Wednesday, January 15, 2025

Rep. Andy Ogles introduces "Make Greenland Great Again Act" supporting territory acquisition

 Fox 17, Jan. 15, 2025 - ... In a statement on the bill, Rep. Ogles says "The acquisition of Greenland by the United States is essential to our national security. Joe Biden took a blowtorch to our reputation these past four years, and before even taking office, President Trump is telling the world that America First is back. American economic and security interests will no longer take a backseat, and House Republicans are ready to help President Trump deliver for the American people. That’s why I introduced the Make Greenland Great Again Act."

The bill authorizes President Trump to begin negotiations with Denmark following his inauguration on January 20, 2025. Once, and if an agreement takes place, Congress would then have 60 days for review. If there is no disapproval by Congress within the 60 day period, the agreement would go into effect and "take the full force of the law," per the bill language.

The bill also is supported by 12 other House lawmakers, including fellow Tennessee Representative Diana Harshbarger [TN-01], Reps. ... (Read More)

Rod's Comment: Disgusting!

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'Speed bumps need to go': Hundreds sign petition to remove Nashville speed bumps

Nearly 500 people have signed a petition calling for NDOT to stop
installing speed bumps across Nashville.

(wsmv.com) — A petition in Nashville is gaining traction as nearly 500 residents call for the removal of speed bumps, citing vehicle damage. While the Nashville Department of Transportation defends the installations, petitioners seek more effective traffic calming measures. (link)

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Continuing Choas at the Metro Arts Commission

 Metro Arts Commission Interim Director Resigns After Brief Tenure

The Nashville Scene, Jan. 15, 2025- Interim Metro Arts executive director Paulette Coleman tendered her resignation on Saturday after less than a year leading the department.

Coleman was named interim director in April following a botched fiscal year 2024 grants cycle that left artists and arts organizations with little faith in the department’s ability to distribute funds in a timely manner. The situation resulted in a conciliation agreement between the Metro Arts Commission, Nashville artists and other Metro departments to improve the grants process for future years. Coleman was tasked with overseeing the department through that rebuilding phase.

However, according to emails and letters obtained by the Nashville Banner, Coleman was failing to hold up Metro Arts’ end of the agreement, leading artists to question if Metro Arts was about to have a repeat of the FY24 grant cycle. ... second time in less than a year that the department responsible for distributing grants to artists and arts organizations is left without leadership at an essential time.

Former Metro Arts Director Daniel Singh resigned in May with a $200,000 settlement agreement. Before that, he had been on FMLA leave followed by administrative leave since February, leaving the department rudderless. (read more)

For more on the years of chaos at the dysfunctional Metro Arts Commission see the following.


 

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Tuesday, January 14, 2025

Thoughts on the House Banning Boys from Competing with Girls in School Sports.

by Rod Williams, Jan. 14, 2025- Today the House of Representatives passed a bill that would prohibit men from competing in women’s school sports. The bill passed 218-206, mostly along party lines. However, two Democrats voted for the bill and some Democrats instead of voting against it voted "present."  Some Dems adamantly opposed the bill saying Republicans were fixated on the private parts of small children and saying the Republicans in the House were mean and cruel. 

Since the House does not have the filibuster, all it took was a majority of votes cast to pass the bill. It will be interesting to see if the Senate Dems filibuster the bill or allow it to pass. In the Senate, seven Dems would have to join Republicans for the bill to pass.

I am pleased to see this bill pass. I find it ridiculous that men, even men on hormone replacement drugs with fake tits, can compete with girls on the sports field of play. That said however, I have reservations about the Federal government dictating such policy to the states. If California wants to allow boys who think they are girls to play against girls, let them; if Tennessee want to ban it, that should be up to Tennessee. One size does not have to fit all. 

The House was able to pass this bill, which would dictate policy for the whole nation, because the Federal government provides funding for education.  While it provides funding, it does not provide much. Only about 8% of public education funding comes from the Federal government and for that small amount of money, the Federal government dictates education policy and social engineering for the whole nation. According to some reports, nationwide at the N.C.A.A. level there are only ten boys competing against women. In most places in this nation, local schools will never even encounter this issue. 

President Trump's DOGE is looking for cost savings and ways to cut the size of government. One place to start is to abolish the Department of Education and leave education up to the states. 

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Saturday, January 11, 2025

I'm Calling BS on the Homeless Vet Argument

by Rod Williams, Jan. 22, 2025- There are a lot of Facebooks memes that just annoy me. This is one of them.

Being a veteran is not a ticket to a free ride forever or an excuse for evading the consequences of your actions.

I suspect that some of the homeless holding up "homeless vet" signs are scamming you. Also, for those who are actual veterans, I suspect their being a vet had nothing to do with their homelessness. Bad things happen to veterans and non-veterans and both veterans and non-veterans make poor choices.

I am a veteran myself and served in Vietnam. Most vets, however, did not see combat. For many people serving ln the military, after basic training military service was not that much different than a civilian job. It didn't ruin you for life. For those who did see combat, for most it didn't warp them for life either. For those whom it did, the VA seeks to serve them, and they are likely receiving disability.

The argument that we must spend nothing on other services until certain other problems are solved, is nonsensical. This is the same argument that people make who say we should spend nothing on foreign aid as long as we have any poor people in America, or we should spend nothing on Parks as long as we have crime. Some problems will never be solved. The problem of spending money on immigrants and refugees is complex and I am opposed to the policy of putting people up in expensive hotels, however one can think this is a problem that needs to be addressed without to resorting to the homeless vet argument.

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Friday, January 10, 2025

Trump revives 19th-century imperialism. Make Russia great again!

 Calling the U.S.-Canada border “artificial” is what Putin says about Russia and Ukraine.

by Fareed Zakaria, Washington Post, Jan. 10, 2025- Having campaigned on a policy of ending wars, making peace, putting America first and disentangling the country from the world, President-elect Donald Trump this week decided to revive 19th-century imperialism. 

In a single news conference, he pondered making Canada a state and acquiring Greenland and the Panama Canal by economic coercion — and declined to rule out using military force in the latter two cases. Republican leaders, whom Trump has only recently trained to denounce their party’s old foreign policy of expansionism and internationalism, quickly pivoted again and adopted the new party line, and are now showering praise on Trump’s grand vision and big thinking. Where will all this go?

Some say we are simply back to the “madman theory” of foreign policy, which posits that it’s good for the president to sometimes appear unpredictable, even irrational, because it throws adversaries off guard. It’s worth recalling that Trump tried this gambit in his first term, most obviously with North Korea’s Kim Jong Un. He began by threatening him with nuclear war (“fire and fury … the likes of which this world has never seen before”) and then abruptly switched to romancing him with love letters. None of it worked. North Korea continued to build its nuclear arsenal, conduct missile tests (after a brief pause) and threaten its southern neighbor. ...

America has been so influential around the world because it has been able to persuade others that it seeks to act not just in its narrow self-interest but for broader interests — that it wants peace, stability, rules and norms that help everyone. That’s why it was able to get 87 countries to immediately condemn Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine. That is why so many of China’s neighbors have allied themselves with the United States.

In the news conference, Trump proposed getting rid of the “artificially drawn line” between Canada and the United States. Of course, that is precisely what President Vladimir Putin says about the line between Russia and Ukraine. Or President Xi Jinping about the division between China and Taiwan. This is a world that makes Russia and China great again. (Read it All)

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Tennesseans think there should be a limit on how much property taxes can go up each year

 


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Poll: Majority of Tennesseans support school choice expansion

By Kim Jarrett, The Center Square, Jan 6, 2025 - A majority of Tennesseans polled by the Beacon
Center said they support Gov. Bill Lee's expansion of school choice statewide.

The poll of 1,200 registered voters shows 67% back the plan, including 73% of Republicans and 51% of Democrats. Just 13% said they oppose the extension and 20% are not sure.

Sen. Jack Johnson, R-Franklin, and Rep. William Lamberth, R-Portland, filed the "Education Freedom Act of 2025" in November. The bill would allow the state's school choice program, currently limited to Hamilton, Davidson and Shelby counties, in all of the state's 95 counties. Students who qualify would receive $7,075 in annual scholarships for tuition, fees and other private school expenses.

The bill also includes a $2,000 bonus for teachers and increase in starting teacher pay to $47,000 a year, beginning with the 2025-26 school year.

A majority of respondents (57%) also indicated they would be more likely to vote for a state lawmaker who supports school choice expansion while 12% said they would be less likely to vote for school choice proponents.

The school choice bill has received some criticism. The Hamilton County Board of Education passed a resolution in December asking legislators not to pass the bill as part of their legislative agenda.

"The board recommends retaining current limitations of the pilot program to evaluate the effectiveness including 200% poverty-level income eligibility and prior public school attendance, and to include holding private schools and homeschool programs accepting vouchers to the same accountability stands as public schools," the legislative agenda said.

House Democratic Leader Karen Camper called for a bipartisan discussion on education in a statement issued last week.

"While I appreciate the goal of empowering parents with more choices, I firmly believe we cannot afford to weaken our public school system in the process," Camper said. "Instead, we need to focus on strengthening public education by addressing key issues, such as resource allocation, accountability, and equity."

Part of Camper's proposal includes changes to the state funding formula for education.

"We should explore adjustments that allocate more resources to districts with higher needs, including rural and economically distressed communities, ensuring no child is left behind," Camper said. "A revised formula could also prioritize smaller class sizes, access to technology, and additional support for students with disabilities and English language learners."

Just 40% of those who participated in the Beacon Poll said they were satisfied with the state's education system, while 55% said they were not.


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Memphis transit squeals past Nissan Stadium for pork spending award

By Kim Jarrett, The Center Square, Jan 7, 2025 - The Memphis Area Transit Authority won the Pork of the Year Award for 2025, squealing past a Nissan Stadium project that puts taxpayers on the hook for upgrades, according to a poll by the Beacon Center.

The transit authority spent money on a new downtown office and purchased a branded suite for Memphis Grizzlies' games at a hefty price tag, even though it was facing a $60 million deficit, according to a report from WREG.

The Beacon Poll pitted the spending against upgrades to the Tennessee Titans' current Nissan Stadium requested by the National Football League as construction continues on a $2.3 billion stadium funded by taxpayers.

The two projects were close – 35% of respondents voted for the Memphis project, while 34% voted for the Nashville project. A $1.5 million incentive doled out to a Lebanon restaurant came in third with 24% of the votes.

"While all three of the finalists deserved the Pork of the Year award, Tennessee voters agree that the way MATA ran an enormous deficit while spending money on luxury expenses that only benefitted their board members was both distasteful and unethical, ignoring their duty to regard taxpayers' interests. In order to recoup this irresponsible spending, the city must consider cutting bus and trolley lines, punishing the people who rely on public transportation the most."

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CBO Estimates $710 Billion Deficit for First Three Months of FY 2025

Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, January 10, 2025 - The United States borrowed $710 billion in the first three months of Fiscal Year (FY) 2025, including $85 billion in the month of December, according to the latest Monthly Budget Review from the Congressional Budget Office. This ends the 2024 calendar year with a total of $2.0 trillion in borrowing.  

The following is a statement from Maya MacGuineas, president of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget: 

As we start the new year ushering in a new administration and a new Congress, we must not lose sight of the fiscal challenges ahead. In the 2024 calendar year, we borrowed an astounding $2.0 trillion – not to mention we are only three months into the fiscal year and we have already borrowed $710 billion.  

Our unsustainable debt isn't something we can just shy away from, as 2025 is packed full of fiscal deadlines. This year we face the return of the debt limit, the end of discretionary spending caps, large parts of the 2017 tax cuts expiring, and reconciliation on the horizon. So far we’ve heard much about how lawmakers plan to spend more and tax less; we’ve heard much less about the opposite. But with these deadlines comes the opportunity for the incoming administration and 119th Congress to start the new year on the right foot.  

A great start would be committing to no new borrowing and guaranteeing all tax cuts and spending increases are fully offset. If lawmakers start the year working to improve our nation’s fiscal situation, then our future challenges won’t be so daunting.  

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Thursday, January 09, 2025

Biden's Title IX Rule to Include Gender Identity is Ruled "Unlawful."

By Brendan Clarey, The Center Square, Jan. 9, 2025- A federal court in Kentucky ruled Thursday that the Biden administration’s rulemaking expanding Title IX to include gender identity is “unlawful.”

The judgment from the United States District Court from the Eastern District of Kentucky sided with Kentucky, Indiana, Tennessee, West Virginia and private organizations and individuals. Critics of the rule lauded the court’s decisions.

Chief Judge Danny C. Reeves wrote in Thursday's order that the administration’s final rule overstepped its congressionally given boundaries. 

“Congress gave the Department authority to issue rules, regulations, and orders to effectuate Title IX’s prohibition on sex discrimination consistent with the objectives of the statute,” Reeves wrote. “However, the Department exceeded that authority in issuing the Final Rule and the text of Title IX shows why. 

“Put simply, there is nothing in the text or statutory design of Title IX to suggest that discrimination ‘on the basis of sex’ means anything other than it has since Title IX’s inception – that recipients of federal funds under Title IX may not treat a person worse than another similarly-situated individual on the basis of the person’s sex, i.e., male or female,” Reeves wrote. 

“As this Court and others have explained, expanding the meaning of ‘on the basis of sex’ to include ‘gender identity’ turns Title IX on its head,” Reeves wrote. 

“While Title IX sought to level the playing field between men and women, it is rife with exceptions that allow males and females to be separated based on the enduring physical differences between the sexes,” Reeves said. 

Reeves said that the final rule’s approach to locker rooms “does not make sense.” 

“Confirming the arbitrary nature of these new regulations, the Department has offered no rational explanation for the stark inconsistencies that will result if the Final Rule is allowed to go forward,” the judge wrote.

The court also said the rule violates the First Amendment because “the Final Rule’s definitions of sex discrimination and sex-based harassment … require Title IX recipients, including teachers, to use names and pronouns associated with a student’s asserted gender identity.”

“The Final Rule also is vague and overbroad,” Reeves wrote. “As the Court explained previously, several of the terms used in this regulation are so vague that recipients of Title IX funds have no way of predicting what conduct will violate the law.” 

The court also said the final rule violates the Spending Clause of the Constitution and is arbitrary and capricious.

“The Department does not provide a reasoned explanation for departing from its longstanding interpretation of Title IX,” Reeves wrote. “Although it relies primarily on Bostock, the Supreme Court was clear that the decision was limited to the context of Title VII and did not purport to address ‘bathrooms, locker rooms, or anything else of the kind.’”

The court struck down the entire ruling, rather than the portions challenged by litigation. In the order, Reeves concluded that “the entire Final Rule and corresponding regulations are invalid and must be set aside.”

Reeves said that other courts have indicated it is unlawful and “would simply ‘cause a return to the status quo’ that existed for more than 50 years prior to its effective date.” The judgment is appealable. 

Critics of the Biden administration rule celebrated the order. 

“Huge blow today for Biden’s wildly unconstitutional plan to hollow out Title IX protections and instead use federal law to enforce gender ideology in public schools and colleges across our nation,” said Kim Hermann, executive director of the Southeastern Legal Foundation.

“Freedom has won in the Court’s decision to grant summary judgment for the plaintiffs in this case and to throw out the Biden Title IX rules as ‘unlawful’ — adding that it ‘offends the First Amendment,’” Hermann said. 

Hermann also said it creates a precedent for the other cases, including one in which her firm is challenging the Biden administration’s rules. The rule's implementation has remained piecemeal since legal challenges and court orders have halted its widespread implementation.

The Biden Department of Education attempted to expand the definition of sex discrimination to include gender identity and strengthen protections for pregnant students, citing the discrimination faced by LGBTQ+ students. 

Critics have said that it would redefine women’s sports and put female students at risk. 

The Biden administration recently withdrew its proposed rule that would have dictated how schools and institutions of higher learning would approach transgender athletes on single-sex sports teams. 


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Tuesday, January 07, 2025

Trump Threatens Military Force to Take Panama Canal and Greenland. Congress Needs to Act.

click to view press conference

by Rod Williams, Jan. 7, 2025- President-elect Donald Trump has upped his rhetoric regarding taking military action against our neighbors.  He had previously said he might retake the Panama Canal which implies military action, and he had spoken of purchasing Greenland, which of course is not for sale.  Today said he would not rule out the use of military force to seize control of the Panama Canal and Greenland, declaring U.S. control of both to be vital to American national security. 

Much of what Trump said on the campaign trail was dismissed by his supporter as simply bluster and not to be taken seriously. Now that he is days away from taking office and he continues to talk of taking military action against friendly neighbors, I don't think one should be so sanguine. Not only has he talked of taking Panama and Greenland but has insultingly, jokingly called Canada the 51st state. He has also threatened to declare Mexican drug cartels Foreign Terrorist Organization. 

Declaring the Mexican drug cartels Foreign Terrorist Organization would open the door to a more hostile relationship with Mexico and could be a first step in justifying military action against Mexico. Not only is Trump threatening these actions, but he has threatened a trade war with both Mexico and Canada. 

Unfortunately, I think many Americans would be ready to support Trump aggression against our neighbors. The case for retaking the Panama Canal would be an easy sell. After all, we build it and when we gave it away, that was a contentious decision. And we could likely take it with little difficulty and little loss of life. After taking Panama, then it would be easier to sell the next foreign aggression. People could more easily be persuaded taking Greenland was essential to our national security than they can be persuaded that preventing China from taking Taiwan or Russia from taking Ukraine or continuing to support NATO is in our national interest. Not that they are right, but most people think simply. 

Trump as a candidate talked like an isolationist. I take his threat to cut support for NATO and his willingness to let Putin take Ukraine seriously. While it was Joe Biden who presided over the disastrous withdrawal from Afghanistan, it was Trump who negotiated the American surrender in that war. These isolationist actions and utterances from Trump do not make him an isolationist nor are they contradictory to his threats against Canada, Greenland, Mexico and Panama. 

Trump's hostile posture and threats against our neighbors are consistent with a new theory of multipolarity. This grand theory holds that Russia should rule over an area called Eurasia. It also recognizes that there will be other regions of the world ruled over by other superpowers. This is viewed as natural and appropriate. This theory's prime proponent is Aleksandr Dugin, a Russian philosopher and activist. Dugin's books and essays and ideas are popular among people like Curtis Yarvin and Steve Bannon and others of the Trump intelligentsia. Dugin is often spoken of approvingly in speeches and interviews by people like Yarvin and Bannon and other Trumpian theorist. 

Whether this posture of hostility toward our neighbors is the result of adherence to new theories or just old fashion imperialism, colonialism and a desire for empire I don't know. In any event we should be concerned. 

The president has broad powers to authorize military actions without prior congressional approval. Article I, Section 8, Clause 11 of the U.S. Constitution grants Congress the power to declare war. However, Article II, Section 2, names the president as Commander-in-Chief of the armed forces. A state of war can exist without a declaration. The War Powers Act however, says within 48 hours of committing troops to hostilities outside the United States the President must notify Congress and that after 60 days, the President must get Congressional Approval to continue the military action. With foes like Panama and Greenland the task of conquering those territories could be accomplished well within 60 days, probably within mere days. 

Normally after even a hard-fought campaign, the public and the loyal oppositions grant the winner a honeymoon period. A period of goodwill often follows a hard campaign.  Despite my concerns with Donald Trump and what I see as his authoritarian tendencies, I was ready to wish him the best and hope for the best.  I was ready to say, maybe Trump wouldn't be so bad. Afterall, I want him to get control of the border and expel criminals and cut government and rollback DEI and political correctness. Maybe, he wouldn't start a trade war, I reasoned. Maybe he wouldn't exact revenge on his critics. Before I had time to consider that maybe he would be sort of normal, he starts talking of making war on our friends. 

There can be no honeymoon when the new President-elect is promising military action against our neighbors and allies. Democrats, pundits, and sane old-style Republicans need to be loudly condemning this talk of military action against our neighbors. While I doubt it could pass Congress, there should immediately be a bill introduced prohibiting military action against Mexico, Canada, Greenland, and Panama without specific Congressional authorization. 

There can be on honeymoon. 

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