SocraticGadfly: 8/10/25 - 8/17/25

August 15, 2025

Why won't the left hand of the duopoly admit they're not REALLY environmentalists?

To be honest, I'm not talking only about elected national or state-level Democraps, like our past two presidents, like the current governor of New Mexico and others.

I'm also talking about the rank-and-file, reasonably intelligent, reasonably politically active Donkey voters who don't like to hear that about their elected "betters," but will also go out of their way to defend them, AND, beyond that, maybe aren't that environmentalist themselves.

This is a riff on last week's post about a tribalist duopoly ban.

Before I get to some of the stuff copy-pasta'ed from there?

Let's look at oil drilling.

Both Dear Leader and Green Fake Deal Biden promoted "all of the above" for "energy." This included continued drilling permits on BLM and USFS land. Outside Mag has Biden's background:

During his 2020 campaign, Biden swore not to open any new public lands for drilling. And at first, he was true to his word, issuing an executive order that paused all new oil and gas leases. But in 2021, a federal judge struck down his ban on drilling, and public outcry ratcheted up amid rising gas prices. In 2022, Biden went back on his campaign promise and opened Bureau of Land Management land in Colorado, Nevada, North Dakota, New Mexico, Wyoming, Montana, and Utah to drilling. 
Afterward, Biden’s administration approved additional oil and gas permits at a rate comparable to Trump during his first term. Biden also approved the massive, long-disputed Willow Project in Alaska’s National Petroleum Reserve, which will involve drilling up to 199 new oil and gas wells over 30 years. Many of the leases approved by Biden were sold by former presidents—ConocoPhillips bought the Willow project lease back in 1999. 
But there’s no getting around the fact that U.S. domestic crude oil production grew to more than any country, ever, during his time in office. 
“Every day that you are allowing [the industry] to remain in the room, that you are indulging their fantasies about continued production, that you are allowing them to kind of peddle their false solutions and prolong their existence, you’re shooting yourself in the foot,” Collin Rees, U.S. program manager for Oil Change International, told E&E News in 2024.

"But they had to issue those leases!"

No they didn't. If nothing else, since the Pentagon had said, before the end of Obama's time in office, that climate change was a national security measure, they had the opening right there to ban oil leases. Or per federal judicial rulings by that time and later, to essentially stop such drilling by carbon-emission environmental impact findings.

And, I've said time after time that Obama got in bed with Xi Jinping to make the Paris Accords totally voluntary Jell-O. Too bad that doesn't fit the left hand of the dupoly's narrative.

As for the ban? It was related to a comment of mine on a post I POSTED at r/nationalpark about the Grand Canyon Lodge burning at the North Rim.

A respondent said Obama didn't cut NPS firefighting. 

Maybe he did. Obama DID cut the budget for individual national parks. There you are, certain Reddit soy boy.

That link comes off Google's AI, which also returned all of this:

I focused on stuff that came out of Obama's presidential budget.

Here's more on that third bullet point:

The President's Fiscal Year 2013 budget released today requests $2.6 billion to support the bureau's critical national recreation, preservation and conservation mission. The 2013 President's budget request fully funds $27.0 million in fixed costs and provides increases totaling $39.2 million to fund essential programs and emerging operational needs. Reflecting the President's call for fiscal discipline and sustainability, the budget also includes $67.2 million in strategic reductions in park and program operations, construction, and heritage partnership programs. 

This is the same O'Bummer who listened to Rahmbo Emanuel on cutting the size of his stimulus. 

But wait, that's not all. 

  • In February 2012, a National Parks Conservation Association (NPCA) announcement noted that President Obama's proposed budget included cuts exceeding $20 million for the parks themselves, leading to a net reduction of 218 full-time rangers and other park service staff. (That's also the link above.)
  • The NPS budget for deferred maintenance (addressing the backlog of repairs) was reportedly cut during the first three years of the Obama Administration, according to the U.S. Department of the Interior (.gov). (link was dead, to Trump content)
  • The National Park Service (.gov) confirmed in 2015 that the President's Fiscal Year 2013 budget included $67.2 million in "strategic reductions" in park and program operations, construction, and heritage partnership programs.
  • An ABC News article from 2012 reported on potential staffing cuts for national parks under Obama's budget, particularly affecting seasonal staff. 
  • Not just Dear Leader, either. Fake Green New Deal, per a leading group like National Parks Conservation Association, cut money for an already massive deferred maintenance backlog. That is listed after several "goods."

    Let's pivot to land protection, namely the tussle over Bear's Ears. Both Obama and Biden, while using the Antiquities Act, made it and other national monuments — but kept them in their original BLM or Forest Service oversight. Even before Trump 1.0's threatened downsizing, places like Grand Staircase-Escalante (who? Clinton) showed this approach didn't work well. Yes, making the NPS national monuments would have burdened it even more. But, at least somewhat better protected them.  I've opposed non-NPS monuments for these and other reasons for a decade in this space.

    On Bears Ears in particular? I offered my first thought nearly a decade ago. I wrote again two years later. Today, I'm not totally sure a BLM NM is better than nothing, or not that much better.

    As for my original comment? Even before the NPS centennial celebration itself, here's Dear Leader already pushing backdoor privatization at the Park Service.

    Or, to current times, and in Congress, look at all the Democraps supporting environmentally destructive bitcoin mining. 

    You Dumbocrats keep falling for this. 

    You fall for Bears Ears. Neither Obama nor Biden made it part of the National Park Service with orders to phase out multi-use shit, even though we see how problematic Grand Staircase-Escalante has been. 

    Then you keep attacking the messengers of truth.

    And, then, many of you claim people like me "really" voted for Trump. 

     I grow more and more tired of these lies.

    August 14, 2025

    Texas Progressives talks bombs, Gaza, more

    The Texas Progressives, as curated by me, beyond what Kuff does, had enough international stuff, and enough Gaza stuff to give him a bit of a kick on that, for me to separate it from the rest of the Roundup.

    SocraticGadfly talked about the 80th anniversary of Hiroshima and also Nagasaki and Korean history.

    Joe Costello notes (with just hints, snarkily, of the problematic nature of this) how many companies are investing in bitcoin.

    How and why did NYC Mayor Eric Adams start sucking up to Trump? Blame Dr. Phil.

    Mondoweiss calls out the MSM for complicity in the Gaza genocide.

    A Dallas ER doc saw babies burned to death in Gaza. 

    Killing journalists is among the IDF war crimes in Gaza that Off the Kuff likes to ignore.

    Trump's attempts to stop fentanyl smuggling are way behind the curve.

    Texas Progressives talk redistricting, hypocrisy, more

    Off the Kuff is all over the quorum break.

    A state judge has blocked R.F. O'Rourke from aiding state House Dems in the quorum break.

    State Rep. James Talarico is inching closer to a U.S. Senate run. Joe Rogan (no really) wants him to run for president.

    Stop me if you've heard this before: Republicans nominating Ken Paxton for the Senate instead of renominating John Cornyn allegedly could be a bridge too far.

    RIP James Lovell.

    Brains, about 3/5 the way down his Sunday funnies for Aug. 3, sadly has a Marcionite view of the Old Testament/Tanakh, Yahweh and Israelite religion. Of course, he's not alone, when a critical biblical scholar like Bart Ehrman does the same.

    Neil at the Houston Democracy Project reported on well-attended quick response protest at John Cornyn’s Houston office, after Cornyn called for on FBI to abduct Texas State Reps. who rightly left Texas. The action was called by the John Cornyn Houston Office Protest, which has been weekly for well-over 8 years at corner of Memorial & Detering.  

    Texas Monthly explains what Chili's "Booth Boots" are about.  

    The Barbed Wire reviews the non-border-security spending that Greg Abbott's "Operation Lone Star" enabled.  

    Your Local Epidemiologist tries again to make sense of current vaccination policy. 

     Pete vonder Haar compares the future that we were promised to the future we actually got.  

    Law Dork finds another DOJ-manufactured lawsuit aimed at ending in-state tuition for undocumented students. 

    The Current found what may be the most epic "leopards eating people's faces" example ever.

    The Quorum Report shows how Greg Abbott's thinking about separation of powers has changed since he was Attorney General.

    August 13, 2025

    Good on McKinney going ahead with a passenger airport terminal

    I thought, after McKinney voters rejected a 2023 bond issue, this would be dead.

    But, the city has enough money without going through a bond to start work on a commercial terminal, in part through state budget funding and a TxDOT grant, per this story of the airport's history. It's too bad the 2023 Lege hadn't funded this; it would already be open by now.

    I'm not ignoring or dissing questions about environmental impacts.

    I am saying that the greater Metromess could use a third airport. Now, what airlines are going out there? I think the FAA should put both American and Southwest at the back of the bus on gate requests. I expect UnitedContinental or whatever the hell it's called would love to fly from here to Houston and Denver, two of its hubs. 

    I wrote more about that in the run-up to the 2023 bond election, here. One pullout:

    Presumably, given Southwest's near monopoly at Love, and American's at D/FW, the FAA would have Delta and United Continental first in line for gate slots. With that, almost all United flights would go either to its big hub at Houston Bush, and anywhere else from there, or secondarily to its Denver hub, with anywhere in the Western states from there. (A few nonstops would go to Chicago.) Delta, of course, would send all sorts of flights to its massive hub in Atlanta (cue old joke) and probably a few to its secondary hub in Salt Lake City. Starter (in the past decade) airlines might get a gate or two. And McKinney Mayor George Fuller says he can't name names, but, the interest is there. His assistant city manager says the same

    Gavin Newsom: What's wrong with Democraps in a nutshell

    I'm not talking about his neoliberalism, and things like pseudoenvironmentalism that go along with that. Those are givens when you talk about "what's wrong with Democraps," as are things like Palestinian statehood and all related issues, military Keynesianism, etc.

    No, there's something else generally wrong with national Democraps.

    And, that is that, at some point, they'll always have a lack of balls.

    Like Newsom on mid-decade redistricting. 

    Texas called its special session more than a week ago, but here he is earlier this week, begging Trump to stop with the redistricting.

    From the way he talks, I remain unconvinced that he'll actually order the Cal Legislature to do a mid-decade redistricting there.

    Related to that, he's already backed off his claim that, the way the enabling rules are set for California's non-partisan redistricting commission, he and the Cal Lege could do a mid-decade redistricting without any additional approval.

    Ballless.

    Or clueless, if he misread the statute.

    That said, they're not mutually exclusive.

    Meanwhile, per Capital and Main, de facto segregation in California public schools is getting worse. And, it says that on magnet and charter schools, there are things the state could do to reverse that. But, obviously, hasn't.

    Since she is also from California, remember that if Kamala is a Zionist Cop runs for prez again, too. 

    August 12, 2025

    Will Trump actually Schedule III marijuana?

    Or will he just blather about it, per a news story Monday?

    The first important takeaway is that Dementia Joe's Drug Enforcement Administration started talking about that idea in 2024, but nothing further happened. Had Kamala is a Zionist Cop Harris promised to follow through, maybe, just maybe, she would have been elected.

    Second, if the disapproving take of the incel-like Charlie Kirk, at Politico, represents a fair amount of MAGAts, this has potential to further allegedly split the Trumptard base beyond the Epstein Files. Note that "allegedly"; I'm not a BlueAnon who believes unicorns are real. 

    Here's Trump's recent background, if that means anything from either his weathervane, flighty personality or from his own growing dementia.

    Ahead of the 2024 elections, Trump said he would vote yes on a Florida amendment that would legalize marijuana throughout the state. Florida voters did not approve the amendment. 
    “As I have previously stated, I believe it is time to end needless arrests and incarcerations of adults for small amounts of marijuana for personal use,” he wrote on Truth Social. “We must also implement smart regulations, while providing access for adults, to safe, tested product.” 
    In the post, he indicated he would look into the medical uses of marijuana and the benefits of reducing its classification to Schedule III.

    There you are. 

    Marijuana is currently Schedule I-listed, along with heroin et al, LSD and ecstasy. LSD could arguably itself be knocked down to at least Schedule II and ecstasy to Schedule III. (Many non-heroin opioids are in Schedule II, as are amphetamines.)

    Ketamine is among Schedule III drugs. Your benzos are generally Schedule IV, and arguably should be moved UP to Schedule III. 

    For details, not just LSD and ecstasy, but many other hallucinogenic drugs like peyote, psilocybin and MDA are in Schedule I, as are heroin-derived drugs, and "designer" stimulants, per Wiki's complete list.

    Beyond amphetamines not in Schedule I, others of them, barbiturates, cocaine, and opioids not in Schedule I are in Schedule II, per Wiki.

    This is why rescheduling for marijuana needs to take it all the way down to Schedule III. It's a different mindset on federal "criminality" at that point. Also, established banks in states that have legal recreational marijuana will treat the industry differently. See also Wiki on the Controlled Substances Act.

    Top blogging of July

    As is normal (and I'm a few days late, due to catching up with life after vacationing and other things), these posts were not necessarily written IN July, they were just the most-read in the month.

    Drumroll, as we count backwards ...

    No. 10 is actually from Aug. 1, my writing about the latest climate news, that the US Southwest's drought will likely last the rest of this century

    In the No. 9 slot, I said Trump was actually right about California's high-speed rail. 

    At No. 8, from back in March, I called out "The Resistance 2.0" for wanting to relitigate Russiagate. Some things never get old. 

    At No. 7? I heavily snarked on one of the most sappy bits of poetry from the fundagelical world with my snappy hot take on "Footprints in the Sand" — talking about "The REAL Footprints in the Sand." 

    No. 6? For whatever reason, an April installment of the Texas Progressives weekly roundup was trending. 

    No. 5? It's fun calling out a subreddit and duopoly tribalism at the same time, as when I talked about "Fuck r/NationalPark for a duopoly tribalist ban." 

    No. 4 goes back to May about how none of the three Democrats on the Supreme Court are serious environmentalists.

    No. 3 comes from April and looked north of the border. Yes, per my question, Canada's Liberals could win again. That said, the win got nothing more than a nice, polite Canadian version of Canadian nationalism from the left hand of the duopoly, along with the disintegration of the NDP meaning that yes, for now at least, Canada really is like the US governed by a duopoly. (Sit down PQ.)

    No. 2 is from June and another Texas Progressives roundup, this one wrapping up the Texas Lege regular session. 

    And the top post?

    From July, "A Drying Rio Grande Won't Fix Itself." And this is even more true in light of No. 10.  (I had originally typed "Dying" instead of "Drying," and that's not totally inaccurate.

    August 11, 2025

    GOP wingnuts want a conservative version of Californicating Texas

    The Monthly talks about how Tex-ass wingnuts want to pull off a conservative version of Californicating the state. A poster child is SB 8 from two years ago, which allowed private citizens to file lawsuits in abortion-related issues.

    Unknown to me until reading that story? The whole idea, though of course with different targets, originated in California far earlier. For example, those carcinogen worries you see on so many products? Required in California — and enforceable by citizen lawsuit. It's easier for companies to print one version of such labels nationwide. Here's the skinny.

    If you’ve ever visited the great state of California, you may have experienced that cumulative effect, as well as some alarm at finding out that nearly everything there will give you cancer. Any consumer product or location there that contains any level of a carcinogen, from coffee machines to Disneyland, is required by a 1986 law to display a warning about its potential to cause cancer and birth defects. Because makers of consumer products will invariably want to sell those products in California, many items sold outside the state also contain the warning. And because testing to determine the levels of carcinogens is so expensive, manufacturers may slap warnings on products that don’t contain carcinogens at all, lest they be hit by lawsuits later. Those lawsuits can be brought by enterprising members of the public, just as with SB 8.

    Never knew that before.

    And beyond wingnut political purity, this stuff has also come to Tex-ass:

    There’s a bipartisan consensus that Americans eat like garbage, and that ultra-processed food is at least partly to blame. But Senate Bill 25 is notable for its mechanism of correcting the national appetite. It presents a list of 44 ingredients or categories of ingredients, from dyes to bleached flour, many of which are commonly included in products Texans buy at grocery stores and which the U.S. Food and Drug Administration already regulates. Any product made with one of those 44 elements—pancake mix, tortilla chips, granola bars—now must include a warning on its packaging that it “contains an ingredient that is not recommended for human consumption by the appropriate authority in Australia, Canada, the European Union or the United Kingdom.”

    Interesting indeed. (And also highly hypocritical, per the story.)

    Here's the bill. It's the "physical education in schools" bill; the food stuff comes later, about halfway down. Before that, it has many other things, like an elective high school course, and a required college course, on food and nutrition. Sounds good, right? But with wingnut promoting Brainworm Bobby's rants about seed oils, maybe it's not.