Trump’s hilarious speech infuriates Democrats (3-5-25)

01:00 The Democrats needed every bit of their buffered identity to stay unmoved during last night’s Trump event, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=149512
16:00 Mark Halperin on Smerconish, https://www.smerconish.com/podcasts/the-smerconish-podcast/
32:00 The r-word, https://freddiedeboer.substack.com/p/the-r-slur-inner-circle-and-outer
39:00 Lenny Skutnik moment, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lenny_Skutnik
41:00 Trump’s skillset matches Bill Clinton’s
44:00 Trump doesn’t pussy foot around, he goes hard without euphemisms, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EQiTYYD_NsM
45:50 What made Dems think they could out-troll the Troll Master Donald Trump?
56:30 12 Simple Things Men Do With Their Bodies That Women Just LOVE! , https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WB16v9EUFhc
57:20 Ann Coulter talks to Mark Halperin, https://anncoulter.substack.com/p/video-interview-with-mark-halperin
1:00:00 Great actors, speakers, presenters don’t give away their neck
1:02:00 Who ran the Biden White House?
1:03:00 Accomplished Public Speakers Tend To Not Move Their Heads, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=51658
1:13:00 The Best Reality TV Is Actually in the Oval Office, https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-best-reality-tv-is-actually-in-the-oval-office/id1570872415?i=1000697606779
1:16:00 Christopher Caldwell describes the Ukraine war as a border conflict
1:30:00 How Musicians can benefit from the Alexander Technique, https://bodylearning.buzzsprout.com/382/episodes/25174-how-musicians-can-benefit-from-the-alexander-technique
1:36:40 Your Hands are Intelligent and Creative | Pedro de Alcantara, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9C5nzsON8WI
1:46:00 Alexander technique lesson with Diana Devitt-Dawson, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oXqIuvav5hY
1:48:00 Adam Carolla: AOC has lost her fastball and Jasmine Crocket is meeting the crazy void
1:51:00 Douglas is cancelled, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Douglas_Is_Cancelled

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Air Supply

I ask Grok: My favorite pop group is Air Supply. What does that say about me?

Grok says:

Liking Air Supply as your favorite pop group says some cool things about you! Air Supply is known for their soft rock ballads and heartfelt love songs from the ’80s—like “All Out of Love” and “Making Love Out of Nothing at All”—so your taste might hint at a few traits:
Romantic at Heart: Their lyrics are all about love, longing, and emotional connection. If these resonate with you, you might be someone who values deep feelings, whether in relationships or just in how you experience life.

Nostalgic or Sentimental: Air Supply’s peak was decades ago, so you could have a soft spot for the past—maybe you enjoy the vibes of older music, or it connects you to memories or a sense of timelessness.

Appreciator of Softer Vibes: Their mellow, melodic style suggests you might enjoy music that’s soothing rather than super intense or aggressive. It could mean you’ve got a calm or introspective side, or you just like something that feels easy to sink into.

Emotional Depth: Fans of Air Supply often connect with the vulnerability in their songs. If that’s you, maybe you’re not afraid to feel things deeply or appreciate art that wears its heart on its sleeve.

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Trump Makes Law Firms Think Twice Before Crossing Him

I ask Grok: “Do the professions such as law lean to the political left?”

Grok says:

Yeah, professions like law do tend to lean left, at least in the U.S., but it’s not a monolith—context, location, and specific roles tweak the picture. Data backs this up: a 2021 study from the American Bar Association found 68% of lawyers identified as liberal or leaned Democratic, compared to 27% conservative or Republican. That’s a hefty tilt. Same vibe in academia—legal scholars at top law schools like Harvard or Yale skew even harder, with donor records from a 2017 New York Times analysis showing 15-to-1 Democratic over Republican contributions.
Why? Education’s a factor. Lawyers need advanced degrees, and higher education correlates with left-leaning views—Pew Research in 2020 pegged 54% of postgrads as liberal vs. 19% conservative. Urban clustering helps too; most big law firms are in blue cities like New York or San Francisco, where social norms lean progressive. The job itself—defending rights, challenging power—also attracts people comfy with ideas like social justice or government intervention, which vibe more with the left.
But it’s not uniform. Corporate lawyers, especially at elite firms (think Big Law), often swing pragmatic or rightward—handling billion-dollar mergers doesn’t scream socialism. A 2022 National Law Journal survey showed partners at top firms donated 55% to Republicans, flipping the script. Criminal defense or public interest lawyers, though? Way more left—80% Democratic per a 2018 UCLA study, likely tied to their focus on marginalized groups.
X posts reflect this split. You’ll see gripes about “woke lawyers” pushing DEI, countered by others saying law’s just a mercenary gig—politics depends on the paycheck. History’s mixed too: lawyers drove the Constitution (conservative bedrock), but also civil rights (progressive wins). Today, the left lean’s real—campaign finance data from OpenSecrets shows lawyers gave $43 million to Dems vs. $14 million to GOP in 2020. Still, it’s less about the profession “being” left and more about who it attracts and where it’s practiced.
Doctors? Mixed bag. A 2016 JAMA study found 45% of physicians identified as Democrats, 34% Republicans, and the rest independent—closer to even than law’s 68% left lean. Specialties shift it: surgeons and anesthesiologists (higher earners) trend GOP, while pediatricians and psychiatrists lean Dem, per a 2019 Medscape survey. Why? Income and values. Docs making over $250k—about 60% of them—often favor tax cuts and deregulation (right-wing vibes), but those in public health or academia (more urban, research-focused) swing left. AMA donations in 2020 split 52% Dem, 48% GOP, per OpenSecrets.
Dentists? More conservative. A 2018 Journal of the American Dental Association poll pegged 54% Republican, 36% Democrat. They’re often small-business owners—private practices dominate—and that entrepreneurial streak aligns with right-leaning priorities like lower taxes and less red tape. Rural dentists (20% of the field) amplify this; Pew 2020 data shows rural America’s 60% GOP. ADA political giving in 2020? 58% to Republicans.
Accountants? Slight right lean. A 2021 Accounting Today survey had 49% Republican, 41% Democrat. Big Four firms (Deloitte, PwC) in blue cities like NYC show more Dems (55% per internal polls), but smaller firms and solo CPAs—think tax prep in the heartland—tilt GOP. Why? Business focus again. Accountants deal with tax codes and corporate clients; 62% of CFOs surveyed by Duke in 2022 leaned conservative, and that rubs off.

Thomas B. Edsall writes in the New York Times today:

In addition to revoking the security clearances, Trump wrote in a Feb. 25 memorandum, “I also direct the attorney general and heads of agencies to take such actions as are necessary to terminate any engagement of Covington & Burling L.L.P. by any agency to the maximum extent permitted by law and consistent with the memorandum that shall be issued by the director of the Office of Management and Budget.”

The effects of the Trump administration’s initiatives soon become apparent. On Feb. 26 the Bloomberg reporters Ben Penn and Tatyana Monnay described some of the reverberations of the Trump edict in “Covington Revenge Deepens Worries of Defending Trump Targets.”

“Some firm leaders,” they wrote, “citing corporate clients threatening to walk if they get crosswise with Trump, have rejected outright or put up roadblocks to partners seeking approval to represent D.O.J. lawyers, F.B.I. agents and other civil servants who’ve faced various forms of attack.”

Penn and Monnay reported that their sources told them:

Individual attorneys want to enter what they see as a nonpartisan battle to preserve democracy by filing merit systems complaints for terminated federal employees, representing Jan. 6 prosecutors under investigation from D.O.J. and Congress or participating in litigation to halt Trump policies. Firms’ senior decision makers, however, agonize about the sustainability of representing current and former government employees opposite the administration.

It’s not just the left and the center that find the administration’s policies disturbing. Walter Olson, a senior fellow at the libertarian Cato Institute, warned in a Feb. 26 essay, “Trump Punishes Large Law Firm for Representing His Adversary,” that the president’s actions threaten “the loss of an independent and qualified bar willing to stand up to authority.”

The implications of the revocation of security clearances, Olson continued, “go far beyond the practice of national security law. Anyone can find themselves in a fight with Trump or his allies on almost any topic under the sun, and the question is whether the counsel representing you in that dispute has to fear being made the next Covington.”

While the focus is different, the drive by Elon Musk’s so-called Department of Government Efficiency to reduce the size of the federal work force also carries a broader message.

Adam Bonica, a political scientist at Stanford, analyzed the pattern of personnel cuts initiated by Musk in a Feb. 28 Substack post, “The DOGE Purge: Empirical Evidence of Politically Motivated Firings,” and concluded: “What we’re witnessing in Washington isn’t about ‘efficiency’ or ‘cutting waste.’ It’s a calculated, ideologically driven purge of federal agencies perceived as liberal — a playbook lifted directly from modern authoritarian regimes.”

Bonica found that “agencies perceived as liberal are overwhelmingly more likely to face staffing cuts. This ideological targeting is the single strongest predictor of which agencies face layoffs — far outweighing practical considerations like agency size or budget.”

Targeting U.S.A.I.D. and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, “two of the most liberal-leaning agencies, is likely telling,” Bonica wrote. “The hardest-hit agencies are precisely those that regulate industry, protect public health and expand access to education.”

The cuts DOGE is calling for, Bonica argued, fulfill an authoritarian agenda, closely following the proposals in the Heritage Foundation’s Project 2025. The underlying goals include:

Frame political purges as administrative reform: This framing masks the potential for politically motivated actions, such as targeting agencies that enforce environmental regulations or protect civil rights.

Target agencies that constrain executive power: The Project 2025 document specifically calls for significant alterations or dismantling of agencies like the E.P.A., the Department of Education, the Department of Labor and potentially the Department of Homeland Security.

Weaken regulatory enforcement without changing laws: Project 2025 advocates for rescinding numerous regulations, streamlining permitting processes and reducing funding for agencies responsible for environmental protection and labor standards. This weakens enforcement without requiring the more challenging and public process of legislative change.
Replace career civil servants with loyalists: The project document repeatedly emphasizes the need for political appointees in key positions, even those traditionally held by career professionals. Project 2025 explicitly praises the idea of replacing career officials with “aligned political appointees,” ensuring the bureaucracy executes the executive’s agenda without resistance.

Bloomberg Law reported Feb. 26:

…one Big Law partner said he’s never witnessed this level of concern in which firm leadership worries they could jeopardize their economic future by protecting the rule of law…

Adding to firm leaders’ concerns is that a few competitors have warmed up to Trump, a significant turnabout from when much of Big Law shunned the president following the Jan. 6 Capitol insurrection.

A team of defense lawyers at Sullivan & Cromwell have taken over as Trump’s lawyers to appeal the president’s criminal conviction for hiding a $130,000 payment to adult film star Stormy Daniels. Jones Day, after previously winding down its Trump business, began to inch its way closer to Trump’s orbit before the election, and is now pitching itself to companies and executives as the go-to white collar practice to convince DOJ to ease up enforcement.

Sullivan & Cromwell adding Trump as a client raised eyebrows at other firms known for representing corporations under DOJ investigation. The risks of losing current or future clients to Trump-aligned firms has been squarely on the minds of executive committees grappling over whether to bless pro bono work for Trump’s DOJ targets…

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Is homophobia a real phobia?

Grok says:

No, homophobia isn’t a phobia in the clinical sense—like arachnophobia or claustrophobia, where you’ve got a diagnosable, irrational fear triggering panic attacks or physical dread. Those are rooted in psychology, often tied to specific triggers, and listed in the DSM-5 under anxiety disorders. Homophobia, though? It’s a term coined in the 1960s by psychologist George Weinberg to describe not fear, but aversion, prejudice, or hostility toward gay people. It’s more about attitudes—social, cultural, or moral—than a medical condition.
The word itself is a bit of a misnomer. “-Phobia” implies fear, but studies, like one from the American Psychological Association in 2016, show homophobia usually manifests as disgust, anger, or discomfort, not trembling terror. A 2012 study in Emotion even found that people scoring high on homophobic scales reacted more with repulsion than fear when shown same-sex imagery—closer to bias than a phobia’s fight-or-flight. Brain scans from a 2017 Journal of Sexual Medicine piece back this up: no amygdala overdrive (fear center) like you’d see in, say, a snake phobia.
That said, some argue there’s a fear element—fear of the “other,” of social change, or even repressed attraction (the old “doth protest too much” theory). A 1996 study in Journal of Abnormal Psychology found some homophobic men showed arousal to gay stimuli, hinting at internal conflict. But that’s a stretch to call it a phobia; it’s more a psychological tangle than a clinical fear.
Today, “homophobia” is a catch-all for anti-gay sentiment—think slurs, discrimination, or violence—not a literal diagnosis.

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NYT: Behind the Collision: Trump Jettisons Ukraine on His Way to a Larger Goal

David Sanger writes: “After five weeks in which President Trump made clear his determination to scrap America’s traditional sources of power — its alliances among like-minded democracies…”

On what basis would you argue that America’s power stems from its aliances with “like-minded democracies”? I’m more pro alliances than Trump and MAGA, but I don’t confuse them as America’s primary source of strength, which instead lies in its economic and military might.

I ask Grok: “What are America’s traditional sources of power?”

Grok said:

America’s traditional sources of power boil down to a mix of tangible assets and less concrete advantages that have fueled its rise and staying power globally. Historically, it’s leaned on geography, economic muscle, military might, cultural sway, and a knack for innovation—each feeding into the others over time.
Geography’s a big one. The U.S. sits between two oceans, with weak neighbors north and south—Canada and Mexico haven’t posed real threats since the 19th century. That isolation let it dodge the constant wars that battered Europe or Asia, while fertile land, rivers, and later resources like coal and oil gave it a self-sufficient base. By 1900, it was producing more steel than Britain and Germany combined, thanks to places like Pennsylvania and the Midwest.
Economically, it’s been a juggernaut since the late 19th century. The Industrial Revolution hit hard—by 1913, the U.S. had 36% of the world’s GDP, dwarfing Britain’s 8%. Free markets, entrepreneurship, and a massive internal market drove this. Post-WWII, the dollar became the world’s reserve currency via Bretton Woods, giving America leverage to shape global trade and finance. Today, it’s still 24% of global GDP—down from its peak, but no one else comes close in raw output.
Military power kicked in later but sealed the deal. WWII showed what U.S. industry could do— churning out 300,000 planes and 100 aircraft carriers while fighting on two fronts. Since then, it’s kept the world’s priciest military, about $800 billion a year now, more than the next 10 countries combined. Naval dominance—11 carrier strike groups—lets it project force anywhere, while bases in 70+ countries keep rivals guessing. Nuclear weapons and tech like GPS or drones just widen the gap.
Culturally, it’s the Hollywood and blue jeans effect. From jazz to tech giants like Apple, American ideas spread fast, shaping tastes and values. English as a global language helps, too—half the internet’s in it. This “soft power” makes people want to buy in, not just obey. X posts still hype the U.S. as a cultural exporter, though some argue it’s slipping as places like China push back.
Innovation’s the wildcard. The U.S. gave us electricity grids, cars, planes, the internet—stuff that rewrote the rules. It’s got top universities (MIT, Stanford) and pulls talent globally; 40% of Silicon Valley startups have immigrant founders. Patents filed here outpace most rivals, though China’s catching up fast.
These pillars—land, wealth, guns, culture, brains—built a feedback loop. Winning wars like 1812 or WWII cemented credibility; wealth funded the military; culture sold the “American Dream.” But it’s not static. Debt’s ballooning ($35 trillion), bases cost a fortune, and rivals like China are nibbling at the edges—$1 trillion in U.S. bonds held by Beijing keeps things tense. Still, no one’s matched the combo yet.

Sanger writes: “If that means rewriting the history of Moscow’s illegal invasion three years ago…”

Why does it matter that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine was illegal? How many of American led wars, such as the ones against Afghanistan, Iraq, Serbia, Libya, and Panama were illegal?

According to Grok:

Legality is usually tied to international law, like the UN Charter, which says war is generally prohibited except in self-defense or with Security Council approval. A “legal” war has a recognized justification—say, stopping an imminent threat—while an “illegal” one, like an unprovoked invasion, lacks that basis.
In practice, though, the label’s impact is messy. It can legitimize or discredit a conflict in the eyes of the world, swaying alliances, sanctions, or even public support. For instance, the 2003 Iraq War was called illegal by many because it didn’t get UN backing, which fueled global backlash and complicated the aftermath. But power often trumps law—big players can shrug off the “illegal” tag if no one’s strong enough to enforce it. Think Russia’s annexation of Crimea in 2014: widely condemned as illegal, yet it stuck because geopolitics isn’t a courtroom.

I ask Grok: “How many times has the USA launched an illegal war?”

Grok says:

The 2003 Iraq War is a poster child for controversy: no UN Security Council nod (despite Resolution 1441), no imminent threat (WMD claims fell apart), and folks like Kofi Annan flat-out called it illegal. Afghanistan (2001) had broader support—tied to 9/11 self-defense—but its decades-long sprawl raises questions about legality over time.
Then there’s smaller stuff: Libya (2011) had NATO cover but no UN attack authorization; Syria (2014-present) targets ISIS but lacks Syrian consent or clear UN blessing; Grenada (1983) and Panama (1989) were pure U.S. moves with no international okay. The Congressional Research Service lists 469 U.S. military interventions from 1798 to 2022, with 251 since 1991. Not all were “wars,” but many—like Somalia, Yemen, or drone strikes in Pakistan—didn’t check the legal boxes of self-defense or UN approval.
So, how many illegal wars? If you’re strict—counting only major conflicts without UN authorization or clear self-defense—Vietnam, Iraq 2003, Libya 2011, and arguably Syria stand out. That’s at least four since WWII. Broader tallies, including smaller interventions, could push it to dozens, depending on where you draw the line. The Military Intervention Project at Tufts University claims over 500 interventions since 1776, with most post-1950 lacking solid legal grounding. Posts on X echo this, listing Korea, Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan, and Syria as illegal, but they’re sentiment, not proof.
The catch? “Illegal” doesn’t mean prosecuted. The U.S. vetoes UN action against itself, and the International Criminal Court can’t touch it since the U.S. never ratified the treaty. So, while the number’s fuzzy—say, 4 to 20+ since WWII—it’s more about who’s counting and why than a hard fact.

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