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CSotD: And Now, Maybe, the News

Let’s start with something to brighten your day, and how nice that Arctic Circle has, by happenstance, a cartoon to go along with what is essentially more analysis than breaking news.

You may recall that, some time ago, Disney announced a deal with Sora, the AI slop-maker, under which fans would be permitted to make short movies using trademarked Disney characters. And if you’re thinking, “Yeah, whatever happened to that?” here’s an article from 404 that will tell you, and, if it doesn’t make you laugh, it should at least bring a contented smile.

Sora fall down go BOOOM! and took a whole lot of Disney investment with it. Turns out that AI is mostly good for making phony animal videos and fake porn and it isn’t really even all that good at doing either of those. As for making actual movies, well, it wasn’t any good at all at doing that.

Poor Disney. They’d been hoping to lay off a lot of animators, but the only person they seem to have fired so far is Taylor Frankie Paul, and that also cost them a bundle.

As for the above comic strip, I don’t think anyone’s been getting bonuses at Disney these days.

Juxtaposition of the Day

There is not a lot of joy in Silicon Valley, either, now that a jury, after nine days of deliberation, came up with a series of guilty verdicts on charges that Meta (Facebook/Instagram) and Google (YouTube) were actively working to make the Internet specifically addictive and turning kids into robotic consumers.

In that case, the jury recommended a combined fine of $6 million, but that’s only for the damage their engineering inflicted on the 20-year-old in the case. There may be additional fines added in the form of punitive damages.

It’s important to recognize that large jury awards are frequently trimmed down on appeal, but it’s also important to recognize that the reasoning that succeeded in this case can be applied to any number of pending and future cases in which young people have experienced problems thanks to addictive programming.

Joy of Tech notes the similarity between the defenses of the tech industry and the defenses of the tobacco industry, and they’re not the only observers who have connected the two and suggested a similar downturn of fates.

And I know lots of kids can enjoy the online world without harm, and that your uncle smoked two packs a day and lived to be 103. And there are drunk drivers who arrive home safely, too, and people who shoot heroin and don’t become addicted, but that’s not how laws work, and it’s not how causality works.

This is a big deal.

Yahoo Finance

And so is this: That’s a chart showing a very large rise in the trading of oil futures in the minutes before Dear Leader announced a halt in his announced plans to attack Iran’s power systems. Paul Krugman has a solid explanation of it all, but I rather like Miles Taylor’s headline, “It’s almost like they want to go to prison.”

Taylor, who worked in the first Trump White House, adds the subtitle

An “epidemic” of insider trading. Stolen classified documents. Sham investigations. Trump and his henchmen are tempting fate — and building a paper trail.

He builds a long-term case along those lines, and does it with the same fury he exhibited in 2018 when he wrote the famous “Anonymous” op-ed piece from inside the administration. It seems this isn’t the only apparent insider trade linked to Dear Leader, and Taylor lays it out.

However, the Trumps and their friends may feel they’re not headed for prison at all. As Robert Reich reports, (h/t Suke)

Margaret Ryan, the top enforcement official at the Securities and Exchange Commission — the agency tasked with investigating insider trading and other illegal activities in financial markets — abruptly resigned last week, after just six months on the job.

Reportedly, Ryan wanted to be more aggressive in pursuing charges of fraud and other misconduct, including against Trump’s inner circle. But the SEC’s chairman, Paul Atkins, and other Republican appointees to the commission wouldn’t let her.

Reich has more charts documenting the suspicious sales, and more reasoning about why you ought to be upset. And, really, when Krugman and Reich and Taylor are all shouting “Fraud!” and “Crime!” it seems worth looking into.

Taylor sounds like Lenny Briscoe when he suggests that whoever steps forward to lay it out like John Dean will fare a lot better than the ones who wait to be caught.

Which is true, but Dean testified in front of the Senate Watergate Committee, which consisted of four Democrats and three Republicans. 48 years later, when a select committee was formed to investigate an attempted, violent coup, only two Republicans agreed to sit on it, and they’re both out of politics today as a result.

Nice try, but the only ones despairing are the ones without connections.

Juxtaposition of the Day #2

Thank god for cartoonists who do their homework and act as journalists.

But while our previous topics today have been good news about the system working as it should, this is a story of cover-up. Much as Goris makes it all seem obvious, Zyglis points out how Trump and his cronies are being protected by the same loyalty that locks in votes for whatever the Party tell them matters, and locked out participation in the Jan 6 inquiries.

I don’t think we can count on the Securities and Exchange Committee doing its job and I doubt we’ll see the Republican Party step forward and fulfill their civic duty.

I hope, however, that we can count on people showing up for Saturday’s No King rallies, and then again for the midterm elections in November. The people, united, can never be defeated.

To keep morale high and anger properly stoked, we should remind the cartoonists that all the columns and news reports and SubStacks won’t matter, and that they should, rather, remember the words of Boss Tweed:

I don’t care a straw for your newspaper articles; my constituents don’t know
how to read, but they can’t help seeing them damned pictures.

Keep the faith.

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Comments 13

  1. Off topic…probably because the mechinations of the uber-rich seem impossible to stop…it’s entirely possible that current efforts at voter suppression will have a disproportionate effect on Maga and Maga-adjacent voters because they’ll never hear anything about it.

  2. Really liked the video.Always enjoy your posts because I find hope in them.

  3. “Trump and his henchmen”; I’ve been pondering this word, which basically means “crooked or nefarious subordinate”. It is certainly a helpful adjectival compound word for most of the enablers, shills, and liars in Trump’s orbit, but is it strong enough? Not to be unnecessarily coarse, but couldn’t they be called “henchanuses” or “henchrecta”? Both seem less coarse than “henchassholes”, but most of them are such horrible people that it seems like a good idea to highlight their despicable personalities as well as their repulsive work.
    Trying to think up a good sign for No Kings, obviously.

    1. Note the way we never applied “regime” to an American administration until Trump and his merry crew began referring to the Biden Crime Family that way. In case anyone doubted that they were seeking to divide the country.

  4. I’ve been assuming that Trump has promised his “hench-holes” pardons at the end of his term, making prosecutions moot.

    – Greg –

  5. I’ll go with the majority. I just thought a little Latin, correct or incorrect in form was more humorous. But I have nothing against hench’-holes at all.

  6. Death comes for us all, but it is frustrating knowing that Trump will surely go to his grave without ever being held accountable for his many, many wrongdoings.

    1. Kinda makes you hope that Pearly Gates thing is real, doesn’t it?

  7. Yep, even HE doesn’t think he’s getting in. A rare admission of awareness that showcases his underlying mendacity about religious morality.

  8. Trump gets away with so much without any of us conservatives fighting back. His gold ballroom, his gilded decor in the White House, his name on the Kennedy Center, his “arch,” his name now going to be on US currency, his wars without consulting Congress, his failure to sign an executive order so TSA workers could be paid, his appointment of a cretin named Robert Kennedy, Jr. – when does this stop? Why are we Republicans cow-towing to this joke of a human being? He lies as soon as his mouth is open. And this is OK? Honest to God, I absolutely do not understand this deification of such a hypocritical lowlife.

    1. I’m going to buy a number of permanent markers soon and make sure I always have one in my pocket. And I’m going to express my first amendment right to protest anytime I get any currency with Trump’s signature on it. I’m sure others will also. It will be interesting to see how many marked bills will be show up in circulation…

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