Comic Strip of the Day Editorial cartooning

CSotD: Politics and Pigeon Drops

I’m not nearly as worried about mice and rats as I am of the looney in charge of Health and Human Services.

Hantaviruses are spread in rodent droppings, which is why they’re a greater threat out West where desert climates suit rodent life and their droppings don’t return to the earth quickly. And how better could Deering arouse public awareness than with mice and rats, though these particular ones seem kind of cute?

There’s a lot of commentary about our lack of cruise ship inspectors, but the ship in question wasn’t one of ours and wouldn’t have been inspected by the US, plus the Andean strain of the hantavirus likely emerged on one of its stops, not on the ship itself, since it carried a group of nature lovers to some off the beaten path places, where they poked around in odd corners.

All of which puts cartoonists in a position where they need to polish their journalism chops and dig into the details, not to explain it all in a graphic but to avoid going off in irrelevant directions.

It’s not about cruise ships, but now that a number of Americans who were on that nature trip are back in the US, it’s very much about our ability to handle a health crisis after laying off experts, motivating others to resign, and putting ourselves in the hands of a man whose beliefs on how diseases spread and how to avoid them consist of medieval quackery.

The potential good news being that some people who understand this stuff have a completely other opinion than the government’s official “Don’t Worry, Be Happy” guidance.

Bottom line is that Deering nailed it: It’s not that mice or rats are the problem, but RFK Jr and his enablers certainly are.

We need to stop blaming the ship and focus on the incompetents who may turn this into a much larger problem than it needed to be. Raise awareness, of this, of measles outbreaks, and of other clear dangers to the public of science denialism.

I will give Whamond a C rather than an A for this one, because, while it rightfully criticizes the astonishing vanity of Dear Leader and his desire to have his name and face on everything, we aren’t all condemned to carry passports with his (genuine police) mug shot, because Trump Vanity passports are kind of hard to get.

You have to go to DC and to a particular outlet and request one. Everybody else gets a regular sensible passport.

The difference between a Trump Vanity Passport and a Trump Vanity Phone is that apparently the passports are really going to happen, while the phones apparently never will. Nor will the suckers who made a down payment on the non-existent telephones be getting refunds.

Details on the scam are at Popular Information, whose report encapsulates a bizarre variation on unilateral contracts, in which deposits were solicited under one offer but are now subject to a new set of rules:

According to the new terms, the $100 deposit was not actually a pre-order but “a conditional opportunity if Trump Mobile later elects, in its sole discretion, to offer the Device for sale.”

Popular Information also reports the claim that, while Don Jr and Eric have been hawking the phones, they really have nothing to do with it and, heavens, certainly aren’t making any money from it.

You may recall that, at the start of Dear Leader’s first administration, there was a press conference in which he pledged that he would make no money during his presidency, a claim they backed with a stack of manila folders that some reporters said were filled with blank paper.

Blank paper being what you get in an envelope should you find yourself participating in a pigeon drop.

And speaking of gullible pigeons …

One major element in a con game is making the mark feel he’s smart, and it seemed that the most obvious marks have been those Trump fans who bought golden sneakers and cryptocoins that cratered in value, and those who believed QAnon conspiracy theories, or were happy that Trump isn’t accepting his $400,000 annual salary but don’t realize he’s spending far more than that golfing in Florida weekends instead of, like other presidents, playing at Andrews Air Force Base.

However, the Anti-Trump crowd should not take too much pride in having greater intelligence, since, as Reality Check reports, an embarrassingly large percentage of them believe that Dear Leader is staging bogus assassination attempts on himself.

These illogical conspiracy theories flourish in both political parties and among all age groups, seemingly confirming Hannah Arendt’s theory:

This constant lying is not aimed at making the people believe a lie, but at ensuring that no one believes anything anymore. A people that can no longer distinguish between truth and lies cannot distinguish between right and wrong. And such a people, deprived of the power to think and judge, is, without knowing and willing it, completely subjected to the rule of lies. With such a people, you can do whatever you want.

Not only can a lie travel halfway around the world while truth is putting on its shoes, but once misinformation is out there, it never seems to go away.

As an example, the new war on Iran has re-invigorated the old, readily disproven canard that the US paid Iran pallets of cash as a sort of bribe.

The fact is, that money belonged to Iran and had been frozen as part of the sanctions against it. It was returned when the multi-nation agreement limiting Iran’s nuclear program was signed.

The agreement Trump tore up.

Juxtaposition of the Day

The fact that the stock market appears more resilient than gas prices and cost-of-living seems confusing, but, as Bramhall says, it may also be irrelevant if people have to raid their nest eggs to get through the double whammy Rico describes.

Rico’s South Africans have no power over our government, but Americans do, and kitchen-table issues seem likely to impact our midterms.

Neither of these cartoonists is telling people anything they don’t already know.

Sometimes it’s not necessary to convert, only to remind.

Reminding people helped FDR defeat Hoover.

And Betty, somehow.

Mike Peterson has posted his "Comic Strip of the Day" column every day since 2010. His opinions are his own, but we welcome comments either agreeing or in opposition.

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Comments 17

  1. The question is whether Bok knows what he’s pushing is a lie. If the answer is either yes he does, or no he doesn’t, either condition is disturbing. Meanwhile there is the complaint that the Democrats can’t message effectively to gain the attention and trust of the voters. It must be hard to get a message out when, as Bok does, disproved lies get trotted out and are still effective.

    1. Amen. When it comes to journalism, genuine ignorance is every bit as bad as blatant lies.

      It’s literally your job to find out the truth, otherwise you’re either a lazy idiot or a propagandist. Neither of those are good.

    2. I don’t even get the joke he’s trying to make, if there is one—why is Grant asleep?

      1. His argument is built on an obvious lie. Analyzing it beyond that is futile.

  2. As has been noted before, facts have a liberal bias.

  3. I have long been aware of the lies and misinformation spread by the orange one and his cronies. I didn’t realize the depth of their corruption until this morning.

    Feeling under the weather since our trip abroad, I decided to take a COVID test. I had kept a note saying to go to CovidTest.gov to check if test kit experations were correct. I have NEVER seen such blatant propaganda on a Federal website before.

    If you have a strong stomach you can look at the website for yourself. I suggest you use your incognito or other privacy settings. Be sure to read to the end of the website for their “proof” including how Biden pardoned Fouci.

    And, I thought I felt sick before. *shiver *wretch

    1. When I went to check the website for update expiration dates on my Covid tests this past summer, the page was gone. But I’ve come across pages of blatant lies on other topics. It’s revolting.

  4. Hey–don’t worry about the hantavirus.

    After all, there are several very good research groups that have been studying it and looking for ways to combat it. Oh…wait a minute. The Trump administration defunded that research.

    Well then, thanks to mRNA technology, if there is a pandemic, we’ll be prepared to rapidly produce a vaccine. Oops…Our Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr. shut down all mRNA research and disbanded the office.

    Not good, but we can still rely on the research being done elsewhere by our allies under the auspices of the World Health Organization. Uh, oh…we left the WHO and took our funding with us…and we pretty much don’t have any allies left.

    I guess we should worry.

    1. The really interesting thing is that there is a paper in Science (Apr. 2, 2026) showing the use of mRNA vaccines in fighting cancers.
      “Catching a chameleon: mRNA can be engineered to overcome cancer evolution”
      by Elias J. Sayou.
      This is a real breakthrough and may be applicable to a wide selection of cancers.

  5. Meanwhile, this morning’s NPR report on the hantavirus offered some useful (one hopes) context:
    A typical person with hantavirus might spread the disease to two other people.
    A typical person with COVID might spread it to ten others.
    A typical person with measles could spread it to fifteen.
    To which we can add:
    A delusional HHS Secretary with addlepatitis can spread addle patedness to hundreds of thousands.

  6. I’m sorry, but I don’t believe that DJT will only hawk his passports in just one location in DC, not if he can find a way to monetize it to the rest of the country. I think that before the end of the year (or even before the midterms) he will open up his “Trumports” nationwide.

    And I’d like to think that I’m not one of those paranoid / conspiracy types (at least, not yet, but there are still two and a half years left…)

    1. I agree. That’s why I just renewed mine one year early

  7. How long before I can pay extra to get a passport with my choice of cartoon characters on it? I think that’s where this is headed, and my preference would be Screwy Squirrel.

  8. Rodents are good at hiding and not at all bad at swimming short enough distances. So, despite it not being highly likely that any rodents which are reservoir animals for the Andes strain of Hanta are in the ship it certainly is not impossible. Perhaps an even more important thing to recognize as an unknown is that it is unknown what other animals which are currently naive for that virus might become reservoir animals once exposed. The current plan is to do a very thorough decontamination of the ship while anchored at sea before she sees a port and that is beautifully logical. This disease has a high mortality if 30% and the CDC criteria for “close contact” of within 6 feet for at least fifteen minutes is not that hard to meet. It is estimated that average Americans have about ten individuals a day in that grouping. On cruises, BTW, that at least doubles. Like most coronaviruses, hantaviruses are not prone to mutations, and this Andes virus is all the same strain and matches specimens from three decades ago, so unlike the SARS.2 which causes covid it appears very stable and it is somewhat known already, unlike SARS.2 and its sister viruses later found in wild areas of Thailand and elsewhere.

    1. My wording was unclear. Coronaviruses and hantaviruses are different viruses. SARS.2 is unusual for a coronavirus in its level of mutation. Andes is typical for a hantavirus in still being incredibly the same over a space of three decades. Some other types of viruses mutate extremely easily.

    2. Well said. Seems the media hysteria is politically motivated rather than medically driven.

      1. The “media hysteria” is filling the informational vacuum left behind by the likes of Dr Oz, Captain Brainworm and your beloved Daddy— in a sane universe we could have had a medical expert in the administration (like, I don’t know, a surgeon general?) who could communicate the actual risks with the whole country and set the record straight.

        Mind you, in a sane universe we also wouldn’t have a sizable segment of the population with their brains broken during COVID deciding that expertise is a commie plot.

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