Tuesday, September 30, 2025

What Do We Still Not Know About January 6?

Legacy media has immediately pooh-poohed the release of FBI documents placing 274 FBI agents in the crowd at the January 6, 2021 Capitol incursion. From Newsday:

TRUMP: “As it now turns out, FBI Agents were at, and in, the January 6th Protest, probably acting as Agitators and Insurrectionists, but certainly not as ‘Law Enforcement Officials.’”

THE FACTS: This is false. The alleged FBI documents to which Trump is referring state on page 46 that 274 agents from the FBI's Washington Field Office “responded to” to the U.S. Capitol and other nearby locations on Jan. 6. They do not contain any credible evidence to suggest that federal agents were acting as agitators or insurrectionists.

“This number includes agents that responded to the Capitol grounds as well as inside the Capitol, the pipe bombs, and the red truck that was believed to contain explosive devices as well as CDC/ADCs,” the documents read.

The mention of “pipe bombs” refers to the devices planted outside offices of the Democratic and Republican national committees in Washington on the eve of the attack, while “the red truck” refers to a pickup truck filled with weapons and Molotov cocktail components that was parked near the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6.

But what is indisputably new is the information that something like 274 employees of the FBI's Washington Field Office were dispatched to the US Capitol that day, and for whatever reason, the FBI had not previously released this information. How it might be interpreted depends in part on what the meaning of "agents" is. CNN also disputes Trump's version:

As CNN previously reported, no undercover FBI agents were at the Capitol during the January 6 riot, according to a Justice Department watchdog. However, the DOJ inspector general said that 26 paid FBI informants were in Washington, DC, that day.

Well, OK, but the information we've just received is that 274 FBI employees were also purposely sent there. So far, we don't know what their job classifications were, or what they were supposed to be doing, and Trump is asking good questions:

“I want to know who each and every one of these so-called ‘Agents’ are, and what they were up to on that now ‘Historic’ Day. Many Great American Patriots were made to pay a very big price only for the love of their Country. I owe this investigation of ‘Dirty Cops and Crooked Politicians’ to them!” Trump continued.

In fact, the information that was released over the weekend simply expands the set of unknowns connected with January 6. The legacy media interpretation of the 274 "agents" (if that's what they were, we aren't really sure) is that they were sent in at the last minute for crowd control, because they were in offices just down the street, or something like that. But let's look at the situation from the testimony of Steven Sund, Capitol Police Chief on January 6, to the US Senate:

We [the Capitol Police] were monitoring the actions and demeanor of the crowd, which at the time did not raise any concerns, when we received word at 12:52 p.m. that a pipe bomb had been located at the Republican National Committee Headquarters, immediately adjacent to Capitol Grounds. . . . We also dispatched resources to look for other explosive devices, suspects, and vehicles. At almost the exactly same time, we observed a large group of individuals approaching the West Front of the Capitol. When the group arrived at the perimeter, they did not act like any group of protestors I had ever seen. Unlike other heated protests, these protesters did not simply congregate to angrily voice their grievances. As soon as this group arrived at our perimeter, they immediately began to fight violently with the officers and to tear apart the steel crowd control barriers, using them to assault the officers. . . . This mob was like nothing I have seen in my law enforcement career. The group consisted of thousands of well-coordinated, well-equipped violent criminals. They had weapons, chemical munitions, protective equipment, explosives, and climbing gear. A number of them were wearing radio ear pieces indicating a high level of coordination.

This is a little puzzling. "Violent criminals" would normally be street thugs, who aren't well-coordinated. These were apparently both well-trained and well-equipped, and frankly, this doesn't sound like Mr and Mrs MAGA. Earpieces? Climbing gear? Chemical munitions? Sund sent a letter to Speaker Pelosi and other parties on February 6, after the riot:

"Having previously handled two major post-election demonstrations successfully utilizing an action plan that was based on intelligence assessments that had proven to be credible, reliable, and accurate, we reasonably assumed the intelligence assessment for Jan. 6, 2021, was also correct."

On Jan. 4, the Capitol Police Intelligence and Inter-Agency Coordination Division "assessed "the level of probability of acts of civil disobedience/arrests occurring based on current intelligence information," as "Remote" to "Improbable" for all of the groups expected to demonstrate on Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2021," according to Sund.

But the Justice Department's pursuit of charges against the rioters appears to be at variance with Sund's description of "thousands of well-coordinated, well-equipped violent criminals" who were somehow able to keep their detailed plans from intelligence assessment teams. For instance,

By the end of 2021, 725 people had been charged with federal crimes. That number rose to 1,000 by the second anniversary of the attack, to 1,200 by the third anniversary (three-quarters of whom had by then been found guilty) and to 1,500 before the fourth anniversary.

. . . Early on, the majority of charges filed against the rioters were for disorderly conduct and unlawful entry. Ultimately, about one-third of the defendants were charged with assault on or interference with law enforcement officers. Other charges included trespassing; disrupting Congress; theft or other property crimes; weapons offenses; making threats; and conspiracy, including seditious conspiracy.

All these might apply to Jacob Chansly, the "QAnon Shaman", not disciplined, well-organized brown shirts wearing earpieces:

Chansley, who pleaded guilty to a felony charge of obstructing an official proceeding, was among the first rioters to enter the building. He has acknowledged using a bullhorn to rile up the mob, offering thanks in a prayer while in the Senate for having the chance to get rid of traitors and scratching out a threatening note to Vice President Mike Pence saying, “It’s Only A Matter of Time. Justice Is Coming!”

Though he isn’t accused of violence, prosecutors say Chansley, of Arizona, was the “public face of the Capitol riot” who went into the attack with a weapon, ignored repeated police orders to leave the building and gloated about his actions in the days immediately after the attack.

The "weapon" was a stage spear, and Chansly was pretty clearly a harmless nut. The scenes from inside the Capitol were in fact farcical. But we have Sund's testimony in several forums that there were well-coordinated, well-equipped forces involved -- so who were they? Where were they, precisely? Frankly, earpieces are the sort of thing federal agents wear, not wackos in costumes, or indeed just Mr and Mrs MAGA.

Sund also brings up the pipe bombs and a truck loaded with explosives. We've heard almost nothing about these. FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino has announced that the bureau is revisiting the case.

On the night of Jan. 5, 2021, someone carrying a backpack and wearing a grey-hooded sweatshirt, mask, gloves, glasses, and a pair of Nike Air Max Speed Turf sneakers dropped two pipe bombs outside Republican and Democratic headquarters in the nation’s capital.

While the explosives did not detonate, the FBI assessed that they were “viable.”

Then-Vice President-elect Kamala Harris visited the Democratic National Committee headquarters the next day, shortly before the Capitol riot began, and was evacuated after the pipe bombs were identified by a passerby.

. . . While the explosives did not detonate, the FBI assessed that they were “viable.”

. . . In a House GOP report released in early 2025, lawmakers claimed initial inquiries “yielded a promising array of data and revealed numerous persons of interest” — but “little meaningful progress” has been made since.

Sund suggests that the timing of the pipe bomb discoveries may have been intended to distract the Capitol Police from the incursion on the Capitol grounds, and this would suggest a fairly intricate conspiracy -- so it's intriguing that while there were 1500 people prosecuted for things like trespassing or interfering with law enforcement, there have been no prosecutions, as far as we can tell, of trained, well-equipped, well-financed professionals with climbing gear that Sund testified were on the Capitol grounds.

In other words, we still know almost nothing about January 6.

Monday, September 29, 2025

How Is This Not A Revolution At The FBI?

Just in the past few days, we've had this development:

The FBI has fired 15 agents associated with a 2020 incident in which agents were photographed kneeling with demonstrators at the height of protests over the police killing of George Floyd, according to the agents association.

The latest round of dismissals at the bureau came at the end of a monthslong review targeting 15 agents who were associated with the kneeling incident, according to one person briefed on the matter. Some agents who were present at the incident but didn’t kneel were not fired, the source said.

Followed by this one, which strikes me as even bigger:

The FBI secretly deployed more than 250 plainclothes agents to the U.S. Capitol during the Jan. 6, 2021 riot, an operation so disorganized it unleashed searing frustrations among many of the FBI's rank-and-file that the bureau had lost its core competencies to "wokeness" and allowed its employees to become “pawns in a political war,” according to an after-action report kept from the public for more than four years.

Scores of FBI agents and personnel – many from the bureau’s premier Washington field office (WFO) – sent anonymous complaints to the after-action team detailing how agents were sent into an unsafe scenario without proper safety equipment or the ability to identify themselves readily as armed officers to other police agencies, the report obtained by Just the News shows.

But it doesn't end there:

Three senior FBI officials who were abruptly fired last month by Kash Patel, the FBI director, are claiming in a new lawsuit against the Trump administration that they were illegally terminated at the direction of the White House for purely political reasons.

. . . The three fired agents who brought the case were decorated veterans of the agency who had served in senior roles. One of them, [Brian] Driscoll, had briefly been acting FBI director while Patel was going through the Senate confirmation process. Steven Jensen served as assistant director in charge of the Washington, D.C., field office. Spencer Evans had once led the Las Vegas field office, but by the time he was fired he had been removed from that position and was being relocated to the Huntsville, Alabama, office.

But Sundance's take at Conservative Treehouse is hard to square with reports like those above:

FBI Director Kash Patel once again rises to defend the integrity of the institution he leads.

While Tweeting a link to a Fox News story quoting him, the FBI director says, “274 FBI agents were thrown into crowd control on Jan 6 against FBI standards. That failure was on corrupt leadership. Thanks to agents stepping up, the truth is coming out. Transparency. Justice. Accountability.

Which begs the questions: 274 FBI plainclothes agents were going to do what, exactly?… How did the FBI know to have 274 agents “on hand” prepared to intervene? And where exactly is “on hand” located?

He links to a Fox News story that he seems to think proves his case:

The FBI responded on Saturday to a report that 274 plainclothes agents were at the U.S. Capitol riot on Jan. 6, 2021, clarifying the role of bureau personnel while still blasting former Director Christopher Wray.

While the agents were on hand, they were sent in after the riot had begun to try to control the unruly crowd, officials told Fox News Digital. That is not the proper role of FBI agents, and Wray was not forthcoming about what happened when he testified numerous times on Capitol Hill, Director Kash Patel said.

“Agents were sent into a crowd control mission after the riot was declared by Metro Police – something that goes against FBI standards,” Patel told Fox News Digital. “This was the failure of a corrupt leadership that lied to Congress and to the American people about what really happened.”

He added, “Thanks to agents coming forward, we are now uncovering the truth. We are fully committed to transparency, and justice and accountability continues with this FBI.”

As best I can read this, the FBI has released files on the January 6, 2021 episode that it had suppressed for four years. Director Patel attributed this to "corrupt leadership" (viz, Christopher Wray), and he announced, "we are now uncovering the truth". This may be defending "the integrity of the institution he leads", but that's only if you see it in the light of former agents like the late James Kallstrom, who led the TWA 800 investigation but said in later years that he "did not recognize the agency I gave 28 years of my life to".

If anything, it seems to me that Patel is trying to restore the integrity of an FBI that Kallstrom would recognize, not the FBI of Comey and Wray, or for that matter, Mueller. The second link above continues,

The most persistent complaint [from agents themselves] was that the bureau during the James Comey and Chris Wray era had become infected with political biases and liberal ideology that treated the protesters from the summer 2020 Black Lives Matter riots far differently than those arrested in the aftermath of the Jan. 6 episode.

“The FBI should make clear to its personnel and the public that, despite its obvious political bias, it ultimately still takes its mission and priorities seriously,” one employee wrote in a stinging review. “It should equally and aggressively investigate criminal activity regardless of the offenders' perceived race, political affiliations, or motivations; and it should equally and aggressively protect all Americans regardless of perceived race, political affiliations, or motivations.”

Just yesterday, other news confirmed that Patel is continuing a serious agenda of transparency:

The unsolved case of two pipe bombs planted at the major political parties' headquarters in Washington D.C. before the Jan. 6, 2021 Capitol riot is facing new mystery after FBI Director Kash Patel transmitted to Congress the lab analysis and interviews with a key witness who is challenging the official timeline of events.

. . . The mystifying evidence now has congressional investigators exploring stunning new theories, including whether the bombs were made to look real but not to explode to create a diversion during the Jan. 6 protest or whether someone came back and set the timers later on one or both of the devices.

"The single greatest action that facilitated the protester's ease of entry into the Capitol on January 6 was the placing of the pipe bombs, and the diversionary effect that had on security resources which would have otherwise been at the Capitol," said Rep. Barry Loudermilk, R-Ga., the chairman of the House Judiciary subcommittee that is investigating the law enforcement response to Jan. 6.

"After that day, the FBI was zealous in pursuing those trespassing at the Capitol, but quite lacking in their pursuit of whomever placed the pipe bombs," he added. "One focus of this Committee will be highlighting the bizarre facts surrounding the pipe bomb case, hoping to bring much needed clarity on this subject to the American people.”

The allegation that Sundance and others at the conspracy-theory right seem to make is that Patel, Bongino, and Bondi are creating a smokescreen of frenzied but feckless activity that somehow just serves as a distraction from the real conspiracies that are still taking place. So, what are they covering up? January 6? The FBI has just confirmed that 250-plus agents were in the crowd, something it had previously denied, a central issue of the MAGA theory of recent history, and Trump is now demanding that this be fully explained.

The pipe bombs planted at the DNC-RNC before the riot? Ditto, Patel has just released genuine new information. This was another major MAGA question. Well, then, is Patel shielding high-level people who were complicit in all this skulduggery? Apparently not, he's actually firing them left and right.

Wait just one moment, though. What's the one name we aren't hearing in all this phony activity? That's right! Jeffrey Epstein! They're covering up for Trump, Epstein, Dershowitz -- probably Netanyahu! It's all gonna fall out about Epstein! Just you wait!

Saturday, September 27, 2025

Has Trump Been A Rational Actor All Along?

Yesterday I floated the idea that we've been fed a legacy media consensus that Trump is narcissistic, impulsive, vindictive, and erratic, when in fact evidence shows he's a rational actor. This certainly got started as early as his June 16, 2015 escalator ride at Trump Tower during his campaign announcement, which was almost universally treated as a vanity project that would soon fade from view. But I think it's important to start assessing Trump's statements, his postures, and his actions through a filter that gives him credit for being a rational actor.

James Comey is a key example. Since before Trump's 2017 inauguration, Comey has sought to control the narrative over his case by feeding the very perception that Trump is narcissistic, impulsive, vindictive, and erratic. In fact, I'd say Comey has been one of the chief exponents of this perception in public life -- but this is hardly a disinterested position; Comey has been flirting with indictments over this whole period, and the idea that Trump could be acting vindictively has largely protected him, at least up to now.

Comey lasted less than four months under Trump before he was fired on May 9, 2017. Comey has largely controlled the legacy media narrative ever since. For instance, pretty much everything we know about the January 6, 2017 meeting in which Comey along with James Clapper, John Brennan, and Mike Rogers met with Trump, comes from either Comey himself or his special assistant Josh Campbell (the photo above shows the two together). Campbell in a tell-all book wrote,

The four intelligence chiefs decided Comey should brief the incoming president on the [Steele dossier] one-on-one, both because the FBI had originally received the information and because Comey was the only one in the group who was guaranteed to remain on the job when the new administration came in. (Unlike the heads of the other intelligence agencies, the director of the FBI serves a statutorily mandated ten-year term, and Comey was in year three.) Conscious of the personal embarrassment this sensitive brief might cause the president-elect, the FBI director opted to discuss it with Trump separately at the end of the larger briefing on Russian interference.

. . . Aware of the unprecedented nature of an FBI director confronting a newly elected president with explosive material about his personal life, coupled with the fact that the president’s campaign was secretly under investigation for its possible ties to Russia, Comey wanted to make certain that he fully documented the interaction in writing. He would later tell me he knew it was possible the president-elect might one day lie about the exchange if it ever came to light.

. . . When Comey got to the tawdry details contained in the dossier, Trump became defensive, cutting him off and denying the allegations. “Do I look like the kind of guy who needs prostitutes?” Trump asked. He then went on to recount, unprompted, a number of allegations against him by various women, which he claimed were all false. Comey indicated that the intelligence community was aware that the claims in the dossier were unsubstantiated, but that he nevertheless wanted Trump to be aware the information was circulating through government and media circles. Trump thanked Comey for the information, signaling the end of the short one-on-one meeting.

Let's consider this: in a one-on-one encounter with Trump, their first ever, Comey shows his hand, which is the Steele pee allegtions. Trump must certainly have been aware that these were false; at minimum, those closest to Trump say he's a germophobe, and such antics would be wildly improbable. But Trump's alleged reply, “Do I look like the kind of guy who needs prostitutes?” doesn't sit right with me, either.

Comey has just accused Trump of something both improbable and, by his own admission, unsubstantiated, thereby establishing in Trump's mind that he's completely unreliable and unserious. Trump wouldn't even want to be around someone like that. I believe the part about Trump cutting Comey off and thanking him, but not much else.

On June 8, 2017, after Trump fired him, Comey testified to the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence:

I felt compelled to document my first conversation with the President-Elect in a memo. To ensure accuracy, I began to type it on a laptop in an FBI vehicle outside Trump Tower the moment I walked out of the meeting. Creating written records immediately after one-on-one conversations with Mr. Trump was my practice from that point forward. This had not been my practice in the past.

I suspect that in that first Trump Tower meeting, Comey realized he'd gotten off on the wrong foot with Trump, and that was putting it mildly. Thus he felt the need immediately to create self-serving versions of each subsequent encounter, because he was a short-timer, and he knew it. He went on in the testimony,

The President and I had dinner on Friday, January 27 at 6:30 pm in the Green Room at the White House.

. . ,. The President began by asking me whether I wanted to stay on as FBI Director, which I found strange because he had already told me twice in earlier conversations that he hoped I would stay, and I had assured him that I intended to. He said that lots of people wanted my job and, given the abuse I had taken during the previous year, he would understand if I wanted to walk away.

My instincts told me that the one-on-one setting, and the pretense that this was our first discussion about my position, meant the dinner was, at least in part, an effort to have me ask for my job and create some sort of patronage relationship. That concerned me greatly, given the FBI’s traditionally independent status in the executive branch.

I replied that I loved my work and intended to stay and serve out my ten-year term as Director. And then, because the set-up made me uneasy, I added that I was not “reliable” in the way politicians use that word, but he could always count on me to tell him the truth. I added that I was not on anybody’s side politically and could not be counted on in the traditional political sense, a stance I said was in his best interest as the President.

My reading of this account of the conversation is that, three weeks after Comey had given Trump a highly unfavorable impression at Trump Tower, Trump was giving Comey a chance to reset things. Not "an effort to have me ask for my job", but under the circumstances a very generous opportunity for Comey to admit that he'd blundered by bringing up the pee dossier and, in effect, set things right. Instead, Comey doubled down and made it plain that he would continue to work against Trump, and he seems to have put it in almost as many words. Next:

On February 14, I went to the Oval Office for a scheduled counterterrorism briefing of the President.

. . . The President signaled the end of the briefing by thanking the group and telling them all that he wanted to speak to me alone.

When the door by the grandfather clock closed, and we were alone, the President began by saying, “I want to talk about Mike Flynn.” Flynn had resigned the previous day. The President began by saying Flynn hadn’t done anything wrong in speaking with the Russians, but he had to let him go because he had misled the Vice President.

. . . The President then made a long series of comments about the problem with leaks of classified information – a concern I shared and still share.

. . . The President returned briefly to the problem of leaks. I then got up and left out the door by the grandfather clock, making my way through the large group of people waiting there, including Mr. Priebus and the Vice President.

I immediately prepared an unclassified memo of the conversation about Flynn and discussed the matter with FBI senior leadership.

It's very hard not to read this as Comey being remarkably obtuse. Trump announces that he wants to talk about Mike Flynn, who had been accused of lying to the FBI in circumstances Trump must already have recognized were questionable, but what he really wanted to talk about was leaks. Let's fast forward to late September 2025:

The two-page indictment is short on detail, but it says Mr Comey has been charged with one count of making false statements and another of obstruction of justice.

. . . The first count relates to Mr Comey telling the congressional committee he had not authorised someone else at the FBI to be an anonymous source in news reports about an FBI investigation into what the indictment describes as "PERSON 1", believed to be Clinton.

I take Trump's subtext in this meeting to mean that he's fully aware that Comey had been leaking, and that he made a regular practice of it. This was an implicit warning of grounds for termination. I would take this from any supervisor of mine that this was precisely that, and whatever I was doing in that direction, I should immediately stop. In fact, again, in a normal working context, I would take this as remarkably generous, since it effectively means that the boss already has grounds to show you the door but is giving you one more chance.

Comey's attitude seems to have been that he's in year three of his ten-year term, and he can't be fired. On May 9, Trump disabused Comey of any such assumption. In fact, the actual circumstances of Comey's firing struck me as consistent with a corporate firing for misconduct: Trump did it while Comey was out of the office in Los Angeles, and his electronic access and physical access to his office were terminated immediately at the same time. He would have had no way to spirit any files out before he was barred.

This isn't the usual case of a senior official being eased out "to spend more time with my family". In fact, given termination circumstances like those, I would have expected indictment for something like fraud or embezzlement to happen quickly in an ordinary business environmnent.

The more I look at Comey's accounts of his brief relationship with Trump, the more I get the impression that Trump was working with a great deal of insight into human nature, and insight into Comey in particular; and I have a sense that he almost immediately recognized that Comey wasn't just unreliable, he was completely untrustworthy and should never have been at the FBI. Under those circumstances, I think we're justified in recognizing that Trump was a rationial actor from the start of his first administration.

Friday, September 26, 2025

Trump Decides to Own the Shutdown

This was yesterday's headline by Daviud Dayen at the far-left American Prospect, and it promoted the legacy stereotype of Trump as narcissistic, impulsive, vindictive, and erratic:

In the past 24 hours, we’ve been treated to a combination of first-term and second-term Trump. On Monday, the president agreed to a meeting with House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY) and Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) to negotiate a government funding compromise. . .

But by Tuesday morning, Trump realized that his dealmaker persona doesn’t exist anymore, replaced with pure hatred and vengeance. He canceled the meeting in a rambling denunciation on Truth Social, dismissing the Democrats’ “unserious and ridiculous” demands while simply lying about those demands in unserious and ridiculous ways.

Hmm, how could someone like that be elected dogcatcher, much less win two presidential elections? The answer is that the conventional wisdom seriously underestimates the guy. Even MSNBC has a smarter take:

The Chinese military strategist Sun Tzu famously wrote, “He will win who knows when to fight and when not to fight.”

Congressional Democrats would be wise to keep this maxim in mind. Under pressure from their loudest supporters to stand up to President Donald Trump, they are laying the groundwork to shut down the government at the end of this month. But while there are reasonable arguments in support of a shutdown, it’s a fight that Democrats would most likely lose, and they should do everything to avoid it.

This piece, from earlier in the week, simply takes the posiition that government shutdowns heretofore have been a Republican strategy, but it's never worked for them, and there's no reason to expect it will work any better for Democrats this time. But now it looks like circumstances have given Trump a new twist.

Dayen in the first link above accuses Trump of lying about the Democrat demands, but it simply isn't clear what they wanted. He says below that he reviewed the details, and I see no reason to doubt him: Instead, it looks like Jeffries and Schumer, both from New York and thus acutely aware of the Mamdani phenomenon, whereby tired machine Democrats are losing primaries to fresh parlor leftist faces, are being forced into hard left positions to look like they're standing up to Trump -- except this is exactly what Trunp wants them to do:

The White House has instructed U.S. federal agencies to brace for mass firings as a government shutdown looms next week. This directive originated from a memo by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB).

Unlike previous shutdowns, the Trump administration plans to go beyond temporary furloughs. Agencies have been told to target programs that are not legally mandated to continue, as outlined in the memo sent to media on Wednesday.

The memo emphasized that programs lacking mandatory appropriations will face significant impacts. Agencies must submit their staff reduction plans and notify employees accordingly.

Even the NeverTrump Wall Street Journal sees what's happening:

Democrats will give the Trump team exactly what it’s been wanting—a shutdown—in return for Democrats’ continuing to demand something they will never get. What a deal. Even Faust got some worldly pleasure in exchange for a soul. This is trading hellfire for brimstone.

. . . The true scope of this losing proposition came clear with a memo Mr. Vought, director of the Office of Management and Budget, issued Wednesday night, explaining how a shutdown will roll. Shutdowns usually mean furloughed federal employees, who suffer temporary inconvenience before resuming their jobs. Not this time.

The Vought memo orders agencies to identify all programs that depend on discretionary funding (which lapses next week) and don’t align with the president’s priorities. Employees who administer those disfavored programs or projects won’t be furloughed. They will be fired.

According to The Hill,

Cracks are starting to form in the Senate Democratic caucus over whether to hold the line against a seven-week clean government funding stopgap passed by the House, according to Democratic sources who say a threat by President Trump to lay off thousands of federal workers is changing the Democratic political calculus on a shutdown.

. . . Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.), who plans to retire from the Senate at the end of 2026, has been “putting out feelers” to Republican senators about reaching some sort of deal or mutual understanding to avoid a government shutdown next week, according to a source familiar with her conversations with Senate colleagues.

Shaheen told Semafor in an interview Wednesday that she sees “a number of ways” to avoid a government shutdown “that should satisfy both sides” and opened the door to voting for the House-passed stopgap next week when Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) brings it back to the Senate floor.

I keep thinking back to the business-school analysis of Trump's negotiating style that I last referred to in March:

An analysis of Trump’s negotiation behavior reveals how he embodies each of these four roles. His first preference is to negotiate with those who have few or no options, giving him both immediate maximum leverage (controller) as well as the opportunity to draw a sharp contrast between the other party’s eagerness to negotiate and his magnanimity in doing so given his many purportedly superior options (performer). If his counterparts do have options, he uses threats to denigrate the value of these alternatives, thus presenting them with a structured choice: either accept his offer (which, as performer, he promotes with his typical bravado), or face his unpredictable ire (disrupter). Accepting Trump’s offer often puts the other parties in his debt, and he can be expected to threaten retribution if they do not reciprocate (disrupter).

It's time for legacy media to scrap the stereotype of Trump as narcissistic, boorish, impulsive, and vindictive.

Thursday, September 25, 2025

"I Don't Think Biden Had A Clue About Anything."

Stories have kept trickling out over tbhe past week, including:

Usually, the years after a presidency are when the money pours in, but for Biden the financial future looks rather bleak.

. . . According to public records, he left office with a mortgage on his main home in Wilmington, Delaware of somewhere between $250,000 and $500,000, at an interest rate of 3.375 percent.

. . . Meanwhile, he has also been juggling a $250,000 home equity loan taken out on his holiday home in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware in 2022, while he was in the White House.

. . . At age 82, Biden is too old for a new career and he has instead been working on a book, having signed a $10million deal with publisher Hachette.

However, that is dwarfed by the $60million Barack and Michelle Obama received for theirs.

The book will be entirely ghostwritten.

On top of his own obligations, he still seems burdened vy his family's parasitic lifestyle:

He confessed to people around him that he intends to pay off a personal debt of about $800,000, which includes loans for a house in Rehoboth Beach worth $2.7 million, as well as the costs of his son Hunter's legal problems. Biden also expressed a desire to help his daughter Ashley, who has filed for divorce, and to provide financial support to his grandchildren.

Back in June,

Hunter Biden owes the law firm that represented him in federal investigations, including his Delaware gun case, “substantially in excess of $50,000,” according to a lawsuit filed against the former first son on Monday.

“This is breach of contract action against Mr. Biden for unpaid legal fees,” reads the complaint against Hunter filed in the Superior Court of the District of Columbia by Winston & Strawn LLP.

. . . Abbe Lowell, Hunter’s attorney who has since left Winston & Strawn, notes that his “current hourly rate is $1,510” and that billing rates for other attorneys and legal assistants at the firm, who may work on his cases, range from $230 to $1,945 an hour.

The state of Biden's finances is just another indication of his mental decline while in office. In fact, there's nothing new about any of this, nor that there was a coordinated effort to cover things up. Trump's estimate that Biden didn't have "a clue about anything" is the only possible conclusion.

Wednesday, September 24, 2025

Getting College Admissions Wrong Yet Again

In a Washington Monthly essay, The College Board Capitulates to Trump, Richard D. Kahlenberg ignores what to my mind are the two most convincing discussions of selective college admissions programs since their start a century ago, Alan Dershowitz's 1991 Chutzpah and Jerome Karabel's 2005 The Chosen. Both argue that as Jews became more numerous, prosperous, and influential in the US after the late 19th century, this created a problem for the Ivy League, which had been a bastion of upper-crust WASP society since before the Revolution.

More and more Jews had the money and cultivation to send their sons to Harvard, Yale, and Princeton, with the result that their student bodies were becoming noticeably Jewish. Selective admissions programs simply began as way to limit this trend. An obvious way to do this would have been to require photos with applications and reject applicants with aquiline features, or simply to cull those with identifiably Jewish surnames, but that would be too obvious, and it might not even be fully effective.

Instead, the Ivies and other elite schools developed techniques that have persisted to this day. One of the most pervasive has been to promote "geographic diversity", to advantage applicants from the Rocky Mountain and Plains states over applicants from Northeastern cities and suburbs, where many more would likely be Jewish. At the same time, applicants from legacy families, the traditional WASP upper crust, as well as the offspring of major donors, politicians, and celebrities, were also placed in separate, advantaged categories.

Jerome Karabel went so far as to examine the specific admissions office method that puts these policies into practice: each application, let's say from a hopeful in Fargo, ND as an example, is placed bn a separate "basket", where he or she competes only with other applicants from the Rocky Mountain and Plains states. On the other hand, an applicant from Great Neck, NY, with the largest Jewish population on Long Island, will go into a "basket" of other applicants from prosperous Northeastern suburbs, many of whom can be assumed to be Jewish. Applicants from Boise, Cheyenne, or Rapid City will never compete with applicants from White Plains; they will all go up a different silo.

For that matter, applicants who happen to come from the Hamptons, Bedminster, or Potomac will also go into a different silo, but this will less likely be based exclusively on location than their family surname and how much the family has donated to the institution. But all the same, they will never compete with applicants from either Great Neck or Rapid City, and their chances of admission are considerably higher no matter what.

I've looked at the college admissions rat race here from time to time, and what I've consistently found has been that the only competitive and merit-based component of the process has been the particular silo of applicants from the Northeastern cities and suburbs, with numerous other silos deliberately designed to supply an applicant pool with limited numbers of Jews. As I said this past May,

If you go looking for the percentages of each such set-aside in typical Ivy entering classes, you'll get something like 80% who've come in via set-asides. This has me questioning how Princeton comes up with an "overall" admissions rate of 4.62% if as many as 80% of its students come in via set-asides where the rate is much higher.

But let's get to Mr Kahlenberg's argument:

A Trump Department of Justice memorandum, for instance, has declared that “criteria like socioeconomic status, first-generation status, or geographic diversity must not be used” if a university’s goal is to further racial integration on campus.

Given the president’s appalling history on matters of race, this development, while troubling, is not particularly surprising. What is mystifying is that a pillar of the higher education establishment recently went along with Trump. Earlier this month, the College Board, which administers the SAT, announced it would stop making a tool called Landscape available to colleges, which is designed to help identify high-achieving low-income students of all races.

. . . Landscape, as the College Board noted, “was intentionally developed without the use or consideration of data on race or ethnicity.” Instead, it allowed colleges to consider a student’s achievement in light of the socioeconomic makeup of his or her neighborhood and high school. Neighborhood factors included median family income, typical educational attainment, the share of families headed by a single parent, and crime rates. High school factors included the share of students eligible for subsidized lunch, the proportion taking AP exams, and the average SAT score. The idea was that if a student does pretty well academically despite these educational challenges, they have something special to offer.

Well, early in my tech career, I worked for the Los Angeles City statistical office. The "neigborhood factors" Mr Kahlenberg cites, including "typical educational attainment, the share of families headed by a single parent, and crime rates", simply correlate closely with African-American parts of town. All this is doing is identifying African-Americans by a different set of criteria, and it looks like both the Trump administration and the College Board have gotten wise to this particular con -- in effect, it puts African-Americans in a separate set-aside, has them compete with each other, and rewards this particular set of winners irrespective of how they measure up against anyone else. Mr Kahlenberg tries to answer this problem:

As Raj Chetty and his colleagues have found, living in a neighborhood with a large share of single-parent households predicts opportunity in America. A student of any race who lives in such a neighborhood and nevertheless does fairly well shows grit and determination. The fact that, on average, Black students face this extra disadvantage is hardly a reason to ignore this factor.

But here he's simply admitting that he wants either to create or maintain a set-aside for students "of any race" who live in such communities and "do fairly well". But there's another silo for students who in fact live in prosperous suburbs and wind up in top percentiles for standardized tests and other measures of achievement. As I've noted, the elite universities, with their elaborate systems of admissions set-asides, wind up accepting this demographic in only 20%-30% of any entering class. Mr Kahlenberg is simply arguing for yet another set-aside that will keep the high-achievers in the minority in even the most selective schools.

What would an elite-school student body look like if an admissions office simply dropped all pretense and admitted only the top performers, rather than admitting as much as 70%-80% via set-asides? What would the student experience be like?

Thursday, September 18, 2025

So, Just How Many Trans Mass Shooters Have There Been?

Intrigued by the overall question of trans violence, I asked the web, "How many trans mass shooters have there been?" "AI" felt it would be important to set me straight before giving an answer:

Data on mass shootings indicate that the vast majority of perpetrators have been cisgender men, with transgender and nonbinary individuals responsible for only a tiny fraction of these crimes. While precise numbers vary depending on the definition of "mass shooting," major research sources show that trans and nonbinary shooters account for less than 2% of the total.

It then gave five names:
  • Anderson Lee Aldrich: The nonbinary shooter responsible for the 2022 Club Q shooting in Colorado Springs.
  • Audrey Hale: The transgender shooter of the 2023 Covenant School shooting in Nashville, Tennessee.
  • Snochia Moseley: The transgender woman involved in the 2018 Rite Aid warehouse shooting in Maryland.
  • Alec McKinney: A transgender male involved in the 2019 STEM School Highlands Ranch shooting in Colorado.
  • Robert "Robin" Westman: The transgender woman accused of the 2025 Annunciation Catholic Church and school shooting in Minneapolis.
There are at least two possible other candidates.
  • Dylan Jesse Butler, who killed three and injured two at a school in Perry, IA in January 2024
  • Kimbrady Carriker, who killed five and injured two in Philadelphia in July 2024.
In the case of Dylan Jesse Butler, social media postings and images at least raised the question:

While law enforcement has not commented about the alleged shooter’s gender identity or sexual orientation, social media users focused on the appearance of a Pride flag on an account allegedly linked to the shooter, and it led to a narrative amplified by right-wing influencers online. That account is no longer available, but screen grabs of its content have circulated widely on social media.

Florida Gov Ron DeSantis said,

“This was somebody who was really hopped up on this gender ideology and you saw it in the profile, you know, the media doesn’t want to talk a lot about that because it doesn’t fit their narrative,” DeSantis said in Dubuque on Saturday.

Yahoo! notes that the shooter’s social media account featured “rainbow and transgender flag emojis and an image of graffiti that says ‘LOVE YOUR TRANS KIDS.'”

Regarding Kimbrady Carriker, Rep Marjorie Taylor Greene posted, based on photos in his social media,

According to NBC News,

“The suspect has not identified themselves as trans. They have only identified themselves as male,” [member of the LGBTQ advisory committee for the Philadelphia District Attorney’s Office Asa] Khalif said at Wednesday’s news conference. “But the language spewed out by the conservative press is violent and is dangerous, and it’s targeting trans women of color. It’s rallying the community to be violent, and we’re better than that.”

Typical discussions of this question say it all depends on what qualifies as a "mass shooting", while almost none say it depends on who qualifies as trans. But trans can mean almost anything. According to Wikipedia,

Transgender does not have a universally accepted definition, including among researchers; it can function as an umbrella term. The definition given above includes binary trans men and trans women and may also include people who are non-binary or genderqueer. Other related groups include third-gender people, cross-dressers, and drag queens and drag kings; some definitions include these groups as well.

. . . Accurate statistics on the number of transgender people vary widely, in part due to different definitions of what constitutes being transgender. Some countries collect census data on transgender people. Canada was the first country to introduce collection of census data on its transgender and non-binary population in 2021. Generally, less than 1% of the worldwide population is transgender, with figures ranging from <0.1% to 0.6%.

There are other questions about other shootings, especially the Pulse Nightclub shooting in Orlando, FL on June 12, 2016. Omar Mateen, a US-born Muslim from an Afghan family, killed 59 and injured 53 at the gay nightclub. According to Wikipedia,

Despite numerous anonymous and named reports of LGBTQ connections, the FBI was unable to verify any claims that Mateen was homosexual or frequented gay bars. The FBI investigation found the witnesses claiming Mateen's homosexuality were mistaken or refused to go on the record, and doubts that Mateen was gay. Law enforcement sources said the FBI found no photographs, text messages, smartphone apps, pornography, or cell tower location data to suggest Mateen lived a gay life, closeted or otherwise.

On the day of the shooting, Mateen's father, Mir Seddique Mateen, said that he had seen his son get angry after seeing a gay couple kiss in front of his family at the Bayside Marketplace in Miami months prior to the shooting, which he suggested might have been a motivating factor. Two days later, after his son's sexual orientation became a subject of speculation, Mateen's father said he did not believe his son was homosexual. Mateen's ex-wife, however, claimed that his father called him gay while in her presence. Speaking on her behalf, her current fiancé said that she, his family, and others believed he was gay, and that "the FBI asked her not to tell this to the American media."

From this, it sounds like the FBI was eager not to be able to verify any claims of Mateen's sexual orientation, which only goes to the issue that both official agencies and legacy media tend to minmimize or gaslight the public over such information. In addition, the lack of any meaningful definition of "trans" makes any verifiable statements about "trans mass shooters" impossible. For instance, was Tyler Robinson trans if he identified as cis male but had a trans partner, if indeed that's how he identified? How in fact did he identify? Does that matter?

Nor was Tyler Robinson a mass shooter; he was simply an assassin. So how do we characterize what's beginning to emerge as growing evidence of LGBTQ+ public violence? In the past few days, I've been able to quantify five definite trans mass shootings plus two possibles, five trans arsons, and two more if we add perps who are at least maybe this or that. The numbers just keep growing.

A better term might be "LGBTQ+ performative violence".

Wednesday, September 17, 2025

More Gay And Trans Violence

As I said yesterday, every time I go looking for specificallly gay and trans-connected violent episodes, even in idle web searches, I come up with more. Yesterday I noted that Armed Queers SLC is a pro-gay-and-trans gun group that's surfaced in connection with the Charlie Kirk assassination. For instance, Ermiya Fanaeian, the founder of AQSLC, is a biological male who identifies as female:

AQSLC, a socialist group of pro-gun activists, was founded in 2021 by the former March for Our Lives activist, Ermiya Fanaeian, who that year parted ways with a nationwide group advocating self-defense for LGBT people known as Pink Pistols.

Fanaeian was identified by the press as a “trans woman” as early as September 2020, when Fox 13 Now profiled the activist shortly after the relaunch of the Salt Lake City chapter of Pink Pistols, which is now defunct.

. . . In an interview published in June 2021, apparently not long before parting ways with Pink Pistols, Fanaeian additionally identified himself as a member of “the trans community especially.”

Speaking of his hopes for Salt Lake City Pink Pistols, he said later in the interview, “We’re trying to move away from this world where police are roaming our communities and the only way we can protect ourselves is by calling these cops who largely are harming us.”

Though it is not clear when Fanaeian began identifying as a transgender woman, he was using his current first name during a 2019 profile published by the University of Utah, where he previously attended, suggesting he might have transitioned while in high school.

It was in this first-person account where the activist revealed he is an immigrant to the United States.

“I’m originally from Iran, a country where LGBT people are facing severe persecution. They don’t have legal protections and they can’t obtain educational degrees, so to be at the U is incredibly liberating,” said Fanaeian in the profile.

Elsewhere, Fanaeian is described as Palestinian, which can only mean we know less about him than we should:

A Palestinian and transgender immigrant, Ermiya Fanaeian, leads a far-left terrorist movement and LGBT in the United States, Utah, the state where right-wing activist Charlie Kirk was murdered.

Fanaeian leads the organization called "Armed Queers Salt Lake City" (AQSLC), a group that combines armed self-defense with LGBT activism and communist militancy, with the goal of "promoting a broader struggle against capitalism and state violence," according to a publication by the organization.

. . . A concerning piece of news is that this movement had as its Facebook cover the phrase "Ben Shapiro should be the next one killed," which reflects the hatred and left-wing extremism of its members. For this reason, AQSLC ended up deleting its account after the controversy that arose.

. . . The group defines itself as an openly communist organization. During a meeting held in July, one of its leaders stated: "We are a Marxist-Leninist organization led by queer and trans people."

But the group's associations go beyond Salt Lake City.

Federal investigators are expanding their scrutiny of the assassination of conservative influencer Charlie Kirk to include potential ties between a Dallas-area antifa-aligned gun club and a pro-trans activist organization. . . .

The Elm Fork John Brown Gun Club (EFJBGC), a North Texas-based outfit known for providing armed "security" at drag events and pro-trans protests, has surfaced in the investigation due to past collaborations with Armed Queers SLC (AQS), a Utah-based pro-trans group now under federal review for possible foreknowledge of Kirk's killing. AQS, led by trans activist Ermiya Fanaeian, reportedly deleted its Instagram account shortly after the September 10 shooting of Kirk in Utah, prompting heightened interest from the FBI.

. . . The connection to EFJBGC traces back to at least 2023, when AQS co-hosted educational workshops and events with the Texas group, including a now-deleted Instagram post advertising a joint meeting. EFJBGC, part of a broader network of John Brown Gun Clubs that advocate armed antifascist resistance, has a history of confrontational actions. Members were implicated in a 2021 arson attack on a Texas ICE facility in Alvarado, where suspect Benjamin Song—named in a separate 2023 lawsuit as an EFJBGC affiliate—allegedly rammed a vehicle into protesters before fleeing.

The John Brown Gun Clubs are a national organization generally characterized as left-wing and anti-fascist, but there is an association with violent demonstrations in favor of drag events.

The groups are known to show up in defense of events like drag shows that draw protesters.

On April 24, 2023, three members of the Elm Fork club were arrested after they allegedly pepper sprayed a group of Christian Nationalist protesters from the New Columbia Movement outside a drag brunch in Fort Worth.

The lawsuit claims [Benjamin] Song was also there to provide security for the event.

Benjamin Song earned headlines again this past July:

An armed mob arrested for shooting up a Texas immigration detention center last month are reportedly members of a secretive network of far-left “anti-fascists” trained in self-defense and firearms.

An ex-US Marine Corps reservist and 10 others were nabbed after the group, who were clad in black military-style clothing, opened fire outside the Prairieland Detention Center in Alvarado back on July 4 — leaving one cop shot in the neck.

. . . Some of them were allegedly trained by Benjamin Hanil Song — the former reservist charged with attempted murder in connection with the attack.

. . . The group of alleged agitators, which includes some transgender activists, is believed to have met during the Black Lives Matter protests in the summer of 2020.

Song's gender identity and sexual preference are currently unknown, but according to the news stories linked, trans activists appear to belong to many "anti-fascist" groups like the John Brown Gun Clubs, and they appear to be prominent among those involved in violent episodes like the one in Texas.

What I'm discovering in just this exercise, doing simple web searches on Armed Queers Salt Lake City and John Brown Gun Clubs, is that these groups network, they plan violence, and while they claim primarily to be Marxist-Leninist or "anti-fascist", they appear to attract significant numbers of trans activists as well.

I also did some searching to find out how trans activism fits into classical Marxism-Leninism. Karl Marx died in 1883, before sexual deviance became a matter for serious study via figures like Richard von Krafft-Ebing, whose Psychopathia Sexualis was published in 1886. Sexual deviance was never a component of Marx's social theory.

But I suspect that Marx, if questioned on homosexuality, would likely have classed gays either among the Lumpenproletariat, the underclass that included prostitutes, or the bourgeoisie, the cultured, respectable gays among the British and European upper classes. Neither group would be allies of the worklng class, so the current self-asserted congruity of interests among trans, queers, and workers seems fanciful at best.

But this is all new, and it's new to the Justice Department and the FBI. There's a lot more to learn.

Tuesday, September 16, 2025

Toward A Definition Of Trans Ideology

The excerpt embedded above from yesterday's Morning Meeting with panelists Mark Halperin, Dan Turrentine, and Sean Spicer is a good indication of how clueless mainstreram commentators have been over trans ideology. At 2:20:

HALPERIN: There are people in MAGA who believe that trans culture, or a strain of trans culture, is violent and wants radical change in this country and is using violence to get it. That's a strong belief amongst many in MAGA, and thqt this has been a story that's been covered up by the left and the media for a long time, and that based on what they know, that's at issue here, and they want to go hard after anything that they think is a violent subculture of the trans community and those that support them. What do you think of that, and what do you think the Democratic party's posture should be on that strong belief held by those people??

TURRENTINE: I don't know of other instances of trans people lashing out like that. Perhaps there are some. I don't know. I mean, obviously this issue has been part of our politics now for the last two years, front and center, and I imagine it's going to be part of our politics for the foreseeable future. I don't see examples of the trans community engaging in violence. I know what people in the trans community feel conmes the other way a lot, but I would; hope there is not this kind of, you know, . . . I think it is going to be part of the debate now.

SPICER: There's two examples right off the top of my head, one is Nashville, two is Catholic Annunciation Church last week in Minnesota.

Well, at least give Halperin credit for raising the issue, but on one hand, Turrentine basically says, "It's news to me," while Spicer -- who is a longtime professional Republican edged out early from Trump 45 -- has only the most basic grasp of it. But even Newsweek was on the case back in 2023:

A United Nations investigator is among several voices raising the alarm about a rise in far-left transgender activists, amid reports of some intimidating and physically assaulting those who disagree with them.

In an interview with the British Daily Mail newspaper on Sunday, Reem Alsalem, the international body's special rapporteur on violence against women and girls, said it was an "increasing trend" that she had been observing, calling on officials to protect freedom of speech regarding conversations around gender.

. . . The debate around transgender inclusion has often become heated, with both sides facing incendiary remarks and threats of violence. Some transgender activists have distanced themselves from "extreme" rhetoric.

Trantifa is a portmanteau of "transgender" and "Antifa," the latter being itself a truncation of "anti-fascist" and a left-wing movement that rose to prominence in 2017. The antifa movement has faced criticism from right-wing figures, including Donald Trump, who have accused them of acts of violence.

In March, I was making the point that a remarkable number of anti-Tesla vandals and firebombers were trans. In one post, I linked to a piece at Hot Air that identified three, and I added a fourth, but that was before I saw a fifth, Owen McIntire of Kansas City, MO, whose case I brought up yesterday. In fact, there have been additional shootings, at least one at a school, involving trans perps -- Alec McKinney, a trans 16-year-old, killed one and injured eight at STEM School Highlands Ranch in Colorado in 2019.

In fact, there's no authoritative total of trans-involved school shootings, arsons, or other violent crimes. When I go searching for others, I inevitably find them. The conventional response is along the line of "only 1% of all murders are committed by trans people", but that neglects the very small number of trans people in the population. The number of these who go postal seems to be notable.

The Kirk assassination in Utah has surfaced local trans activist groups that appear to have a violent agenda.

''

Further,

[A]s state law enforcement and FBI now say they are expanding their investigation to identify if there was a network working with Tyler Robinson (which seems obvious based on the Discord chat), attention is now being paid to militant transgender groups and NGO’s in the Utah area who seem to connect to Robinson and his transgender boyfriend Lance Twiggs.

. . . “Armed Queers SLC” and a Non-Governmental Organization (NGO) known as “Utah Global Diplomacy,” partly funded by the UN appear to be two groups in the region with connections to the overall militant transgender movement: a preliminary motive being explored by federal investigators.

Trump's Deputy Chief of Staff for Policy and Homeland Security Stephen Miller has indicated that he will pursue the role dark-money-funded NGOs have played in what amounts to domestic terrorism, especially as it appears to have been connected with the Kirk assassination. But basic to the trans self-image appears to be the idea that some type of vengeance needs to be secured:
But against whom? For what? Who "put them in the wrong body", for instance? The overall justification for violence seems elusive indeed -- we can acknowledge that trans people have a tendency toward it, but the reasons seem to be something added after the fact. They basically just want to be violent. Isn't that odd?

Monday, September 15, 2025

Just What Is "Gender Affierming Care"? And What Is "Trans Ideology"?

These are questions that nobody's asked in the wake of horrific shootings within just two weeks, the Annunciation Church attack on August 27 and the Charlie Kirk assassination on September 10. The Annunciation shooter, Robin Westman, accordiong to reports, had previously undergone some type of medical treatment for gender transition, although he had apparently discontinued it at some point:

In a twisted handwritten journal he shared on YouTube before the massacre — much of which is encrypted in a homespun code of Russian Cyrillic script and English words — Westman groaned about his long hair and his decision to transition.

“I only keep [the long hair] because it is pretty much my last shred of being trans. I am tired of being trans, I wish I never brain-washed myself,” he wrote, according to a translation by The Post.

. . . “I can’t cut my hair now as it would be an embarrassing defeat, and it might be a concerning change of character that could get me reported. It just always gets in my way. I will probably chop it on the day of the attack.”

. . . “I regret being trans.. I wish I was a girl I just know I cannot achieve that body with the technology we have today. I also can’t afford that,” he said.

Elsewhere, he wrote:

Gender and weed [redacted] up my head. I wish I never tried experimenting with either. Don’t let your kids smoke weed or change gender until they are like seventeen.

Lance Twiggs, the trans romantic partner of Tyler Robinson, apparently referred to hormone treatment as part of his medical program for transition on social media:

In November 2024, Twiggs posted about his anxiety with injecting cross-sex hormones. Replying to a thread on injection pain, he wrote: “seriously. sometimes it’s just muscle memory, sometimes i gotta get buzzed on something so i’m not too anxious about it.”

In another post, he appears to have at least a general familiarity with hormone treatments:

Old Reddit comments linked to Lance Twiggs under the username “lancelott3” have resurfaced, showing discussions about hormone replacement therapy (HRT). In one post, Twiggs explained that hip growth depends largely on genetics, while HRT can slow beard growth but not fully stop facial hair.

Back in May, I discussed the case of Owen McIntire of Kansas City, MO, who allegedly firebombed a Tesla dealership but was released from custody "due to 'serious and ongoing' medical needs — which include gender-affirming medical care that requires daily medication as well as mental health support, according to KMBC." Just what did his medical treatment consist of? Are there any similarities among the treatments violent trans offenders have received?

Similar questions have been raised over Audrey/Aiden Hale, the female-to-male trans shooter at the Nashville, TN Covenant School, when it was revealed that she had been a mental health patient at Vanderbilt University Medical Center from the age of six to the day of her death. That therapy presumably included "gender affirming care", but questions that were raised at the time have never been answered.

Marjorie Taylor Greene, a Republican representative for the state of Georgia, tweeted a statement regarding the shooting, implying that the shooter's testosterone level was a reason for the shootings.

"How much hormones like testosterone and medications for mental illness was the transgender Nashville school shooter taking?" she tweeted. "Everyone can stop blaming guns now."

Journalist Andy Ngô also suggested that the hormones may have contributed to the crime.

"Was the #Nashville trans mass shooter on cross-sex hormones (in this case, testosterone)? Women committing mass shootings are exceptionally rare, but if Audrey "Aiden" Hale took testosterone, it could explain part of the male-typical mass violence the Christian school tragically experienced," he tweeted.

The Tyler Robinson-Lance Twiggs connection brought renewed attention to the 2024 case of another Washington, UT male-to-female trans offender:

Mia Bailey, 28, was arrested Wednesday and charged with 11 felony counts related to the double homicide of parents Joseph, 70, and Gail Bailey, 69, and the attempted murder of her brother, according to the Washington City Police Department.

"We have some good news. We have the suspect in custody." St. George Police Officer Tiffany Mitchell announced in a Facebook live broadcast, telling residents of the Bloomington Hills and Fort Pierce they were no longer urged to shelter in place. "Everyone is safe. No one else was injured."

. . . Bailey filed a petition to change her name and gender legally in July 2023, according to 5th District Court records reviewed by KSL. She was granted both in August 2023, with the court writing that "there is clear and convincing evidence that [Bailey] has transitioned to the sex sought in the petition and a uniform manner for at least six months," including "evidence of appropriate clinical care or treatment for gender transitioning or change provided by a licensed medical professional."

According to The Gaterway Pundit,

Robinson’s parents and Bailey’s parents both lived in Washington, Utah, approximately 5 minutes apart, in a small town of 27,993 people as of 2020.

. . . Mia Bailey, 28, born Collin Troy Bailey, identifies as transgender and has confessed to fatally shooting his parents, Joseph and Gail Bailey, in their Washington City home at 1039 E. Chinook Drive, St. George, on June 18, 2024.

. . . In a later incident while in custody, Bailey was accused of assaulting two correctional officers in October 2024.

But this brings up another question. Tyler Robinson and Lance Twiggs belonged to what appears to have been close-knit social media groups whose posts suggest foreknowledge of the Kirk shooting:

[A]s details emerge, a web of disturbing connections points to a possible broader conspiracy involving online radicalism, transgender networks, and even hints of foreknowledge among left-wing activists.

Adding to the chilling narrative are Robinson's own flippant jokes made in Discord chats with 20 other users while he was on the run. He reportedly quipped to friends that a "doppelganger" was responsible for the shooting after the FBI released images of the suspect.

. . . On September 9, an account under the handle "NajraGalvz" posted, "Charlie Kirk is coming to my college tomorrow I rlly hope someone evaporates him literally," followed several hours later by, "Lets just say something big will happen tomorrow," accompanied by a grinning dog image.

Earlier, on September 5, a social media user named "Fujoshincel" teased "something BIG coming soon" and urged followers to watch the news; after the shooting on September 10, the same account gloated, "Well that’s that" and "Another Chud Bites the Dust."

A transgender user followed by Robinsom's boyfriend Lance Twiggs on X, and who followed them back, celebrated with "WE F-CKING DID IT" as reports emerged, followed by "LET IT DIE. LET IT DIE" when Kirk was reported to be in critical condition.

According to the Urban Dictionaty, "a 'chud' is a person, usually male, who holds reactionary or far-right sociopolitical views." I asked the web, "What is trans ideology?" "AI" replied,

The term "trans ideology" is a pejorative and misleading phrase used primarily by opponents of transgender rights and visibility to frame gender identity as a political movement rather than an aspect of human diversity. There is no single, unified "trans ideology," but rather a range of academic concepts, social movements, and lived experiences related to gender identity and expression.

I'll agree that there's no single, unified "trans ideology", in large part because the most visible trans people we've begun to recognize are deeply addled. On the other hand, in the manifestos and journals they leave behind, as well as in social media posts to trans-affirming groups, there seems to be a deep sense of aggression against the non-trans-affirming world, to the point that there seems to be a general consensus that parents and other figures who don't accept trans identity should be killed, or at least are the ones at fault for the violence trans people commit.

Certainly we don't see any internalized sense that these views are in any way bizarre. Could recreational drug use, mentioned by both Robin Westman and Lance Twiggs, somehow increase the bad effects of hormone treatment? And why do we see such frequent conjunction of gender affirmng treatment with therapy for serious psychiatric problems, as in the cases of Audrey Hale and Owen McIntire? To what extent was Tyler Robinson, who wasn't trans himself, somehow converted to "trans ideology" so that he shared the view of his trans friends that Christopher Kirk should be killed?

You know what? I think Secretary Kennedy is right to be investigating the unacknowledged effects of vaccines -- but isn't it at least just as important that there be a serious investigation of what passes for "gender affirming care"?

Sunday, September 14, 2025

Busted!

Only a short time after YouTube pop psychologist Dr Todd Grande (his degree is an EdD, like Dr Jill Biden's) assured us that the ATF erred when it leaked that the etched inscriptions on the shells in Tyler Robinson's gun were "consistent with transgender and antifascist ideologies", the story began to break that Robinson's roommate, with whom he'd had a "romantic relationship", was a male undergoing trqnsition to female. Grande discussed the message "notices bulges owo what's this" etched on one of the shells. He dismissed it as a trans and "furry" meme that indicates "exaggerated surprise in a sexualized tone" at seeing evidence of male genitalia in a costume, but he assured us that there's nothing that connects this with "transgender ideology". That is, nothing except that Robinson's roommate and romantic partner, Lance Twiggs, was both trans and a "furry". (Grande also reassures us that only a small subset of "furries" have sex with each other while dressed in animal suits.)

Andy Ngo researched Twiggs's social media and reported,

Twiggs was raised in a devout Mormon family but said he left the faith. On the r/exchristian subreddit, he claimed he was expelled from his family home after refusing religious spiritual help.

“[W]as told i was possessed by a demon and then within 30 mins kicked outta the house because i started laughing and wouldn’t go to the bishop for a blessing,” Twiggs wrote. “later found out they just didn’t like me and were looking for a way to get me out of the house, wasn’t even 18 at the time.”

A website was able to contact a Twiggs relative:

“He (Lance Twiggs) is very angry with anyone who is supportive of conservative ideals and Christian values,” alleged the family member.

“As far as I know, he was not going by another name. I just know he was in the process of transitioning. I know he was trying to take different medications,” alleged the relative of Lance, whom the family member had avoided for about four years out of concern over Twiggs’ alleged temperament.

The relative told WRN about having heard second-hand from other family members that Lance had allegedly “wished horrible things on people. I’ve really distanced. There was (allegedly) evil inside and only getting worse.”

Certainly in several recent cases, it's hard to rule out demonic possession, although for Twiggs, I doubt if getting a blessing from a Mormon bishop would be much help. I asked the web, "Do you have to want to cooperate with an exorcism for it to work? "AI" replied,

For an exorcism to be effective, Christian tradition generally requires the afflicted person's cooperation and willingness to be freed from evil influence. An uncooperative or unwilling person may still be subjected to a ritual, but it is considered less likely to succeed, and some views suggest it could even worsen the situation.

Short of someone like Twiggs wanting to rid himself of demons, it seems as though the best option for his family was to go no contact. But this raises two questions for me: first, what was the nature of his influence on Robinson? But second, how sincere is his current cooperation with law enforcement? If he played a big role in encouraging Robinson to shoot Charlie Kirk, how much culpability does he have?

For now, it looks like we'll continue to see new revelations in the case.