ulukinatme
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[TWEET]https://twitter.com/ArtValley818_/status/1395055489793380360?s=19[/TWEET]
[TWEET]https://twitter.com/ArtValley818_/status/1395055489793380360?s=19[/TWEET]
Been another tough week on Grandpa Joe lol
I think the anti-Israel sentiment among the Democrats has been going on longer than since the Squad came around. They weren't happy when Trump recognized Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and there was rumblings long before that. It honestly puzzles me that most Jewish voters are very blue...in fact they haven't supported a Conservative since 1920 and it hasn't been close since other than Reagan. It's honestly all puzzling when Israel is a big ally and Palestine allows Hamas to control the country and raise their kids with terrorist kid shows to push their propaganda.
Israel's not the outmanned country surrounded by foes. They have allies in the arabs, military superiority, and the Palestinian situation sucks. Culturally Jewish people tend to be secular, educated, liberal philosophically etc. It makes sense they'd back a liberal party as long as it isn't directly hostile to Israel.
Uhhhh.... they don't have Arab allies.
Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia are all basically allied w them. Iran's the threat and no one is saber rattling on their border any more outside of Iranians assets in Syria/Lebanon.
During the Chicago Cubs’ long century of futility, the old joke was that every year they peaked on Opening Day. Is it too early to wonder if Joe Biden’s presidency did the same thing?
The inauguration promise to bring healing to a fractured nation didn’t last the short ride back down Pennsylvania Avenue on Jan. 20. But what of the real Biden project that was revealed once the festivities ended: the transformation of America into a land of equity and inclusion, one that Michelle Obama could finally be proud of, that Bernie Sanders could count as Cuba’s equal, and where LeBron James could feel safe and fairly rewarded
True, it’s no longer Opening Day, but we haven’t reached the All-Star break and already reality has bitten the geniuses in this White House harder than old Major the German shepherd did. Unlike Major, this fickle beast can’t be safely dispatched from the executive mansion and forgotten about. It has a painful way of telling you what happens when you construct an ideological dreamscape made up of impossible promises, implausible assertions and dishonest propositions.
Last week reminded us on multiple fronts that trying to govern on a prospectus of large claims at odds with the defiant reality is a perilous mission.
The sudden change in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s mask advice has undermined the administration’s claim to be governed at all times by data and facts. It has revealed to a wider audience what some of us knew all along: that pious claims about “following the science” were as flimsy as a cloth face covering. We’d been told for four months that vaccinations don’t necessarily protect against viral transmission. The CDC’s director warned a few weeks ago about “impending doom.” The president said “neanderthal thinking” drove governors to lift mandates. Suddenly, everything has changed—except for federal mask mandates, which officials began to ease only on Monday.
But with the Biden administration leading from behind, many states and businesses relaxed or abolished their mask rules. That prompted dismay by many of the president’s most loyal supporters. They took to TV studios and social media to bewail the betrayal. The mask had been the most joylessly visible way of signaling one’s virtue since sackcloth and ashes. Now it will be easier to tell the righteous from the deplorable, but millions will stray from the path of redemption.
The crisis in the Middle East is another unwelcome intrusion of reality into the wonder world of Democratic progressivism.
Leftist Democrats, whose demands the president has so dutifully followed so far, don’t like Israel. They see the Palestinian cause as an extension of the equity and racial-justice objectives they’re busy pursuing at home.
The dwindling reality-based community inside the Biden administration knows better and can’t yet abandon the logic that Israel has a right to defend itself from Hamas rockets. But with a progressive wing to please, an Iran deal back at the heart of their foreign-policy objectives, and an Israel-hostile international “community” to appease, they’re in a deepening hole that threatens their wider Middle East aspirations.
The most explosive collision with reality is in economics. It’s hard to recall a week of official data that more directly challenged the entire governing premise of a fledgling administration than what arrived in early May.
The sharp slowdown in job growth, uptick in unemployment, and biggest leap in retail prices in more than a decade was a reminder about the immutability of certain economic truths.
It was only a month’s worth of data; we’d need more evidence before declaring an emergency. But plenty of intelligent people have been warning that this could happen if you committed to multiple spending binges in an economy as unpredictably disrupted as the post-pandemic one.
Supply bottlenecks have been driving up prices, and with the economy reopening employers are desperate for workers. Being paid to stay home is proving to have predictable consequences for the availability of labor. All this may or may not be “transitory” as the Fed insists it is.
But perhaps most worrying and suggestive of stagflation is a growing mismatch between the pool of available labor and the demand for it. Companies have shed millions of jobs in the last year—and many improved their profitability. They will be slow to return to their old payrolls if they ever do. Demographic trends are also stagflationary—with fewer working-age Americans available to support the growing proportion of the population less likely to work.
Spot on piece from the WSJ-
Did Biden Peak on Inauguration Day?
Covid confusion, Mideast chaos and the threat of inflation—he doesn’t have many victories to point to.
Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia are all basically allied w them. Iran's the threat and no one is saber rattling on their border any more outside of Iranians assets in Syria/Lebanon.
Spot on piece from the WSJ-
Did Biden Peak on Inauguration Day?
Covid confusion, Mideast chaos and the threat of inflation—he doesn’t have many victories to point to.
Didn't expect anything like that from the WSJ. Everything will be fine. After all, CNN did write an article supporting Mrs. Biden and her style of clothes.
No, they just tolerate each other because they don't want a war.
Maybe it has something to do with the billions of dollars in aid and weapons we give them. It's almost like our tax dollars are being used to bribe the ruling class of these ME nations so they agree to play nice with Israel. Meanwhile, we're broke.
Journalists are busy right now. Half are still fawning over the Bidens and writing admiration stories while the other half is 15 months behind Sen. Tom Cotton on the Wuhan Lab origins and shifting from "Fact-Checking" Republicans to "suddenly" recognizing they may have been right.
[TWEET]https://twitter.com/GlennKesslerWP/status/1256267931220049920?s=20[/TWEET] Journalism. Is. Dead.

Oops. This goes in the bucket with the promise recently walked back on student loan debt. Vote for me!
[TWEET]https://twitter.com/BidenLs/status/1397172744983355395[/TWEET]
America’s housing market has grown so overheated as demand outpaces supply that prices keep hitting record highs — and roughly half of all U.S. houses are now selling above their list price.
Two years ago, before the pandemic struck, just a quarter of homes were selling above the sellers’ asking price, according to data from the real estate brokerage Redfin.
On Tuesday, new data further illuminated the red-hot nature of the housing market: Prices rose in March at the fastest pace in more than seven years. The S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller 20-city home price index jumped 13.3% that month compared with a year earlier — the biggest such gain since December 2013. That price surge followed a 12% year-over-year jump in February.
While I do like watching my neighbors get 50k over ask on the first day with waived inspections and guaranteed cash over appraisal, this isn't sustainable. We're going to need those basic income checks from J-Powell and Joe soon just to maintain our standard of living. I've been looking at summer vacations lately too and that sure isn't going to be cheap.
It has to crash eventually. The price of lumber has driven up the costs of new homes that even paying over market value for an existing home is still better than building new. I stopped at Lowes to grab a 2 X 4 the other day. The price was over $5 for a single board.
You have a lot of millenial renters trying to become home owners. The demand for renting has gone down as the demand for housing has gone up. This has led to increased home building and such. At some point the market will rebalance.
You have a lot of millenial renters trying to become home owners. The demand for renting has gone down as the demand for housing has gone up. This has led to increased home building and such. At some point the market will rebalance.
My fiance and I are in that group. Been actively looking for 6 months and there's a lot of stupid money being thrown around for homes. We only offered on one house, offered $20k over asking and it sold for $35k over asking. House wasn't worth that number but it's happening every day. Not sure what's worse...burning money in rent every month or grossly overspending on the house/ mortgage.
I keep telling my fiance how lucky we were to buy our house in the summer of '19 because of what's going on. My best friend's brother just told me about how much of a struggle it is for him and his wife. They've bid on about 4/5 houses so far in the Lehigh Valley here in PA. Houses that are 300K+, very beautiful affluent area. They've been outbid each time by 20-40K with CASH offers. Apparently, a lot of people are coming to that area from NY and NJ, selling their houses for 500-600K and moving to the "less expensive" Pennsylvania.
You have a lot of millenial renters trying to become home owners. The demand for renting has gone down as the demand for housing has gone up. This has led to increased home building and such. At some point the market will rebalance.