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A right-leaning disgruntled Republican comments on the news of the day and any other thing he damn-well pleases.
by Anita Wadhwani, Tennessee Lookout, April 7, 2026 - A bill authorizing county election administrators to verify Tennessee voters’ immigration status through a federal database is on its way to the governor’s desk after Senate Republicans on Monday voted to approve the measure.
The bill (SB2204/HB2185) by Senate Majority Leader Jack Johnson of Franklin and House Leader William Lamberth of Sumner County, both Republicans, is dependent on whether the United States Department of Homeland Security makes the data available to state election officials via a secure web service known as the Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements (SAVE).
Current law already requires voters to attest to their citizenship status when registering to vote: the state then verifies citizenship using state and federal data sources.
Johnson said the bill was intended to intercept potentially fraudulent registration at the point of voter registration.
“This bill would allow election officials to use SAVE data during the initial application review,” Johnson said.
Sen. Raumesh Akbari, a Memphis Democrat, cited high error rates that have occurred in verifying citizenship status through the SAVE system in the past.
The system is routinely used to verify citizenship eligibility for a variety of public services with a low error rate. But in states such as Texas, which has deployed the SAVE checks for voter registration, some county election officials mistakenly flagged voters as noncitizens upwards at high rates, up to 14% of the time, according to reporting by Pro Publica and the Texas Tribune.
Johnson said existing election law already provides potential voters denied registration with an appeals process.
“You can bring appropriate documentation for consideration by the election administrator, election coordinator, so all of those provisions will remain in place,” Johnson said. “So someone is falsely deemed to be ineligible to vote under this system, they would have a mechanism to appeal and provide the necessary documentation,” he said.
The bill, already in the House, was passed on a party-line 27-6 vote Monday in the Senate.
If signed into law by Gov. Bill Lee, the bill’s implementation would remain contingent on the U.S. Department of Homeland Security working with Tennessee’s election officials to “create a secure, electronic portal through which each county administrator of elections may access information” by 2028 to verify citizenship status.
Separately the similarly-named federal Safeguard American Voter Eligibility (SAVE America) Act would require states such as Tennessee to create mechanisms to verify immigration status upon voter registration. The measure, passed by the U.S. House of Representatives earlier this year, requires voters to provide proof of citizenship at the point of voter registration. The U.S. Senate has yet to take up a vote on the measure.
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Gen. Randy George’s departure was announced by the Pentagon, which provided no reason for his removal. The Army chief of staff normally serves four years, and George, who gave no indication he had been preparing to retire, assumed his post in September 2023.
A defense official confirmed that Hegseth asked George to retire early. ... Lt. Gen. Jeffrey Kruse, the former head of the Defense Intelligence Agency, Adm. Linda Fagan, commandant of the Coast Guard, and Gen. Timothy Haugh, commander of U.S. Cyber Command and director of the National Security Agency, were also removed from their positions under the Trump administration.
by Erica York, Emily Kraschel, The Tax Foundation, published March 30, 2026 - A year ago on April 2, President Trump charted a new course for US trade, calling it “Liberation Day.” The president said his idea was simple: the US would charge the same tariffs as our trading partners. With this new regime in place, Trump made a host of promises:
At the height of the trade war—including the “Liberation Day” and other tariffs imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), plus sector-specific tariffs imposed under Section 232 authorities—the tariff rates were the highest since 1911, constituting a $3.2 trillion tax hike over a decade.
One year later, the evidence shows the tariffs were not reciprocal, did not generate the promised investment boom, raised less revenue than projected, and contributed to higher prices.
Were the Tariffs Reciprocal?
Recalling how the Liberation Day tariffs were calculated and imposed under IEEPA shows they were not reciprocal.
While the president said his idea was simple—apply the same tariffs to trade partners that they apply to us—the tariffs actually imposed were a far stretch from that. They were not based on observed foreign trade barriers or tariff schedules. Instead, the United States Trade Representative’s office converted each country’s bilateral goods trade balance into a synthetic tariff rate with a 10 percent minimum. Because bilateral goods trade balances do not measure trade barriers, the resulting tariffs had no relationship with other countries’ trade barriers.
And those tariffs changed many, many times between the April 2 announcement and February 2026, when the Supreme Court ruled the authority under which Trump imposed them did not authorize tariffs.
The first major change came just days after the Liberation Day speech in a back-and-forth escalation with China that took the US tariff rate to 125 percent for a month while the country-specific rates on other trading partners were delayed. During that period, the US applied tariff rate reached 21.5 percent under the combination of the IEEPA tariffs (baseline tariffs and higher country-specific tariffs) and Section 232 sector-specific tariffs.
In the months that followed, US tariff policy changed more than 50 times, spanning rate increases, rate decreases, new product exemptions, and new product inclusions. After multiple sets of exemptions, by the end of 2025, the IEEPA tariffs affected just 42 percent of US imports, and the applied tariff rate had fallen from its high of 21.5 percent to 13.6 percent before the Supreme Court ruling. Rather than ask whether the predictions made when tariffs were at their peak levels came to pass, the relevant question is whether the tariffs, as they were actually imposed, achieved the administration’s stated goals.
US Tariffs Changed More Than 50 Times Under Trump, Peaking at 21.5%
The data does not support claims of a large investment surge. During his Liberation Day remarks, President Trump claimed the US would see a rebirth of industries, with jobs and investment pouring into the United States. He claimed the US had already seen $6 trillion of investment and would see even more by year’s end. Throughout the year, he has claimed up to $18 trillion in new foreign investment into the United States.
Foreign direct investment (FDI) into the United States has seen no such dramatic spikes. In 2025, FDI totaled $288.4 billion—more than an order of magnitude smaller than President Trump’s claims. Total FDI in 2025 was below the prior 10 years’ average of $320.7 billion and lower than the annual totals in 2021, 2022, 2023, and 2024 ($405.5 billion, $338.4 billion, $297.4 billion, and $292.3 billion, respectively).
While various firms and countries have pledged, sometimes vaguely, to increase US investment, so far, those investments have not shown up in broad macroeconomic statistics. Aggregate FDI flows have remained within a typical range rather than exhibiting a sharp increase.
Neither has employment in the manufacturing sector reversed the trend. Manufacturing employment has continued to decline after Liberation Day, declining by 89,000 jobs between April 2025 and February 2026. The decline is broadly consistent with pre-existing trends.
The volatility in both rates and coverage created significant policy uncertainty, which likely weighed on investment and hiring decisions.
Foreign Direct Investment Has Not Spiked as Trump Claimed
Did the Tariffs Make the Federal Government Wealthier?
Tariffs increased federal revenue, but fell far short of the Trump administration’s claims and did not pay down the national debt.
President Trump asserted that in the 1880s, when tariffs were high, the US was proportionately the wealthiest it had ever been: at that time, the federal government ran large budget surpluses because taxes generated more revenue for the government than it spent. President Trump often refers to the Congressional Commissions of that day, which were tasked with addressing the budgetary surpluses. They did so by increasing government spending, which proved unpopular in the 1890s.
While tariffs were the main source of federal revenue then, total spending was an order of magnitude lower, averaging under 3 percent of GDP rather than roughly 23 percent of GDP in 2025. The taxes that funded the federal government of the 1880s mathematically cannot raise enough revenue to fund the federal government today.
President Trump predicted tariffs would “direct hundreds of billions of dollars and even trillions of dollars into our Treasury to strengthen our economy and pay down debt.” And his advisors, such as Peter Navarro, estimated that the new tariffs would bring in $600 billion a year.
The Liberation Day tariffs undoubtedly raised taxes for the US Treasury—but far short of what the Trump administration predicted. Before the Court ruled against the IEEPA tariffs in February, they generated approximately $166 billion in tariff payments. Altogether, tariffs brought in $264 billion in customs duties from January through December 2025, accounting for 4.9 percent of total tax receipts for the calendar year. The net revenue generated by the tariffs is less, because tariffs mechanically reduce how much revenue is raised by income and payroll taxes. Though the tariffs increased tax revenues while they were in effect, federal debt has continued to grow under President Trump.
Did Tariffs Affect Prices and Employment?
Tariffs raised prices and weighed on economic activity, contrary to claims that they would be paid by foreign countries, lower consumer costs, and boost economic activity.
President Trump and his advisors have repeatedly asserted that Americans would not have to pay the tariffs, and the president even suggested that under the tariffs, “more production at home will mean stronger competition and lower prices for consumers.”
Tariffs are taxes on imports legally paid by the importer, and economically paid by a combination of imports, downstream businesses, final consumers, and foreign sellers. By raising the cost of imported goods, tariffs increase relative prices and can also lead domestic producers to raise prices in response. Tariffs can also affect employment in the short run as firms may lay off workers (or slow hiring) to hold employment costs (including the new taxes) fixed.
While research is still ongoing into both the price and employment effects of the tariffs in 2025, the findings so far are contrary to President Trump’s claims. The new tariffs have passed through to the US economy, lifting prices for importers and retail consumers and weighing down hiring.
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell has attributed much of the remaining inflation to tariffs, explaining in a recent press conference: “These elevated readings largely reflect inflation in the goods sector, which has been boosted by the effects of tariffs.”
Research from the Pricing Lab at Harvard estimates that through October 2025, tariff pass-through to retail prices reached 24 percent, contributing a cumulative 0.76 percentage points to Consumer Price Index inflation. Prices for imported goods and for domestic substitutes have both risen. Initial research from the Kansas City Fed suggests (albeit with high levels of uncertainty) that tariffs likely reduced employment growth in 2025.
Additional research from the Federal Reserve found that rather than a sudden, one-time price hike after the tariffs were imposed, price pressure developed gradually and retailers slowly adjusted prices over time. The same uncertainty that held back investment and hiring may have also been an important factor limiting retail-level pass-through in 2025.
Conclusion
One year after Liberation Day, the evidence does not support the administration’s central claims about how tariffs were supposed to benefit the American economy. The tariffs were not reciprocal, did not produce a surge in investment or manufacturing employment, generated less revenue than projected, did not pay down the national debt, and contributed to higher prices and weaker economic activity. As policymakers consider future tariff actions under alternative authorities, these outcomes provide important context for evaluating the likely economic effects of continued trade restrictions.
Davidson County added nearly 9,300 new residents in 2025, according to the Census numbers. That's the highest raw total among all of Tennessee's 95 counties by a solid margin. The surrounding suburban counties have been growing at an even higher rate for years. Rutherford, Wilson, Williamson and Sumner counties were all in the state's top 10 for population growth from 2024 to 2025.
The Axios article says that seemingly every major challenge — and opportunity — facing Nashville right now traces back to its propulsive growth: skyrocketing home prices, traffic snarls, eye-popping tax bills, transformative construction projects, innovation, new corporations and big-ticket jobs.
I am gung-ho for Nashville and love this city and would not want to live anywhere else. However, I am actually pleased to see Nashville's growth slow. I wish it had slowed about twenty years ago. I liked Nashville better when you could go someplace and find a parking space on the street and when you did not have to use a QC code and your cell phone to park.
I know Nashville has a vibrancy that many cities lack, and the growth has brought a slew of fine dining establishments. Nashville is a top-tier culinary destination, boasting several Michelin-starred restaurants. I will probably never eat in one of them. However, part of this growth has brought about a slew of ethnic restaurants. One has a choice of Pho places, sushi restaurants, Thai, Kurdish and Turkish, Ethiopian, Persian, Greek, lots of Mexican, other Latin American restaurants, and various others. It you are adventurous, there are some real dining bargains to be had. I like that. The cultural diversity has made Nashville more interesting, also. I enjoy the Festival of Cultures, Cinco de Mayo events, Chinese New Year events, St. Patrick's Day parade, and all of the neighborhood festivals. Without growth, we would not have all of this.
Nashville has attracted a lot of high-income jobs. However, it seems that those jobs are most often filled by new people who follow the jobs to Nashville. I am not sure those high-paying jobs helped many existing Nashvillians. Of course, all of these people moving here and earning the big bucks does generate economic growth. People are building houses, cleaning houses, working in the many restaurants, and providing all of the other services that those making the big bucks need. But it seems the highest wage earners are people who moved to Nashville and not existing Nashvillians.
Along with the new high-paying jobs came more expensive housing, leaving many Nashvillians unable to afford to live here. It is simple economics. When you have a young couple, each earning a six-figure income, they can pay more for a home and that bids up the price of all homes.
| Metro Nashville Davidson County Public School Enrollment |
Maybe it is just an impression and not based on data, but I have a feeling that many of those moving to Nashville are not forming deep connections to our city. I suspect they cast votes for Democrats just because that is what hip people do, but don't really care that much about how the city is governed. They don't really care about the quality of our schools and don't mind paying higher taxes, because they can afford it. I suspect they do not feel a deep connection to the city. I think many of the newcommers find things like stock car racing, flea markets, and meat-and-three dinners an embarrassment. The new Nashville is hip and prefers expensive coffee shops and soccer to flea markets and meat and three diners.
While Nashville has problems, it is not as crime-ridden and dysfunctional as many other Democrat led cites, but it continues to become less affordable, and the tax burden continues to rise. Maybe I am just an old man yearning for the good old days, but I don't think so. I think there is something to be said for slow and steady, familiarity, and modest, adaptable change, preserving the personality of a community, and being able to find a place to park. I wish we had pulled up the drawbridge about twenty years ago. Slowing growth is fine with me.
Leading the delegation is Vyacheslav Nikonov, grandson of Stalin’s Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov, who drew lines in the 1939 pact that divided Eastern Europe between Nazi Germany and the USSR.
by Vivian Jones, The Tennessean, March 27, 2026- U.S. Rep. Andy Ogles was among the five members of Congress organized by U.S. Rep Anna Paulina Luna who met with a delegation of sanctioned Russian State Duma officials visiting Washington on March 26.The meeting came despite sanctions imposed by Washington in light of Moscow’s ongoing invasion of Ukraine.
... “We will continue to foster this dialogue and push for peace in support of this admins push for peace, as well as economic opportunity,” Ogles wrote.
Nikonov has described Russia’s current invasion of Ukraine as “truly a holy war” and “a metaphysical clash between the forces of good and evil.” (link)
Before attending my first anti-Trump rally, I was apprehensive about rallying with a bunch of leftists. I feared the vibe would be left-wing with displays of anti-Americanism. It was not. Sure, there were some signs I disagreed with supporting liberal causes, but for the most part, the messaging was pro-democracy and pro-decency. I did not feel terribly out of place.
Today's vibe was much different than the other three events. Upon arriving at the site, a pro-trans chant was taking place. Now, I am pretty tolerant of deviancy as long as it is consensual and doesn't involve children. If Trump's paramilitary force was actually picking up and imprisoning trans people without due process, I might would join the chant, but that is not the case, and I did not plan to attend a pro-trans event.
The next thing that grabbed my attention was a large Communist banner with hammer and sickle. There were also some Democratic Socialists of America banners and Antifa Banners. Now, I recognize that any mass political movement is going to have some oddballs and fringe people. However, I recall my Tea Party days and other political events I have attended. If at any of those events, a group would have had a swastika banner, they would have been denounced from the stage and would have been asked to leave. I accept that a mass political movement has to be "big tent," but I don't want to be in a tent big enough for Nazis or Communists.
The speeches from the stage were not just a renunciation of Trump's authoritarianism and corruption but calls for universal health care and denunciation of income inequality and rich people, and corporations, and other messages that I do not agree with. One of the speeches was a partisan campaign speech by Jerri Green, Democratic Party candidate for Governor. I don't know if the speeches at the other rallies were as partisan liberal as these or not. At the other three rallies, they had terrible sound systems with small speakers, and I really could not hear the speeches. At today's rally, there were nice large speakers and one could hear clearly. It would have been better if I could not have heard the speeches.
It was impossible for me to judge the size of the crowd. The event was held in the amphitheater bowl in the park formerly known as Cumberland, on the east side of the river between the Korean Veterans Blvd. bridge and the John Seigenthaler Pedestrian Bridge. The site is not that large and people were not packed in tight, but there were a lot of people gathered on the pedestrian bridge and in the park area outside of the amphitheater. I don't know, but I would estimate the crowd was smaller than the last two rallies.After the speeches and group chants ended, the crowd was to march from the park formerly known as Cumberland, across the pedestrian bridge up Third Ave. to the Public Square Park in front of the courthouse. I am unsure if there were to be more rally activity at the end of the march or if the crowd was simply to disband once it reached the courthouse park.
| I thought maybe she was at the wrong protest and was supposed to be on lower Broadway, but there was a logic to her sign, but I can't explain it. |
I followed the crowd as far as Broadway, then went up Broadway to A.J's, had one beer, listened to two good country songs by the band, then called it a day. I think I may have attended my last "No Kings" rally.
Gardenhire, a veteran Chattanooga lawmaker who chairs the Senate Judiciary Committee, said the firearms group hadn’t “darkened” his door for years yet continued to bash him. They also hammered nearly every other Republican in the state for opposing the end of Tennessee’s law against carrying a weapon with “intent to go armed,” a situation in which carrying the gun has no designated purpose such as hunting.
“They’re not reasonable. They’re raising money for their own pocket and paying themselves,” Gardenhire told the Lookout. “I don’t pay any attention to what they say. They have a vested interest in getting their supporters riled up to send them money. Follow the money.”
The gun group sent email letters this week slamming the state’s Republican leaders for failing to use their supermajority to “defend the Constitution” and the rights of Tennesseans to carry weapons, including long guns, along streets, near schools, in parks, pretty much everywhere.
“Instead, despite years of campaign promises and public assurances of unwavering support for the Second Amendment and the federal and state constitutions, these leaders and the Republican supermajority purposefully have left in place statutes that intentionally criminalize the very conduct and activities that the state and federal constitutions not only protect but which they also declare ‘shall not be infringed,’ by the government including its officials,” the letter says.
It points out a three-judge panel in Hughes v. Lee found the state’s “intent to go armed” and gun prohibitions in parks to be unconstitutional, void and unenforceable. Gov. Bill Lee and Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti are appealing the ruling.
The appeal and the refusal to pass bills this year repealing the law “are the actions of government tyranny choosing to violate your rights and their oaths.”
The letter goes on to blast Gardenhire for pushing off a spate of bills until 2027 without alerting committee members, none of whom objected. One of those would have ended recognition of same-sex marriages.
Tennessee Firearms Association Executive Director John Harris wraps up the letter by asking people to consider joining the organization and making charitable contributions. By the way, he also encourages people to defeat the reelection efforts of lawmakers such as Gardenhire.
If that’s the case, Gardenhire said they better be prepared to “dig a trench and get into their little foxholes.”
“I try to look at these things on a reasonable basis. I don’t like somebody being able to carry a shotgun into a bank or around a schoolhouse or in a hospital or where there’s a divorce going on somewhere and everybody’s mad at each other,” he said. “That’s just common sense, and these people don’t use common sense.”
He predicted he would serve six more years. If that’s the case, someone else will be writing his retirement story.
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This one didn't make me mad; it amused me. This one is right up there with renaming the Kennedy Center after himself, accepting someone else's peace prize, or naming a navy battleship after himself, or having the U. S. mint produce a commemorative gold coin with Trump's image on it, or wanting to build a big Trump Arch in Washington.
Trump’s signature is to be added to U.S. dollars, a first for a sitting president. The only thing that makes this not simply amusing is that this is the kind of thing dictators do all over the world and at all times. This is the kind of thing you expect from a Kim Jong Un, not the president of a democracy.
Here is the press release from the Treasury Department:
Treasury Announces President Donald J. Trump’s Signature to Appear on Future U.S. Paper Currency
March 26, 2026
WASHINGTON – In honor of the 250th anniversary of the United States of America, President Donald J. Trump’s signature will appear on future U.S. paper currency along with the Secretary of the Treasury, marking the first time in history for a sitting president.
“Under President Trump’s leadership, we are on a path toward unprecedented economic growth, lasting dollar dominance, and fiscal strength and stability,” said Secretary of the Treasury Scott Bessent. “There is no more powerful way to recognize the historic achievements of our great country and President Donald J. Trump than U.S dollar bills bearing his name, and it is only appropriate that this historic currency be issued at the Semiquincentennial.”
“As the 250th anniversary of our great nation approaches, American currency will continue to stand as a symbol of prosperity, strength, and the unshakable spirit of the American people under President Trump’s leadership,” said Treasurer Brandon Beach. “The President’s mark on history as the architect of America’s Golden Age economic revival is undeniable. Printing his signature on the American currency is not only appropriate, but also well deserved.”
Wow! What an ego! What a brat! What a clown!