Saturday, July 26, 2025

Pardoned January 6 Insurrectionist Stewart Parks Enters 7th District Race.


by Rod Williams, July 26, 2024- Steward Parks is one of several candidates running for the District 7th Congressional seat vacated by Congressman Mark Green. In this video of Parks being interviewed by former Davidson County Republican Party chair Lonnie Spivak, Parks is referred to as a "political prisoner," and the Biden term as president is referred to by Parks as the "Biden reign of terror." Parks talks about his actions on the day of January 6th, the FBI raid on his home and his arrest, his trial, his stint in prison, and his pardon. Other than Parks participating in the January coup attempt, Parks seems to be short on credentials. 

Stumble Upon Toolbar
My Zimbio
Top Stories

Friday, July 25, 2025

Columbia mayor weighs run as Democrat in 5th Congressional District

Columbia Mayor Chaz Molder
By Sam Stockard, Nashville Lookout, July 22, 2025 - Columbia Mayor Chaz Molder confirmed this week he is “strongly considering” entering the 5th Congressional District race as a Democrat, potentially setting up a 2026 race with Republican U.S. Rep. Andy Ogles.

If he enters the contest, Molder would join Metro Council member Mike Cortese, who has announced his candidacy and filed a statement of candidacy with the Federal Election Commission, adjunct professor Joyce Neal and healthcare executive Jim Torino in a Democratic primary. Political activist Maryam Abolfazli, who lost to Ogles in 2024, has made overtures about running again. 

... Molder won the Columbia mayoral election in 2018 and captured re-election in 2022. He grew up in Columbia in Middle Tennessee and graduated from the University of Tennessee and University of Memphis law school before returning home and practicing law.

... Cortese is the most visible candidate to enter the race. In an announcement at the Tennessee Democratic Party’s annual Three Star Dinner, he criticized Republicans and Democrats alike, saying members of both parties have cozied up to special interests instead of representing the working class.

“I’m running to fight for the people who make this country work and just want the damn thing to work for them too,” he said at the event. “The people who make things, fix things, grow things, and keep this whole damn thing running – we’re taking that opportunity back.” (link)

Rod's Comment: I don't know much about Mayor Molder as of yet, but having been elected twice mayor of Columbia is a good credential. A Democrat who has been elected mayor of Columbia in Republican Maury County looks like the kind of Democrat that could mount a viable challenge to Andy Ogles. I am hoping Dems will nominate a sane, sensible, good-government type, old-fashioned moderate liberal, with government experience and not some radical woke progressive activist. I think that type of Dem could mount a viable challenge to Ogles, assuming other factors align.

I tend to think Ogles' future is tied to Trump's popularity. If Trump's approval ratings drop to about 32%, Ogles may be vulnerable, or if some real dirt on Ogles finally sticks, combined with a drop in Trump's popularity that is less 32%, Ogles could be vulnerable. 

Andy Ogles is a despicable humane being, ethically challenged, and an embarrassing Trump suck-up. He needs to be defeated. Of course, my preference would be that a solid conservative, normie Republican would primary Ogles, and then the Republican would keep the seat in the Republican column. Unfortunately, unless Trump's popularity falls sharply,  I doubt Ogles could be defeated in a Republican primary. 

Stumble Upon Toolbar
My Zimbio
Top Stories

More Europeans Die of Heat Death—Largely Due to Lack of Air-Conditioning—than Americans Die from Gunshot Wounds.

 More Europeans Die of Heat Death—Largely Due to Lack of Air-Conditioning—than Americans Die
from Gunshot Wounds.

Stumble Upon Toolbar
My Zimbio
Top Stories

Metro School Board approves $6.5 million settlement, sparking concerns

By Rod Williams, July 25, 2025 - It seems that Nashville has a hard time hiring competent or honest administrators for key positions. The Arts Commission is probably the best example, but its budget is a relatively small part of the total Metro budget. The Arts Commission has been dysfunctional for years. (link)

The school budget gets the bulk of Metro tax dollars. With school directors and arts administration and some other positions, it seems we hire based on identity politics, the new person makes a mess of things, or engages in atrocious or embarrassing conduct, we do not want to be seen firing a member of a minority or angering social justice warriors, so we pay them a lot of money to just go away. Also, when those who worked for the director or a department head end up suing the city for the malfeasance of the disgraced former director or department head, we pay off the claimants rather than trying to defend against the claim.

MNPS Director
Adrienne Battle
We paid a lot of money- $6.5 million - to settle the claims of five former administrators who filed formal complaints against the Metro School District for misconduct tied directly to school Director Adrienne Battle.  The five school administrators, Dr. Jenai Hayes, Dr. Lily Moreno Leffler, Dr. James Bailey, Dr. Pippa Meriwether, and Dr. Damon Cathey, claimed MNPS retaliated against them for complaining of wrongdoing by Battle. These five exercised their First Amendment rights. One of the five alleged discrimination based on age, another retaliation based on sex and a violation of Title VI laws that protect employees from forms of hiring discrimination. One plaintiff said he was fired after calling for Battle’s brother to be removed from his position as Whites Creek High School's basketball coach after he got into a fight with a parent.

The school board voted 9-0 to pay the settlement, which far exceeds the typical $300,000 cap for cases of this nature. Dr. Battle has not gone away nor has she been disciplined and still serves as Metro Director of Schools. She has not been punished and she has not publicly addressed the allegations or the settlement. 

For more on this, see this link, this link, and this link.

Stumble Upon Toolbar
My Zimbio
Top Stories

Tuesday, July 22, 2025

Freeing Ghislaine Maxwell

 

Donald Trump is going to let Ghislaine Maxwell out of prison early in exchange for absolving him of wrongdoing related to Epstein. (link)

Stumble Upon Toolbar
My Zimbio
Top Stories

Why Trump Can’t Shake Jeffrey Epstein | The Ezra Klein Show with Will Sommer

by Rod Williams, July 22, 2025- Did you know that when women wear red shoes, that is a signal to other women that they drink the blood of children? That is what many in the Q-Anon world believe. In this episode of the Ezra Klein Show, guest Will Sommner shares that bit of information and more on the weird world of Q-Anon as part of his discussion on why segments of Trump world are so invested in the Epstein conspiracy and why they will not just fall in line with Trump's desire to be done with the whole thing. 

Esra Klein is by far my favorite liberal podcaster or broadcaster. He is not so doctrinaire liberal that he has closed his mind. Unlike many on the left, he is not constantly angry and does not display that self-righteous condescending superiority so often displayed by personalities on the left. He is thoughtful and inquisitive and is a good interviewer. I don't watch every episode, but do catch his podcast from time to time.

In this episode, he interviews Will Sommer, discussing the Epstein controversy and why it is causing such division within MAGA world. Sommer is a regular on the Bulwark YouTube channel with I watch regularlly. I have never heard Sommer express specifically his political philosophy but from what I have gathered, I assume he is a pre-Trump normie Republican or a former Republican. Sommers is an expert on conspiracy theories and the far right and is the author of “Trust the Plan: The Rise of QAnon and the Conspiracy That Unhinged America.”

This was a fascinating program and I highly recommend it. 

Stumble Upon Toolbar
My Zimbio
Top Stories

CBO: 'Big, beautiful bill' will add $3.4 trillion to federal deficit by 2034

By Thérèse Boudreaux, The Center Square, July 22, 2025-  Republicans’ recently-passed One Big Beautiful Bill Act will add trillions to the federal deficit and debt over the next decade, according to the Congressional Budget Office’s final cost analysis.

The long-awaited CBO score, released Monday, estimates that the budget reconciliation bill will increase the federal deficit by a net $3.4 trillion over the 2025-2034 period. Most of the cost stems from the legislation permanently extending the 2017 tax cuts, which CBO calculates as lost federal revenue.

Using the CBO score, the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget projects that the policies in the bill will also add $4.1 trillion to the national debt over the same time period, when accounting for interest.

“It’s still hard to believe that policymakers just added $4 trillion to the debt,” CRFB President Maya MacGuineas said Monday. “We’ll hear a lot of excuses, of course. Claims that economic growth will cover the costs or that spending cuts will wildly exceed expectations, or that they shouldn’t have to pay for extending temporary provisions in the law. None of these excuses pass muster.”

Republican leaders had promised deficit-wary constituents that they would pair any provisions in the bill resulting in lost revenue with dollar-for-dollar spending cuts or provisions boosting economic growth.

While House committees largely followed those promises by authorizing a ten-year tax cut extension with offsetting spending cuts, Senate committees leaped far out of the fiscal bounds established by the budget reconciliation’s original blueprint. 

Because extending the tax cuts permanently would cost more than lawmakers could realistically cut, the Senate changed its accounting methods to paper over the entire cost. Under the current policy baseline, the OBBBA costs only $441 billion by 2034, as The Center Square reported. 

This new fiscal framework allowed Republicans to permanently extend the tax cuts, as President Donald Trump wanted, while still theoretically complying with budget instructions. But the CBO, CRFB, and nearly all budget organizations denounced the tactic as a “gimmick.” 

“[M]odelers from across the ideological spectrum universally agree that any sustained economic benefits are likely to be modest, or negative, and not one serious estimate claims this bill will improve our fiscal situation. Rather, positive growth effects are likely to be swamped by the effects of higher debt and interest rates,” MacGuineas said.

House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., has said that he wants to do a second budget reconciliation bill to codify even more of the president’s agenda. MacGuineas said that if Republicans do so, the bill “should focus entirely on deficit reduction.”


Stumble Upon Toolbar
My Zimbio
Top Stories

Sunday, July 20, 2025

More Illegal Haitian Immigrants Would Lower the Crime Rate

 


Stumble Upon Toolbar
My Zimbio
Top Stories

DHS Secretary Kristi Noem Goes After Nashville

Stumble Upon Toolbar
My Zimbio
Top Stories