It’s Monday, April 29th, 2019…but before we begin, here’s an interesting factoid regarding the continuing travails of embattled Baltimore mayor Catherine Pugh:

Pugh came to office in late 2016 after edging out ex-Mayor Sheila Dixon, who had spent much of her tenure fighting corruption charges before being forced to depart office in 2010 as part of a plea deal connected to the misappropriation of about $500 in gift cards meant for needy families.

Holy “Marion Barry”, Batman!  Progressives literally flaunt their corruption, because, like the illegal aliens flooding our southern border, they know, at least for them, breaking the law generally carries no consequences.  It’s difficult to pity those who suffer at the hands of the very same parasitic scam artists they continue to put in office.

In a related item of political corruption of the rankest variety, Balls Cotton forwarded this tweet from Paul Sperry:

Stay tuned on this one; we’ll update you on further details as they’re forthcoming.

Now, here’s The Gouge!

First up, courtesy of The Federalist via George Lawlor, David Harsanyi details why….

Biden’s Attack On ‘White Man’s Culture’ Is A Mix Of Historical Illiteracy And Dishonesty

The former vice president still owes Clarence Thomas an apology.

 

During a recent struggle session over his role in the Clarence Thomas-Anita Hill Supreme Court hearings of 1991, prospective presidential candidate Joe Biden declared that the United States had a centuries-old embedded cultural problem with permissive violence against women. “It’s an English jurisprudential culture,” Biden explained this week, “a white man’s culture. It’s got to change.”

“English jurisprudential culture” is, of course, the foundation of American governance and our Constitutional rights. It’s unlikely any culture in history has brought more freedom and prosperity to more of humankind. Now, it’s true that the tenets of this culture have fallen into disfavor with the progressives who Biden is trying to woo. But does any educated person truly believe that “English jurisprudential culture” has been more prone towards misogyny than other societies?

How has Chinese jurisprudential culture performed for women over history? How about Indian jurisprudential culture? Or Russian jurisprudential culture? Or sub-Saharan African jurisprudential culture? How has Islamic jurisprudential culture worked out for women? The “English jurisprudential culture” of New Zealand was the first to grant all women the right to vote in 1893, followed over the next decades by an array of other English and formerly English colonies. Saudi Arabia granted women that same right only in 2011. Then again, the women of 1893 “English jurisprudential culture”—voting rights or not—were already leading freer and safer lives than most of the women who have to function under the deeply illiberal legal cultures of the Islamic world today.

Those who demand acts of contrition over “English jurisprudential culture,” seem to have a problem with ideals of blind justice and due process that stop us from sacrificing people to the whims of an aggrieved mob. Biden’s transgression against progressivism, as far as I can tell, was affirming to Thomas during the Hill hearings that, “from the beginning and at this moment, until the end, the presumption [of innocence] is with you.” It wasn’t true.

…If anything, Biden should be apologizing to Thomas

One can only assume, hearing Biden make such claims today, he’s forgotten whom he was sitting next to…

…during the Thomas hearings.

Moving on, writing at NRO, Kevin Williamson relates how…

Impeachment Would Be a Redundant Judgment

 

The Mueller investigation was supposed to be a legal process concerned with crimes. Investigators identified no crimes to charge, and so it has, naturally, become something else: no longer a theory about a criminal conspiracyonly an irritable mood.

In terms of Donald Trump’s character and habits, there is practically nothing in the Mueller report — or in the public record since 2016 — that voters did not already know when they elected him. And that is really the fundamental argument against impeaching President Trump: The political judgment called for in an impeachment at this point and in this context properly ought to be understood as beside the point, if we take seriously the democratic assumption that the judgment of the people, rendered in the election, is sovereign.

There isn’t some shocking new thing, and, of course, some Democrats have been talking impeachment since before Trump was even sworn in. The Democrats do not propose to impeach Donald Trump for high crimes and misdemeanors, but simply for being Donald Trump. One may sympathize with that, but Donald Trump is the man the voters chose.

And that goes to the real issue here: The Democrats cannot accept that they lost an election to Donald Trump

Which is to say: The Democrats’ talk of impeachment is partly about 2020, but it’s mainly about 2016, and their adolescent psychic need to believe that the presidential election that brought Donald Trump to the White House was illegitimate rather than an opportunity they simply blew…”

Here’s the juice: res ipso loquitur…the thing speaks for itself.  Particularly when it comes to the current, incredibly virulent strain of Trump Derangement Syndrome which continues to plague every urban enclave and “newsroom” across the country, as well as the halls of Congress.

Then there’s this from the front page of the WSJ:

PG&E’s Radical Plan to Prevent Wildfires: Shut Down the Power Grid

When dangerously high winds arise this year, the utility says it will black out fire-prone areas that are home to 5.4 million people

 

PG&E Corp. can’t prevent its power lines from sparking the kinds of wildfires that have killed scores of Californians. So instead, it plans to pull the plug on a giant swath of the state’s population.

No U.S. utility has ever blacked out so many people on purpose. PG&E says it could knock out power to as much as an eighth of the state’s population for as long as five days when dangerously high winds arise. Communities likely to get shut off worry PG&E will put people in danger, especially the sick and elderly, and cause financial losses with slim hope of compensation.

In October, in a test run of sorts, PG&E for the first time cut power to several small communities over wildfire concerns, including the small Napa Valley town of Calistoga, for about two days. Emergency officials raced door-to-door to check on elderly residents, some of whom relied on electric medical devices. Grocers dumped spoiling inventory. Hotels lost business.

PG&E is “essentially shifting all of the burden, all of the losses onto everyone else,” said Dylan Feik, who was Calistoga city manager until earlier this month.

By shutting off power in fire-prone parts of its service area, which are home to 5.4 million people, PG&E said in regulatory filings it hopes to prevent more deadly wildfires. The San Francisco-based company sought bankruptcy protection in January, citing more than $30 billion in potential damages from fires linked to its equipment.

This plan amounts to an admission by PG&E that it can’t always fulfill its basic job of delivering electricity both safely and reliably. Years of drought and a drying climate have turned the state’s northern forests into a tinderbox, and the utility has failed to make needed investments to make its grid sturdier.

During this year’s wildfire season, which typically starts around June, PG&E is preparing to make cutoffs to a far larger geographic region than it has targeted for blackouts in the past, increasing the number of potentially affected customers nearly 10-fold. While it is unlikely all areas would be affected at once, the outages may turn entire counties dark…”

Hey, what could go wrong?!?

Had these “facts” been offered by the Journal‘s editorial board, we’d take them with a far smaller grain of salt.  But coming as they do from the “news” side, we’re inclined to suspect the powers-that-be in Sacramento bear a much larger share of the blame for the fires which have recently ravaged the once-Golden State than the article “reports”.

And in the Health Section, we’re shocked…

…to learn one Dr. Jen Gunter, OBGYN and author of The Vagina Bible, found it necessary to advise women…

No, Putting Garlic in Your Vagina Will Not Cure a Yeast Infection

Myth busted.

 

“There’s a nasty rumor that’s been around for years that women in need of a yeast infection cure should look no further than the produce aisle. The myth states that the simple act of inserting a garlic clove into your treasured female bits will help to remedy the entirely unpleasant sensation that anyone in possession of a vagina has at some point experienced.

It turns out this DIY method is actually not an effective treatment for that internal burning or itching. In fact, it can actually harm your lady garden. And that’s why Dr. Jen Gunter, OBGYN and author of The Vagina Bible, wrote a (now viral) thread of tweets to end the cycle of fake vajayjay news.

We can only hope these women weren’t recycling the garlic…

…into whatever they were making for dinner.

Perhaps this is why Monistat doesn’t come in a garlic-scented variety!

Reports the LGBQTUVWXYZ community strenuously objected to Dr. Gunter’s follow-on suggestion men should avoid shoving cucumbers up their keisters as a treatment for hemorrhoids remain unconfirmed.

Which brings us, appropriately enough, to The Lighter Side:

And although selecting our favorite cartoon from the amazing Stilton Jarlsberg is as tough as picking the greatest Far Side, this one’s definitely in our top ten:

Finally, we’ll call it day with an admonition, as…

Tourists are warned against taking selfies after Instagram influencer popularizes dangerous spot

 

Sydney’s picturesque Diamond Bay has become overrun with tourists trying to get the perfect shot on the Australian cliff edge – so much so that emergency responders and residents have issued a “warning” to those flocking to the dangerous destination.

This isn’t the first time officials have had to issue warnings to remind people not to put themselves in precarious positions to get the perfect snap – and have suggested going as far as to install fences along popular cliff edges or implement “no selfie zones.”

According to a global study, there were 259 people who died while taking selfies between 2011 and 2017…”

Two quick thoughts: (1) in our view, selfies specifically, and social media in general, are largely useless time sinks, as well as providing an easy means for the softest and most irresponsible generations in world history…

…to exhibit their narcissism for the world to see.

(2)  The premature demise of such individuals can only serve to deepen the global gene pool, as Ebenezer Scrooge once observed:

Magoo



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