Jun 7, 2026

Angela

I doubt seriously that Graham Platner is anything close to the perfect guy for Mainers to put in a US Senate seat.

And I doubt he's somebody I'd trust absolutely to do - or to have done - exactly the right thing. Past, present, or future.

He's a politician, so grains of salt are in order.

But he seems not to be trying to hide from anything. He's fucked up on occasion, he seems to be honest about acknowledging it all, he looks you in the eye when he speaks - without that over-practiced phony shit-eatin' smiley smirky attitude that people like Collins always bring - and he's made adjustments. He's worked on himself.

So when Corporate Media Lords line up against somebody who genuinely wants to make some real changes that just might help regular normal people, it pays to be very skeptical of what their Press Poodles are trying to tell us.


Jun 6, 2026

Rich

There's more to those numbers than meets the eye.


What If

... we had leadership like this again?

Eisenhower jotted this down some time shortly after the first waves had either started across the English Channel, or disembarked into the landing craft, a mile or so off the coast of Normandy.

The fact that he put the wrong date at the end of the thing is believed to be a hint at how worried he was - anxious about possibly sending 150,000 troops into a death trap.

Can you imagine Donald Trump even thinking such thoughts? Taking full responsibility for something as enormous as the invasion of Europe? And writing it down?


Our landings in the Cherbourg-Havre area have failed to gain a satisfactory foothold, and I have withdrawn the troops.

My decision to attack at this time and place was based upon the best information available.

The troops, the air, and the Navy did all that Bravery and devotion to duty could do. If any blame or fault attaches to the attempt, it is mine alone.


Erika Jordan

The fines and penalties are priced in - the cost of doing business.

And it's deductible!


Jun 5, 2026

A.I. May Never Work As Advertised

It's a machine. Machines don't think, because machines can't think.


On Bad Faith

A crisis feels urgent - motivating. The monster is coming for you and your children. You have to respond immediately and do exactly what you're told.

A five point plan for affordable housing, and a white paper on making the move to Medicare For All just feels like extra homework.

Moral Panic sells like hotcakes. Reasoned solutions to real-world problems are boring.


Homes Etc

There's a number of reports that seem to conflict - some saying home sales are up, and the number of pending deals is up, and jobs are up, and the markets are up, and all kinds of happy talk stories, while at the same time, Americans are going deeper into debt trying to pay the bills, and US Treasury bonds aren't selling well.



Car payments squeeze Americans as auto debt hits $1.68 trillion, report finds

It's weird and getting weirder.


Sellers are pulling homes off the market at the fastest pace since 2020

Key Points
  • Nationwide, 5.8% of all home listings were pulled off the market in April, according to Redfin.
  • Delistings were up 3.8% compared with March.
  • Atlanta saw the most homes taken off the market as higher mortgage rates and elevated gas prices weigh on housing.
More frustrated home sellers were giving up, right in the midst of the all-important spring market, according to new data.

Nationwide, 5.8% of all home listings were pulled off the market in April, according to Redfin, a real estate brokerage. That ties with December for the highest share of homes delisted since March 2020, when the pandemic hit and the housing market froze. Delistings in April were up 3.8% compared with March.

The increase comes as higher mortgage rates, elevated gas prices and weaker consumer confidence take their toll on housing demand. Sellers are no longer in the driver’s seat and aren’t getting the prices they want.

Atlanta saw the highest share of homes come off the market in April, with 1 in 10 delisted. San Jose, California, followed with roughly 9% pulled, then Los Angeles (7.8%), Dallas (7.8%) and Seattle (7.7%).

Mortgage rates had been falling at the start of this year, with the 30-year fixed briefly touching the 5% range at the end of February, according to Mortgage News Daily. They then jumped sharply when the war with Iran started and have remained elevated since then.

“Buyers know they have negotiating power, often offering under the asking price and completing inspections, but some sellers just won’t budge,” said Patricia Ammann, a Redfin agent, in a release.

Home prices have been easing, but are still higher than they were a year ago and have even begun to strengthen more recently.

“Markets that depend more heavily on traditional mortgage financing and rate-sensitive buyers are seeing prices stay relatively flat,” said Selma Hepp, chief economist at Cotality, in a release. “Overall, fewer markets posted year-over-year price declines in April than in prior months, pointing to continued stabilization across the housing market.”

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Signed contracts on existing homes, so-called pending sales, did rise very slightly in April, up 1.4% from March, according to the National Association of Realtors. That is likely due to higher inventory, which was up nearly 6% from March.

Listings in some parts of the country are starting to pile up, as new ones come on the market and other ones sit. Homes are sitting on the market longer, causing some buyers to simply give up as the all-important spring season draws to a close.

Some homeowners who pulled their homes off the market over the past year relisted them in April, according to Redfin, hoping to take advantage of the spring market, despite higher mortgage rates. The report found 2.5% of the homes on the market in April were relistings, tied with the prior two months for the highest share since mid-2020 when there was a sudden surge in housing demand.

A TweeXt


Every Day - HCR

Every day. Get up and try to make one small bit of the world a tiny bit better.

Smile, and nod to a stranger.

Hold the door open for somebody at the 7-11.

Make eye contact with a kid and wave at them.

Buy a lottery ticket.

Every day you can.


Robert Arnold

Plutocrats aren't your friends. They're not your allies. They're not even your fellow citizens.