POSTPONEMENT: Subway succumbs to eight inches of snow!

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2026

Also, goodbye Kennedy Center: True story! 

Last Friday, we never made it to the medical mission. Making a long and frigid story short, we were wrong when we assumed that it doesn't snow in the subway. 

Once they determined that no trains would be running, further chaos ensued.

As a result, we're to the mission today on a makeup assignment. We won't be posting today, not even about this essay in the Washington Post:

The grave risk of Trump’s Kennedy Center shutdown

Last fall, workers at the Kennedy Center slapped a coat of white paint over the gold-hued columns that connect its upper terrace to its plaza, apparently at the direction of the man who effectively appointed himself chair of the center’s board, President Donald Trump.

It was a seemingly small intervention from a man who fancies himself a connoisseur of architecture, but of course, it made no architectural or visual sense. Now, the all-white columns disappear against the building’s white marble cladding, and so too the lovely symbolism of the narrow, modernist metal supports, which look more like the strings of a musical instrument than the traditional, heavy stone supports of a classical structure.

Now there is grave concern from artists and patrons that the institution itself may disappear. Sunday night, Trump announced a two-year closure for renovation beginning in July, which sounds ominously like a complete rebuild of the structure. Trump added Monday that he wasn’t “ripping it down” but then went on to describe a process that could tear the structure down to its steel framing.

Given Trump’s sudden demolition of the White House’s East Wing in October, and the mix of vague promises and bombastic language in his social media post, which promises “a new and spectacular Entertainment Complex,” it certainly seems possible that the 1971 building, designed architect Edward Durrell Stone, could be partially or completely erased...

And so on from there.

The column was written by Philip Kennicott, the paper's long-time art and architecture critic. A letter expressing a similar concern"Watch for another wrecking ball"has been published by the New York Times. The letter comes from a former chief editor of Architecture Magazine.

Is it possible that these fears are well-founded? We don't have the slightest idea. We can tell you this:

These peculiar events will keep occurring until we're prepared to discuss what seems to be sitting there right before us. Of course, these peculiar events would almost surely continue to happen even if we did decide to have that discussion.

This is the silence we've chosen. All in all, it seems like the best we can do.


MONDAY: Morning Joe played the videotape!

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2026

Almost surely, Fox & Friends Weekend won't: It's true! Joe Scarborough did start today's Morning Joe with what could be called "screams of rage."

He was playing the remarkable videotape of the latest bizarre behavior by ICE. As part of this reportMediate reports the bulk of what he said and provides the Morning Joe tape:

Joe Scarborough Screams in Rage Watching ‘Idiot’ ICE ‘Thugs’ Chase, Pull Guns on Woman

Morning Joe host Joe Scarborough screamed at the camera, trashing ICE as an “undisciplined paramilitary force” as he watched back shocking footage of the moment federal agents chased and surrounded an unarmed Minneapolis woman in her vehicle with their weapons drawn.

The woman is seen in the video from St. Peter, Minnesota, calling police as she’s being pursued by the agents on January 29 after reportedly observing and recording their actions.

As the woman requests help from police and gives her location, the agents’ red vehicle cuts her off, and officers step out to demand she exit her car.

And so on, at length, from there, with no lack of furious behavior involving threats from very large guns. The fuller story of this remarkable incident is provided by Minnesota Public Radio if you simply click here.

St. Peter police chief intervened and got federal agents to release resident, sources say

MPR News has learned that the police chief in the small southern Minnesota city of St. Peter intervened Thursday to prevent federal immigration agents from taking a local resident into detention, although the city of St. Peter denied the intervention in a statement Saturday.

And so on from there. We offer one additional thought:

That seems to be the kind of behavior many Minneapolis residents have witnessed in recent weeks. Can we tell you who won't be witnessing this latest bit of videotape? 

Almost surely, viewers of Fox & Friends Weekend will never see that tape. Neither will viewers of other programs on the Fox News Channel.

Why are people protesting in Minneapolis? As we noted in Saturday's report, Hurt, Campos-Duffy and Jenkins answered that question for Red American viewers on that day's Fox & Friends Weekend. The people were out there protesting in frigid temperatures because they're paid, viewers were told, and because they're "a little bit crazy."

That is the embarrassing way those three friends behave on the air. On Sunday morning, they continued along with that Song Sung Red, but we leave you with an obvious question:

Were some people in Minneapolis protesting last week because they've seen federal agents behaving in similar ways? Or because they've heard about such bizarre behavior? Or because they've seen the videotape?

We'll guess that the answer is yes! That said, viewers of Fox & Friends Weekend aren't likely to see that videotape. That very much isn't a "song sung Red." On programs like Fox & Friends Weekend, the songs involve different events.

Newspapers like the New York Times should be reporting the way our two Americas, Red and Blue, are exposed to different information and to different ideasand to different pieces of videotape. This is a very basic part of our failing modern politics.

It's a basic part of our crumbling society's ongoing societal meltdown. For reasons only they can explain, most news orgs don't want to go there.


SONG(S) SUNG BLUE: Are we hearing the latest "song sung Blue?"

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2026

We may not agree with its message: With the release of additional Epstein files, the stumblebum conduct continued. 

That said, was this really stumblebum conduct? Or might it have been a gesture of contempt from within an undeclared "silent secession?" Let's hear from the Wall Street Journal:

Epstein Files Release Exposes Names of at Least 43 Victims, WSJ Review Finds

The Justice Department exposed the names of dozens of Jeffrey Epstein’s victims, including many who haven’t shared their identities publicly or were minors when they were abused by the notorious sex offender.

A review of 47 victims’ full names on Sunday found that 43 of them were left unredacted in files that were made public by the government on Friday, according to a Wall Street Journal analysis. Several women’s full names appeared more than 100 times in the files.

Could they really have been that inept? Or was that just the latest gesture?

Whatever the answer to that question might be, the madness has continued unabated. With respect to Rep. Omar, the president quickly returned to the practice of calling forwell, we'll let Mediaite explain:

Trump Rages At Ilhan Omar In Early Morning Rant Days After Attack—Demands Sending Her To Jail Or ‘Back’ To Africa

President Donald Trump attacked Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-MN) in an early morning rant suggesting she be jailed or “sent back” to Africa just days after she was attacked onstage.

And so on from there. In a somewhat similar gesture, he announced, early this morning, that he may sue celebrity host Trevor Noah because of the bad thing he said:

Trump Aims Next Lawsuit at Trevor Noah Over ‘Defamatory’ Epstein Joke at Grammys: ‘Get Ready Noah, I’m Going To Have Some Fun With You!’

President Donald Trump said he is going to sue “pathetic” Trevor Noah after he made a “false and defamatory” joke about the president hanging out with dead sex criminal Jeffrey Epstein while hosting the Grammy Awards on Sunday night.

Trump went off on Noah in a Truth Social post at 1:01 a.m. on Monday.

And so on from there. 

More accurately, the president only said that he may decide to sue Noah. For the record, he returned to his "George Slopadopolus" construct in the course of this post:

Ask Little George Slopadopolus, and others, how that all worked out. Also ask CBS! Get ready Noah, I’m going to have some fun with you!

It was actually Little George Slopadopolus to whom his post referred.

Have recent events in Minneapolis damaged the president's political standing? It seems that they actually have! But after replacing Bovino with Homan, the president continued along on his rather unusual way.

Consider this surprising announcement, to cite one example:

Trump Drops Big News About His ‘Trump Kennedy Center’—It’s Closing For 2 Years

In a lengthy Truth Social post Sunday, President Donald Trump announced that his renovation plans for the Kennedy Center For The Performing Arts will involve closing the facility for a full two years.

And so on from there. Will "Kennedy" still be part of the name by the time the renovations are done? 

Regarding those naming rights, we wouldn't bet one way or the other. Meanwhile, also this construction project, according to this report in Saturday's Washington Post:

Trump wants to build a 250-foot-tall arch, dwarfing the Lincoln Memorial

The White House stands about 70 feet tall. The Lincoln Memorial, roughly 100 feet. The triumphal arch President Donald Trump wants to build would eclipse both if he gets his wish.

Trump has grown attached to the idea of a 250-foot-tall structure overlooking the Potomac River, according to two people who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe his comments, a scale that has alarmed some architectural experts who initially supported the idea of an arch but expected a far smaller one.

[...]

Trump has considered smaller versions of the arch, including 165-foot-high and 123-foot-high designs he shared at a dinner last year. But he has favored the largest option, arguing that its sheer size would impress visitors to Washington, and that “250 for 250” makes the most sense, the people said.

Of course! You always design the height of a project based on how many years it has been!

The president tore down the East Wing in order to build a ballroom; the ballroom just keeps getting bigger. So too, it seems, with the triumphal arch. 

And yet, the most remarkable post-Minneapolis walk-back moment would almost surely be this:

FBI Raids Georgia Election Office in Probe Related to 2020 Voter Fraud

The FBI has raided a Georgia election hub as part of an investigation into 2020 election fraud, Fox News Digital reported on Wednesday.

Agents were seen entering the Fulton County Election Hub and Operation Center just outside of Atlanta on Wednesday in an operation related to the 2020 election, the outlet reported. A law enforcement official later confirmed to Reuters that a search warrant was executed at the facility.

President Donald Trump has claimed repeatedly—and without evidence—that the 2020 election, which he lost to Joe Biden, was stolen and rigged against him.

More than five years later, this madness hasn't stopped! Tulsi Gabbard was on the sceneand also, there was this:

Trump Revives #Italygate—The Weirdest 2020 Election Conspiracy of Them All

In the middle of a late-night online posting spree on Wednesday, President Donald Trump resurrected what may be the most bizarre conspiracy theory to emerge from the aftermath of the 2020 election: the idea that the vote was stolen in a globe-spanning covert operation involving Italian military satellites, U.S. intelligence agencies, and China.

Between posts declaring former President Barack Obama a “traitor” and inaccurate claims Walmart is shutting down in California, the president reshared a screengrab of an X post to his 11.6 million followers on Truth Social alleging that “Italian officials at [defense contractor] Leonardo SpA used military satellites to help hack U.S. voting machines, flipping votes from Trump to Biden using CIA-developed tools like Hammer and Scorecard.”

“China reportedly coordinated the whole operation,” the post claimed, while “the CIA oversaw it” and “the FBI covered it up.”\

[...]

This particularly elaborate conspiracy theory, dubbed “Italygate,” is not new and was, in fact, mainlined from QAnon channels to staffers in the first Trump administration during the months between the 2020 election and former President Joe Biden’s inauguration, while Trump was pushing claims the election was “rigged.”

And so on from there. Should that post have been front-page news in the New York Times? We'd say that the answer is yes.

More than five years later, the president has returned to that peculiar claim about the Italian military. In a new column for the New York Times, David French reacts to that news as show:

This Is Not a Drill

[...]

After the F.B.I. raided the Fulton County election center, Trump demanded Obama’s arrest on social media and threatened the prosecution of election workers. He claimed, among other things, that Italian military satellites had hacked the 2020 election and that Obama had “conspired with foreign powers, not one, not two, not three, but four times to overthrow the United States government in 2016.”

The Italian satellite theory is a jolting reminder that Trump will demand that his core supporters believe almost anything he says, no matter how wild or delusional.

As Jonathan Karl reported for ABC News, this theory “was brought to the White House by a woman who went by several aliases, including ‘The Heiress,’ and was known at the Pentagon for her claimed ties to Somali pirates.”

More than five years later, that peculiar theory is suddenly back!

French delivers a frightening warning in the course of that new column. We'll summarize that warning in the days ahead.

We mention these things because of a song we thought we may have heard in several other recent columns in the New York Times. 

We've been hearing a version of that same song on MS NOW as Blue America responds to the latest startling election win. We refer to the Democratic win in a Trump-friendly district in a race for a seat in the Texas State Senate.

The "song" to which we refer is more like a storylinea pleasing claim, proffered by many, according to which the end may finally be drawing near for the MAGA Express.

According to that storyline, it's looking worse and worse for the GOP in this year's scheduled midterm elections. That theory may turn out to be perfectly accuratethough we toss the word "scheduled" into the stew in deference to David French's extremely dire perspective.

Where were we hearing that song sung Blue? In his new column for the Times, Jamelle Bouie worked beneath this headline:

Minneapolis May Be Trump’s Gettysburg

Ezra Klein's new column was published beneath this banner:

Trump Has Overwhelmed Himself

Also, Ruth Ben-Ghiatshe's more of a (highly insightful) academicalmost seemed to be singing the same song in the course of this nuanced guest essay:

History Shows Trump’s Worst Impulses May Backfire on Him

We thought we've heard this song before, dating at least to 2015. It's rarely worked out quite right. 

French's new column stands in extremely gloomy opposition to this possible "song sung Blue." We ourselves would suggest a different perspective, one which may be less dire his.

Have we Blues returned to that upbeat song? We'll pick up here tomorrow.

Tomorrow: A major blue note from French


SATURDAY: Why were the protesters out in the streets?

SATURDAY, JANUARY 31, 2026

Fox & Friends Weekend explains: Yesterday, on a chilly day, they were at it again.

People were marching in the streets"thousands," or possibly "tens of thousands." marching in "sub-zero windchills." Why were those citizens out in those streets? This morning, at the start of the 7 o'clock hour, Fox & Friends Weekend explained.

Griff Jenkins posed the question. Rachel Campos-Duffy responded:

JENKINS (1/31/26): You know, I was just having this conversation with our cameraman, Ted, off camera. You wonder, are they really out there, the protesters in Minneapolis, dealing with like the most frigid temperatures in a long time because they are into the issue? Or are they being paid?

CAMPOS-DUFFY: They're probably being paid. And they're a little crazy. You couldn't get me out there for any amount of money, by the way. I hate cold weather.

On Fox, it's standard messaging. Viewers are constantly told that the others are being paid. For the record, Charlie Hurt had kick-started the rumination by saying this:

HURT: It's kind of like a crazy meter. The crazier you are, the more you like negative 12 degrees to go outside and scream at people.

[LAUGHTER]

In Hurt's world, the others weren't out there stating a view. They were out there "screaming at people."

Jenkins, Campos-Duffy and Hurt are this program's regular co-hosts. To our eye and to our ear, they seem to be three different people.

Jenkins strikes us as wholly sincere. We'd be inclined to venture different capsules concerning the other two friends.

That said, this messaging is constantly offered to viewers of the Fox News Channel. They're out there marching because they've been paid! In our view, there's no way a large modern nation can hope to function this way.

That's an example of the sifting of message which emerges from Silo Red. That said, over here in Blue America, we're also subject to tribal messaging. Consider a highly unusual comment in Michelle Goldberg's new column:

The Fathomless Resentment of Tucker Carlson

[...]

I’ve been thinking about bad faith a lot since reading “Hated by All the Right People,” Jason Zengerle’s shrewd new biography of Tucker Carlson. In the Trump era, many people have shocked their former friends with their authoritarian transformations, but few more than Carlson...

[...]

Carlson’s journey isn’t unique. JD Vance, his closest political ally, has traveled a similar route, from worrying that Trump could be “America’s Hitler” to serving as his vice president. And just like Carlson, who once praised the Hungarian autocrat Viktor Orban for being “hated by all the right people,” Vance has been fueled by hatred. “I think our people hate the right people,” Vance told The American Conservative in 2021. This psychological reliance on loathing, I suspect, accounts for Carlson and Vance’s similar affect. Neither seems, despite phenomenal success, to be very happy. Instead, they radiate spite and grievance, forever making a show of incredulity about the awfulness of their enemies.

Bad faith, obviously, doesn’t belong only to the right. (Just look at the Democrats who assured us all that Joe Biden was up for a re-election campaign.) But Trump’s Republican Party requires of its adherents an exponentially greater degree of mind-warping rationalization. Occasionally this rationalization becomes insupportable, and people break away from Trump’s movement. More often, it’s just corrosive.

Say what? "Bad faith, obviously, doesn’t belong only to the right?" Is Goldberg allowed to say that?

Goldberg occasionally slips such observations into her columns. She sees the problem as much worse in Red America. But she says that an undisclosed number of unnamed Democrats also engaged in "bad faith" in recent years, in the manner she describes in that parenthetical passage.

(Also, perhaps, when the future replacement candidate was sent out to say that the southern border was shut up tight as a drum? When every sane person in America knew that it actually wasn't, often from watching videotape on the Fox News Channel?)

We did this too, President Lincoln once astoundingly said. Given the madness which often prevails Over There within Silo Red, have those of us in Blue America also helped create our former nation's current devolution / descent? 

Why were the protesters out in the streets? On the tightly messaged Fox & Friends Weekend, there could be only one answer.

Are those of us serviced by Silo Blue capable of understanding our own tribe's role in this astoundingly dangerous game? Does the inability to see the real world in all its fullness also, at times, afflict Us?

Next week: Silo Blue?

POSTPONEMENT: We stumbled upon some comic relief...

FRIDAY, JANUARY 30, 2026

...before heading off to the mission: We'll be spending the bulk of the day at the medical mission. For that reason, we don't expect to execute a normal report this day.

That said, we stumbled upon some comic relief in the course of our daily perusals. We start with a passage from Michelle Goldberg's new column for the New York Times.

What ever happened to Tucker Carlson? (Tucker Carlson! Remember him?)

What ever happened to Tucker? As happenstance would have it, the New Yorker's Jason Zengerle has published a book on that topic.

Goldberg discusses that book in her column. We can't vouch for the perfect accuracy of the suggestion housed in this passage, but we did find some dark humor there:

Tucker Carlson Needs His Hatreds

[...]

In 2010, [Tucker] set out to create, with The Daily Caller, a right-wing news site that would value serious, substantive reporting. Unfortunately, he soon found that his audience wanted not sober policy journalism but stories that “actively antagonized liberals,” Zengerle writes. So Carlson, committed to the site’s success, staffed up with a group of white nationalists, one of whom reportedly referred to his desk as “the Eagle’s Nest,” after Hitler’s mountain lair.

Carlson’s immersion in The Daily Caller’s analytics helped him understand, well before many of his peers, Trump’s potential appeal. His insight enabled his rise at Fox News, where he’d started as a low-level contributor. “The project at Fox of trying to find normal-seeming, television-camera-ready human beings who would make a sensible case for Donald Trump was not a small lift,” a former Fox producer told Zengerle. Carlson could do it, and that propelled him to prime time.

In such ways, the prophet Carlson roamed the American desert. At any rate, Carlson ascended to prime time at Foxand he became the channel's top messenger. 

In the aftermath of January 6, he devoted himself to a project in which he played highly selective video clips from the Capitol building that day. Those clips were selected to convey the impression, to millions of viewers, that nothing untoward had occurred.

So goes our imperfect species' recurrent, insistent madness. That said, a bit of comic relief was present in that anonymous quote about Fox:

 The project at Fox of trying to find normal-seeming, television-camera-ready human beings who would make a sensible case for Donald Trump was not a small lift.

According to Zengerle, so said a former producer for Fox. On this campus, we mordantly chuckled, for the following reason:

On occasion, we ourselves have described the people we see on Fox News Channel shows as a collection of "Unrecognizables!" Some say they resemble the bar scene from Star Wars, though we ourselves wouldn't say that.

Borrowing from the late Ed McMahon, How unrecognizable are they? We ask you to ponder this fact:

Yesterday, we managed to sit through every segment of The Five, this former nation's most watched "cable news" TV program. We're not sure we've ever seen an hour so insipid, so defiantly vapid. 

("And yet, this is [us]," Ezra Pound might have said.)

We may try to describe the vapidity of that hour in the next few days. Meanwhile, a bit more comic relief may have lurked in this news report from today's Times:

Greenlanders Watching Turmoil in the United States Say No Thanks

[...]

The United States defended Greenland during World War II and the Cold War, and Greenlanders used to see Americans as protectors. But now the idea of joining up with the United States—a deeply divided nation with no universal health care, widening inequality and chaos on full display in the streets of Minneapolis—is not so appealing.

“What are we supposed to think of the U.S. now?” asked Julie Rademacher, who heads a Greenlandic association in Denmark. She said she too had been disturbed by the news from Minnesota.

“I feel a lot of sympathy with many American citizens,” she said. “It must be hard to live like that.”

Those Greenlanders today! Truly, they live at the end of the earthand yet, they feel sorry for us!

For ourselves, we can't shed the feeling that the recurrent impulse toward tyranny has already won in this land. According to that theoretic, it's all over now but the shoutingand there's plenty of that down here!

With that, we're "going out to clean the pasture spring," or to do something vaguely like that. We may try to describe yesterday's (all too recognizable) hour in the days and the weeks ahead.