A lovingly created satirical tribute of the best monster on PBS. May PBS overcome the assault from the MAGA mobsters. #pbsfunding #comic #sesamestreet #humour #NPR #PBS
https://muddyum.net/the-way-the-cookie-monster-crumbles-6cbef19f3a5c
A lovingly created satirical tribute of the best monster on PBS. May PBS overcome the assault from the MAGA mobsters. #pbsfunding #comic #sesamestreet #humour #NPR #PBS
https://muddyum.net/the-way-the-cookie-monster-crumbles-6cbef19f3a5c
Oh you thought you was slick posting #anticommunistpropaganda then post #hasbara the next day? As you're shamelessly asking for #oklahomans money because the same #capitalistdictatorship that told you to do so is #defunding you? #irony
https://www.threads.com/@materialist.danarxist/post/DK8vyCCttQs
https://www.instagram.com/reel/DKc7987vl3U/
#hasbarasucks #WesternPropaganda #propaganda #oeta #Kevin_stitt_pbs #pbsfails #pbsfunding #pbs #oklahomanews #oklahoma #oklahoman #oklahomanotokay #oklahomanotok #capitalistpropaganda
Finally Friday Reads: Feet Donât Fail Me Now
âWow, eye-opening interview!â John Buss, @repeat1968
Good Day, Sky Dancers!
Iâm a little late on this because Iâve finally reached the end of all these tests to figure out why I keep having to sing Feet Donât Fail Me Now. Iâm finally getting a bit of information on my poor polyneuropathic feet. It seems they likely came from the intense rounds of chemotherapy I had for the cancer I developed after my youngest was born. Anyway, Iâm back from the EMG which involves a lot of needle poking and shocking your nerves. It wasnât a pleasant experience, much like Yam Titsâ reign of terror, but now I know. I guess the best thing I can do is take a couple more supplements, so I will keep on Truckinâ here in New Orleans. Anyway, the Polycrisis continues on all fronts.
So, now is the time for all good citizens to come to the defense of Big Bird, Elmo, Cookie Monster, and all the Sesame Street gang. The AP reports that âTrump signs executive order directing federal funding cuts to PBS and NPR.â
President Donald Trump on Thursday signed an executive order aiming to slash public subsidies to PBS and NPR as he alleged âbiasâ in the broadcastersâ reporting.
The order instructs the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and other federal agencies âto cease Federal funding for NPR and PBSâ and further requires that that they work to root out indirect sources of public financing for the news organizations. The White House, in a social media posting announcing the signing, said the outlets âreceive millions from taxpayers to spread radical, woke propaganda disguised as ânews.ââ
Itâs the latest move by Trump and his administration to utilize federal powers to control or hamstring institutions whose actions or viewpoints he disagrees with. Since taking office, Trump has ousted leaders, placed staff on administrative leave and cut off hundreds of millions of dollars in funding to artists, libraries, museums, theaters and others, through takeovers of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts and the National Endowment for the Humanities. Trump has also pushed to withhold federal research and education funds from universities and punish law firms unless they agreed to eliminate diversity programs and other measures Trump has found objectionable.
The broadcasters get roughly half a billion dollars in public money through the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, and have been preparing for the possibility of stiff cuts since Trumpâs election, as Republicans have long complained about them.
March 20, 2017
I have to say that PBS is a mainstay of the small amount of TV viewing I actually do. Master Piece Theater has been a staple of my viewing since University, and my daughters grew up with Mr Rodgers, Sesame Street, and my youngest was addicted to Barney and Friends. My mother always watched all the Detective Shows they ever showed, including Mystery Theater. Itâs where I learned to love Dr. Who and Monty Python. I canât even imagine #FARTUS has even seen any of those shows. The actual Federal Spending on the public networks is very small. They get most of their money from corporate sponsorship and their viewers. The amount going to Elon Muskâs enterprises is huge. You can view the funding numbers for PBS at this link: âFrequently Asked Questions about Support.â
The Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) receives a congressional appropriation each year of about $500M. CPB allocates the appropriation mostly to public television and radio stations, with some assigned to NPR and PBS to support national programming.
CPB funding to stations covers a portion of eachâs annual operating budget (the percentage varies from station to station but as a general rule the percentage is smaller for larger market stations). Stations rely on generous donations from viewers like you, corporate sponsorships, and foundation grants to cover the rest of their operating budget.
Part of each stationâs operating budget is programming dues which it pays to PBS (and NPR) for National programming like PBS News Hour.
The News Hour receives about 35% of its annual funding/budget from CPB and PBS via national programming funds â a combination of CPB appropriation funds and annual programming dues paid to PBS by stations re-allocated to programs like ours. The remaining 65% is generated from individual donations, foundation grants and corporate sponsorships.
Hereâs a recent article from WAPO on the amount of Federal Funding received by Musksâ businesses. âElon Muskâs business empire is built on $38 billion in government funding. Government infusions at key moments helped Tesla and SpaceX flourish, boosting Muskâs wealth.â Remember,nothing has ever actually blown up on Sesame Street.
Elon Musk and his cost-cutting U.S. DOGE Service team have been on a mission to trim government largesse. Yet Musk is one of the greatest beneficiaries of the taxpayersâ coffers.
Over the years, Musk and his businesses have received at least $38 billion in government contracts, loans, subsidies and tax credits, often at critical moments, a Washington Post analysis has found, helping seed the growth that has made him the worldâs richest person.
The payments stretch back more than 20 years. Shortly after becoming CEO of a cash-strapped Tesla in 2008, Musk fought hard to secure a low-interest loan from the Energy Department, according to two people directly involved with the process,holding daily briefings with company executives about the paperwork and spending hours with a government loan officer.
When Tesla soon after realized it was missing a crucial Environmental Protection Agency certification it needed to qualify for the loan days before Christmas, Musk went straight to the top, urging then-EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson to intervene, according to one of thepeople. Both people spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of retribution.
Nearly two-thirds of the $38 billion in funds have been promised to Muskâs businesses in the past five years.
In 2024 alone, federal and local governments committed at least $6.3 billion to Muskâs companies, the highest total to date.
The total amount is probably larger: This analysis includes only publicly available contracts, omitting classified defense and intelligence work for the federal government.SpaceX has been developing spy satellites for the National Reconnaissance Office, the Pentagonâs spy satellite division, according to the Reuters news agency. The Wall Street Journal reported that contract was worth $1.8 billion, citing company documents.
The Post found nearly a dozen other local grants, reimbursements and tax credits where the specific amount of money is not public.
An additional 52 ongoing contracts with seven government agencies â including NASA, the Defense Department and the General Services Administration â are on track to potentially pay Muskâs companies an additional $11.8 billion over the next few years, according to The Postâs analysis.
Well, isnât that special? Hereâs a read from Politico about the pushback from NPR to Trump. âPublic media executives push back against Trump targeting NPR and PBS: âBlatantly unlawfulâ. The president issued an executive order late Thursday trying to cut federal funding.â
Public media executives are pushing back against President Donald Trumpâs late Thursday executive order seeking to strike federal funding for NPR and PBS, arguing it is unlawful.
Trumpâs Thursday order directed the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, a private nonprofit that Congress awards more than $500 million annually to fund public media, to âcancel existing direct funding to the maximum extent allowed by lawâ to NPR and PBS.
âCongress directly authorized and funded CPB to be a private nonprofit corporation wholly independent of the federal government,â she wrote.
CPB is already embroiled in a battle with the Trump administration. Earlier this week, the organization sued after Trump asserted he was removing three of the organizationâs five board members.
Trump and his allies in Congress have repeatedly targeted NPR and PBS, arguing that the two outlets have a liberal bias and seeking to strip their funds.
The leaders of both organizations were hauled in front of Congress for a hearing in front of the House Oversight Subcommittee on Delivering on Government Efficiency â a companion to Elon Muskâs Department of Government Efficiency â and the FCC has launched an investigation of bothâs underwriting messages.
The White House is expected to ask Congress to cancel already approved funding for public broadcasting, in what is known as a rescission request, POLITICO previously reported.
PBS Chief Executive Paula Kerger released a statement Friday in response to the presidentâs order, calling it âblatantly unlawfulâ and said the broadcaster is âexploring all optionsâ to ensure it can continue programming across the country.
In a press release from NPR, the organization said it would âvigorously defend our right to provide essential news, information and life-saving services to the American publicâ and challenge the executive order âusing all means available.â
The order explicitly called on the CPB Board of Directors to end direct, indirect and future funding to the two public broadcasters. Federal funds make up about 15 percent of PBSâ annual revenue and about 1 percent of NPRâs budget every year.
Well, kids, the President says you have to scale back holiday gifts, and he doesnât want you to access Blueâs Clues. Work it out, Wombat, Milo, and Carl the Collector. Lawrence OâDonnell is now calling him Donny Two Dolls. Martine Powersâwriting for the Washington Postâhas this to say. âIs Trump waging a war on dolls? The presidentâs call for American children to own fewer dolls sounded to some like an implicit rebuke of U.S. consumerism. Itâs not his usual message.â
Call it the Great Barbie Belt-Tightening â as if that were even possible with her waistline.
President Donald Trump and his deputy chief of staff, Stephen Miller, might have a new target in their trade war crosshairs: dolls.
Or, more specifically, excessive numbers of dolls. Or, dolls that are not of the superior manufacturing quality befitting Americaâs children.
On Wednesday, Trump predicted during a Cabinet meeting that higher prices caused by tariffs will mean âchildren will have two dolls instead of 30 dolls.â The next morning, Miller doubled down in a White House briefing, suggesting that American parents agree that fewer dolls would be better.
People of all ideological stripes, from liberals to conservatives to the late Pope Francis, have cautioned against American overconsumption â and suggested that the worldâs richest nation should make do with less. But Trump has never come close to espousing such a philosophy, not even in his messaging around his tariff policies, which threaten to raise prices on myriad consumer products, including dolls. In his second term, the president has decorated the Oval Office with gilded accents â and has promised repeatedly, as he did Tuesday at a political rally in Warren, Michigan, to âmake America wealthy again.â
History shows that there is great political peril in asking Americans to do more with less. Just ask Jimmy Carter, the late president whom Republicans have pilloried for nearly 50 years for scolding the country to make sacrifices during the energy crisis of the late 1970s.
Plus, there are few more uniquely American icons than toy dolls. Barbie was the runaway bestseller for decades before it became a blockbuster movie in 2023. One of the most popular brands of dolls is literally called American Girl. And among the best-selling dolls are action figures marketed to boys, such as the U.S.-military-inspired G.I. Joe.
Some Democrats have suggested that Trumpâs comments are an act of political self-sabotage â a bridge too far for American consumers, who donât want to be told by a rich politician that their children should expect a smaller-than-usual stack of toys on Christmas morning.
So, you intrepid reporter wants to know if Yam Titâs has just started an official war on Christmas? This surely looks like it. Good thing Sky Dancing Blog doesnât rely on any federal or state funding.
If all that wasnât depressing enough, AXIOSâ Mark Caputo has a mood-killer headline up today. âScoop: Stephen Miller emerges as top contender for Trumpâs next national security adviser.â Will one single Republican in Congress say hell, no?
Why it matters: Miller â the deputy chief of staff and the brain behind Trumpâs controversial immigration crackdown â is one of the presidentâs longest-serving and most-trusted aides.
Zoom in: Miller already is the administrationâs Homeland Security adviser, and is an aggressive defender of the administrationâs legal push for immediate deportations of unauthorized immigrants without court hearings.
Zoom out: Trump has a penchant for putting his faith in a small number of advisers and piling responsibilities on their plate, so insiders say it wouldnât be unusual for Miller hold multiple titles, just as Rubio does.
Whatâs next: Those who understand the presidentâs thinking say itâs unclear how long he wants to keep Rubio as national security adviser.
Judges that have made decisions against Trump continue to be under threat of violence and death as are their families. This headline is from Reuters. âThese judges ruled against Trump. Then their families came under attack. As federal judges rule against the Trump administration in dozens of politically charged cases, the families of at least 11 of the jurists have been targeted with threats and harassment. The intimidation campaign has strained judges and their relatives â and legal scholars fear it could have a chilling effect on the judiciary. Multiple reporters have contributed to this very jarring story.
When U.S. District Judge James Boasberg ruled in April that Trump administration officials could face criminal contempt charges for deporting migrants in defiance of a court order, the blowback was When Elon Musk shared an online post that mischaracterized the work of Judge Boasbergâs daughter, some of his followers responded on X with calls âto lock her up.â
The presidentâs supporters unleashed a wave of threats and menacing posts. And they didnât just target the judge. Some attacked Boasbergâs brother. Others blasted his daughter. Some demanded the familyâs arrest â or execution.v
U.S. District Judge John McConnellâs family endured similar threats after he ruled that President Donald Trump overstepped his authority in freezing grants for education and other services. Far-right provocateur Laura Loomer tweeted a photo of the judgeâs daughter, who had worked at the U.S. Education Department as a policy advisor, and accused McConnell of protecting her paycheck. Billionaire Elon Musk amplified the post to his 219 million X followers. Neither mentioned the daughter had left her job before Trumpâs inauguration.
When Elon Musk shared an online post that mischaracterized the work of Judge Boasbergâs daughter, some of his followers responded on X with calls âto lock her up.â
Loomer continued her attacks with nine more posts in the ensuing days â and more than 600 calls and emails flooded McConnellâs Rhode Island courthouse, including death threats and menacing messages taunting his family, according to a court clerk and another person familiar with the communications.
Trying to fly anywhere? Are you willing to take this hits to your time and the risk to your safety?
âNewark Liberty Airport posted a statement to X advising, âFlights at @EWRairport continue to be disrupted due to @FAA staffing shortages, with delays and cancellations expected to continue throughout the day.âđ± How many more âNewarkâsâ are there?#DemVoice1 https://www.rawstory.com/newark-airpo…
â Nana Boricuađșđžđ”đ·đŽđđ (@nana-mary.bsky.social) 2025-05-02T19:32:48.848Z
Jennifer Bowers Bahneyâwriting for Raw Storyâ has the scary details. âInsider issues âincredibleâ warning to avoid critical air hub âat all costsâ over safety.â Is this another shot across the bow of Americaâs Christmas celebrations? Well, Mister and Misus American and all the ships at sea, you let me know.
MSNBC correspondent Tom Costello claimed Friday that an air traffic controller who âhandles airspaceâ at the Newark, NJ, airport gave him some ârather concerning and startling informationâ about public safety.
âHe said, It is not safe. âIt is not a safe situation right now for the flying public,â Costello said. âReally an incredible statement, unsolicited. He just said that to me, and separately, âDonât fly into Newark. Avoid Newark at all costs.â
Costello said that there were about two-hour delays for planes coming into Newark on Friday following a week of major delays due to staffing issues.
âWeâve got a lot of problems going on,â Costello said, including âequipment failures.â
âThey have lost both radios and radars this week,â Costellos said. âAnd because of the stress, some controllers have walked off the job.â
Newark Liberty Airport posted a statement to X advising, âFlights at @EWRairport continue to be disrupted due to @FAA staffing shortages, with delays and cancellations expected to continue throughout the day.â
Costello said that Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy was touring the Newark facility, along with the president of the air traffic controllers union, âtrying to reassure the public and reassure controllers that theyâre working on this.â
âBut,â Costello added, âthis is not going to be an easy fix by any means.â
CNN reports that âTrump says the government will revoke Harvardâs tax-exempt status.â
President Donald Trump says Harvard University will be stripped of its tax-exempt status, redoubling an extraordinary threat amid a broader chess match over free speech, political ideology and federal funding at the Ivy League school and across American academia.
âWe are going to be taking away Harvardâs Tax Exempt Status. Itâs what they deserve!â Trump posted Friday morning on Truth Social.
Trump floated a trial balloon April 15 for the notion of removing Harvardâs tax-exempt status, and the Internal Revenue Service had been making plans to carry out the idea.
âThere is no legal basis to rescind Harvardâs tax-exempt status,â a university spokesperson told CNN. âSuch an unprecedented action would endanger our ability to carry out our educational mission.â
Money for federal taxes would have to be taken away from other priorities and âwould result in diminished financial aid for students, abandonment of critical medical research programs, and lost opportunities for innovation,â the spokesperson said Friday.
US law specifically prohibits presidents from directing the IRS to investigate anyone. If it found Harvardâs tax-exempt status should be revoked, the agency would have to formally notify and give the school a chance to challenge the decision. The IRS did not immediately respond to CNNâs questions about how Trumpâs announcement might be implemented.
Democratic Sen. Ed Markey of Massachusetts said Friday that Trumpâs actions are an attempt to force Harvard to comply with his ideology and described the move as unconstitutional. He added the disruption caused by Trumpâs threats has had a negative impact on life-saving research and peopleâs livelihoods.
The trouble is, if you give in just a little bit on a Mafia shake-down, they always return for more. âItâs not personal, Sonny. Itâs strictly business.â
Iâm not sure it was the pokes or the shocks this morning, but I seem to be floating back somewhere to the 70s where Nixon was making trouble for every one. That seems picayune now. I was planning to do some work around the garden and the backyard but for some reason, I just want to hug the furbabies, make so lunch, and find something distracting. I certainly hope youâre upcoming weekend will be joyful and peaceful. Iâm wondering how much tea Iâm going to have to stock up on.
Whatâs on your reading and blogging list today?
#IsTrumpWagingAWarOnDolls_ #AreFlightsInTheUSASafe_ #DomesticTerroristsAndJudges #DonnieTwoDolls #FARTUS #PBSFunding #TrumpSWarOnChristmas #YamTits #YamTits100DaysOfOops