Thursday, June 11, 2026

Trump Says That He Loves Inflation & Suggests That He Tanked Economy on Purpose (Not a Joke)

This is a picture of a magnet that was being sold at Strand's Book Store in New York City a few years ago. No, I did not buy it, but I liked it and took a picture, which I am sharing here now. 


Everyone is saying that Trump is really, noticeably losing it lately.

Frankly, I am not convinced that he ever had any real redeeming qualities worth losing to begin with. But it does appear that his behavior is spiraling out of control lately. He is saying things that are just completely off the wall crazy. 

While speaking with reporters in the Oval Office, Trump claimed that he loved inflation and suggests that he is tanking the economy on purpose.

No, really. It might sound like a joke, or that perhaps it was taken out of context, but he actually did say these things. Here is part of what he said, in his own words, as taken by a recent MSN article by Travis Gettys (see link below):

"No, I love it – the numbers were great," Trump said. "You know what I really love? I love the inflation. You know why? Because as soon as this war is over, you know, I can say it now, something you didn't know. You know, we've been taking out millions of barrels of oil, nobody knows it. You know who doesn't know about it? Iran, until right now we took out the other night 22 ships late at night with no lights because they don't have any radar because we blasted the crap out of it. We took out, that's why oil is $85 a barrel."

Then he explained how and why he tanked the economy. Temporarily, at least, according to him. Here is what he said:

"I mean, you take a look – remember when I did this?" Trump said. "I said, look, the one bad thing will be we hit the best economy we've ever hit, and I said to my people, I had Scott, I had Howard, I had Pete, I had all, I had Todd in the room. I said, the one thing we have to do now, we had just hit the highest stock market in history, highest 401ks in history. Everything was going well, and I said, I hate to do this to you guys, but Iran's going to have a nuclear weapon very soon. We have to go and attack."  

"So we hit him with the B-2 bombers, which took a lot of courage," he added. "It was totally successful. We buried it, very hard to get, but now we had to make the second move, and I said, you know, the bad part is the stock market will go down by little bit – a lot, based on predictions of experts, like 25 percent, and it was worth it to me. It was worth it not to have a nuclear weapon."

Man, this guy is freaking nuts. What an absolute loser! 

Are we finally ready as a nation to move on from this man? Can we collectively admit that he was a mistake - quite possibly the biggest mistake that this country ever made - and that he should be permanently removed from office?

Let's move on from this ugly, dark chapter in our history. Let's get out from the shadow of this small, pathetic man and become a bigger and better country for it. 



This is the link to the article which got me going on this topic, and from which I obtained all of the quotes used above:

Trump claims he tanked economy on purpose Story by Travis Gettys • June 10, 2026:

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/trump-claims-he-tanked-economy-on-purpose/ar-AA25jwBp?ocid=entnewsntp&pc=U531&cvid=6a2a24340c5d41aaaf1ab9167d344fba&ei=15

Trump claims he tanked economy on purpose

Knicks Stage Greatest Comeback in NBA Finals History Against Spurs & Take a Commanding 3-1 Series Lead

 


2026 NBA Finals Update

NY Knicks 107, San Antonio Spurs 106



Game 4 of the NBA Finals sure looked like it was going to be a Spurs blowout win. I tuned into the radio on the way to work and heard that the Knicks were down by well over 20 points. Like most people, I had assumed that San Antonio had found their rhythm and taken control of the series. With two straight road wins following their two home losses, the series would shift back to San Antonio, with the Spurs having solid momentum. 

It seemed like they might win the NBA title again, but with an all new cast this time around. Maybe even a new Spurs dynasty.

But then something happened. Little by little, the Knicks chipped away at the big lead. Bit by bit, they got it closer. From 29 points down to about 20. Then 15. Then less than 10 points. 

Suddenly, it was a close game late in Game 4.

Just like that, the Knicks held their first lead of the night late in the fourth quarter.

Then it became a close, intense game. The spurs took the lead, and things looked decidedly grim for the Knicks. Just seconds remained in the game, and they trailed by one. Jalen Brunson went for the win from downtown, a three-pointer that missed. I watched and was disappointed by the shot selection, saw it miss, then turned away briefly. Then I heard the announcers yelling that it was good.

As it turns out, OG Anunoby moved in with perfect timing to tip the ball in for what turned out to be the winning shot. Suddenly, the Knicks had the lead with less than two seconds left on the clock. 

Their defense held, and New York had completed what turned out to be the greatest comeback in NBA Finals history. Knicks head coach Mike Brown suggested that the tip by OG Anunoby was the greatest shot in franchise history. 

And who are we to argue?

Never in my lifetime have the Knicks held a 3-1 series lead in the NBA Finals. From seemingly seeing the Spurs swing the momentum in their favor to handing those Spurs a stunning loss and taking a decisive 3-1 series lead, it now feels like the New York Knicks are the team of destiny. I felt like that after they took a 2-0 series lead with two consecutive wins on the road in San Antonio, but now I am even more convinced. This kind of a win, and in the position that it puts the Knicks, just feels like it will prove to be too much for the Spurs to come back from. It would take a monumental turnaround that would actually dwarf this comeback win by the Knicks for the Spurs to take the series now. They enter each game the rest of the way facing elimination. 

What a game this one was!

June 11th: This Day in History

 



Once again, it should be reiterated, that this does not pretend to be a very extensive history of what happened on this day (nor is it the most original - the links can be found down below). If you know something that I am missing, by all means, shoot me an email or leave a comment, and let me know!


It was on this day in 1184 BCE during the Trojan War that the city of Troy was sacked and burned, according to calculations by Eratosthenes. On this day in 631, Emperor Taizong of Tang, the Emperor of China, sent envoys to the Xueyantuo bearing gold and silk in order to persuade the release of enslaved Chinese prisoners who had been captured during the transition from Sui to Tang from the northern frontier; this embassy succeeded in freeing 80,000 Chinese men and women who were then returned to China. On this day in 1770, British Captain James Cook discovered the Great Barrier Reef off the coast of Australia. On this day in 1776 in the British colonies during the American Revolutionary War of Independence, the Continental Congress created a committee to draft a Declaration of Independence from Great Britain. The committee consisted of Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, Roger Sherman, and Robert R. Livingston. Russian explorer Gerasim Izmailov reached Alaska.on this day in 1788. In 1798 on this day, Napoleon Bonaparte took the island of Malta. In 1895 on this day, Charles E. Duryea received the first U.S. patent granted to an American inventor for a gasoline-driven automobile.  In 1940 on this day during World War II, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill flew to Orleans. On this day in 1963, US President John F. Kennedy declared that racial segregation was morally wrong & that it was "time to act" as he stood up to segregationist Alabama Governor George Wallace. On this day in 1967, the Six-Day War in the Middle East ended. There was a battle for control over the Kampong Speu in Cambodia on this day in 1970. On this day in 1989, China issued a warrant for a Tiananmen Square dissident.



Here's a more detailed look at events that transpired on this date throughout history:

It was on this day in 1184 BCE during the Trojan War that the city of Troy was sacked and burned, according to calculations by Eratosthenes. 

 On this day in 631, Emperor Taizong of Tang, the Emperor of China, sent envoys to the Xueyantuo bearing gold and silk in order to persuade the release of enslaved Chinese prisoners who had been captured during the transition from Sui to Tang from the northern frontier; this embassy succeeded in freeing 80,000 Chinese men and women who were then returned to China. 

758 - Abbasid Arabs and Uyghur Turks arrive simultaneously at Chang'an, the Tang Chinese capital, in order to offer tribute to the imperial court. The Arabs and Turks bicker and fight over diplomatic prominence at the gate, in order to present tribute before the other. A settlement is reached when both are allowed to enter at the same time, but through two different gates to the palace.



1231 - Harderwijk becomes a city
1345 - The megas doux Alexios Apokaukos, chief minister of the Byzantine Empire, is lynched by political prisoners.
1429 - Hundred Years' War: The start of the Battle of Jargeau.
1488 - Battle of Sauchieburn, Scotland
1517 - Sir Thomas Pert reaches Hudson Bay
1572 - Spanish co-land guardian duke of Medinaceli arrives in Lock
1578 - England grants Sir Humphrey Gilbert a patent to explore & colonize North America
1594 - Philip II recognized the rights and privileges of the local nobles and chieftains in the Philippines, which paves way to the creation of the Principalía (i.e., elite ruling class of native nobility in Spanish Philippines).
1644 - Florentine scientist describe invention of barometer
1666 - -14] Vierdaagse Sea battle (Ruyter-Monk vs Prince Ruprecht)
1676 - Battle at Öland: Danish & Dutch fleet under CM Tromp beats Sweden
1685 - James Scott, Duke of Monmouth, rebels against Catholic king James II
1690 - English king Willem III departs to Ireland
1699 - England, France & Neth agree on 2nd Extermination treaty of Spain
1726 - Cardinal Fleury succeeds duke of Bourbon as French premier




Altered picture that I took of the Benjamin Franklin Memorial in Philadelphia some years ago. 

1742 - Benjamin Franklin invents his Franklin stove






Picture of a statue of British explorer Captain James Cook

On this day in 1770, British Captain James Cook discovered the Great Barrier Reef off the coast of Australia.




1774 - Jews of Algiers escape attack of Spanish Army



  

Independence Hall in Philadelphia, PA

On this day in 1776 in the British colonies during the American Revolutionary War of Independence, the Continental Congress created a committee to draft a Declaration of Independence from Great Britain. The committee consisted of Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, Roger Sherman, and Robert R. Livingston. 




1788 - 1st British ship built on Pacific coast begun at Nootka Sound, BC

  Russian explorer Gerasim Izmailov reached Alaska.on this day in 1788.


1793 - 1st American stove patent is granted to Robert Haeterick





French Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte



In 1798 on this day, Napoleon Bonaparte took the island of Malta.
  


1816 - Gas Light Co of Baltimore founded
1825 - The first cornerstone is laid for Fort Hamilton in New York City.
1837 - The Broad Street Riot occurres in Boston, fueled by ethnic tensions between English-Americans and Irish-Americans.
1838 - Iowa Territory is organized
1859 - Comstock silver load discovered near Virginia City, Nevada
1864 - -12] Battle of Trevillian Station, VA (Central Railroad)
1864 - 300' (90 m) of Meigg's Wharf washed away in storm
1864 - Battle at Cynthiana Kentucky: Gen Hobsons unit caught
1864 - Battle of Laurel Hill, WV
American Founding Father Robert R. LivingstonAmerican Founding Father Robert R. Livingston 

1864 - Confederate warship CSS Alabama runs into harbor of Cherbourg
1866 - The Allahabad High Court (then Agra High Court) is established in India.
1870 - 1st-stone Amstel Brewery opens in Amsterdam
1876 - Republicans pick Rutherford B Hayes as presidental candidate
1878 - DC is given a new government by Congress, 3 commissioners appointed by president (change in 1974)

1891 - Puerto Rican flag adopted

1892 - The Limelight Department, one of the world's first film studios, is officially established in Melbourne, Australia.
1895 - 1st auto race

In 1895 on this day, Charles E. Duryea received the first U.S. patent granted to an American inventor for a gasoline-driven automobile.  


1896 - US Assay Office in Deadwood South Dakota authorized
1898 - 1st US Marines (600) land at Guantanamo Cuba during Spanish-American War
1898 - 23rd Preakness: Willie Simms aboard Sly Fox wins in 1:49.75

1898 - Emperor De Zong proclaims reforms in Peking


1900 - -12] Battle at Diamond Hill: British troops chase General Botha

1901 - Cook Islands annexed & proclaimed part of New Zealand

1904 - Cub's Bob Wicker no-hits NY Giants, wins in 12th on 1 hitter, 1-0

1904 - German Lt-Gen Lothar von Trotha lands in Swapokmund, SW-Africa

1905 - Penns Railroad debuts fastest train in world (NY-Chicago in 18 hrs)
1907 - Northants all out for 12 v Gloucestershire
1907 - George Dennett, aided by Gilbert Jessop, dismisses Northamptonshire for 12 runs, the lowest total in first-class cricket.
1911 - Tigers trailing White Sox 13-1 come back to win 16-15
1911 - UNIA founded by Garvey
1917 - King Alexander assumes the throne of Greece after his father Constantine I abdicated under pressure by allied armies occupying Athens.
Golfer Walter HagenGolfer Walter Hagen 1919 - 23rd US Golf Open: Walter Hagen shoots a 301 at Brae Burn CC Mass
1919 - 51st Belmont: J Loftus aboard Sir Barton wins in 2:17.6 & Trip Crown
1920 - Republicans nominate Warren G Harding for president
1921 - 53rd Belmont: Earl Sande aboard Grey Lag wins in 2:16.8

1921 - Brazil adopts women suffrage

1924 - Bene Brak Palestine founded
1924 - Koos Vorrink elected President of AJC
1927 - 59th Belmont: Earl Sande aboard Chance Shot wins in 2:32.6
1927 - Babe Ruth hits 19th & 20th of 60 HRs
1927 - Charles Lindbergh is awarded the 1st Distinguished Flying Cross
1928 - Alfred Hitchcock's 1st film, "Case Of Jonathan Drew," is released
1934 - Disarmament conference in Geneva fails
1935 - Inventor Edwin Armstrong gives the first public demonstration of FM broadcasting in the United States, at Alpine, New Jersey.
1936 - Presbyterian Church of America founded at Philadelphia
1936 - International Surrealist Exhibition opens in London, England.
Director Alfred HitchcockDirector Alfred Hitchcock 1937 - Marx Brothers' "A Day At The Races" released
1938 - 42nd US Golf Open: Ralph Guldahl shoots a 284 at Cherry Hills Denver
1938 - Cin Red Johnny Vander Meer no-hits Boston Braves, 3-0
1938 - Compton scores 1st Test Cricket ton (102 v Aust) aged 20 yrs 19 days
1938 - Earthquake in Belgium
1938 - England declare at 8 for 658 v Australia at Trent Bridge
1939 - King & Queen of England taste 1st "hot dogs" at FDR's party
1940 - Italy declares war on allies/raids Malta



Statue of soldier, author and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill in Parliament Square, London

In 1940 on this day during World War II, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill flew to Orleans



1940 - World War II: British forces bomb Genoa and Turin in Italy.
1940 - World War II: First attack of the Italian Air force on the island of Malta.
1941 - 2nd great raid on Jews of Amsterdam

1941 - Vichy-French planes bomb Tel Aviv, killing 20 Jews

1942 - German army defeated at El-Alamein North Africa
1942 - US & USSR sign Lend-Lease agreement during WW II
Soldier, Author and British Prime Minister Winston ChurchillSoldier, Author and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill 1943 - British invades Pantelleria (tiny island south of Sicily)

1943 - Heinrich Himmler orders liquidation of Polish ghettos

1944 - 15 US aircraft carriers attack Japanese bases on Marianas
1944 - 1st Serbian Orthodox cathedral in US, Cathedral of St Sava, NYC
1944 - KP gang surprise attack on Dome Arnhem jail
1947 - WW II sugar rationing finally endd in US (began May 28, 1942)
1949 - 49th US Golf Open: Cary Middlecoff shoots a 286 at Medinah CC ILL


1951 - Mozambique becomes an oversea province of Portugal


1951 - NY Times reports the NYC subway will auction off things found
1953 - "Amos 'n Andy," TV Comedy, also radio from '29; last aired on CBS
1953 - Test Cricket debut of Alan Davidson at Trent Bridge
1955 - 1st magnesium jet airplane flies
Golfer Ben HoganGolfer Ben Hogan 1955 - 87th Belmont: Eddie Arcaro aboard Nashua wins in 2:29
1955 - Le Mans race car accident kills 83 spectators (race continues)
1957 - 12 die in a train crash in Vroman Colo
1958 - UN Security council sends observers to Lebanon
1959 - Postmaster General bans D H Lawrence's book, Lady Chatterley's Lover (overruled by US Court of Appeals in Mar 1960)
1960 - 92nd Belmont: Bill Hartack aboard Celtic Ash wins in 2:29.2
1960 - House packed with wedding celebrants collapses killing 30 (Pakistan)
1961 - "Winston Churchill," last airs on ABC-TV
1961 - Mary Lena Faulk wins LPGA Triangle Round Robin Golf Tournament
1961 - Norm Cash becomes 1st Det Tiger to hit a ball out of Tiger Stadium
1961 - Roger Maris hits 19th & 20th of 61 HRs

US President Kennedy accepted an honorary degree from Yale University on this day in 1962.

1962 - Brothers John and Clarence Anglin and fellow inmate Frank Morris escape from Alcatraz Island prison, the only ones to do so
1963 - Gov Wallace tries to prevent blacks registering at U of Alabama
1963 - Greek government of Karamanlis resigns









On this day in 1963, US President John F. Kennedy declared that racial segregation was morally wrong & that it was "time to act" as he stood up to segregationist Alabama Governor George Wallace.


Jun 11, 1963: JFK faces down defiant governor  

On this day in 1963, President John F. Kennedy issues presidential proclamation 3542, forcing Alabama Governor George Wallace to comply with federal court orders allowing two African-American students to register for the summer session at the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa. The proclamation ordered Wallace and all persons acting in concert with him to cease and desist from obstructing justice.  

The battle between Kennedy and Wallace brought to a head the long, post-Civil War struggle between the federal government and recalcitrant southern states over the enforcement of federal desegregation laws. Kennedy, a Catholic, considered racial segregation morally wrong. As of 1963, Alabama was the only state that had not integrated its education system. From the time of his gubernatorial campaign in 1962 until this day in 1963, Wallace had boldly proclaimed that he would personally stand in front of the door of any Alabama schoolhouse that was ordered by the federal courts to admit black students. In response to Wallace's rhetoric, Kennedy sent his brother, Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy, on April 25 to negotiate with Wallace; the talks failed. The Kennedy brothers, having decided that they were dealing with a raving maniac, looked for an indirect solution. JFK appealed to Alabama business leaders and influential politicians to talk sense into Wallace. On May 21 and again on June 5, the U.S. district court ordered Wallace to allow the students to register on June 11. Wallace dug in and refused, hoping to force JFK to call up the National Guard, an act Wallace was sure would infuriate staunch states' rights supporters and paint JFK as a tyrant. Robert Kennedy wanted his brother to go ahead and federalize the Alabama National Guard and arrest Wallace, but the president feared that such an action would play into Wallace's hands. So, the president waited for Wallace to make the first move.  

On the morning of June 11, the day the students were expected to register, Wallace stood in front of the University of Alabama campus auditorium flanked by Alabama state troopers while cameras flashed and recorders from the press corps whirred. Kennedy, at the White House, and Deputy Attorney General Nicholas Katzenbach, in Tuscaloosa, kept in touch by phone. When Wallace refused to let the students enter for registration, Katzenbach phoned Kennedy. Kennedy upped the pressure on Wallace, immediately issuing Presidential Proclamation 3542, which ordered the governor to comply, and authorizing the secretary of defense to call up the Alabama National Guard with Executive Order 11111. That afternoon, Katzenbach returned with the students and asked Wallace to step aside. Wallace, knowing he was beaten, relented, having saved face with his hard-line, anti-segregation constituency. Three days later, a third black student registered at the University of Alabama campus in Huntsville without interference.  






1964 - Chicago police break up Rolling Stones press conference
1964 - Manfred Mann record Do Wah Diddy Diddy
1964 - Queen Elizabeth orders Beatles to her birthday party, they attend
1964 - West Germany seeks talks with Czechoslovakia
1966 - "(I'm A) Road Runner" by Jr Walker & The All-Stars peaks at #20
1966 - "I Am A Rock" by Simon & Garfunkel peaks at #3
1966 - "On A Clear Day You..." closes at Mark Hellinger NYC after 280 perfs



1966 - "Paint It, Black" by The Rolling Stones peaks at #1



1966 - "Skyscraper" closes at Lunt Fontanne Theater NYC after 248 perfs
1966 - "Sloop John B" by The Beach Boys hit #1 in UK
1966 - French & German media mistakenly report death of Roger Daltry

1966 - Janis Joplin plays her 1st gig (SF)





On this day in 1967, the Six-Day War in the Middle East came to an end.

Jun 11, 1967: Six-Day War ends

The Six-Day War between Israel and its Arab neighbors ends with a United Nations-brokered cease-fire. The outnumbered Israel Defense Forces achieved a swift and decisive victory in the brief war, rolling over the Arab coalition that threatened the Jewish state and more than doubling the amount of territory under Israel's control. The greatest fruit of victory lay in seizing the Old City of Jerusalem from Jordan; thousands of Jews wept while bent in prayer at the Second Temple's Western Wall.  

Increased tensions and skirmishes along Israel's northern border with Syria were the immediate cause of the third Arab-Israeli war. In 1967, Syria intensified its bombardment of Israeli settlements across the border, and Israel struck back by shooting down six Syrian MiG fighters. After Syria alleged in May 1967 that Israel was massing troops along the border, Egypt mobilized its forces and demanded the withdrawal of the U.N. Emergency Force from the Israel-Egypt cease-fire lines of the 1956 conflict. The U.N. peacekeepers left on May 19, and three days later Egypt closed the Strait of Tiran to Israeli shipping. On May 30, Jordan signed a mutual-defense treaty with Egypt and Syria, and other Arab states, including Iraq, Kuwait, and Algeria, sent troop contingents to join the Arab coalition against Israel.  

With every sign of a pan-Arab attack in the works, Israel's government on June 4 authorized its armed forces to launch a surprise preemptive strike. On June 5, the Six-Day War began with an Israeli assault against Arab air power. In a brilliant attack, the Israeli air force caught the formidable Egyptian air force on the ground and largely destroyed the Arabs' most powerful weapon. The Israeli air force then turned against the lesser air forces of Jordan, Syria, and Iraq, and by the end of the day had decisively won air superiority.  

Beginning on June 5, Israel focused the main effort of its ground forces against Egypt's Gaza Strip and the Sinai Peninsula. In a lightning attack, the Israelis burst through the Egyptian lines and across the Sinai. The Egyptians fought resolutely but were outflanked by the Israelis and decimated in lethal air attacks. By June 8, the Egyptian forces were defeated, and Israel held the Gaza Strip and the Sinai to the Suez Canal.  

Meanwhile, to the east of Israel, Jordan began shelling its Jewish neighbor on June 5, provoking a rapid and overwhelming response from Israeli forces. Israel overran the West Bank and on June 7 captured the Old City of East Jerusalem. The chief chaplain of the Israel Defense Forces blew a ram's horn at the Western Wall to announce the reunification of East Jerusalem with the Israeli-administered western sector.  

To the north, Israel bombarded Syria's fortified Golan Heights for two days before launching a tank and infantry assault on June 9. After a day of fierce fighting, the Syrians began a retreat from the Golan Heights on June 10. On June 11, a U.N.-brokered cease-fire took effect throughout the three combat zones, and the Six-Day War was at an end. Israel had more than doubled its size in the six days of fighting.  

The U.N. Security Council called for a withdrawal from all the occupied regions, but Israel declined, permanently annexing East Jerusalem and setting up military administrations in the occupied territories. Israel let it be known that Gaza, the West Bank, the Golan Heights, and the Sinai would be returned in exchange for Arab recognition of the right of Israel to exist and guarantees against future attack. Arab leaders, stinging from their defeat, met in August to discuss the future of the Middle East. They decided upon a policy of no peace, no negotiations, and no recognition of Israel, and made plans to zealously defend the rights of Palestinian Arabs in the occupied territories.  

Egypt, however, would eventually negotiate and make peace with Israel, and in 1982 the Sinai Peninsula was returned to Egypt in exchange for full diplomatic recognition of Israel. Egypt and Jordan later gave up their respective claims to the Gaza Strip and the West Bank to the Palestinians, who beginning in the 1990s opened "land for peace" talks with Israel. The East Bank territory has since been returned to Jordan. In 2005, Israel left the Gaza Strip. Still, a permanent Israeli-Palestinian peace agreement remains elusive, as does an agreement with Syria to return the Golan Heights.



1967 - A J Foyt & Dan Gurney drove a Ford to victory in Le Mans
1967 - Chicago Cubs (7) & NY Mets (4) tie record of 11 HRs in a game
American Baseball Player Roger MarisAmerican Baseball Player Roger Maris 1967 - Mickey Wright wins LPGA Bluegrass Golf Invitational
1967 - Race riot in Tampa Florida; National Guard mobilizes
1967 - Mexico becomes a member of the Berne Convention copyright treaty.


  

    

1969 - "The Ballad Of John & Yoko" by The Beatles hit #1 in UK




1970 - US leaves Wheelus AFB Libya



There was a battle for control over the Kampong Speu in Cambodia on this day in 1970.

Jun 11, 1970: Battle for control of Kompong Speu in Cambodia

A force of 4,000 South Vietnamese and 2,000 Cambodian soldiers battle 1,400 communist troops for control of the provincial capital of Kompong Speu, 30 miles southwest of Phnom Penh. At 50 miles inside the border, it was the deepest penetration that South Vietnamese forces had made into Cambodia since the incursion began on April 29. The town was captured by the communists on June 13, but retaken by Allied forces on June 16. South Vietnamese officials reported that 183 enemy soldiers were killed, while 4 of their own died and 22 were wounded during the fighting. Civilian casualties in Kompong Speu were estimated at 40 to 50 killed.



1971 - US & Japan sign accord to return Okinawa to Japan
1971 - US ends ban on China trade
1972 - 18th LPGA Championship won by Kathy Ahern
1972 - 31°F lowest temperature ever recorded in Cleveland in June
1972 - KPAT-AM in Berkeley CA returns from KRE
1974 - Bundy victim Georgann Hawkins disappears from UW, Seattle, Wash
1974 - Mel Stottlemyre's AL record 272nd consecutive start, without relief
1975 - 1st oil pumped from North Sea oilfield
1975 - Greece adopts constitution
1975 - One-day international cricket debut, Javed Miandad age 17 yrs 364 days
1976 - "Magnificent Marble Machine," last airs on NBC-TV

1976 - Anti-apartheid advocate Dumisa Ntsebeza arrested in South Africa

1976 - Australian band AC/DC begin their 1st headline tour of Britain
1976 - Beatles "Rock & Roll Music" LP is released in USA

1977 - Dutch marines rescued hostages from a Moluccan held train in Holland
1977 - ELO releases "Telephone Line"
1977 - Main Street Electrical Parade premieres in the Magic Kingdom at Walt Disney World
Singer Olivia Newton-JohnSinger Olivia Newton-John 1978 - "Grease" starring John Travolta & Olivia Newton-John opens

1978 - Joseph Freeman Jr is 1st black priest in Church Of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints
1979 - Chuck Berry pleads guilty to income tax evasion, sentenced to 4 months
1980 - K-Ingleside streetcar converts to METRO service (SF)
1981 - Cannibal Issei Sagawa kills Dutch student

1981 - Richter Scale 6.9 magnitude Golbaf earthquake at Iran, killing at least 2,000.
1982 - Israel & Syria stop fighting in Lebanon
1982 - Larry Holmes TKOs Gerry Cooney in 13 for heavyweight boxing title
1982 - Movie "ET the Extra-Terrestrial" released (highest grossing film)
1982 - Pope John Paul II visits Argentina
1983 - "Always Something There To Remind Me" by Naked Eyes peaks at #8
264th Pope John Paul II264th Pope John Paul II 1983 - "Cool Places" by Sparks & Jane Wiedlin peaks at #49
1983 - "Faithfully" by Journey peaks at #12
1983 - "My Love" by Lionel Richie peaks at #5
1983 - "Theme From Doctor Detroit" by Devo peaks at #59
1983 - "When I'm With You" by Sheriff peaks at #61

1984 - Funeral for S Nakagawa & burial of half of his ashes
1984 - Supreme Court declares illegally obtained evidence may be admitted at trial if it could be proved that it would have been discovered legally

1985 - Russian space probe Vega 1 lands on Venus


1986 - Amnesty International megaconcert
1987 - Margaret Thatcher is 1st British PM in 160 years to win 3rd consecutive term



1988 - Freedomfest - Mandela addresses Wembley Stadium London



The flag of the People's Republic of China

On this day in 1989, China issued a warrant for a Tiananmen Square dissident.

Jun 11, 1989: China issues warrant for Tiananmen dissident

In the wake of the Tiananmen Square massacre on June 4, China issues a warrant for a leading Chinese dissident who had taken refuge in the U.S. embassy in Beijing. The diplomatic standoff lasted for a year, and the refusal of the United States to hand the dissident over to Chinese officials was further evidence of American disapproval of China's crackdown on political protesters.  

In April and May 1989, hundreds of thousands of protesters gathered in Beijing to call for greater political democracy in communist China. On June 4, Chinese soldiers and police swarmed into the center of protest activity, Tiananmen Square, killing hundreds and arresting thousands. The Chinese government used this brutal crackdown as a pretext for issuing an arrest warrant for Fang Lizhi, an internationally respected astrophysicist and leading Chinese dissident. Although Fang had not participated in the Tiananmen Square protests, he had been a consistent advocate of greater political democracy and a persistent critic of government policies. In February 1989, more than one hundred Chinese security personnel forcibly prevented Fang from meeting with visiting President George Bush.  

In the June arrest warrant, Fang and his wife, Li Shuxian, were charged with "committing crimes of counter-revolutionary propaganda and instigation." Fang and Li immediately took refuge in the U.S. embassy. Chinese officials demanded that the American government hand over the pair, but the U.S. refused. Almost exactly one year later, Fang and Li were given free passage out of the country and they left the U.S. embassy for the first time since June 1989. The action was part of a wider effort by the Chinese government to repair some of the international damage done to its reputation in the wake of the Tiananmen Square incident. In addition to Fang and Li, hundreds of other political prisoners were also released. Fang and Li traveled to the United States and took up residence. Fang continued his dissident activities against the Chinese government and taught in both America and Great Britain.  

The incident indicated that feelings about what had occurred in Tiananmen Square ran high, both in the United States and China. For America, the brutal attack on the protesters repulsed most people and led Congress to pass economic sanctions against the Chinese government. In China, the refusal to hand over Fang and the U.S. criticisms of what the Chinese government considered to be a purely internal matter generated a tremendous amount of resentment. The issue of human rights in China continued to be a major issue in relations between the U.S. and China throughout the 1990s and into the 21st century.  




1990 - Supreme Court says law prohibiting desecration of US flag unconstitutional
1990 - UN appoints Olivia Newton-John environmental ambassador
1990 - Federal judge sentenced former national security adviser John M Poindexter to 6 months for making false statements to Congress

1991 - Microsoft releases MS DOS 5.0
1992 - Owners approve sale of Seattle Mariners to a Japanese group
1992 - Tracy Austin, 29, is youngest inductee of Intl Tennis Hall of Fame
1992 - US Olympic baseball team plays 1st exhibtion game, beat Venez 20-0
1993 - "Jurassic Park" opens, sets box office weekend record of $502 million
1993 - "Scattergories," game show; last airs on NBC-TV
1993 - "Scrabble," second run," TV Game Show; last airs on NBC-TV
1994 - "Meet The Flintstones" by The BC 52's peaks to #33
1994 - 126th Belmont: Pat Day aboard Tabasco Cat wins in 2:26.8
Singer Olivia Newton-JohnSinger Olivia Newton-John 1994 - Drunken officer shoots 7 people dead in Falun Sweden
1994 - Moshood Abiola becomes pres of Nigeria
1994 - Cbox is 39'115 long, 20'85 wide, & 8' high in Jacksonville, Fl Largest popcorn container is 6,619.76 cubic feet full of popped corn
1995 - 65th French Mens Tennis: Thomas Muster beats Michael Chang (75 62 64)
1995 - Julie Larsen wins Edina Realty LPGA Golf Classic
1995 - Rondell White has six hits & hits for the cycle in 13-innings
1996 - Bob Dole, (Sen-R-KS), resigns from US senate to run for president
1998 - Compaq Computer pays $9 billion for Digital Equipment Corporation in the largest high-tech acquisition.
2001 - Timothy McVeigh is executed for his role in the Oklahoma City bombing.
2002 - Antonio Meucci is acknowledged as the first inventor of the telephone by the United States Congress.
2004 - Cassini-Huygens makes its closest flyby of Phoebe.
2004 - Ronald Reagan's funeral is held at Washington National Cathedral.

Prime Minister of Canada Stephen HarperPrime Minister of Canada Stephen Harper 



2008 - Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper made an official historic apology to Canada's First Nations in regard to a residential school abuse in which children were isolated from their homes, families and cultures for a century.

2009 - A Texas mother was hit by lightning while standing in her kitchen inside her Texas home. Witnesses say the lightning came through a light fixture and struck her chest and exited her foot. Her 9-year-old son franticly called 9-1-1 to save her life. She had to spend three days in the hospital.
2011 - 143rd Belmont: Jose Valdivia Jr aboard Ruler On Ice wins in 2:30.88
2012 - Five people are killed after an ambulance hits a roadside bomb in Afghanistan
2012 - 23 people are killed after two villages are attacked in northern Nigeria
2012 - The Nobel Prize is reduced by 20% to prevent any future undermining of capital

2012 - Two earthquakes in Afghanistan trigger landslides that kill more than 80 people

2012 - Los Angeles Kings defeat New Jersey Devils 6-1 in game 6 to win the NHL's Stanley Cup



1346 - Charles IV of Luxembourg was elected Holy Roman Emperor in Germany.   1509 - King Henry VIII married his first of six wives, Catherine of Aragon.   1770 - Captain James Cook discovered the Great Barrier Reef off of Australia when he ran aground.   


1776 - In America, the Continental Congress formed a committee to draft a Declaration of Independence from Britain.   1798 - Napoleon Bonaparte took the island of Malta.   

1880 - Jeanette Rankin was born. She became the first woman elected to the U.S. Congress.   1889 - The Washington Business High School opened in Washington, DC. It was the first school devoted to business in the U.S.   1910 - Jacques-Yves Cousteau was born. He was the French underwater explorer that invented the Aqua-Lung diving apparatus.   1912 - Silas Christoferson became the first pilot to take off from the roof of a hotel.   1915 - British troops took Cameroon in Africa.   1919 - Sir Barton became the first horse to capture the Triple Crown when he won the Belmont Stakes in New York City.   1927 - Charles A. Lindberg was presented the first Distinguished Flying Cross.   1930 - William Beebe dove to a record-setting depth of 1,426 feet off the coast of Bermuda. He used a diving chamber called a bathysphere.  1934 - The Disarmament Conference in Geneva ended in failure.   1936 - The Presbyterian Church of America was formed in Philadelphia, PA.   1937 - Soviet leader Josef Stalin began a purge of Red Army generals.   1940 - The Italian Air Force bombed the British fortress at Malta in the Mediterranean.   1942 - The U.S. and the Soviet Union signed a lend lease agreement to aid the Soviets in their effort in World War II.   1943 - During World War II, the Italian island of Pantelleria surrendered after a heavy air bombardment.   1947 - The U.S. government announced an end to sugar rationing.   1950 - Ben Hogan returned to tournament play after a near fatal car accident. He won the U.S. Open.   1963 - Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was arrested in Florida for trying to integrate restaurants.   1963 - Alabama Gov. George Wallace allowed two black students to enroll at the University of Alabama.   1967 - Israel and Syria accepted a U.N. cease-fire.   1972 - Hank Aaron tied the National League record for 14 grand-slam home runs in a career.   1973 - After a ruling by the Justice Department of the State of Pennsylvania, women were licensed to box or wrestle.   1977 - In the Netherlands, a 19-day hostage situation came to an end when Dutch marines stormed a train and a school being held by South Moluccan extremist. Two hostages and the six terrorists were killed.   1981 - The first major league baseball player's strike began. It would last for two months.   1982 - Steven Spielberg's movie "E.T." opened.   1987 - Margaret Thatcher became the first British prime minister in 160 years to win a third consecutive term of office.   1990 - The U.S. Supreme Court struck down a law that would prohibit the desecration of the American Flag.   1991 - Mount Pinatubo in the Philippines erupted. The eruption of ash and gas could be seen for more than 60 miles.   1993 - The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that people who commit "hate crimes" could be sentenced to extra punishment. The court also ruled in favor of religious groups saying that they indeed had a constitutional right to sacrifice animals during worship services.   1993 - Steven Spielberg's movie "Jurassic Park" opened.   1998 - Mitsubishi of America agreed to pay $34 million to end the largest sexual harassment case filed by the U.S. government. The federal lawsuit claimed that hundreds of women at a plant in Normal, IL, had endured groping and crude jokes from male workers.   1998 - Pakistan announced moratorium on nuclear testing and offered to talk with India over disputed Kashmir.




1509 King Henry VIII married his first wife, Katharine of Aragon. 1770 Capt. James Cook discovered the Great Barrier Reef off Australia . 1919 Sir Barton won the Belmont Stakes, becoming the first horse to capture the Triple Crown. 1963 Vivian Malone and James Hood successfully enrolled at the University of Alabama following Gov. George Wallace’s famous "stand in the schoolhouse door." 1977 Seattle Slew won the Belmont Stakes, capturing the Triple Crown. 2001 Timothy McVeigh, the 1995 Oklahoma City bomber, was executed.


The following links are to web sites that were used to complete this blog entry:

http://www.historyorb.com/today/events.php

http://on-this-day.com/onthisday/thedays/alldays/jun11.htm


http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history

http://www.infoplease.com/dayinhistory

Wednesday, June 10, 2026

The New York Times Just Released a Damning Story Regarding the Trump Administration and the Epstein Files

There is a New York Times exclusive article which seems pretty damning for the Trump administration regarding the Epstein controversy. Despite all of his bullying and dismissal, trying to make the Epstein story just go away and disappear, nobody seems to be forgetting. And the questions and concerns clearly persist. In fact, Trump's seeming rush to try and make this story disappear have justifiably raised still more concerns about his role regarding the Epstein controversy.

Trump made a lot of promises in both the 2016 and 2024 campaigns which he broke once in office. We all remember that during the first term, he never fulfilled some of the major campaign promises. He did not build the wall, much less get Mexico to pay for it. He did not build a national healthcare system that would be affordable and would cover everyone. He was not the greatest jobs creating president in history (far from it, in fact). He did not make progress in paying off the national debt in eight years, instead increasing it by over 25% in his first four years, and he has added still trillions more so far during his second term, with tax cuts and incentives for the wealthiest and most privileged Americans in the "Big Beautiful Bill, and now the war with Iran). It was debatable whether or not the rest of the world was laughing at us as he claimed, but they certainly were laughing at him, and at the United States by extension, when he mistook the U.N. General Assembly for a Trump rally, as well as praising the healthcare system of a non-existent African country before assembled leaders of Africa, as well as other gaffes.

Then we get to the second term. He neither lowered the price of gas or groceries. He did not stop the war in Ukraine within 24 hours, or at all, in fact. He broke his promise to keep the United States out of new foreign wars, especially in the Middle East. And he never released the Epstein Files, which he also promised to do, and which was a major theme for many members of MAGA. 

Many members of MAGA, apparently not paying attention to Trump's well-established tendency to lie and mislead, really thought that Trump would quickly release the Epstein Files as promised. 

Except that it never happened. 

In fact, Trump's seeming urgency to try and sweep the story under the rug began to raise suspicions regarding his own role in the Epstein Case. Suddenly, MAGA began to realize that the video footage of Trump partying with Epstein and all of the other evidence, such as an interview in a major magazine in 2002 in which Trump praised Epstein and seemed to know that Epstein tended to like very attractive and very young women, which hardly encouraged the notion that Trump was innocent of any knowledge that Epstein liked them young, as Trump himself insinuated in the interview.

So the pressure on the Trump administration began to build. Publicly, they tried to remain calm and sound dismissive, much like the president himself. However, according to the Times article (see link below):

But behind the scenes, the Epstein crisis was paralyzing the Trump administration to a far greater extent than the public knew. In their public statements, Trump’s advisers were full of bravado, dismissing the crisis. In reality, it was consuming the highest ranks of the administration as no issue had for the president’s team since the Russia investigation in his first term. His aides were determined to keep their rising sense of panic out of public view.

The Trump administration seems to have fumbled their response to the Epstein Files. Their bullying and dismissals and general arrogance when it comes to this disturbing story seems to actually be adding fuel to the fire. Frankly, one wonders how they did not figure this out beforehand, given how their own base responded, and then how Trump's response seemed to get the attention of his detractors and political opponents.

Again, a bit from the article:

The Wall Street Journal was preparing a damaging article about Trump’s relationship with Epstein. The president’s desperate attempts to kill the story had failed. His team now had to get everyone onto the same page about how to counter the growing swarm of attention. They needed a gesture of transparency to appease an increasingly angry base, but also a way to convey the message that the president was sympathetic to his supporters’ concerns. Which itself was a problem, because he clearly wasn’t.  

Not a surprise, frankly. The only people who still seem even remotely surprised by Trump's transparent indifference to the concerns of ordinary Americans - his base included - are his most loyal supporters. For everyone else, this began to feel like a rerun a long, long time ago. For many of us, frankly, this was a disturbing trend regarding Trump's overall attitude well before he won the 2016 election.

Far from helping people forget the story, Trump's own response simply added still more fuel to the fire. It began to tear MAGA apart, the only thing seemingly that could. That is one point which was also made clearly in this article:

Some of that complexity was self-inflicted. In the engine room of the MAGA movement, the Epstein files were potent fuel. Elon Musk had used his social media platform to repeatedly question why a client list had not been released. Donald Trump Jr. and JD Vance had invoked the Epstein files as a broader campaign message to argue that “powerful people” were hiding the truth from Americans. Tucker Carlson and the young conservative leader Charlie Kirk had each insisted that the government should release the documents and each floated the idea that there was an expansive cover-up in progress.

Finally, MAGA had an actual conspiracy to work with. While many, if not most, Trump supporters still support the president, many MAGA members began to see something very sinister afoot.

Yet, Trump remained tone deaf. He kept insisting that this story should go away, and seemed to think that he could simply will it to do so, perhaps with a little bit of his trademark bullying to go along with it. Once again, a snippet from this article:

On July 12, the president took to Truth Social to defend Bondi against criticism and to urge his “boys” and “gals” to stop wasting “Time and Energy on Jeffrey Epstein, somebody that nobody cares about.” Trump told aides he was very unhappy with some of his most influential supporters, including Charlie Kirk, Tucker Carlson and Megyn Kelly, all of whom were publicly urging the administration to come clean. Kirk had held a Turning Point USA event the previous day that turned into an Epstein grievance fest, with one speaker after another bashing Bondi over her handling of the situation. Trump had called Kirk and scolded him.

Nobody in Trump’s orbit had a better feel for the younger part of the MAGA base than Kirk, who saw that the Epstein cover-up, as it was now viewed, was capturing attention to an alarming extent. Donald Trump Jr. and JD Vance — both of whom spent considerable time on X and were tapped into the same younger and hyper-online portion of the base — were also worried. They urged the White House to change course and force the Justice Department to release more of the files.

Still, many were insisting on the full release of the files. 

Only one problem: the more they insisted, the more Trump insisted on this story going away, claiming only stupid people were still interested in Epstein. Again, a part of the article:

But there was one major obstacle in the path of a solution: The president himself still had no interest in transparency. He wanted the whole Epstein issue buried, and he was snapping at anyone who mentioned it. His staff largely avoided the subject in their conversations with him, forced to worry among themselves.  

Finally, on July 16, in an exasperated Truth Social post, seemingly desperate to make his case in language that might resonate with his base, Trump somewhat nonsensically called the Epstein case a “hoax” by Democrats and then proceeded to heap abuse on members of his party and his base, disavowing their support, calling them “PAST supporters” and “weaklings” who had “bought into this ‘bullshit,’ hook, line, and sinker.”

Whether or not this is finally the controversy that Trump, truly the Teflon President of all Teflon Presidents, could not get away with remains to be seen. However, it likely will define Trump and his administration for a very long time to come. And it has proven to be the one thing that Trump cannot set the tone for. Again, a bit from the article:

The Epstein crisis had exposed something that some of Trump’s closest advisers spent months refusing to see. The president could break institutions, redirect the federal government against his enemies and bring the world’s richest men into the Oval Office bearing tribute. But he could not, it turned out, make Jeffrey Epstein disappear.

One thing is clear: this story is not going away.

Could this finally be the scandal which catches up with Trump, the one thing that Trump finally does not get away with, as he has gotten away with everything to this point? Some are comparing this to Watergate, but I think it is far worse than Watergate. 

It should be interesting to see how this unfolds.

What a story by the New York Times.




Below is the link to the article which I wrote about in this entry, and from which I obtained all of the quotes and snippets of the article used above:


Times Exclusive  Inside the White House Freakout Over the Epstein Files by Maggie Haberman and Jonathan Swan Maggie Haberman and Jonathan Swan, White House reporters for The Times, are the authors of the forthcoming “Regime Change: Inside the Imperial Presidency of Donald Trump.” This article is drawn from reporting done for that book.  June 10, 2026:

The president’s top advisers gathered in a series of Situation Room meetings as they struggled to contain a scandal engulfing Donald Trump himself.

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/10/magazine/trump-epstein-files-white-house-vance-doj.html

Inside Trump’s White House, the Epstein Files Caused a Freakout - The New York Times

The Current American Decline is More Complicated - And More Complete - Than Most People Might Realize

Watched this video earlier.

And while he talked quite extensively about Americans losing their will to sacrifice in order to win wars and thus continue to dominate world affairs, he makes some very solid points. You can make the argument that in the three wars which, arguably, the United States was on the losing side of, the enemy country that we were fighting showed more willingness to sacrifice and suffer losses. That was true in Vietnam, as well as in more recent wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Iran clearly has learned that lesson, as they survived the early barrage and then seem to be waiting out the American war effort, knowing that the political price seems to be too much for most Americans to bear. In point of fact, Iran appears stronger than most people - myself included - thought they were, because they have done some things (controlling the Straight of Hormuz, and generally standing up to the might of the American military) then they seemed to be before the war. Too often in recent wars, the United States swaggered in thinking that they would show off their military might, and instead eventually retreated having instead displayed the limitations of our military capabilities.

Indeed, more Americans (myself included) are wondering why we spend a fortune to fund an American military industrial complex empire and to fund unpopular, immoral, and often illegal wars in order to try and bully other countries to do things our way. Frankly, he almost seems to be suggesting that the way for the country to grow or remain strong is to allow sacrifices of war to become acceptable. Personally, that is where I would differ, because history shows that too many unnecessary wars is, more often than not, the real reason why empires see their status and power compromised. These wars chip away at a nation (or empire's) image and the perception of them as relevant, even dominant, slows fades. How much stronger would we be as a nation if we never had gotten involved with Iraq or Afghanistan or, now, Iran? I would argue that part of the reason for our decline, and for why the world views the United States with more distrust and skepticism now, is because the United States grew a little too comfortable with trying to bully and threaten other countries and to fight never-ending wars. 

That is not what Paul Warburg is saying here, of course. But I suspect that it is the reason why Americans began to question the wars we were getting involved in. Also, personally, i suspect that the price, literally and figuratively, of sustaining our world empire began to weaken and ultimately sink us as a nation. The military industrial complex which Eisenhower once warned us about has become this bottomless pit where we throw money and get less and less in results.

Remember the ridiculous price that they allegedly paid for toilet seats? Surely, it went to something else, something that they did not want to mention. Also, let's remember the Iran-Contragate Scandal, which frankly should have ended the Reagan presidency and forced him to resign in disgrace. It was far more serious and compromising to us before the entire world than Watergate ever was. 

But Warburg mentions that, in this day and age, even warfare itself has changed. And spending obscene sums of money on modern tanks and jets which, in fact, are not necessarily nearly as effective as much cheaper weaponry has proven to be might ultimately sink us. He argues that we are not adapting to changes, instead puffing our chests with the perceptions of invincibility which many of us associated with those more conventional weapons, of which we really were the masters.

The United States does seem like a nation in decline. Less and less people around the world are overly impressed with us, and as he mentions, both enemies and allies are beginning to dismiss us. And that will have wider ramifications than most Americans care to think about.

Meanwhile, many Americans are fooling themselves into allowing themselves the conceit of believing in our inherent superiority and parading around, beating their chests and cheering whenever Trump insults or takes actions against other countries, including even allies. Those people seem to view this as a show of strength. In fact, it is convincing the rest of the world that the U.S. is a nation and an empire in decline. That is has lost touch with reality, become unstable, and can no longer be relied upon.

As the saying goes, pride comes before a fall. Our collective swaggering and hubris not only is not helping, but it is now actively hurting matters.

Donald Trump is shallow as spit. Every action that he takes is transparently for selfish desires. Nothing for any greater good. And yet tens of millions of Americans seem to think that this pathetic, blatantly corrupt and ugly (in every way) man is making us stronger as a nation. He is actively compromising our strength and our image around the world. Under him, we are growing far weaker, and the entire world is watching it happen. We as a nation grow smaller the more we allow ourselves to remain in the shadow of this pathetic excuse for a leader.

I would recommend taking a look at this video and see for yourself what you think.


America’s Decline is Worse Than You Think Paul Warburg 

https://youtu.be/I5QtOOhJarA?si=9oMjXk1c8l0V6q8L

America’s Decline is Worse Than You Think