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Sunday, January 11, 2026

No, Trump Did Not End Taxes on Social Security

Don't be gullible - Trump is lying. AGAIN.

Martin Burns and Mary Liz Burns

Watching Donald Trump’s speech on national television and Vice President JD Vance’s remarks at the Turning Point event in Arizona, we identified with Bill Murray in the movie Groundhog Day. For those who have not seen the movie, Murray plays a TV weatherman who is trapped reliving the same day, day after day. 

We felt exactly like Murray when both Trump and Vance claimed once again that they ended taxes on Social Security.

Time after time, fact-checkers and news outlets have pointed out that contrary to Trump and Vance’s claims, the “One Big Beautiful Bill” (OBBB) did not eliminate taxes on Social Security. Most recently, Factcheck.org on December 18 reported that:

Trump called the One Big Beautiful Bill Act he signed in July “perhaps the most sweeping legislation ever passed in Congress” and touted provisions that include “no tax on tips, no tax on overtime, and no tax on Social Security for our great seniors.” (As we have said, fewer seniors would pay taxes on Social Security benefits, but millions of Americans would still have to pay.)

The Constitution Prohibits Trump’s War on Rhode Island and other Blue States

Trump intends to punish all who voted against him

Robert Reich

What does Trump have against Minnesota? Not only is ICE causing mayhem in Minneapolis, but Trump is halting hundreds of millions of dollars in federal funding for social services programs there, according to a Tuesday announcement from Health and Human Services.

It’s not just Minnesota. Trump is also stopping billions in funding for social services in Colorado, Illinois, New York, and California.

Why? Could it be because all of them are led by Democrats and inhabited by voters who overwhelmingly rejected Trump in 2024?

It’s not the first time Trump has openly penalized “blue” states. What’s new is how blatant his vindictiveness toward blue states has become.

Angry at Colorado’s votes against him in three successive elections and at its refusal to free Tina Peters — the former clerk of Mesa County, who was convicted in 2024 of tampering with voting machines under her control in a failed plot to prove they had been used to rig the 2020 election against Trump — Trump has cut off transportation money to Colorado, relocated the military’s Space Command, vowed to dismantle a major climate and weather research center located there, and rejected disaster relief for rural counties hammered by floods and wildfires.

Two weeks ago Trump used the first veto of his second term to kill a pipeline project that had achieved bipartisan congressional support, to provide clean drinking water to Colorado’s parched eastern plains. 

Trump’s action enraged Republican congresswoman and formerly dedicated Trumper Lauren Boebert, who stated: “Nothing says America First like denying clean drinking water to 50,000 people in southeast Colorado, many of whom voted for him in all three elections.”

Trump’s blatant lawlessness will haunt America and the world for a long, long time.

From Jan. 6th to Maduro Kidnapping, the Threat Trump Poses Is Existential

Robert Reich for Inequality Media

Trump sees the world as belonging to him, Putin
and China. "Xi" refers to Xi Jinping, China's leader
Trump’s domestic and foreign policies — ranging from his attempted coup against the United States five years ago, to his incursion into Venezuela last weekend, to his current threats against Cuba, Colombia, and Greenland — undermine domestic and international law. But that’s not all.

They threaten what we mean by civilization.

The moral purpose of civilized society is to prevent the stronger from attacking and exploiting the weaker. Otherwise, we’d be permanently immersed in a brutish war in which only the fittest and most powerful could survive.

This principle lies at the center of America’s founding documents: the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, and the Bill of Rights. It’s also the core of the post- World War II international order championed by the United States, including the UN Charter — emphasizing multilateralism, democracyhuman rights, and the rule of law.

But it’s a fragile principle, easily violated by those who would exploit their power. Maintaining the principle requires that the powerful have enough integrity to abstain from seeking short-term wins, and that the rest of us hold them accountable if they don’t.

Every time people or corporations or countries that are richer and more powerful attack and exploit those that are not, the fabric of civilization frays. If such aggression is not contained, the fabric unravels. If not stopped, the world can descend into chaos and war. It has happened before.

We now inhabit a society and world grown vastly more unequal. Political and economic power are more concentrated than ever before. This invites the powerful to exploit the weaker because the powerful feel omnipotent.

Every time people or corporations or countries that are richer and more powerful attack and exploit those that are not, the fabric of civilization frays. If such aggression is not contained, the fabric unravels. If not stopped, the world can descend into chaos and war. It has happened before.

Ya think?

Dance in the New Year

The medal he deserves

R.I. has a rising tide of tiny trash on its beaches.

But it still doesn’t have a bottle bill.

By Nancy Lavin, Rhode Island Current

Cigarette butts strewn across the sand and plastic bottles bobbing in the waves are the most obvious targets of frustration about litter on Rhode Island beaches.

But the button-sized plastic and foam pieces less visible to the casual observer might be a more serious problem. More than 14,000 of these 2.5-or-smaller centimeter pieces were collected from state shorelines as part of 2025 volunteer-led efforts through the International Coastal Cleanup, according to a new report from Save the Bay. 

Tiny trash came in second to cigarette butts, which claimed the dubious honor of no. 1 trash item among the 15,561 pounds of trash collected from September to November 2025. “Other plastic waste” was the third most prevalent, followed by food waste, bottle caps and plastic beverage bottles and cans.

Your Daily Cup of Tea Could Help Fight Heart Disease, Cancer, Aging, and More

Tea may offer powerful health benefits, but how it is prepared and consumed matters.

By Maximum Academic Press

Tea has a long history as both a traditional remedy and an everyday drink. Now a new review suggests that reputation may have real support behind it.

Across human cohort studies and clinical trials, tea drinking shows its most consistent links to better heart and metabolic health, including lower risks of cardiovascular disease (CVD) and related problems like obesity and type 2 diabetes — with hints of protection against some cancers as well.

The authors also point to early signs that tea may be tied to slower cognitive decline, less age-related muscle loss, and anti-inflammatory and antimicrobial effects. Those areas are promising, they note, but still need stronger long-term human trials.

How much you drink seems to matter, too. In a meta-analysis of 38 prospective cohort data sets, “moderate” intake tracked with lower all-cause, CVD, and cancer mortality. For CVD mortality, the benefit signal appeared to level off around ~1.5–3 cups per day, while all-cause mortality showed its strongest association at ~2 cups per day.

Big Oil tells Trump they won’t go into Venezuela without big bucks from US taxpayers

The grift goes on

Brett Wilkins

ExxonMobil’s CEO told Donald Trump that Venezuela is currently “uninvestible” following the US invasion and kidnapping of President Nicolás Maduro, underscoring fears that American taxpayers will be left footing the bill for the administration’s goal of exploiting the South American nation’s vast petroleum resources.

Trump had hoped to convince executives from around two dozen oil companies to invest in Venezuela after the president claimed US firms pledged to spend at least $100 billion in the country. However, Trump got a reality check during Friday’s White House meeting, as at least one Big Oil CEO balked at committing financial and other resources in an uncertain political, legal, and security environment.

“If we look at the legal and commercial constructs and frameworks in place today in Venezuela today, it’s uninvestable,” ExxonMobil CEO Darren Woods told Trump during the meeting. “Significant changes have to be made to those commercial frameworks, the legal system. There has to be durable investment protections, and there has to be a change to the hydrocarbon laws in the country.”

There is also skepticism regarding Trump’s promise of “total safety” for investors in Venezuela amid deadly US military aggression and regime change.

However, many of the executives—who stand to make billions of dollars from the invasion—told Trump that they remain eager to eventually reap the rewards of any potential US takeover of Venezuela’s vast oil resources.

The oil executives’ apparent aversion to immediate investment in Venezuela—and Trump’s own admission that the American people might end up reimbursing Big Oil for its efforts—prompted backlash from taxpayer advocates.

Trump's Venezuela adventure is already a propaganda disaster

Nobody is buying it, and we don't even know what they're trying to sell.

Paul Waldman

For a man who spent a lifetime using showmanship to con people into believing things that aren’t true, Donald Trump has run an absolutely dreadful propaganda campaign in support of his latest foreign military adventure.

Nothing about what just happened in Venezuela is clear — who is now running the country, what will happen from this point forward, or why we did it. 

We don’t even know what to call it. An invasion, a kidnapping, a coup, a takeover? Who knows? In the long run, it will probably turn out badly for the people of Venezuela and for US foreign policy interests, but it’s already a case study in incompetent public relations.

Let’s be honest: Getting the American people to support a fun little war has never been all that hard, at least at first. When things eventually go sideways they’ll realize it was a mistake, but the beating of the war drums gets their toes a-tapping, and it isn’t long before a majority of them are clapping along. 

But despite spending months laying the groundwork for the incursion that happened Saturday morning — bombing boats supposedly carrying drugs, moving an aircraft carrier to the region, making an endless series of threats to Nicolás Maduro — Trump never got anything like a majority of the public behind him.

If you want a preview of how chaotic, self-contradictory, and ultimately futile the Venezuela policy will be, you have only to look at how inept the PR campaign has been.

Granted, skill at public relations doesn’t necessarily correlate with policy competence. In 2002 and 2003, the Bush administration conducted what may be the most extraordinary public persuasion effort in American history, to convince Americans that we absolutely had to invade Iraq lest Saddam Hussein obliterate us all with his terrifying arsenal of weapons of mass destruction.

As propaganda, it was a smashing success. Before the war began, overwhelming majorities believed the twin lies the administration was pushing — that Saddam had WMD and was involved in the 9/11 attacks. But the skill of their communication was not reflected in the implementation of the war and its aftermath, which turned out to be probably the most catastrophic blunder in the history of American foreign policy.

Nevertheless, the incoherence of the Trump administration’s communication suggests that what happens next in Venezuela will be an unfolding series of screwups. If these clowns can’t even get the American public to support a war, do we really think they’ll be able to manage an infinitely more difficult task of nation-building?

They can’t get their story straight

Start with the most basic question: Why, precisely, did we attempt a takeover of the Venezuelan state through military force? If the first answer is “Well, it’s not exactly a takeover, we arrested Maduro, but we’re not really running Venezuela,” then that illustrates the problem. What was all this about?

Maduro and his wife have now been indicted for drug trafficking. Was that the reason for this whole thing? Not exactly — after all, President Trump recently pardoned Juan Orlando Hernández, the former president of Honduras, who was convicted of helping to send hundreds of tons of cocaine to the United States. Maduro’s indictment also mentions cocaine, but we’ve been told that the real drug problem is fentanyl, of which almost none comes through Venezuela.

The point is, if you’re going to invade another country, you have to at least put some effort into convincing the public that this will solve a serious problem that faces them. How many people believe that taking over Venezuela is going to change America’s relationship with drugs?

Here’s the truth, and it isn’t exactly a secret: Multiple key administration figures had their own motivations for wanting to overthrow the Venezuelan government, none of which are about drugs.

Saturday, January 10, 2026

Five ways to become a billionaire

None have anything to do with “free market” capitalism

Robert Reich

One of the most notable characteristics of 2025 has been the shamelessness of the billionaire class and the conspicuousness of its corruption.

For many years, whenever I’ve warned that an increasing portion of the nation’s wealth is falling into the hands of an ever-smaller number of people, the moneyed interests have responded: “But that’s just the free market,” or “the free market has decided they deserve it.”

Rubbish. There’s no such thing as a “free market” to begin with. Today’s so-called “free market” is the outcome of political decisions over monopolization, labor organization, private property, finance, trade, taxes, and much more.

Who’s behind these political decisions? Increasingly, the same small number of ultra-rich who have gained disproportionate influence over our politics. They’ve created five ways for themselves to accumulate a billion dollars or more.

1. First, exploit a monopoly.

Does Jeff Bezos deserve his billions because he founded and built Amazon?

No. Amazon is a monopolist with nearly 40 percent of all e-commerce retail sales in America. In addition, Amazon is protected by a slew of patents granted by the U.S. government.

In 2023, the U.S. government — through the Federal Trade Commission and 17 states— charged Amazon with illegally maintaining a monopoly by crushing competition, inflating prices, and harming consumers through anticompetitive practices like punishing sellers who offer lower prices elsewhere. (The trial is currently scheduled to begin in 2027.)

If the government fully enforced anti-monopoly (antitrust) laws and didn’t give Amazon such broad patents, Bezos would be worth far less.

If anti-monopoly laws were enforced, other titans of high tech would be worth far less, too — among them, Elon Musk, Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg, Apple’s Tim Cook, and Oracle’s Larry Ellison.

The good, the bad and the ugly

Rally in Providence tomorrow against ICE violence

From Charlestown Residents United

 

Trump says wind farm off RI coast is a "national security" risk - Here's his "proof"

‘Specific’ Revolution Wind national security risks remain classified in court documents

They look a lot like the Epstein files

by Nancy Lavin, Rhode Island Current

A recent federal analysis revealed new and specific national security risks posed by offshore wind, including Rhode Island’s nearly completed Revolution Wind project, according to the Trump administration.

But, it’s classified.

Pages from a federal analysis outlining perceived national security risks posed by Revolution Wind and four other East Coast wind farm projects submitted in a court filing by the Department of Justice.

Federal regulators, and the U.S. Department of Justice attorneys representing them in court, offered little explanation for the abrupt suspension of five East Coast wind projects, including Revolution Wind, in court filings submitted Thursday. The tranche of documents, spanning 160 pages, defends the Interior Department’s Dec. 22 stop work order, which is being challenged by the Revolution Wind project developers, along with the companies behind three of the four other projects. 

The companies have each turned to federal courts to attempt to bar the Trump administration from interfering in their projects, claiming the 90-day suspension is an executive overreach that violates constitutional separation of powers, among other laws.

For the 65-turbine Revolution Wind project already 87% complete south of Rhode Island’s coastline, the late December halt to construction was especially harmful. The 704-megawatt project already endured a monthlong pause from August to September when federal regulators first sought to stop work under the guise of national security concerns. 

The initial stop work order was temporarily tossed by U.S. Senior Judge Royce Lamberth of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia. Lamberth is scheduled to consider the second request for a preliminary injunction from the Revolution Wind developers, joined by the Rhode Island and Connecticut AGs, on Monday.

Ahead of the in-person hearing, Trump attorneys laid out their defense in writing to the court. They refuted allegations of constitutional breaches, and consequences for the project developers, who say they are at risk of losing $6 billion if construction cannot resume by Jan. 12.

The Trump administration’s response? 

“When it comes to the operation of the Project, the public interest in national security outweighs Revolution Wind’s alleged economic harms,” wrote Adam Gustafson, principal deputy assistant attorney general for the environment and natural resources division.

But exactly what security concerns prompted the Trump administration to renege on the existing federal approval for the project remains fuzzy. The project had already undergone a rigorous and lengthy review of economic, environmental and security considerations.