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Where Objectivity Yields to Journalistic Ornamentation
Where Objectivity Yields to Journalistic Ornamentation

Stockton’s “Ski Mask” Ordinance: Narrow Rule, Wide Panic

By Holden McGroin
Posted in Justice, Politics
Stockton’s face-covering rule isn’t a blanket “ban all masks.” It’s aimed at concealed identities used in a way that reasonably creates fear of intimidation, threats, or violence—plus it explicitly carves out multiple everyday exceptions. Of course the internet heard “game over” anyway.
Follow the Money — Health Care Costs Edition political infographic

A Job Shouldn’t Have a Bouncer

By Harlan Quill
Posted in Economy, Housing
A job should open the door to a home, not lock you out—but this door has a bouncer with a calculator. Rent climbed to…
Tagsaffordability, cost of living, Homeownership, Housing, Mortgage Rates, rent, Working Families
Poster meme: Amphifa the frog-suit beats the president in an algae feud—“The pool is still green, the frog is still winning.”

Amphifa Wins Edition: The Pool’s Still Green, and the Frog Suit Keeps Beating the President in the Algae Feud

By Phil McCracken
Posted in Environment, Politics
The president of the United States can lose a feud to a frog suit, call the problem “a crazy pro-algae (likely paid) protestor,” and…
Tagsaccountability-theater, culture-war, federal-procurement-logic, government-blame, political spin, public accountability, public-infrastructure
Follow the Money — Good-Job Shortage Edition political infographic

Follow the Money: Productivity “Saved Time”—So Why Did Workers Get Busier Instead?

By Justin Jest
Posted in Labor, Tech
Better tools. Faster systems. More efficiency. Then the fine print does the disappearing-act everyone loves: technology got faster, workers got busier, and the “experience”…
Tagsinequality, Labor, management-metrics, productivity, quotas, workplace-surveillance
Follow the Money — Good-Job Shortage Edition political infographic

Gross Pay Can Look Big—But the Headline Isn’t What You Actually Live On

By Mike Rotch
Posted in Economy, Labor
Every time somebody sells “good jobs” using the gross pay number, I can practically hear the math trying to escape the room. Gross is…
Tagsjobs, Labor, media criticism, political spin, take-home-pay, taxes, wages, workforce
Follow the Money: Corporate Profits Edition political infographic

Be Patient: The Billionaire Customer Service Script

By Justin Jest
Posted in Economy, Politics
When wealth piles up at the top, everyone else feels the weight. AT THE TOP gets asset booms, market gains, and tax advantages; DOWN…
Tagsbillionaires, cost of living, economy, inequality, Labor, portfolios, rent, student-loans, taxes, working-people
Infographic “Follow the Money—Wisconsin Edition”: Johnson opposes raising the minimum wage; a reality check says costs are up and wages don’t stretch.

Reality Check vs. Johnson’s Position: Freedom Math Can’t Eat Rent (Wisconsin Edition)

By Brick Tungsten
Posted in Economy, Labor
Johnson’s Position sounds like a front-porch sermon: “I oppose raising the minimum wage. There are high paying factory jobs that factories can’t fill, so…
Tagscost of living, economy, Labor, minimum wage, Wisconsin, working class

Deletion Queue? Pay the Costs Anyway

By Hugh Jass
Posted in Justice, Tech
DOJ says Vercel didn’t fully comply with an ECPA search warrant until after a magistrate judge’s preliminary contempt finding—while Vercel’s defense leaned on deletion. In other words: trust & safety, but make it trust & delay.
TagsContempt of Court, Corporate Compliance, courts, DOJ, Electronic Communications Privacy Act, Privacy, Search Warrants, Vercel
Trump portrait before a sunburst backdrop with slogans reading “Promises broken. Devotion unbroken.” and “Losing is winning.”

Promises Broken, Applause Unlocked

By Holden McGroin
Posted in Culture, Politics
My corkboard keeps trying to do arithmetic: promises break, reality shows up, and the whole thing should end. Then the crowd votes on vibes…
Tagsculture-war, identity politics, media narratives, misinformation loops, political communication, public accountability
Split political meme comparing small-business scrutiny with Trump Mobile-style branding, ending with 'Fine for them. Problem for you.'

Fine for them. Problem for you: the “read the terms” double standard for Trump Mobile-style branding

By Phil McCracken
Posted in Justice, Politics
If a small business “did this,” you don’t get a vibes-based response—you get a DUE DILIGENCE REVIEW for MISLEADING CLAIMS and UNDELIVERED PROMISES, plus…
TagsAccountability, branding, consumer protection, double-standards, FTC, political-advertising
Trump Mobile T1 phone ad with $499 price, America First? Fine Print First, and multiple no-guarantee warnings.

America First? Fine Print First

By Harlan Quill
Posted in Business, Politics
Nothing says “America First” like paying $100 down for a $499 “Trump Mobile T1” while the terms insist you’re not buying a phone, a…
Tagscampaign-branding, consumer protection, contract-law, fine-print, patriotism, political-marketing, preorders, risk-transfer
Rosie the Riveter-style woman flexes beside a factory labeled “Billionaires,” under a “We Can Do It!” banner.

Rosie Still Has Work Gloves; Billionaires Have Billing Departments

By Justin Jest
Posted in Economy, Labor
“WE CAN DO IT!” is supposed to be a promise. Instead it’s wearing a hard hat in front of a factory that only says…
Tagsbillionaires, civic absurdity, credit taking, democratic accountability, Labor, wealth inequality, Workers
ICE agent in tactical gear leans at a diner counter while a waiter and child look on.

ICE Armored Pancakes at the Counter

By Moses Pray
Posted in Justice, U.S.
A kid doing the noble work of choosing eggs or pancakes, a waiter in a bow tie practicing hospitality, and then—“ICE.” Not the gentle…
Tagscivil-society, dignity, immigration-enforcement, mercy, public-hypocrisy, Workers
Infographic arguing to freeze the fraud, not care, with a senior and caregiver, denied applications, and a Capitol backdrop.

Freeze the fraud—don’t freeze the care: Stop Enrolling the Truth

By Harlan Quill
Posted in Health, Politics
“Freeze the fraud, not the care” sounds like a targeted plan until you notice the workflow only knows one setting: OFF. If the villains…
Tagsbureaucracy, care access, eldercare, fraud, Healthcare, home health, hospice

The Watchdogs Forgot the Forms, Again

By Hugh Jass
Posted in America's Got Governance, Justice
A GAO audit found the Integrity Committee built to enforce OIG misconduct review timelines and documentation repeatedly missed the required paperwork beats—so the “fix” is more compliance stapled to the same haunted process.
TagsAudit Findings, CIGIE, Compliance, GAO, government accountability, government waste, Inspector General, OIG, Oversight
Trump promise / reality reversal series political infographic

Receipts Don’t Read Slogans

By Harlan Quill
Posted in Economy, Politics
Every “end inflation” promise collapses at checkout, because receipts don’t RSVP to campaign slogans. The promise side can do the whole “quickly bring down…
Tagscost of living, energy, grocery-checkout, Inflation, promise-vs-reality, receipts, slogans
Trump promise / reality reversal series political infographic

Promise Made, Promise Broken: “No New Wars” Turns Into “War Isn’t Peace” (Plus Rising Prices)

By Holden McGroin
Posted in Economy, Politics
“NO NEW WARS? NO NEW WARS. AMERICA FIRST.” sounds like a promise you can frame: “I stop wars” and “Restore peace.” But then the…
TagsAmerica First, campaign promises, cost of living, Foreign Policy, Gas Prices, political spin, war and peace
Trump in a doctor’s office holding a prep solution jug, with text asking how many colonoscopies he’s had.
Partisan care-at-home infographic comparing Biden-Harris home care expansion with Trump CMS freeze and blocked enrollments.
Health | Politics

Seniors Need Care at Home—Not a Nationwide Freeze: Existing Providers Stay, New Providers Stop

By Moses Pray
“Help seniors stay at home” gets a choir seat on the Biden-Harris side: expand home & community care, support caregivers, strengthen care-worker pay. Then…
June 23, 2026
Moses Pray
He doesn’t think about our financial situations, but we’re thinking about his. Follow the money. When policy, timing, and personal profit keep lining up, the public deserves answers.
Justice | Politics

Follow the Money: The Family Cover-Up Edition (GOP Silence / Family Money Trail)

By Justin Jest
Nothing screams “rules for thee” like a party that demands competition, accountability, and process—right up until the moment the reported family connection starts matching…
June 23, 2026
Justin Jest
Justice | Politics

There’s No Protester Database (It’s Just the Records Cabinet, Actually)

By Holden McGroin
ICE insists it doesn’t keep a “database” of protesters—except the referenced correspondence and official paperwork treat “records” like the practical thing you’re still being sorted into. The panic isn’t imaginary; it’s the vocabulary game.
June 23, 2026
Holden McGroin
Trump promise / reality reversal series political infographic
Economy | Labor

A Raise That Buys Less

By Mike Rotch
Big win for the donors, I guess: the paycheck gets a little fatter on paper, and then the grocery store comes in like a…
June 22, 2026
Mike Rotch
Follow the money, as Deepthroat says in All the President's Men. He doesn't think about American's financial situation, but Americans are thinking about his financial situation.
Economy | Politics

Follow the Money to the Same Wallet

By Justin Jest
The modern Washington trick is to package one giant cash-and-favors machine as eight different “issues,” then act stunned when the paper trail smells like…
June 22, 2026
Justin Jest
Infographic titled “Follow the Money: Don Jr. Edition” about board seats, advisory roles, company access, and family connections.
Business | Politics

When the Last Name Becomes the Business Plan

By Phil McCracken
In Washington, some people earn a living by knowing things. Others earn a living by being related to the sign above the door. That’s…
June 21, 2026
Phil McCracken

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