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    Arizona’s Data Center Tax Break Moratorium Meets the Deadline Rush (Again)

    I love a good “pause the giveaway” announcement—until the money-trail correspondent in me hears the checkout timer beep. Arizona’s data-center tax-break moratorium was marketed as taxpayer “savings,” but reported timing points to a behavior signal: when the state raised the fence, the subsidy class started sprinting for the gate—applications first, questions later.

    Gov. Katie Hobbs framed the three-year freeze as a protection measure and said it would save taxpayers $57 million. Cool. Except, per reported coverage cited by Axios, the Arizona Commerce Authority (ACA) received 113 tax-incentive applications in just two weeks—June 15 through June 30—right before the freeze began. That late-June spike reportedly also came close to matching the prior 13-year total up to June 14. That’s not what “pause” usually sounds like; that’s what a stampede sounds like.

    And the mechanics matter. The point of an incentive system run through an application pipeline is that the “help” happens when someone successfully requests it—so timing isn’t a footnote, it’s the product. If you can get your paperwork in before the policy gate closes, the incentive math changes from “economic development” to “who can hit submit fastest,” with the public left holding the bill and the state left with a stack of receipts that arrived in a hurry.

    Here’s the contradiction in plain English: the moratorium is sold as stopping a giveaway, but the application surge suggests it functionally re-allocates the giveaway by speed and access. The pause didn’t end the incentive pipeline—it changed who got to benefit before public money goes back on the menu. If Arizona wants this to be real taxpayer protection, the fix isn’t just “freeze the program.” It’s accountability over how discretionary timing becomes a corporate deadline game.

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    SSA Deletes the Wrong Death, Forgets the Why

    I’m Hugh Jass, serious investigative reporter with absurd gravitas, and I have bad news and good news—both in the same envelope. The SSA “deletes the wrong death,” the beneficiary gets unfrozen, and everyone claps because the calendar finally stops yelling. Then the contradiction kicks in—because the system often deletes the outcome without keeping the reason, so the Evidence Screen (EVID) doesn’t explain itself. The document coughed; Exhibit A had a pulse; the fix still can’t prove how it learned.

    A reader seeing the article title will immediately understand why this article accompanies the piece because the phrase “deletes the wrong death” points to the correction, while “forgets the why” points to the missing documentation that makes the correction un-auditable.

    In an OIG review of incorrect-death corrections in a sample spanning Jan. 2020 through Dec. 2024, SSA corrected cases at a fairly healthy clip: 54% of the time, technicians made changes in line with policy. So the part that “works” definitely works. The part that doesn’t is the part that lets anyone else verify what happened next time.

    Here’s where the haunted paperwork starts: for 45% of the cases where the record was corrected, the technician didn’t document the reason the death was recorded/removed on EVID. Worse, in 61 of 78 cases within the review sample, there wasn’t even an EVID entry present—meaning the system’s own evidence door is left wide open, and then everyone acts surprised when accountability walks right through.

    And because government fixes love a sequel, the OIG also noted payment follow-through problems. In at least two cases, payment records weren’t updated to reinstate benefits for beneficiaries whose incorrect-death status had been corrected. That’s not a philosophical glitch—it’s the difference between “we changed the record” and “we fixed the life attached to it.”

    So yes: the SSA can correct an incorrect death posting. But if the “why” doesn’t live in EVID, the agency can’t show its work, future mistakes can’t be filtered, and the public is left with a transcript edit where the exhibits are missing. If you’re alive but the government’s records say you aren’t, you don’t just deserve a correction—you deserve receipts that stay filed after the clerical smoke clears.

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    Ignore the Ledger, Praise the Guy

    “He told you” becomes a personality test, and the second the ledger shows up—receipt, exhibit, invoice, whatever flavor of paperwork haunted house—the crowd doesn’t update. They cheered anyway. Then it’s “Believe the leader,” and if you try “maybe this is the part where we follow the evidence,” you’re told you’re ignoring the vibe. (Translation: ignore the ledger.)

    Because in this group chat, contradiction isn’t a bug—it’s merch. You point at the documents-energy and suddenly you’re “attacking the person,” like loyalty is the real charge code. When someone shows you who they are, a cult calls it strength—and congratulations, you didn’t join a debate; you got drafted into the applause.

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    Another Promise Kept? Not Even Close: The Fine-Print Twist on “No Tax on Social Security”

    “NO TAX ON SOCIAL SECURITY FOR OUR GREAT SENIORS” is the kind of headline that makes you hear the ice cream truck music of democracy. Then the fine print shows up with a clipboard: the “TRUMP’S 2025 BILL” version is allegedly “an additional, temporary $6,000-per-year tax deduction” for individuals age 65+, and if you earn $75,000+, the deduction allegedly gets smaller. So congratulations—your tax experience has been rebranded.

    But the “THE REALITY” panel doesn’t do the happy dance. It just says “millions of social security recipients will continue to pay taxes on their benefits.” Another promise kept? Not even close. It’s promise-zero packaging with receipt-keep-your-coins energy—read the extra pages before you start celebrating.

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    Rule of Acquisition #25: Democracy Is Priceless—So You’re Probably Undercharging

    I’m Justin Jest, and I can practically hear the checkout screen clearing its throat inside the polling place: “DEMOCRACY IS PRICELESS. WHICH MEANS YOU ARE PROBABLY UNDERCHARGING.” If it can be voted, it can be sold—every right has a price—and “PUBLIC TRUST NOT INCLUDED” is printed right on the menu like a default setting. They don’t even pretend; they “MONETIZE EVERYTHING,” slap a “DEMOCRACY PACKAGE™” on it, and call the counter a “PREMIUM ACCESS VOTING BOOTH.”

    So yeah: “VOICE ACCESS” turns into “VOTE PRIORITY,” “POLICY PERKS,” and “TAX BENEFITS,” while “ZERO ACCOUNTABILITY” sits next to “GUARANTEED TERMS APPLY” like the fine print is the only thing guaranteed. Start at “BASIC BALLOT” for “$9.99,” upgrade to “EXECUTIVE BALLOT” or “PREMIUM BALLOT” (“MORE POWER. LESS PEOPLE”), and remember—“DEMOCRACY INVOICE” is the real feature, because “SUBSCRIBE TODAY!” comes with “CONFIDENCE FUND (YOUR FUND).”

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    Pay 32% and get told you have “representation”

    Representation is apparently a sacred civic feature—until you’re the self-employed taxpayer holding “ALL THE TAXES” and staring at the “TAX BILL” part where the number reads “32% of net self-employment income.” The colonists revolted over “without representation” (meme says “over 1.5%”), and now you get the sequel: no employer, no benefits, no PTO, no safety net… plus a happy little reminder that you have “representation.” In the form of “NO STINKING REPRESENTATION,” of course.

    Here’s the quiet incentive problem: paperwork doesn’t create outcomes, it creates receipts. The state cashes the check, then stamps your citizenship like it’s participation points—while your checklist stays the same and your balance sheet still doesn’t magically reimburse PTO or safety-net math.

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    Transparency Still Works Like a Paperwork Escape Room

    I keep hearing Washington say “transparency” like it’s a universal solvent, but the Lobbying Disclosure Act feels less like a ledger and more like a paperwork escape room: you can fill out the forms and still not reach the accountability exit. Follow the invoice, sure—if the invoice came with missing pages and a help desk that answers in sunsets.

    GAO’s report GAO-26-108486 puts numbers on the vibes. It found potential non-disclosure issues in roughly 22% of LD-2 reports related to required “covered positions.” And on enforcement, GAO says the U.S. Attorney’s Office received 12,391 referrals for failure to file from 2016–2025, with only about 46% resolved as compliant by December 2025. That’s not “all clear, citizens”—that’s “the system is still processing your certainty.”

    This is where the revolving-door PR line starts selling a magic trick: if influence is disclosed, then influence is fully knowable. But GAO is describing a disclosure pipeline that depends on accurate “covered position” reporting and timely follow-through on failure-to-file referrals. When transparency depends on whether paperwork was correctly completed and whether referrals get resolved fast enough, the experience for ordinary taxpayers stops being legibility and starts being roulette with forms.

    So yes, transparency exists. But what the design really delivers is a choose-your-own-adventure version of governance—where the accountability ending depends on compliance quality, referral volume, and processing timelines rather than voter consent. If the public’s “read the receipts” plan comes with missing labels and an aging stack of unresolved referrals, don’t call it transparency; call it procurement jazz hands for the donor class—done in a broom closet labeled “public access.”

  • DOL’s “Common Interest” Shuffle: 48 Agreements, 13 Reviewed, 8 Recommendations, Still No Tracking

    I have seen many things in my line of work, but the particular haunt of this one is “common interest.” The Department of Labor calls these agreements a lawful way to share confidential information—then, in an Inspector General audit, DOL’s own paperwork starts acting like it’s allergic to accountability.

    The audit is OIG Report 09-26-001-08-001, issued June 30, 2026. It focused on a defined period (Jan. 1, 2023, through June 30, 2025) and looked at “common interest agreements” used across DOL components—specifically identifying 48 agreements in that window, with seven tied to EBSA and forty-one tied to the Wage and Hour Division.

    From those 48, the OIG reviewed a sample of 13, using an explicit compile-then-select approach—part random, part judgmental selection. That’s the kind of methodology you can show auditors, managers, and, if necessary, a judge: “We didn’t just guess.” Yet the findings read less like “we found a few bad apples” and more like “we never built the basket that tells you how many apples exist.”

    According to the OIG, DOL lacked sufficient formal policies or procedures, had weak internal coordination, and—most crucially for anyone who wants oversight beyond vibes—did not have adequate tracking mechanisms to determine, with confidence, how many agreements existed across the relevant universe. And then the plot twist: DOL agreed to all eight recommendations aimed at fixing the control and accountability gaps.

    So here’s the human stake, in plain language. EBSA and WHD exist to enforce worker protections, not to play administrative hide-and-seek with sensitive information-sharing arrangements. When the watchdog says the filing system can’t reliably tell you what’s in the folder, that’s not a theoretical problem—it’s the enforcement equivalent of being asked to prove a negative. The paperwork can reproduce; the tracking can’t. The document coughed; Exhibit A had a pulse; and still the agency’s answer was “trust us, we’ll improve.”

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    Rule of Acquisition #13: If the product has no value, slap on a gold-name luxury markup

    I keep seeing Grand Nagus Trump’s “luxury is just lettering” method in the wild: take an ordinary thing, add a famous name, print it in gold, declare it premium, and suddenly the product becomes whatever the logo is dressed as. The pitch even confesses the quiet part—zero value—then dares you to pay extra because the label is the whole proof. Add gold, remove doubt, and watch the checkout line turn into a confession booth.

    That’s the part the algorithm never stops repeating: when the substance is thin, branding has to do cartwheels until it feels like facts. Outrage gets the same treatment—brand the vibe, gild the outrage, call it patriotism, and raise the price of participation. I’m not saying don’t look; I’m saying follow the thread but check the knot, because the knot is always where the markup lives.

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    Promises can break—devotion doesn’t: when failure becomes “another test of faith”

    Promises break, and the devotees clap harder—because when results get delayed, they don’t call it a problem. They call it a “test of faith.” Loyalty stays intact like a hymnal that refuses to admit it’s missing the verses, and failure becomes the new attendance badge: show up, mean it, don’t ask for receipts, don’t measure the pantry, don’t check the ledger.

    They’ll swear “trust” is sacred while behaving like data is a heresy and accountability is the villain. If mercy is for the hurting, then let’s start with the hurting: the neighbors who live with the broken outcome, not the fan club grading devotion from the front pew. Peace be with you—and with the people who demand results before calling it holiness.

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