Return of the “Hoovervilles”

From History.com “During the Great Depression, which began in 1929 and lasted approximately a decade, shantytowns appeared across the U.S. as unemployed people were evicted from their homes. As the Depression worsened in the 1930s, causing severe hardships for millions of Americans, many looked to the federal government for assistance. When the government failed to provide relief, President Herbert Hoover (1874-1964) was blamed for the intolerable economic and social conditions, and the shantytowns that cropped up across the nation, primarily on the outskirts of major cities, became known as Hoovervilles.”

Now in 2020 thanks to Covid-19 millions of people have lost their jobs
and after on dose of help (the CARES Act) those people are about to lose their homes. Those without adequate savings to tide them over to a time when their jobs will recur may be facing the same fate as the homeless of the 1930s. The National Alliance to End Homelessness says that as of January 2019, well before the virus there were an estimated 567,000 homeless people in the United States. The largest numbers are in the West Coast states.

Hoovervilles are already occurring in Los Angeles as the tented homeless live along freeways, beneath freeway underpasses, and on major boulevards. Others with motorhomes have parked along boulevards in industrial areas hoping that the police will not tell them to move their rigs.

Articles about the homeless in the Los Angeles Times are numerous. Four of those articles in November alone.

Homelessness is up in Los Angeles County for the third time in four years, a result of an ever-growing number of people who cannot afford the region’s high housing costs. This year’s homeless count is 66,433 people. That’s up 12.7% from 2019.

Proposition HHH was sold to L.A. voters as a funding mechanism to get at least 10,000 Angelenos, and likely more, off the street and into permanent housing. That housing is supposed to come with accompanying services, like counseling, to help people stay housed — it’s called “supportive housing.”

Sadly many people have no sympathy and seem to believe that the homeless are all on drugs/alcoholics, are likely to harm their children, and they are all thieves. Consequently that supportive housing was never implemented.

Solutions are using the Los Angeles Convention Center and abandoned buildings far away from residential neighborhoods to house the homeless.

Wait a minute that solution is not the answer for those who refuse to live in the provided housing for a variety of reasons including mental illness, and fear their lives are in jeopardy from other homeless people.

Society’s solution for those refusing help is chasing them away from places we see from our cars.

“And that’s the way it is.”

Homeless in a upper income neighborhood near my home.

Poor Losers Club


Pictured are three presidents who skipped their successor’s inaugurations.


Bad loser Donald Trump is not likely to attend the inauguration of Joe Biden. He would not the first president to refuse to attend his successor’s inauguration. In the past, three outgoing presidents — John Adams in 1801, John Quincy Adams in 1829 and Andrew Johnson in 1869 chose not to attend their successor’s inaugurations.

In the instance of John Adams a re-election a tie between Jefferson and running mate Aaron Burr, which meant that the election decision next moved to the House of Representatives. After more than 30 ballots, the House of Representatives finally decided the race for Jefferson. For reasons that he never made public, he chose to skip Jefferson’s inauguration, leaving on the early morning stagecoach out of Washington that morning to begin the journey back to his beloved Quincy, Massachusetts.

John Quincy Adams, son of John Adams, faced multiple challengers, notably from Andrew Jackson and Henry Clay. Jackson won the most popular and electoral votes, but he failed to obtain a majority of needed electoral votes. With the election at stake, the Clay electors switched their support to Adams, and the House of Representatives voted to make Adams the next president. Later, Jackson declared a “corrupt bargain” had taken place and vowed to run again in 1828. The election of 1828 featured a contentious rematch between the two men. Adams’ supporters accused Jackson of being a military tyrant and a bigamist. Rachel Donelson Jackson’s divorce to Lewis Robards in 1793 had not been granted, which technically made her an adultress. She was granted a divorce the following year, but Adams’ camp claimed Andrew Jackson was morally unfit to serve as president.

Vice President Andrew Johnson succeeded to the presidency after the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln in 1865. In turn, the new president committed himself to obstructing the will of the Republican Congress at every step. In November 1868, the nation elected Gen. Ulysses S. Grant, Johnson’s nemesis, to the presidency by a wide electoral margin. In the popular vote, Grant owed his slim majority of 300,000 to the votes of nearly a half million freedmen in Southern states.

Donald Trump will probably be in Mar-a-Lago on January 20 surrounded by his family and friends. And the world will move on wondering how Americans could have fallen for a circus barker.

Wear the Goddamned Mask!

What in hell is it going to take to get your attention?  The corona virus is spreading more than ever. Of course I am sick of this damned disease. We all are.  Quit whining. If you can fight in wars you can sacrifice yourself to protect other people.

Nov 4   New Cases 108,389         New Deaths: 1,201

Nov 5   New Cases 118,204         New Deaths: 1,125

Nov 6   New Cases 132,540         New Deaths: 1,248

Nov 7   New Cases 124,232         New Deaths: 1,031

Nov 8   New Cases 102,726         New Deaths: 512 this is a Sunday

Nov 9   New Cases 125,689         New Deaths: 641

Nov 10   New Cases 135,574       New Deaths: 1,345

Wait Minute, I am not giving up the Presidency

No presidential candidate in modern history has refused to concede, but there’s no law that requires it. What happens if Trump refuses to concede the 2020 election?  It won’t make any difference. Joe Biden becomes president on January 20, 2021 if he has won in the electoral college.

Then comes Donald Trump saying wait a minute. He throws a fit and a group of ten Republican attorneys general announced Monday that they are filing an amicus brief with the Supreme Court in a case challenging mail ballots in Pennsylvania, arguing that the state increased the risk of fraud in the election. Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt led the group saying, “Free and fair elections are the cornerstone of our republic and it’s one of the reasons why the United States is the envy of the world. We have to ensure that every legal vote cast is counted and that every illegal vote not cast is not counted. To do so would disenfranchise millions of Americans.” If successful they will file briefs overturning the votes in other states.

Donald Trump loves drama. He is an entertainer. Like soap opera the drama offers the questions that those programs always ask
-Will a conservative supreme court overturn the vote in Pennsylvania or any other state?
-Will Joe Biden and Kamala Harris’s moment of “we won” be overturned? That really would be the end of the American democracy.
-Are all these actions by state attorney generals meant to placate the scary Donald Trump?

Tune in in the coming days to learn who will be the next president of the United States.

BIDEN DEFEATS TRUMP

The sad reality is that more than 70 million of Americans voted for Donald Trump and that says something about the people of this country.  The words Hate and White Superiority come to mind. Keep that in mind in the coming four years.

Donald Trump will not accept the conclusions of the Associated Press, CNN and NBC.  The real final vote is the electoral college vote taken on December 14.  Between now and then the president will appeal to federal courts and the Supreme Court to overturn the election results.

This is not the same as Bush versus Gore in the year 2000.  Bush had already been officially certified the winner by the secretary of State, a loyal Republican, but the day before, in a shocking 4-3 decision, the Florida Supreme Court had ordered a statewide recount.

Trump will plead that the results are fraudulent because millions of votes were duplicates, millions of unregistered votes were counted, and of course there were votes cast by millions of deceased persons.  He will claim there was a conspiracy to deny him re-election.  Without proof the courts, I hope, will not overturn the election results. 

The Associated Press now projects the electoral count as 290 for Biden and 214 for Trump.  The very close Biden win in Georgia has resulted in plans for a re-count but why bother?  Georgia’s 16 electoral votes will not change the outcome of the presidential race.

The lingering question is how will Joe Biden successfully lead this divided country?

“If you count the legal votes, I easily win.”

Waah, Waah. This can’t be happening to me

A Panicked Trump falsely claims he’s winning as Biden’s lead expands in nail-biter election.

It is a sad time for the American democracy. Of course we don’t know who will win the election but I can’t recall any one term president claim there were illegal votes and that was the reason he lost re-election.

Donald Trump’s claims of fraud started at 2:30 a.m. on Wednesday November 4 in an appearance at the White House, Trump falsely asserted the pending outcome was “a fraud on the American public” and an “embarrassment on our country.”

Then Trump followed up with these were the words were spoken at about 7 p.m. eastern time yesterday by the president in the press room at the White House. “If you count the legal votes, I easily win. If you count the illegal votes, they can try to steal the election from us.”

The Los Angeles Times reported some Republicans joined other officials in swiftly condemning President Trump’s latest false claims late Thursday that he is being robbed of a reelection victory by fraudulent votes in decisive states where Joe Biden appears to be winning.

“There is no defense for the President’s comments tonight undermining our Democratic process,” Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, a Republican, tweeted shortly after Trump spoke from the White House briefing room. “America is counting the votes, and we must respect the results as we always have before. No election or person is more important than our Democracy.”

Ellen Weintraub, chair of the Federal Election Commission and a Democrat, urged the president to stop making false claims.  “Enough, Mr. President. Enough. Spewing conspiracy theories regarding this election will not change the results,” she tweeted. “Your lies undermine our democracy and harm our country. Just stop.”

The sad reality is that we elected a person to be president who believes he is above the law and has the right to a second term in office no matter what the vote count results.  The cartoon above says it all.  

A Divided Government Equals Gridlock

Think about this.

Joe Biden wins the election.
The Senate majority is held by the Republican Party.
Little or no legislation is passed.

That is not an unlikely scenario.  Mitch McConnell wanted to make Barack Obama a one term president by blocking Obama’s agenda.  Aren’t we going to hear those same words again?

There is no reference to political parties in the U.S. constitution and that is the problem. This issue is confronted by countries that have a parliamentary democracy by agreeing to a compromise that provides everyone a voice. Or does it?

Explained at britannica.com.  A Parliamentary system, democratic form of government in which the party (or a coalition of parties) with the greatest representation in the parliament (legislature) forms the government, its leader becoming prime minister or chancellor.

A majority of the world’s parliaments are unicameral. One body decides what laws are to be passed and who will obtain a judgeship.

One main criticism of Parliamentary system is that the head of the government is in almost all cases not directly elected but that is the system in the United Sates democracy too.

Is Joe Biden to be a place holder? The ACA may not be dismantled and DACA children may not be deported from the country. Then what?  The Democratic Party will have to find new leaders in four years.

If Trump were to obtain a second term, he is more likely to see legislation passed.

Grid lock is likely to be the situation for the next four years. Democrats control the House and Republicans control the Senate. This is a system that makes many people question the whole idea of democracy.