America Never did Obtain Total Independence from England

The proof of America’s undying connection with England is the non-stop reporting in American media of English royalty. When I say “the queen” everyone knows who I am talking about. When Princess Di was killed in a car accident America wept. Megan Markle’s marriage to Prince Harry reinforces that connection.

Markle grew up in Leimert Park. That is a mostly black community in Los Angeles. She attended Immaculate Heart High, an all-girls school in the Hollywood Hills, and worked her way up the Hollywood acting ladder, becoming a regular on the TV show “Suits.” In 2003 she graduated from Northwestern University with a double major in theatre and international relations.

Meghan made Canada her home after landing her role on Suits in 2011, staying in the Seaton Village neighbourhood of Toronto, where the show is filmed. She moved out in late November 2017 when her work on the show was complete.

Markle was previously married to TV producer Trevor Engelson in a ceremony in Jamaica in 2011. The couple divorced two years later.

Is Megan Markle the 21st century version of Wallis Simpson?

Are Dogs really getting smarter?

My dogs, I have two, seem to know when it’s time for their walk.  They walk away from some of the of the food I feed them.  Sometimes they pick through the food and spit out what they don’t like. They seem to understand that they can’t go out after dark because of coyotes.  And now they can even use a computer or was this just a photoshop creation?

Tres Belle French Maid Costume

You won’t be sweeping any floors in this Tres Belle French Maid costume featuring a black and white bodysuit with a ruffled bust, a straight neckline with a black ribbon trim, thick shoulder straps, a back zipper closure, a lace-up bodice, an attached apron, a back bow detail, a tiered polka dot peplum, adjustable garter straps, a cheeky cut back, matching arm sleeves, a matching lace choker, and a matching maid headpiece. (Gloves, duster, and thigh high stockings not included.)

The Thin Skin of President Donald J. Trump

CBC (Canadian Broadcasting Company) cut a cameo of Donald Trump in the movie “Home Alone 2.” Both Donald Trump and Donald Trump Junior are upset about this really trivial event. A spokesman for the CBC says the now-president’s “short scene” was cut for time when the broadcaster acquired rights to the film in 2014 — before Trump was elected. Donald Trump Jr. tweeted an article accusing the broadcaster of bias.

Why are we wasting time on a fool? Because he is the president of the most powerful country in the world.

Voters don’t like Joe Biden’s nostalgia? That’s pure malarkey

This is fun to read but it is full of baloney.

By Jonah Goldberg  Los Angeles Times Columnist

Democratic presidential candidate former Vice President Joe Biden has embarked on a “no malarkey” campaign tour.

I like the word malarkey, consarn it. It’s the bee’s knees. Sure, the youngsters might say, “OK, Boomer” on hearing Joe Biden utter the word, but if you think he’s all wet for using it, you can take your phonus bolonus and tell it to Sweeney.

Joe Biden has never really been my cup of tea. There’s always seemed like a bit of flimflam behind that gigglemug of his. And for a guy who uses the word malarkey more than any politician since the 19th century — and has now emblazoned the slogan “no malarkey” on his campaign bus — he’s peddled a lot of it over the years. But he remains popular among a lot of Democrats for the same reason people like the word malarkey: nostalgia, which can be a powerful force in an election.

While I’m prone to nostalgia myself, I’m fairly immune to Biden nostalgia. And so are the hep cats of Twitter and Instagram who have an outsized role in the Democratic primary process. Most of the Twitterati weren’t even twinkles in their father’s eye when Biden first ran for the Senate, and it’s no surprise they don’t get his appeal.

But if Donald Trump taught us anything, it should be that the opinions of smarty pants don’t amount to a hill of beans compared with the opinions of voters. Trump’s “Make America Great Again” campaign was soaked with balderdash. He promised to balance the budget, cut taxes, spend wildly and save money in the process. He promised to fix the economy by putting China in its place and bringing back manufacturing. For nostalgic Republican voters, though, Trump’s vision evoked just the sort of mythical past they aspired to inhabit one day. And it was a plus that Trump caused the self-righteous press to huff and puff their outrage as they declared him incapable of victory.

Biden benefits from a similar dynamic. The handicappers keep fitting him for a pine overcoat, but the voters haven’t gotten the memo.

As Bloomberg columnist Ramesh Ponnuru writes, “The only thing Joe Biden has had going for him in this race is Democratic primary voters.” He’s flubbed debates and failed to convince wealthy members of his party to open their wallets. But despite a barrage of negative press, he remains popular with a lot of voters, particularly older ones.

Nostalgia is Biden’s trump card. For some voters, it’s not nostalgia for the good old days of the 1950s or the 1920s, but for the Obama years — which is why Biden mentions him like a verbal punctuation mark. But he also appeals to a deeper nostalgia.

For moderate voters who nonetheless think things have gone haywire under Trump, Biden represents a kind of return to normalcy, to a time when partisan politics weren’t quite as lethal. He may be as prone to malapropisms and misstatements as Trump, but his folksy fumbling is a known quantity, a relic from a more predictable time.

But he’s also reassuring to Democratic voters who still think they’re good liberals in the tradition of FDR, Johnson and Clinton, and who honestly think their party is veering off the rails. They’re the voters who aren’t interested in who’s tweeting what or what’s trending in search engines, and there are a lot of them. A recent pre-obituary of the Kamala Harris campaign in the New York Times noted that many of the younger members of her team thought Twitter was the best place to figure out what voters really care about.

This doesn’t mean everything is copacetic for Biden. But he’s doing better than the wiseacres seem to think. He’s up 10 points over the field nationally, nine in Nevada and 19 in South Carolina. In New Hampshire and Iowa he’s slipped considerably and is now running in fourth place. But it’s still easy to imagine he could win or pull off a close second. Bill Clinton came in second in New Hampshire and, thanks to his gift for tooting his own horn, was dubbed “the comeback kid.”

If Hoosier moppet Pete Buttigieg wins in Iowa and Sen. Elizabeth Warren wins in New Hampshire as a “favorite daughter” from neighboring Massachusetts, that wouldn’t be ideal for Biden. But if he were to come in second in both places, which doesn’t seem unlikely, he could still be rolling in clover, and that’s no malarkey.

@JonahDispatch