She sounds uncannily like a Democrat politician

I feel your pain, Rex, and I know that asa does, too. We’ve brought you flowers

Wife of accused Gilgo Beach serial killer Rex Heuermann says he’s her ‘hero’ — and reveals creepy take on first jailhouse visit

“I haven’t seen him in all this time, and when I went down there, I was excited, and like I was, I don’t know, I guess on a first date. You’re nervous, you’re scared. You don’t know how the date is gonna go,” she said.

Asa Ellerup, 61, said during an explosive interview in the upcoming Peacock docu-series “The Gilgo Beach Killer: House of Secrets” that she is convinced cops have the wrong guy — and that her “wonderful” husband isn’t the monster who killed and mutilated seven sex workers on Long Island over nearly 30 years.

“[But] I love hm no matter what.”

Can you spot the “citizen” here? Gavin Noisome can, but then, he’s a Democrat

(Bonus Material: According to Bureau of Justice Statistics, in FY 2020, 40% of all offenders charged in US District Courts were aliens; and 37% of all prisoners released from federal Bureau of Prisons custody were aliens. Just sayin’. )

UPDATE: You’ve probably had enough of this topic, but PJMedia’s Victoria Taft has an excellent post up looking at Newsom’s role in encouraging and enabling this riots and ensuring they spread. Worth reading.

Gavin Newsom Told Trump to Get Troops Out of California. Then, All Hell Broke Loose in L.A.

Awww ....

we are not amused

King Charles ‘livid’ as royal family’s cherished Christmas pheasant slaughter faces cancellation

King Charles is said to be “livid” that he won’t exactly get Christmas cheer this year.

The Sun recently reported there is a potential shortage of pheasants at the monarch’s Sandringham Estate, which could affect the chances of a full shooting calendar this winter.

It is known as one of the monarch’s favorite pastimes during the holiday season.

“King Charles III is livid, frustrated and disappointed, reflecting both his deep personal attachment to the cherished family tradition and his broader commitment to his royal heritage,” British royal expert Hilary Fordwich claimed to Fox News Digital.

The poor royals — will their woes never end?

You can't say they didn't warn us

Don’t underestimate what Democrats can accomplish with a unified delegation at the state capitol.”

  Across the U.S., Democrats are waging war to crush a lifestyle they abhor. Call it small-town America: single-family neighborhoods, quiet streets, town centers stamped with their own historic character, and almost no signs of the vagrancy and homeless encampments that plague cities.

        Democrats want you to have none of this. If you've worked for years to save up for a home in one of these havens, forget about it.

        The Democratic Party is using brute legal force to remake towns using a cookie-cutter formula that forces each to have the same proportion of houses and apartments, the same mix of low-, middle- and upper-income residents, and the same reliance on public transit, all controlled by state politicians.

        Any town that resists gets shamed as "segregated" -- though this isn't about race -- and "snobby."

        On Saturday, the Connecticut legislature passed a bill, H.B. 5002, which should be called the Destroy Connecticut Towns Act. It's headed to Gov. Ned Lamont's desk for signature. The new law dictates how many low-income and moderate-income apartments each Connecticut town must provide, and mandates that towns also foot the bill for the schools, parks, public transportation and other services low-income residents will need. Local taxes will soar.

        The bill explicitly says its purpose is to ensure "economic diversity" in each town. This is about social engineering, not remedying housing shortages.

        Democrat Bob Duff, the state senate majority leader, says "it's extremely important ... that we don't segregate people based on a ZIP code." Everyone, regardless of income, should have the opportunity to choose to live in any town.

        The bill mandates that the wealthiest towns, mostly in lower Fairfield County, provide most of the new housing, even though that raises the cost. Land costs less in other towns, and lower-income people this bill is supposed to serve are more likely to find bus transportation and affordable stores in these other towns as well.

        Connecticut lawmakers are nixing local rule. Ordinances that protect the appearance of a town have to be overruled. The bill states that multifamily buildings of up to 24 units will no longer have to provide off-street parking. Envision cars lining every residential street.

        Towns also will be forced to welcome vagrants who want to sleep in parks and public lots. The bill outlaws "hostile architecture," meaning park benches with armrests and divided seating, or stone walls with spikes on top that deter sleeping in the rough.

        Instead, the bill launches a program of mobile showers and mobile laundry services on trucks to serve the homeless wherever they choose. Picture the mobile showers pulling up to Greenwich Common Park on the town's main street, or Waveny Park in New Canaan.

        How can kids walk around town with their pals if there are homeless encampments? Judge Glock, director of research at the Manhattan Institute think tank, points out that the homeless amount to 1% of the population in Los Angeles but commit 25% of the homicides. Inviting the homeless means inviting crime and drugs.

        Californicating the small towns of Connecticut by encouraging public camping and vagrancy "is frightening," says Glock.

      ….

        Similarly, in New Jersey, Democratic Gov. Tim Murphy is pushing lawmakers to override local ordinances and impose the same kinds "reforms" as those in the Connecticut bill.

        In all these states and across the country, small-town Americans need to fight back. There is no constitutional right to live in a wealthy town with single-family homes and leafy, quiet streets.

        It's something you earn.  Once you've purchased a home, you have a right to protect its value.

There's a reason why hard drinkers and reporters — but I repeat myself — shouldn’t post on social media or send emails after, say, 8:30 PM

ABC's Terry Moran suspended after journalist slams Trump, top advisor in since-deleted post

Moran said Trump and Stephen Miller were each a 'world-class hater'

Trump had this hack’s number back in April:

Moran interviewed the president after his 100th day in office, during which Trump called out the ABC correspondent for his questioning. 

Trump accused Moran of "not being very nice" during an exchange about the deportation of illegal immigrant Kilmar Abrego Garcia.

"They’re giving you the big break of a lifetime," Trump told Moran. "You’re doing the interview, I picked you because, frankly, I never heard of you, but that’s okay. I picked you, Terry, but you’re not being very nice."

Moran also pressed Trump on his relationship with Russia's Vladimir Putin. 

"I don’t trust you. I don’t trust a lot of people," Trump responded. "I don’t trust you. Look at you. You’re so happy to do the interview, and then you start hitting me with these fake questions."

And:

"We had a president that was grossly incompetent," Trump said. "You knew it. I knew it. Everybody knew it. You guys didn’t want to write about it because you’re fake news." 

"By the way, ABC is one of the worst, I have to be honest with you," he added. 

Here's who Democrats and commies are demanding be released to prey on their communities (Updated)

"This morning, we received reports of federal immigration enforcement actions in multiple locations in Los Angeles," Bass said in a statement on Friday. "

As Mayor of a proud city of immigrants, who contribute to our city in so many ways, I am deeply angered by what has taken place. These tactics sow terror in our communities and disrupt basic principles of safety in our city. My Office is in close coordination with immigrant rights community organizations. We will not stand for this."

Immigration authorities highlight criminal history of multiple migrants arrested in Los Angeles

  • Rolando Veneracion-Enriquez, 55, of the Philippines, has a criminal history that includes a burglary in Ontario, California, for which he was sentenced to four years in prison, and sexual penetration with a foreign object with force and assault with intent to commit rape in the city of Pomona, for which he was sentenced to 37 years in prison. He was arrested on Saturday and served a notice to appear.

  • Jose Gregorio Medranda Ortiz, 42, of Ecuador, was arrested Friday and served administrative deportation. His criminal history includes being sentenced to more than 11 years in prison for conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute five kilograms or more of cocaine while on board a vessel in Tampa, Florida.

  • Armando Ordaz, 44, of Mexico, was arrested on Friday. He is an alleged active gang member of Bratz 13 who has a criminal history that includes sexual battery in Los Angeles, landing him a sentence of 135 days in jail and five years probation. He was also sentenced to 90 days in jail and three years probation for receiving known or stolen property in Norwalk and sentenced to 365 days in jail and four years probation for petty theft in Los Angeles.

  • Victor Mendoza-Aguilar, 32, of Mexico, was arrested on Friday and has a criminal history in Pasadena that includes being sentenced to 112 days in jail for possessing unlawful paraphernalia, being sentenced to 16 months in jail for possessing controlled substances, being sentenced to four years behind bars for assault with a deadly weapon and being sentenced to 364 days in jail for obstructing a public officer. He is an alleged active member of the Villa Boys gang and was previously removed from the U.S. in 2017.

  • Delfino Aguilar-Martinez, 51, of Mexico, was arrested on Friday and served a notice to appear. His criminal history includes assault with a deadly weapon with great bodily injury in Los Angeles, and he was sentenced to a year in jail.

  • Jesus Alan Hernandez-Morales, 26, of Mexico, was removed from the U.S. on Saturday. His criminal history includes being sentenced in Las Cruces, New Mexico, to 239 days in jail for conspiracy to transport an illegal migrant.

  • Lionel Sanchez-Laguna, 55, of Mexico, was arrested on Tuesday. He has a criminal history in the city of Orange that includes being sentenced to 365 days in jail for discharging a firearm at an inhabited dwelling and vehicle, being sentenced to four years probation for battery on a spouse or cohabitant, being sentenced to four years probation for willful cruelty to a child, being sentenced to 10 days in jail for driving under the influence, being sentenced to three years behind bars for assault with a semi-automatic firearm and being sentenced to three years behind bars for personal use of a firearm.

Bonus Material: CNN reprises its Fiery but Peaceful debacle from the George Floyd Summer of Love

that was then

THIS IS NOW

UPDATE: A friend of InstaPundit’s Glenn Reynolds wrote to him, pointing out that “there’s a difference between wanting to be in America and wanting to be an American” — how true that is, and the difference is illustrated every day.

Captain Renault goes to Washington

consolation for your children when they reach 65

Peruvian-American congressman Robert Garcia claims shock at discovering describes Social Security as a Ponzi scheme.

During a House oversight DOGE subcommittee hearing on Wednesday, Garcia grilled Power the Future CEO Dan Turner while holding up a posterboard of a past tweet calling Social Security a "government-sponsored Ponzi scheme."

"Madoff went to jail for it. Congress runs on it," the post said. "I should be able to keep 100% of my money and not watch government waste it with a paltry percentage return."

Garcia then suggested that post was evidence that Turner lacks the credibility to be testifying about the billions of federal tax dollars directed to left-wing NGOs. 

"A Ponzi scheme and so I think it's interesting, of course, as one of our Republican witnesses is calling Social Security a Ponzi scheme, and that's the person that we should be taking advice from here today," Garcia said. 

You’ll have noticed that no Democrat has ever denied the waste and fraud occurring in social programs and exposed by the DOGE (and by decades of reformers before Musk and his team) and rather than defend the undefendable , they drag out the same old tropeL “think of the children!” Garcia followed his party’s game plan: he doesn’t address the fact that Social Security is going bust, and that cutting fraudsters and dead people from the rolls will strengthen, not weaken the program; he turns to hysteria and tears to argue against any attempt to rein in spending. When you can’t argue the facts, argue the emotions. The old advice to lawyers still holds: “If the law’s on your side, argue the law; if the facts are on your side, argue the facts; if neither the law nor the facts are on your side, pound the table.” The Democrats are table-pounders.

"Without Social Security, 22 million people would be pushed into poverty. That includes over 16 million seniors and nearly 1 million children. And in fact, Elon Musk has also said and agreed with you, sir, that this is a Ponzi scheme. I think it's ironic that you are one of our witnesses talking about efficiency when you want to attack the single best program that we have to support people not just out of poverty, but across this country to uplift them, to ensure they can afford a decent life."

Fox News Digital spoke to Turner, who stood by his post and outlined his belief, echoed by many, that Social Security is structured like a Ponzi scheme by definition. 

"Rep Garcia does not know the definition of Ponzi scheme," Turner said. "Social Security is the ultimate Ponzi, demanding more and more people at the bottom pay in to fund the people at the top, expect our demographics have this now reversed. The system will default. Mr. Garcia nor I will likely never see a dime. That should worry him more than my social media feed."

A foreign Army, yes, but one joined by America’s native-born enemies*

*According to the latest woke guidelines, a hyphen is no longer approved for describing someone’s heritage; which is why I made sure to use on, of course.

National Origin | The Chicago School Community

Do not hyphenate national origins even if they are used as adjectives. The use of the hyphen is rooted in the history of the “hyphenated American’—an epithet used during the late 19th century to the early 20th century to ridicule Americans of foreign birth or origin.

Hyphenated American - Wikipedia

I missed this letter to the editor from Margarita Alban, published earlier this week

proposed (later withdrawn) apartment building at 143 Sound Beach Avenue, old greenwich,that would have included both moderate and Market-rate units. Ct’s new housing mandate will likely bring something similar back, soon

I’m including only those excerpts that address the hurdles facing towns by land and building costs, but read the entire letter. I’m also posting a portion of an article on Maine’s encountering the same problem in its own goal of increasing the supply of "affordable” housing: land and building costs mke such housing nearly impossible to build.

Whatever Maine’s problem with the cost of land, you can multiply that number by at least !0X in the affluent towns CT’s Democrats have targeted; If a multi-unit project in Greenwich or Westport or New Canaan must include a substantial percentage of low and moderate priced units, the price of the others must be substantially hiked to cover the sky-high price of land here. The result will be more housing for the very rich and the very poor and none for the middle class. Greenwich is already becoming a town comprised solely of just two classes and the new requirements will only accelerate that transformation. Of course, that’s the Democrats’ goal for all of America, but we maight s well try to delay and maybe even thwart that effort.

HB 5002 Fails US ALL

June 3, 2025

Submitted by Margarita Alban [Chair of the Greenwich Planning & Zoning Commission, but writing as a rivate citizen]

  • The housing bill just passed by the CT General Assembly, HB 5002, is a combination of 22 different bills proposed during the 2025 legislative session. The bill moved so quickly that Planning & Zoning is still unpacking its language and potential impact. My personal view is the bill does not tackle the single greatest obstacle to the creation of affordable and diverse housing in our State.

  • HB 5002 fails because it doesn’t address funding or economics. The bill presses municipalities to increase housing density. In the face of that, it’s worth knowing Greenwich Planning & Zoning has recently approved over 1,000 new housing units. Yet, many of those housing units aren’t being built.

  • Why aren’t we seeing that housing construction? Builders tell us they are struggling with increases in materials costs, interest rate hikes and tariff uncertainty. Other towns are hearing the same from their developers. That’s why approved housing projects aren’t moving ahead, not only here but throughout the State.  Shifting economics.

….

  • Under the bill, Towns will be assigned new affordable housing targets based on a formula which relies on the value of the town’s real estate.  The price of real estate is a very poor proxy for the size and location of populations needing reasonably priced housing.

  • From a planning perspective, I’m deeply troubled the bill is not rooted in a study of where our State truly needs more housing and at what income levels the housing gap is greatest.  For example, I’ve seen no report of how far workers are commuting to reach their employment.  Nor do we know how many people are at greatest need because they are unable to find housing.  As a result, the bill fails workers with long commutes as well as our most vulnerable populations.

  • By focusing on zoning and superficial measures, HB 5002 fails to address the real issues and, thus, fails us all. ….

And:

The hole in Maine’s strategy to build more housing

Sam Hight only had to pay the town of Madison $1 for a prime parcel of land.

That allowed Hight and his partners to build an 18-unit affordable housing complex that opened last year. But it would not have happened without a state subsidy, even though the developers had essentially the lowest-cost construction plan for a project of this size.

“I’ve been trying to figure out a way to provide market rate housing using conventional financing, but with multi-unit buildings and interest rates and the cost of construction materials, it really didn’t pan out at all,” said Hight, who runs his family’s car dealerships in Skowhegan.

Hight’s experience is shared by others working on market-rate housing in low-income parts of Maine. It also shows a hole in the state’s strategy. Lofty housing goals rely on rural communities dramatically upping production. But developers cannot keep units affordable without subsidies [from Maine taxpayers, most of whom aren’t eligible for such housing — FWIW ED], meaning very little affordable housing will come naturally.

The Madison project cost $5 million, with $3 million in the form of a 45-year loan from a rural housing program run by MaineHousing. While the real cost was around $280,000 per unit, the subsidy dropped that to just over $110,000, enough to meet a requirement of keeping the apartments affordable to those making no more than 80 percent of the area median income.

Hight and his partners used modular homes from KBS Inc. of South Paris. They did not have to build roads or pay to hook up to utilities. The developers are set to begin construction on a similar 18-unit modular housing project in the western Maine town of Rumford this spring. The median household income there is nearly $40,000, according to Census data.

“We’re doing the cheapest kind of construction we can do,” Kara Wilbur, a developer with modular builder Dooryard who is partnering with Hight, said.

In Rumford, they bought the land for $12,000. That discount from its $46,000 valuation is one of a series of changes that the western Maine mill town Rumford has made recently to woo affordable housing developers.

Low-to-no-cost land is often a necessity to pencil out projects, said developer Kevin Bunker, principal at Portland-based Developers Collaborative, whose company has taken advantage of these sorts of deals in communities including Bangor, Portland and Augusta. It often helps projects score higher in MaineHousing applications for subsidies.

But it is no panacea. For one, George O’Keefe, Rumford’s town manager, said he is wary of giving land away because he wants to preserve property values. Construction costs and interest rates are also so high that it does not generally make much of a dent in price, Bunker said.

“If you think of land as maybe 10 percent of a total project and construction as maybe 80 percent, you can imagine even as land approaches $0 per unit, it doesn’t go as far as, say, a 20 percent reduction in construction,” Bunker said. ….