‘Do your job, bud’: There’s a lot to learn from Fetterman’s takedown of Gaetz

There are lots and lots of legitimate things to criticize Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz over, as the fashion-allergic Sen. John Fetterman clearly knows. So when Gaetz called Fetterman out over his seven (or more) thread-ly sins, Fetterman was prepared.

Haute couture isn’t for everyone, of course. Some people are Beau Brummells and Dapper Dans, while others are more than content to be Dumpster Dons. Gaetz’s own sartorial history suggests he’s keen on dressing for the ladies (and allegedly girls)—when he’s not busy dressing down teens.

And during a recent interview with convicted criminal Steve Bannon—who, ironically, looks like a pair of Kirkland sweatpants trying to screw a sack of mulch—Gaetz launched a few tepid bons mots in Fetterman’s direction. Fetterman responded with a bracing dose of reality for the Lilliputian across the aisle.

Gaetz, in a clearly prewritten monologue (he literally checks his notes about a minute and a half in), seems determined to take down the good senator from Pennsylvania after he mocked House Republicans and their revenge impeachment inquiry earlier in the week.

The evidence against Joe Biden is overwhelming. A first-year law student could win this case for impeachment before a fair jury. Unfortunately, the United States Senate isn’t a fair jury. It’s full of fashion icons like John Fetterman. While the Senate will be the platform,… pic.twitter.com/LsWyNrhsjW

— Rep. Matt Gaetz (@RepMattGaetz) September 13, 2023

In over two uninterrupted minutes, Gaetz doesn’t get around to answering Bannon’s question, so here’s a partial transcript, Why? Because I love you.

BANNON: “Congressman Gaetz, I can tell you from my sources around Washington, D.C., they’re blaming you [for the impeachment inquiry]. They’re saying McCarthy was rattled by you. He knew you were going to make the speech today, he knew it was going to be powerful, he knew you would put him on notice, and put him on the clock, and this is why he ran out and made the hostage video. Your response and observations, sir.”

GAETZ: “First of all, that is the best dressed we have ever seen John Fetterman. His shirt had both buttons and the entire pant was not elastic. There were elastic features, but it was not exclusively elastic. And so, I don’t know what tent store he bought that muumuu at, but it appears to be new and I am grateful that he is really upping his game in that regard ...”

BANNON: [Giggles with glee while curb-stomping irony to death with his dandruff-mottled joggin’ Crocs.]

Gaetz then waxes rhapsodic about Biden impeachment bullshit that hasn’t been remotely proven—according to these Republicans, anyway—and, in a weird detour for a Republican, goes after George W. Bush’s WMD lies. Then he doubles down on the fashion insults while predicting the failure of the GOP’s wholly made-up impeachment case: “This is not a hard story to tell. A first-year law student could win this case before a fair jury. Now, the United States Senate isn’t a fair jury. It’s full of great fashion icons like John Fetterman. But I think that the Senate will be the platform, and the American people will be the jury when we put that case on before them.”

Our fearless Fetty minced no words in his response.

Government shutdown in t-minus 16 days. Instead of crying about how I dress, how about you get your shit together and do your job, bud? https://t.co/97vQMURDZX

— Senator John Fetterman (@SenFettermanPA) September 14, 2023

For the nontweeters:

FETTERMAN: “Government shutdown in t-minus 16 days. Instead of crying about how I dress, how about you get your shit together and do your job, bud?”

Now, if you need the lowdown on why Republicans’ entire impeachment case is naught but frothy horseshit, Daily Kos’ own Mark Sumner dropped his latest wonderful primer on the manufactured allegations on Thursday. Gaetz’s—and the GOP’s—strategy is clear: Muddy the waters among low-information (i.e., Republican) voters enough to make President Joe Biden look corrupt—all so they can shove the most corrupt human on the planet down our throats for another four years.

After all, if everyone’s dishonest, you might as well vote for the one with the most felony convictions.

So instead of getting down into the wonky weeds on this “issue” here, let’s take a cue from Sen. Fetterman, who’s treated the GOP’s disingenuous efforts with the dismissiveness they deserve. 

Again, here was his response—which is also included in the above clip—to questions about the GOP’s fake impeachment push. And it was exactly as snarky and scornful as warranted.

LMAOOOO John Fetterman's reaction to impeachment for the WIN!!!🤣🤣pic.twitter.com/KDl1RSeclT

— BrooklynDad_Defiant!☮️ (@mmpadellan) September 12, 2023

That’s really the only reaction anyone should bother to have over this impeachment nonsense, but even before House Speaker Kevin McCarthy unilaterally announced the launch of a formal impeachment inquiry this week, Fetterman was being unusually blunt about the GOP’s upcoming, and no doubt soon-to-be-disastrous, Fyre Liar Festival.

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On Sept. 6, as Republicans were telegraphing plans for their latest waste of time, Fetterman literally dared them to go ahead with their half-baked schemes.

“Go ahead, do it. I dare you,” Fetterman said. “Your man has what, three or four indictments now? Trump has a mug shot, and he’s been impeached twice.”

Fetterman also correctly noted that the impeachment push “would just be like a big circle jerk on the fringe right” and “would diminish what impeachment really means.”

Well, yeah, that’s at least part of the reason they’re doing this. If impeachment no longer means anything, Trump’s long-demonstrated penchant for double-fisting big, frosty mugs o’ crime might not seem like such a deal-breaker. Nor will his (likely) upcoming felony convictions. 

In fact, Democrats should think about letting Fetterman lead on this issue, if only because he’s a genuine human being who abhors political double-talk and can connect with ordinary voters on a host of real issues. When he says, “Sometimes you just gotta call their bullshit,” people will be more likely to listen than if, say, Majority Leader Chuck Schumer says it.

RELATED STORY: Sen. John Fetterman is back—and telling it like it is

And if we hit on the right messaging—with a combination of Fetterman-like bluntness and ordinary, workaday fact-checking—the GOP’s impeachment push might end up pushing them right off the table, as happened to the party following Newt & co.’s dogged pursuit of Bill Clinton in the ‘90s

NBC News, Sept. 6:

Some vulnerable Republicans ... are skeptical about opening an impeachment inquiry.

Fetterman said impeachment would be a political "loser" for House Republicans, along with the looming threat of a government shutdown if they can't reach a funding deal before the end of the month.

“I’m just tired of a couple of them over there, talking like they’re hard a--es," Fetterman said. "They just keep pushing it.”

Yeah, they do, and they’re clearly not being honest about their motivations. Luckily Sen. Fetterman is here to push their lying faces in their own barmy bullshit. Let’s join him!

With the November election just weeks away, it’s time to get out the vote. Daily Kos and our partners have numerous opportunities waiting for you!

Check out Aldous J. Pennyfarthing’s four-volume Trump-trashing compendium, including the finale, Goodbye, Asshat: 101 Farewell Letters to Donald Trump, at this link. Or, if you prefer a test drive, you can download the epilogue to Goodbye, Asshat for the low, low price of FREE.  

Abbreviated Pundit Roundup: ‘With democracy on the ballot …’

Margaret Sullivan/The Guardian:

With democracy on the ballot, the mainstream press must change its ways

US news organizations have turned Biden’s age into a scandal and continue to cover Trump as an entertaining side show

  • The evidence-free Biden impeachment efforts in the House of Representatives are presented to news consumers without sufficient context. In the first round of headlines last week, most news outlets simply reported what speaker Kevin McCarthy was doing as if it were completely legitimate – the result of his likely high crimes and misdemeanors. The Washington Post presented it seriously: “Kevin McCarthy directs House committees to open formal Biden impeachment inquiries,” adding in a credulous line: “The inquiry will center on whether President Biden benefited from his son’s business dealings … ” No hint of what is really happening here. In this case, the New York Times was a welcome exception: “McCarthy, Facing an Ouster and a Shutdown, Orders an Impeachment Inquiry.” That’s more like it.

I noted The New York Times’ coverage as well.

This should be seen as a critical, embarrassing, humiliating failure by every political journalist in Washington and New York, except for like six of them who have figured out how to call politics accurately in these times. https://t.co/s1n6Ie3LaV

— Garrett M. Graff (@vermontgmg) September 15, 2023

Meanwhile in Wisconsin, this (on X, formerly known as Twitter, via Threadreader) from the Democratic Party Executive Director Devin Remiker:

GOP Assembly Speaker Robin Vos is pressing forward with nullifying Wisconsin’s Supreme Court election through impeachment. But he’s thrown out a giant red herring—a vote on a make-believe redistricting bill. 🧵 
His goal is that we spend the next two weeks talking about it, instead of his unprecedented, unconscionable, and unconstitutional impeachment threat. We’re not going to do that. It is worth, at best, a Twitter thread and not even by the guy who normally does our threads. 
There are very serious problems with the bill— most importantly that Vos created a process designed to fail and lock in the current gerrymander perpetually instead of outright giving Republicans the power to unilaterally redraw the maps. 
Last night they ensured their process can be obstructed by one party, now and in any future redistricting cycle. How? Through a bunch of amendments hastily circulated for the first time on the floor.

Craig Gilbert/The Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel:

Gilbert: Are Wisconsin's election maps 'rigged'? Here are the reasons the answer is yes

The results in these legislative races were already “baked in” by how the districts were drawn.

Based solely on the new redistricting plan, paying zero attention to the actual campaign, I predicted that Republicans would win 63 of 99 Assembly districts, give or take a seat.

They won 64.

Does that sound like a “rigged” system?

That’s the term that was used by the newest state Supreme Court justice, Janet Protasiewicz, in the run-up to her landslide April election victory, which gave liberals a 4-3 majority on the court.  She called the legislative maps “rigged.”

Her comments outraged Republican lawmakers, who recently threatened to impeach her unless she recused herself from the current legal fight over Wisconsin’s gerrymandered districts.

First poll is out on impeachment. Not everyone knows about it yet—but already, “Nearly twice as many oppose impeachment (47%) as support it (24%)” https://t.co/rHLpb6d10V

— Ben Wikler (@benwikler) September 14, 2023

Charlie Sykes/The Bulwark:

Why Wisconsin's GOP Might Blink And why it might not.

This brings us to the even messier story: the GOP’s threat to impeach a newly elected Supreme Court Justice.

Last week, I described the move as “a power play within a putsch inside a political blunder. The collateral damage will be staggering.”

That should be obvious, and Speaker Vos is a smart politician. But it’s not clear that he can resist the temptation to take a dive that will set a dangerous precedent for the independence of the judiciary, destroy his reputation, and set off a chaotic and unpredictable chain reaction that could shift the outcome of the 2024 presidential election.

Indeed, the scheme set off a firestorm, and Democrats quickly announced a $4 million campaign targeting the Republican attack on the court. More national money was on the way, and insiders began talking about the possibility of a $100 million do-over special election.

The flood of money focused GOP minds marvelously.

OK, posting this and then I’m out. To my fellow members of the tribe, have a happy and sweet new year. Jack Smith Requests ‘Narrow’ Gag Order on Trump Forbidding Attacks on Jan. 6 Witnesses - The Messenger https://t.co/4GepZMg0qk

— Bradley P. Moss (@BradMossEsq) September 15, 2023

Lindsay Beyerstein/Editorial Board:

House Republicans poised to launder Russian disinfo again

A skeptic’s guide to “Hunter Biden’s Laptop.”

In a hack and leak, data is stolen and dumped.

A largely genuine trove of stolen data is also the perfect place to hide forged or stolen elements, which enjoy unearned credibility because they’re packaged with real stuff. That’s why the victims of hack and leaks are advised never to confirm the authenticity of anything.

The attackers are counting on the public to draw the erroneous conclusion that, because some things are genuine, the whole package is real, and – most importantly – that it came from where the cover story says it came from, be that an imaginary collective of good-hearted “hacktivists” or a computer repair shop in Delaware. Anywhere but the GRU.  

The GRU is notorious for hacking and leaking.

Considering this has completely dominated conservative media for three years, 1 in 3 Americans is an extremely low number here. Just an extraordinarily small percentage considering the effort. pic.twitter.com/YG6JLluqqA

— Ben Collins (@oneunderscore__) September 15, 2023

Susan B. Glasser/The New Yorker:

The Twilight of Mitch McConnell and the Spectre of 2024

On the dangerous reign of the octogenarians.

I suspect this is not yet the moment for an open effort to bring down McConnell, but the signs are there for a seismic power shift in the making. The possible heirs to his post are known around the Capitol as the three Johns—Senators Barrasso of Wyoming, Cornyn of Texas, and Thune of South Dakota. Like McConnell, all three are considered members of the Senate G.O.P.’s establishment wing. But none has the power, clout, or stature of McConnell, never mind the reputation for Machiavellian maneuvering that he so relished in his prime. And, if there were any doubt about the direction in which the Party’s momentum is trending, Trump’s current stampede toward the 2024 Presidential nomination seems to offer a loud answer. It speaks clearly to the moment that it was President Biden and not ex-President Trump who called McConnell with words of consolation. “He was his old self on the telephone,” Biden said, as he called the Republican whom Democrats have loved to hate in recent years “a friend.” “I’m confident he’s going to be back to his old self.”

Biden, quite simply, needs McConnell right now. At a time when many Republicans are increasingly taking their cues from Trump and questioning U.S. support for Ukraine, Biden is counting on McConnell and his Senate Republicans to push through twenty-four billion dollars in urgently needed additional funds. The fall’s marquee crisis is expected to be a showdown between the Biden Administration and McCarthy’s restive House Republicans, who have threatened to shut down the government when federal funding runs out at the end of September. What happens if McConnell is out of action to help make a deal?

Rep. Mike Simpson has been the most transparent, clear-eyed legislator on McCarthy's predicament. There will be a motion to vacate. It's just a matter of when. And when it comes, the House will undoubtedly table it and move on. pic.twitter.com/VL0H7ynTie

— Josh Huder (@joshHuder) September 15, 2023

From Cliff Schecter:

Impeachment inquiry, son’s legal issues could create political distractions for Biden

President Biden is now contending with a political firestorm on two fronts. This week, his son Hunter Biden was indicted on federal gun charges, while House Speaker Kevin McCarthy said he had authorized the Republican-led House committees to launch an impeachment inquiry into the president regarding his son's foreign business dealings. Nancy Cordes has more.
Posted in Uncategorized

Cheers and Jeers: Rum and Coke FRIDAY!

Wayback Whiplash: September 2014

Weird. Unless I get help from the “world wide web,” I can’t remember a damn thing about 2014 besides Obama was president and I was still writing C&J. Apparently anticipating this Billy brain freeze, we archived some of the currently still-idle late nighters’ takes on events from this month nine years ago. What a simpler time...

"Disney World has become a popular location for Republican fundraisers. A favorite activity is to ride through It's a Small World and deport most of the dolls."

—Conan O'Brien

"Former House Majority Leader Eric Cantor has taken a new job at a Wall Street investment bank. Now he can finally have some influence in Congress."

—Stephen Colbert

Continued...

You are now below the fold. A tropical storm watch is in effect.

"According to a report from the United Nations, the damage from global warming could be irreversible. It's clear we need to do something. We need to give the Earth the ice bucket challenge."

—Jimmy Kimmel

CNN Anchor: New York's junior senator, Kirsten Gillibrand, says she has been the target of some very inappropriate sexist comments right in the halls of Congress.

Jon Stewart: Not just sexist comments, but inappropriate sexist comments. That's my least-favorite kind of sexist comment.

—The Daily Show

September, 2014: President Obama with a group of elementary school students at MacDill Air Force Base in Tampa

"In a recent interview, Texas Governor Rick Perry revealed that he has spent the last twenty months preparing to run for president. Then Hillary said, 'Call me when you’ve spent 67 years.'”

—Jimmy Fallon

"You know who Americans hate more than we hate Russia? More than we hate Russia we hate our own Congress. The latest CNN poll puts the Russia’s approval rating at 19 percent and Congress' approval rating at 14 percent. So we American citizens are basically in a cold war with the 202 area code."

—Rachel Maddow

And to mark this weekend's passing of the cocktail-weenie baton from Chuck Todd to Kristen Welker:

"Meet the Press has fired host David Gregory and hired another guy—Chuck Todd—to host. To me, if your name is Chuck Todd, it might as well be David Gregory. Todd Chuck, Gregory David...it makes no difference. They're all interchangeable."

—David Letterman

And now, our feature presentation...

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Cheers and Jeers for Friday, September 15, 2023

Note: A critical, time-sensitive reminder that Sunday is National Apple Dumpling Day.  Please, apples: dumple responsibly.

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By the Numbers:

7 days!!!

Days 'til Indigenous Peoples Day: 24

Days 'til the Arizona State Fair in Phoenix: 7

Current year-over-year inflation rate: 3.7%

Additional investment the Biden administration is making in its "cancer moonshot" initiative: $240 million

Prison sentence handed down to MAGA traitor Joseph Padilla of Tennessee, who was seen frothing at the mouth during the Jan. 6 insurrection: 6.5 years

Percent chance that Sen. Mitt Romney is running for reelection: 0%

Months besides September that have the same number of letters in its name as the number of the month: 0

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Puppy Pic of the Day: The Four Corgiteers…

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CHEERS to impeaching the bastard. So-called "president" Joe Biden is finally feeling the heat from the Republican leadership of the United States House Of Representatives, and will soon pay for what he did with impeachment. I think we all know what he did. I think we're all well aware that Matt Gaetz and Jim Jordan and that Comer fella have the goods on him—enough to impeach, convict, remove, and send him away for many concurrent sentences of life in prison. The detailed list of transgressions in their possession is as long as your arm, but the top 10 are as awful as you'd expect:

  He did that one thing that one time, remember?

  Right after the one thing, he did that second thing and my god what a thing that was.

☹  The third thing came between the first thing and the second thing, which is even more damning than the other things because it defies the principles of basic math.

According to the MAGA cult, he’s both a doddering old man...and sharp-as-a-tack, cunning mastermind.

☹  He allegedly used offshore hidey holes to conceal the fourth, fifth, and sixth things. (Number 5 will shock you!)

☹  The seventh thing is so heinous, so grotesque, so unbelievably inhuman that the details must be concealed to prevent panic in the streets.

☹  How bad is the eighth thing? Try and ask any ice cream vendor about it and watch how fast they slam the door in your face!

☹  Then there's the ninth thing Biden did. Or rather, didn't do. May God have mercy on his soul for that one is all we can say. No joke, ladies and gentlemen, no joke.

☹  Number 10 involves… Well, let's just say we hope no momma ever lives to see her child grow up to do a thing like that.

Okay, okay, I'm finally ready to say it: help us, No Labels. You're our only hope.

CHEERS to Year 5784. Happy New Year again!  Rosh Hashanah starts at Sundown and C&J wishes all of our Jewish readers a hearty "Shana Tova!" minus the Times Square ball drop:

The only similarity between the Jewish New Year and the secular one is:

It ain’t the years…..it’s the mileage.

Many people use the New Year as a time to make "resolutions." Likewise, the Jewish New Year is a time to begin looking back at the mistakes of the past year and planning the changes to be made in the new year. …

Rosh Hashana begins a 10 day period, known as Aseret Ymay Tshuva, (Ten Days of Repentance) or Yomim Nora'im (High Holy days). These ten days that end with Yom Kippur, are a time for Tshuva (repentance), Tefilla (prayer) and Tzedaka (charity).

Even though the C&J household is just a run-'o-the-mill lapsed-Episcopalian/lapsed-Catholic domicile, we’ll still take a moment to blow a ram's horn outside our neighbor's bedroom window at 3am.  We figure, why break with our normal routine just because it's Rosh Hashanah?

CHEERS to “Old Bill.”  Happy 163rd birthday to William Howard Taft.  At 325 pounds, the 27th President (who later served as Chief Justice) was also our, um, "biggest boned." It's believed that his weight contributed to the fact that he was habitually sleepy.  From Secret Lives of the U.S. Presidents by Cormac O'Brien:

William Taft had an alarming habit of dozing off at the drop of a hat.  And nothing was so important that it couldn’t be slept through—including cabinet meetings, funerals (he was in the front row of one when a catnap came over him), and campaign engagements.

Like the previous president, Taft enjoyed the game of golf. Unlike the previous president, Taft was smart, got important work done, and loved his country.

He once slept through a campaign motorcade in New York City—his open car cruised the streets, the great man snoring for all the city to see.

Pay your respects here.  And I doubt the old man would complain if you tossed him a bucket 'o ribs.

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BRIEF SANITY BREAK

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Digital artist Victor De Martrin creates musical animations where popular themes are played while marbles hit a xylophone's bars. [🎞️ victordemartrin]pic.twitter.com/2aYuGfuVMU

— Massimo (@Rainmaker1973) September 13, 2023

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END BRIEF SANITY BREAK

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CHEERS to memorable moments in attempted comedy.  Fifty-five years ago tomorrow, in 1968, Richard Nixon appeared on Laugh-In and uttered the immortal words: "Sock it to me???"  Here's the whole segment for context:

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I wish we had gotten the chance to sock it to him after the crook quit in '74. Thanks a lot, Gerald.

CHEERS to home vegetation. Quick roundup of TV-type stuffs on the weekend platter-o-plenty. Tonight starts with the unpacking of the Friday news dumps on MSNBC with Chris Hayes and the prime time lineup. Or you can catch the classic 1967 introduction of “Khan” during the original Star Trek episode Space Seed (H&I Network, 8 ET) with live-tweeting at hashtag #allstartrek.  

The most popular movies and streamers are all reviewed here at Rotten Tomatoes. The National Concussion League schedule is here, and the baseball lineup is here. (If you’re wondering when NHL and NBA seasons start: October 7th and October 24th. You’re welcome.) 

Sunday evening on the season premiere of 60 Minutes: an interview of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, and a story on the military reservists protesting the MAGAfication of Israel by Benjamin Netanyahu. Other than that...meh. Now here's your Sunday morning lineup:

Meet the Press: Kristen Welker reassures the show’s core viewers that she won’t be rocking the beltway boat as she takes over hosting duties from Chuck Todd. Her guest: MAGA Cult leader Donald Trump.

Kristen Welker rides to the set of “Meet the Press” to bring sparkles and joy to all the MAGA cultists who show up.

This Week: Next speaker of the House Rep. Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY); Rep. Nancy Mace (MAGA Cult-SC); Cindy McCain.

Face the Nation: Sean Penn talks about his Ukraine-centric documentary Superpower; Reps. Debbie Dingell (D-MI) and Mike Turner (MAGA Cult-OH).

CNN's State of the Union: Gov. Gavin Newsom (D-CA); Presidential candidate now soaring at 1% Mike Pence (MAGA Cult); and Bernie!!!

Fox GOP Talking Points Sunday: Rep. Elise Stefanik (MAGA Cult-NY); Rep. Ro Khanna (D-CA); Presidential candidate now soaring at 2% Vivek Ramaswamy (MAGA Cult).

Happy viewing!

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Ten years ago in C&J: September 15, 2013 

CHEERS to de primary outcome.  I was tempted to do de obvious thing and blurt out de name of de candidate who won de Democratic primary for de mayor's race in de city of New York.  But then I got to thinkin', "Hey, why don't I have a little fun and make de C&J crowd guess who de victor is in de Big Apple on de east coast?  It could be just de thing to get de cobwebs out of de brain first thing in de morning.  Yeah—that's de ticket!  So de ball's in your court.  No fair Googling de answer, but I'll give you a hint: it's Bill [blank] Blasio. Good luck finding de answer!

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And just one more...

CHEERS to misty water-color memories of mayhem. August. 1991. I'm 27 and on vacation at my grandfather's cottage on the Maine coast twenty minutes south of Portland. He's 89. My nearly-60 mom is there, along with my sister, my four year-old brat nephew, ten month-old niece, dog, and cat that bites. Hurricane Bob is barreling up the coast. Weather Channel says wind speeds in Rhode Island are clocking in at 115. I've boarded up the place. We wait. We wait. We wait some more.

Then, suddenly and without a hint of warning, all hell breaks loose: my grandfather reminds me that I'd promised to drive him to the podiatrist for his 2:15 foot exam. Plus he needs to stop at the grocery store to pick up a fresh bottle of scotch whiskey. We go. While we're gone the evacuation order is given. We cannot return. Road's closed.

August 1991.

We eventually meet up with the rest of the family at Saco Middle School. Pandemonium ensues when we are told: NO dogs allowed. A riot is averted at last minute when we are told: Okay, okay…WELCOME DOGS! Power goes out, followed immediately by that haunting sound a crowd makes when something scary happens: "Oooohhawweeaww!" It's not total darkness, but dark enough that if you go into the restroom you stand a good chance of getting peed on by the disoriented among us.

After a while, cheers go up as everything outside turns calm…then SUNNY!!! Oh my god, cue Barry Manilow, we made it through the rain! Yippee!!! It's over! It's…….Aw fuck, it was just the eye passing over us. Back to our regularly-scheduled mayhem and Whap Whap Whap! of the peeling school roof.

We sit and sit and sit some more. I silently observe that southern Mainers need to take showers more often. Finally, Bob moves on. Seven hours later, we head back to our cottage made of sticks. It survives. We praise the circa-1895 builders. We toss the empty bottle of scotch whiskey in the recycle bin. The nephew is still a brat and the cat still bites. We go to bed. Tired and alive and thankful.

Back to the present: Hurricane Lee is barreling in our general direction. We are, once again, tiny specks on Mother Nature's hiney. May the gays, feminists and pagans be merciful upon us.

Have a great weekend. Floor's open...What are you cheering and jeering about today?

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Brooks and Capehart on Biden’s impeachment inquiry and tensions among House Republicans

New York Times columnist David Brooks and Washington Post associate editor Jonathan Capehart join Geoff Bennett to discuss the week in politics, including rising tensions in the House as lawmakers launch an impeachment inquiry into President Biden.

White House addresses possibility of pardoning Hunter Biden for first time since federal indictment

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre addressed the possibility of President Biden pardoning his son, Hunter, for the first time since the latter was indicted on federal charges for making false statements and unlawfully possessing a firearm.

"Will the president pardon or commute his son if he is convicted?" one reporter asked Jean-Pierre during Friday's daily White House press briefing.

"So I've answered this question before. It was asked of me not too long ago — a couple of weeks ago — and I was very clear, and I said no," Jean-Pierre responded.

BIDEN BREAKS SILENCE ON POSSIBLE IMPEACHMENT, BLAMES GOP DESIRE TO ‘SHUT DOWN THE GOVERNMENT’

Her answer was unchanged from the one she gave in July following Hunter's first appearance at a Delaware federal court where the president's sonded not guilty to tax charges pl. Jean-Pierre simply said "no" when asked if the president would pardon his son if convicted.

Biden was indicted Thursday on federal gun charges out of Special Counsel David Weiss' investigation. 

He was specifically charged with making a false statement in the purchase of a firearm; making a false statement related to information required to be kept by a federal firearms licensed dealer; and one count of possession of a firearm by a person who is an unlawful user of or addicted to a controlled substance. 

ROMNEY USES BIDEN'S OWN WORDS AGAINST HIM, CALLS FOR PRESIDENT TO JOIN HIM IN RETIREMENT: ‘TIME TO TRANSITION’

These are the first charges Weiss has brought against the first son since being granted special counsel status. 

The charges come after an original plea agreement collapsed during Hunter's July court appearance, when he was expected to plead guilty to two misdemeanor tax counts of willful failure to pay federal income tax as part of a plea deal to avoid jail time on the felony gun charge.

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Fox News' Brooke Singman contributed to this report.