10 July 2026

Parasite


At 8:07 p.m. tonight, the President of the United States shared his first and only social media post of the entire day. Coming from a man who routinely posts dozens, sometimes well over a hundred times a day, often through the middle of the night, the silence was unexpected. After traveling back to America under what is now being reported as an extreme threat to his safety, Donald Trump has spent the day locked away from the public eye, choosing the safety of the White House gates during this uncertain time.

In that one and only post was something so important to him, so urgent in his mind, that it became the only thing he wanted to tell the American people all day. It had absolutely nothing to do with the duties of the presidency, the NATO summit, or the threats against him. It was about himself. It was about renaming an airport in his name. This is what he wanted the American people to read tonight.
“A very big day in Palm Beach, Florida, where it was my Great Honor to have the Palm Beach International Airport be renamed, by a spectacular vote, The President Donald J. Trump International Airport. The Area is HOT, the Location is GREAT, and the Renovation will be SPECTACULAR. Thank you to all in Palm Beach for your Vote and your Confidence. This will soon be one of the Greatest and Most Spectacular Airports anywhere in the World! President DONALD J. TRUMP”

That is what mattered to him today, out of everything happening in this country and across the world. And if the post itself were the whole story, it would be troubling and embarrassing enough. But it is not even close to the whole story. Because what happened today in Palm Beach was not just a president forcing his name and likeness on as many things as possible. It was a business deal that will benefit the president and his family for years to come.

To celebrate Trump’s big day, his son Eric landed at 5:01 this morning on a plane the family calls “Trump Force One,” racing to beat a UPS cargo plane so that the first aircraft to touch down under the new name would carry the Trump brand. On Fox and Friends, Eric called the renaming only “slightly controversial.” He credited his father with putting the region on the map. He said nothing about the lawsuits, the complaints, opposition, corruption, or moral failures that led to this moment. But they all happened too.

The FAA didn’t just change the name or the airport; they changed the airport code too, from PBI to DJT. The cost of the rebrand is estimated at $5.5 million, with the state of Florida covering roughly half.

Beyond that is a 35-page licensing agreement, approved 4-3 by the Palm Beach County commission, that tells us everything we need to know about what this renaming is actually for. The Trump Organization filed three trademark applications months before the name change took effect. The agreement gives the Trump Organization control over which vendors can manufacture and sell merchandise at the airport. It gives Trump veto power over any biographical material displayed inside the building. A non-disparagement clause bars the airport from publishing anything that could tarnish his reputation. His own staff writes the version of his story that travelers see. And the trademark applications cover watches, jewelry, collectible coins, cuff links, purses, backpacks, suitcases, umbrellas, tote bags, clothing, robes, neckties, belts, and plastic slippers designed for going through the security line. They trademarked slippers at a public airport.

The agreement says Trump cannot receive royalties from merchandise sold at the airport. But his company controls which vendors are approved to manufacture and supply that merchandise, and there is nothing preventing one of Trump’s own businesses, or a company connected to his family or inner circle, from being on that approved list. The airport would not be paying him a royalty. It would be paying his company for the product. The money flows to the same place. It is just called something different on the receipt. And outside the airport walls, there are no restrictions at all. The Trump Organization can license the same branded products to anyone, sell them anywhere, and keep every dollar.

Florida State University law professor Jake Linford also pointed out that the merchandise clause restricts royalties on goods but says nothing about services, which means that if someone wanted to open a branded Trump airport lounge or any other branded service inside the building, licensing fees flowing back to the Trump Organization would not be covered by the restriction at all. The deal is written so that on paper, it looks like no one is profiting. But with Trump, nothing is ever as simple as it appears, and nearly everything he touches he profits from one way or another.

And this is not just about putting his name on things. It is about erasing what was there before. Palm Beach International Airport served that community for nearly half a century. That name, that identity, that history is gone now. Replaced by three letters. His. The old signs are coming down. The highway markers have already been changed. The code that airlines and travelers used for decades has been overwritten. And in its place, a name that cannot be criticized, biographical material that cannot be unflattering, and a legal framework that ensures the only version of this president that exists inside that building is the one his own people approved.

Since he took office, his name has been stamped on a planned class of Navy warships, a visa program for wealthy foreigners, a government prescription drug website, and federal savings accounts opened for newborn children. Passports, his signature on money. His face on government buildings; the list goes on and on. And now his name is the three-letter code you type when you book a flight. Everywhere you turn in this country, his name, his face, his brand, has taken over so much that belongs to “we the people.”

This is what authoritarian regimes do. They do not just hold power. They make you see it everywhere you look, until the idea of pushing back feels impossible because the regime feels permanent, everywhere and ever powerful. And he is getting away with it. The lawsuits did not stop it, nor did people flooding the comment sections of the airport websites. It happened anyway. People in power continue to allow all of this to happen. It is as if they have looked at the direction this country is heading and decided that if they just take his side, if they just go along, when his worst ideas come to pass, they will somehow be untouched. That is what so many of his supporters believe. That compliance will protect them. It never has. And it will not this time either.

Because while the President of the United States spent his only words of the day on an airport with his name on it, our country is reeling from not having the resources to properly track a parasite that is now making thousands of Americans sick. They had the time and money for the airport, but not enough to keep CDC staff that would help with this latest outbreak.

The infection is called cyclosporiasis, caused by a microscopic parasite that spreads through contaminated food and water. As of today, more than two thousand cases have been confirmed across at least eighteen states, and health officials say the true number is almost certainly much higher because many people recover without ever being tested. Michigan has been hit hardest, approaching twelve hundred cases in roughly two weeks, a figure roughly twenty times the state’s typical annual caseload. Cases have been confirmed in people as young as five and as old as eighty-six. More than three dozen have been hospitalized in Michigan alone.

Most people who contract it will recover, and some will have symptoms mild enough that they never seek medical care. But for the very young, the very old, and anyone with a weakened immune system, weeks of severe diarrhea can lead to dangerous dehydration if left untreated. The good news is that medication works, and there are steps people can take to lower their risk. Experts recommend cooking fresh produce whenever possible, since heat kills the parasite, and anyone experiencing prolonged watery diarrhea, cramping, bloating, nausea, or fatigue should contact a healthcare provider rather than waiting it out.

And even for those who recover, the cost is real. Think about what two weeks of this illness means for a family. A parent who cannot go to work because their child is sick. An hourly worker who does not get paid when they stay home. A small business that loses staff it cannot replace. A restaurant that has to pull ingredients off the menu and absorb the lost revenue. In an economy where people are already stretched to the breaking point, two weeks of lost wages from an illness we could mitigate with a proper health department can be the difference between making rent and falling behind.

And nobody knows where it is coming from. No specific food, grower, or distributor has been identified. The CDC’s working hypothesis is contaminated produce, but they have not determined which produce, how long it has been on shelves, or where it has been distributed. The investigation depends on what epidemiologists call shoe-leather detective work: calling sick people one by one, asking what they ate, reviewing grocery receipts and credit card records, trying to trace a microscopic organism backward through the food supply to the source. That kind of work takes people, time, and money. And this administration has taken all three. Meanwhile, people on social media are building their own databases, pooling information, trying to do what they can to connect the dots and pinpoint the source. Ordinary Americans, doing the tracking work because the system that is supposed to do it has been gutted.

Today, Taco Bell locations in Metro Detroit posted signs on their doors telling customers that they are currently unable to sell lettuce, cilantro, onion, pico de gallo, and guacamole due to a nationwide recall. A fast food chain is doing more to protect its customers right now than the federal government of the United States.

And to the people still inside the CDC, the career scientists and epidemiologists and field investigators, still trying to hold the line for all of us with fewer colleagues and fewer resources than they have ever had, do not get enough credit for the hard work they are doing under an unimaginable situation.

Because here is what they did to the agency that is supposed to protect us. The CDC has lost more than a quarter of its workforce since January 2025. And perhaps the most damning detail of all: as of July 2025, the CDC made tracking this exact parasite optional. It was removed from the required surveillance list as part of the scaling back of the Foodborne Diseases Active Surveillance Network. So right now, as cyclosporiasis spreads and case counts are doubling in a matter of days, the CDC’s official national count still shows 145 cases through mid-June. The states are reporting more than two thousand. The federal count is nearly a month behind. The system that was supposed to catch this was deliberately weakened, and now we are paying the price of their incompetence.

And as bad as this seems now, it is only going to get worse unless we change course. We have intentionally left ourselves less prepared for the next public health emergency at the very moment millions of Americans are already barely holding on. The reality is that the people at the top of our government do not care enough about the American people to do the job they were elected to do. They spent millions putting his name on an airport. And they took away money to track a parasite. That is looting.

But it will not last. Ordinary people are already taking matters into their own hands. The tide is turning from waiting for elected officials to save us to neighbors, workers, scientists, healthcare professionals, and everyday Americans doing what has to be done. That is the America we believe in. The one where we carry each other through difficult times and refuse to let cruelty become normal. The one where we remember that public institutions exist to serve people, not presidents. That’s who Americans really are. And more of them are remembering that every single day. That is why I still have hope for America. And you should, too.

I’ll see you tomorrow,
Heather

Canada Has its Own A$$e$ - Who Wore It Better?

 I mean, really, who dresses him???

Pierre Poilievre has undergone two major, highly publicized image makeovers throughout his political career to rebrand himself for voters.


The 2023 "Everyman" Revamp: Ahead of the fall parliamentary session, the Conservative leader dropped his signature wire-rimmed glasses, opted for contact lenses, and replaced his stiff suits with casual T-shirts, open collars, and fitted, unstructured blazers. This included a multi-million-dollar ad campaign.

The 2025 Women's Outreach Makeover: Following polling that showed a glaring gender gap and steep drops in his favorable views among women, Poilievre shifted to a more approachable, softer image, incorporating relaxed public relations tactics and heavily featuring his family.

YET WE STILL HATE HIM!


Recent data shows that Pierre Poilievre continues to struggle with high disapproval ratings among female voters, keeping the gender gap a major hurdle for his party. Recent Angus Reid Institute polling indicates that nearly 2 in 3 Canadian women (62%) hold a negative view of him, compared to only 28% who view him positively.

Polling from Abacus Data highlights several key reasons why this divide persists:

Policy and Issue Priorities: Women are statistically more focused on healthcare, social programs, and cost-of-living issues, areas where they favor progressive platforms.

Rhetoric and Tone: Poilievre's aggressive, adversarial speaking style remains highly unpopular with female demographics, who often report finding it unhelpful or overly combative.

Social and Policy Gaps: Direct policy positions—such as his proposed crackdowns on transgender rights—and past comments linking millennial women's "biological clocks" to housing affordability have severely hindered his relatability with women.

While his messaging resonates strongly with certain male demographics, the widening gap among women has significantly squeezed his broader voter coalition.















31 Days in Canada

   In honour of CANADA DAY  I plan to post a daily image of Canada and a link to a random Canadian location we have visited.


St. Martin's New Brunswick - random post

New Brunswick is one of the three Maritime Provinces – and the largest by area.

New Brunswick has a population in 2023 of approximately 834,691.

Fredericton is the capital of New Brunswick though Saint John is the most populous city.

New Brunswick is the only province in Canada that is constitutionally bilingual. French is spoken by about a third of the population, especially by people of Acadian origin.

The Bay of Fundy boasts the highest tides in the world. One of the best places to see their effects is by visiting Hopewell Rocks – either on foot or by kayak – or both.

One of the cool facts about New Brunswick is that it’s home to the Hartland Covered Bridge in Hartland, New Brunswick. Not only is it a National Historic Site but it’s the longest covered bridge in the world. It was built in 1901 and for its time was an engineering phenomenon with a span of 390 metres (1,282 feet). Back in 1906 it was a toll bridge and cost $0.03 per person.

Magnetic Hill in Moncton is a gravity hill and an optical illusion. You can experience it today by paying a fee for the experience; then put your car in neutral where you will roll backwards though it will feel like you’re going uphill.






Weekend Roundup and Reflections

   Welcome to The Weekend Roundup...hosted by Tom The Back Roads Traveler

1. Starts with "B"
2. A Favorite
3.  BLUSTERY- Chosen by Tom

WEEKEND REFLECTIONS

Starts with B

Las Vegas NV

BIG BOLD BRANDED 


BLUSTERY


REFLECTIONS
I came across this reflection in my archives from 2013! BANFF Alberta



Morning Reflections

 


09 July 2026

Turkey

 It's a Lovely Life by Heather Delaney Reese



At 3:43 p.m. local time in Turkey, the President of the United States grabbed the stairs to his plane with his swollen right hand while his bruised left hand hung motionless at his side. This was not the plane he had arrived on; his newly refurbished Qatari Air Force One, but instead the older presidential aircraft he had used before. The change was sudden and unexpected, and multiple reports indicated it was related to security concerns with Iran, even as Trump denied that was the reason while simultaneously contradicting himself, telling reporters traveling with him, that they are “on a dangerous flight,” and, “I’m number one on their list, before you,” before adding, “But if I go, you go. Perhaps someday you want to change professions.”

This was just a few minutes in Donald Trump’s day. By the time the day was over, he had confused world leaders and countries. Sitting beside Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy earlier in the day, Trump mistakenly referred to him as “President Putin.” And while discussing the conflict with Iran, he declared, “We had 111 missiles shot by the Islamic Republic of Japan.” He had also, once again, signaled his determination to seize territory from a fellow NATO ally, and told more easily verifiable lies than perhaps any sitting president in American history. It was another reminder to the world that the most powerful office on Earth is now occupied by a man whose physical and mental condition appears to be deteriorating at an alarming speed, leaving the entire planet in harm’s way.
The NATO summit was supposed to project strength and unity among the Western alliance. Instead, it became a stage for one man’s unraveling. Trump opened his morning by sitting beside NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte and declaring, in front of the international press, that he was “very upset with NATO.” He called Spain “a terrible partner” and “a wasted cause,” then turned to his Treasury Secretary and ordered him, on camera, to “cut off all trade with Spain, please, including visits.” He added, “Don’t even talk to them. They’re hopeless, bad people.”
He then renewed his demand that the United States take control of Greenland, a territory belonging to NATO ally Denmark. “Greenland is very important for the United States, but it’s not important for Denmark,” he said, before invoking the Nazi occupation: “When Denmark was overrun by the Nazis in less than one day, Hitler beat them out in one day, took over, they asked us to take care of Greenland. In fact, we took Greenland, and then stupidly we gave it back.” Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen responded by saying her country was “ready to defend every inch of NATO including our own territory” and that Greenland is “not for sale.”
But the most consequential moment of the day had nothing to do with alliances or defense spending. It had to do with war. Just three weeks after celebrating the signing of a memorandum of understanding with Iran at the Palace of Versailles, a deal he had called a triumph of his personal diplomacy, Trump declared that the agreement was “over.” He called Iranian leaders “scum” and “sick people.” He said continuing to negotiate was “a waste of time.” And he announced that U.S. forces had struck more than eighty targets inside Iran overnight, with more likely coming. “We hit them very hard last night,” he said. “Probably hit them hard again tonight.” Oil surged more than six percent. The Dow dropped six hundred points.
In the same stretch of remarks, while discussing his relationship with Chinese President Xi Jinping, he suddenly blurted out, “You know who’s No. 1 on Tic Tac (sic)? I am. I’m number one on TikTok. And all I talk about is how bad communism is.” He claimed to have “like 4 billion views or something like that.” In reality, Trump has roughly sixteen million TikTok followers, which does not place him in the top fifty accounts on the platform. And when some reporters expressed concern about TikTok’s influence, he waved them off: “People have to get their priorities straight.”
That is the sentence that captured the entire day. While ordering strikes on a nation that shares a border with the country he was standing in, while threatening to destroy civilian water and electricity systems, while demanding territory from an ally, the President of the United States bragged about his social media following. He then told the rest of us to get our priorities straight, because we are not sufficiently impressed by his follower count on an app he cannot correctly pronounce.
And all of that happened before he boarded the plane. Aboard Air Force One, after the press had to keep their blinds drawn and the plane shut off their transponder, Trump walked to the press cabin and spoke for fourteen minutes. What came out was a flood of fabrications so constant and so detached from reality that it became difficult to track where one lie ended and the next began.
He told reporters that “probably billions of votes” had disappeared in the Los Angeles mayor’s race. California has roughly twenty-three million registered voters. The entire population of Earth is eight billion. And this is the same man who demands voter ID to protect the integrity of our elections.
He claimed that prescription drug prices had come down “four hundred to five hundred to six hundred percent” under his leadership. A price cannot decline more than one hundred percent. One hundred percent means the price is zero.
Maybe the most telling moment was when he was talking about the conflict between the Democratic Republic of Congo and Rwanda. Trump said, “I settled after fourteen years and about fifteen million people had their heads chopped off.”
Fifteen million people did not have their heads chopped off. Not in Rwanda. Not in the Congo. Not anywhere on Earth, in any era of recorded history. Fifteen million is roughly the entire current population of Rwanda. The broader Congo conflicts, spanning three decades, killed an estimated five to six million people, overwhelmingly from disease, displacement, and starvation. And he called it a settled war, even though his own administration acknowledged in March that the conflict is still ongoing.
I can’t stop thinking about what it means for us as a society when the President of the United States invents fifteen million beheadings, and says billions of votes vanished. These are lies. And they are coming from the man who controls our nuclear arsenal, commands our military, and is actively waging a war without consideration for his allies or permission from Congress.
And what makes all of it worse, what makes it dangerous instead of just absurd, is that it is not only dishonesty; it is showcasing how quickly his decline is accelerating.
Today, at a NATO summit, on the world stage, the President of the United States called Iran “Japan.” He called Zelenskyy “Putin.” He called TikTok “Tic Tac.” He called the JCPOA the “JCPOC.” He called Erdogan the leader of a “great company.” He stumbled over the word ‘denuclearization,’ first calling it ‘d-nuking’ before finding the actual word. His feet were so swollen that his ankles spilled over the sides of his shoes. His left hand, bruised and covered in makeup, hung limp at his side as he climbed the stairs until it jerked backward in an unnatural motion that was caught on video and circulated around the world. He is eighty years old. And when the White House was asked about all of it, Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt issued a statement calling his performance “marathon” and “high-energy,” claiming the president “commanded every room.”
He did not command any room. He alarmed every room he entered. Retired Naval War College professor Tom Nichols said what so many are thinking: “There is something deeply wrong with him. His friends know it, his critics know it. His staff, I’m sure, knows it. The world knows it. World leaders know it. And most importantly, our enemies know it, which is why they don’t take him seriously.” Former Republican Congressman Joe Walsh called for invoking the Twenty-Fifth Amendment. Senator Chuck Schumer called it “an embarrassment to our country on the world stage.”
And still, no one around him acts. No one in his inner circle intervenes. No one invokes the constitutional mechanisms that exist for exactly this moment. Because what we are witnessing is not just a president in decline. It is the most significant cover-up and the deepest corruption our government has ever faced at this level. There is nothing in modern American history that compares. Every person propping him up knows exactly what we are all watching. Every enabler who stands behind him in that room. Every cabinet member who clears the press when he begins to lose coherence. Every Republican in Congress who looks the other way. They know. And they do it anyway, because they want to stay in power. That is the entire reason. They are not acting out of patriotism or principle. They are anti-American in the most fundamental sense of the word. They allow and enable all of this to stay close to power and profit.
And while they cover for him, he is destroying the architecture that has kept this country and its allies safe for generations. In a year and a half, he has shattered alliances that took nearly a century to build. Alliances that matter. Alliances that were forged on the graves of people who died to protect them. He called Spain’s people “hopeless” and ordered his Treasury Secretary to cut off all trade. He demanded Greenland from Denmark by invoking the Nazi occupation. He posted a mocking image of the Italian Prime Minister days before sitting across from her. He told the world he only attended this summit because his friend, the authoritarian leader of Turkey, was hosting it. He said he does not need NATO’s help. And he keeps saying it, over and over, that we are “far away” from the rest of the world, that “we have an ocean separating” us from danger.
We were not so far away when Pearl Harbor happened. We were not so far away when the towers fell. Things do not stay within imaginary borders. They never have. And what he is doing right now in Iran is not making us safer. He is attacking a country instead of helping its citizens free themselves from a regime that oppresses them. He is threatening to bomb infrastructure that provides water and electricity to ordinary people. And in doing so, he is creating the next generation of extremists who will grow up knowing that America destroyed their homes and their families. We will be the ones to pay for that. Not him or his enablers. Us. Our children and grandchildren. Our service members. The people who will be sent to fight the wars that his recklessness and his impairment have set in motion.
Because that is the truth no one around him will say out loud. He cannot govern this country. He simply cannot do the job. And the people who are supposed to protect us from exactly this kind of danger have chosen instead to protect themselves.
We simply must take back both chambers in November. And when we do, here is what becomes possible. Real subpoena power returns. Not just letters or requests. Not strongly worded statements released to the press and forgotten by morning. Subpoenas with the full force of congressional authority behind them, aimed at every decision, every contract, every military order that was issued by or on behalf of a president who was not capable of making them himself.
Impeachment and removal become possible. And the mechanism is specific. We remove Vance first. We leave the vice presidency empty. Then we remove Trump. And when he goes, the cabinet structure that has been propping him up collapses with him.
And then come the investigations. Not just into this president, but into every member of Congress who made this possible. Even the ones who are no longer serving and the ones who get voted out in November. We need to understand why they did what they did. Were they being threatened? Were their families being threatened? Were they promised money, positions, or protection? Or are they simply terrible people who wanted access to power and did not care what it cost their country? We need those answers. Because what they did was not a difference of opinion. It was not politics as usual. It was the deliberate abandonment of their oath of office and the willing destruction of the country they swore to serve. There must be accountability. Without it, the next version of this will be worse. And there will be a next version, unless we build the precedent now that what they did can never be done again.
We are watching a man who is physically breaking down, mentally unraveling, and morally bankrupt try to hold together a presidency that is being operated, behind the scenes, by people who were never elected and who answer to no one. The only thing standing between them and the future of this country is the midterm election. We have to remember that every seat and every vote matters.
And if today felt like nothing but darkness, look at what happened while Trump was stumbling through his NATO performance. A federal judge ordered the release of five point eight million dollars to E. Jean Carroll, the woman a jury found Trump sexually abused and defamed. Trump’s lawyers appealed within an hour. And then, hours later, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals denied his request to block the payment. He lost twice on the same case in a single day. Every court that has touched this case, from the trial court to the appeals court to the Supreme Court, has ruled against him. The system held.
And in Florida, the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals struck down Ron DeSantis’s “Stop WOKE Act,” ruling that restrictions on how race and gender can be taught in public universities violate the First Amendment. The court called it “a breathtaking assertion of power to ban unpopular ideas from public discourse.” And the judge who wrote that opinion was appointed by Donald Trump himself, during his first term. Even the judges he put on the bench are drawing the line.
On a day when his decline was visible to the entire world, when he embarrassed his country on the global stage, the courts back home still held firm. And that matters, because it sends a message to every loyalist, every enabler, every member of Congress who thinks they can ride this out and escape the consequences. He is not untouchable. And neither are they.
In November, they will be reminded that the power still belongs to the people. And that is why I still have hope for America. And you should, too.
I’ll see you tomorrow,
Heather

Morning Reflections

 


Parasite

   It's a Lovely Life by Heather Delaney Reese At 8:07 p.m. tonight, the President of the United States shared his first and only social...