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  • Actor Val Kilmer Dies

    Actor Val Kilmer Dies

    Val Kilmer known for a multitude of roles has died of pneumonia in Los Angeles. He was 65.

    Kilmer was born December 31, 1959, in Los Angeles, California. He attended Chatsworth High School at the same time as Kevin Spacey. His high school girlfriend was Mare Winningham. He became the youngest person at the time to be accepted into the Juilliard School’s Drama Division.

    Initially a stage actor, Kilmer’s first starring role in film was the spy comedy Top Secret!, released in 1984. His next film continued in the comedy genre with 1985’s Real Genius. 1986 saw him playing Iceman in Top Gun alongside Tom Cruise. The 1988 film fantasy film Willow was his next starring role. He played Madmartigan alongside his future wife, Joanne Whaley.

    The 90’s were the big decade for Val. Most of his most well known roles occurred during that decade. Kilmer played Jim Morrison in Oliver Stone’s The Doors, Doc Holliday in Tombstone, Chris Shiherlis in Heat, Bruce Wayne/Batman in Batman Forever among others.

    Kilmer continued acting through the 2000s. His last appearance was a reprise of his role in the original Top Gun in 2022’s Top Gun: Maverick.

    In 2015 Kilmer was diagnosed with throat cancer. A subsequent surgery damaged his vocal cords.

    He passed surrounded by family according to his daughter. He is survived by his two children, Mercedes and Jack.

    Requiescat in Pace

  • Special Election Results

    Special Election Results

    There were three special elections and one important ballot measure vote held last night. Here are the results.

    Starting in Florida with the election in Congressional district one – Matt Gaetz old seat. Trump backed Republican Jimmy Patronis, the sitting FLorida CFO, faced off against Democrat Gay Valimont. Patronis won handily, getting nearly 57% of the vote.

    Jimmy Patronis

    Patronis underperformed Gaetz by 9 points and Trump by 11. Whether this is because of the usual off year/special election disinterest, the amount of money dropped on Valmont – the Valmont campaign outraised Patronis by a 3 to 1 margin – or a dislike of Patronis is hard to say.

    In Florida 6, Repub Randy Fine – a sitting state senator – faced off against Democrat opponent, Josh Weil. Fine won 56-42.

    Randy Fine

    Fine, like Patronis, underperformed compared to the November elections. Trump won the district with 64.5% and Waltz with 66.5. The same questions about the results apply here, with one caveat; Fine has been credibly accused of being a RINO.

    In Wisconsin, a special election was held for a State Supreme court justice. This pitted Musk and Trump backed Brad Shimel against Dem Susan Crawford. Crawford won 55-45%.

    This race was the most expensive court race in US History with around $100 million spent. This R loss means the Wisconsin Supreme court will continue to lean left for the foreseable future.

    It was not all bad news out of the Badger state however. Ballot question 1 passed by an overwhelming – 62.8 to 37.2% – margin. Question one amended the Wisconsin constitution permanently enshrining the state’s 2011 law requiring voters to provide photo identification in order to vote. This is a big step in securing elections in Wisconsin.

  • Dedicated to our own Albertan The case for Alberta as the 51st US state

    Dedicated to our own Albertan The case for Alberta as the 51st US state

    The case for Alberta as the 51st US state

    Warren Kindzierski for americanthinker.com

    Alberta would make a great 51st state.  It has a population of 4.8 million and had a gross domestic product of $244.3 billion in 2024.  (All numbers here are in U.S. dollars.)  This would rank us 27th among the 50 states, just behind South Carolina at $246.3 billion.  Over 90% of our economic output is from oil & gas extraction, refining, distribution, and servicing.  Alberta has over 37 billion tons of mostly readily accessible coal reserves, the world’s third-largest proven oil reserves, and among the world’s top ten largest natural gas reserves.

    In short, Alberta has tremendous ability to supply cheap and abundant coal, oil, and natural gas to meet President Trump’s Agenda47 goals for the United States.  Also, rural and blue-collar Albertans are hardworking, honest people.  Our cities — unfortunately like many U.S. cities — attract socialists, but this problem can be fixed.

    Canada is currently undergoing an election for prime minister following the resignation of Justin Trudeau, leader of the Liberal party.  All the socialist, globalist babble pushed by the WEF and Davos crowd — climate changeDIE disease, etc. — were front and center with his government over the past decade.

    If we have learned anything, it is not to trust Liberals to look out for the interests of Alberta.  On the contrary, they have impeded development of our energy resources in the name of fake climate change.  One estimate is that Canada has seen $466 billion in canceled oil, gas, LNG, and pipeline projects since 2015, when Trudeau became prime minister.

    Our premier, Danielle Smith, is not afraid to stick up for Albertans.  She would make a capable Republican governor.  She has let it be known that whoever skids into the new prime minister’s role must agree to a specific list of demands within the first six months of his term.

    Some of these include guaranteeing Alberta full access to oil and gas corridors to the north, east, and west; halting federal censorship of energy companies (incredible but true); and lifting a tanker ban off the British Columbia coast and eliminating oil and gas emissions caps brought in to address fake climate change.  In short, set our energy industry free.

    The current, unelected Liberal candidate for running for prime minister, Mark Carney, is a globalist and elitist with a dubious record.  A firm he used to manage, Brookfield Asset Management, set up $17.4 billion’s worth of funds in a Caribbean tax haven.  His “solution” to President Trump’s tariffs includes an export tax on Canadian oil and gas, which would ravage Alberta.

    He has already admitted potential conflicts in his role as prime minister from his past work life.  He’s facing questions over a past role with the global elitist Bilderberg Group, a secretive meeting of global elites that has sparked theories about controlling world events.  He’s behind a corruption-plagued South American toll road scheme, submerged in litigation over bribes paid to a mayor who issued the contract.  He’s even facing plagiarism accusations for a 1995 Oxford doctoral thesis.

    Why the focus on Carney?  He is a net-zero zealot, an enemy of capitalism, and an enemy of Alberta and the U.S.  He fits in perfectly with the eastern Canadian Laurentian elites (the old-school wealthy, socially connected ruling class).

    Carney and the Liberals are currently leading the election polls.  If they win, it will spell the demise of Alberta’s energy industry — all that world-class oil and gas left in the ground to address fake climate change.

    If, on the other hand, we became the 51st state, we could help President Trump achieve the cornerstone of the American advantage — providing efficient, reliable, and affordable energy as the key to American security.

    Warren Kindzierski is a retired college professor and a concerned father and grandfather in St Albert, Alberta.

  • Welcome to Conversation on Wednesday, April 2

    Welcome to Conversation on Wednesday, April 2

    Over Black Coffee and Gunpowder Tea served with 

    The following seems like an excellent question.

    Let us see if our MilVets can answer the question.

    More gorgeousness for your AM.

  • So Milley was running the whole Ukraine war…

    So Milley was running the whole Ukraine war…

    So Milley was running the whole Ukraine war with Russia without telling the public -report

    By Monica Showalter for American Thinker

    While the U.S. public under the Biden administration was told, via Congress, that the U.S. was supplying arms to Ukraine, actually, the U.S. was pretty much running the whole show.

    Its long and interesting report begins this way:

    One of the men, Lt. Gen. Mykhaylo Zabrodskyi, remembers being led up a flight of stairs to a walkway overlooking the cavernous main hall of the garrison’s Tony Bass Auditorium. Before the war, it had been a gym, used for all-hands meetings, Army band performances and Cub Scout pinewood derbies. Now General Zabrodskyi peered down on officers from coalition nations, in a warren of makeshift cubicles, organizing the first Western shipments to Ukraine of M777 artillery batteries and 155-millimeter shells.

    Then he was ushered into the office of Lt. Gen. Christopher T. Donahue, commander of the 18th Airborne Corps, who proposed a partnership.

    Its evolution and inner workings visible to only a small circle of American and allied officials, that partnership of intelligence, strategy, planning and technology would become the secret weapon in what the Biden administration framed as its effort to both rescue Ukraine and protect the threatened post-World War II order.

    The U.S., during the time of Gen. Mark Milley, was pretty much calling the shots on all aspects of the war — targets, intelligence, trainings, logistics and all kinds of sneaky pete inside Russia itself, ostensibly to keep the information out of Putin’s hands, the idea being to let him think Ukraine was putting up a ferocious fight on its own, without more than U.S. arms sales buttressing it.

    But that isn’t what was happening. The Times summed it with:

    But for nearly three years before Mr. Trump’s return to power, the United States and Ukraine were joined in an extraordinary partnership of intelligence, strategy, planning and technology whose evolution and inner workings have been known only to a small circle of American and allied officials.

    With remarkable transparency, the Pentagon has offered a public accounting of the $66.5 billion in weaponry it has supplied to Ukraine. But a New York Times investigation reveals that America’s involvement in the war was far deeper than previously understood. The secret partnership both guided big-picture battle strategy and funneled precise targeting information down to Ukrainian soldiers in the field.

    They supplied coordinates to the Ukrainians on Russian targets from a base in Wiesbaden. They supplied mobile artillery units called HIMARS for satellite-guided rockets on Russian targets with American troops calling every shot. They put boots on the ground, and more boots on the ground, calling them “subject matter experts.” They dispatched the U.S. Navy to share targeting information on Russian warships beyond Ukrainian waters — when Ukraine sank Russia’s flagship battleship without a navy, through drones, that was what was going on. They targeted Crimea and through sustained firepower chased the Russians out.

    Then mission creep came calling, and soon enough, the U.S. was handing out intelligence on Russian locations for military strikes.

    There were arguments, and in 2023, they were bad enough that the Ukrainian army split into two directions and won nothing. The Ukrainians complained that the U.S. role bogged it down, which sounds about right with Milley, who is a bureaucrat who may have viewed the Vietnam war as a model, not a warning.

    There’s an intriguing detail about one Ukrainian general using then 29-year-old Confederate Gen. J.E.B Stuart’s daring 1862 cavalry end run around Union Gen. George McClellan’s Army of the Potomac as a successful model. (So much for political correctness, better not let that get out, might mean bringing back more Confederate statues and place names.)  

    The Times compares it to the U.S. sending military advisors into Vietnam and consequently getting drawn more and more into that war, enmired. One recent operation they didn’t bring up, but leaped out to me was the U.S. involvement in the Colombia rescue mission of three American and many more Colombian hostages held by FARC Marxist narcoterrorists in 2007.

    The problem with this whole mission-creep approach in Ukraine is less that it happened (and apparently the U.S. ground general, named Lt. Gen. Christopher Donohue was pretty good) than that it amounted to an undeclared war that the public wasn’t aware of. That’s not good in a democracy.

    Putin may or may not have been fooled, and I am going to guess that at a certain point he wasn’t, but for sure, the U.S. public had no idea.

    It was being drawn closer and closer into a world war without its consent, and became itself a military target, and had no idea it was happening.

    The other problematic part is that all this help and assistance prolonged the war and increased the casualty count on both sides without succeeding, the calls for more and more bottomless-pits of money simply increasing.

    Had it not happened this way, there might have been negotiations starting sooner. A simple agreement to not join NATO and perhaps a referendum on the eastern part of Ukraine as to which country they’d like to be part of might have saved a lot of lives and destruction.

    That’s Milley for you, though — he got us into deep involvement in a war Joe Biden was unwilling to ask the public to go along with because he suspected the answer would be ‘no,’ but he wouldn’t take ‘no’ for an answer. One day he’s sneaking around with the Chinese, telling them to trust him on keeping Trump engaging in any military action, the next day, he’s making the U.S. a bigger target.

    Now President Trump is there to clean up the mess and try to bring peace to Ukraine and bring Putin back into the family of normal nations if possible. I do find it interesting that this story got out — the Times said, from doing considerable interviews with different sources. If Putin was as fooled as the American public, he won’t be fooled now.

    So chalk it up as another failure from the worst general in American history, Mark Milley, again.

  • Dedicated to Our Editor

    Dedicated to Our Editor

    Yankees Debut New Gloves

    NEW YORK, NY — Continuing to find every equipment modification that could give them a competitive edge, the New York Yankees closed out their season-opening series sweep of the Milwaukee Brewers by debuting new baseball gloves.

    The new gloves, which are noticeably larger than traditional mitts, provided Yankee players with significantly more range in the field, increasing their chances of getting opposing batters out and reducing the potential for errors.

    “This evolution in fielding is all perfectly legal somehow,” said centerfielder Aaron Judge following the game. “While other teams are still stuck in the past with normal-sized gloves, we’re moving into the future with mitts the size of truck tires. We learned our lesson in the World Series last year and made the necessary adjustments. Good luck getting any balls past us ever again.”

    Much like the team’s new “torpedo bats” that led to an offensive explosion to start the season, the Yankees hope the new giant baseball gloves will eliminate fielding errors entirely. “Every player can now be a ‘plus’ defender,” said manager Aaron Boone. “When your glove extends your reach by three feet, no grounder is too far away, no line drive is out of reach, and no home run is safe from being robbed. Plus, they look awesome.”

    Despite players admitting that running around on the field with gloves as large as bass drums took some getting used to, the new equipment had already paid off, with the team committing no errors in its 12-3 win over the Brewers.

    At publishing time, the Yankees were reportedly testing out new, larger, clown-shoe-inspired cleats that would be long enough for players to safely reach bases in fewer steps.

  • That’s affirmative

    That’s affirmative

    Can always tell when kids have a dad that was a Marine, acting up public will not be tolerated

    Sips a coffee, so I got this call, was about wanting a wallet, ” where you get this number?”. I was told about you and just work through it. ” was Smitty wasn’t it. “I was told to tell you this, the older you gotten the meaner you are, another storm we hear on the news biting people”. It was Smitty, sounds like Smitty talkin.

    Thanks to that bastard, I got a song stuck in my head, been there for 2 days. This person wants wallet for the Finals. “Anything to do with basketball and my initials”. You want fools gold or real gold which will cost you. ” I don’t care, make it nice”. I like you man, America being a premium market, you’re gonna pay for Quality. It’ll be ready

    Shiney is fake, dull is real

    Basketball Jones, I got a Basketball Jones
    Got a Basketball Jones, oh baby, oo-oo-ooo

    Yes, I am the victim of a Basketball Jones
    Ever since I was a little baby, I always be dribblin’
    In fac’, I was de baddest dribbler in the whole neighborhood
    Then one day, my mama bought me a basketball
    And I loved that basketball
    I took that basketball with me everywhere I went
    That basketball was like a basketball to me

    I even put that basketball underneath my pillow
    Maybe that’s why I can’t sleep at night.

    Basketball Jones

    Not gonna lie, as a kid you proably heard just we did If ain’t one thing, it’s another, now that we are adults

    , we can confirm without hesitation, it’s true, if it’s not one thing it’s another.

    Snowstorms or stupid songs stuck in your head.

    Strange

    Emerson, Lake and Palmer came to mind, along with the bastard bill gates, fasci & scarf lady

    Days of Future’s past

  • Welcome to Tuesday Conversation for Fools Day

    Welcome to Tuesday Conversation for Fools Day

    Over Black Coffee and Gunpowder Tea served with 

  • The Final Four is Set

    The Final Four is Set

    The NCAA Men’s basketball tournament is down to the last four teams and three games. The games will be played this Saturday at the Alamodome in San Antonio Texas.

    The tourney started a couple of weeks ago with 68 teams, now only four remain. Those four, Auburn, Duke, Florida and Houston, were all #1 seeds in their regions.

    Florida and Auburn tip off at 6:09 ET with Houston and Duke set to tip at 8:49 ET. The Championship game is scheduled for Monday at 8:50 Eastern.

    It is the first time since 2008 – and only the second time ever – that the Final Four are all the top seeds. There have been more instances of no #1 seeds in the Final Four, 3 – 2006, 2011 and 2023 – than there have been all #1 seeds finals.

    Full disclosure: Your editor is a graduate of Duke University and roots for the Blue Devils even though he hates the Duke fan base.

  • What a WENCH!

    What a WENCH!

    That’s better than calling her slutpenny, ohh don’t what that is eh, well I’ll tell ya, ever be eating some bread and you feel you’ve broken a tooth, that’s dough that wasn’t beat enough before baking. Medieval days, kitchen help were commonly called slutpennies. That woman is just a wench. Incase no one knows location I’ll show you

    Sunday, Governor Whitmer activated the State Emergency Operations Center due to ice storms in Northern Lower Michigan.

    The SEOC was activated at 12 p.m. on Sunday.

    I came in for a coffee and piss, been out there since 6am ffs and that wench don’t even give us the time of day.

    Snow ending 31 minutes (get coffee take a piss) 3-6 inches Tuesday evening Wednesday mornin,

    Sayin you’re to G’damn lazy to plow just to see the snow thigmajig, lucky for you we got your six

    Snow totals for the 2024-2025 season

    Check out our digital snow meter! Data is from the Keweenaw County Snow Commission.

    That’s 20 feet 10 inches for those who hate math

    Yeah, there’a a difference between leftist sycoses and cabin fever.

    I’m good, new coffee and my bladder much gladder, come on dog back in the truck.