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Meet the Republicans who killed solar subsidies — after using them - E

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At least three Republican lawmakers took advantage of a decades-old rooftop solar credit that will end in January due to President Donald Trump’s megalaw, according to a review of property records and satellite imagery by POLITICO’s E&E News.

The lawmakers — with solar arrays on a California villa, a $3 million Utah manse and an off-the-grid Kentucky homestead — all supported ending the perk this summer that sliced thousands of dollars off the cost of installing their panels.

California Rep. Ken Calvert, a long-serving Republican who was thrust into a race next year with a member of his own party when the state redrew his conservative district, defended voting to end the solar credit that he used about 15 years ago to offset the cost of putting two rows of panels on the back roof of his ranch-style house in Southern California.

“It never was supposed to be permanent,” Calvert said of the credits — a line echoed by other Republicans who criticized renewable energy as unreliable and dependent on subsidies. The law that Trump called his “one big beautiful bill” passed Congress with no Democratic votes and the support of all but five Republicans.

E&E News examined the rooftops of 112 members of Congress: every Senate Republican and 59 House GOP lawmakers who are in leadership or facing tough reelection races.

The search found that at least seven Republican lawmakers had rooftop panels. Three of them acknowledged using the federal tax credit to help pay for the arrays. One couldn’t recall. Another had leased a solar system that was indirectly subsidized via a separate tax credit for installers. And two other lawmakers didn’t respond to questions about their panels, which were on properties they had recently owned.

Rep. Ken Calvert arrives at the Capitol.Rep. Ken Calvert (R-Calif.) had solar panels installed on his home about 15 years ago. | J. Scott Applewhite/AP

In addition to Calvert, the other Republican lawmakers who are known to have collected the residential solar credit are Sen. John Curtis of Utah and Rep. Tom Massie of Kentucky, a libertarian who voted against Trump’s megalaw but said in an interview he supports rescinding the solar subsidy — and all tax credits. Curtis said Democrats and solar companies “knew that it was time for the subsidies to go.”

The revelations come at a time of rising utility rates and increasing politicization of energy as the Trump administration scraps grants, loans and permits for solar, wind and other renewable energy technologies. The president has dismissed solar panels as part of Democrats’ “green new scam” and called them “a blight on our country.”

Trump’s megalaw reinforced the partisan divide on energy. While the legislation primarily extended tax cuts passed in the president’s first term and provided $300 billion for border enforcement and military programs, it also slashed over $484 billion in clean energy incentives. Despite the megalaw’s deep cuts for climate programs, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimated that it would add $3.4 trillion to the national debt over the next decade.

The law was a double-whammy for the solar industry. It speeds up the phase-out of both the rooftop solar subsidy tapped by Calvert, Curtis and Massie as well as another credit relied on by project developers to cut the price of leased panels. At the same time, it boosted an oil subsidy created in the early 1900s and included other provisions to increase the production of fossil fuels that are primarily responsible for global warming.

“There has been a push, as you know, for a long while to get rid of those tax credits,” said Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski, whose Capitol Hill rowhouse roof has been layered with solar panels for about a decade. “And then when you had Trump come into office, he made it very clear that this was not something that he was going to continue supporting.”

A key swing vote on the megalaw, Murkowski couldn’t recall if she received the credit, which can save homeowners thousands of dollars by refunding 30 percent of the cost of buying and installing panels. Analysts say almost everyone who buys a new solar system — the average cost of which is now about $30,000 — files for the benefit.

Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska).Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) has had solar panels on her Capitol Hill rowhouse for about a decade. | Francis Chung/E&E News | Francis Chung/E&E News

Rise and fall of solar subsidies

Congress first established a tax credit for some residential solar investments in 1978, but the subsidy expired in 1985.

The tax credit was revived in the Energy Policy Act of 2005 — a sweeping law signed by President George W. Bush that Murkowski and Calvert voted for at the time.

In the years since, the so-called residential clean energy credit has been extended and broadened in scope several times, most recently when Democrats passed the Inflation Reduction Act in 2022 with no Republican votes. The clean energy spending package would have allowed homeowners to claim tax credits of between 22 and 30 percent of the cost of qualifying solar, wind, geothermal and battery projects through 2034.

Then on July 4, Trump signed the megalaw that moved up the expiration of the residential clean energy credit by nearly a decade.

The legislation also accelerated the end of a 30 percent investment tax credit that’s used by solar installers to lower the cost of leasing panels for their customers. That solar credit will now largely disappear at the end of 2027, at least five years earlier than it would have.

New York Rep. Mike Lawler lives in a suburban home in the Hudson River Valley with rooftop panels that he leases from Vivint Solar. His district narrowly supported former Vice President Kamala Harris in the last presidential election, making him one of the most vulnerable Republicans in Congress.

Lawler was among a group of GOP lawmakers who repeatedly urged House leaders to protect clean energy subsidies when the party was overhauling the tax code this year. Those efforts were largely unsuccessful, and Lawler voted for the bill.

“We didn’t get everything we wanted, but we were able to keep a lot of the provisions and labor standards, etc.,” he said in an interview.

The panels on Lawler’s house have helped him avoid the impacts of rising electricity costs. Since he began leasing the solar system in 2016, it has saved him “a few thousand bucks,” he estimated.

“Look, they were going to expire,” Lawler said of the solar subsidies. “And it was phased out — a little more accelerated than some would like — but people are still able to utilize them.”

Rep. Mike Lawler (R-N.Y.) speaks during a press conference at Columbia University.The home of Rep. Mike Lawler (R-N.Y.) has had a leased solar system since 2016 that the congressman said has saved him “a few thousand bucks.” | Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images

Lawler indirectly benefited from the investment tax credit, analysts say, because it helps companies reduce the costs their customers pay for leasing rooftop solar systems. After 2027, when the investment tax credit disappears, it could be harder for people to lease panels or buy electricity from community solar projects, according to Zoë Gaston, an analyst at the consulting firm Wood Mackenzie.

“Solar will definitely be more expensive,” she said. “It could be as much as a 30 percent increase. I know from talking to lots of installers that they’re trying to find other opportunities to cut costs.”

California Reps. Darrell Issa and Young Kim, both Republicans who voted for the megalaw, also had solar panels on homes they once owned. Public records show Issa sold his property last year. Kim transferred hers to a family trust in 2024 that now operates it as a rental property. She is facing a primary from Calvert.

Their offices did not respond to questions about whether the lawmakers had taken advantage of federal subsidies to purchase or lease the panels.

Dampening a solar boom

The use of rooftop panels by Republicans illustrates the growing economic appeal of solar energy, industry data shows.

A renewable energy trade group estimated in 2004 that the nation installed enough panels that year to produce a total of 58 megawatts of power, enough for about 8,000 homes. Installations have exploded in popularity since then. Last year, the U.S. added over 50 gigawatts of solar capacity — 865 times higher than 2004 levels — with 4.8 GW of that annual growth coming from the residential sector alone, according to solar industry data. Seven percent of U.S. homes now have solar systems.

The megalaw is likely to blunt the solar boom as it amplifies other challenges facing the industry, such as high interest rates and Trump’s tariffs, according to analysts. Three large companies have already filed for bankruptcy protection this year, with more expected to become insolvent in the coming months. Wood Mackenzie estimates that solar installations over the next decade would be 17 percent lower than it had previously forecast.

Curtis and Murkowski both argued that phasing out solar subsidies was necessary.

“I think universally, everybody — including our Democratic colleagues, including the industry — knew that it was time for the subsidies to go,” said Curtis, who along with Murkowski shaped the megalaw to make it slightly less difficult for companies to access the investment tax credit before it ends. “Nobody fought harder than I did for the off-ramp for those, because I felt like the off-ramp was appropriate.”

Democrats and solar companies disagreed with Curtis. Abigail Ross Hopper, the head of the Solar Energy Industries Association, warned on July 1 that the compromise legislation he and Murkowski had brokered “will strip the ability of millions of American families to choose the energy savings, energy resilience, and energy freedom that solar and storage provide.”

Curtis founded the Conservative Climate Caucus in 2021 while he was serving in the House. Two years later, he invited a climate media company to tour his home in Provo, Utah, where he showed off his solar panels and geothermal heat pump, while bragging about the hundreds of dollars per month they helped him save in energy costs. The panels and heat pump were both eligible for the residential tax credit he voted to terminate.

Sen. John Curtis (R-Utah) walks through a corridor before meeting with Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell.Sen. John Curtis (R-Utah) said everybody “knew that it was time for the subsidies to go,” a claim disputed by Democrats and solar industry advocates. | J. Scott Applewhite/AP

Back on Capitol Hill, Murkowski said her husband decided to install panels on their rowhouse about a decade ago. The senator, who once chaired the Energy and Natural Resources Committee, couldn’t recall if they had filed for the federal tax credit.

“He was a real skeptic of solar and solar panels, more specifically, because he didn’t think that they were really going to make a difference for him as a consumer, as an individual,” Murkowski said, referring to her husband, Verne Martell.

What changed his mind, she said, was seeing the electricity savings of his then-87-year-old mother, who has solar panels on her home in Maui, Hawaii.

“It was an education for him that allowed him to do more research about how it might work in Washington, D.C.,” Murkowski said. “I do like the fact that our utility bills are really manageable now. And you know, it took a while, but it paid off.”

New fossil fuel subsidies

Republicans’ justification for killing rooftop solar credits are undercut by their continued support for incentives that go to the fossil fuel industry, argued Jesse Lee, a former senior adviser to the National Economic Council during the Biden administration.

“We’ve had subsidies and tax credits for oil production for more than a century. So I don’t really understand this argument that all clean energy tax credits must come to an end,” said Lee, who is now a spokesperson for the environmental advocacy group Climate Power.

“And not only did they leave the century-old oil industry subsidies untouched, they gave new tax loopholes to the oil industry,” he added. For instance, the megalaw established a 2.5 percent production tax credit for steel-making coal, cut royalty rates for coal mining and oil drilling on federal land, and eased restrictions on tax deductions for oil drilling costs — a subsidy that dates back to 1913.

Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) speaks with reporters outside the U.S. Capitol.Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.), an early adopter of solar energy, voted against the megalaw but supports ending all tax credits. | Francis Chung/POLITICO

Murkowski wasn’t comfortable with the megalaw’s energy contradictions.

“It’s kind of putting your finger on the scale, if you will, and picking winners and losers in the energy space,” she said. “I don’t think we should do that.”

But overall, she thought the bill was “more positive than negative in a lot of different areas,” she said. Murkowski was one of the final Republican holdouts on the bill, which passed the Senate with a tiebreaking vote by Vice President JD Vance.

Massie, whose Kentucky farmhouse appears to have more solar panels than the homes of his GOP colleagues, was one of only two House Republicans to oppose the megalaw. He voted against it because he thought the bill didn’t go far enough in cutting energy and health care subsidies.

“I would end all the tax credits. For everything,” said Massie, who earned a master’s degree in mechanical engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and has enough solar and battery systems to live off the grid. “I bought the bulk of mine before the federal tax credit.”

This story also appears in E&E Daily and Energywire.

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HarlandCorbin
10 hours ago
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Hm. Hypocrites... how on-brand for the r party.
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Farmer says ‘we’re in a very dire situation’ ahead of harvest—with zero soybean orders from China, historically the largest buyer

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  • Caleb Ragland, a Kentucky farmer and president of the American Soybean Association, is warning of an agricultural crisis as China has placed zero soybean orders for the upcoming harvest. It’s a departure from typical patterns, where 25% of the U.S. crop goes to China. With prices 40% below three-year highs and production costs rising, hundreds of thousands of farmers face losses unless there’s a trade resolution between the two countries.

American soybean farmers are heading into harvest season without a single order from China, historically their largest customer, raising alarm bells about the agricultural sector’s stability and broader implications for the U.S. economy.

Caleb Ragland, president of the American Soybean Association and a ninth-generation farmer from Kentucky, issued a stark warning about the crisis facing the nation’s 500,000 soybean growers. “Right now, we’re in a very dire situation,” Ragland said in a TikTok video that has drawn national attention to farmers’ plight.

In a separate CNN interview, Ragland emphasized the scale of China’s importance to American agriculture: “China takes more of our soybeans than all other foreign customers combined,” he said, noting that 50% of U.S. soybeans are exported and China represents a quarter of total demand.

The absence of Chinese orders represents a dramatic departure from normal trading patterns. China typically accounted for over 25% of total U.S. soybean purchases, with roughly one-third of annual sales to the country normally booked by this point in the season. This translates to approximately 8%-9% of the entire U.S. crop that would typically be sold to China by now currently sitting at zero.

The trade dispute has pushed already-struggling farmers to the brink. Ragland told CNN that soybean prices have fallen 40% from their levels three years ago, while production costs and interest rates have risen. “We’re looking at basically losses for the upcoming year if commodity prices don’t improve,” he said.

Current soybean futures prices reflect the uncertainty, trading around $10.10 per bushel for September contracts—well below estimated production costs of approximately $11.03 per bushel. Ragland’s own farm is currently generating $750,000 in losses, forcing him to rely on loans to bridge the financial gap.

“Right now we’re planting a crop that looks like it will be produced at a loss,” he told CNN. “By fall, when the soybeans are harvested and ready to sell, we’re gonna need a drastic improvement in our markets or it’s gonna get even tougher for farm families all across this country.”

The financial pressure extends beyond individual operations. “There’s not much room for error right now in the budgets,” Ragland said, emphasizing that all 500,000 soybean farmers nationwide face similar challenges.

The implications extend far beyond individual farms. Agriculture contributes $9.5 trillion to the U.S. economy annually, representing 18.7% of total national economic output. The agricultural sector directly and indirectly supports over a million American jobs, with soybean exports alone generating more than 231,000 jobs across farming, manufacturing, transportation, and related industries.

Ragland highlighted these broader economic connections in his CNN interview: “That trickles down to our rural communities. Our rural communities are a lot of folks across this country. And that impacts small business. That impacts just the whole infrastructure within our communities.”

In 2023, every $1 billion in U.S. agricultural exports supported approximately 5,997 jobs. Soybeans and corn bulk exports alone supported over 212,520 jobs. The economic multiplier effect means disruptions to soybean trade ripple through manufacturing, logistics, and rural communities nationwide.

The standoff stems from ongoing U.S.-China trade tensions, which have fundamentally altered global soybean trade patterns. U.S. soybeans currently face a 20% retaliatory tariff disadvantage compared to South American competitors, pushing the total duty rate on American soybeans to 34% when combined with other taxes.

China has responded by dramatically increasing purchases from Brazil. Chinese soybean imports hit record highs in July, driven largely by Brazilian exports. Brazil exported approximately 15.7 million tons of soybeans in March 2025, with three-quarters destined for China—the highest monthly volume ever exported to China. In 2024, China sourced 71% of its total soybean imports from Brazil, up from previous years.

The American Soybean Association warned in an August 19 letter to President Trump that “China has contracted with Brazil to meet future months’ needs to avoid purchasing any soybeans from the United States.”

Despite his support for Trump, Ragland has become increasingly vocal about the need for immediate trade resolution. “We desperately need to get something rectified quickly with China, our biggest export customer,” he told CNN. “We wanna encourage the administration to get a proactive trade deal done.”

When asked about the administration’s calls for patience, Ragland emphasized the time-sensitive nature of the crisis. Farmers are “planning a crop that looks like it will be produced at a loss,” and without market improvements before harvest, the situation will deteriorate further.

The broader agricultural sector is experiencing what industry groups describe as an economic crisis. The National Corn Growers Association reports corn prices have fallen more than 50% from their 2022 highs, with production costs declining only 3% over the same period. This agricultural downturn comes as the 2025 U.S. soybean crop is forecast at nearly 4.3 billion bushels, the country’s sixth-largest harvest in history. However, without Chinese demand, this abundant supply threatens to further depress prices and worsen farmers’ financial distress.

The situation echoes the 2018-2020 trade war, during which U.S. agriculture lost $26 billion, with nearly $20 billion in soybean losses alone. Soybeans accounted for 71% of agricultural losses experienced by American farmers during that earlier conflict.

The urgency reflects the seasonal nature of agricultural markets. As harvest approaches and storage facilities fill with unsold grain, prices typically face additional downward pressure. Without resolution soon, farmers may be forced to sell their crops at deeply discounted prices or face expensive storage costs through the winter months.

Current trade dynamics show limited progress toward resolution. While President Trump signed an executive order in August extending the current tariff truce with China by 90 days through November 10, the extension primarily addresses broader trade issues rather than agricultural-specific concerns.

Ragland framed the crisis in terms of national strength: “We want to keep this nation strong. We’re the backbone of America,” he said.

Despite acknowledging that he believes Trump “loves farmers” and is “trying to do what’s right for this country,” he emphasized the need for immediate action: “We gotta make sure that we survive through these tough times.”

For this story, Fortune used generative AI to help with an initial draft. An editor verified the accuracy of the information before publishing.

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

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HarlandCorbin
63 days ago
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I wonder how many farmers voted for mango mussolini... FAFO and this is the find out stage. And wait, the article said something about the 2018-2020 trade war causing farmers distress too, I'm thinking they didn't learn anything that time around.
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‘I have never been as worried as I am now’: Arkansas farmers gather to share concerns

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BROOKLAND, Ark. (KAIT) - Farmers from across the state are asking for help before it’s too late.

Hundreds of farmers gathered in Brookland to speak with representatives of Arkansas leaders to share with them their urgent plight: the difficulties they face in farming today.

Many farmers spoke out at the meeting.

Their message was straightforward: We need help, and we need it now.

“Mr. Trump, you looked at me and said, ‘I love you,’” Woodruff County farmer Chris King said. “Mr. Trump, I need to see the fruit of your love.”

“You are going to lose 25 to 30% of the farmers in this country if they don’t do something,” said Scott Brown, a farmer from Biggers, Arkansas. “It has to be done, and it’s not just here; it’s everywhere.”

Hundreds of farmers gather to share their concerns

The line to get into the meeting place, the Woods Chapel Baptist Church, went out the door. Countless farmers from across the state came to voice their concerns about the current state of farming.

Representatives from U.S. Congressman Rick Crawford, Sen. Tom Cotton, and Sen. John Boozman’s offices attended the gathering to hear concerns.

One of the farmers in attendance, Chris King, spoke about his harvest difficulties.

He told us this was his 39th harvest, and he has never seen it this bad before.

“I have never been as worried as I am now about whether or not my kids and grandkids will be able to carry on,” said Chris King.

Lack of profit, export difficulties, and high costs

Chris King said the main problem is that they can’t sell for profit.

“I just would like to see somebody help us get our markets back,” said Chris King. “We need our exports, and we just need to be paid for what we do, and that’s not happening, and we’re in real trouble.”

But this is not the only issue.

Chris King’s wife, Melissa King, and farmer Scott Brown said they are struggling to afford the bare minimum cost to maintain their farms.

“Prices that we are getting now are prices like they were when we were children, and what it costs for us to farm is astronomical now. The price of a combine when we were kids was in the 20,000s, and now it’s 100,000,” said Melissa King.

“I farm 800 acres by myself, I can’t afford any help, I farm with paid-for equipment, all my tractors are 50 years old, and I can’t hardly make this deal work,” said Brown. “How are the guys farming 5 and 10 thousand with 20 hands and million-dollar combines and million-dollar drills going to make it work?”

Tariffs are hurting farmers

Brown said one issue that rounds out all the problems farmers are facing: tariffs.

“I think the tariffs are the ice cream on the cake of a perfect storm,” said Brown. “When you try and sell a product, okay, U.S. soybeans leaving New Orleans without the tariff to China are cheaper than Brazilian soybeans, at the current market. But when you put the tariff on top of them, Brazilian beans are cheaper.”

What can be done to help farmers?

“In the short term, they have no choice but to mail us a check,” said Brown. “I don’t know a farmer that likes the check program. Nobody wants to take the taxpayer dollars, but nobody wants to go broke, nobody wants to lose everything. Long term, we have to have options, markets, and places to sell our product.”

The political representatives who attended said they will take these concerns to Washington to share with government leaders and find a way to solve this problem before it’s too late.

To report a typo or correction, please click here.

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HarlandCorbin
68 days ago
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Let's see... Who did Arkansas vote for president again? Methinks that farmers above all others should understand the phrase "You reap what you sow". FAFO, and you're in the find out stage.
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1 public comment
LeMadChef
68 days ago
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GFY farmers!
Denver, CO

A Reminder

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When Donald Trump came into office in 2017, the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action was in force, and working as expected/ hoped. It was a far better agreement than most of us wonks had expected or wished for. When its draft came out earlier, we were dancing in the streets. It was carefully done and extremely specific about limitations on Iran’s nuclear program.

And Iran was working to the plan. IAEA inspectors installed sensors that sent information on how enrichment was working to their computers. Numbers were being hit. Iran was working toward what the IAEA calls a “broader conclusion,” a certification that its nuclear program is peaceful. Collaborations were being forged between Iran and the nations that were involved in the negotiations. IIRC, China was working with Iran on reactor design to minimize plutonium production, for one example. There were other provisions to move toward more extensive agreements; the expectation was that interactions would continue.

But the JCPOA required regular certifications from the US president. And those regular signatures reminded Trump that it was Barack Obama who had negotiated this wildly successful agreement. That could not stand, and it didn’t. Trump withdrew. He had great faith in his negotiation skills combined with coercive measures that he loves.

The Biden administration tried to put things back together, but the loss of trust that Trump’s withdrawal produced was too much. And situations had changed, both in the US and in Iran.

Trump ordered his golfing buddy, Steve Witkoff, another great negotiator in his eyes, to put something like the JCPOA back in place. He didn’t use those words, of course, but that was what it amounted to. Reports from Witkoff’s negotiations seem to indicate they might have been converging on something a little less than the JCPOA.

The US JCPOA negotiating team consisted of something like 150 people, most of whom were experts in nuclear issues and sanctions. The national labs supplied experts. Witkoff showed up to meetings without even an interpreter, much less national lab experts.

This time around, Iran was more pressed to get an agreement, but even with that, the Great Negotiators failed. Throughout, Trump occasionally tweeted threats at Iran to encourage them to agree.

Bibi Netanyahu had other ideas, as we see. Like Putin, he sees Trump as a sucker. Like Putin, he has no interest in peace. As Trump sees his great triumph (and Nobel Prize) slipping away, he is panicking, as we see from his frequent postings over the last 24 hours. His earlier threats, along with his poor understanding of the situation and inability to think about anything but win-lose outcomes, put him in a bind Now he’s meeting with his crack foreign policy team.

The post A Reminder appeared first on Lawyers, Guns & Money.

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HarlandCorbin
148 days ago
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I think there's a typo.

Now he’s meeting with his crack foreign policy team.

Should be:
Now he’s meeting with his on crack foreign policy team.
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The Disability Follies, Part the Thousandth

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In one of those brave acts of revelation long after the fact to sell books, Jake Tapper and Alex Thompson tell us that President Joe Biden’s aides were told by his doctor that Biden might need a wheelchair if he tood a bad fall.

Biden has spinal arthritis and neuralgia in his feet. That makes his gait uncertain. It’s not uncommon in people his age. A friend of mine has the same sort of neuralgia in her feet. I have to let her hold onto my arm at times, but she continues to compose operas and just had one performed in Santa Fe.

Physical disabilities do not imply mental disabilities.

Let me repeat that.

PHYSICAL DISABILITIES DO NOT IMPLY MENTAL DISABILITIES.

Nonetheless, CNN includes a sentence in the article to imply exactly that.

I remind you that one of our most influential presidents used a wheelchair.

Donald Trump, on the other hand, has been ignorant and bigoted and has abused his body for most of his life. It’s not just a feature of his old age, so I guess that’s okay.

Could we concentrate on that clear and present danger?

The post The Disability Follies, Part the Thousandth appeared first on Lawyers, Guns & Money.

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HarlandCorbin
183 days ago
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If the cheeto traitor took a bad fall, he'd likely need a hearse.
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Punched Out

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Everybody to the limit

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HarlandCorbin
195 days ago
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Bowling ball? Or Pintsize's old head?
JavaJim
195 days ago
that's got to be a head
gordol
195 days ago
My question too!
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