Teri e-mailed
 to say I never do drink recipes.  I rarely do them.  I think I've done 
three here in the almost 20 years of this site.  I started it during a 
bad economy.  Bully Boy Bush occupied the White House and people were 
struggling across the country.  As someone who raised eight kids, I knew
 about putting food on the table when money was tight so I thought I 
could offer that, otherwise I wouldn't have started this website.  
That's been our focus and that's why we focus on food.  Drinking is 
important and I know we have to drink more than just water but that's 
why I haven't really emphasized drink recipes here.  Teri has one she 
loves from Med With Love for Green Tea Lemonade:
Ingredients
2 green tea bags
2 oz water boiled and then let to sit for 5 minutes
1 cup lemonade
4-5 mint leaves optional
ice
Instructions
Bring
 a pot of water to boil, remove from heat and let sit for 5 minutes. 
Pour two ounces of water into a glass jar or mug and add 2 green tea 
bags. Let steep for 2 minutes and then dunk a few times in the water 
before removing and discarding the tea bags. Let cool.
In a 
large glass with ice, pour your favorite lemonade and the green tea 
concentrate you just brewed. Add in mint leaves and stir to combine.
Sip sip sip away.
Notes
I
 have been making a large batch of green tea concentrate so that I can 
have it ready when I am. I use 6 tea bags for 8 oz of water, meaning 
I’ll have enough concentrate on hand for 4 drinks. It also helps because
 the tea is cold and won’t melt the ice straight away. 
Remember, there are sugar free lemonades -- both the powder version and the already made -- Minute Made being one example.  
Grocery
 prices are rising, and tariffs are a big reason why. Trade disputes 
have led to higher taxes on imported foods, which has a direct impact on
 everyday staples. But the impact doesn’t stop there. It also affects 
restaurants, food manufacturers, and supply chains.
Here are a few foods that have been hit the hardest—and why your grocery bill keeps climbing.
The
 U.S. imports around 90% of its avocados from Mexico, which means that 
it is heavily dependent on this trade. A 25% tariff on Mexican imports 
has pushed avocado prices higher. As a result, you might have to pay 
more for guacamole, avocado toast, and fresh avocados at the grocery 
store.
Countries
 like India have placed export restrictions on rice and thus reduced 
global supply. This has led to price hikes for rice-based dishes. If you
 rely on rice as a meal staple, you will notice a significant cost 
increase at grocery stores and restaurants.
Here's some more bad consumer news via MoneyWise:
Americans continue to feel the squeeze at grocery stores — and we're not just talking about the price of eggs.
According
 to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the cost of food is up 1.9% since 
2024, rising 0.5% in January 2025 alone. This increase is partly 
attributed to skyrocketing egg prices, but there's another food category
 that might be giving shoppers sticker shock: beef.
Sirloin
 steak prices averaged $11.97 per pound in January, just shy of 
November's record high of $12.01 per pound. In addition, ground beef 
prices averaged $5.55 per pound, again not far from the record high of 
$5.67 per pound set in September.
Overall, the cost of beef and veal has gone up 5.5% since last year.
This is C.I.'s "The Snapshot" for Friday:
Friday, March 14, 2025.  We're putting MSNBC on pause, Chump continues 
his war on education, propaganda is not news coverage, and much more.
We're
 starting with that CNN video for a number of reasons.  First the 
reaction -- negative reaction -- to US House Rep Chuck Edwards is news. 
This is happening around the country and it is news.
Second, it's CNN.  
Not MSNBC.
Lawrence
 O'Donnell was off last night and won't be back until two Mondays from 
now.  Had he been on last night, we would have highlighted him if he'd 
covered the above but we would have most likely highlighted him on 
something. 
You're not going to find MSNBC in today's snapshot.  You won't find it later in the day up here.
Maybe back on Monday.  
The community shapes this site and always has.  
Too many of you are furious with MSNBC right now.  I get it.  I really do and we'll go into that in a moment. 
11:30
 pm EST is the last time we noted them.  If I'd known the objection when
 I was queuing up videos before the roundtable for the gina & krista
 round-robin, that video would not have gone up here. 
Let's go back to the CNN video.
A veteran is loudly calling out a US House Rep who is failing We The People.
If
 you've missed it, House Conversion Queen Mike Johnson has insisted that
 the people -- all these people -- showing up at rallies to demand that 
their Congressional reps do their jobs and stop serving Musk and Chump 
and start serving the people -- he's insisted these are paid agitators 
and George Soros or someone else has paid them.
If
 tomorrow we find out that the veteran in the video above was paid off 
or was not who he presented as, we'd have every reason in the world to 
be upset.  Every reason.
That's not going to be the case with the veteran above.  But if it had been, we'd have every right to be outraged.
A
 number of you are outraged about a similar issue around protests and 
you're sick of MSNBC trying to shove it down your throat while lying.
Yes, I agree with the community, it is lying. 
When
 the genocide in Gaza began (or this wave), we covered the protests and 
supported the protesters on campuses across the country.  Good for 
American students for using their voices.   We covered it here.  We 
bought in some of the activists that Ava and I met with on campuses for 
roundtables.  
And when the corporate media, 
not just FOX "NEWS," would lie, we'd call them out.  We're the only ones
 that called out some of that garbage.  We'd point out that this average
 student, 'voice of the people' that was denouncing other students for 
protesting was, in fact, a paid member of the right-wing media.  FAIR 
didn't do it.  We did. It was a story of lies, a story of media bias and
 a story of media conglomeration (the country's largest owner of 
stations across the country broadcast the same lie filled 'report on 
every station they owned for example).  
Those 
liars that we called out?  They're still liars.  They received money 
from right-wing media and that wasn't disclosed in the 'reports' they 
were featured in.
But one thing that they said often was that these student protests were being led by non-students and/or foreigners.
The
 charge is often made.  And it's made because no one wants someone 
sticking their nose in our country's business.  So if it's a foreigner 
leading this, then it is a lot different.
I've 
denounced this here for the whole week -- we're talking about the 
Syrian-born Palestinian activist who, turns out, pretty much led, 
organized and spoke for the Columbia University-based protests.
In
 the CNN video above, we hear what the veterans is saying.  And, sure, 
we applaud him partly because we agree with him.  But we also applaud 
him because of the integrity he's bringing to his remarks.
If
 FOX "NEWS" does an expose Sunday morning revealing that the veteran 
isn't who we've been led to believe he was, we're going to feel ripped 
off.
(Again, that's not going to happen.  The man's a veteran and he wasn't paid by anyone.)
So a lot of you are angry about the Syrian-born activist and, again, I get it.  
It helps out FOX "NEWS" and that's bad enough.  But we also got lied to and that's equally bad.
The problem you're having with MSNBC is that they won't shut up about it.
Excuse me, they don't cover what we're talking about.
They
 cover the Syrian-born activist as a martyr and a noble person and 
they're not doing coverage -- as Keesha pointed out in last night's 
roundtable, "They are putting their thumbs on the scales and 
misinforming to shape our opinions."  She's exactly right.
MSNBC
 has yet to grapple with the fact that the US-led campus protests were 
not all US-led and that the activist in question makes us all look like 
fools because we defended against the charges that this was a foreign 
influenced movement.  
MSNBC doesn't want to inform you of that.
They do want to try to tell you what to think.  
And, here's the thing, they're not succeeding.
Syrian-born is a liar.  And a lot of us feel betrayed.
They
 are trying to create a news story -- there has been no news there since
 he was arrested, it's now a matter for the courts.  But MSNBC has 
decided to stake their brand on this bulls**t.
You're
 doing the right thing when they start doing that and you turn off the 
TV or change the channel.  I spoke with a friend in management and 
they're also getting a lot of complaints about this coverage -- as they 
should be.  But turning off the TV or changing the channel will send a 
much stronger message.  
Again, there's no 
story there.  There was no reason, for example, for Chris Hayes to cover
 it last night -- I didn't watch, I only became aware during last 
night's round table. 
There are no new developments and MSNBC isn't being honest.
We defended those students, we defended the movement and now Syrian-born is making FOX "NEWS" look like the truth teller.  
So,
 yes, I get the anger.  And when Lawrence comes back, we'll highlight 
him.  Other than that, I'm going to have wait on the community's 
decisions.  
I also heard -- and agree -- 
during the roundtable that the attack on school breakfasts and lunches 
is 100% more important than any one person -- certainly more than the 
Syrian-born activist.  This is going to take place in over forty states 
if the administration gets away with it. Over forty states. And, as 
we've noted this week, this is going to mean that farmers are going to 
be struggling even more because the cuts are going to harm them.  But 
they're also going to harm our country's children.
A
 growling stomach?  You can't learn on that.  If a child is going 
hungry, their basic needs aren't being met and, yes, it does effect 
education.
Now you may be the biggest sack of 
s**t MAGA idiot.  But I would think even that person who hates the world
 and thinks all adults are welfare cheats would have the brains not to 
blame a child.  We're supposed to protect the children.  We're adults.  
That's our job.  And cutting the food program is not protecting them.  
Again, you may hate their parents for example if you're MAGA but I think
 you'd have to agree that the children themselves haven't done anything 
wrong.  The gutting that's going on right now is appalling and inhumane 
and destroying the economy.  That's across the board. 
But
 the attacks on children's meals -- like the attacks on science -- are 
much worse because they will do long lasting damage and, again, we're 
the adults, we're supposed to protect the children.
In the roundtable, a number of you made clear that MSNBC isn't interested in this story.
They're
 flooding the zone on the Syrian-born activist but America's children 
apparently don't have enough disposable income to interest MSNBC so 
they'll instead bore us all with another story about the Syrian-Born 
activist.
We need to take back at least one 
house of Congress in the mid-terms -- I want both.  And MSNBC's coverage
 isn't helping with that.
The protests were 
divisive.  Actions can be.  Didn't bother me.  Didn't bother me that we 
lost some readers (and about 40 community members) by covering the 
protests.  
It was news and I still applaud the American students on campuses who spoke out -- the Americans.
But the b.s. that soon overtook everything cost us the election.  And now we live in horror each day.
So,
 I hear you, you're not in the mood for MSNBC and their ignoring of real
 stories that impact the American people and could impact the mid-terms 
to instead do another whine about Syrian-born.
We got enough propaganda on him before he was arrested.  We don't need anymore.
Repeating
 from last night, a permanent resident?  That's a status and it doesn't 
mean it can't be revoked.  You're getting liars telling you all sorts of
 things there.  My favorite is: It has to be proven in court!
Where the f**k have you lived since 9/11?
That's why community members are so angry at MSNBC, they're doing propaganda.
The
 courts have bent over backwards to take the government's word on 
terrorism.  Over and over since 9/11 -- and they weren't all that 
reluctant prior to that.
There's also the 
reality that he may in fact be part of terrorism.  I don't know.  I 
don't know him.  I thought Columbia's protests were being led by 
American students at Columbia.  He's duped the public once already so, 
no, I'm not staking my word on his claims.  
They
 also don't seem to understand immigration.  You can't lie on 
paperwork.  If you do, you can lose a visa or a green card.  That's 
reality.  Reality is also  that most of us will lie on a form.  
Especially if it's a lengthy form.  And it might be a lie of omission, 
it might be you short handing something, but it happens all the time.  
And that's their out -- the government's out -- when they want to revoke
 whatever they granted to a foreigner.  
We 
have serious issues to address in this country.  We all have to figure 
out what they are and cover what we need to cover -- what we feel we 
need to cover.
MSNBC could argue that this is 
the story that they feel that they need to cover.  Fine.  But they need 
to accept the fact that viewers are already tuning out on them and that 
will only increase as more air time is wasted on this non-story.
Non-story!!! He could be deported!!!
He
 could be.  Hasn't happened yet.  The only news was that he was taken 
into custody over the weekend and the plan is to deport him.  That 
headline has been more than conveyed.  You're no longer doing news, 
you're doing propaganda for his defense attorney.
And you're doing that while you're ignoring American children.  
In
 the mid-terms, other than a few freaks, no one's going to basing their 
vote on what happened to the Syrian-born activist.  What Chump's doing 
to America's children?  That's going to be an issue.   The measles 
outbreak that continues to spread because we have anti-science fools in 
Chump's administration?  That's going to be an issue.
I said this last night in the roundtable but let me repeat it here:
I
 do not live in front of the TV.  I do not know every thing that is said
 or done on MSNBC.  I do leave the TV on these days because I'm a 
Nielsen viewer but I really am not a TV person.  So I was not aware that
 this non-story -- it's a headline at this point -- about one person was
 taking up so much TV real estate on MSNBC.  I understand the anger I'm 
hearing [in the roundtable] and this matter's addressed.  We'll put a 
halt on including MSNBC for the time being except for Lawrence 
O'Donnell.  We'll continue to asses this as a community.
So, again, my apologies.  It was my ignorance completely.  And I am sorry.
This is an important topic so the time above was not wasted but let's wrap up with a few other things.  Aimee Picchi (CBS NEWS) reports:
The
 U.S. Department of Agriculture is cutting two federal programs that 
provided about $1 billion in funding to schools and food banks to buy 
food directly from local farms, ranchers and producers, part of what the
 agency said was a decision to "return to long-term, fiscally 
responsible initiatives."
The 
move cancels about $660 million in funding this year for the Local Food 
for Schools program, which is active in 40 U.S. states, as well as about
 $420 million for a second program called the Local Food Purchase 
Assistance Cooperative Agreement, which helps food banks and other local
 groups provide food to their communities. 
The
 decision comes as the Trump administration and Elon Musk's Department 
of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, say they are slashing federal 
spending to reduce government waste. The USDA programs were funded 
through the agency's Commodity Credit Corporation, a Depression-era fund
 created to buy products directly from farmers.
I
 have no idea why this isn't getting more coverage.  We noted it this week.  This an attack on America's children.  This will 
impact so many and it's bread-and-butter issue so you'd think 
politicians and news outlets would be running with this story.  It's 
also impacting farmers:
One
 farmer in Massachusetts told CBS News Boston that she was concerned the
 funding cut could hurt her business. Katie Carlson, president of 
Carlson Orchards in Harvard, Massachusetts, said the Worcester Regional 
Food Hub, which connects school districts with food from local farmers 
through the USDA program, had been a reliable customer. 
"We
 know that this time of year we can count on the Worcester Food Hub," 
Carlson said. "They may not be huge orders every week, but we know that 
they're coming to take something every week, so if that were to all of a
 sudden drop off [...] It's just not, not good."
So
 children and farmers will suffer in order for Convicted Felon Donald 
Chump to deliver tax breaks to his wealthy and crooked friends.  That's 
our nation priority when trash occupies the White House: Tax breaks for 
the wealthy and attack the working class and America's future.  In news 
of Chump's other attacks on education, ABC NEWS reports:
The
 Department of Education's far-reaching layoffs have decimated a small 
statistical agency considered to be the "authoritative and trusted 
source" of information on the education system in the United States, 
four former employees familiar with the situation told ABC News.
Since
 the 1860s, the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) has 
collected and analyzed data on education across the country, which has 
been used by policymakers and the public to measure academic success, 
teacher productivity and crime and safety in schools, among other 
topics.
It issues a congressionally mandated 
test called the National Assessment of Education Progress -- better 
known as the "Nation's Report Card" -- which, since 1969, has been 
considered the gold standard of testing to compare the academic 
performance and progress of students across all 50 states in math and 
reading across several grades.
Since 1860 . . .  But, of course, idiot Chump knows better. 
Chump
 declares war on education because, as a deeply stupid person, he's 
always railed against the notion that people could improve their lives 
via education.  So he attacks and attacks and attacks.  Another 
example, Erin Hudson and Sophie Alexander (BLOOMBERG NEWS) reports:
The US Department of Education’s sweeping cuts Tuesday included staff that oversee schools’ efforts to help millions of students learn English.
Employees
 from the Office of English Language Acquisition, or OELA, are being 
eliminated as part of the Education Department’s reduction in force this
 week, according to the American Federation of Government Employees 
Local 252, the union representing the agency’s employees. The wider 
Education Department cuts aim to eliminate half of its more than 4,000 
employees. A spokesperson for the department said OELA’s work will 
continue in another division.
[. . .]
At
 least a dozen OELA staff were cut including those who worked on the 
Title III program, which provides federal funding for states to improve 
education for students learning English, as well as the National 
Professional Development Program and the Native American and Alaska 
Native Children in School program, which train teachers to support those
 students, according to a person familiar with the matter who asked not 
to be named and a document seen by Bloomberg.
On the Native American issue, CRONKITE NEWS adds:
The
 National Council of Urban Indian Health issued a press release deeming 
“federal layoffs targeting essential tribal programs … catastrophic for 
Indian Country.”
“DEI requires 
context,” said Tempe Chief Diversity Officer Velicia McMillan Humes. 
“You have to understand that this is addressing a greater, longer, 
pervasive issue.”
Diversity training began with
 affirmative action after President John F. Kennedy signed an executive 
order in 1961 that required federal contractors to create equal 
employment for all.
“You have to learn how to 
create strategies to engage individuals who don’t feel safe or 
comfortable or don’t feel like they’ll be heard,” Humes said. “But the 
first thing we need to do is recognize that we have played a role in 
that inequity.”
Everyone is under assault in Chump Land.  Thomas Kika (CNET) observes:
President
 Donald Trump and his administration appear to be ramping up plans to 
abolish the Department of Education, a long-promised move that has 
prompted as much alarm as it has uncertainty.
The
 Department of Education has been around in some form since the mid-19th
 century, with its current cabinet-level form being created when a law 
passed by Congress and signed by President Jimmy Carter spun it off from
 the broader Department of Health, Education and Welfare in 1979. Over 
the decades, it's frequently come under fire from conservative 
lawmakers, including from President Ronald Reagan, Carter's successor, 
but the calls have usually been for it to be stripped back, not shut 
down outright.
This pushback 
was supercharged, however, when Trump pledged during his 2024 campaign 
to do just that: shutter the department completely. That threat took 
another step forward in early March, when Trump's former Small Business 
Administration head Linda McMahon (yes, that Linda McMahon)
 was sworn in as the new secretary of education and quickly sent a memo 
to department workers claiming that they would be carrying out its 
"final mission." Recent reports also indicate the Trump administration 
was working on an executive order directing the secretary to prepare for
 the end of the department, and on March 11 it was announced that half 
of its staff was being cut as part the planned shutdown.
Senator Patty Murray's office issued the following regarding Chump's attacks on education:
Let's wind down with some good news, Lloyd Lee (BUSINESS INSIDER) notes:
Tesla
 has lost so much value in such a short period of time that JPMorgan 
analysts said they couldn't think of another comparable moment in 
automotive history.
"We
 struggle to think of anything analogous in the history of the 
automotive industry, in which a brand has lost so much value so 
quickly," they wrote, adding that the closest example was when Japanese 
and Korean car brands lost sales amid "diplomatic disputes" with China 
in 2012 and 2017, respectively.
The JPMorgan 
analysts wrote in a note on Wednesday that those historical cases were 
"confined to a single market, whereas the decline in Tesla sales in 2025
 is not specific to any one nation or geography."
JPMorgan
 analysts cut their price target on Tesla by about 41% from $230.58 to 
$135, lowering guidance on vehicle deliveries for the first quarter of 
2025 to about 355,000 — an 8% year-over-year decrease from the first 
quarter of 2024.
From December to Wednesday 
after trading hours, Tesla lost nearly 49% of its market cap, seeing its
 peak value of $1.54 trillion from the end of last year fall to about 
$777 billion.
ADDED 20 minutes after post published:
The Black Commentator Issue #1032 is now Online
 
March 13, 2025

Read issue 1032
March 13, 2025

Read issue 1032
Our email address is BlackCommentator@gmail.com
Our voicemail number is 856.823.1739
The following sites updated:
 
