A Greenland Solution
A One-Way Ticket
After President Trump’s term of office concludes, the United States must do two things: (1) Reiterate the legislation and agreements recognizing that Greenland is a part of and should remain under the control of Denmark, and (2) appoint him as a permanent American emissary to that place, provided that he reside there permanently, even if it takes a ‘Go Fund Me’ campaign to buy him a one way ticket to get there and a gold painted dog sled.
* * *
'What Kind of Fool am I?’
That’s the title of a song from the 1962 Broadway musical, ‘Stop the World, I Want to Get Off,’ which premiered earlier in London.
But we’ll get back to that shortly.
According to the Constitution, (Article I,Section 8), the powers of Congress include the levying of tariffs on imports. Here’s how it reads: ‘The Congress shall have Power To lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises, to pay the Debts and provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of the United States, etc, etc. … ‘That sounds to me like imposing tariffs is the job of Congress.
But it doesn’t say they have that power ‘exclusively.’ It is understandable that the President can also assume this power, among other powers, but only in a national emergency. But he can’t run around making one or more such emergencies up!
President Trump interprets this extremely liberally, using the mere threat of imposing tariffs as a weapon in our relationship with other nations, without any real national emergencies existing. When he first started using this tool, he was challenged, but such criticism has become mired in back and forth arguments and its resolution awaits the opinion of the Supreme Court. Don’t hold your breath waiting for that to happen. Meanwhile he continues to do it, along with many other illegal or unconstitutional acts.
But get one thing straight. Allowing him to get away with that weakens the rule of law on which our government is based. If there’s a national emergency at this time, it is the person who is the current occupant of the White House.
President Trump will go down in history as a criminal, convicted in the courts of New York State on 34 counts, and a lawbreaker. That is why he is tacking his name on everything in sight right now, fully believing that would never happen once he is out of office and Americans realize what kind of fools they were to elect him President twice, succumbing to what amounted to a political version of his shady real estate developer’s pitches.
Anyone who voted for him should be joining with Anthony Newley as he asked the question raised by the song from that show back in the 1960’s and the subsequent motion picture:
‘What Kind of Fool Am I?
JL
* * *
Coming Together
I try to keep clickable links at a minimum (most of you know how to get there anyway) on Jackspotpourri. But Simon Rosenberg’s January 18 piece on ‘Coming Together’ is something you should not miss. Please copy and paste https://www.hopiumchronicles.com/p/sunday-hopium-some-thoughts-on-meeting on your device’s browser line, or click right here.
JL
* * *
Jeffrey Who?
While Professor Heather Cox Richardson’ January 15 ‘Letters from an American’ repeats the litany of President Trump’s misdeeds and the acts by which they manifest themselves, she also makes the point that they take the spotlight off of the Epstein documents, only a miniscule portion of which have been released, even in a ‘redacted’ format, despite an act of Congress requiring that be done by a now-passed deadline. Who is hiding what? This will not end well for those involved, but also for the nation that let this mess stay out of the spotlight for so very long!
JL
* * *
Future Actions by a Democratic Congress
Nice column by Maureen Dowd in the Times on January 17 and Heather Cox Richardson’s ‘Letters from an American’ dated January 16 and January 19 as well. Read them.
It is obvious that the President is out of his mind and beyond senility! No doubt about it.
I believe that if (I cautiously avoid using the word ‘when’) the Democrats take control of both houses of Congress in November, Trump will finally be successfully impeached, or removed from office through the 25th Amendment. There will be problems with his successor, but at least the Mad King will be replaced with sanity. See the top article in this posting for an idea of what then to do with him.
A Democratic Congress might also immediately withhold funding of the Immigration Control and Enforcement Agency until it starts observing the provisions of the Constitution and its Amendments, and we have an Executive Branch that must learn that lesson as well. Congress controls ‘the power of the purse’ and must use that power.
* *
Two misguided and crazy assassination attempts on the President’s life (one in Pennsylvania where his ear was struck and one threatening him on one of his golf courses, aborted by the Secret Service) as well as innumerable columnists’ opinions and newspaper editorials have failed to budge Donald Trump from his tyrannical behavior which can destroy our nation and the alliances with other democracies it has led for years. As an editorial example, here’s the text of the South Florida Sun Sentinel’s editorial of January 20. It is very hard to disagree with it:
'Weakened and Weary: America a Year Later - Sun Sentinel Editorial Board - January 19, 2026 at 6:00 AM EST
President Trump’s second inauguration one year ago found our nation more divided and apprehensive than at any time since the Civil War. For his followers, it was a time for jubilation. For others, it foreshadowed grave danger for our republic. The fears weren’t idle after Trump tried to overturn the 2020 election he had lost and threatened retribution against those who thwarted him. A better person would have taken his return to power as an opportunity to put the past aside and unite us. But Trump is everything a president should never be: petty, petulant, vindictive, vulgar, indifferent to unwelcome facts, addicted to lying, ignorant of history and pathologically egotistic.
He boycotted Joe Biden’s inauguration.
He refuses to display Biden’s portrait at the White House.
He recently replied to a heckler with an obscene gesture.
It was apparent almost from the moment of his second inauguration that he did not intend to keep his oath to uphold the Constitution. His conduct has been the worst that we feared, and then some. In what seemed a joking remark (with him, you can never be sure), Trump recently told congressional Republicans that he would not try to block the 2026 election because people would then call him a dictator. It’s much too late for that.
Defining a tyrant
A president who prostitutes the Department of Justice to persecute or intimidate his perceived enemies, now including the chairman of the independent Federal Reserve, is a tyrant.
A president who demands absolute obedience from his party’s officeholders and who calls for their defeat when one crosses him is a tyrant.
A president who threatens to seize another nation’s territory “whether they like it or not” is a tyrant.
A president who orders states to redraw voting districts in a non-Census year to strangle the opposition is a tyrant.
A president bent on imposing his will on everything from the media to universities to international corporations to major law firms to the nation’s museums to how the states conduct their elections is a tyrant.
A president who trashes the people’s White House as if he owned it, and who plants his image or name on everything from National Park passes to a memorial for an assassinated predecessor, is a tyrant.
A president who makes war and orders extrajudicial killings on the oceans without so much as notifying Congress is a tyrant.
Contempt for the Constitution
Trump’s contempt for the Constitution and for any restraint on his conduct was on display throughout a two-hour interview with New York Times reporters Jan. 7.
“Is there anything that could stop you?” they asked.
“Yeah, there is one thing,” he replied. “My own morality. My own mind. It’s the only thing that can stop me, and that’s very good.” The words of a tyrant.
Pressed about Greenland, he said it “may be a choice” to seize it by force, even if that should destroy NATO.
He seemed to forget that he had promised the public $2,000 checks from his tariffs, then claimed the right to pay them without congressional approval. He spoke of replacing tariffs with “licenses” if the Supreme Court rules against him.
‘I won three times’: A lie.
He would not commit to respecting the 2026 congressional election returns, insisting that “we have very dishonest elections” and that “I won three times.”
A better president and wiser Congress could eventually remediate the vast damage that Trump has done to the federal work force, civil rights, equal opportunity, scientific research, the environment, the national debt, public health, ethics in government, our diplomatic corps and the industries decimated by ICE’s inhumane arrests and deportations.
There are greater damages that will be far more daunting to repair.
He has shattered the respect our nation earned worldwide over 250 years as a beacon of democracy.
He has encouraged authoritarian movements elsewhere, abetted Putin’s ruthless war, vandalized the international economic order and threatened NATO’s existence.
Why should our allies trust us? Why should any enemy respect us?
The worst of it is the repudiation of the bedrock American faith that ours is a nation of laws and that no one is above them.
A Reckless Supreme Court
The Age of Trump has coincided disastrously with a Supreme Court majority predisposed to inflating the presidency at the expense of Congress, the Constitution and the public. Chief Justice John Roberts’ ghastly opinion that a president cannot be prosecuted in connection with his official acts has emboldened Trump with a frightening sense of unaccountability.
Together, Trump, Roberts and the spineless Republican majority in Congress have exposed a potentially fatal weakness: The Constitution is only as effective as the good faith of those elected to uphold it.
America desperately needs a Congress able and willing to restrain the tyrant and to impeach and remove him. That, right there, is the overarching issue of the midterm elections.'
The Sun Sentinel Editorial Board consists of Opinion Editor Steve Bousquet, Deputy Opinion Editor Dan Sweeney, editorial writers Pat Beall and Martin Dyckman, and Executive Editor Gretchen Day-Bryant. To contact us, email at letters@sun-sentinel.com.
* *
It is clear that the only way to get rid of Trump, his ideas, and his followers will be on Election Day when voters can get the job done as the above editorial points out. The bullets of madmen, the words written or spoken by journalists, and demonstrations on the streets are not enough. It is totally up to YOU to get it done on Election Day. Big job, but you can do it!
JL
* * *
Sports Gambling’s Back in the News
The presence of sports gambling sites (Draftkings, Fanduel, MGM, etc.) on the internet creates legitimacy for the kind of betting that once used to be, and which still may be, illegal, and what once required contact with a neighborhood bookie. So we shouldn’t be surprised that some athletes can be bribed to affect the outcome of games where big money is at stake. With college athletes being paid through ‘legitimate’ NIL schemes, they are no less motivated by money than are professionals, and ignore the fact that what they do may be illegal. After all, they may think that if it’s all over TV and the internet, it must be okay.
If someone wants to place a bet, they should go to a brick and mortar physical casino with a ‘sportsbook,’ where there usually is some measure of State regulation. That regulation may or may not be extended to online sports gambling sites also run by such regulated casinos, like MGM’s or the ones run by the Hard Rock Casinos in Florida.
Bribery is less likely to occur in baseball where many variable factors come into play, but basketball, football, ice hockey, and of course horse racing are ripe for such dishonesty, where a slight reduction in an athlete’s intensity can mean many dollars to bettors.
Newspapers and websites regularly provide the ‘line’ for such events, usually a handicapper’s opinion, and believe me, such advice is not intended for those playing in moneyless or penny-ante ‘fantasy’ leagues.
Horse racing odds remain a possible exception. The ‘morning line,’ while still determined by handicappers, is replaced by race time electronically by the actual amounts of money wagered in a regulated pari-mutual system at a racetrack or in its satillite betting ‘parlors.’ Still, however, a jockey can always let up just a bit on using his whip in the homestretch.
When there is a scandal, blame those who opened the door to supposedly legitimate, but unregulated, wagering sites online. As I pointed out, some atheletes may think that because they are all over TV and the internet, they must be okay.
Come to think of it, the people behind some of the unregulated online wagering sites might be the same people to whom those neighborhood bookies of years ago passed on those wagers (the expression was ‘laid off’) involving the risk of having to make giant payouts to a winner and which they knew they could not personally bankroll. (In the insurance industry, this practice is known as ‘reinsurance’ and is totally legitimate.) In wagering, those who collect the ‘vigerish’ really don’t care who the winner is so long as they can collect their cut off of the top.
JL
* * *
Housekeeping on Jackspotpourri
Your comments on this ‘blog’ would be appreciated. My Email address is jacklippman18@gmail.com.
Forwarding Postings: Please forward this posting to anyone you think might benefit from reading it (Friends, relatives, enemies, etc.) If you want to send someone the blog, you can just tell them to check it out by visiting https://jackspotpourri.blogspot.com or you can provide a link to that address in your email to them.
There’s another, perhaps easier, method of forwarding it though! Google Blogspot, the platform on which Jackspotpourri is prepared, makes that possible. If you click on the tiny envelope with the arrow at the bottom of every posting, you will have the opportunity to list up to ten email addresses to which that blog posting will be forwarded, along with a brief comment from you. Each will receive a link to click on that will directly connect them to the blog. Either way will work, sending them the link to https://jackspotpourri.blogspot.com , or clicking on the envelope at the bottom of this posting.
Email Alerts: If you are NOT receiving emails from me alerting you each time there is a new posting on Jackspotpourri, just send me your email address and we’ll see that you do. And if you are forwarding a posting to someone, you might suggest that they do the same, so they will be similarly alerted. You can pass those email addresses to me by email at jacklippman18@gmail.com
More on the Sources of Information on Jackspotpourri: The sources of information used by Jackspotpourri include a delivered local daily ‘paper’ newspaper (now becoming the South Florida Sun Sentinel) and what appears in my daily email; that includes the views of many contributors. Be aware that when I open that email, I first quickly glance at and screen out those sent to my very old former email address and those considered ‘promotional’ by Gmail’s system as no more than advertisements or requests for donations.
Besides these sources, I also utilize the Google search engine where I can look up any subject I want. Lately, these search results have been headed by a very generalized summary clearly labeled as being developed by AI (Artificial Intelligence). On occasion I might use such search results, but when I do, I will say that I am doing so. Generally, however, I try not to use such summaries in preparing Jackspotpourri.
After such ‘AI’ search results, there follows the other results of my search. Unlike the anonymous AI-generated summaries, the sources of these results are clearly indicated, giving them a greater credibility than any AI summary. I feel that It comes down to who YOU want to be in the driver’s seat in seeking information: yourself or something else (Artificial Intelligence), the structure of which somewhere along the way had to have been created by others, with whose identity I am neither familiar nor comfortable. At least when I read a column by Timothy Snyder, for example, I know from where it comes, and to some extent, what to expect.
Caution should be exercised in using Artificial Intelligence.
JL
* * * *

