Welcome to The Cruelest Day: Tuesday February 11, 2025, and National Peppermint Patty Day. I can’t show a picture (copyright issues!) but here’s some information from Wikipedia, where you can find a drawing from the Peanuts strip:
Peppermint Patty is a fictional character featured in Charles M. Schulz‘s comic strip Peanuts. Her full name, very rarely used in the strip, is Patricia Reichardt. She is one of a small group in the strip who live across town from Charlie Brown and his school friends (although in The Peanuts Movie, Snoopy in Space, and The Snoopy Show she, Marcie, and Franklin live in the same neighborhood and attend the same school). She has freckles and “mousy-blah” hair, and generally displays the characteristics of a tomboy.
Charles M. Schulz modeled Peppermint Patty after a favorite cousin, Patricia Swanson, who served as a regular inspiration for Peanuts. Schulz had also named his earlier character Patty after Swanson, and he coined his well-known phrase “Happiness is a Warm Puppy” during a conversation with her in 1959. Swanson’s roommate Elise Gallaway served as the model for Peppermint Patty’s best friend Marcie. In later years, especially after lesbian groups began identifying with Peppermint Patty, Schulz downplayed the fact that the character was based on Swanson to protect her privacy.
In one interview, Schulz stated that he coined Peppermint Patty’s name after noticing a dish of peppermint patties in his house and deciding the name was so good that he should use it before another artist thought of the same joke. He created the character design to fit the name. Peppermint Patty debuted in the strip of August 22, 1966. In 1972, Schulz introduced the character’s last name, Reichardt, which he borrowed from the last name of his secretary, Sue Reichardt, whose favorite character was Peppermint Patty.
It’s also Get out Your Guitar Day (I have a Martin that I no longer play), International Day of Woman and Girls in Science, and National Latte Day. Here’s mine from yesterday (Puerto Rican coffee courtesy of Divy):
Readers are welcome to mark notable events, births, or deaths on this day by consulting the February 11 Wikipedia page.
Da Nooz:
*Trump is about to intensify his trade war by levying tariffs on steel and aluminum from every country, including Canada and Mexico (article archived here):
President Trump is poised to move forward with sweeping tariffs on foreign steel and aluminum on Monday, re-upping a policy from his first term that pleased domestic metal makers, but hurt other American industries and ignited trade wars with allies on multiple fronts.
The 25 percent tariffs that the president said he would impose on foreign steel and aluminum will be welcomed by domestic steelmakers, who argue they are struggling to compete against cheap foreign metals. As they did during Mr. Trump’s first term, U.S. metal makers have been lobbying the administration for protection, and Trump officials agree that a strong domestic metal sector is essential for U.S. national security.
But the tariffs will invite plenty of controversy. They are likely to rankle America’s allies, like Canada and Mexico, who supply the bulk of U.S. metal imports. And they could incite retaliation on U.S. exports, as well as pushback from American industries that use metals to make cars, food packaging and other products. Those sectors will face significantly higher prices after the tariffs go into effect.
That’s what happened in Mr. Trump’s first term, when he slapped 25 percent tariffs on foreign steel and aluminum. While he and President Biden eventually ended up rolling back those tariffs on most major metal suppliers, they were often replaced with other trade barriers, like quotas. Studies have shown that while the measures helped U.S. metal makers, they ended up hurting the broader economy, because they raised prices for so many other industries.
And of course that’s what’s expected. Tariffs are no good for anybody, and ultimately the consumer pays the price. Further, among his other unconstitutional acts, the NYT reports that Trump is contemplating running for a third term!:
Just eight days after he won a second term, Mr. Trump — whose supporters attacked the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, in an effort to prevent Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory from being certified — mused about whether he could have a third presidential term, which is barred by the Constitution.
Since then, he has floated the idea frequently. In public, he couches the notion of staying in office beyond two terms as a humorous aside. In private, Mr. Trump has told advisers that it is just one of his myriad diversions to grab attention and aggravate Democrats, according to people familiar with his comments. And he has made clear that he is happy to be past a grueling campaign in which he faced two assassination attempts and followed an aggressive schedule in the final weeks.
The third-term gambit could also serve another purpose, political observers noted: keeping congressional Republicans in line as Mr. Trump pushes a maximalist version of executive authority with the clock ticking on his time in office.
The man is insane! (But we knew that already.) This, like the prohibition of birthrights, is destined to sink like a lead balloon. The Supreme Court wouldn’t allow anything like this, for it’s a clear violation of the Consitution.
*The WSJ reports that, in violation of international law, Ukrainian prisoners of war are now subject to unlimited violence and torture in Russian prisons, with no restrictions on what can be done to them.
In the weeks after Russia invaded Ukraine, the head of St. Petersburg’s prisons delivered a direct message to an elite unit of guards tasked with overseeing the influx of prisoners from the war: “Be cruel, don’t pity them.”
. . . Those meetings set in motion nearly three years of relentless and brutal torture of Ukrainian prisoners of war. Guards applied electric shocks to prisoners’ genitals until batteries ran out. They beat the prisoners to inflict maximum damage, experimenting to see what type of material would be most painful. They withheld medical treatment to allow gangrene to set in, forcing amputations.
Three former prison officials told The Wall Street Journal how Russia planned and executed what United Nations investigators have described as widespread and systematic torture. Their accounts were supported by official documents, interviews with Ukrainian prisoners and a person who has helped the Russian prison officials defect.
. . . . Pavel Afisov, who was taken prisoner in the city of Mariupol in the initial months of the war, was among the first Ukrainian prisoners detained in Russia. For 2½ years, the 25-year-old was moved from prison to prison in Russia before being released in October of last year.
He said beatings were the worst when he was transferred into new prisons. After arriving at a penitentiary in Russia’s Tver region, north of Moscow, he was led by guards into a medical examination room and ordered to strip naked. They shocked him repeatedly with a stun gun while shaving his head and beard.
When it was over, he was told to yell “glory to Russia, glory to the special forces” and then ordered to walk to the front of the room—still naked—to sing the Russian and Soviet national anthems. When he said he didn’t know the words, the guards beat him again with their fists and batons.
The violence served a purpose for the Russian authorities, according to the former guards and human-rights advocates: making them more malleable for interrogations and breaking their will to fight. Prison interrogations were sometimes aimed at extracting confessions of war crimes or gaining operational intelligence from prisoners who had little will to resist after they suffered extreme brutality.
The former guards described a staggering level of violence directed at Ukrainian prisoners. Electric shockers were used so often, especially in showers, that officers complained about them running out of battery life too fast.
One former penitentiary system employee, who worked with a team of medics in Voronezh region in southwestern Russia, said prison guards beat Ukrainians until their police batons broke. He said a boiler room was littered with broken batons and the officers tested other materials, including insulated hot-water pipes, for their ability to cause pain and damage.
The guards, he said, intentionally beat prisoners on the same spot day after day, preventing bruises from healing and causing infection inside the accumulated hematoma. The treatment led to blood poisoning and muscle tissue would rot. At least one person died from sepsis, the officer said.
Many of the guards enjoyed the brutality and often bragged about how much pain they had caused prisoners, he said.
Well, this is close to how the Nazis treated Soviet prisoners of war, though it’s not quite as bad (the Germans often shot them or starved them to death). But it’s a war crime, and I doubt that Ukraine is doing anything like this. Remember when Trump said he’d stop the war in Ukraine on “day 1” of his administration?
*Two piece of news from the Hamas/Israel war. First, Hamas has suspended both the release of hostages and the cease-fire, blaming Israel for violating their agreement:
Hamas announced on its Telegram account on Monday that it is canceling the release of hostages on February 15 until further notice due to an Israeli violation.
Egyptian mediators fear that the statements will lead to a breakdown of negotiations. At the same time, Hamas told US mediators that the ceasefire was no longer in place due to Trump’s comments about displacing Palestinians.
The Hostages and Missing Families Forum said, following the announcement, that it has reached out to all countries mediating the agreement, demanding “swift assistance in finding an immediate and effective solution to restore the implementation of the deal.”
“We call on the Israeli government to refrain from actions that endanger the execution of the signed agreement and to ensure its continuation, securing the return of our 76 brothers and sisters,” the statement continued.
“The hostages are out of time, and they all must be rescued from this nightmare urgently,” the forum added.
They said they have officially contacted the government and the intelligence coordination unit to “clarify the situation and provide updates to all concerned families who fear for their loved ones’ fates.”
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is consulting with top security officials in light of Hamas’s announcement and intends to move the security cabinet meeting on Tuesday to the early morning hours.
One Israeli official told The Jerusalem Post that, in his view, Hamas did not attempt to sabotage the deal in its latest statement.
What is going on here? Hamas is complaining that Israel is not delivering enough goods to Gaza and not allowing Gazans to return to their homes in northern Gaza. Neither claim is true: Gazas who go north and find their homes in ruins are simply heading south again. Malgorzata suspects that this is a tactic that Hamas is using to try to wheedle more out of Israel than was agreed. We will know on Saturday, if more hostages are not handed back to Israel, if Hamas is really breaking the agreement. If so, then all hell may break loose.
*Also, the Palestinian Authority has stopped its “pay for slay” program (see Wikipedia article on the Palestinian “Martyr’s Fund”) which gives Palestinian prisoners in Israel (or Palestinians killed or injured while enacting terrorism money based on how many Jews they have killed or tried to kill (not a lot of people know about this).
Palestinian Authority (PA) Chairman Mahmoud Abbas issued an order to cancel laws and regulations related to paying financial allocations to the families of Palestinians linked with terrorist activity, known as “pay for slay,” on Monday, according to Palestinian Authority state media WAFA.
Additionally, the computerized cash assistance program, along with its database and financial allocations, will be transferred from the Ministry of Social Development to the Palestinian National Institution for Economic Empowerment, WAFA stated.
The amendments will allow all families previously benefiting from the former laws, regulations, and legislations to be subject to the same eligibility criteria as other families enrolled in social protection and welfare programs, according to WAFA.
The Palestinian Institution for Economic Empowerment will now assume full authority over all social protection and welfare programs in Palestine. It will be responsible for providing assistance to all Palestinian families in need, without discrimination, WAFA added.
Why are they eliminating this odious fund? Because Trump cut of all money to the Palestinian Authority, and Israel is withholding the pay-for-slay money from the prisoners. And, on top of that, there’s this:
This comes amid news that, on February, US courts will impose heavy fines – of about $200-300 million – on the Palestinian Authority – following lawsuits filed by families of terror victims. The PA is reportedly worried that this will lead to a financial crisis.
The Palestinian Authority arranged payment for families of dead Hamas terrorists amounting to a combined total of around $2.8 million, following the October 7 attacks, according to a report by the Palestinian Media Watch (PMW), a nongovernmental organization and media watchdog group.
With U.S. aid cut off, and fines in the offing, Abbas is in danger of losing his Presidency for life (that would be a good thing.) To try to avoid bankrupting the West Bank, Abbas seems to have decided that he can sacrifice the pay-for-slay program.
*From The Free Press‘s daily newsletter (yesterday) about the Super Bowl. You’ll want to click on some of the links, but I’ve also put two of the videos below (one is in a tweet).
The Super Bowl isn’t just a game, it’s a cultural barometer—and sometimes, a crystal ball. In 2016, Beyoncé danced on the Super Bowl stage to her new song “Formation,” flanked by backup dancers dressed like Black Panthers. Controversy ensued, foreshadowing the great war over woke that would dominate for years to come.
This year, another vibe shift. The NFL changed the message stenciled into the end zone from “End Racism” to “Choose Love.” Trump showed up—the first sitting president to do so—and his favorite patriotic walk-on song, “God Bless the USA,” was heard playing in the stadium. Kendrick Lamar’s halftime performance featured a nagging Uncle Sam character (played by Samuel L. Jackson) who told the rapper not to be “too ghetto,” but when backup dancers dressed in red, white, and blue formed the American flag, it felt more patriotic than political, even though his song “Alright” is perhaps best known as BLM’s unofficial anthem. And in another patriotic move, Kendrick performed “Not Like Us,” his Grammy Award–winning diss track against one of America’s new trade war enemies—Canadian rapper Drake.
Speaking of Canada, even the ads couldn’t escape the vibe shift. In the wake of Trump’s proposed, but currently delayed, 25 percent tariffs against Canadian goods, the province of Ontario ran an ad reminding Americans that Canucks are important trade partners and good neighbors, eh bud?
Speaking of “bud,” Bud Light launched a new ad to convince America they aren’t woke anymore. Still reeling from its disastrous 2023 campaign with transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney, which spurred an effective conservative boycott, the beer’s new commercial featured Peyton Manning, Post Malone, and Shane Gillis—a comic who was infamously fired from Saturday Night Live in 2019 for affecting a Chinese accent on a podcast. (Read Anson Frericks’ great essay on the Bud Light saga.)
Bud Light wasn’t the only company with a subtle rebrand. After a backlash last year over their support for trans women participating in female sports, Nike launched a new ad putting female athletes front and center. The tagline: You can’t win, so win. Well, maybe they can’t win because they’re competing against biological males, Nike. Still, the ad is about female sports and features only female athletes, which is radical conservatism by Nike’s standards.
The Nike ad (note the FP’s comment) is among the tweets below, along with a counter-ad by women objecting to trans-identified males competing in women’s sports. Here’s the Bud Light commercial:
Meanwhile in Dobrzyn, Hili and Szaron are in the kitchen, closely watching Andrzej:
Szaron: What is he doing?Hili: I don’t know, but it’s not what we are waiting for.
Szaron: Co on robi?Hili: Nie wiem, ale nie to, na co czekamy.
*******************
From Things With Faces. This spud is saying, “Don’t chop me up!”:
From Cat Memes:
From @secretsoftheoccult:
Masih posted this 2½-minute video Twitter post about Iranian women defying the hijab ban. Do watch it. I can’t embed it, but if you click on the screenshot you’ll go there.
I saw this ad, which apparently was meant to counter the Nike ad below. This is a good ad; I guess it was the Nike ad that “sucked”:
It sure seems like @Nike thought they needed a women’s ad.
I wonder why?
The ad sucked. You can’t win. So win. WTF does that even mean?
Dear Nike – your ad was no good. You’ve lost your mojo. Hypocrisy does that. No longer authentic. pic.twitter.com/iFUGa3u7gN
— Jennifer Sey (@JenniferSey) February 10, 2025
Here’s the ad (featuring famous women athletes urging other women to accomplish what they’re told they can’t):
From Luana. I can’t believe that encamping students (actually in buildings) at Bowdoin actually got punished!
Haha, Bowdoin is suspending the students occupying a campus building and telling on them.
They’ve received an “immediate temporary suspension…pending a College disciplinary process” and are kicked off campus.
They’re also told, “Your family will receive a copy of this letter.” pic.twitter.com/9jbChzo3P2
— Steve McGuire (@sfmcguire79) February 10, 2025
From Brian, showing the speed of light going around different planets. Jupiter is BIG!
Visualization of the speed of light on the surface of different planets. pic.twitter.com/LGOI1F3iNv
— Black Hole (@konstructivizm) February 10, 2025
From Malcolm; revenge cat:
The middle one planning revenge pic.twitter.com/ZNTCDBCLoN
— Posts Of Cats (@PostsOfCats) January 23, 2025
From the Auschwitz Memorial, one that I reposted:
Gassed upon arrival at the camp, this Italian Jewish girl was five.
— Jerry Coyne (@evolutionistrue.bsky.social) 2025-02-11T11:07:42.250Z
Two tweets from Dr. Cobb. The first on reports a finding that flies PLAY! I must read the paper!
Our story about flies on carousels is out in @currentbiology.bsky.social! After formally engaging the fantastic @clarahowcroft.bsky.social and integrating helpful reviewer feedback, we present a more concise story with detailed behavioural quantification and cooler videos! doi.org/10.1016/j.cu…
— Wolf Huetteroth (@wolfhuette.bsky.social) 2025-02-10T16:03:38.157Z
A lovely duck photo taken by one of Matthew’s friends:
Teal on the River Otter estuary this morning
— Andrew Luck-Baker (@andrewl-b.bsky.social) 2025-02-09T16:04:52.872Z






“Szaron: What is he doing?
Hili: I don’t know, but it’s not what we are waiting for.”
I like that – I think I’ve been there…
Oh and the “encampment” – seems to be back to how things should go.
Not so sure on the encampment response Bryan: so if they do not leave campus, or even the building, what is the threat? To maybe lead to further disciplinary action? But I see nothing that says these encampers who stand their ground will be physically removed either by campus authorities or the real police…or that they would attend their own hearings. I hope that there is more enforcement behind it, but as of this report, the letter is simply that- a letter – but still more than I expected at the time of my comment yesterday. So thank you Bowdoin admin!
I notice the return to in loco parentis for students with traditional families. That may help with them.
Mmm.
You know, there’s the “encampment”, and then there’s what’s called
The Freezeout
Bowdoin is in Maine.
Maine is in the Northern Hemisphere.
Great campin’ country year ’round.
You see where I’m goin’ with this…
The only downside to turning off the heat is that pipes will eventually freeze and split unless building service workers can get into the basement and drain them, after they shut the water off. They may encounter dangerous thugs inside the building, as maintenance workers did at Columbia. The water should be shut off in any case from outside to reduce the damage the occupiers can do — they surely will, it’s part of the fun — with fire hoses, smashed toilets, etc.
I would first just turn off the electricity and the water. There are still well over 12 hours of darkness in Maine and once everyone’s phones and battery lights stop working they will surely bail. Needless to say, food and water deliveries (and all entry) to the building should be strictly embargoed by college security. McGill U actually did this during a building occupation back in the 1980s. An earlier occupation of nearby Sir George Williams University (now Concordia) protesting racism or something did millions of dollars in damage to the computer centre.
I thought I should edit before times up:
A “freezeout” is camping in freezing weather. By definition, outdoors. Google was not enlightening, but “freezeout” is a shorthand for simply putting a tent down outdoors in freezing/winter weather and sleeping there overnight. I didn’t mean turn the heat off – good lord no!
It’s just I thought it was funny/silly – an “encampment” in winter…. but they are indoors… not exactly camping spirit.
There’s a Bruce Springsteen song 10th Avenue Freezeout but I haven’t looked up what they mean by it.
Anyway…
Just turn off the wi-fi!
Super Bowl…that’s football, right? I don’t even know who played, nor do I care enough to look it up.
Right roz…American football. I have lost pretty much all interest in college and professional sports in the US as the actual sport and athleticism themselves seem to be overshadowed, by enrichment of a few individual stars, delays in play by officials using technology to validate their calls, gambling on results, tv sponsorship commercials, and often announcers who seem only peripherally to focus on the game at hand. Free agency in professional sports long ago killed my allegiance to any one team as players moved around; free agency in college (known as the portal) has similarly killed team allegiance in college sports…not to mention the commercial aspects of killing off traditional college conferences.
So true. Since free agency I haven’t had an answer to “Who’s your team?” What does it matter. They really sucked the joy out of sports. It’s depressing. I turned to college ball and, as you say, they’ve ruined that now, too. Again, very depressing. It’s hard explaining this to young people. Gone are the days when we cried when our team lost. I simply cannot get behind a “Big 10” with Arizona in it. Get outta here! It’s all meaningless.
I live near a state university (Arkansas). They announced that they were increasing the costs of a seat license (money which must be paid in order to have the right to buy a season ticket) for basketball games. All so they can raise enough NIL money (Google that if needed) to PAY THE PLAYERS! I remember when a full college scholarship was reward enough.
Bread and circuses.
I’m torn on the NIL issue.
On one hand, it always was the case that the players received scholarships as a result of making the team, so that was the benefit of playing the sport.
On the other hand, the schools make a lot of money from certain sports as a result of the performance of the players, so why shouldn’t the players who supply the labor for those sports also get paid? After all, I got paid as a co-op student engineer while at the same time I was on an academic scholarship, and I also got some minimal payment to work as a lab tech at the college when I was an upperclassman.
Different times. I’m not saying it’s all good but I do understand it. At least the money is no longer provided under the table by alumi donors – it’s all above board or at least seems to be.
Pal Media Watch says: Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas intends to continue paying the terrorists through a third party to clear the PA of any connection to the terrorists, but the payments are slated to continue.
Noooo Andrea. Surely you lie! Far be it from “Palestine” to not be honest and on the level. Next you’ll tell me our new president is dishonest or something. Really.
D.A.
NYC
This is how I, too, interpreted the plan. It seemed that the Palestinian Authority got “pay for slay” off their official books by shifting the account elsewhere. Time will tell what’s really going on.
I think time has already told:
https://english.wafa.ps/Pages/Details/154504
The problem with Bud Light is that it tastes like…Bud Light. I’d rather drink gutter water than drink that…
Its like making love in a canoe …
+1
Via RealClearPolitics, three articles debating tariffs historically from The Coolidge Review.
Thank you for this. It will be top of tomorrow’s reading list.
That’s definitely a triffid in your office, I’m convinced. (1980s version, not the 60s ones which were lame.)
I wish our Dear Leader would stop doing economically stupid things and stop picking on our friends! Maybe our enemies would be better served by his flighty attention.
Send the bulldozers into Gaza, say. Start a war, lose a war, lose your land. This isn’t a new concept. Time to bid farewell to your fetid seaside sewer Falesteens – onwards to your new homes in Ireland, Pakistan, Iran and Turkey. Y’know… your best friends!
D.A.
NYC
There is actually a video of Dylan Mulvaney at the White House
Putin has needed to go the way of Rasputin for a long time.
But in good news, Ukraine made further advances in Kursk in the last days. Russian capabilities with materiel and personnel are crumbling.
Great article on the flies seeking play by exposing them to carousels. It’s a subject that would never have occurred to me. I just think of them going after the basics in life; food, sleep and reproduction and annoying me. Never occurred to me they could have a sort of sense of humor, if you can call it that.
I would be curious to learn opinions about fruit flies playing. I think there was experiments showing honeybees playing (or doing play-like behavior), so I will try to be open-minded about it.
Why did you give up on playing that Martin? You want to sell it? 🙂
The cat in a bee costume is adorable. 🐈🐝
I enjoyed the speed of light ring around the planets. I’d like to see what it would look like going around the sun. And “hasn’t cleared its orbit of debris” Pluto…it would probably be a band of solid light.
I liked that, too! Replayed it several times.