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New Breed Leader

New Breed Leader's Journal
New Breed Leader's Journal
March 17, 2026

As Rome burns, the Fourth Estate Smiles

Great blog post from The Establishment Bar:

If the past decade has taught us anything, it's that our media failed us when we needed them most. When the most dangerous man ever to run for higher office enter the scene in 2015, the media had countless opportunities to bury him before he ever got started. The housing discrimination lawsuit. The use of undocumented labor. The six bankruptcies. Stiffing hundreds of contractors. Trump University. The two dozen rape and sexual assault allegations. A single one of these would have completely derailed a major party presidential candidate in previous election cycles. Hell, we lost Howard Dean because of an akward scream in 2004. But with Trump it was different. With Trump there was so much there that our media not only chose to ignore a single thing, they chose to ignore it all.


https://establishmentbar.blogspot.com/2026/03/as-rome-burns-fourth-estate-smiles.html




March 13, 2026

Palantir CEO Alex Karp wants new AI technology to "disrupt humanity's train"

this, evil, sick, fascist POS

Palantir CEO Alex Karp: "This technology disrupts humanity's train, largely Democratic voters, and makes their economic power less, and increases the economic power of vocationally trained, working class, often male voters. These disruptions are going to disrupt every aspect of our society."

Aaron Rupar (@atrupar.com) 2026-03-12T13:33:54.354Z
March 7, 2026

LIVE: What did Prince do this week?

Yes, that Prince. Prince Rogers Nelson.

What Is #WDPDTW?

We meet every Saturday at noon ET for What Did Prince Do This Week?, an interactive virtual book club and salon where we slowly read and discuss Prince and the Purple Rain Era Studio Sessions and the full Prince Studio Sessions series by Duane Tudahl.

It’s more than a book club.
It’s a Saturday salon inspired by the Harlem Renaissance, where Prince’s work becomes a jumping-off point for deep cultural, musical, and historical conversation.

In Episode 162 of What Did Prince Do This Week?, we cover two historic moments: Prince’s final performance with The Revolution at First Avenue and three guest appearances with Sheila E. in California, including a performance of “A Love Bizarre” that would later be immortalized on Romance 1600 Live.

In the studio, Prince wrapped this phase of the Jill Jones album with final mixes and edits, while continuing work on “Can I Play With U?”.Also this week, the 12-inch of “Kiss’ is released, alongside Mazarati’s self-titled debut album.

https://www.youtube.com/live/g94PDcQZ6so?si=cfa9rgFiiQBn4PR7

February 27, 2026

Social Security trust fund could run out in 2032, earlier than expected according to CBO

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/social-security-trust-fund-cbo-estimate-2032-inflation/

Social Security's main trust fund could be depleted a year earlier than expected, according to a projection from the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) released earlier this month.

The CBO forecasts that the Old-Age and Survivors Insurance Trust Fund — one of the two funds Social Security taps to disburse benefits — will be exhausted in 2032. The agency, which provides budgetary analysis to Congress, estimated last year that the trust fund would run dry in 2033.

Although the Social Security Administration wouldn't stop administering benefits if the trust fund reserves are depleted, the agency could be forced to trim the amount it pays to beneficiaries, according to experts.

"My takeaway from all of this is we don't have much time to spare to address the shortfall," Max Richtman, CEO of the National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare, a nonprofit advocacy group. "If there's not enough revenue coming in payroll taxes — and I don't see that changing — benefits are going to be cut dramatically."

The Social Security Administration did not respond to a request for comment.

Why CBO changed its forecast
The CBO changed its Social Security funding projection after updating its economic forecast, which predicts hotter inflation in the coming years. That could affect Social Security's annual cost-of-living adjustment (COLA), which is aimed at ensuring that inflation doesn't erode beneficiaries' purchasing power.

Higher inflation could mean a larger COLA, which would draw down the trust fund more quickly. The CBO forecasts a COLA of 3.1% for 2027, on the higher end of projections. The agency announced a 2.8% COLA for 2026.

The CBO also projects Social Security trust fund income will be lower because of a reduction in individual income taxes and payroll taxes.

Diminishing trust fund reserves
The Social Security Administration started tapping into the trust fund reserves in 2021, when the total cost to provide benefits started to outpace the agency's income. Social Security, which is funded chiefly through payroll taxes paid by workers and employers, is facing greater financial strains as the U.S. population ages and more people claim retirement benefits.

"As long as people are paying in, money is coming in," Richtman said. "But the point is, it's not enough to pay full benefits. The trust fund has been relied on over the last few years to fill in that gap."

The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a Washington, D.C.-based nonpartisan think tank, said last year that the Social Security Administration will be able to pay roughly 81% of promised benefits once the trust fund reserves evaporate.

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