Sunday Cartoons: My Meat

We have a shitload of cartoons for you today…I hope you enjoy them…

Via Cagle:

Be careful out there…


10 Comments on “Sunday Cartoons: My Meat”

  1. Mama Lopez's avatar Mama Lopez says:

    Dammit, I had the post set for pm and not am! I’m a dumbass…

    • dakinikat's avatar dakinikat says:

      Every one is off these days. I know I am. At least now I know I have a ticket to Peru if it becomes necessary. I’m pretty sure they’re going to go after people based on the ideology next. If we don’t stop then, none of us will be safe.

    • dakinikat's avatar dakinikat says:

      https://www.currentaffairs.org/news/how-a-cash-strapped-louisiana-is-profiting-from-trumps-deportation-frenzy

      Louisiana’s long history of extracting profit from human captivity now fuels Trump’s deportation surge.

      Louisiana’s commander-in-chief could hardly contain his glee on Fox News this week as he announced that Donald Trump’s Gestapo force would soon be entering New Orleans: “I will tell you that when ICE is ready, we certainly welcome them to come into the city and be able to start taking some of these dangerous criminal illegal aliens off of our streets,” said Gov. Jeff Landry, explaining that local police have already been working with the agency. 

      But it was this next part that really made him smile: “And we’ve got a place to put them—at Angola.” 

      The Louisiana State Penitentiary, nicknamed “Angola” after the slave plantation that once stood in its place, is the largest maximum-security prison in the country. It has also been called “the bloodiest.” Angola gained national attention this September as the site of Louisiana Lockup, a new partnership between the state and DHS to “expand detention space by 416 beds” and “house some of the worst of the worst criminal illegal aliens arrested by ICE.” Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem said the prison was specifically chosen for its notoriety—a place where inmates still toil in the fields, surrounded by armed guards on horseback and alligator swamps—in hopes that it might scare immigrants into self-deporting. The facility is also known for its racism; in an ongoing class-action lawsuit, one inmate reported a white officer telling him, “We need a good hanging because these boys are out of line.”

      It is no surprise that Gov. Landry seems thrilled by the prospect of rounding up “criminals” in New Orleans and sending them there. The former cop’s tough-on-crime rhetoric has always been a thin veil for his sadism; in Landry’s first year in office, he passed a law allowing for the perpetrators of certain sex crimes to be surgically castrated, and added two new methods of execution: the electric chair and suffocation by nitrogen gas. (If you’re someone who believes the punishment fits the crime, remember that Louisiana has the second-highest rate of known wrongful convictions in the country and New Orleans, as a city, has the first.)

      But the reason Louisiana has become the center of mass deportation goes further than our governor’s personal cruelty and racism. A significant factor is profit. 

      When you take a look at demographics, ICE’s upcoming Operation Swamp Sweep doesn’t make much sense. Only about 6.5 percent of New Orleans’ residents are foreign-born, a paltry number compared to much larger cities like San Francisco (34 percent) or Dallas (23 percent), neither of which have been the focus of large-scale, publicly-branded operations. Yet according to documents obtained by AP News, DHS has plans to arrest 5,000 migrants in this next sweep—significantly more than the number arrested in Chicago, a city whose metropolitan area has nine times more people than New Orleans.

      But like everything in this administration, Operation Swamp Sweep has nothing to do with public safety and everything to do with pocket-padding: In Louisiana, migrant detainees are literally worth more money than ordinary inmates because their housing is federally funded. We also have a higher incarceration rate than anywhere in the world—besides, notably, El Salvador—and a track record for treating those inmates like filth. That means we have plenty of prisons to house people and we’ll do it at a fraction of the cost of other states. 

      This is shameless and evil.

  2. Mama Lopez's avatar Mama Lopez says:

    Meanwhile:

    Trump’s special envoy Witkoff put his hand over his heart when Putin walked in the room. Like he’s reunited with a loved one. That really tells you all you need to know.

    Ron Filipkowski (@ronfilipkowski.bsky.social) 2025-11-23T13:45:34.529Z

  3. Unknown's avatar Anonymous says:

    Here’s a protest song by Lucinda Williams featuring Norah Jones. We need protest songs now more than ever. With love, Beata.

    • Unknown's avatar Anonymous says:

      “We are weary of these trials

      Tribulations, we are tired

      But, we’ve come too far to turn around

      From the East to the West

      From the North to the South

      We have come too far to turn around

      We are here to bear witness

      To this monstrous sickness

      We have come too far to turn around…”

    • dakinikat's avatar dakinikat says:

      Love Lucinda. It’s getting real down here.

    • dakinikat's avatar dakinikat says:

      I put it up on the main thread today. Thank you so much. Very uplifting