Thursday Political Cartoons: Artemis Too
Posted: April 2, 2026 Filed under: just because 6 Comments
Isn’t that amazing?

At least that was a positive unifying experience from yesterday.
I want to share a couple more items on the moon mission:


Some crazy ass Trump quotes:
About the speech last night:
Cartoons via Cagle website:








































































































And that’s it for today…stay safe out there.





Yeah, he’s firing the women first. Notice that?
and there it is:
Throwing hissy fits because they can’t deliver what he wants which is basically stuff that’s not legal or even real.
BB: Thought you might be interested in this from Lafayette, LA.
https://thecurrentla.com/2026/in-cajun-country-mass-deportation-is-personal/
In Cajun Country, mass deportation is personal
“Last weekend, people came out to protest the Trump administration in Lafayettes across the U.S., from Colorado to Indiana. But in Cajun country, the Trump administration’s immigration policy especially has hit a nerve with some who see it as an affront to the region’s deep immigrant roots.
“The ancestors of people who are Cajun would be rolling over in their graves to think that Cajuns would be supporting mass deportation,” says Claire Dawkins, a Lafayette native who attended Saturday’s No Kings rally at Downtown Lafayette’s Prejean Unity Point with her parents and children. “It goes against our culture, our values.”
The story of that culture itself begins with an exodus, a scattering.
In 1755, Acadian families were driven from their homes in what is now Nova Scotia, dispersed across the globe during Le Grand Dérangement. Many of them made their way to Louisiana, where generations later the memory of displacement still lingers.
In South Louisiana, the expulsion has lived on as a story: one passed down through family histories, music, folklore and tradition, where themes of identity and belonging appear again and again. In the current political climate, that collective memory is more than just history for some in Acadiana: It’s a lens for what’s happening, and it’s shaping their response today.
Kara St. Clair, a Lafayette native living in New Orleans, says she’d been looking for a way to represent her heritage in opposition to the Trump administration’s immigration policies. When the Department of Homeland Security announced Operation Catahoula Crunch late last year, she quickly pulled together a design and posted it online.
Since then, she says, she’s received close to a thousand orders. Simple in design, T-shirts and buttons read “Cajuns Against Mass Deportation since 1755” with two words in French below it, “réveillez” and “résistez” — wake up and resist.
“When I was really young, it was kind of embarrassing to embrace your Cajun identity, and I’ve seen that change over the years,” St. Clair says. “