Saturday, July 04, 2026

ANNALS OF TRUMPI$TAN: Heat causes cancellation of Independence Day Parade and other disruptions. (Liam Scott & Joe Heim, WaPo, July 4, 2026)

Did DONALD JOHN TRUMP got whistle-bit by climate change, global warming  and epic bad planning?  No misters, no cooling stations, no class?  You tell me.

From The Washington Post:

Heat causes cancellation of Independence Day Parade and other disruptions

Temperatures over the July Fourth weekend marking America’s 250th anniversary are expected to exceed 100 degrees.

3 min

The Great American State Fair was forced to close temporarily on Friday during extreme heat. (Julia Demaree Nikhinson/AP)

A blistering heat wave gripping Washington forced the cancellation of the Independence Day Parade on July Fourth, the latest disruption of celebrations in the region after the Great American State Fair closed temporarily a day earlier due to extreme heat.

Organizers announced that D.C.’s Independence Day Parade, which was set to start 10:30 a.m. Saturday, was canceled due to the hot conditions. “This decision was made after extensive and careful consideration of the safety of our participants, spectators, and staff as the top priority,” an email from parade organizers late Friday read.

Freedom 250 announced the Great American State Fair on the National Mall would open on Saturday at noon instead of 10 a.m. after closing temporarily on Friday due to the heat. 

Extreme weather forced cancellations in other areas including Virginia and Maryland. Philadelphia’s Salute to Independence Parade was canceled due to extreme heat, organizers said, while in New York, organizers of Sail 4th 250, a parade of tall ships, said a viewing from a premier access area on Governors Island had been canceled after a flash storm. 

D.C. fire personnel escort a heat casualty through mist outside the fair Friday. (Tyler M. Andrews/The Washington Post)

The D.C. fire department told The Washington Post that it had treated people at the fair for heat-related illnesses on Friday. Independence Day weekend is typically busy for the department, and this weekend is no different, the spokesperson said.

The spokesperson said that in the hours before the fair closed Friday afternoon, the department responded to 44 patients at the event, 11 of whom were transported to hospitals “due to various illnesses or injury.” The spokesperson said they did not know how many of the incidents were related to the heat. Other health care providers are on the Mall, too, they added.

“It is going to be a very busy weekend. We know that there are going to be heat-related illnesses on and off the Mall, and we encourage our residents and visitors to take precautions if you’re going to be out in the heat,” the spokesperson said.

Despite the scorching heat, the annual Capitol Fourth Concert took place on Friday evening. Ahead of the event, U.S. Capitol Police urged people with at risk of heat-related health issues to exercise caution.

People wait in line while using fans to cool off at the fair Friday. (Matt McClain/For The Washington Post)

Temperatures on Saturday are expected to exceed 100 degrees, and officials have issued extreme-heat advisories.

The decision to proceed with Friday’s event came after Capitol Police banned the public from attending the concert’s Thursday-evening rehearsal due to the heat. 

Visitors cool off in mist from a fire truck. (Tyler M. Andrews/The Washington Post)

The concert is usually held on Independence Day, but it was moved to July 3 because of the Freedom 250 fireworks and programming scheduled for the National Mall on the Fourth. 

Other holiday events in the Washington area have been called off entirely.

In addition to D.C., Independence Day parades have been canceled in Leesburg, Virginia, as well as in Laurel and Takoma Park, Maryland, due to heat.

“In this heat, parading is particularly risky,” Tara Egan, president of the Takoma Park Independence Day Committee, wrote in a Thursday email to event participants and volunteers, which The Post reviewed. 

“We feel that it would not be safe, or responsible, to ask our community to march or to gather in this heat,” Egan added.






SJC CORRUPTION WATCH: "It is only through politics that miracles occur"

Let freedom ring!

Let every vote count.

Let every vote be counted.

One-party rule and oligarchs' planned disenfranchisement of millions of Florida voters: it's not working in 2026.

Do you believe in miracles? 

For the first time in ten years, no "spoiler," no phony write-in person, will close our St. Johns County Universal Primary, now set for August 18, 2026. 

Three cheers! 

The Honorable Victoria Oakes, St. Johns County Supervisor of Elections, so informed our St. Johns County Commissioners at their August 16 meeting.  

One Anonymous whiner posted online, "They're letting Democrats vote!"

Yes, we can! 

It bears repeatin': "They're letting Democrats vote!"

So said an angry Anonymice extremist, actually writing it down on Facebook.

Snidely Whiplash "Jim Crow" law in St. Johns County has failed.  

Curses, foiled again! 

They're crying in their imported Champagne, my friends.

What happened?

Did some wiseguys (or their corporate criminal defense lawyers) wave them away from their usual dirty tricks?

Did criminal prosecutions and ongoing investigations of Ghost Candidates and Phony Sample Ballots make the Owners and Controllers  get cold feet?

You tell me. 

"There is no shortage of shills in St. Johns County." So said retired St. Augustine lawyer Tom Cushman some 20 years ago.

This time, County Commission seats 2 and 4 are to be decided August 18, 2026 in a Universal Primary. 

That's  what we voters intended in amending our Florida State Constitution. 

"It is only through politics that miracles occur.' Near the end of at two-part, six hour play and movie, "Angels in America," that's what one of Pulitzer Prize winning playwright Tony Kushner's characters says, "It is only through politics that miracles occur.'



Yes, America at 250 -- We SHALL overcome! 


America at 250 -- We SHALL overcome!


Guest column: Robin Nadeau worked for a more sustainable world. (Ed Slavin, St. Augustine Record, February 5, 2012)

Guest column: Robin Nadeau worked for a more sustainable world


We moved to St. Augustine in 1999. I was first contacted, encouraged and empowered by Robin Nadeau in 2000, after Robin read my December 3, 2000 St. Augustine Record column, “Democracy under pressure,” about the strange case of Bush v. Gore (Florida election recount lawsuit). Below is my 600 word guest column about Robin Nadeau, from February 5, 2012 St. Augustine Record (coincidentally, I saw my first butterfly of 2012 while walking that morning):


Guest column: Robin Nadeau worked for a more sustainable world
Posted: February 5, 2012 - 12:32am

By ED SLAVIN
St. Augustine

Hundreds of Robin Nadeau’s friends joined her family, celebrating her life on Jan. 23.

“Thinking globally, acting locally,” always young at heart, Robin knew “freedom is never free.” “Speaking truth to power,” she worked for positive change and a more sustainable world.

Citizen Robin Nadeau (1926-2012) was a zealous environmentalist, peace activist, government reformer and free speech defender. Robin won the Daughters of the American Revolution National Conservation Award for work planting/saving thousands of trees (where greed once endangered them all).

Robin supported “Medicare for All,” Solar/Wind energy, Progressive Taxation and Environmental Justice. She opposed polluters’ promiscuously weakening our environmental laws. She exposed the horrors of nuclear power plants, offshore oil, and dirty money in politics.

She succeeded in convincing governments to buy park land, including a now-threatened 6.1 acres at St. Augustine Beach.

Robin was kind, logical, thoughtful, winning progressive victories with information, research, diplomacy and tact. Robin had what Ambassador Andrew Young calls “soul force.”

Few said “no” to Robin Nadeau.

A faithful convert to Roman Catholicism, she supported Occupy St. Augustine, Grandmothers for Peace, NAACP, League of Women Voters and Sierra Club. She championed equality for gays and lesbians.

Robin encouraged and nurtured so many people.

Robin knew that “decisions are made by those who show up,” showing up for decades. Her work was a tale of two cities (St. Augustine and St. Augustine Beach) and St. Johns County, persuading all to adopt tree protections, serving for decades on city and county boards and as TREES VP for 13 years.

In December 2006, Robin persuaded me to help investigate our Mosquito Control District’s luxury jet helicopter purchase and organophosphate spraying. Together, we helped kill the $1.8 million, no-bid helicopter, winning a refund. It took us nine months, enduring AMCD’s then-chair’s insults and arrest threats. The people won. Robin wrote in her autobiographical note, “I contributed to an ultimately successful effort to replace use of organophosphates to control mosquitoes in St. Johns County with environmentally friendly techniques.”

In 2007-08, Robin and I sought ballot-petition signatures for Democratic Congressional candidate Faye Armitage in local parks. Someone threatened to have us arrested, exclaiming, “I know the law!” Gently, Robin and I stood our ground. First Amendment rights prevailed.

Robin believed in hope, forgiveness, democracy and Democrats: as precinct committeeperson, Robin worked hardest of all.

Robin Nadeau lived with joy, wit and style, getting things done (often working until 3 a.m.). Like Thomas Jefferson, she loved beauty and she designed her own home. She had an infectious laugh, threw wonderful Twelfth Night parties, and made the best orange marmalade.

The Record printed a cognitive miser’s 2004 letter, attacking “the Robin Nadeaus of the world.” I responded, “thanking the Robin Nadeaus of this world,” who bring us moral strength.

“Robin Nadeau family values” are based on love, reality and kindness — the opposite of “faux FOX-TV family values,” based on prejudice, ignorance and hatred.

With all of her beautiful heart, soul and “PBS mind,” Robin Nadeau avidly supported the St. Augustine National Historical Park and National Seashore since 2006. St. Augustine Beach Mayor Gary Snodgrass remembers Robin telephoning him about the proposal two months ago — he was in the shower, but took her call.

Robin’s inner strength showed on Nov. 1, as park supporters were called “Nazis” and “Communists” by angry, misguided “Tea Partiers,” who momentarily scared off our County Commissioners from supporting the Historical Park and Seashore. Enough. errant nonsense!

Give Robin Nadeau the last word. She wrote, “I think my greatest achievement lay in my contribution to enactment of the St. Augustine National Historical Park and National Seashore Act of 2012.” Let’s do it for Robin!  www.staugustgreen.com




Ed Slavin has a bachelor of science in Foreign Service from Georgetown University and a Juris Doctor from Memphis State University (now University of Memphis).

ANNALS OF TRUMPI$TAN: Trump Targets Not Just Georgia’s Vote, but Also Trust in Elections (Zolan Kanno-Youngs, News Analysis, July 3, 2026)

From The New York Times:

NEWS ANALYSIS

Trump Targets Not Just Georgia’s Vote, but Also Trust in Elections

The president has sent 260 F.B.I. analysts to Georgia, repeating his baseless claims of fraud in 2020. But critics say the intention is to undermine overall confidence in the electoral process.

Listen · 6:15 min
A man wearing a camouflage tactical vest bearing the letters F.B.I. walks into a building with the name Department of Registration and Elections on the door.
An F.B.I. agent entering the Fulton County elections office in Union City, Ga., in January. Credit...Nicole Craine for The New York Times

Zolan Kanno-Youngs is a White House correspondent for The Times, covering President Trump and his administration.

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