Tuesday, February 03, 2026

The LuLac Edition #5 562, February 3rd, 2026

 

OH BABY!!!!!

 

Since Donald Trump behaves like a baby, I guess he felt a compelling need to hand out a thousand bucks to every newborn in the United States of America. Now this is the same guy and party that has cut back on Medicaid and SNAP to feed children already in their formative years. But now he wants to send some money out from the government to give them a head start in life.

A few questions here.

Where will he get the information on every newborn in the states? Isn’t there a HIPPA concern for privacy?

How will that delivery of the $1,000 occur? Check? On line bank account?

How will it be enforced? What’s to stop the parents from using the money for drugs, care for other children in an emergency, high food prices from his tariffs or just careless parents?

Here’s one. If the baby is born to an illegal or a person of color and they get a check, does ICE come, separate the family and deport the kid?

What happens if less than competent parents start reproducing just to get that grand?  This might incentivize poorer people to have more kids who will then wind up on the welfare that the GOP has been railing about as far as the Depression.

That $1,000 won’t pay a dividend until the child is eligible to work, right? So, the deficit will balloon on his watch.

Like always, Trump’s ideas are never thought out. Plus, it has all the earmarks of not going anywhere or costing more money than it should. 

 

 

TRUMP SHUTS DOWN TRUMP-KENNEDY CENTER FOR “REMODELING”


Trump has closed the Kennedy Center for “remodeling”. The real story here is when the stupid prick renamed a living memorial to the late President John F. Kennedy, entertainers left in droves.

Now to add insult to injury the pig President wants to put marble handrails on all of the seats. His reasoning?  “It’ll be something like people have never seen before!”

 

BRUCE WEIGHS IN

Bruce Springsteen did a music video on the killings in Minnesota. Here it is:


Monday, February 02, 2026

The LuLac Edition #5, 561, February 2nd, 2026

 MONDAY MEMES 

 






Sunday, February 01, 2026

The LuLac Edition #5, 560, February 1st, 2026

 

DINING OUT INFLATION

We’ve all noticed it. The cost of dining has risen because of inflation. Restaurant prices rose 4.1% in 2025, roughly double the pace of grocery inflation, reflecting five years of steady increases in food and labor costs that have climbed 35% each.

A new McKinsey report, “What U.S. Consumers Want From Restaurants in 2026,” confirms that value and pricing remain top of mind, but cost alone isn't what's driving diners away. Among consumers who said eating out "wasn't worth the money," the top complaints were food quality and portion size, with more than half citing each, according to the survey of roughly 900 U.S. consumers fielded in August 2025.

Then there’s delivery which many baby boomers have used. That’s becoming more expensive too. For years, delivery apps promised a simple trade: convenience for a fee. As those fees climbed, the math started to break down. Service charges, delivery costs, inflated menu prices, and tips. Now diners aren't just cutting back on delivery, they're stepping out of the system altogether.

Pickup orders grew 14% year over year, with customers spending about the same per visit. Delivery went the other direction: order totals fell 6%, and overall spending dropped 12%. Diners still want the food, but they're just no longer willing to pay a premium to have it delivered.

The gap has gotten hard to ignore. A 2025 LendingTree study found that delivery now costs nearly 80% more than pickup, adding an average of $9.30 per order once all fees and tips are factored in. For the 40% of Americans who say they order delivery at least once a week, that surcharge adds up fast, and for many, the convenience no longer justifies the cost.

For couples and singles, the dent isn’t as bad vs. families who have more mouths to feed. Special dinners out for families have now become just that: one time affairs.

Gen Z's spending at quick-service restaurants has dropped faster than any other generation, down 19 percentage points over the past two years. The shift is striking. Fast food and drive-throughs typically offer what this generation says it wants: affordable prices, customization, and the ability to order from their phones. These restaurants are still losing ground with the demographic that should be fueling their growth.

Gen Z isn't cutting back across the board, though. They still favor sit-down restaurants over quick grab-and-go options entirely. If they're going to leave the house, it's going to be for something social, something that feels like more than a transaction.

Again, the inflation has touched all demographics and each is responding in various ways that point downward.

You might think that when you see a parking lot filled with cars on a Friday or Saturday night things are going well. Well, maybe. My guess is that the days of people hitting their favorite place every week are over. To be sure there are repeat customers as well as regulars but their number will continue to diminish  as costs increase. (LuLac, Food & Wine).

 

COLD WEATHER BARGAINS

It’s cold, you’re hungry, don’t want to get out of the car and need cheap food. Try these options:

Here are some current fast food bargains you can check out:

Arby's: Join Arby’s Rewards and receive a FREE Classic Beef ‘N Cheddar with a $5 purchase.

Wendy's: Get a $5 Biggie Bag that includes a sandwich, nuggets, fries, and a drink.

McDonald's: Check out their $5 Meal Deal, which includes a double cheeseburger, fries, and a drink.

Taco Bell: Explore the Luxe Value Menu, which offers 10 craveable items for $3 or less.

These deals may vary by location and availability, so it's a good idea to check with your local restaurant for the latest offers. My go to is mostly Taco Bell because at least then you get the fiber. 

 

 

4

 

Saturday, January 31, 2026

The LuLac Edition #5, 559, January 31st, 2026

 


 

NATHANIEL GREENE



UNDERRATED BUT

ESSENTIAL

 

Major General Nathanael Greene was an American military officer and planter who served in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War. He emerged from the war with a reputation as one of George Washington's most talented and dependable officers and is known for his successful command in the Southern theater of the conflict.

Born into a prosperous Quaker family in Warwick, Rhode Island, Greene became active in the colonial opposition to British revenue policies in the early 1770s and helped establish the Kentish Guards, a state militia unit. After the April 1775 Battles of Lexington and Concord, the legislature of Rhode Island established an army and appointed Greene to command it. Later in the year, Greene became a general in the newly established Continental Army. Greene served under George Washington in the Boston campaign, the New York and New Jersey campaign, and the Philadelphia campaign before being appointed quartermaster general of the Continental Army in 1778.

In October 1780, Washington appointed Greene as the commander of the Continental Army in the southern theater, where he was involved in several engagements, primarily in Virginia, Georgia, and South Carolina. After taking command, Greene engaged in a successful campaign of guerrilla warfare against a numerically superior British force led by Charles Cornwallis. He suffered a series of tactical defeats at Guilford Court House, Hobkirk's Hill, and Eutaw Springs, which nevertheless eroded British control over the American South.

Defense analyst Robert Killebrew writes that Greene was "regarded by peers and historians as the second-best American general" in the Revolutionary War, after Washington. The historian Russell Weigley believed that "Greene's outstanding characteristic as a strategist was his ability to weave the maraudings of partisan raiders into a coherent pattern, coordinating them with the maneuvers of a field army otherwise too weak to accomplish much, and making the combination a deadly one.... [He] remains alone as an American master developing a strategy of unconventional war."  Historian Curtis F. Morgan Jr. describes Greene as Washington's "most trusted military subordinate." According to Golway, "on at least two occasions, fellow officers and politicians described Greene... as the man Washington had designated to succeed him if he were killed or captured." He was also respected by his opponents; Cornwallis wrote that Greene was "as dangerous as Washington. He is vigilant, enterprising, and full of resources–there is but little hope of gaining an advantage over him." Alexander Hamilton wrote that Greene's death deprived the country of a "universal and pervading genius which qualified him not less for the Senate than for the field."  Killebrew argues that Greene was the "most underrated general" in American history.

During the Revolution Greene supported numerous campaigns with his own money. Greene was in debt. In 1782 and 1783, Greene had difficulty supplying his troops in Charleston with clothing and provisions. He contracted with Banks & Co to furnish supplies but was compelled to put his name to the bond for the supplies. An order was given by Greene to Robert Morris for payment of the amount; this was paid by the Government of the United States to the contractor, who did not use it to pay the debt and left the bond unpaid. Greene paid the debt himself, and in 1791, his executrix petitioned Congress for relief. Greene had obtained some security from a partner of Banks & Co named Ferrie on a mortgage or lien on a tract of land, but the land was liable to a prior mortgage of £1,000 sterling to an Englishman named Murray. In 1788, the mortgagor in England filed a bill to foreclose on the mortgage, while Greene's family instituted proceedings against Ferrie, who was entitled to a reversionary interest in the land. The court ordered the land be sold and the sale proceeds to be first used to extinguish the mortgage, with the balance to go to representatives of General Greene. The land was sold, and after the £1,000 mortgage had been paid off, the residue of £2,400 was to go Greene's representatives. However, the purchaser never took title and never paid the money on the grounds that the title was in dispute. In 1792, a Relief Act was passed by Congress for General Greene which was based upon the decree of the land sale; the sum of which he was entitled to (£2,400) was exempted out of the indemnity allowed him at that time, of which his heirs received $2,000 (~$61,965 in 2024). In 1830, the administrators of Murray filed a bill of Chancery against the land; however, his agent who had bought the land had not taken title to it, on the grounds that there was a dispute about the land. The claim to the title was not resolved, and the money was never paid. Meanwhile, from 1789 to 1840, the plantation had gone to ruin; under the original decree, the land, instead of bringing the sum it had first bought, was sold for only $13,000. This left Greene's representatives only about $2,000 instead of £2,400. In 1840, they applied to Congress for the difference between the two sums. In 1854, the case was put to Congress for the relief of Phineas Nightingale, who was the administrator of the deceased General Greene.

Major fighting on land came to an end following the surrender of Cornwallis at the siege of Yorktown in October 1781, but Greene continued to serve in the Continental Army until late 1783. After the war, he settled down to a career as a plantation owner in Georgia, but his rice crops were mostly a failure. He died in 1786 at the Mulberry Grove Plantation in Chatham County, Georgia. Death was attributed to sunstroke. He was only 43.(LuLac, wikipedia, Bicentennial archives.