I’m feeling a bit overwhelmed right now. The FBI has blocked Minnesota authorities from the investigation into Renee Good’s apparent murder by ICE agent Jonathan Ross, noting that Ross is innocent until proven guilty in court. But that’s not going to happen as long as Kash Patel and Trump’s girl Pam have anything to do with it. Expect the “findings” of the “investigation” to exonerate Ross and put all the blame on Good. That’s too obvious.
Two people were shot by Customs and Border agents in Portland yesterday, and as with Minneapolis there is every reason to doubt the “official” explanation. The feds are claiming the driver was an illegal alien and Tren de Aragua member who attempted to run over the agents, who were forced to shoot him (and the passenger?). This was on the campus of an office complex, so there were lots of witnesses.
A man who was at the medical building said he saw federal officers follow a Toyota truck into the parking lot of the office building and try to corner it.
One officer pounded on the window, he said. The driver then backed up and moved forward at least a couple of times, striking a car behind him, before turning and speeding off, said the man who gave only his first name. It’s not clear if the car hit by the truck belonged to the federal officers.
Officers fired about five shots at the truck as it left, the witness said.
The two people who were shot are still hospitalized, and so far their identities have not been made public.
María Corina Machado is supposed to meet with Trump soon, next week I believe. At some point she had said something about sharing her Nobel Peace Prize with Trump. I take it he now expects her to give it to him. “… during an interview with Fox News’s Sean Hannity that aired Thursday. Trump added that he heard Machado wants to give him the prize, ‘and that would be a great honor.'” And if he gets his hands on it, she’ll never see it again. Although possessing a physical trophy (I understand it’s a gold medal) won’t make him a Nobel Laureate.
But according to the Norwegian Nobel Institute, rules forbid Machado to give someone else her prize.
A Nobel spokesperson told the Daily Beast, “A Nobel Prize can neither be revoked nor transferred to others. Once the announcement of the laureate(s) has been made, the decision stands for all time. As for the prize money, the laureate(s) are free to dispose of it as they see fit.”
Latchem [a Daily Beast reporter] notes that Nobel’s “organization’s refusal to bend its own rules” will “be a disappointment not just to Trump, but also, to some of his loyalists, who are reported to have lobbied for Machado to hand the president the prize he so covets.”
Trump is supposed to be meeting with the oil execs now, as I keyboard. MS Now reports:
President Donald Trump will meet with oil executives at the White House on Friday to pitch an ambitious goal that highlights a fundamental problem in his hopes for Venezuela’s oil industry: He wants American oil companies to invest heavily, but get lower prices for their product.
Trump’s aim is to vastly increase oil production in the country to help reduce the global price of oil to around $50 a barrel to ease costs for American consumers. But dramatically increasing oil production in Venezuela will take years, and oil companies argue that reducing the price of oil to $50 a barrel will make drilling unprofitable….
…“They’re going to rebuild the whole oil infrastructure,” Trump said in an interview on Fox News Thursday night, referring to the oil companies. “They’re going to spend at least $100 billion.”
But executives have expressed deep hesitation about committing capital to a country where they previously lost billions and where profitability remains uncertain, particularly if Trump succeeds in his promise to lower global oil prices.
The piece goes on to say that Trump appears to believe “that the U.S. would be able to quickly generate vast oil revenues in Venezuela,” like within a year or so. And nobody in the industry seems to agree with that. Venezuela has been exporting some oil, mostly to China I believe, but not quantities that anyone would get excited about.
Update: As expected, the two dozen oil execs who met with Trump were not all that fired up to go into Venezuela. The Wall Street Journal reported the execs “indicated they need security guarantees and an overhaul of Venezuela’s legal and commercial framework to consider diving in.”
This is from the New York Times:
Darren Woods, the chief executive of Exxon Mobil, said at the meeting that for the company to return to Venezuela it would need “durable investment protections.”
“We’ve had our assets seized there twice, and so you can imagine to re-enter a third time would require some pretty significant changes,” Mr. Woods said. “Today it’s uninvestable.”
In other Trump business news, it was widely anticipated the SCOTUS would release its opinion on Trump’s tariffs today. But it isn’t. The Court is expected to release more rulings on Wednesday, January 14.
Yesterday the House passed a bill to extend the ACA enhanced subsidies for three years, with 17 Republicans voting with the Democrats. It now goes to the Senate, where nothing is certain. I notice my rep. Mike Lawler is among the 17 Republicans.
And yesterday the Senate voted to put limits on future Trump military actions in Venezuela. If they were smart they’d extend that limit to the rest of the planet. Make it clear he has no authority to so much as send a soldier out to pick up pizza without congressional approval. Because he’s not going to stop. He thinks he has absolute power.
Paul Krugman is on a roll. See The Mad King’s Madness Deepens.


