It probably couldn't be any worse than what corporate Nashville's been spewing out but still ... disconcerting (or should that be de-concerting?)

The Top Country Song on the Charts Was Written and Performed by AI

This was inevitable and now it's here. The top song on the country charts right now is a song written and sung by artificial intelligence. The "artists" name is Breaking Rust and the song is called "Walk My Walk."

It's official: "Chartificial intelligence" is here.

Breaking Rust, a new artist on the scene, is topping charts ... but he's not a real person. He's a computer-generated outlaw blues-country singer.

"Walk My Walk," a song from Breaking Rust's October EP "Resilient," is the No. 1 song on Billboard's Country Digital Song Sales Chart, a list of the most-downloaded tracks in the U.S.

Breaking Rust isn't the only AI artist in the charts at the moment.

Following Rust's song on the chart is Ella Langley's "Choosin' Texas," and coming in third is "Don't Tread On Me" by Cain Walker, another AI artist.

…. Still, significant proportions of US music consumers don’t seem to mind. Breaking Rust already has 2 million monthly Spotify listeners. And just look at the YouTube comments on the above video and weep – ‘masterpiece’, ‘My god, his voice is awesome. Beautiful yet heartbreaking’, ‘The greatest song ever!!!’

Here it is — I lasted 15 seconds. There is still good country music being written and performed, as well as new bluegrass, but it’s not being produced by the Nashville suits, and definitely not by AI, if this sample is typical.

What, was the buyer disappointed to find no tipis?

65 John Street, 9.3 acres and an $8.45 million price tag, was reported under contract just last week, and I reported that here. Today, the contract is busted and it’s back on the market. I hope the buyer wasn’t mislead by my enhanced photograph of the property.

In fairness, anyone that determined to have Indians on his meadows should have known that tipis were used by the Plains Indians, not Woodland savages like our native Siwanoys, who, when they weren’t beating their squaws or scalping and raping settler children, loafed idly in cardboard shipping boxes and wigwams behind the Riverside Caldors, subsisting on a diet of sticks, gravel and ditchwater.

It took some digging, but Brown Harris's Brian Tunney unearthed this gem and even dug up a buyer for it

The old Parsonage at, coincidentally, 33 Parsonage Road, sold for $2 million, asked for $1.995. A stone-faced Tunney declined comment on the sale, stating that it was much too grave a matter, to be flippant about, although he did concede that buyer’s agent Charles Magyar left no stone unturned in his search for the perfect property for his client — or he would have, not doubt, had we asked.

By the way, a search for the history of the Parsonage using Google’s vaunted AI tool produced this gem of misinformation, completely wrong — it conflated this house with the history of the Elizabeth Feake House in Old Greenwich; if they still teach the history of Greenwich in 3rd Grade and require students to write reports or be tested on what they’ve they’ve learned, warn your children to use an alternatives source of information.

AI Overview

The house at 33 Parsonage Road in Greenwich, CT, is known as the Old Parsonage or Feake-Ferris House, and is

considered the oldest house in Greenwich, dating back to the colonial era. It is historically significant as the first house in the town and is also one of the oldest houses in America still located on its original site. The Greenwich Point Conservancy is currently restoring the building, which is a project to preserve a unique piece of American history. 

  • Historical Significance: The Feake-Ferris House is historically important as the oldest house in Greenwich and the first house built in the town.

  • Age: It is among the oldest houses in the United States that remains on its original site.

  • Preservation: It was saved from demolition and is undergoing restoration by the Greenwich Point Conservancy.

  • Location: The house is situated in a historically significant area, and its preservation is a key project for the Greenwich Point Conservancy. 

What price, safety?

,The beauty of new england’s fall foliage, or the deadly hazard of florida’s falling iguana’s? will you risk the lives of your grandchildren?

New Report: NY, NJ Lose $690B As Residents Flee High Taxes

Sounds bad, but Mamdani and his fellow NJ socialist governor have a plan, one that began election night, to keep the golden geese on the butcher’s table: “Danger, Will Robinson! Shelter in place!”

These reptilian missiles rain down every year, but is this sudden media attention to the phenomenon coincidental with news that those states’ productive citizens are fleeing the soon-to-be-released army of tax collectors and heading south to a more hospitable sanctuary?

Arctic Blast: Iguanas Raining Down In Florida Thanks To Record-Breaking Temperatures

So they folded up their tents and left the stage

Felicity Hayward, a model and activist, thinks 2023 was a turning point. “Ozempic arrived into our industry, and there was a definite change,” she says. Hayward, who has modelled for Mac and appeared on the cover of i-D magazine, monitors the number of designers using curve models across the fashion weeks in London, Paris, New York and Milan for her report Inside the Curve. At first the drop was slow, but this season, she says, “we’ve started to see a huge decline. New York, which had 70 plus-size models in 2023, had 23 earlier this year. At the September 2024 London fashion week, 80 plus-size models were on the runway, but just 26 this year.”

Why just probation, and not hard time?

Self-described “corruption fighter” convicted of fraud — $88,000 stolen

Virginia Democrat Who Went Viral Protesting Trump Sentenced For COVID Fraud

A former Democratic Virginia state lawmaker who made headlines for disrupting a speech by President Donald Trump was recently sentenced after confessing to defrauding a federal COVID relief program.

A judge sentenced Ibraheem Samirah, 34, Oct. 30 to three years of probation and ordered him to pay $88,000 in restitution after he pleaded guilty to a wire fraud charge, according to FFX Now. The former Democratic delegate secured $83,000 in Paycheck Protection Program funds fraudulently back in May 2020.

Prosecutors said Samirah created fake payroll and tax records, claiming he had four employees at his dental practice, NOVA Healthy Smiles, and backdated the documents to January 2020, The Washington Post reported. Court records showed his practice lacked a current financial account to pay employees until days before he requested the loan. 

After receiving the money, Samirah moved the funds through accounts belonging to fake employees into his personal bank account, according to court documents. He spent the cash on personal expenses rather than legitimate business costs and later applied to secure forgiveness for the loans in August 2021, the documents said.

The former delegate first secured election to the Virginia House of Delegates in a 2019 special election, then lost to a challenger in 2021, FFX Now reported. He gained national attention in 2019 when he interrupted a Trump speech in Jamestown, holding a “Deport Hate” sign and yelling “Mr. President, you can’t send us back! Virginia is our home!”

And of course, he blames Trump

Samirah told The Washington Post he misunderstood the loan rules and blamed“Donald Trump’s Justice Department” for his prosecution.

From the thief’s former campaign’s webpage:

Meet Dr. Ibraheem Samirah

Growing up in the Chicago suburbs, I enjoyed a typical American childhood—watching basketball in the bleachers, riding bikes with my brothers, and then getting around to my homework.

That all changed in middle school when my father traveled to Jordan to care for his ailing mother and was denied re-entry to the U.S. by the Bush Administration. My family uprooted and relocated to stay together and fight for my father’s reinstatement. It took eleven years, but we won. That experience taught me that while the American dream is real, our country’s entrenched prejudice can take it away at any moment.

I worked hard in school so I could one day return to the country I loved. I attended American University and went on to Boston University for dental school. In 2019, I was elected to the Virginia House of Delegates as a representative of Loudoun County. For three years, I tried to drive our country towards the promise of what America can be in order to address our country’s injustices so that nobody else’s American dream can be stolen and pushed out of reach.

I took on MAGA Republicans, confronted Donald Trump, fought corruption, and championed a progressive vision that would create better, more cohesive schools, high-quality jobs, lower costs, enshrine healthcare as a human right, and fight the climate crisis that threatens the future of our planet.

Today, I’m a small business owner working to build out of the pandemic through my dental practice, helping everyday Loudouners become healthier with more opportunities to succeed.

I’m running for State Senate because we need to defend our democracy by fighting the influence of big money in politics, defending abortion rights across Virginia, and stopping gun violence in our schools, places of worship, and community centers. Loudoun deserves a State Senator who will champion bold legislation that reduces everyday costs on families.

I fought for you in Richmond before. I'll fight for you again.

Fake payroll, imaginary employees, shuffling payments into his personal accounts, and then a year later applying for loan forgiveness. What rules did he not understand?

This would be progress, I suppose, except that the progressives will block it again

the devil made me do it

New York Approves Trump-Backed Gas Pipeline

NESE is set to be New York’s first new gas pipeline in at least a decade, and by far the state’s largest expansion of fossil fuel infrastructure since passing its flagship climate law in 2019. 

The Northeast Supply Enhancement pipeline had been rejected by environmental regulators three times but was revived this spring after talks between Hochul and Trump.

The state Department of Environmental Conservation issued crucial water permits for the Northeast Supply Enhancement project, which it had rejected three times in the past.

At the same time, the DEC announced that the even larger Constitution pipeline, slated to cross New York into New England, would not move ahead. Both pipelines were priorities for President Donald Trump, who railed against Governor Kathy Hochul on social media earlier this week for moving too slowly on the projects.

“Environmental groups are likely [guaranteed — Ed] to sue.”

Climate advocacy groups pounced on the decision, calling it a betrayal.

“Hochul has shown New Yorkers she’d prefer to do Trump’s dirty work rather than protect our waterways from pollution,” said Laura Shindell, New York state director at Food & Water Watch. “She hasn’t kept her promises to fight against skyrocketing energy bills or the climate crisis. But New Yorkers will fight Hochul’s dirty pipeline every step of the way — alongside our communities — until it is stopped for good.”

“Governor Hochul is turning her back on the same agency scientists that determined the NESE pipeline would cause unacceptable degradation of water quality and marine life to NY waters just a few years ago,” said Roger Downs, conservation director of the Sierra Club’s Atlantic Chapter.

…. The DEC stated outright that the project is “inconsistent” with the emissions requirements of the state’s climate law, but said that mandate was overridden by energy regulators’ September finding that the pipeline was needed to maintain a reliable gas system downstate. 

New Jersey environmental regulators swiftly followed DEC’s lead and issued their own approvals for the pipeline on Friday, allowing for its construction to begin.

The Non-Fossils have blocked new gas supplies for decades, and this one will undoubtedly suffer the same fate, but give Trump credit for trying; he read Hochul the riot act and threatened all sorts of nasty consequences if she continued her intransigence, and she buckled. But the courts and the state’s laws banning gas in new construction by 2027, the closure of gas-powered electric generating plants by 2030, and a 40% reduction in all gas use by 2030 will doom this pipeline, again.

Shocker:

Here’s an Albany TV interview with an opponent and proponent of the pipeline that actually gives each a full 7 minutes to explain their position. The opponent goes first, and the interviewer, to my mind, is sympathetic to his cause, but she then spends another seven minutes with a pipeline/gas industry spokesman and gives him a fair opportunity to state his case. Compared to the clips I’ve seen of national TV reporters’ interviews of those they disagree with, this woman does a fine job and performs a service to viewers — all 6 of them — who might like to understand the issues beyond headline depth and make up their own minds.

New York DEC approves natural gas pipeline; here are 2 differing viewpoints on it

Downstate New York is closer to seeing the build-out of a new pipeline. After denying a water quality permit for the proposed Northeast Supply Enhancement natural gas pipeline multiple times, the New York state Department of Environmental Conservation announced on Friday that the permit had been approved.

The pipeline will transport fracked gas from Pennsylvania through New Jersey and under the ocean floor off the coast of Long Island. Once built, the pipeline is expected to pump enough gas to serve 2.3 million homes in New York City, Staten Island and Long Island.

The story behind the pipeline's approval is interesting.

…..

Capital Tonight spoke with two energy experts about the DEC’s approval of the Northeast Supply Enhancement: Rich Schrader, a member of the board of Frack Action, who is critical of the project, and Gavin Donohue, the president & CEO of IPPNY, Independent Power Producers of New York, Inc., who supports it. 

You’ll find the video of the interviews here.

Who laughs last

2018 — then came Ukraine

Russia’s gas gamble backfires as Trump’s energy vision reshapes Europe

European leaders once laughed at Trump's prediction about Russian energy dependence

When Donald Trump warned European leaders years ago that their dependence on Russian gas would leave them "hostage to Moscow," the remark was met with skepticism — and even laughter.

Nearly a year into his second term, those same leaders are now scrambling to secure long-term contracts for U.S. liquefied natural gas as Russia’s once-dominant grip on Europe’s energy market unravels exactly as Trump predicted.

Russia’s decision to choke off gas deliveries in 2022 — an attempt to fracture Western unity and pressure Europe into abandoning Ukraine — has had the opposite effect. Its share of European Union gas imports has fallen from 45% in 2021 to under 10% today. U.S. gas now accounts for nearly 57% of Europe’s total imports, compared to roughly one-third before the war.

The cutoff accelerated a historic realignment in global energy, with U.S. LNG producers rushing to fill the void. The shift has not only blunted one of Vladimir Putin’s most powerful geopolitical weapons but also fueled an American export boom that is binding Europe more tightly to Washington than at any point since the Cold War.

The transformation is most visible in Central and Eastern Europe, where countries once reliant on Russian pipelines are turning west. New corridors linking LNG terminals in Poland, Greece and Croatia are channeling U.S. and Qatari gas deep into the continent. Nations such as Ukraine, Romania and Slovakia — long vulnerable to supply cutoffs — are forging contracts that would have been unthinkable just a few years ago.

"Central and Eastern Europe have been the most vulnerable because these were the countries that had been historically almost 100% dependent on Russian gas," said Aura Sabadus, a senior energy analyst at the Center for European Policy Analysis. "Now we see companies in those markets securing U.S. LNG through new routes, particularly via Poland and southern corridors through Greece."

In Athens last week, executives from major U.S. producers met with regional buyers from Greece, Poland and Ukraine to finalize new supply deals — the clearest sign yet that Europe’s energy axis has shifted. American gas now flows through the same infrastructure that once carried Russian fuel, and the geopolitical balance has flipped with it.

For the Kremlin, the toll is mounting. Energy exports once funded a third of Russia’s budget, but the loss of its most lucrative market has forced Moscow to sell oil and gas to China and India at steep discounts. Analysts say the country’s energy sector — once the backbone of its geopolitical power — has become a liability, exposing its dependence on fewer, less profitable buyers.

….

At the time of Trump’s first warnings, many European leaders dismissed them. German officials defended the Nord Stream 2 pipeline, insisting that trade would keep Russia tied to the West. Now, those same governments are racing to secure American supply as U.S. LNG terminals along the Gulf Coast operate at record capacity.

As the U.S. cements its role as Europe’s primary gas supplier, Russia’s grip on the continent’s energy market continues to weaken. "Russia used to offer big discounts to keep buyers hooked, but as global production surges, it will have limited flexibility to compete," Sabadus said. "U.S. LNG will become very competitive in Europe."

The Trump administration has moved quickly to capitalize on the shift. It lifted a pause on LNG export approvals earlier this year, approved new production projects in Louisiana and Texas, and pushed for a U.S.–E.U. energy framework under which European buyers have pledged to purchase hundreds of billions of dollars in American energy over the coming decades. Officials point to a string of recent long-term contracts — including Venture Global’s deals with Italy and Germany over the summer, Greece’s agreement announced last week, and a newly signed contract between Spain’s Naturgy and Venture Global — as evidence that the "energy dominance" agenda is reshaping global trade flows.

Rob Jennings, vice president for natural gas markets at the American Petroleum Institute, said the policy shift has unleashed a wave of investment and confirmed strong demand for U.S. LNG.

"Five facilities have made their final investment decisions in the first nine months of this year, totaling about 50 million metric tons per year of new capacity — more than $50 billion in investment," he told Fox News Digital. "It’s a really strong signal from the market."

Jennings said the growth in exports benefits both sides of the Atlantic.

"Since 2016, the cumulative GDP impact of the U.S. LNG industry is about $400 billion, and over the next 15 years it could add another $1.3 trillion," he said. "At the same time, more than two-thirds of U.S. LNG exports now go to Europe every single day, replacing the gas they once bought from Russia."

Of course, for the European deindustrialists, this development is just a new hurdle to clear on their way to a Green, pastoral Eden, and they’re working on it. They may have the last laugh at their subjective peaasants after all.

[I]ndustry officials warn that regulatory differences could complicate future trade. Jennings pointed to two new European policies — the E.U. methane regulation and the Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive — that U.S. producers say could impose foreign standards on American companies.

"Those rules are effectively Europe trying to impose its own standards globally," he said. "We hope that can be addressed as part of the trade deal, because there’s a risk they could undermine Europe’s commitment to buy more U.S. energy."

Stop me if you think you've heard this one before

This is what I found on the Fannie Mae site after further digging:

Minimum credit score requirements

Minimum credit score requirements will no longer apply to loans submitted to DU. The Selling Guide has been updated to align with changes previously communicated in the DU Version 12.0 November Update Release Notes. Specifically, DU will no longer apply a minimum credit score but will rely on its own comprehensive analysis of risk factors to determine eligibility. In addition to these revisions, we have updated DU nontraditional credit documentation and homebuyer education requirements to no longer rely on credit scores.

Instead, DU will issue a message when lenders must establish a nontraditional credit history and/or complete homebuyer education when no borrower has at least one credit account or installment account reported on their credit report.

Effective: The minimum representative credit score requirement of 620 for loan casefiles for one borrower and minimum average median credit score requirement of 620 for more than one borrower will be removed for new loan casefiles created on or after Nov. 16, 2025. All other changes apply to loan casefiles submitted or resubmitted on or after the weekend of Nov. 15, 2025.

Digging around further, I see that in some cases, the loan to value ratio can be dropped to 97/3. What could possibly go wrong?