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Jim Gaffigan on adjusting to the painful new reality: “How did this happen?”
How are you holding up?
Are you over it? I’m over it. I’m fine. At least, at times I think that. It’s obviously not what I wanted but that’s life. I’m not going to lie. It been an adjustment, but the world continues to spin.
And I’m an adult. I have children that are counting on me. I mean, they don’t listen to me, but I can’t just curl up in a ball and mope.
Sometimes I’m embarrassed how detached I feel about it. The me from September would be ashamed of how well I’m holding it together. I’ve become the person giggling at a funeral.
I’ll admit it: I was blindsided, but I knew this could happen. I prided myself on being the contrarian when all the other supporters were putting the cart before the horse. I’ve done my research. I read all the articles. I know the history. This has happened before. Not that long ago!
It will probably happen again.
I’d be lying if I didn’t admit I do think about it. Mainly in the morning. It mostly lingers for a moment wanting to own my whole day. As I get my coffee, I always ask the same questions: “Is this real? How did this happen?”
I’ve done a deep dive on all the numbers, trying to figure out who’s to blame. Sometimes I think I care too much. Other times I feel my emotional state means I’ve lost the ability to empathize.
I’m a numb shell of a former compassionate human.
It happens every morning. Then I shake it off, wake my kids up for school, and face the reality: The New York Jets are not going to make the playoffs. They have Aaron Rodgers, DaVante Adams, and that defense! All those weapons! And they’re done.
It’s brutal.
Anyway, I’m okay. We’re going to be okay.
Maybe…
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Story produced by Lucie Kirk. Editor: Remington Korper.
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Sen. Amy Klobuchar says presidential pardon process “cries out for reform”
Washington — Sen. Amy Klobuchar, a Minnesota Democrat, said Sunday that the entire presidential pardoning process “cries out for reform” following some controversial commutations and pardons made by President Biden, including when the president issued a blanket pardon of his own son, Hunter.
“This whole process cries out for reform because otherwise you undermine the justice system,” Klobuchar said on “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan.”
The White House announced early Thursday that President Biden was commuting the sentence of nearly 1,500 people, marking the widest reaching clemency granted by a president in a single day. Among the individuals, many of whom had been placed on home confinement during the COVID-19 pandemic, were some who have sparked controversy in recent days — including a judge involved in a so-called “Kids for Cash” scheme.
Klobuchar interjected that she “did not like that one,” adding that she did not agree with all the pardons and commutations.
“I have no doubt there were some righteous pardons in this group,” Klobuchar said. “But there were a number that I think make no sense at all.”
Further, she said she didn’t agree with Mr. Biden’s pardon of his son, Hunter, earlier this month.
Klobuchar noted that she has also disagreed with a number of pardons that President-elect Donald Trump made during his first term. And the Minnesota Democrat said that while the pardon ability is part of the Constitution and has a long history that she said wouldn’t be changed, she would advocate for reforms.
“We should have some kind of an outside board that governors have,” she said. “Governors have the ability to give mercy to people after years have gone by, but a lot of them have boards that make recommendations and other things, instead of people just doing it in the middle of the night.”
Klobuchar suggested that over a year-long period, a board could look at individual petitions rather than large groups, which she argued undermines the work of FBI agents and prosecutors who took on the cases.
“Might you want mercy 10 years later?” Klobuchar said. “Yes, you might. But let’s at least look at these on a factual basis and a risk basis, instead of just in the middle of the night a month before a president leaves.”
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12/15: Face the Nation – CBS News
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