u/iambarrelrider

So I found out Morgan Wallen cover’s Jason Isbell’s masterpiece “Cover Me Up.”

I don’t listen to pop music all that much but it exposed so many people to Jason Isbell. Plus, I like Isbell publicly weighed in was after Wallen’s racial slur controversy in 2021. Isbell announced he was donating all of his songwriting royalties from Wallen’s version to the NAACP. His tweet was basically: “A portion of this money goes to me, since I wrote ‘Cover Me Up.’” That line had a little edge to it: almost a reminder to the public: *I wrote this song.*

BTW This post was removed for the Morgan Wallen subreddit. Lol

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u/iambarrelrider — 4 days ago
▲ 42 r/AskNOLA

I forgot to say thank you so much.

Update on my original we absolutely loved our trip.

We had the best brunch of our lives at Bear Cat. My Fat Daddy told me “this probably isn’t healthy but it might be spiritually necessary, welcome”

Then a late lunch at the Napoleon House where we had there famous drinks, jumbo, and muffuletta. The dimly lit place had ghost whispering in my ear ““Relax. Stay awhile. Nothing important is happening faster than this meal.”

We actually enjoys a bus tour the day before our cruise.

After cancelling seafood dinner reservations at 2 high end places we ate at Drago’s and the charred oysters were amazing.

We stopped at various bakeries but honestly Cafe du Monde was the girls favorite beignets.

The music, the food, the people, the night life I am suprised we even got on the ship.

I understand now why New Orleans cuisine has always kind of embraced the philosophy of:
“Life is uncertain, eat the rich things.”

Many thanks!

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u/iambarrelrider — 7 days ago

Players should not be blinded by stadiums. People don’t play football in “The Patch” on Thanksgiving. Time to move on.

u/iambarrelrider — 7 days ago
▲ 3.7k r/NEPA+6 crossposts

This is the sound a data center makes around the clock, every single night - while hundreds of homes sit right next door.

u/50shotnochaser — 20 hours ago

What to know about the Iran war today:
Iran launched its first missile and drone attack on the United Arab Emirates since a ceasefire with the U.S. took effect on April 8, and it fired two drones at a ship in the Strait of Hormuz, UAE authorities said Monday.
The U.S. military said two commercial vessels safely transited the strait amid "efforts to restore transit for commercial shipping" under the Project Freedom initiative announced by President Trump.* *

The Iranian regime says it received a U.S. response to its latest 14-point peace proposal, which it says is aimed at ending the war, not extending the current ceasefire. Mr. Trump said over the weekend that he'd likely reject the Iranian proposal, as "they have not paid a big enough price."

CENTCOM chief says Iran fired at U.S. warships, and "U.S. destroyed six Iranian small boats"
U.S. Navy Admiral Brad Cooper, the commander of Central Command, confirmed Monday that Iran had launched an attack earlier in the day using cruise missiles, drones, and small boats targeting U.S. commercial and military vessels in the Strait of Hormuz.
"The U.S. destroyed six Iranian small boats that attempted to interfere," Cooper was quoted by Reuters news agency as telling reporters on a conference call. He said Iranian vessels were "strongly advised to remain clear of U.S. military assets" in the region.
Iran's state-run IRNA news agency rejected the assertion by Cooper, saying none of its so-called "fast boats" were destroyed Monday.

Iranian state media said earlier that forces fired "warning" shots, including missiles and drones, at a U.S. destroyer as it neared the Strait of Hormuz in the Sea of Oman.
CENTCOM said two U.S.-flagged commercial vessels transited the strait Monday under the auspices of Project Freedom, an initiative announced by President Trump on Sunday for the U.S. military to guide ships through the waterway.
Iranian authorities insist the strait is closed and only vessels with explicit permission from its military will be permitted to pass, while U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent insisted Monday that the U.S. has full control over the waterway.

u/iambarrelrider — 18 days ago

The United States has crossed a grim threshold: The national debt now exceeds the size of the entire American economy. As of March 31, debt held by the public stood at $31.27 trillion, while nominal GDP over the prior 12-month period was an estimated $31.22 trillion—pushing the debt-to-GDP ratio to 100.2%, according to a press release issued Thursday by the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget (CRFB), based on new data from the Bureau of Economic Analysis.

Total gross national debt—including intragovernmental obligations—has already surpassed $39 trillion, a figure that amounts to roughly $114,000 per American or $289,000 per household, according to the Senate Joint Economic Committee’s monthly debt update as of April 3, 2026.
“It’s happened—the national debt is now larger than the U.S. economy, about twice the historic average,” said Maya MacGuineas, president of the CRFB. “We’ve heard plenty of alarm bells in the past few years about our fiscal path, but this one rings especially loudly. The real question is whether or not our leaders in Washington will listen.”

Record that shouldn’t be broken
The 100% milestone puts the U.S. on a collision course with its all-time high: the 106% debt-to-GDP ratio reached in 1946, in the immediate aftermath of World War II. The difference, MacGuineas argued, is stark. That peak was the result of financing the largest military mobilization in American history. Today’s debt, she said, “isn’t borne from a seismic global conflict, but rather a total bipartisan abdication of making hard choices.”

The Congressional Budget Office warned in February that, under current trajectories, debt held by the public will rise to 108% of GDP by 2030—surpassing the postwar record—and balloon to 120% by 2036. One independent macro model places gross federal debt—a broader measure—even higher, at nearly 126% of GDP by year’s end.

No easy exits
The CRFB’s MacGuineas called for what she termed “Super PAYGO”—a fiscal rule that would require any new spending or tax cuts to be offset by twice the amount in savings—as a first step. But she acknowledged that stabilizing the debt-to-GDP ratio would require far more: approximately $10 trillion in total deficit reduction. One widely discussed benchmark is bringing annual deficits below 3% of GDP, a target that has attracted bipartisan interest but no concrete legislative path.
The Senate did adopt a fiscal year 2026 budget resolution last week, a step the CRFB called “about a year too late” and one that includes no plan to address the country’s structural deficit problem. President Trump’s proposed fiscal year 2027 budget, released in early April, would increase defense spending by over 40% while cutting nondefense discretionary programs—but would still leave the debt-to-GDP ratio above 100% throughout the forecast window.

u/iambarrelrider — 20 days ago