Weight Loss Inc


Becky writes:

Barry’s script said, “A fat person is handing a bundle of cash to someone standing in the entrance to a building that has a sign saying “WEIGHT LOSS INC”. It looks like summer.” Luckily for both of us, Barry doesn’t mind when I don’t take his stage directions too literally. I thought it made sense for the saleswoman and customer to be all the way inside the store. We’d need to be behind the saleswoman and looking out the front window in order to observe the changing seasons. Here’s the initial sketch I showed Barry (along with some clothing ideas for the customer and a cool-looking font that I saw on an awning). Barry liked the layout!

This script calls for an unchanging environment, but it has to be clear that several months pass between each panel. Of course, the characters can dress differently for winter than summer. The tree can gain and lose leaves. But I tried to tell the story with color, as well. As an artist, I enjoy puzzles like “What color will convey ‘red brick building; also it’s dark and wet out?” I’m really happy with how the background turned out. It’s mostly hidden, but I think it does its job.

The light affects the interior of the store, too. The walls are white, but they’re also greenish when the tree outside is full, and orange when the store is being lit by warm overhead lights. (It’s funny to think that the bare white decor, concrete floor, and iPad will make this store look “dated” one day.)

Thanks for supporting Barry on Patreon so that he can pay me. Happy New Year!


Barry writes:

The basic idea behind this cartoon – that the economic model of the weight loss industry is based on weight loss never working in the long term for the vast majority of their customers — is hardly a unique observation. But it’s been said often because it’s true. Traci Mann, a professor who founded the Health and Eating Lab at the University of Minnesota, wrote about Weight Watchers (but this is applicable to the larger industry):

It’s the perfect business model. People give Weight Watchers the credit when they lose weight. Then they regain the weight and blame themselves. This sets them up to join Weight Watchers all over again, and they do.

The company brags about this to its shareholders. According to Weight Watchers’ business plan from 2001 (which I viewed in hard-copy form at a library), its members have “demonstrated a consistent pattern of repeat enrollment over a number of years,” signing up for an average of four separate program cycles. And in an interview for the documentary The Men Who Made Us Thin, former CFO Richard Samber explained that the reason the business was successful was because the majority of customers regained the weight they lost, or as he put it: “That’s where your business comes from.”

It’ll be interesting (and possibly horrifying) to see how the new weight-loss drugs will change things (and how they won’t). It appears that semaglutide (also known as Ozempic) and similar drugs, like a thousand weight-loss treatments before, won’t allow the overwhelming majority of fat patients to stop being fat.

What it might do is allow many more people to lose noticeable amounts of weight – so a 300 pound patient becomes a 270 pound patient – and to keep that weight off, as long as they continue taking semaglutide. Since Ozempic can easily cost a thousand dollars or more a month, this is another way that the weight loss industry can make everlasting profits off of fat patients who will never be “cured.”

In many ways, it’s just the same old thing – marketing to people by telling them to hate their own bodies – in a new injectable form.


TRANSCRIPT OF CARTOON

This cartoon has four panels. They all show the same scene – the lobby of a weight-loss store – but a few months pass between each panel. In every panel, a fat redheaded woman, a customer, talks to a thin blonde woman, a saleswoman.

PANEL 1

Through the display window, we can see a green, leafy tree. A couple of bags of money lie under the counter. The customer is wearing a floral sundress and cardigan, and is opening a purse full of cash as she talks to the saleswoman.

CUSTOMER: I’d really like to lose weight.

SALESWOMAN: We can help! It’s only $200 to start!

PANEL 2

The tree has now lost all its leaves, and the customer is returning, carrying a sack of cash and wearing winter clothing. There’s more money under the counter.

CUSTOMER: I lost a bit of weight, but I’d like to lose more.

SALESWOMAN: You got it! For a modest monthly subscription.

PANEL 3

It’s now spring, and there are little pink flowers on the tree. The customer, in stretchy pants and a loose fitting long-sleeved top, returns with a grocery cart filled with bags of money. The saleswoman is cheery, but the customer is downcast. There are now so many moneybags under the counter that some are spilling out the side.

CUSTOMER: Now I’ve gained all the weight back… And a little more.

SALESWOMAN: You need our super subscription plan. It comes with an app!

PANEL 4

The tree is full and green again. The customer is back, with the shopping cart piled so high with money that she’s mostly hidden behind it. The room is filled with money bags, and the saleswoman is lounging on the pile of money, smiling happily.

CUSTOMER: Does it worry you that your weight loss plans keep on failing?

SALESWOMAN: Oh, yes, definitely. So very concerned!

CHICKEN FAT WATCH

“Chicken fat” is an obscure cartoonists’ term for fun background details. There’s a poster on the wall which says “Love Yourself,” but in the first three panels we can’t see the complete poster because the saleswoman stands in front of it. In panel four, we can finally see the small print below “Love Yourself”: “Not yet. Later. Once there’s less of you.”


Weight Loss Inc. | Patreon

Posted in Cartooning & comics, Fat, fat and more fat | 7 Comments

The AI Bubble


This cartoon is drawn by new guest artist Jamie Sale, who did a terrific job.


I’d originally written the script so the camera would pan out until we saw that the speaker was in a giant bubble. Then I realized that sends the wrong message, because it implies that the people pushing A.I. are putting themselves at economic risk. But that’s not it at all; they’re gonna be fine.

I mean, no doubt some of them will be downgraded from “inconceivably wealthy” to “stupid rich.” It’ll be a blow to their egos and maybe even their social standing. But at the end of the day, none of them are facing any real risk; their lives will remain secure and comfortable.

It’s the rest of us they’re putting at risk.

So I did a last minute rewrite. Jamie had already done initial sketches of the cartoon, but cheerfully went along with my third-act change of direction.


Hedge fund manager Harris “Kuppy” Kupperman ran the numbers:

Simply put, at the current trajectory, we’re going to hit a wall, and soon. There just isn’t enough revenue and there never can be enough revenue. The world just doesn’t have the ability to pay for this much AI. It isn’t about making the product better or charging more for the product. There just isn’t enough revenue to cover the current capex spend. …

At the end of the day, this AI cycle feels less like a revolution and more like a rerun. I’ve seen this story before—fiber in 2000, shale in 2014, cannabis in 2019. Each time, the technology or product was real, even transformative. But the capital cycle was brutal, the math unforgiving, and the equity holders were ultimately incinerated. AI will be no different. The datacenters will be built, the chips will hum, and some of the capacity will eventually prove mind-blowingly useful. But the investors footing the bill today will regret ever making the investment. That’s how bubbles end—not with a bang of innovation, but with the slow, grinding realization of negative returns, for years into the future. When shareholders finally wake up to the fact that AI isn’t generating cash flow, only burning it, the guillotine will fall—on management, on the stocks, and on the broader market that bet its future on a fantasy.


TRANSCRIPT OF CARTOON

This cartoon has four panels. Each of the panels shows a businessman in a suit grinning as he speaks to us.

PANEL 1

A close up of a businessman grinning. In the background, a bright blue sky with fluffy clouds.

MAN: A.I. Is the defining tech of our time! Microsoft and amazon and facebook and google have spent almost a trillion dollars on A.I.!

PANEL 2

The camera has pulled back a little. We can see the man is holding a bubble blower, bubbles streaming from it.

MAN: Has A.I. made a profit? Not yet, but… Someday we’ll figure out something A.I. can do that actually makes money! It definitely might could happen!

PANEL 3

The man continues grinning, pumping his fist, as the air around him turns gray and forbidding and the bubbles stream out.

MAN: In the meantime, We have to prepare! By spending more billions building more A.I. data centers so we can spend trillions more so that someday A.I. can do… Um…

PANEL 4

We can now see that the man is talking to a huge bubble floating in the air. The bubble has been packed fill with ordinary looking people, shoved in like sardines in a can. They looked panicked and unhappy.

MAN: Anyway, A.I. is certainly possibly maybe not going to pop and take down the whole economy! You’ve got nothing to worry about!

CHICKEN FAT WATCH

“Chicken fat” is old-fashioned cartoonist lingo for little extras in the art.

Panel 2 – In a tiny window in a cloud is a tiny, teeny silhouette of a spy with binoculars.

Panel 3 – One of the bubbles has a mouse in it.

Panel 4 – One of the bubbles has a “for rent” sign.


The A.I. Bubble | Patreon

Posted in Cartooning & comics, Economics and the like | 6 Comments

The Future of Journalism is Now


This cartoon is by Jenn Manley Lee and I.


This cartoon was originally posted on Patreon on December 19th, 2025. Just three days later, Bari Weiss, the utterly unqualified head of CBS News, pulled a 60 Minutes story that went against the interests of the Trump administration. Weiss was put in charge of CBS News by right-wing billionaire David Ellison, who’d recently bought CBS’s parent company Paramount.


Alan MacLeod writes:

No other period in history has seen such a rapid and overwhelming buy up of our means of communications by the billionaire class—a fact that raises tough questions about freedom of speech and diversity of opinion. Today, the world’s seven richest individuals are all major media barons, giving them extraordinary control over our media and public square, allowing them to set agendas, and suppress forms of speech they do not approve of. This includes criticisms of them and their holdings, the economic system we live under, and the actions of the United States and Israeli governments.

Robert Reich provides a clear example:

After taking charge of CBS, David Ellison promised to gut DEI policies there, put right-wing hack Kenneth R. Weinstein into a new “ombudsman” role, and made anti-“woke” opinion journalist Bari Weiss editor-in-chief of CBS News, despite her lack of experience in either broadcasting or newsrooms.

The Guardian reports that Larry Ellison has told Trump that if Paramount gains control of Warner Bros. Discovery — which owns CNN — Paramount will fire CNN hosts whom Trump doesn’t like.

Other billionaire media owners have followed the same trajectory.

A news outlet owned by a business mogul will inevitably put the mogul’s business interests first and the public interest second (or worse).

As Reich points out, a better government would block billionaires with obvious conflicts of interest from snapping up news networks. But we certainly don’t have a government that sensible now, and I’m not sure we ever will, even when the Democrats eventually stumble their way back into power.

Lately, for general mainstream news, I’ve been reading The Guardian, which is owned by a trust that exists only to “secure the financial and editorial independence of The Guardian in perpetuity.” Specifically, I read the US edition, which seems less transphobic than their U.K. mothership.

I wouldn’t say it’s a completely objective newspaper – but at least its bias is its own, and unlikely to turn on a dime next month because a billionaire bought it.

I also read other independent news sites – for example, I’m a fan of (most of) Propublica’s work. And I follow individual writers who often specialize in issue areas, like Marisa Kabas and Erin Reed and Jessica Valenti and many others. Let me know in comments if there’s a news source or writer you’ve found especially valuable – I’m always on the look out for new sources that I won’t have time to read nearly as often as they deserve.

The problem is that it all becomes a little much; there are so many excellent individual journalists deserving of support, and I can only support so many. But hopefully, there are many tens of thousands of readers like me (and I imagine most of you), and if we all support a few people hopefully they can all keep going.


TRANSCRIPT OF CARTOON

This cartoon has four panels.

PANEL 1

Two anchors on a TV news show are talking.

MALE ANCHOR: Breaking news – The sale of this network to a billionaire has been finalized!

FEMALE ANCHOR: Wow! It seems like that’s been happening to all the networks!

PANEL 2

A guy sits in his living room, practicing the guitar, while the news plays on his laptop.

MALE ANCHOR: Not just the networks – all the social media sites too!

FEMALE ANCHOR: So will things be changing here in the newsroom.

PANEL 3

The news plays on a wall-mounted TV in a laundromat.

MALE ANCHOR: Absolutely not! Our news division will remain independent!

FEMALE ANCHOR: You really think so?

PANEL 4

In the TV studio; we are behind the anchors, looking at the cameras and lights. A nervous looking intern winces away from a confident looking executive. The cue card the intern holds says “Of course! In fact, it’s good that journalism is owned by kindly oligarchs with only the public’s best interests at heart!”

MALE ANCHOR: Of course! In fact, it’s good that journalism is owned by kindly oligarchs with only the public’s best interests at heart!

CHICKEN FAT WATCH

“Chicken fat” is ancient cartoonist lingo for fun but unimportant details in the art.

PANEL 1 – In the skyline in the background, a caped superhero flies. The chyron says “Caped Hero Spotted Over Skyline – only the most attentive viewers notice. End times sign?

PANEL 2 – The dog is very attentively watching the newscast. The book the man is looking at is called “Guitar Riffs for a Mid-Life Crisis.”

PANEL 3 – The chyron on TV says “Blah Blah Blah Blah. Blah? Yes, Blah!” and then “this particularly rapid unintelligible patter” (a Gilbert and Sullivan reference).

Signs on the wall: “WANTED: Flier writer. Must be able to write better fliers than this one.” “LOST: Innocence. If found do not return, I worked so hard to get rid of it.” “NOTICE: Soap sludge scraped off the bottom of washers is NOT edible.”

A koi fish is swimming around in the washing machine.


The Future of Journalism Is Now | Patreon

Posted in Cartooning & comics, Media criticism | 5 Comments

Wanted


ICE agents are the worst people in the world. If you’re a good person and you’re working for ICE, you don’t really exist, because all the good people have resigned by now.

In Maine, an ICE agent told a woman filming him in public – which is entirely legal to do – “we have a nice little database, and now you’re considered a domestic terrorist.”

In Minneapolis, days after an ICE agent publicly murdered Renee Good, agents were referring to Good’s death to threaten civilians. “Listen, have y’all not learned from the past couple of days? Have you not learned?”

Garret Grass reports that “Overall, CBP’s arrest and misconduct rate is FIVE TIMES higher than other federal law enforcement agencies — and, in fact, if you look over the last decade, the arrest rate of CBP officers and Border Patrol agents (.5%) has been HIGHER than the arrest rate of undocumented immigrants in the United States (.4%).”

Brookings wrote about “reports of ICE using excessive force, such as in the case of Julio Sosa-Celis, and of U.S. citizens being arrested or detained based on their accent or appearance, including Native Americans.”

On January 20, a 5-year-old with a pending asylum case was apprehended by ICE as he arrived home from preschool. School officials say he was used “as bait” to attempt to arrest other family members and members of his community.

ICE agents are some of the worst people, and that’s not an accident.

ICE is deliberately trying to attract the worst people in the country, by using white nationalist dog whistles in recruitment ads. For instance, they’ve posted ads using the slogan “We’ll Have Our Home Again,” a quote from a white nationalist anthem.

Since 2020, the song has been circulated on the messaging app Telegram almost exclusively by accounts linked to far-right extremists, according to analysis by Open Measures, a research firm that specializes in online extremism.

With lyrics about replacement by foreigners, Beirich says the song is only popular in white nationalist spaces. “This is the kind of thing that I can’t find to be a mistake,” she said.

ICE has also famously lowered “the bar for recruits, including reduced training, slower background checks, and lower physical abilities… Some ICE recruits reached the training academy before fingerprinting, drug tests or background checks were completed.”

Washington Post reporter Drew Harwell commented on ICE recruitment:

With this kind of campaign, they feel like they’re going on the internet and basically just saying, “Hey, if you want to pick up a gun and start shoving people around, you want to join us.”

No wonder ICE has been killing people – thirty two people in 2025, and they’re on track to kill many more than that in 2026.


Most of the drawing in this one is basic – mostly just a guy talking straight to the camera – although I hope it’s good. The last panel was the most fun to draw, just because there’s so much more going on there. And – as far as chicken fat goes – I’m very pleased with my little “summary of everything popular on YouTube” at the bottom of panel three. Frank Young did a terrific job with the colors, despite my giving him zero guidance. (It’s so handy to work with a colorist who gets my cultural references).


TRANSCRIPT OF CARTOON

This cartoon has four panels.

PANEL 1

A middle-aged man in a button-up shirt points directly at us, contempt on his face. He’s standing in a park.

MAN: You! Yeah, you! Face it – you’re a loser.

PANEL 2

The man continues berating us.

MAN: You’ve never accomplished much of anything, and you never will, because you’ve got nothing to contribute.

PANEL 3

We’re looking at a hand holding a smartphone; on the phone’s screen, the man continues his rant.

MAN: But you still think you’re better than most people. Especially the dark skinned ones. You’re basically a piece of shit and you want to hurt people.

PANEL 4

We switch scenes to a cluttered living room. Two women are relaxing on the sofa, one with her feet up on the other’s lap. The second woman is looking at her smartphone.

WOMAN 1: What on earth are you watching?

WOMAN 2: New ICE recruitment ad.

PHONE: Well, have I got a job for YOU!

CHICKEN FAT WATCH

“Chicken fat” is long-dead cartoonists’ slang for what the kids now call “Easter eggs.”

Panel two: In the hollow of a tree is a human skull. Through the eyeholes, we can see a bird sitting inside the skull.

And on the ground, an evil bunny glares and smokes a cig.

Panel three: Thumbnails of other videos are below the main image. The other videos are named “CATS,” “puppies,” “BOOBS,” “SPORTS!,” and “RAGE.”

Panel four: There are two framed pictures of the wall, one of a giant worm wearing a polo shirt, the other of the title character from the 1990s cartoon “Daria.”

The cat snoozing on the sofa is wearing glasses.

The first woman has a tattoo of an octopus with a mohawk, and also a snake winding around her arm.

The book on her lap says “BOOK TITLE, by Author Name.”

The second woman has a tattoo of Harold from Harold and the Purple Crayon. She’s wearing a t-shirt with the “Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy” planet logo.

One coffee mug on the table has a picture of an apple with a worm hole. The other mug has a picture of a worm looking puzzled (I think it’s looking for its apple).

A book on the coffee table is entitled “GREG: Like God, but taller” by “A Horne,” a reference to the UK TV show “Taskmaster.”


Wanted | Patreon

Posted in Cartooning & comics, Immigration, Migrant Rights, etc, police brutality, Prisons and Justice and Police | 2 Comments

I Can’t Believe They Deported Carol!


This cartoon is by me and new guest artist Mike Lawrence. Mike Lawrence is a cartoonist in Milwaukie, OR who mostly makes middle grade graphic novels. He’s the creator of the Star Scouts series for First Second and his next book, The Lionharts, is being published this spring from Abrams.

I’ve known Mike for many years, but this is the first time we worked together. It was a pleasure – and Mike took to doing chicken fat with wonderful enthusiasm, so chicken fat fans have a lot to enjoy in this one.


Hey, I had a big Wings of Fire script deadline coming up when this cartoon came out. And there were a lot more guest artists for my political cartoons around that time. I wonder if those two things are somehow related? Hmm.

I named the character “Carol” after Carol Hui, the subject of the New York Times story “A Missouri Town Was Solidly Behind Trump. Then Carol Hui Was Detained.” Despite the title of the story, I don’t think anyone in the article said they’d change their future votes as a result of Hui’s detention.

(Since that NYT story, Hui was released from custody, but her immigration case goes on.)

Of course, some Trump supporters have changed their mind. But many haven’t. A few sample headlines:

Husband Refuses To Take Trump Flags Down After Wife Detained by ICE – Newsweek

He lost his wife to Trump’s immigration crackdown — here’s why he still backs Trump

Illegal Immigrant Says He’ll Still Support Trump Even If He’s Deported – Newsweek

In a way, it’s laudably non-hypocritical of them; even when their own faces are eaten, they still support the face-eating leopard party as a matter of principal.

From the New York Times story about Carol Hui:

“I voted for Donald Trump, and so did practically everyone here,” said Vanessa Cowart, a friend of Ms. Hui from church. “But no one voted to deport moms. We were all under the impression we were just getting rid of the gangs, the people who came here in droves.”

But there aren’t even remotely enough immigrant gang members in the U.S. for Trump to achieve his deportation goals. There are only about a million gang members in the U.S. total.

In fact, there aren’t enough undocumented immigrants, period:

…during his campaign, Trump spoke of deporting 15 million or even up to 20 million people, despite estimates from the Pew Research Center indicating that between 11 and 12 million undocumented immigrants reside in the US.

It was obvious all along that Carol and people like her would be targeted – that Trump’s voters were, in fact, voting to deport moms.


TRANSCRIPT OF CARTOON

This cartoon has four panels. Each panel shows a frizzy-haired guy, and in each panel he’s in a different setting talking to a different person.

PANEL 1

Frizzy and a woman in a green shirt are on a downtown sidewalk.

WOMAN: I voted for Trump, but I didn’t know he’d deport good moms like Carol.

FRIZZY: And now that you know, you’ll vote for someone who’ll fix it, right?

WOMAN: Eh.

PANEL 2

Frizzy and a sad-looking man in a blue baseball cap and American flag t-shirt are sitting at a bar.

MAN: We all love Carol. She’s so honest and hard working. What they did to her is just awful.

FRIZZY: Exactly! So next time you’ll vote for someone for giving people like Carol legal ways to stay?

MAN: Well…

PANEL 3

Frizzy is standing in front of a church, talking to an anxious woman wearing a nice dress.

WOMAN: Carol’s a regular at church! And such a big heart! She doesn’t belong in a detention center.

FRIZZY: Um… So now you’ll vote differently?

WOMAN: I didn’t say that.

PANEL 4

In a park, a man in a plaid shirt looks a little downcast; Frizzy is yelling and in a panic.

MAN: I can’t believe they’re doing this to Carol. Poor Carol.

FRIZZY: SO NOW YOU’LL VOTE DIFFERENTLY RIGHT?!?

CHICKEN FAT WATCH

“Chicken fat” is an archaic cartoonists’ term for unimportant but fun details in the art.

PANEL 1 – The bus sign says “14 to the cool people.” (Mike used to live near, and I still live near, the number 14 bus line).

The sign in the store window says “50% OFF! All 50% off signs now 50% off.”

A child in the store window is holding up a handmade sign saying “trapped plees call mommy.” An ad on the bus stop bench shows a grinning man, and says “LAWYER ready to sue your pants off since 2019.” Small print on the bench says “blah blah blah Bob Loblaws law blog blah money money gimmie gimmie (503) 867-5309.”

Poster on wall says “That Old Band From Your Youth – Surprisingly Still Alive Tour,” with a picture of a walker in a spotlight.

Another poster says “WANTED For Crimes Against Inking,” with a picture of a badly-drawn face surrounded by ink splatters.

A coffee cup on the ground says “Cap’n Boomer,” a Moby Dick reference.

PANEL 2 – A poster on the wall says “Putz Blue Ribbon swill.”

The mustache man has a tattoo of Twilight Sparkle from My Little Pony. His hat has the logo of the UCI (University of California Irvine) Anteaters, except it says UTI. His beer is called “Lowlife.”

A man in the background is wearing a “KPop Demon Hunter.”

There’s gum stuck under the counter.

Under the counter are three rats. The first rat has a mustache and is holding a tiny beer bottle, like the mustache man above him. The second is playing darts. The third is exploring the inside of a mug.

PANEL 3 – The church has a “Church of Christian Love” sign with room for three notices to be pinned to it. The first notice: “Liberals, homos and trans stay out!” The second: “Monday Rapture.” The third: “Tuesday Potluck.”

PANEL 4 – There’s a person sitting high in a tree in the background. In the other tree, Beaker from the Muppets is peeking out of a hollow.


I Can’t Believe They Deported Carol | Patreon

Posted in Cartooning & comics, Elections and politics, Immigration, Migrant Rights, etc | 1 Comment

We’d All Miss Private Health Insurance


Another collab with the terrific R.E. Ryan.


“I Can’t Afford My Spleen” might be a good title for the eventual book collection.


I love the way R.E. drew this, especially the suit-and-tie guy in the last panel, with his quietly sour expression and disappointed slump.

This cartoon feels a bit Doonesbury-ish to me, particularly in the way the fourth panel works, with a extra piece of dialog following the punchline.

I have a shelf full of Doonesbury collections that I used to reread pretty often. (As I’ve gotten older I’m rereading much less than I once did; I blame the internet. Who has time to read with the torrential flood of new content available every minute on our screens?)

Nonetheless, I think Doonesbury – which has now been running an incredible fifty-five years (although it’s now Sundays only, the other six days are reruns) is a singular achievement in cartooning. Very few daily strips have found success with such a distinctive voice and dry sense of humor. And it’s certainly been a big influence on my writing.


I admit, Medicare For All is not going to pass through Congress this year, or the next, or the year after that. But I refuse to give up – someday we could have a better Congress. And we will, almost unavoidably, have a better President. Things have changed; they can change again. (I’d kind of like that on a t-shirt.)

And when that happens… then this cartoon will feel more of the moment. Whooo!

(There may be other advantages as well.)

Happily, Bernie Sanders hasn’t given up on Medicare For All, either – as of this writing, his most recent MFA bill was put forward in April 2025, and gathered sixteen cosponsors.

Sanders, on this issue, is aligned with most Americans. A new survey from Data For Progress found that:

65% of voters support a Medicare for All system — described as a “national health insurance program…that would cover all Americans and replace most private health insurance plans.” This includes majorities of Democrats (78%) and Independents (71%), and a plurality of Republicans (49%).

Even after being exposed to arguments that MFA “would raise taxes and give the government too much control over health care,” 58% of voters still supported it.


TRANSCRIPT OF CARTOON

This cartoon has four panels, all showing a protest in front of a state government capital building, with marchers holding placards. We’re focused on two people talking, on a thin blonde man in a suit, the other a fatter guy in a pink shirt, carrying a sign that says “MEDICARE FOR ALL.”

PANEL 1

Suit, with an annoyed expression, is talking at Pinkshirt.

SUIT: Medicare For All? Ridiculous! Did you know that most Medicare For All proposals ban private health insurance?

PANEL 2

Pinkshirt slaps a palm over his face and looks horrified. Suit is startled.

PINKSHIRT: No private insurance? Oh no! The horror! How could I stand not paying more than my rent for insurance that doesn’t even kick in until I’ve spent $5000?

PANEL 3

A close up of Pinkshirt, wide-eyed and sweating.

PINKSHIRT: How terrible if I could pick any doctor! Imagine the trauma of not losing health insurance if I lose my job! Sob!

PANEL 4

Pinkshirt had fallen dramatically to his knees. Suit scowls at Pinkshirt.

SUIT: I can tell you’re being sarcastic, you know.

PINKSHIRT: The poor insurance company executives! Why didn’t I think of the harm to them!

CHICKEN FAT WATCH

“Chicken fat” is obsolete cartoonist lingo for fun but irrelevant details in the art.

In panel 1, an inflatable frog costume has a frown on its face. In panel 2, the frog has started to blow up a balloon with zebra stripes. In panel 4, the inflatable zebra has joined the inflatable frog, and both are smiling.

The tattoo on Pinkshirt’s arm at first shows an egg in the nest. Then, in the next panel, cracks have appeared in the egg. In the final panel, an adorable chick has hatched.

Protest signs:

“generic background PROTEST sign, which isn’t important and you didn’t need to read this, but now you have.”

“Down with this sort of thing.”

“Proofreaders need health insurence,” with the “e” in the last word crossed out and replaced with an “a.”

“No!”

“Bad Doggie”

“Careful Now”

“I Can’t Afford My Spleen”


We’d All Miss Private Health Insurance | Patreon

Posted in Cartooning & comics | 10 Comments

ICE’s Get Out of Jail Free Card


This was not a fun cartoon to write or draw.

On January 7, 2026, Renee Nicole Good was shot to death in her car by Jonathan Ross, an ICE agent who has been with the agency a decade.

(Wait, January 7? Has it really only been two days? It feels like so much longer).

The same day, the Department of Homeland Security released a statement falsely accusing Good of attempting to murder ICE agents by running them down, adding:

An ICE officer, fearing for his life, the lives of his fellow law enforcement and the safety of the public, fired defensive shots. He used his training and saved his own life and that of his fellow officers.

With his characteristic muddle of malice, stupidity, and delusion, President Trump twice claimed that Good actually had run over Ross: “She didn’t try to run him over, she ran him over.”

Several news agencies (such as this well-made New York Times video) did thorough frame-by-frame analysis of several videos that were taken, showing that the administration was lying about the shooting.

Of course, all police departments – not just ICE – will justify shooting people by claiming they were in deadly peril, or reasonably thought they were. It’s the get out of jail free card for law enforcement, even in cases like an unarmed Black man being shot in the back. And although there are so many infuriating things about the murder of Renee Good, somehow that really got under my craw.

Eventually, I wrote this cartoon, and over several drafts kept whittling it down and simplifying it until there were only two words of dialog. I hope it’s effective.

I went back and forth on how malicious and evil to make the ICE agent in the final panel. Then I read about the ICE shooting of Marimar Martinez, just two months before Good’s death. Martinez, like Good, was accused by an ICE agent of trying to kill him with her car. Martinez, despite being shot five times, survived, and the case against her was so weak the government quietly dropped all charges.

The agent who shot Martinez, Charles Exum, sent texts to his fellow ICE agents gloating about the shooting. His texts included: “I fired 5 rounds, and she had 7 holes. Put that in your book boys,” “I’m up for another round of ‘fuck around and find out’” and “Sweet. My fifteen mins of fame. Lmao.”

Exum, by the way, is a supervisory agent and a shooting instructor for ICE. He’s teaching new agents how to behave. There’s no reason to think that his disgusting attitudes aren’t the norm within ICE.

ICE is a toxic agency, and deserves to be shuttered.


There is always sad and enraging news going on somewhere in the world. I don’t think that should stop us from saying: Happy New Year! Let’s fervently hope it’s a better one.


TRANSCRIPT OF CARTOON

This cartoon has four panels. Each panel shows two people on a sidewalk: One is a masked ICE agent, the other a woman carrying a protest sign which says “abolish ICE.”

PANEL 1

The ICE agent glares at the woman. The woman’s back is to him.

PANEL 2

The woman turns her head, spotting the ICE agent, who has angry body language.

PANEL 3

The ICE agent has drawn his gun and fires three times. The woman falls.

PANEL 4

The ICE agent speaks directly to us, pulling down his mask so we can see his gleeful expression. The woman’s corpse lies in the background.

ICE AGENT: Self-defense!


ICE’s Get Out of Jail Free Card | Patreon

Posted in Cartooning & comics, In the news, police brutality, Prisons and Justice and Police | 83 Comments

BEWARE the NARCO TERRORISTS!


This cartoon is by me and Nadine Scholtes.


Like a lot of people, I’ve been reading the news about Trump’s attacks on so-called “narco terrorists” with horror.

From an ACLU press release:

Not only does the administration claim to have sweeping power to target and kill U.S. citizens anywhere in the world, but it makes the extraordinary claim that the court has no role in reviewing that power or the legal standards that apply… If the Constitution means anything, it surely means that the president does not have unreviewable authority to summarily execute any American whom he concludes is an enemy of the state.

Quoting that press release is a bit sneaky of me, because it’s from 2010, about the Obama administration’s drone strikes outside of combat zones. Those drone strikes killed hundreds or thousands of civilians; it’s hard to know precisely how many civilians were killed, since the official Obama administration numbers simply counted all adult men, without regard for who they were or what they did, as fighters and legitimate targets.

I do see some distinction between Obama’s drone strikes and Trump’s. At one level, I simply trust Obama more than I do Trump (a bar so low you’d need a shovel). I find it easier to imagine Trump calling for his peaceful political enemies to be killed. (Oh, wait, I don’t have to imagine it.)

Another difference: Obama’s strikes were aimed, at least in theory, at the Taliban and Al Qaeda, two groups that actually exist and had committed serious terrorist attacks on Americans. In contrast, Trump’s strikes are against the Cartel de lose Soles, a group that “is probably not a terrorist organisation as most people understand them. Whether it is even an organisation in a formal sense is also up for debate.”

But I’m also disturbed at the similarities. Both campaigns killed innocent civilians (a definite fact for Obama, and highly likely for Trump).

Both Obama and Trump claimed a legally murky right to pick targets for extrajudicial killing without any review from courts or Congress. That’s more power than I wanted Obama to have, and it’s certainly more power than I want Trump to have.

Even if you think that Obama’s drone strikes were justifiable, it’s hard to deny that the way they were done – without oversight, and with claims of being unanswerable to other branches of government – set a terrible precedent.

The U.S. shouldn’t be ruled by an emperor who can arbitrarily choose to kill people with a thumb’s down.


TRANSCRIPT OF CARTOON

This cartoon has five panels. They show two people, a Black woman wearing a white turtleneck, and a white woman wearing a red MAGA cap, talking in a park.

PANEL 1

Turtleneck is holding a smartphone and speaking angrily. Red Cap is taken a bit aback.

TURTLENECK: Look at this! Trump had the Navy shoot another boat of “narco-terrorists” in international waters! No evidence, no trial, just an execution!

PANEL 2

Turtleneck points at Red Cap accusingly; Red Cap raises her palms placatingly.

TURTLENECK: How can you condone this? What’s wrong with you?

RED CAP: Calm down! There’s no need to be uncivil! We can disagree and still be reasonable.

PANEL 3

Turtleneck, still angry, walks away muttering; Red Cap smiles and waves bye.

TURTLENECK: Mumble grumble stupidnazi fascists

RED CAP: Go touch some grass. Bye!

PANEL 4

Red Cap continues smiling and waving bye.

PANEL 5

Still smiling and waving, Red Cap is making a call on her cell phone.

RED CAP: Hello, U.S. Navy? I’m calling to report a narco-terrorist.

CHICKEN FAT WATCH

“Chicken Fat” is obsolete cartoonists’ lingo for Eater Eggs.

PANEL 1 – A happy little mouse is holding a pink balloon. Far in the background, a bird soars.

PANEL 2 – The mouse, now sad, has lost its balloon, which floats into the sky. The bird flies to the balloon.

PANEL 3 – The bird returns the balloon to the again-happy mouse.

PANEL 4 – The MAGA hat reads “Make America Spell Agian”

PANEL 5 – The MAGA hat reads “Mash America’s Grapes Again”


Beware The Narco Terrorists | Patreon

Posted in Cartooning & comics | 32 Comments

Bankruptcy Lane


This cartoon is by me and Becky Hawkins.

Becky writes:

This comic was inspired by current events. Some background: 82nd Ave is a 4-lane road that cuts through East Portland. It’s flanked on both sides by shopping centers and grocery stores, car dealerships and auto repairs. It services the busiest bus line in Oregon, which is often delayed by traffic. It’s also one of the most dangerous streets in the city for drivers, bicyclists, and pedestrians. The city is thinking about turning the outer lanes of 82nd into bus lanes that double as right turn lanes for accessing the businesses. This has several perks, in my opinion. If you want to hear me testify about it, you can watch the public meeting on YouTube. (The link goes right to my 2-minute talk. I value your time as well as your money.)

Some business owners on 82nd are up in arms, threatening to sue, convinced that bus lanes will drive their customers away and destroy their businesses. I’d be more sympathetic, but we just went through this about a mile away. In 2019, SE Foster Rd was transformed from a 4-lane street into a 2-lane street with bike lanes. Local business leaders made their objections known.

I hope I did it justice in the comic.

Barry and I saw this store regularly. It was quite the neighborhood fixture. After the bike lanes went in, the posters slowly came down. Here’s a more recent photo of the store, apparently thriving:

You’ll notice I drew a lot more people on the sidewalk in panel 4, as well as bicyclists in the bike lane. Study after study shows that bike lanes and walkable streets are good for businesses. When there’s a buffer between the sidewalk and the cars and trucks zooming by, sidewalks feel safer and more pleasant to walk on. Anyone can get hit by a car, but old people, young people, and disabled people are especially vulnerable to traffic violence. I made sure to include them on the sidewalk. Similarly, the bike lane will attract those “lycra guys” that people love to hate, but it will also allow a safety-conscious woman to do her grocery shopping by bike.

Barry’s stage directions for panel 4 were “Same dude and same store, obviously. Maybe the season has changed, though?”  I went back and forth on what kind of weather to draw in panel 4. Will critics claim that bike lanes are only for summertime, or that Becky the cartoonist thinks bike lanes magically make the weather nicer? Maybe. In the end, I wanted panel 4 to look much more vibrant than panels 1-3, so I went with it.

I decided to draw the bike lane supporter walking into the store, having biked there. Readers needed to recognize them from panels 1-3, despite being fairly small and facing away from the reader. That’s why I gave them red hair. I also decided they needed a really bold design on the back of their jacket. This is what inspired the general look of the jacket. I loved those lapels. The jacket seemed like something you’d find in a thrift store, so I thought about what organization the jacket might have come from. A bowling team! I’m so happy with the result.


TRANSCRIPT OF CARTOON

This cartoon has four panels, all showing the sidewalk and part of the street in front of a store called “The Furniture KING.”

PANEL 1

A guy in a green jacket is taking a bag out the back of his hatchback. In the background, The Furniture King’s huge display windows are completely covered with signs such as “Call You Mayor We Need All 4 Lanes” and “How Will YOU Get Home?” There’s a tree with pretty autumn leaves.

GREEN JACKET: I can’t wait for the new bike lanes.

STORE OWNER: Noooo!

PANEL 2

The store owner has grabbed the Green Jacket’s shirt and is yelling at him.

STORE OWNER: The new bike lane is supposed to pass right in front of my store! How are my customers supposed to get in? How?

PANEL 3

Green Jacket tries to reassure the store owner, who has fallen to his knees and is weeping.

GREEN JACKET: Er, I don’t think it’ll be-

STORE OWNER: Six months from now my poor store will be out of business! BANKRUPT!

PANEL 4

The same scene, but now the tree leaves are green, and a green bike lane has been installed in front of the store. There are pedestrians and bikers. Store Owner stands on the sidewalk, talking into a bullhorn and shaking a fist in the air.

CAPTION: Two Years Later

STORE OWNER: If they build that new bus lane, it will definitely destroy my store!

CHICKEN FAT WATCH

“Chicken Fat” is old fashioned cartoonist parlance for what we now call “Easter Eggs.”

PANEL 1 – The back of the man’s jacket shows a bowling ball lovingly hugging a bowling pin. The rear view mirror of a car is completely filled with a green monster eye, a reference to the famous “Objects In Mirror Are Closer Than They Appear” Far Side cartoon.

PANEL 4 – The customer walking into the store in the background, is Green Jacket guy from the first three panels.


Bankruptcy Lane | Patreon

Posted in Cartooning & comics | 11 Comments

Reasons To Support Trump


I’m generally against “bothsidesism,” but one thing I believe conservatives and liberals have in common in the U.S.: We both find the other side’s choices completely, utterly incomprehensible.

And nothing is harder to comprehend, in the lefty (a.k.a. my) mindset, then why so many Americans support goddamn fucking Donald Trump. He’s lost some supporters, to be sure, but he seems to have a solid core of followers who will not be shaken off, no matter what he says or does. Even Trump has sometimes seemed impressed by his followers’ loyalty, famously joking, “I could stand in the middle of Fifth Avenue and shoot somebody, and I wouldn’t lose any voters, OK? It’s, like, incredible.”

Nearly all of the reasons given in this cartoon – although I’ve written them in an exaggerated and mocking way – are real reasons I’ve seen Trump supporters give. The exception is the white supremacy panel – I’ve never seen someone outright admit that white identity politics is why they support Trump. But research shows it’s a major factor.

It’s not the deepest cartoon I’ve ever done, but it’s always fun to draw one of my “Nine Jerks” cartoons (as Becky calls them). Not needing to keep characters or settings consistent from panel to panel is so relaxing and frankly makes it faster, making it practical to do nine panels instead of my usual four. And drawing over-the-top angry expressions never fails to be fun.

Also, lots of room for chicken fat, even though it slows me down. Doing the chicken fat has added a lot to my enjoyment of my work.


TRANSCRIPT OF CARTOON

This cartoon has nine panels.

PANEL 1

A grinning man stands in his living room.

MAN: That TV Star billionaire son of a billionaire is an underdog like me!

PANEL 2

A woman standing behind a fence gestures at her phone.

WOMAN: Trump kills random Venezuelans on boats with no trial or evidence… But Democrats seem smug, which is much worse.

PANEL 3

A man in a suit is overcome with fury and shouting.

MAN: Because filthy pet-eating invaders are poisoning America with their dirty blood! (But I’ve got nothing against immigrants).

PANEL 4

A man in a compound surrounded by barbed wire hugs a gigantic gun and yells.

MAN: Because Democrats wanna take our guns!

PANEL 5

This central panel contains the title, “Reasons To Support Trump.” Below that, a nice looking smiling woman talks, and in the background a Klansman adds something.

WOMAN: Not because I’m a closet white supremacist! Heck no!

KLANSMAN: Same!

PANEL 6

A housewife in an apron, surrounded by children, happily talks.

HOUSEWIFE: I like that the President has traditional family values! Like Donald with Ivana Marla Melania.

PANEL 7

A man looks up from reading a newspaper.

MAN: Because Trump is fighting “cancel culture” by getting people we don’t like fired or deported!

PANEL 8

A man in a suit gestures towards a teacher in the background, who looks indignant.

MAN: Because woke “teachers” indoctrinate our kids into being trans!

TEACHER (thought): Yeah, right. I can’t even get them to use deodorant.

PANEL 9

An woman in her living room talks to us angrily.

WOMAN: Liberals are evil terrorist loving pathetic loser cucks who hate freedom! And they say such mean things about Trump!

CHICKEN FAT WATCH

“Chicken Fat” is long-dormant cartoonist speak for irrelevant details we stick in because it amuses us.

Panel 1: Igor, Marty Feldman’s Young Frankenstein character, is peering in the window. (He’s drawn in black and white, like the film). There’s a framed picture of Montgomery Burns on the wall. The man’s sports shirt says “42,” a reference to the Hitchhiker’s Guide To The Galaxy novels.

Panel 2: A flyer taped to the tree says “WANTED: A poem as lovely as this tree. Contact Joyce.” A groundhog wearing a top hat and a scarf has popped out from the ground.

Panel 4: A poster taped to the wall shows an adorable mom holding a gun; the caption says “My other mom is the NRA.” One of the gun crates has a sign on it saying “Caution: Bang! Bang!”

Panel 6: A surprised looking infant hangs from one of the hooks on the wall. One of the children is smoking a cigarette. One is Little Orphan Annie, as she looked early in that comic strip. One has a t-shirt with a superhero named “I.P. Man.”

Panel 7: The newspaper, entitled “The Right News,” has a giant headline saying “Is Zohran Secretly Hamas?” A smaller subhead says “We imply yes!”

Panel 8: On the blackboard, below a complex looking algebra equation, it says “You’re right. You’ll never use this math in real life. Ha ha suckers!” Elsewhere, it says “E=M.C. Hammer” and, in a list format, “1. Fee 2. Fie 3. Foe 4. Fum”.

Panel 9: The cat is a pirate, with a big loop earring in one ear, an eyepatch, and a wooden leg. The vase has Charlie Brown’s shirt’s stripe on it.


Reasons To Support Trump | Patreon

Posted in Cartooning & comics, Conservative zaniness, right-wingers, etc., Elections and politics | 14 Comments