Saturday, June 13, 2026

CARTOON CAROUSEL: The nation’s cartoonists on the week in politics | By POLITICO STAFF 06/12/2026 05:00 AM EDT

Every week political cartoonists throughout the country and across the political spectrum apply their ink-stained skills to capture the foibles, memes, hypocrisies and other head-slapping events in the world of politics. 

The fruits of these labors are hundreds of cartoons that entertain and enrage readers of all political stripes. Here's an offering of the best of this week's crop, picked fresh off the Toonosphere. Edited by Matt Wuerker.


 CARTOON CAROUSEL

Jun 12, 2026 -Politics & Policy 

America approaches 250 with its best days in doubt

Russell Contreras

Illustration of the Statue of Liberty looking concerned and with her arm down and the flame out on her torch

Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios. Stock: Getty Images

"Most Americans say the country's best days are behind it as the U.S. approaches its 250th birthday, even as they're personally hopeful about the future. . ."

READ MORE: https://www.axios.com/

A Clandestine U.S. Operation in the Strait of Hormuz

The Secret U.S. "Dark Fleet": Breaking the Strait of Hormuz Blockade? ⚓Analysis of President Trump’s statements on the Strait. ⚓The role of Secretary Wright’s congressional testimony. ⚓How U.S. Navy and Marines are providing point defense for commercial tankers. ⚓The impact on Kuwaiti and Qatari oil/LNG exports. ⚓A deep dive into the "competing dark fleets" currently operating in the region. Video:

00:00 - Introduction: A Second Dark Fleet? 01:15 - Trump’s Revelation: 100 Million Barrels Clandestinely Moved 03:40 - Secretary Wright’s Testimony: "Meaningful" Oil Flow Increases 05:34 - The "Aha" Moment: Piecing Together the Operation 06:44 - Attacks & Retooling: From Project Freedom to Dark Transits 08:09 - Bloomberg & TankerTrackers: Identifying the Dark Fleet 10:45 - State-Owned Tankers: ADNOC, Kuwait, and Qatar’s Involvement 12:16 - Data Analysis: Kepler & the Reality of Oil Exports 14:48 - Pre-War vs. Current Volume: Is it Enough? 16:06 - Marine Traffic Breakdown: The Blockade & Sanctions 19:20 - Conclusion: The Evidence & The Sweet Spot of Truth Contact What's Going on With Shipping via: Patreon: www.patreon.com/wgowshipping Twitter: @mercoglianos Bluesky: @mercoglianos.bsky.social Facebook: @wgowshipping Email: mercoglianosal@gmail.com Marine Traffic www.marinetraffic.com Seasearcher https://www.seasearcher.com/ Tanker Trackers on X https://x.com/TankerTrackers CENTCOM on X https://x.com/CENTCOM Amena Bakr on X https://x.com/Amena__Bakr Trump Claims Covert U.S. Operation Helped 200 Ships Transit Hormuz https://gcaptain.com/trump-claims-cov... Oil Tankers Go Dark to Sneak More Gulf Barrels Through Hormuz https://gcaptain.com/oil-tankers-go-d... U.S. Energy Secretary Says Ship Traffic Through Hormuz Increasing ‘Meaningfully’ https://gcaptain.com/u-s-energy-secre... U.S. Counts Far More Hormuz Ship Transits Than Commercial Tracking Data Shows https://gcaptain.com/u-s-counts-far-m... ADNOC https://www.adnoc.ae/

The US Plan to Seize Iran's Kharg Oil Island - YouTube

Friday, June 12, 2026

SPECIAL FEATURE ANGEL ROBLES: Tonight at MADHATTER KAVA

 Tonight! Come enjoy the great sounds and vibes from Angel. No better way to spend a Friday night then Mad Hatter and Music


AZ’s Best Kava Bar 🔥🍹
Serving Kava Cocktails, Herbal Teas & CBD Coffee 

🎩✨🌟 Gilbert, another packed week is here at Mad Hatter ...

Viva! Carmen!!

Check out VoyagePhoenix's latest Rising Stars article featuring Executive Director Carmen Guerrero!



Learn more about her practice as an artist and the work she has done to promote the Chicano and Indigenous arts through Cultural Coalition for over 30 years. We are excited that her work in the community is being recognized, keeping the cultural arts accessible to all!

Take a look https://voyagephoenix.com/.../rising-stars-meet-carmen...

MesaZona > Table of Contents : Here's The Menu. Enjoy

AI Overview
The Mesazona Blogspot (mesazona.blogspot.com) is a localized Mesa, Arizona blog created by local advocate and blogger Tim Mello
It primarily focuses on community-driven development, affordable housing advocacy, transit-oriented development, and local historical highlights in the Mesa and Phoenix metropolitan areas. [1, 2, 3
Mesa history: A shady story for downtown district. . .Mesa has long viewed its downtown district with an eye toward improvements to keep it from being an eyesore 

Hope again for long-dormant downtown parcel | News | eastvalleytribune.com
The history here on this infamous site - and all the problems - simply cannot be ignored now. . . Jeff McVay, the city's so-called "Director of Downtown Transformation" failed miserably two years wasting time-and-money on citizen input sessions that got nowhere...

Press Release from the City of Mesa Newsroom:

Neighborhood Meetings for Public Input for Transform 17

March 30, 2022 at 11:07 am
Mesa residents will be able to provide input on the proposed plans for Transform 17. The project includes a mixed-use neighborhood of residential, office and community retail at the southwest corner of Mesa Drive and University Drive.
Public engagement will begin on Monday, April 4, with a virtual meeting from 5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. Visit www.gblaw.com/nexusmesa to register to participate.
The second meeting will take place on Thursday, April 7, from 5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. at the Charles K. Luster Building Community Room, 640 N. Mesa Drive.
The proposal from Miravista Holdings uses a development block approach consisting of eight development blocks. The initial phase includes two development blocks, street realignment, streetscape improvements and construction of a linear park along 2nd Street between Pasadena and Pomeroy.
The master plan calls for at least 800 housing units, including townhomes and apartments; approximately 200,000 square-feet of office space; at least 25,000 square-feet of commercial space and a parking structure.

City Council is expected to consider zoning issues, a purchase agreement and development agreement in late August.

Contact: Kevin Christopher
(480) 644-4699
kevin.christopher@mesaaz.gov

 2022

STIGMATIZED INFAMOUS SITE 17: A Relic of Downtown Bulldozing + Bad Urban Land-Use Planning

Intro: It was and is a recurring wrecking-ball wreck leaving behind a vacant 27-acre scar all in the name of urban renewal when the city of Mesa seized the properties using Eminent Domain.
It was a futile attempt to "whitewash" segregation in the neighborhood named North Town, next to Rendezvous Park.
However it came to be known as The Mesa Verde Resort Debacle
30 years ago the City of Mesa spent $6,000,000 to demolish a neighborhood that created a "wrecking-ball nightmare.
This public statement made last year:
"The City of Mesa wishes to transform 27 acres of city-owned land at the SWC of University and Mesa Drive into 'a vibrant and cohesive urban mixed-use project' and is requesting a partner to help with that vision . . ."

NICE SPIN ON THAT LIP-SERVICE at the same time city officials were talking with Salt Lake City developers for years.
According to the RFQ, “At 27-acres, this site would be the largest parcel to be developed in the downtown area and could be the largest single development opportunity within downtown for many years to come.”
 
 featured top story

Can city boondoggle be a downtown boon?

   

City planners laid out their vision of how residential, commercial and office space would be distributed on the downtown site. (City of Mesa) +

Boondoggle

Updated

"Mesa City Council hopes this is the year to finally turn a downtown boondoggle into a boon for downtown. Council recently heard the latest development plan for 27 acres of city-owned land just north of Main Street near Phoenix Marriott Mesa that Mesa acquired through eminent domain, leveling 63 homes at a taxpayer cost of $6 million.

BLOGGER INSERT >

October 2023

New plans pitched for tortured downtown site | News | themesatribune.com

INSERT: Streaming video upload of the actual City Council Study Session

INSERT: Excerpt from earlier post

WHAT HAPPENED?

Developer Requested to Transform Mesa Site

If Mesa succeeds in bringing the long-dreamed redevelopment into reality with the city’s latest partner on the project, Miravista Holdings, it would make the third decade the charm for a prime piece of real estate that has long sat vacant.

  • The city started purchasing property at the southwest corner Mesa and University Drives in 1996 and eventually acquired homes through eminent domain in order to make way for a 12-story water-park resort proposed by a Canadian developer.
  • But the planned Mesa Verde water resort died after the developer failed to secure funding.
  • Since then, city planners have envisioned different types of projects for Site 17, as it’s been known, and hoped one developer after another would take up the mantle; but those deals all fell through. . .city planners are hoping 2022 is the year an agreement with a developer leads to shovels in the ground. 

> Last year, the city signed a nine-month “exclusive dealings agreement” with Miravista Holdings to create a master plan for the parcel, which commands a critical location that is in walking distance from downtown attractions, light rail and the Arizona State University campus.

> Officials appeared cautiously optimistic that the multi-phase, mixed use development concocted by Miravista and architectural firm Gensler will come to fruition and keep the redevelopment project only on the drawing board for a fourth decade. . .

Downtown Transformation Manager Jeff McVay said the city has extended its memorandum of understanding with Miravista to continue working on the plan with the goal of signing a development agreement by Aug. 29.. . .The plan is divided into eight sections that can be developed in any order after the initial phase.

  1. “The remaining blocks have the flexibility to be developed in partnership with you as opportunities arise, as the market dictates,” Ayers said. “Really, the city has the opportunity to control that process for the most part.”
  2.  . .If the city signs a deal with Miravista in August, the company would be required to purchase the first two blocks of land within a year of council approval and complete construction within two years of purchase. . .

TWO QUOTATIONS ARE INCLUDED:

City Manager Chris Brady “We’ve always thought of this site as a support and complement in strengthening downtown. The idea is we didn’t want this to compete with what’s already downtown, . .Downtowns, to be successful, need to have that residential vibe, that 24-hour vibe, not just during the workday.”

Hizzoner the Mayor (Giles put it more bluntly): “What downtown needs is people,” . . .“I have been sitting in this room talking about this piece of property since the 1990s, . .I’m very anxious to see a shovel go in the ground.”

> Miravista plans two neighborhood information meetings next month to share details of the plan. It will hold an in-person meeting Thursday, April 7, and a virtual meeting Monday, April 4. Miravista said notification letters went out to neighbors at the end of last week. 

. . Besides describing the master plan, McVay also sketched out the outlines of a development agreement with Miravista for council members.

> Miravista would have to follow timelines for getting the first phase done, and also set aside money for the city to do “restoration” if the project fails for some reason.

> The city, for its part, would sweeten the deal for Miravista by giving it the opportunity to significantly offset the cost of the land.

> The city would agree to reimburse Miravista up to 75% of the land purchase price for what appear to be modest public improvements in the master plan, such as a “linear park” along the southern edge of the property on 2nd Street, and “enhanced streetscape improvements” to Hibbert and 2nd Street.

  • The linear park would be the beginning of a “connected network of shaded space” through the development, Ayers said.

> The city would also agree to consider temporary tax waivers on certain development blocks within the master plan deemed to offer particular public benefits. The state allows cities to waive property taxes for up to eight years for developments located in a designated Central Business District that meet other specified criteria.

Council members appeared satisfied that Miravista’s plan has the potential to inject energy into downtown Mesa, but the optimism was tempered by caution, knowing how many false starts the site has seen. . ."

RELATED CONTENT ON THIS BLOG

11 May 2021

Holey Holdings! Sizzle or Fizzle

Don't know if you noticed or not but Miravista Holdings LLC happens to be all over some places in Mesa.
Miravista Holdings (https://www.miravistaholdings.com/ ) is a boutique development firm specializing in Brownfield redevelopment, urban infill, and adaptive re-use projects.
Here's a story from three weeks ago - curiously enough featuring former Mesa Mayor Scott Smith and his "vision" for that now long-time vacant downtown urban redevelopment wrecking-ball disaster infamous Site 17: What to do with Site 17?
SPOTLIGHT
Site included big-splash resort plan that fizzled
More > An answer seems to be at hand now with the emergence of Miravista/SIHI Holdings LLC as the city-approved developer for the land. The vision, endorsed by the City Council on April 5, is a mixed-use project with a heavy emphasis on health care and research, residential and other business components
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

> Scott Smith, who served as Mesa’s mayor 2008-14, believed Site 17 eventually would find its own solution.

In a 2013 interview, Smith said the city – having already waited that long – was willing to wait a while longer.

“We’re going to let things happen organically,” Smith said. 

He figured the arrival of light rail in downtown Mesa in 2015 would hasten the process, and suggested the acreage might become home to one or more of the colleges that had committed to building campuses in Mesa around that time.

That didn’t happen, either. 



Arizona Republic
Nov. 24, 2016, 7:12 a.m. MT

Once billing itself the “Gem City,” Mesa has always prided itself on being a beautiful community.

When it was once a small town, it could concentrate efforts in the original square mile. . ." 

The City of Zion Plat 
Courtesy of the Church Archives
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
https://latterdaysaintmag.com/article-1-8673/

At a time when farmers were establishing individual farms across the American Midwest, Joseph Smith taught that farmers should live in small organized cities where “the farmer and his family . . . will enjoy all the advantages of schools, public lectures and other meetings.  His home will no longer be isolated, and his family denied the benefits of society, which has been, and always will be, the great educator of the human race; but they will enjoy the same privileges of society, and can surround their homes with the same intellectual life, the same social refinement as will be found in the home of the merchant or banker or professional man” (from B. H. Roberts, A Comprehensive History of the Church, 1:312, as cited in Richard H. Jackson, “The Mormon Village: Genesis and Antecedents of the City of Zion Plan,” page 230, in BYU Studies 17 [Winter 1977]: 223-240).

Joseph Smith's Plan for the City of Zion 

Salt Lake City - History Minute - Plats of Zion

A funny thing is happening in many US cities 




The Old Donut Hole



FUN WITH WORDS: The Doughnut/Donut Duality

Long-time readers of this blog might remember the usage of an altered image of a "Doughnut" or "Donut" to help explain the demise of a defunct central business district described tongue-in-cheek as The Old Donut Hole.
It appears for illustration purposes as Downtown, even though there is no point of comparison or what is normally associated with it - Uptown.
There is no area in common usage that people who live here reference as "Uptown". . there never was one of those when all the growth in population and home-building moved outside of the CBD to The Suburbs.
And please note that word is distinctly plural (more than one).
People swarmed like bees into new tracts of block homes - block after block after block, lots of blocks that dotted empty fields.
_____________________________________________________________________________
 
More from Huffpost

Doughnut Or Donut? The Great Spelling Debate Of Our Time

We're about to take you on a quest to discover the term's origin, and its inevitable path toward ruin. You may want to grab a doughnut for this one.

Doughnuts have become an integral part of American culture, loved for providing us with mouths full of comfort and loathed for ruining our diets. Beyond this love/hate relationship is another duality we apparently feel very passionately about: The correct spelling. Is it doughnut or donut?


How to Revitalise Cities: Doughnuts in Urban Development

NEVER WITHOUT CONTROVERSY 

JOSEPH SMITH SAID: "ALL THE AMERICAS (The Continent) ARE ZION" 

CARTOON CAROUSEL: The nation’s cartoonists on the week in politics | By POLITICO STAFF 06/12/2026 05:00 AM EDT

Every week political cartoonists throughout the country and across the political spectrum apply their ink-stained skills to capture the foib...