What’s It Gonna Be?

The Supreme Court ain’t so supreme, of late.

Maybe it has always benefited from a certain undeserved mystique- its members aren’t gods, after all, just human beings tasked with important work. Justices over the years have produced many landmark decisions seemingly based on a sincere and fair treatment of testimony and applicable law, even charting new ground from time to time, especially when it comes to human rights and bodily autonomy.

Lately, though, there seems to be some backsliding. More suspicion, more doubt, more finger pointing in the direction of a hand-picked conservative majority on a mission to, oh, I don’t know, tighten things up, bring us back to a “better” place that pleases straight, white Christians everywhere.

In the midst of the Trump mess, the court seems to not want to stick its neck out and abide by the 14th Amendment provision of forbidding insurrectionists from running for office. Though he hasn’t been accused yet, many know what Trump did and who and what he really is, and how dangerous he has become.

So maybe it comes down to how closely the court adheres to the letter of the law, along with its efforts to reel in the temptation to react to certain public sentiment, and to what many are seeing with their own eyes: Trump running roughshod over, and even making a mockery of certain norms that have long served as guardrails.

Sometimes it looks like nothing can be done to make him go away.

Not So Fast

Call me a party pooper, but I’m not as excited about the election results in Hungary as others appear to be. The guy who prevailed was in Victor Orban’s fold until someone treated his woman poorly. And maybe he had become a bit disenchanted with the direction an authoritarian regime is liable to take a country.

From what PBS was reporting last night, the new victor knows his way around politics and “did what he had to do” to win. He knew which buttons to push, which people to spend time schmoozing. This to me doesn’t equate to a new day for the people of Hungary who, based on video of post-election rallies, were over the moon with happiness that Orban was ousted. They best reel it in until Peter Magyar proves to everyone that he means what he says about a return to democratic rule and undoing the damage Orban has wrought.

We know a thing or two about someone who promises whatever he thinks voters want to hear, but then reveals he had no intention of delivering, and in fact was and is nothing but a pretender whose only superpower is lying his ass off.

Tasty Fare

Daily writing prompt
What is your favorite restaurant?

Locally, it’s a place that’s been in business for about seven years now– decent pub food, good beer. They have a pork chop entree that’s quite delicious. We often stop at a Chipotle for lunch when we’re out and about. And sometimes we’re close enough to East Earl, PA to rationalize a stop at Shady Maple Smorgasbord.

Fancy restaurants are usually off the table, but on recent visits to our daughter and son-in-law outside of Denver, I was treated to a wonderful meal at a Ruth’s Chris Steakhouse, and a Japanese sushi establishment that’s out of this world. These were a whole other level of dining.

Appalling Cluelessness

So, how is this gonna work, exactly? How is a naval blockade of a portion of the Strait of Hormuz, along with Iranian ports, not going to trigger further violence and add to the tension that already exists in that part of the world? Not to mention affecting the entire planet’s economy even more than it already has, and not to mention putting our soldiers and sailors in harm’s way.

Trumpworld obviously miscalculated when it comes to the consequences of saying yes to Bibi. And now we’ve apparently reached a point where the brain rot that is Trump and Hegseth and the rest have decided to just step in and rule the Strait. Just like that, cue the finger snap? We have to use all that military and naval build-up for something, right? When is our military going to start questioning the orders coming from this collective brain freeze?

Many, I imagine, are wondering how this all doesn’t fall apart. Trump must be really feeling the heat from the whole Epstein thing– especially now that Melania appears to have gone rogue.

This is what happens when people are hired to come in and just break things.  

Impressive

Must See TV last night was watching the Artemis 2 astronauts maneuver their Orion spacecraft into the proper attitude for reentry and then seeing them splash down in the Pacific, off the coast near San Diego.

It is a somewhat tense period, when you know they’re hurtling back into the atmosphere at 25,000 miles per hour—15,000 feet per second—hoping the heatshield does it job as they encounter temps around 5000 degrees F. There was a 6-minute blackout when the networks had to fill airtime, and everyone waited for confirmation that all was well. It came on cue, and we eventually watched as the drogue chutes deployed first, then the mains, and the capsule drifted to a soft touchdown, after having traveled beyond the moon and back.

It’s astonishing what we can do when we put our minds to something.

A Few Things

Daily writing prompt
Describe something you learned in high school.

The first thing to come to mind was Paul Simon’s Kodachrome, but I can’t really say that I learned a lot of crap in high school. I learned some Spanish, I learned how to use a Bunsen burner and make esters in Chemistry class, I dissected a frog and learned a bit about anatomy in Biology class. I read To Kill a Mockingbird and A Separate Peace for the first time in high school.

I tried to learn something more than basic arithmetic in Algebra and Trigonometry classes, though that didn’t take very well. I learned that trying out for the high school baseball team was a lot different than trying out for Little League. I learned that the baseball coach–who was also one of my history teachers– actually played minor league ball for the St. Louis Cardinals.

I learned about the value of reading the editorial page of the newspaper in high school, took Driver Ed. and got my license with Mr. Ford, and even started talking to girls, which was a big thing for wallflower me.

Decorum

It’s time for The Masters golf tournament. “A tradition like no other,” goes the byline. It is often a great tournament to watch, since Augusta National is a beautiful course, all decked out with blooming azaleas and Amen Corner, and the players themselves rise to the occasion and play some great golf. For the casual observer, it might all seem like so much hokum, unduly refined, steeped in more tradition and reverence than any golf tournament deserves.

A few things surprise me about the event– a four-day pass, if one is lucky enough to secure one via a lottery, is only $140. But the secondary market, i.e. resale value for such a coveted ticket, is through the roof, the highest margin of any sport– thousands of dollars. Concessions are remarkably inexpensive– sandwiches at $1.50, some at $3, a beer for $5. Souvenirs are sold only on site, no e-commerce. So if one is lucky enough to get in, the costs for certain items aren’t at all steep. All that being said, the clientele for this tournament includes a high percentage of high income movers and shakers who fly in on private jets and pay $10,000 a day for access to their own facilities that include food, beverages, a separate souvenir shop, and other perks.

The people who attend are never referred to as “fans,” but rather “patrons.” They are the guests of Augusta National and are treated as such. It is said that once you find a spot to sit, you can leave your chair for hours, come back, and it will be empty, waiting for you.

It takes an army of volunteers and staff to pull this off every year– from groundskeepers to security to vendors. The course itself conceals a network of underground electrical and mechanical technology, and the famed bloom of azaleas behind the 12th green is intentionally managed to be at its height during tournament week.

Despite its checkered history with regard to admission of non-white and female members, Augusta National puts on its best face for The Masters– a unique event, with its own traditions that people appear to appreciate and honor, year after year.

Movement

Daily writing prompt
What’s the most fun way to exercise?

There’s lots of movement with the grandkids. They keep us hopping. Bike riding is enjoyable, as is a walk around the neighborhood. Golf is still a decent walk, even when using a cart, and I’ve been using the stationary bike at home quite a bit lately. It’s a mindless way to exercise, but I’ve noticed improvement in leg strength and duration of rides.

Despicable and Repugnant

At some point, many wake up to the deception.

The motivation, for example, for heading back to the moon isn’t as much about the indomitable human spirit as it is a fear of placing second to a political and cultural rival– China, or maybe Russia.

The verbal combativeness, misdirection, and creepily slanted patriotic vomit spilling from Donald Trump, Stephen Miller, Steve Bannon, J.D. Vance, Fox News, Newsmax and the rest isn’t really about loving America and doing what’s in the best interest of most Americans as much as it is emotional blackmail and gaslighting and subversive efforts to bring the country to its knees—all in order to secure a consolidation of power, white privilege, and a ghastly, dystopian restoration of “Christian” values.

Donald Trump, I imagine, has been only too happy about the seeming fact that enough of us are still acting like we were born yesterday. Enough of us are still eating out of his hand, still viewing him as a refreshing, even messianic, take-no-prisoners straight talker who bad-mouths people who support heinous programs like SNAP and Social Security and school lunches and solar energy and scientific research that leads to vaccines and other life-saving innovations.

The Republican party is full of smooth-talking word gymnasts and groupies who can influence outcomes and distract and confuse and deceive, who don’t think twice about lying and doing whatever they can to get us to doubt our own intentions and second-guess America’s goodness, or disparage it as pie-in-the-sky idealism.

It may be the most insidious aspect of this anomalous, aberrant occurrence we’ve come to know as the Trump years: that lying is acceptable, having grown so commonplace as to be mistaken for authenticity.

May we live to see a renaissance of the concept of consensus, and a rebirth of trust born of genuinely honorable intentions.