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.

Confusion and Bitterness

I apologize for lingering over this, but it is ever-present in my field of view, and it’s growing increasingly infuriating and unacceptable. I feel like I need to write until I stumble onto the exact proper turns of phrase, somehow capturing the essence of my anger and dis-ease.

In simple words, It’s Donald Trump. In addition, it’s the apparent willingness of most Republican members of Congress to back him up, to go along with his insidious emptiness and have the temerity to double down on embracing the mob boss chic.

It has been difficult to shake the feeling that Mike Johnson and the rest are morphing into biblically illiterate zombies, on some sort of mission to remake America into a place where no sane person would want to live: an isolated dystopia, an ecological disaster, a bleak, miserable landscape characterized by poverty and prejudice and negligence, ruled by a handful of owned, misguided fish out of water and an angry, judgmental God.

How hateful and un-American are they willing to get? We appear to be on the road to find out.

Who the hell can be excited about celebrating our 250th birthday? What is there to get excited about, right now? What are we celebrating? Will we be told what we should be celebrating?

Who, and what, are we?!

Discipline and Habit

Daily writing prompt
How can you build a regular fitness routine?

With intentionality, and somehow sticking with it long enough for it to become an un-missable part of my week. I’m not a fitness junkie, but I do recognize the importance of movement and flexibility.

It’s probably time I tried to get back into going to the Y. I had stopped doing that when we had a ridiculously long stretch of snowy, cold weather this past winter, and it became easy to generate excuses for not venturing outside. How sad is that?

Seriously

Even if it’s all an act, what good is it? Is this what people aspire to, the role model that provides inspiration?

A POTUS worth his or her salt won’t behave this way. Period. There’s no 3D chess, no strategy other than what will lead to financial windfalls for him and his family, and implementation of Project 2025 for the Heritage Foundation.

Everyone should stop holding out hope, waiting for the moment when confirmation arrives and Donald Trump is proven to be the genius his followers and TV network mouthpieces claim him to be. That’s not, nor was it ever, going to happen.

I’ve never found the comments people make about his hands and skin and hair to be in good taste. Pretty cheap, easy targets. There are much more substantive blemishes on which to focus: he is a walking, talking conflict of interests, he’s not a patriot, he’s not a true leader. He’s just a grifter, a damaged soul with a big mouth and a truth impediment. He’s tone deaf, arrogant, needy, vengeful, and socially awkward. He doesn’t care that he burns bridges. He prefers to go it alone, but lacks the tools needed to attempt such a course of action.

He quashes dissent, never learns from mistakes– because in his mind he doesn’t make mistakes. In his own head, he’s the best thinker, smarter than doctors and scientists and diplomats and generals.

Only an ignoramus thinks this way. Or maybe a teenager still wet behind the ears.

Prescience

Daily writing prompt
What’s a classic book that you think is overrated?

They’re called classics for a reason, so far be it for me to take a shot at one of them. I haven’t read many of this genre, but among the ones I have read, I’d say 1984— only because Orwell was off on the date by 40 years. Otherwise, it seems we may be well on our way to the dystopian tone and feel he was describing, especially now that what’s-his-name was re-elected in 2024 and has resumed his derelict reign, and AI is causing people some anxiety.

Endless Enigma

I always end up arriving at the same conclusion: Trump is a really bad joke. He’s POTUS, but it will always be astounding that he’s POTUS.

Making fun of people, coveting— then receiving —someone else’s Nobel Peace Prize; a train of thought that’s mostly focused on tributes to himself while the country is being disemboweled, limping towards an uncertain future.

He’s neglectful, blind, and corrupt to his core. He’s irresponsible, perhaps unredeemable, a real-life caricature of hollowness who continues to be propped up by an army of sycophants just along for the ride.

Sometimes it feels like a bad dream from which we can’t awaken, or an untenable situation from which we can’t extricate ourselves. It often seems like everything is fuel for him. He is maddeningly efficient, alert when he wants to be, able to convert praise or criticism into something that motivates and energizes.

He is endlessly vengeful, entirely self-involved, and very pliable. Feed him a compliment and he’ll be your puppy dog. Until he can’t use you anymore.

He’s a sad, sad, somehow dangerous man who needs to be relieved of his duties. The whole world knows this, but everyone else has their problems, too.

And let’s face it: some players on the world stage are feeling like they have us right where they want us. They’re in no hurry to see him leave. He’s perfect for the job.

Tough One

Daily writing prompt
Who are some underrated people in history?

This feels like a broad topic, and I almost immediately started thinking about some overrated people in history. The current U.S. President came to mind rather quickly.

But underrated? This isn’t a category to which is usually given much thought. I did Google it and found some entries, but on my own, I’m having trouble thinking of anyone. Political figures are an easy target, and very subjective when it comes to opinions about them. Certain athletes might come to mind, maybe teachers we’ve had, or friends and family who don’t realize the difference they’ve made in others’ lives.

In general, and given the current political climate in which we find ourselves, I’m gonna go with teachers, community activists, medical researchers, meteorologists, scientists, and other previously critical personnel and programs whose jobs and functions have been axed by f#!*ing DOGE.

Appearance v Substance

Daily writing prompt
What are the biggest benefits of minimalist living?

I wouldn’t know, and it’s not because we live an extravagant or unbounded lifestyle. It’s just that we’ve never committed wholesale to a minimalist mindset, except maybe in limited ways– like reducing clutter, focusing on time spent with family, and being more cognizant of the difference between needs and wants.

On the other hand, maybe we’ve bought into it more than we realize. My wife more so than me, though. I think it’s something that may make more sense as one grows older, as one gets out in the world and engages life with eyes opened, and at some point just realizes that endless acquisition and keeping up with the Joneses is a selfish, exhausting, and shallow pursuit.

Obsession is a strong word

Daily writing prompt
What’s a thing you were completely obsessed with as a kid?

I’m racking my brain and nothing is coming to mind. There were certain things I treasured, I guess– my baseball glove, my bike. I used to like going out in our back yard to smash rocks– to see what they looked like on the inside.

As an older kid, through the high school years, I couldn’t wait to get home from school and down to the pond to skate. So, hockey equipment became a bit of an obsession for awhile, even though I was limited in what I could get. I used to love going to the local hockey shop and picking up a new stick, maybe a puck or a roll of tape. I would drool over a pair of CCM Tacks, which were always out of reach. I did get a nice pair of Bauer Black Panthers, though, which served me well even into college.

Hints and Allegations

If, someday, we get to speak of the Trump era in the past tense, will we harbor any regrets, or anger? Or will we be in a rush to move on, as if it never happened—like people who have experienced some level of trauma?

Personally, I have done enough handwringing and reflecting and verbal lashing out to fill what feels like several lifetimes, but it somehow hasn’t been enough to scuttle the nagging feeling that this nation and much of the rest of the world have been grievously wronged and deceived, mishandled and ignored, and led down a path strewn with the grievances of a deprived nitwit, a lightweight, out-of-his-element numskull with anger issues who somehow got elected twice to the office of President of the United States.

Donald Trump is the most visible target of our disdain, but of course there are many others: the ones who enabled him and perpetuated the lies, the fellow impostors and sycophants he nominated for high-profile jobs, the people at the Heritage Foundation who were probably only too happy to have such a needy narcissist in place to mold and shape and feed off the bottom for them.

At numerous points along the way, we should have seen and heard enough to discount any hint of seriousness he might have been able to muster. It’s not like there weren’t signs of trouble from the beginning, when he made his grand, over-the-top entrance. That in itself should have been a tip-off. Maybe even enough to dissuade.

Instead, then came making fun of a disabled reporter, the “shithole countries” commentary, along with the misogynistic pablum about how celebrities can get away with all sorts of stuff. And he somehow still managed to achieve sainthood among his loyal base.

It’s been all downhill ever since, not unlike the direction of that f*#!ing escalator.

Twofer

Daily writing prompt
What’s the most interesting local custom you’ve encountered?

Chicken and waffles– pulled chicken, with gravy, over waffles and mashed potatoes, with sides of corn and green beans and maybe pickled cabbage that approximates coleslaw, with homemade pies and cakes as options for dessert. It is a complete gustatory wonder. And very filling. I had never heard of such a thing until we moved to PA, maybe northeastern PA.

A local church or other group is often holding a supper as a fundraiser, so it works out well: we’re supporting a local organization, and we don’t have to fuss over what to have for the evening meal. Though, it might make more sense, health-wise, to have it earlier in the day.