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.

Power Failure

It’s a start, Donald, but even you must have an inkling that the firings can’t end with your in-way-over-her-head DHS secretary. Ms. Noem is the tip of the iceberg.

It comes down to you. You need to go, too.

For some god-forsaken reason, you’ve been able to commandeer the ship and steer it toward the rocks. On purpose. You’ve shamfully (no sic) taken the oath of office—twice —fingers crossed both times, and proceeded to deep-six the responsibilities that come with the position of POTUS.

It’s never been about patriotism or God, or caring. It’s always been about you and your empty soul, you and your “deal making,” you and your fixation on material wealth and self-enrichment and loopholes and distractions and chaos, and a crippling need to get even with… somebody. What are you even doing here? How could someone with such misguided aspirations make it as far as you have?

You’re a walking, talking lie, Donald. You’re the fake—not the news outlets who have always seen right through you. You’ve somehow attracted a legion of sycophants who are more than willing to back you up, sanction the incompetence and the hate, kiss and cover your ass.

You don’t love America. You’re just an act, and a horrendous one at that. So the hook is coming out, and the curtain is descending. Hopefully it’s in time to douse the fire you’ve started in Iran, you piece of shit.

Structure isn’t always my friend

Daily writing prompt
What is one question you hate to be asked? Explain.

Good question. My father used to ask me, periodically, “So, do you think you’ll ever amount to anything?” I never really hated the question. Maybe I was more confused by it, though I remember usually taking it with a grain of salt, assuming that he was being playful and asking the same thing of my siblings.

I always said Yes, even though I had no plan or little reason for confidence. Besides, whether or not I ever amounted to anything wouldn’t be my question to answer. I came to see this as a reflection of what Dad thought of himself, because of what he perceived as a lack of societally sanctioned “achievements” in his life. He could get down on himself pretty easily, even though to my brothers and sisters and I, he was always the best dad in the world, and loved and respected by everyone around him.

I guess the question I hate most, whether asked outright or insinuated with body language or a glance, is “What are we gonna do today?”– as if every day must have an agenda and a To Do list, as in “Time to get your ass in gear.” I really am annoyed by that, for some reason. The days of being concerned with purposeful busyness have been over for a while.

Epic Fury, alright

Blood is on somebody’s hands. Scores of schoolgirls, other civilians, 6 American military members killed. More likely to come. It’s so very cold.

Oh well, The Donald says– from the luxurious comfort of Mar a Lago, adorned with another stupid hat. Such are the consequences of war, he chimes, whether it’s declared or just foisted on a population.

War is war, something at which humans have always excelled, but the saddest of commentaries on our species. And in the current case, it may very well serve the additional purpose of an excuse for postponing the mid-term elections.

How long will hostilities last—a week, four or five weeks, months, years? How about for as long as Trump needs them to last? He’s been talking about starting a war with Iran since Barack Obama was President, saying he would be surprised if Obama wasn’t desperate enough to create such a distraction.

Obama most likely never gave it a thought, but Trump has brought it to fruition, because he’s a soulless animal, a vessel of darkness from which no light escapes. It has always been difficult to comprehend the emptiness, the desperation, the depravity, yet we’ve been living with their consequences for more than ten years now.

Of course, it’s not just Donald. There are many others around him for whom starting a war in a hotbed like the Middle East is just what the doctor ordered. Slick-haired Petey boy is having the time of his life playing Secretary of War– ooh….

Trouble is, their twisted logic may lead to a scenario that spirals out of control.

No! Really? In a quiet little hamlet like the Middle East?

Meanwhile, at home, the cost of living rises, and untenable choices become the order of the day. And POTUS couldn’t give less of a shit.

Results Unclear

Daily writing prompt
How has a failure, or apparent failure, set you up for later success?

I’m having trouble zeroing in on an example of this– not that there haven’t been failures along the way– but nothing specific is coming to mind where failure led to success. I guess in a more generic sense, from the perspective of an institutional failure, the closure of a place where I worked and the subsequent need to engage in further training so I could stay employed and earn a paycheck led to the best job I ever had and a growing feeling that I was ready to take on more responsibility, which in turn led to leaving town for seminary and 26 years as an ordained minister.

Apart from that whole process, I have failed from time to time to interpret signals and listen to my wife, and that is a lesson I sadly continue to learn. It’s always been unclear what success looks like, in this case. As Winston Churchill once put it– in a different context– it’s been more of a riddle, wrapped in a mystery, inside an enigma.

Strategy, or smokescreen?

To listen to Senators and House members when they’re interviewed, I’ve come to believe that very few of them actually have a handle on any given situation. Most repeat and parrot other opinions and talking points and do their best to make themselves sound like they’re in the loop and informed. But there is often a tell that indicates they’re just well-versed in media speak.

There are exceptions—Jamie Raskin and Pete Buttigieg, Bernie Sanders, maybe Elizabeth Warren, AOC, Jasmine Crockett, and Adam Schiff when he’s not engaged in tortured attempts at being cutting edge and culturally hip.

Most Republicans are lap dogs, still fully on the Trump bandwagon. Any rumors of cracks in the Trump façade are frustratingly overblown, though one might be forgiven for daring to hope that, lately, there’s reason for optimism– that the train might be heading for derailment.

It’s frustrating to think that, more often than not, interviewees on the news shows are either not as informed as we’d like to believe, or they’re measuring their words and being careful not to give anything away or piss someone off.

And stop prefacing your comments by starting off with “Look…”

Messy

To listen to John Bolton, Donald Trump is smarter than many give him credit for. I’ve always found Bolton to be refreshing, somehow, despite his hawkish views, if only because he speaks eloquently and plainly, and maybe isn’t afraid to call ‘em as he sees ‘em without being a blindly loyal coattail kind of guy.

Still, I wish he wasn’t so ready to give Trump so much credit. That’s a hard pill to swallow. He’s making it sound like Trump was fully aware of the stakes in attacking Iran and that there was no influence from Bibi Netanyahu, but that seems a bit pie-in-the-sky to me.

Trump is a narcissist—he lives for compliments and consequently opens himself to manipulation from career politicians and hardened operators like Netanyahu and Putin and the rest of the rogues’ gallery.

I know the folks at MS Now and other left-leaning news outlets are alarmed by what’s happening in the aftermath of the attacks on Tehran and elsewhere in Iran, but in Bolton’s opinion, Trump is doing just fine and will somehow handle this potential planetary conflagration. I don’t share his confidence, and neither should anyone else.

Trump is way out of his league, and what’s been initiated in Iran may make the Iraq debacle look like child’s play.

The latest, already-cliched phrase is “war of choice.” Trump is hoping we’re so consumed by this that we forget about the Epstein files and everything else clamoring for a piece of him.

2400

Not for me

Daily writing prompt
You’re writing your autobiography. What’s your opening sentence?

Central Massachusetts wasn’t a bad place to grow up… or Being the oldest of five was a mixed blessing… or It’s been a non-descript life, but at least it was mine… or I was born on a Sunday... or I don’t consider my life to be autobiographically worthy… or It’s been a long, mostly unremarkable ride

I don’t plan on writing an autobiography.

Propped-up Heroes

We really are suckers for appearances. Surface attractiveness, skin-deep beauty. Our national symbol is a bald eagle—majestic and intimidating, but by nature just a glorified scavenger.

We elect people with “charisma,” people with the gift of gab who are physically attractive even as they are deficient in character, and often devoid of traits needed for meeting the challenges of competent leadership.

We fixate on fame and fortune– Hollywood notables who need almost constant ego feeding, who ride the wave of visibility and get paid megabucks for immersing themselves in a role and memorizing lines and playing make-believe; musical “artists” who become commercial successes while lacking substance or any real talent, and titans of industry who love their lifestyles and pedal influence merely by virtue of having a ton of money to throw around.

We spend too much time wallowing in the shallows.

So, that’s happening

We must try to find the words, even though Donald Trump and the misfit toys around him have tried to dull our senses and flood the zone and exhaust us with the constant drama and misdirection. This nightmare of an administration has upped the ante now, with the assassination of the Ayatollah and attack on Iranian targets.

It is not easy to settle for the obvious calculus—that this is, unbelievably, still all about the Epstein files. But Trump has been caught in lies so often that maybe we’ve learned to maintain our focus on what makes the most sense: the man is desperate and deprived, and he would most definitely encourage this vast military build-up and put Americans in harm’s way simply in order to divert attention from the domestic rat’s nest he appears to be consumed by.

And, as Rachel Maddow suggested last night, he pre-emptively has paved the way for who-knows-what sort of measures to ensure that the 2026 midterms and 2028 presidential election are tampered with—because, you know, Iran was involved in attempts to tamper with the 2020 and 2024 elections and we must guard against such eventualities going forward…

With this outbreak of hostilities in the Middle East, Trump and Hegseth and the rest have perhaps unleashed the latest unwinnable 20-year war, or worse– because it gave Hegseth a chance to live into his self-proclaimed moniker– Secretary of War– and it provided yet more false praise and cover for Trump, who, as it turns out, is nothing more than putty in the hands of people like Miller and Vought and Putin and Netanyahu.