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.

Cacophony

Noise and lament and a throwing up of hands. It’s pretty much what we get anymore. The folks at MS Now can ponder and pontificate, raise their voices, talk over each other in panel discussions when they dare welcome a dissenter to the mix. But in the end, none of the alarm and anger and incensed tones really matter to the Trump administration. All the concern and worry seem to roll off of them, easily dismissed as the rantings of soft, liberal, socialist snowflakes.

Maddow and Psaki can ring the alarm bells, Velshi and Melber and O’Donnell can rationally, if not passionately, expose the lack of a moral compass and outright diabolical intent. But who’s paying attention, besides the choir?

I know I should hold my nose and wade into a Fox News broadcast, just to get a sense for what half the country is absorbing and apparently embracing, but I just can’t bring myself to do that. More often than not, what emanates from their talking heads feels like poison to me, like they live in a totally different place with a vastly different set of core beliefs. Like they’re watching a totally different game.  

The battle for hearts and minds rages on. 

Relatively Carefree

Daily writing prompt
Describe a phase in life that was difficult to say goodbye to.

Often enough, life has been about transitions, moving on, completion and next steps. That being said, the first phase or period that comes to mind, regarding this prompt, was the college experience– those years post-high school when I was on my own, to a certain extent. However, I don’t remember feeling like it was all that difficult to say goodbye to it, other than the sadness of leaving behind friends, which is liable to happen in different settings throughout life.

I occasionally return to those years as if they were a benchmark of sorts, or highpoint. I have come to see them, in some ways, as the best years of my life, with that unique mix of a certain autonomy and responsibility, and of course the daily experience of living in a college dorm with a bunch of people my age who had yet to grow into their more mature selves. Fifty-plus years on, those were the days…

What has come since has been a mix of blissful and challenging, often wondrous in its own right. But that college experience will always stand alone, as much a monument to pre-adulthood as it was preparation for the workaday world.

We Need A Hero

The no-show Congress now has to show up. No more kowtowing or excuse making, no more riding coattails, no more silence in the face of this assault on norms and sensible rules and restraint. Sometimes “rules were made to be broken” is exactly what it sounds like—a pile of shit, a recipe for recklessness, the thing someone says in the absence of having any better ideas, or when someone just wants to break things.

Donald Trump cannot, unilaterally or otherwise, manipulate the election process, nor can he institute martial law because he’s afraid the mid-terms will not be good to him and his party. Is it not obvious to everyone on both sides of the aisle that this is all a bridge way too far? These are the ramblings of a desperate man, and what’s worse is that he’s getting direction or at least support from people around him to pursue such a course of action.

Is the Epstein noose finally tightening? Nothing like even the hint of a strike on Iran to work its distracting magic, right?

It’s always been a house of cards, though maddeningly resilient and sturdy, for some reason.

Ditch The Uptight

Daily writing prompt
If you could be someone else for a day, who would you be, and why?

In a generic sort of way, I’d like to be anybody who can let things roll off of him, who can let things go, who isn’t waiting for the other shoe to drop. I’d like to be someone who could look at all the craziness and ugliness in the world and still be kind and hopeful, still smile and carry on with a lightness in my step. I’d like to be stronger and funnier, and more resilient, with a bit more devil-may-care, I guess.

So, maybe Bill Murray.

Huh?

Playing to type, the guest on Newshour last night said that the reason ICE agents wear masks is to protect them from being identified by people who apparently have evil intent and are liable to make life difficult for the agent and his family.

Which doesn’t really answer the question and sounds more like a well-crafted excuse. Regular law enforcement officers don’t wear masks. Why are these people any different? Last night’s response doesn’t satisfy anyone’s curiosity and, in fact, only reinforces the ongoing suspicion that the powers that be know full well that their tactics and whole reason for being are heavy-handed, unpopular, and riding a razor-thin edge of legality. And masks add to the intimidation factor.

How many of these recruits have been pardoned for their role in January 6th?

Memory Lane

I started going through old pictures yesterday. Well, actually slides from my grandfather that I’ve somehow come to possess. Even Gramp, as organized as he was, didn’t label every slide, so I made the decision that I am going to save mostly pictures of people I recognize, along with an occasional scenery pic, if it meets certain criteria like immediately catching my eye.

I was reminded of why I don’t like doing this—because it’s so easy to get distracted, sidetracked, and otherwise slowed down. And when I take a break, it feels like I’ve returned from the past– I realize I’m in my house in February of 2026 but also that I’ve taken a ride in a time machine.

These were bags of loose slides from as far back as the late 1950s, so Gram and Gramp are way younger than I am now. My siblings and I are little kids, Mom and Dad are our own kids’ age, or younger. It’s weirdly wonderful, but there’s also a bit of melancholy.

There’s a long way to go, and I’m not sure why I’m even bothering with this project. I guess it’s in hopes of these pictures meaning something to our kids or their kids, someone who has a sense of history and a hankering for continuity—a certain curiosity about the past and filling in blanks and learning from whence and whom they come.

New Look, New Feel

Daily writing prompt
Describe the most ambitious DIY project you’ve ever taken on.

A few years ago, my wife and I re-did the upstairs bathroom– a small space but a nice size to tackle when you’re doing something for the first time. We installed a new floor, painted the walls and woodwork, modified pieces of the plumbing and added a new toilet, new outlet and switches, molding, re-calked around the sink, and eventually added new lighting. It was a complete makeover that turned out nicely.

More recently, we made 3 sets of heavy-duty shelving for the basement that was almost immediately filled with stuff, and at the moment we’re in the midst of rearranging rooms– moving things around, re-assigning usage and function. The latest project is re-finishing a set of stairs and changing the look of our living room.

Unnecessary Drama

Daily writing prompt
If you could permanently ban a word from general usage, which one would it be? Why?

Probably devastated. Is someone really broken beyond recovery or repair? Is life as they’ve known it over because a favorite athlete or musical artist decides to retire or move in a different direction, or they stopped carrying someone’s favorite ice cream at the grocery store?

Even if the circumstances are more legitimately serious, are people truly ruined to the point of having to start over? Sometimes yes, but more often, it seems, they’re just engaging in hyperbole, or at a loss for a more fitting word.

This word is used so blithely so often that when it actually fits a situation, it loses its punch.

A close second might be traumatized.

Technology

Drones were more conspicuous at the Olympics this time around. They offered a cool perspective, but I wonder how/if they affected performance. These machines are loud and seemingly intrusive, maybe a bit unnerving, but I guess the athletes do a pretty good job of blocking it all out.

The views on the ski jump, heading down the bobsled track, and the freestyle skiing, among others, were welcome additions to the coverage.

Maybe Some Resolution

Daily writing prompt
What is the biggest challenge you will face in the next six months?

I’m at the age where some health issue could emerge, I suppose. Maybe something will come up in the lives of one of our kids. I’m hoping that the next six months just give us more of the same, which for me includes an almost daily wrestling with a never-ending, though often nebulous To Do list.

I’m hoping that the biggest challenge I face is finding ways to be useful, along with finding a smile– which, for various reasons, has been difficult for some time now. Or maybe the inertia surrounding church attendance will give way to more concrete action one way or another.