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.

Some Words Transcend

I want to believe that there are other things to talk about. It’s just that every new day doesn’t feel totally new, which I guess would be the case even in normal times. A good night’s sleep doesn’t miraculously cure or erase the ailments of advancing age or dissipate the dark cloud that is the Trump administration.

The latter’s presence translates to daily wear and tear, a daily toll on many a psyche—in part because Trump is a daily embarrassment, and things often seem so bad, so much a caricature of evil and incompetence, that many of us can’t believe it’s real.

It is real, of course, and the longer it all goes on, the harder it will be to stop. It’s a battle of attrition; it has meant constant vigilance and protest at every turn. Many may be hoping that time itself will take care of the cancerous growths that have been allowed to spread, checked on occasion by litigation and protest but stunningly resilient. Letting things play out is not a cure, though.

Words come haltingly at times, because we’ve already used so many to describe the coldness and reckless abandon and deceit and zeal and almost cartoonish evil, along with a difficulty in believing that we could let such garbage through the door.

Endless verbal critique won’t rid us of the pestilence. We need to meet this coldness, this attack on reason and good judgment, with a dogged determination to preserve the founders’ vision, and to remind Trump and the rest that certain rules and guidelines are sacrosanct, in a non-religious sense, and not even he in all his ignorance masquerading as competence dare mess with trivializing their importance.

Counties Heard From

I went to a No Kings rally in a town not far from us. Estimates of crowd size will be in this morning’s local paper, but I’d say it was a decent, politely lively crowd that overflowed to the other side of the main street.

Plenty of signage, lots of honking, and at least one big Dodge diesel whose driver was most assuredly trying to interrupt the proceedings with loud revving and clouds of black exhaust. Donald would probably consider him for a position in his cabinet the next time an opening comes along. I’m glad there was no gunfire.

It was good to be a part of it, I guess. I didn’t hear anything particularly inspiring, and there was too much contrived, forced rah-rah for me. But there were a lot of things said that would make a Fox News junkie cringe—abiding by the Constitution, how billion$ can be found for war while essential programs are cut at home, reminders of the cost of essential goods and services, the heartlessness of the Trump administration.

I hope the numbers nationally were significantly more than the last rally day, but one estimate I heard put the total around 8 million. I was hoping for double-digit millions. To me, eight million out of 340 million isn’t anything to write home about. It truly surprises me that more able-bodied Americans weren’t out voicing their outrage yesterday. And yet the “fake news” networks will likely be crazy with people spinning the awesomeness of the turnout, that a message was clearly sent, with an overwhelming show of support for sane, truly patriotic leaders whose heads and hearts are in the right place.

I don’t know. There was a lot of sympathetic honking, as people drove by the rally. I hope it all makes a difference and causes Trump’s BP to shoot through the roof. There would be some consolation in that, for sure.

Guffaws

Daily writing prompt
What makes you laugh?

Babies laughing, a good joke, a fart in church, the mostly unintended hilarity of an out-of-left-field comment from one of the grandchildren, the banter on certain TV shows, funny baseball videos, funny pet videos, occasional comments from my wife.

As far as derisive laughter goes, Donald Trump has a corner on that market.

Infuriating Glibness

We live under the cloud of a person whose goal is to exhaust us, who demands an inordinate amount of attention, and who is forcing us to resort to attending No Kings rallies, where we must waste a portion of a perfectly good Saturday demonstrating our distaste for behavior so childish and vile and inappropriate that it boggles the mind.

He’s dangerously vindictive, full of hate, full of himself and at the same time an empty-souled vagrant wandering the halls of power. He’s at the mercy of people more legitimately crafty and evil than he is.

He has always been a spoiled, needy and deprived thug wannabe, enamored of shiny things, wielding power for power’s sake. Shallow, uncaring, unapologetic, bereft of a healthy sense of humor, indifferent to the damage he and those around him are inflicting.

He’s behaving like somebody who eventually sees the façade, all of what passes for “greatness,” come crashing to the ground.

Starstruck

Daily writing prompt
When you were five, what did you want to be when you grew up?

By that time, I might have been reading about Clyde Tombaugh and how he discovered Pluto. I’m not sure I ever wanted to be a fireman or a police officer, but the story about Mr. Tombaugh grabbed my interest and I periodically thought about studying astronomy.

Maybe that was a bit later. My distant past is getting kind of fuzzy. It was around that time, though, that I got the bug for stargazing and looking up.

Fortunate Sons and Daughters

I’ve been indulging the idyllic lately.

With everything that’s frightening and concerning going on the world, I am reveling in the sheer joy of our grandchildren’s laughter and innocence, as they go through their days mostly oblivious to ugly humans who insist on violence and power grabs and misery.

I find myself hoping they never know what the people of Ukraine have known for four years now, or what the people of Israel or southern Lebanon or Sudan or Iran have faced on a daily basis.

Their eyes will be opened over time, exposed to the burdens and challenges of an imperfect world. But for now, may they only know the great gift of parents and extended family who love and protect them, who feed their imaginations and allow them to be kids.

Way Beyond Mimeograph

Daily writing prompt
How has technology changed your job?

I’ve been retired for almost five years, and I consider technology my friend. Even at my somewhat advanced age, I use my laptop every day. I find myself drawn to my iPad and, to a lesser extent, my smartphone, especially the camera.

During the years of being a parish pastor, there was an increasing dependence on technology, between updated desktop computers, printers, copiers, digital cameras, and audio/video options– especially during Covid. The software for newsletters and bulletins was always improving, becoming more versatile and useful. Bookkeeping programs, spreadsheets, etc. tailored to the annual statistical reports we had to submit made that tedious job a bit less of a chore.

I’d say technology smoothed out certain rough edges, but we always needed to find a person or persons who were well-versed in the tech and were willing to learn along the way.

Concessions are made

Daily writing prompt
How often do you say “no” to things that would interfere with your goals?

I don’t think I’ve ever had bona fide, lofty goals, other than the macro, cliched things like graduating high school, graduating college, finding work that provided a paycheck. There have been unstated hopes and desires, like finding a woman who could love me, being a good parent, and making enough money so we wouldn’t have to worry about money, which hasn’t really happened.

Anymore, seeing that my goal most days since retiring is to tend to whatever I feel like tending to, I say “no” or turn up my nose on occasion to a sudden change of plans, and I do that probably more often than I should. This isn’t a quirk of my personality. It’s something I need to work on, even at this late date, and it’s not easy.

So, it’s happening. I’m getting set in my ways. Or maybe I’ve always been that way.

Saying “no” to things that interfere with your goals has always struck me as being a bit selfish, its own form of going through life with blinders on. But anyone who’s ever achieved anything of note has had to do just that.

Kind of confusing to me.