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.

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 has been and continues to be 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 generate. 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 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.

“There Is No Bottom”

I saw this statement in print the other day. It might have been from a Democratic Congressperson or some pundit on one of the news shows. Anyhow, there will be no limit when it comes to how low Donald Trump will go, when it comes to holding onto power.

I’m beginning to think that one of the worst things about Trump and the time we’ve lost laboring amidst his endless self-promotion and ineptitude is the compromising of values and lowering of standards we’ve been forced to consider.

This becomes most glaring in the degradation and coarseness of our language, and especially of late in matters of electoral maps and voting blocks, as state legislatures try to match what Republicans have been able to get away with in Texas and Florida and now a growing list of other places– especially since the Supreme Court eighty-sixed yet another provision of the Voting Rights Act of 1965. The redistricting and outright gerrymandering has forced the Democrats’ hand and resulted in places like California and other Democratic strongholds resorting to the same tactics.

It’s sickening on the face of it—that Trump and the Heritage Foundation flunkies have forced Democrats to follow suit, to trudge through the mud of foul play and cheap tricks and cheating. Taking the high road is pie-in-the-sky thinking anymore.

Intentions may be different, but the look is one of being muddied and bloodied and rendered no different than the Republican lemmings who apparently prefer a dangerously skewed, selective scriptural stranglehold on religion, maintaining white privilege, and relegating women and black and brown people to the margins.

You know—back to a time when things and people were simpler somehow, more manageable and predictable and the way they should be.

Yikes. Lazy, frightened snakes slithering on their bellies, pining for their good ol’ days. And they’d love nothing more than for the Dems to follow them into the swamp that Trump once promised to drain.

Refined Search Methods

So, what is it? Thirty-eight thousand times or one million times? For a while, the “fake news” folks and some Democrats were claiming, repeatedly, that Trump’s name appeared a million times in the Epstein files, but now I see a significantly lower number being bandied about—38,000 times. It’s still a lot, the most besides Epstein himself, but a long way from one million.

How could such an apparently exaggerated number get so much airtime? Was it intentional from the start, sort of a goose and gander thing, turnabout is fair play? Regardless, it seems no less irresponsible than the manufactured sludge and fear mongering that Fox News and the rest regularly offer the public.

Shame on MS Now and the rest for emulating the dregs of so-called “journalism.” For engaging in their own brand of sensationalism.

Confidence Imperiled

Epstein.

I suppose, in some universe far away, one might argue that the Trump administration meets unreasonable resistance at every turn, so how can anyone expect him and the rest to have a real chance to implement their vision, such as it is, for America?

Let me be clear: I do not consider myself to be in this camp, I do not subscribe to this argument or point of view. And of course, a no-longer-silent majority across the country doesn’t, either. Trump and his spineless suck-ups have long lost our trust. When most of what exits his and their pie holes is a Swiss-cheese defense or outright lie, there is little he can expect in the way of confidence or agreement.

It’s a terrible place to be— for a nation’s people to have to entertain the possibility that some enemy is more believable than its own leadership. This is what appears to be happening in the ongoing back and forth between the U.S. and Iran. Trump claims one thing, Iran’s leadership says he’s lying, and we tend to believe Iran’s leadership over our own President. Trump of course has laid the groundwork for this crisis of trust. It’s his own damn fault.

It is unlikely that many of us can anticipate what will be coming next, other than more misdirection, empty promises, off-the-cuff dumbness, and Karoline Leavitt’s perpetually puppy dog, brown-nosed defense of the indefensible.

What’s that? Someone else will be shoveling the BS while she’s off on maternity leave?

Epstein.

Lots To Do Nearby

Daily writing prompt
Which is the best thing to do in your city?

The nearest cities are 25 minutes east of here and less than an hour’s drive north of us, where a person can shop and eat, buy a car or truck or other vehicle, get decent healthcare, check out a book, worship, play 18 holes of golf, dive into the local history that’s tied up in coal mining, take a walk or a bike ride along a major river, and then head into the hills that surround these urban areas to get away from it all. The landscape has character.

I actually live in a township, bordering a borough (they don’t call them towns in PA, except for Bloomsburg) that historically was a major outpost for tank and ammunition production during WWII, along with manufacturing of certain clothing items. And cigars. The local high school football team had a reputation not long ago for being one of the best in the country. They’ve since come back to earth a bit.

This area is also nestled into the ridges one sees on some maps of Pennsylvania, along the same major river, making for some dramatic landscapes. It’s growing on me, as we’ve lived here off and on for over 30 years. Rolling hills, hollows, scenic vistas up and down the river, farmland, fishing, golf, a few good places to eat, active youth athletics, and a group of leaders and civic-minded individuals who want the area to thrive.