The Lives of the Figureheads

Lots of follow-up commentary after people found out Kate Middleton is being treated for cancer. Colbert took time on Monday to offer not exactly an apology but at least an acknowledgement that he went a bit too far with his jokes a couple weeks ago.

No one wants to make light of someone’s cancer diagnosis, but at the time Colbert and others didn’t know of the diagnosis. All they knew was that there was yet another big kerfuffle, this time over a lack of Kate sightings and a doctored photograph, so they may have chalked it up to the usual royal drama and ridiculousness.

They were operating on the normal footing of assuming much ado about nothing and making light of the breathless craziness which often accompanies any news of what’s going on in Windsor Castle and wherever William and Kate live.

There’s a price to be paid for being in the royal family. One might wonder if they’d part with the headaches if it weren’t for all the country estates and other perks, which must make it a bit easier to live in a fish bowl in the 21st century.

And Just Like That

A massive container ship rams a support pillar and the whole Key Bridge drops into the Patapsco River, a 1.6-mile span rendered unusable for the foreseeable future.

There were people on the bridge. Six are suspected lost.

It’s the third time—recently!—that something like this has happened somewhere in the world. It may be a tragic accident, but I hope there will be a thorough investigation.

Chronic Malady

A gift from the gods, or does Trump actually honor the gag order placed on him in the hush money case?

Aw hell—it won’t matter if he says something inflammatory. He’ll get away with it, because that’s just where we’re at. It’s extremely difficult to envision any scenario where Trump suffers consequences for anything.

Are people actually afraid of him?

He’s facing multiple civil and criminal court cases, he’s hemorrhaging money for settlements and attorney fees, yet somehow, he’s still standing– no matter how often the Lincoln Project goes for his jugular or Michael Cohen attacks his character, no matter the frequency with which pundits and anchors and former DAs claim that he’s a bad apple in big trouble. He’ll just continue giving the middle finger to all his detractors, and he’ll continue prevailing. I don’t see one reason for his luck to change anytime soon.

Even after he loses in November, we’ll be suffering this brain-drained ass pimple until the sun runs out of hydrogen.

Harder Than It Looks

What’s so hard about live and let live? Why can’t Israel and the Palestinians work something out? What’s missing from the thought processes that would allow for peace talks and planning? Is it always going to be animosity?

Israel has every right to be hesitant, but people need a home. Israel needed a home and they got one, even as it remains a contested parcel. And now the Palestinians need a home.

There are concessions to be made on both sides—Israel needs to come to grips with having neighbors, and the Palestinians need to banish any vestiges of animosity toward Israel, though this may be difficult in light of what’s been unfolding in Gaza and the West Bank. Netanyahu’s fixation with squashing Hamas is only going to create a whole new generation of hardcore fighters who won’t forget the seemingly wanton destruction and interminable losses.

In any event, everyone has a right to existence and pursuit of a life unmarked by fear and always feeling the need to look over one’s shoulder. This unending distrust and hatred are way beyond old, and it must be exhausting. Everyone has to try harder, be open to mediation.

They have to actually trust their God and pray to him for peace in the land, if their God allows such a thing.

Ruthless Tactics

Does Netanyahu feel, in his heart, that there is no distinction to be made between members of Hamas and the general population of Gaza? Does he believe that all Palestinians have it out for Israel, whether or not they fight for Hamas, guilty by association?

How else can he continue to pursue his scorched earth policy if not by denying the humanity of the civilians in Gaza who are huddled in tents, taking shelter in bombed out schools, fearing their own death, maybe wishing it would come?

Looming starvation, a dreadful, miserable life where most everything familiar has been taken from them. A shell-shocked populace, damaged in mind and spirit, perhaps sustained by a kernel of faith, the remnants of family, or a distilled hatred that has now been hardwired by Israel’s response to October 7.

Of course, Hamas has no qualms with setting up shop amidst civilians, apparently figuring any fighting force with actual scruples would think twice about attacking innocent women and children. They’ve apparently figured wrongly.

What a mess.

Learning Curve

Got the bookcase project we’ve been working on completed to the point that the two main units could be moved into the house. They fit, but just barely. I measured the height but forgot to figure in the thickness of the cap piece, which added ¾” and was just enough to bend the curtain rod end a bit.

Numbers are important. The only time they lie is when you don’t calculate properly. Then it can become an embarrassment. Or a disaster, if you’re trying to calculate the numbers needed for proper re-entry into earth’s atmosphere.

Anyway, as long as I take this into consideration in future projects, I will benefit from the experience and hopefully avoid the same mistake.

Woodworking is an enjoyable pursuit, but it is an exacting pursuit- if you want to do it right. Small miscalculations can be covered by a piece of trim, or sanded into compliance, but the point is to refine the craft, to get better at it, to pay attention to details and minimize– maybe on occasion eradicate– the mistakes.

Free Flow

-MTG can slam Mike Gallagher’s early exit from Congress, but she also has to look in the mirror and realize that she’s probably no small part of the reason for his exit. Who in their right mind would want her as a colleague? If she and Matt Gaetz and Jim Jordan are the face of the Republican party going forward, we can probably expect more desertions, er vacancies. They’ll “freedom” their way right out of what was already a slim majority.

-I didn’t realize that authorities in Florida had left the Parkland HS shooting scene undisturbed since it happened in 2018. Papers strewn, bullet holes and bloodstains everywhere—it’s all still there, suspended in time.

-I hope Fani Willis is as feisty as she appears. She says a train is coming. I hope she’s right, and that she can remain in place and drive that train right through the middle of Donald Trump’s revenge tour. Maybe she’ll yet be the one who shuts him up, and down.

-Speaking of Trump, the whole country is onto his strategy. An eighth grader could sit in the judge’s chair and see through the delay tactics. Maybe the process needs fewer off ramps. There should be provision for catching slimeballs at their own game, but the water gets muddy when the judge him- or herself gives the appearance of being sympathetic to Trump’s “plight.” Maybe justice properly meted is by nature a slog, fraught with slowdowns and road blocks along the way. It’s ironic that Trump is benefiting, at the moment, from a system he has designs on dismantling.

Lamentable

It’s been official for a while but the Freedom Caucus is a real stain on our governance. Has anyone come out and asked MTG or Gaetz or Ron Johnson exactly what they want, what their plan is, their vision for America?

Do they have a plan? Do they want to govern? Or do they just want instability, just enjoy doing Trump’s bidding and fostering chaos?

MTG says it’s time for Mike Johnson to go, because he had the audacity to work with Democrats to pass a budget, even if this one kicks the can down the road, too. Doesn’t matter. The FC can’t have their Speaker giving Democrats the time of day. It gives ‘em the vapors.

We have a sideshow in Congress, comprised of misfits and sycophants, and it isn’t the Democrats.

NIMBY

As acronyms go, it’s sort of in a class by itself, emerging when discussions about placement of a homeless shelter or a solar array come before local town councils and planning boards. Suddenly, landowners feel threatened and raise concerns about crime and plummeting property values and compromised sight lines.

Not in my back yard. Put it somewhere else— in someone else’s back yard.

Never mind that there are only so many back yards to work with, or that maybe we need to step back and think about what best benefits a community and not just me. Disinformation and assumptions sway opinions, and people can come across as being shortsighted and selfish.

If NIMBY were to always prevail, then opportunities would be left on the table, and needs left untended.

What Are You Doing Here?

The whole Trump family and extended family remind me of people who get thrust into positions of authority and responsibility while having next to none of the tools needed to do the jobs. Privileged nepo babies with irrelevant resumes.

It’s like someone trained in accounting scrubbing in to do heart surgery, or a weekend tinkerer in the woodshop tackling a valve job on a Maserati, or someone who likes to take an occasional walk around the painted track at the Y deciding they can handle Half Dome without ropes.

None of these people have ever even slept at a Holiday Inn Express, never mind possess a sense of propriety or self-awareness or the wherewithal to handle delicate political matters, or capably function in situations that require insight and patience and an understanding of nuance, or the art of the dance.

They’re all in over their heads, out of their league. Plastic, self-involved, bloviating impostors, from Donald on down.