Money Matters

NCAAF playoffs coming up. Is Michigan gonna get its ass kicked again, or will they finally find a way to validate their presence? Meh… probably not.

And Florida State—get a grip, step back and away from the lofty opinion you have of yourselves. Alabama, as much as I can’t stand them, clawed their way back into contention and deserve to be in the conversation. And yes, you probably deserve the same, regardless of the depletion in your ranks. But the Committee has spoken.

Sounds like, looking ahead to next year and beyond, there will be another process in place that may or may not yield more satisfying results. In the meantime, FSU, take a chill pill. You’re way too full of yourselves.

Focus on Georgia. If you can beat them, well, that’ll add fuel to your fire.

Be The Healing Vanguard

Well, say goodbye to Nikki Haley, though probably not, according to David Brooks. And Chris Christie came to her defense at one of his town meetings, telling those in attendance that she doesn’t have a racist bone in her body– which may be something he believes, or it might just be an attempt to rescue the person he sees as having the best chance, currently, to dethrone Trump.

Anyway, she blew an opportunity to bring a bit of clarity to an issue that shouldn’t be at all difficult—the one about slavery being the main underlying cause of the Civil War. She couldn’t come right out and say that, until a day or two later when she couldn’t say it enough, couldn’t be any clearer.

She was the governor of South Carolina, though, which was the first state to secede back in 1860. The mindset still lingers, apparently. People are still sore, still hiding, still making excuses. The clarity still conveniently eludes many, and Ms. Haley may have been playing to that crowd. Yikes.

Wake up! You all have the power to simply move on.

A Potential Mess

The stream of decisions regarding whether or not Trump’s name ends up on ballots in 2024 has begun.

So far, Colorado and Maine have said No, Michigan has said Yes to the primary ballot but has withheld a decision on the November ballot. And therein lies the potential rat’s nest we’re heading towards– electoral chaos, as CNN puts it– even if the Supreme Court doesn’t drag its feet and decides to make a decision on this in a timely manner.

My question arises from that decision, whichever way it ends up coming down: What will keep states from ignoring it? Seems to me that we’re heading deeper into the weeds, regardless of how the SCOTUS rules. Someone’s gonna be unhappy. Blue states may or may not abide by any ruling, and red states will likely disregard it if the court ends up ruling against Trump.

I guess what I’m saying is that Supreme Court decisions don’t necessarily hold water—look at the overturning of Roe v Wade. Even though the two cases are not apples and apples, states will have their opportunity to counter with their own initiatives, or, in Trump’s case, by just including Trump’s name anyway.

The wild card may be if there are enforced consequences for somebody if states disregard the SC ruling—fines, jail time, etc.

I wonder what kind of odds Vegas might offer regarding a stacked SCOTUS ruling against Trump. Ooh… another thing to bet on!

Spontaneity and Mind Games

I recently saw an article on one of the newsfeeds that treated the topic of fun, and how we’re not having any anymore. That in part, because of social media, there exists a heightened sense of shame and an inability to find joy because we’re so often comparing, so often seeing others who, from all appearances, are enjoying life more than we are.

On a different but related note, I’ve always had trouble with the analysis of athletes who emerge from an unproductive stretch by explaining that their game improved after they convinced themselves to just “go out there and have some fun.” Seems like a trite, arbitrary thing to say and to try and do.

I guess I get it from the standpoint of tricking your brain into somehow ignoring the scrutiny from fans and analysts in the broadcast booth, along with handling the pressure the athlete him or herself is already feeling with regard to living up to contracts and endorsements worth gazillions of dollars. It must be difficult to separate enjoyment from a focus on execution and handling the pressure of fans in the stands or behind the ropes, along with a TV audience who may want you to succeed but will also bite your head off if you don’t.

So, fun. Seems to me you can’t force it. Fun is fun when it’s less planned, more organic—or whatever word works for you. I can’t help but think that fun has gone dormant because people are too easily bored anymore. They’re trying too hard and getting stupid and ridiculous (think gender reveal parties with an incendiary component). Or they’re working long hours in order to have enough money to have a little fun… Maybe fun is just a guilty pleasure we can never truly enjoy because we feel we should be working. Yikes.

I used to have fun going out in our back yard and smashing rocks, just to see what they looked like inside. I can still play catch with someone and consider it fun. If I’m near an open body of water, I can skip rocks until my arm hurts and consider it fun. I can sit in one place for a while and marvel at a sunset or the scenery and consider it time well spent. I guess fun for me doesn’t necessarily require other people or exotic locales or activities that push the envelope, which all sounds more like work to me, and like someone’s just trying to show off.

Mixed Signals

Quick-hit developments in the Israel-Hamas war. Depending on the source, we learn that the fighting will go on for months, or that talks are unfolding between different players regarding a ceasefire or end to the hostilities.

It’s hard to know where things stand, but it’s clear if it were up to Bibi, Israel would fight on until not one Hamas fighter is left and his own countrymen and women are dying in (relative) droves as well.

Netanyahu is a hawk, seemingly oblivious to calls to let up, to show mercy on Gazans who are literally trying to stay alive, who have next to nothing going in their favor. He is coming across as not so much a good leader as just another hothead with something to prove, or something that distracts, something to hide behind.

Apart from trying to rid the region of a terrorist organization, how can he so insistently order the continued loss of his own soldiers, not to mention getting the nation to buy into his own sense of urgency, or whatever it is that’s driving him? It might cause one to think in terms of unacceptable sacrifices.

Meanwhile, the U.S has to walk the tightrope of supporting an ally and trying to get that ally to reevaluate its strategy, to ease up on the relentless bombing and indiscriminate killing of civilians who, in Bibi’s estimation, must be guilty by association.

See Change

The latest is that Nikki Haley is within 4 points of Trump. Maybe things will take care of themselves after all, though Haley is nothing to write home about. She’s a drawly conservative who, one might think, would still need to be mindful of keeping the old Trump base happy. So in some ways it’s just going to be SSDD, just a different talking head.

A variation on the attitude that prevailed in 2020—“at least Biden isn’t Trump…”

As for Trump, the clown who has shamelessly taken up way too much of our time? Maybe people will finally take the hint that his “greatness” is truly a figment of his imagination, all in his head. And Stephen Miller and the rest of the Legion of Doom will have to look for other coattails to hang onto.

Clearing the Detritus

Holiday gluttony. Marketing blitzkrieg… starting in October, or maybe even September anymore. How about August?

The job of remembrance, of focusing on true meaning, is left to the faithful who have to navigate and stay the course, ignore the distractions and the temptations and the all-out assault on belief.

Christmastime translates to income and profits and the year-end chance to climb out of the red and into the black. Commerce and faith are unlikely bedfellows, though the dependence is a one-way street. Faith ends up being co-opted for the sake of commerce, the bottom line.

I’m just sayin’ stuff. Maybe I should call a timeout and try to lighten up for a day.

Most Wonderful…

We had our good years, the magical years early on, before the inevitable awakening. The extended family would gather at our house for the traditional Christmas Eve feast and the first round of gift-giving and getting. Christmas music would be playing in the background.

We’d go to the late (11pm) candlelight service at church, which meant that by the time it was over we’d be able to greet each other with a bona fide “Merry Christmas” before heading home. We’d get home, probably take a while to fall asleep, then Mom would settle into the role she relished—wrapping and putting gifts under the tree until 2 or 3 in the morning (I know—I caught her in the act when I was 7 or 8).

And then we’d awaken at 4am and start our reconnaissance runs out to the tree. Not every gift was wrapped, but I’ll always remember that feeling of anticipation and discovery. I’ll always remember the aroma of fresh balsam, or whatever kind of tree we got.

It was a time like no other, but I don’t remember thinking about Jesus very much.

Whole Cloth and Thin Air

Sometimes it’s more noise than anything else. Pick your network, if you must, and don’t get yourself in a tizzy over worrying about “fair and balanced.” Fair and balanced is a myth. Everyone has a slant– not just Fox, though Fox stands out. If you have to make “fair and balanced” part of your byline, then chances are you’re not fair and balanced.

Fox News is the nation’s subversive counter-narrative, its loud, cackling voices dispensing a steady stream of audible pablum, vocal diarrhea. Definitely another county heard from, but populated by anchors and pundits who have operated in an oxygen-starved environment for way too long.

Current Conditions

Watched A Charlie Brown Christmas last night. I’m feeling a lot like Charlie without the change of attitude after Linus’ recitation of Luke 2.

I want it to mean something, even if Jesus was born in May or whenever. It used to mean something, but maybe what I was feeling growing up was just the filling of senses and anticipation of gifts under the tree.

I don’t think such shallowness was all I was feeling, though. There was something else, something deeper and more difficult to explain. Not magic, maybe mystery, most likely hope, and a need to know that the Greatest Story… was more than just a story.

Still waiting for confirmation.