Wednesday, September 17, 2025

The Decline and Fall of America

I'm not going to talk about Charlie Kirk anymore, because I don't want to lose my passport and be denied the opportunity to leave the country based on anything I say getting misconstrued.  There's a bill in Congress that could allow that to happen.  Suffice to say, Kim Alexis restored her Instagram account and removed her Kirk-related Instagram post since I last wrote a post here.  Suffice also to say that I've said enough about Charlie Kirk when I said I condemned his murder even as, as I must say now, his hateful rhetoric led to the hateful action that killed him.

Since I do not give money or support to any terrorist organization, I don't think I'll end up being forbidden to travel outside the country again.  I may get fired from my job, but I can handle that.  Why would I get fired for that?  Because former (former!) MSNBC commentator Matthew Dowd lost his job for saying the exact . . . same . . . thing.

Meanwhile, the Vice President has announced that the administration will seek to shut down liberal-activist groups, and the Attorney General is planning to prosecute hate speech, which is defined as any speech that offends the right - like, say, advocating for more public transit. Trump is planning to sue anyone who questions his finances and his businessman acumen - shut them down to shut them up.  

And if that doesn't work . . . 

 
Oh, Mama, I'm in fear for my life from the long arm of the law . . .hangman is coming down from the gallows and I don't have very long . . ..
I know that today, the anniversary day of the signing of the U.S. Constitution, is an inappropriate time to say this, but I'll say it once again anyway - it's time for the United States to break up into separate countries and one of the Democratic states must take the initiative to get the process going by seceding from the Union and starting a chain reaction that will lead to the dissolution of the country, much like Lithuania's secession from the U.S.S.R.  led to the dissolution of the Soviet Union.  It's time to admit that America is finished.  And we have to finish America before America finishes us. 

Sunday, September 14, 2025

Trump the Shark

Since Kamala Harris had her political career abruptly terminated last year, so many people I admired, from celebrities to strangers I thought were my friends (to cop a phrase from Bob Seger), have let me down by bending their knees to Donald Trump and MAGA.  Mika Brzezinski, Kristen Welker, Bill Maher, Kasie Hunt, Jake Tapper - the list is endless, made more infinite by people who embraced MAGA before Trump forced Harris into early retirement, such as James Howard Kunstler and Elon Musk.  So you can imagine how tested I was when I found a testimonial post for the late Charlie Kirk on the Instagram page of one of my favorite fashion models from the 1980s, Kim Alexis.
Kim (I call her by her first name because not only do I follow her on Facebook, I am one of her personal friends on Facebook, and remember, I have met her in person) expressed her sorrow over Kirk's death, and she also extended her condolences to Kirk's family.  The reason Kim voiced  sympathies for Kirk is because she had actually met him and found him to be a personable and likeable guy.  Black women - including Beverly Johnson, whom Kim has worked with (and the results of their work together are stunning, of course) - would likely beg to differ, given Kirk's questionable questioning of black women's brain power, and so would I, except for a few things.
Remember, just because Charlie Kirk was a rhymes-with-glass-pole doesn't mean he couldn't be charming and engaging in a one-on-one engagement.  After all, Harry Truman, upon meeting Joseph Stalin at the 1945 Potsdam conference, took a liking to him, and actor Jack Lemmon, upon meeting Fidel Castro at a film festival in Havana, said that the Cuban leader had charm "right down to his toenails."  I'm sure Kim was charmed greatly by Kirk when their respective paths crossed.   I'm sure Kirk - who was young enough to be my son - would have charmed me.  And Kirk, to be honest, could exude charm in a public setting.  One video of Kirk engaging with a transsexual person making a transition from male to female caught him saying that he personally hated the idea of injecting sex-altering drugs into anyone to change their sex and telling the individual that he/she should look inward and determine through introspection what sort of body he/she felt comfortable in.  He said he was confident that he/she would make the right decision for himself/herself.
Of course, Kirk probably hoped that he/she would stay a he, but he grasped that that was not a decision for anyone other than the individual to make.
None of this, of course, excuses Kirk for being a racist, homophobic, misogynistic Christian nationalist.  But none of his character deficiencies apply to Kim Alexis.  Kim is a Christian, but she is not a die-hard fundamentalist.  She's not a Christian nationalist.  Good grief, her husband is Jewish.  And I know she's not racist - not because she has black friends, but because she has white friends (some of whom I know, like her fellow models) who would not be friends with Kim if they had reason to believe she was a bigot.  In short, she is not MAGA.  As a Christian, she was showing charity on Instagram toward a fellow human being who was needlessly shot to death in a country with too many guns and too many people who have no qualms about using them.  
And that Instagram post?  Well, that's what I was slowly getting to.  It's not there anymore.  Kim took down the post?  She did more than that.  She took down her whole Instagram account.  When I first saw the Kirk post, I did not leave a comment because I, quite frankly, didn't know what to say.  I tried to go back to her post to see what other people were saying in response, and that's when I saw that her account was no longer available.  It may remain unavailable for along time.  (Her Facebook accounts, where she did not mention Kirk, are still up.)
Even though Kim did not provoke the same visceral reaction in me that made me stop watching "Morning Joe" (and the rest of MSNBC as well) when Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski confessed their pilgrimage to Mar-a-Lago two weeks after the election - I didn't unfriend her on social media - she certainly hit many a raw nerve.  So did Lisa MacKenzie (née Moberg), a Swedish veteran model living in the U.S. who also expressed sorrow about Charlie Kirk's death.  I'm friends with her on Facebook as well, and a lot of her other Facebook friends excoriated her for her thoughts and prayers, and I had to explain to her that Americans aren't as nice to each other as Swedes are. 
Kim's and Lisa's sentiments were clearly meant to be above politics, but this is a time when nothing is above politics, so it helps to be able to tell when someone is genuinely trying to express sorrow for a fellow human being's death and and when an extremist is martyring a fellow extremist.  I did not find their comments worthy of me needing to cancel them.  But long before Kirk was killed, I had to cancel a lot of people who expressed strong support for MAGA or bent their knees to it, be they people I knew personally or famous people I admired.  And that brings my post full circle.  I'm sorry to say that Kim and Lisa - both of whom I featured on my beautiful-women picture blog - are exceptions to the rule that anyone who expresses conciliatory or complimentary comments about MAGA figures ought to be canceled.
Speaking of my beautiful-women picture blog . . . It's been three months and change since I terminated it, and given how many of the women I featured turned out to lack inner beauty - most of them corporate-media reporters who coddle Trump when they should know better - I don't regret my decision one iota.

Saturday, September 13, 2025

Charlie Kirk Is Dead

There are many reasons not to sentimentally eulogize Charlie Kirk, a right-wing activist I knew little about and cared about even less.  

There are, in fact too many of them to list here.  I'd probably need an entirely new blog to list them. 

But among them are his observation that black women lack the brain power for high-level jobs, that Dr. Martin Luther King doesn't deserve to be honored and that the civil rights legislation was a mistake, and that Taylor Swift sucks.   But the biggest reason not to sentimentally eulogize him - and here's something to ponder when you hear an Aretha Franklin song on the radio if it follows a cut from the brain-power-derived Toto ("all chops and no brains" - Dave Marsh) - is that he said the Second Amendment was worth the price of a few school shootings every now and then.

Bear in mind that Charlie Kirk was not only shot to death in Utah, but it happened on a university campus.  A school. 

Having said all that, I condemn the killing of Charlie Kirk for the same reason I don't want to see Tyler Robinson, the guy who shot him, get the death penalty for it - and also for the same reason I personally oppose abortion as a Catholic . . . because only God decides who lives and dies, and killing in all forms is wrong.  That includes war deaths, because even though killing outside the rules of military engagement is referred to as "war crimes," the truth is, as I've said here before, that war crimes are a redundancy.  All war is a crime. 

None of this is good enough for Donald Trump, who has sought to make Kirk's assassination a cause célèbre among the right-wingers who support him to portray Kirk's opponents - who are also MAGA's opponents - as the enemy, and as an enemy that must be obliterated.  Making Kirk a martyr is part of Trump's effort to squelch dissent against his dictatorship by any means available, at least until he can make dissent a capital offense.  And even though Trump and his Trumpettes tried to bang the drum of derision against liberals by suggesting that a person of color or a non-heterosexual pulled the trigger, it turned out that the assassin was a white male member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints - the original iteration of Christian nationalism in America - who shot Kirk because Kirk wasn't far to the right enough.  

Once the news broke that the suspect was in custody, Trump basked in the the triumph of the moment, and Federal Bureau of Investigation director Kash Patel took a victory lap.  Except that family members turned in the assailant.  Patel couldn't recognize a gunman even if you spotted the g, the m, the a, and both n's and let him buy a vowel. 

And yet the demonization of Trump's opponents continues, if only because Trump is now blaming the atmosphere of disgust toward disgusting people who advocate for an exclusionary, reactionary society in America on his opposition.  He's blaming liberals, democratic socialists, congressional Democrats, all other Democrats and who knows whom for Kirk's death by promoting their "radical" and "un-American" ideas and ideals in the public square . . . not that much different than when the Reverend Jerry Falwell opined that feminism and homosexuality were to blame for God removing His blessings from the United States and allowing 9/11 to happen. 

This is a dangerous situation, where anyone who speaks up risks retribution and anyone who doesn't speak up risks being taken away when there's no one left to speak up for anyone else.  All I have to say after all that is, I'm doubling down.  I am for the secession of Democratic "blue" states.  I believe that to remain in the Union isn't worth the violence that's coming.  I believe that it's time for the blue states to get out.

Friday, September 12, 2025

Music Video Of the Week - September 12, 2025

"Wish You Were Here' by Pink Floyd  (Go to the link in the upper-right-hand corner.)

Tuesday, September 9, 2025

Succession and Secession

Trump's disappearance a couple of weeks ago left many Americans contemplating what would happened if he died.  He has since re-emerged and proven that reports about not his death but his mere illness were greatly exaggerated.  But Washington Republicans are fearful that Trump, once considered more vigorous and fit the Biden despite his advanced dementia and his advanced weight, are fearful that his death in office would send the MAGA movement and the GOP into their own death spirals.  Or so it's been said.
"Republicans are scrambling to figure out what to do if he croaks," one Facebook user wrote of Trump.  "If he doesn’t die right in front of us - while racist rambling at a rally - they will try to pretend he is alive until the next election. J.D. Vance has zero following within the Trump cult. The cult will revolt. Project 2025 will go to pot as they need compliance to complete their most diabolical plan."
Yeah, well, I got news for you.  One thing Vance is is smart, not stupid like Trump.  That makes him more dangerous than Trump. A year ago this time, with Kamala Harris as the Democratic presidential nominee, we were trying to keep hope alive.  Now we have to keep Trump alive.  Because if Vance gets in, he will use all of the newly discovered presidential powers the Supreme Court has unearthed (like its latest ruling, that ICE has the right to roam the streets of our cities and apprehend suspect illegal immigrants at will) to make himself so powerful that MAGA will have no choice but to follow him.  To get an idea of how lawless a Vance Presidency would be like, I need only point out that, after the U.S. bombed a fishing boat in the Caribbean Sea off the coast of Venezuela and claimed the boat was piloted by a drug gang headed for the U.S. - ludicrous on its face, as it was heading in the direction of Trinidad - Vance dismissed those (including libertarian senator Rand Paul) who said that that operation was a violation of international law . . . a war crime.  Vance said he didn't give a twit (he actually used a rhyming word for "twit") what it was called.
And the rest of the line of succession isn't any better.  If Trump dies and Vance is, say, lynched by a panicked mob, House Speaker and MAGA toady Mike Johnson becomes President.  After him comes Senate president pro tempore Charles Grassley, who is so old he can call Joe Biden "Sonny."  After that comes the misfits and miscreants of the Trump-Vance Cabinet, starting with the Secretary of State.
Trump's death in office, were it to occur, would be the ideal time for those of us who advocate dissolution of the Union to strike.  Instead of letting the line of succession play out, we should find a way to suspend the government and begin negotiations for a badly needed national divorce.  We would need a plan in advance before Trump were to breathe his last.  But, failing that, Democratic states should immediately begin the process of withdrawing from the Union.  Vance is only Vice President because of his political backer, tech magnate Peter Thiel, whose opposition to democracy and belief in a global system of technology oligarchs running the show makes him the most dangerous German to walk the earth since Adolf Hitler.  For Democratic states to remain in the Union and "resist" MAGA if Vance were to become President isn't my idea of resistance; it's more like suicide.
I still say that Democratic states should secede.  I also say that we shouldn't wait for President Vance.  We should get out now . . . before it's too late.

Saturday, September 6, 2025

It's a Wonderful Presidency

Donald Trump has turned the White House into a Mar-a-Lago-type club for MAGA politicians - no Democrats allowed.  (This is a precursor to him banning the Democrats and all third parties so that future elections never have any opposition on the ballot.)  He's already going ahead with renaming the Defense Department the War Department, saying that the name change shows pride in out victories in World War I, World War II, and every war in between.  (There were no wars in between.)  And the invasion of Chicago is still on the planning table.
I think we're in an alternate It's a Wonderful Life world. What really happened is that a black woman other than Kamala Harris was elected the first black female President in 2024, defeating Trump in a landslide and allowing Jack Smith to bring him to trial and lock him up for good. But early in her Presidency, she was faced with twin crises that threatened world peace and the global economy,
As a result, Speaker Mike Johnson submitted a resolution for the President's impeachment and Trump, operating from prison, made sure that there were enough votes in the Senate to convict her. At this point, the President went out tried to jump in the Potomac but and angel stopped her, and back in the White House she wished she'd never been born. The angel granted her her wish, and for now, we're living in a world without her so she can see what it's like without her.
As soon she decides she's seen enough and wants to live again, we'll be fine after we rally around her.  Hurry, Madam President.

Friday, September 5, 2025

Music Video Of the Week - September 5, 2025

"Domino" by Van Morrison  (Go to the link in the upper-right-hand corner.)

Thursday, September 4, 2025

The Democrats Have Never Nominated a Woman for President

The Democrats have never nominated a woman for President. 

I'll say it again: The Democrats have never nominated a woman for President!

I repeat!  The Democrats have never nominated a woman for President!

So what about Hillary Clinton and Kamala Harris?  What, you actually think rank-and-file Democratic primary voters chose them?  You're kidding, right?

Harris's nomination is easy to explain.  When President Biden decided in July 2024 not to stand for re-election - a decision he should have made in March 2023 - the Democrats needed a new candidate and Kamala Harris was the obvious choice, she being the Vice President and all.  She won the nomination on the first ballot at the convention, all right - which was pretty easy for her since she had no opposition on that ballot - but she became the first Democratic presidential candidate since Hubert Humphrey to win it without having competed in a single primary.  And she suffered Humphrey's fate in the general election.

As for Hillary Clinton . . . well - need I remind you that she had the Democratic establishment so much behind her that the Democratic National Committee protected her from challengers like Martin O'Malley and Bernie Sanders by setting up debate schedules and rules of engagement that tipped the scales in her favor, although Bernie Sanders came close to defeating her at times?  As with Harris eight years later, Hillary Clinton wasn't so much nominated as she was selected.  Everything was fixed for her from the start, and it gave some credence to Donald Trump's complaints that the system of choosing a President is rigged . . . which he now feels gives him carte blanche to rig it in his own favor.  Now there's irony for you.
Truth be told, the Democrats have always done better when they have a candidate who is not a establishmentarian choice but is instead the product of a grass-roots movement.  Just look at John F. Kennedy in 1960, Jimmy Carter in 1976, and Barack Obama in 2008.   The conventional wisdom is that Joe Biden was nominated in a fair and open contest without any input from the DNC once he gained traction in South Carolina in the 2020 primaries and wrapped things up just in time before the COVID pandemic set in.  It's more complicated than that, as I've explained before, but if the result was that Biden was able to defeat Trump and give us four years of government for the people, I'm not going to re-litigate it.  Suffice it to say that neither Hillary Clinton nor Kamala Harris could ever be President because they were chosen by a select group of party insiders who underestimated the Republican opposition.  If we see a female President in our lifetimes, she will be a Democrat, but she has to be a candidate who defeats the party establishment like Kennedy, Carter and Obama did.  She has to be a woman of the people.

Only trouble is, there are no obvious female candidates for 2028, assuming the Democratic Party is not banned under martial law (coming to a city near you!) by then.  Elizabeth Warren is too old, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is too young, Mikie Sherrill and Abigail Spanberger first have to win their respective gubernatorial elections (and I have doubts about Sherrill, for reasons I will revisit on this blog soon), Kirsten Gillibrand, a Generation X elder like myself, is too self-righteous, and Gretchen Whitmer is too busy hiding her face in a binder when Trump is around.  (She should consider joining ICE after she leaves the Michigan governorship if she wants to stay masked and anonymous.)

As the old Mary Poppins song goes, she must be kind, she must be witty, very sweet, and yes, very pretty - a female Gavin Newsom, a polished and attractive politician who looks like an anchorwoman on the local TV news, so long as it isn't Kirsten Gillibrand.  She must be able to relate to people and connect with voters, as well as talk in plain, simple and direct English - and, if she's fluent in it, plain, simple and direct Spanish, when she's campaigning in Hispanic areas.  

And there's one other quality she must share with her male competition - she must be white and Protestant.  After the debacle of trying to elect a half-black, half-South Asian woman married to a Jew, just electing a woman who's more of a so-called "real American" is going to be a heavy lift.

Wednesday, September 3, 2025

The Most Dangerous Man In America

It's not Donald Trump.

It's his Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., whose tenure in that post shows him to be incapable of delivering either.

You might have heard about the brouhaha in the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) in Atlanta, which is out of control.   The director of the CDC was forced out over a dispute over medical science - namely, her recognition of its existence.  This led to mass resignations at the CDC, and HHS employees back in Washington are calling for their boss to resign.

The chaos comes from Kennedy's vaccine recommendations, which themselves are chaotic.  On the particular question of COVID vaccines, Kennedy has declared that priority will be given to Americans 65 and over and those under 65 with underlying conditions.  And, as feared, it appears that any Americans who do not qualify for a free COVID shot under the guidelines will not be allowed to get one even if they're willing to pay out of pocket.  They are not available to anyone who doesn't qualify.  You'll have more luck trying to buy the bones of John Merrick, the Elephant Man, from the London Hospital Medical College, as Michael Jackson (a psychopath like RFK Jr.) had tried to do, even doubling his bid for them.  But, as he found out then and as those of us who want COVID shots but don't qualify under RFK Jr.'s rules are likely to find out, some things don't have a price.  (Ironically, Trump believes otherwise.)   

I have it on good authority that even now, if you try to make an online appointment for a COVID shot at certain pharmacy chains and are under 65 and have no underlying medical conditions, you'll be turned down automatically.  Kennedy, meanwhile, is likely to - just as automatically - fill his recently depleted vaccine advisory board with anti-vax wackos like himself.  This could mean no vaccines for anything being readily available (if available at all) in 2026.  Meanwhile, in Florida, state Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo, who is black and is thus clearly a DEI hire, is ending vaccine mandates for children, comparing mandatory vaccinations to slavery.
But Dr. Ladapo, slavery taught American Negroes vital work skills!  Just ask the Caucasian who gave you your job, Florida governor Ron DeSantis - who has been trying to make that part of the state's standard school curriculum!  (Sarcasm.)

You know, that's another reason for me to hope that the 2028 Olympics get moved out of the U.S.  The war on medical science, which medical science is clearly losing, is going to lead to a lot of Americans with severe respiratory diseases, some of whom could possibly attend Olympic events in Los Angeles while being asymptomatic and cause a mass contagion among foreign athletes and spectators.  The Super Bowl, the most insufferably American of all sporting events, which takes place in the middle of winter, could also be an annual super-spreader event for COVID, the flu, and other nasty diseases.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has been dismissed for his lack of medical expertise - he is, after all, an environmental lawyer.  But that alone is not a detriment in running the Department of Health and Human Services.  Xavier Becerra, his predecessor under President Biden, is also a lawyer, and he used his legal knowledge to cut through red tape and get COVID vaccines out as quickly as possible.  If anything, being an environmental lawyer is an asset; who better than an environmental lawyer to understand how toxins and pollutants in the air and in our soil affects our health?  But while Kennedy is best known for being an environmental lawyer, his reputation in the field of environmental law is based largely on easy-peasy cases he merely signed his name to, including cases that any shyster with a law degree from a correspondence course could have won. RFK Jr., who has campaigned for years against injecting kids with drugs, is, ironically, best known for something else; he's a recovered heroin addict.   And he's a recovered heroin addict who ignores the basics of medical science and whose anti-medical-science policies are going to get us all sick and cause a lot of us to die needless deaths. 

As far as getting a COVID shot is concerned, I propose that if you are under 65 and you want one badly enough - and who with a brain wouldn't?  - the safest course of action is to tell your local pharmacist that you do in fact have an underlying condition.  And trust me, you won't be lying.

The underlying condition we Americans have, whether or not we're 65 or older, is that Robert Francis Kennedy, Jr. is the nation's Health and Human Services Secretary.    

Tuesday, September 2, 2025

Olympics Letter Update

This is a tale of two swimmers.

Janet Evans (left), America's distance-swimming sweetheart of the late 1980s and early 1990s, and Kirsty Coventry, the Zimbabwean swimming champion who was born and raised there when the place was still called Rhodesia, are directly connected to the 2028 Olympiad and its fate.  Evans is the chief athletic officer of the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics, and Coventry is now the president of the International Olympic Committee.  And this past Labor Day weekend, I got around to writing both of them, as I wanted to, to share my thoughts about the 2028 Olympics.  (I finally found the postal address for the Los Angeles Olympics organizing committee.)  I told Evans that I wanted to see the Olympics moved to a city outside the United States because of Trump and his fascist regime, and I asked Coventry to make that happen.

In my latter to Janet Evans, I told her how much I revered her and asked her to bear that in mind as I said rather bluntly that I did not want to see the Los Angeles Games take place because of the militarization of Los Angeles earlier this year and how Trump wants to use his power to bring California to heel.  I also mentioned how he might rough up athletes and spectators from other countries at the Games.  At one point, I even deigned to address her by her first name, even though I don't know her from Eve (although I have fantasized about knowing her, and knowing her intimately, but I didn't tell her that!).  This was different from the open letters I wrote to her on this blog, which were mostly my own brand of punditry in the form of letters to a friend.  This was brutal, personal honesty.  No sugar coating whatsoever.  

As for my letter to IOC President Coventry, I repeated the same points I had made in my February 2025 letter to her predecessor, Thomas Bach, that Trump is a threat to world peace and security and a danger to multilateralism, and how a Bach spokesman blew me off in his reply.  But then I made the added points of how Trump has made things worse for America and the world since then.  I especially stressed the recent militarization of Los Angeles and how Trump's immigration policy violates human rights.  (Although I didn't mention it, this might spur Coventry's memories of living in Zimbabwe under the repressive regime of Robert Mugabe.)  

And yes, in both letters, I cited Adolf Hitler and the 1936 Berlin Olympics - like the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics, awarded to the city before anyone knew who would be ruling the host city's country.  Coventry, of course, grew up in fascist-racist white-minority-rule Rhodesia, and Evans is a lifelong resident of Orange County, California, and I don't need to say any more about that.  Let's just say I expect both of them to Get It.      

I mailed both letters today.  It will be very interesting to see how both women reply.  Especially Evans, who, as anyone who has read this blog before might know, has always placed herself above politics but has inevitably gotten sucked into them. 

Sunday, August 31, 2025

They Made Her Squeal

The importance of being Ernst is no more.

Republican U.S. Senator Joni Ernst, who was first elected to the Senate from Iowa in 2014 who likened cutting pork-barrel spending to castrating pigs on her family farm and who won a second term in 2020 despite knowing precious little about other forms of farming, reportedly will not seek a third term next year.  She is bowing out in part because of her reasoning for supporting Trump's Medicaid cuts (because sooner or later we're all going to die) but also because she was reluctant to support Pete Hegseth's nomination to be Defense Secretary because of his misogyny and her own experiences in the military.  Although Ernst did end up supporting after arm was twisted - literally, I assume - her initial reticence angered Trump and his cronies.  

It's appropriate that she grew up on a farm that raised pigs.  Because she's dead meat.

Numerous Iowa Democrats are already lining up for the U.S. Senate primary in the state next year, but while i have no idea who will be the Democratic nominee for Ernst's seat, I can tell you who won't be - Theresa Greenfield, who ran against Ernst in 2020.  Even though she was more knowledgeable than Ernst regarding agricultural issues, the simple fact is, she still lost to Ernst.  As I always like to note, Democrats don't let failed nominees try again for the same office - they shoot their wounded.  Though, in Iowa, they likely opt for castration.

Make 'em squeal.

Saturday, August 30, 2025

Canceled

We're on the verge of becoming the Third Reich of the twenty-first century, and Democrats and progressives are more interested in banishing people than reforming them.
Anthony Scaramucci (above) worked for Donald Trump for eleven days in 2017 and had known him casually for many years before.  Having seen Trump and his modus operandi up close and personal, he has made it his life's work to warn people about Trump and help anyone opposed to him - including Kamala Harris, whom he helped prepare for her first and only debate with Trump.   But Democrats made it clear to Harris that they didn't want Scaramucci in the campaign because he had once worked for Trump.
Incredible.
Democrats in general and progressive Democrats in particular don't take seriously or acknowledge at all anyone who has worked for Trump and has since "seen the light" and started speaking out against him.  Indeed, they ridicule anyone's insistence that they have "seen the light" and prefer that the anti-Trump resistance movement be populated only by those who were against Trump from the start.  Cancel culture, once confined to historical figures and artistic media (Thomas Jefferson, prog rock) that women and people of color deem offensive, has now been extended to living people who misjudged Trump and paid a heavy price for it.
Michael Cohen, Scaramucci's fellow Long Islander and Trump's most devoted sycophant in his pre-presidential years, helped Trump ruin a lot of careers and maybe even a few lives, but he has been repenting every day for it ever since he did time in prison, warning people about Trump.  Many progressives don't want to bother with him, either.  But who better to warn us about Trump than someone who was there with him and witnessed him firsthand?  Heck, I liked the 1978 Sgt. Pepper movie when I saw it in the theaters as a kid - loved it, in fact - but I've since come to see how it misrepresented the Beatles' songs and legacy and how trying to make a rock opera out of so many disparate Beatles tunes was a fool's errand (and I couldn't have picked a bigger fool than Robert Stigwood to prove it), and now I warn neophyte Beatles fans not to see it.  Would fellow Beatles fans cancel me for having liked the movie so much that I even collected the bubble gum cards from it?  No, of course not.  (They did cancel Peter Frampton for being in the movie, and it took him decades to recover from that career misstep, but that's another post.) 
Progressives in the Democratic Party, of course, are so smug and self-righteous that they would have rejected Ebenezer Scrooge after he tried to embrace Christmas.  (Paradoxically, these are usually the same white progressives who demonstrate solidarity with their black counterparts by celebrating Kwanzaa with them in December.)  Many rank-and-file MAGA voters have dug in their heels in response to the refusal of many progressives to at least hear MAGA's grievances, many of which are legitimate, like the hollowing-out of every other industrial town in Ohio.  Bernie Sanders gets it.  He's been reaching out to MAGA voters for years, trying to gain their trust and support and make them see the errors of their ways.  But most progressives would rather refuse support from famous people burned by Trump like Scaramucci and Cohen and also refuse support from not-so-famous people who voted for Trump and got burned by him as well.  Triple Trumpers - those who voted for Trump thrice in each of the general elections in which he was a presidential candidate - are lost forever, and they should obviously be ostracized to the fullest extent.  But progressives would obviously ostracize anyone who voted for Trump even once.
Remember earlier this week, when I disparaged Jennifer Welch and Angie Sullivan for their hostility toward Roman Catholics as well their hostility against men of both Alpha and Beta leanings - that is, all men in general?  (They both sound like the aging high-school football head cheerleader who never stopped thinking of men as studs or nerds.)  To paraphrase Nick the bartender in the nightmarish segment of It's a Wonderful Life where Bedford Falls becomes Pottersville . . . you know, that's another reason for me not to like them.  Welch and Sullivan recently dismissed Scaramucci and Cohen for being late arrivals to the anti-Trump resistance and went so far as to mock them for saying they had "seen the light."  If those two Okies have such a self-righteous attitude, then they're just as insufferable as the most smug East Coast progressives.   Which is why I canceled them from my YouTube feed. 

Friday, August 29, 2025

Music Video Of the Week - August 29, 2025

"Eve of Destruction" by Barry McGuire  (Go to the link in the upper-right-hand corner.)

Thursday, August 28, 2025

Swim and Sink

I was going to do it.

For some time now, I have written on this blog open letters to champion swimmer and my all-time Olympic heartthrob, Janet Evans, regarding my thoughts about the next Los Angeles Olympics in 2028.  Now, with Donald Trump's dictatorial powers ascendant and with the regime bearing down on American cities run by Democratic administrations with military force - including LA - I had planned to write her in her capacity as the 2028 Olympics' chief athletic officer expressing my fear that holding the Olympics under the circumstances Trump has put this country in would be a disaster.  I had planned to tell her how more than a few pundits I've read fear that Trump will extort conditions from Los Angeles and from the state of California to secure the Games, and how he plans to further consolidate his power over Los Angeles through use of federal prerogatives, military occupation like what just transpired in LA and what is now transpiring in Washington, and just plain brute force.  I was going to tell her that his use of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, his newly reorganized secret police, would complicate things further for guests in this country here to participate in or attend the Olympics.  And I was going to tell her in my letter that I wanted to see the Games canceled and possibly relocated to another city in another country as immediately as possible.

And on top of all that, I was going to end with a happy birthday wish to her.  (She turns 54 today.)

But I didn't write and send this letter to Janet Evans as planned.  See, in order to mail a letter to her, I had to look up the address of the Olympic Organizing Committee in Los Angeles and send it there.  That's just it; I couldn't find such an address.  I Googled for any postal address I could have mailed a letter to, but nothing came up.  Even worse, I went to the official Web site for the 2028 Olympics and did not find any contact information for anyone whatsoever.  All I found was a lousy sign-up field for newsletters.  If the organizing committee is working out of some nondescript office building, the address must be a state secret.

Janet Evans, in addition to being my only sports-celebrity crush ever, is a woman I obviously have great respect for, and so I felt that, as a fan and as someone who despises Donald Trump what a cold passion, I felt it was necessary to contact her, explain my lifelong fondness for her, and to be brutally honest as a fan of hers and as a U.S. citizen - that I felt the Games must not go on here.  That is obviously not an option at the moment and may not be an option at all.  Perhaps I've been saved from utter embarrassment by being unable to write such a letter, as Janet Evans would likely have sent me a scathing reply and told me that I must not bring politics into the Olympics.  Or, maybe she would have said she understands my position but respectfully disagrees with it.  But I guess I may never know.

I'll keep trying to look for an address in which to contact Janet Evans by postal or electronic mail.  By the time I find something, it may be too late to express my thoughts.  In the meantime, I have to ponder whether or not to write another Olympic swimming champion, Kirsty Coventry of Zimbabwe, the current president of the International Olympic Committee.  But considering the reaction that I got from a spokesman from her predecessor, Thomas Bach - that Trump was democratically elected and that the will of the voters must be respected - I don't think I'll have any look with her either.

Tuesday, August 26, 2025

I've Had It With "I've Had It"

I started listening to the podcast "I've Had It" hosted by Oklahomans Jennifer Welch (right) and Angie Sullivan, known for comedically complaining about petty grievances, because the two women were beginning to skewer Trump.  And their observations about Trump are pretty spot-on.  But some of their other political grievances smack of moral superiority  and misandry.

Misandry?  Well, it's not because Welch, an interior designer, constantly airs her husband's faults in public to a fault in and of itself.  It's because the two of them can't seem to find much nice to say about the male sex.  After they rightly lampoon toxic masculinity and dismiss "alpha males" for having too much testosterone, they then ridicule "beta males" for not having enough of it.  What other males are left?

I think it was their constant needling of the Roman Catholic Church, which I just began recommitting myself to.  Sullivan, a lawyer who was raised evangelical but has since dissociated herself from her church, and Welch routinely go after evangelicals for their obvious hypocrisy and sexism, and I'm sure they celebrated James Dobson's death (as did I; I celebrated by cackling).   But they have an animosity toward Catholicism that is unpalatably smug.  When Welch, an atheist, begins a podcast video with the sentence "We're no fans of the Catholics," it's obvious that I've Had It is a party to which Catholics are not invited.  Welch also dismissed Pope Leo XIV despite his anti-war stance, his concern for artificial intelligence, and his contempt for Trump because - big surprise - he's against abortion.  The pope is against abortion, gee, who'd have thought.  I understand that Welch is pro-choice, and that's fine, and you can be personally against abortion while being in favor of a woman's right to decide to have one, but many Catholics are in fact against abortion while still being pro-choice, because they understand that Roman Catholicism is not the state religion and they shouldn't impose their beliefs on others.  In other words, Welch has contempt for anyone who's even personally against abortion, and that includes the pope.

Welch and Sullivan are only a few podcasts away from defending the similarly patriarchal Islamic faith to show how "tolerant" they are. 

Welch and Sullivan are no more than self-righteous progressive purists (with Okie accents), and no one likes a purist.  It was because of that smug self-righteousness.  And that's why I stopped listening to them.  I've had it with "I've Had It." 

Monday, August 25, 2025

Of Course You Realize, This Means War

Trump wants to change the name of the Defense Department back to the War Department.

The Department of War, of course, is what the department overseeing the military was called when ot first came into being in 1789, when Henry Knox became its first secretary.  President John Adams created the Navy Department in 1798, and the two departments existed side by side for nearly 150 years.  Then in 1947, President Truman and Congress dismantled the War Department, which had overseen Army operations, by decoupling the Army, its Air Corps division, and the Marines from each other and creating separate departments for each branch, the former Army Air Corps becoming the United States Air Force.  They were then unified with the Navy Department under a single Department of Defense.  When, as a kid, I asked my father about the name, he explained to me that we didn't want to make war, we wanted to defend ourselves.

My father, of course, was also able to convince me that corporate sponsorship of public television was different from corporate sponsorship of commercial network television simply because there are no ad interruptions in public broadcasting.

Since 1947, though, we have made war frequently - in Korea, Vietnam, Grenada, Sudan, Afghanistan, Iraq - and we haven't done a good job of defending ourselves, as 9/11 proved.  As much as I hate to admit it, Trump's proposed name change - something he says he can do without congressional approval - isn't as nutty as you might think.
*
"I want to know how the War Department became the Defense Department." - George Carlin 

Friday, August 22, 2025

Music Video Of the Week - August 22, 2025

"Sink the Bismarck!" By Johnny Horton  (Go to the link in the upper-right-hand corner.)

Thursday, August 21, 2025

Ukraine Redux?

Trump hosted Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and major European leaders in an effort to push peace talks on ending the Russo-Ukrainian war. Let me show you what Trump doesn't get about the war between Russia and Ukraine. 
But somehow, Trump managed to give a good show, expressing solidarity with European leaders and getting them to praise him for his relentless pursuit of peace guarantees for Ukraine and added that Vladimir Putin was open to such an idea.
There's just one thing - no one has told Putin that Putin is open to such an idea.
Trump made himself look like the reasonable leader in the room - he even got Zelensky to wear a suit to the White House this time =- and he was in such a good mood, he showed the Europeans his collection of Trump 2028 merchandise.  But all he really did was kick the can down the road - for Putin.  He set up an expectation for peace talks that won't amount to much of either peace or talks.

Tuesday, August 19, 2025

Texas Hold-Up

The economy is tanking, Social Security is in trouble, and people are ticked off about the big ugly bill.  So what can Trump do now?  He might decide - no, he did decide - to tell Texas governor Greg Abbott to redraw the districts in the Texas U.S. House delegation so that the Republicans can gain five House seats and thwart any effort by the Democrats to win back the chamber in the 2026 midterms.  So Abbott, who was only too happy to oblige and called a special session of the Texas state legislature.  Democratic legislators quickly left the state and didn't come back until after the special session expired.  Abbott was thwarted, but like the bad guy in any dime-store Western novel, he'll be back.

And when he is, Gavin Newsom (above) will be there to meet him.  The California Democratic governor has vowed to get the California state legislature to find a way to gerrymander California's U.S. House districts if Texas gerrymanders its own.  Until Texas acts, California will stand pat, so if and when Newsom makes his move, he will be fighting back, not playing tit for tat.  Democrats are finally fighting back against Trump.  That's the good news.  The bad news is that none of them are serving in Washington.  and they might not be serving in Congress for much longer.  When they return after summer recess, Trump just might have them arrested and sent to a concentration camp.  He already has the National Guard running the place.
And if California successfully thwarts Texas . . . well, Trump is already looking to outlaw mail-in voting, and he plans to "investigate" voter irregularities in any states that do allow mail-in voting in the 2026 midterms . . . even if the governors and legislatures there don't have any basis to look into such charges and tell Trump not to interfere.  

Be afraid.  Be very afraid.

Sunday, August 17, 2025

When She Fought, She Lost

For the last several months, I’ve been saying that Kamala Harris lost the 2024 presidential election because too many voters didn’t want as their President a black woman with a Jewish husband.  But a couple of books I’ve been reading make it clear that, while there is truth to that, it’s hardly the whole story.  The Democratic Party blew the 2024 presidential (and congressional) elections largely due to incompetence ineptitude, and infighting, and also for the same reason Hillary Clinton lost to Donald Trump in 2016 - they had no ability to communicate with the voters they needed most.
Perhaps the biggest reason the Democrats were doomed to fail in 2024 was because of President Biden.  It pains me to admit this, after believing otherwise, but he had no chance of winning a second term and he didn’t know what he was doing when he decided to try for one.  It wasn’t only because he was older and had a growing cognitive disorder.  It was also because his economic policies were unpopular.  Maybe the economy was doing well during his single term, but many people did not feel the effects of it. They were dealing too much with inflation, especially at the supermarket at the gas station, and Biden kept talking about with a wonderful economy it was.
Both his unpopularity and his growing cognitive disorder, eventually, left him to give up his bid for a second term - a year and a half too late.  How I wish that President Biden had announced his decision not to stand for a second term at his 2023 State of the Union address.  Bowing out much earlier would have allowed other Democrats start presidential campaigns and compete for the party’s presidential nomination in a fair and open contest.  Biden’s decision to withdraw from the presidential campaign in July 2024 made Harris the nominee largely by default.  She was next in line and there wasn’t enough time to have a rump primary quickly set up and held for Harris and other presidential possibilities to run in.
Moreover, Harris did not have unanimous support among leading Democrats. One might think that Barack Obama, the nation’s first black President, and Nancy Pelosi, the first female Speaker of the House, would get behind Harris in a heartbeat to see her become the first black female President.  In fact, Obama didn’t think Harris could win, and Pelosi disliked her. The leading proponent for a Harris candidacy, James Clyburn, the black congressman from South Carolina, said that it would be an insult to the black women in the Democratic base not to make her the nominee.  With that statement, Clyburn more or less invited MAGA Republicans to dismiss Harris as a "DEI candidate."
All of this could have been mitigated by the Harris campaign, which unfortunately had problems of its own.  Harris inherited the Biden campaign's apparatus and the Biden campaign's staff, including campaign manager Jen O'Malley Dillon, a control freak known for making grown men cry and making grown women scream.  Harris felt more or less stuck with her, and she trusted her instincts, which was a problem in and of itself; she should have looked not to O'Malley Dillon's instincts, one of which was to freeze out Harris insiders, but her data, which showed that Harris had a great deal of skepticism toward her presidential bid to overcome. 
The skepticism was rooted in Harris's message, or lack thereof.  Her to-do list read like just that - a list, not a comprehensive and coherent vision for where she wanted to take the country.  Trump, as he had done in 2016, was able to articulate his vision in bold, declarative words, whereas Harris only offered policy positions.  People demanded change, and change was what Trump offered as he did in 2016, but when given the chance to offer on ABC's "The View"  an example of what she would do different as President from Joe Biden, who had told her not to separate herself from the administration and whose staffers dominated the campaign, said she could not think of such an example.
Also, unlike the Trump campaign, the Harris campaign fumbled the ball in pursuing the crucial youth vote, particularly young men.  She did make an earnest effort to appear on Joe Rogan's podcasts but Rogan, based in Austin, Texas, insisted that she appear in his studio in person, not remotely, and her efforts to get on his show failed, particularly when she tried to have a rally in nearby Houston and time it with a possible Rogan appearance on his show.  The result?  Rogan had that particular day off, which he forfeited when Trump, whom Rogan had criticized, offered to come on and mend fences with him - and Rogan couldn't say no to that.  The Harris rally in Houston - a lame cover for her botched effort to talk to Rogan on his show, given that she had no chance of winning Texas - occurred on the same day that Trump appeared on Rogan's show and she didn't, a Friday in October . . . a day when Texans were otherwise occupied with Friday night high-school football.  Too bad - maybe, on Rogan's show, Harris could have explained why she left a Trump ad accusing her of supporting gender-affirming care for transsexual inmates that aired during NFL games go unanswered.
Even if Harris did know whom to reach for their votes, her campaign didn't know how to reach them.  Again - what sort of a presidential campaign tries to win votes in working-class South Philadelphia by sending the worldly and glamorous model Paulina Porizkova to canvass there?  A presidential campaign resembling the clueless DJ who plays Jethro Tull at a hip-hop house party, of course.
In the end, Biden's ego, Jen O'Malley Dillon's self-importance, and Harris's own inability to define herself doomed the Democrats in 2024.  Sure, I and others voted for Harris because Trump represented a threat to democracy.  But by making that a centerpiece (a centerpiece, not the centerpiece) of her campaign, she was preaching to people who were going to vote for her anyway.   She needed to reach out to people who were more concerned with economic security than with the right to vote for President.  Many of those people, perversely, did not vote in 2024 at all. 
And the democracy argument would have had more resonance coming from a party that did not force a sitting President to stop aside and then replace him with a candidate who never competed in any presidential primary, simply because she was next in line.
An earlier Biden exit would have allowed a candidate with an inspiring agenda and a better-than-even chance of defeating Trump.  Maybe Harris, after a grueling primary and caucus season, still could have been such a candidate.  But her aborted 2019 presidential campaign - why was she running then, anyway? - didn't offer any promise of her rising to such a level either.  And when Biden continued to insist he could have won once the election was over, despite all evidence to the contrary, he only cast shade on Harris, a woman he and others once championed.
It is just this sort of backstabbing that ended with Donny Deutsch ridiculing the Democrats on national television and with Chris Matthews scolding them through the same medium two days after the election.  
It's just this sort of party - left in the wilderness once Trump started to bask in his triumph - to end up being lost as to what to do next.
But, as an secessionist who favors breaking up the U.S. into smaller countries, that's none of my business.
Please be sure to read two books on the 2024 presidential election, 'Fight" by Jonathan Allen and Amie Parnes and "Uncharted" by Chris Whipple. 

Saturday, August 16, 2025

Peace In Our Time?

After his "summit" meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Anchorage, Alaska, Donald Trump should be arrested for indecent northern exposure.

Yesterday's tête-à-tête between the two democratically elected dictators was supposed to produce an end to the war in Ukraine that would benefit Putin - I call it "the final solution to the Ukrainian question," because that's how Putin would see it - but, thankfully, produced nothing.  Call it the art of No Deal.

The lack of a deal means that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and his people live to fight another day, and he has solid support from a coalition of pro-democracy allies led by Canada, the country that should have taken that mantle back in 1945.

Prior to this Trump-Putin meeting, everyone was comparing Trump to Neville Chamberlain, the British prime minister who sold out Czechoslovakia by letting Hitler take over the Sudetenland from the Czechoslovakian people in the hope of avoiding an unavoidable war.  That's an insult to Chamberlain.  Chamberlain actually accomplished something.  Trump accomplished nothing in Anchorage.  Because he can't do anything right.

He can't even appease right! 

Friday, August 15, 2025

Music Video Of the Week - August 15, 2025

"Keep On Tryin'" by Poco  (Go to the link in the upper-right-hand corner.)

Thursday, August 14, 2025

Turn the Lights Back On

Just when it seemed that the Christmas Light Show in the Philadelphia department store formerly known as Wanamaker's (the fountain part having been discontinued long ago) was as dead as the department store itself, there's good news for fans of the Christmas tradition throughout the greater Philadelphia area.  The owners of the John Wanamaker Building, which housed the onetime department store of the same name before it was rebranded as a Macy's and then closed in March 2025, announced that the central court of the building, where the light show was held, will host it yet again for this Christmas and for every Christmas in the foreseeable future.  And the eagle sculpture and the pipe organ are staying in place, too.

This is all good news for those of us with Philly roots.  But it got me thinking, especially since my trip to Europe earlier this summer.  I was in Paris, Berlin, and Munich, and I found each city to be as different from each other as possible, due to their architectural heritage, their iconic landmarks, their public spaces, and their nightlife.  But I realized something else - in none of these cities did I notice any department stores that made them unique.  Nor did I care.

When we think of Paris, we think of the Eiffel Tower, the grand boulevards, the cafes, Notre Dame Cathedral, the Louvre, and the recreational amenities along the Seine.  When we think of Berlin, we think of the Bundestag, the Unter Den Linden, and the numerous museums on the island in the middle of the Spree River.  When we think of Munich, we think of the beer halls and the Marienplatz, along with the car-free streets that radiate from it.   (Inevitably, alas, we think of Hitler strutting through all three of these cities, but that's another post.)  We do not think of huge commercial enterprises defining these cities - i.e., department stores.  Department stores are a late-nineteenth-century innovation in Western civilization, and they were meant to be grandiose palaces of consumerism that celebrated opulence and convenience - so many classy products available in different departments under one roof.  By the late 1950s, American cities had become synonymous with the major department stores that dominated their central districts, and vice versa.  It was impossible to think of Philadelphia without Wanamaker's and Strawbridge & Clothier, New York without Macy's and Gimbels, Chicago without Marshall Field's and Carson Pirie Scott, and so on.  Today all of these stores are gone, except for Macy's, which placed its name on the original Marshall Field's store in Chicago even as the Carson Pirie Scott store is a Target now.  

By contrast, European cities are more known for their cultural, not their commercial, institutions.  Not too many Americans are likely to name a department store as one of the chief distinguishing characteristics of Brussels or Rome - if they can even name department stores in those cities.  True, London is famous for Harrods and Selfridge's, but it's unlikely that anyone naming London's distinctive landmarks will name either of those two stores.  But ask an American to name at least three distinctive landmarks of an given American city and, with a few exceptions - New Orleans, Los Angeles, Washington - one of those distinctive landmarks is likely to be a department store, even if it's a department store that went out of business years or decades ago.  Old-timers in the Detroit area will remember Hudson's, which was more colossal and luxurious than even Bloomingdale's.  But can anyone name any cultural or historic landmark in Detroit that would command the global recognition of an Eiffel Tower or a Big Ben?  (The Ford River Rouge factory is not an acceptable answer.)  Dallas is only known for two landmarks, and one of them is the gaudy Neiman-Marcus store.  The other is Dealey Plaza, and only because John F. Kennedy was assassinated there.     

In short, most American cities are known for commercial enterprises that mostly have not stood the test of time.  We've been acclimated to think of these stores as institutions in these cities and we have little to define these cities once these stores are gone.  Only a handful of American cities are known for cultural institutions and public spaces free of consumerist values, like New York, which is known for the Metropolitan Museum of Art and for Central Park . . . but it too is known for a department store - the aforementioned Macy's, a once-unique store that is now located in just about every major city in place of the local and regional department stores that once thrived there . . . but not in Philadelphia anymore, and certainly not in Newark, where the chain took over and appended the Macy's name to the old Bamberger's store and closed it in 1992.  

What's so special about the Macy's in New York, the flagship store, when there are Macy's stores all over America now?  Probably the annual Thanksgiving Day parade, with its oversized balloons and its canned performances for the TV cameras in front of the store's entrance.  As for Newark, the Newark Museum and the cookie-cutter New Jersey Performing Arts Center - built to get to and leave from by car with ease, so you don't have to stroll downtown - are hardly big draws to a central business district so devoid of life in makes downtown Cleveland look like Carnival. 

So, if American cities have any future in this suburbanized, sprawling country, it's as cultural, not commercial, centers, which European cities have been for centuries, developing their art, culture and public amenities through all that time, and with the patronage of royalty and aristocracy.  American cities mostly developed for commercial reasons, and art museums and opera companies only came later, and so there's little if any rich history that defines American cities the way it defines Rome or Athens.  There's no ancient Philadelphia to speak of, no medieval Cleveland, no Renaissance Minneapolis, no Tudor Atlanta . . . honey, there ain't even a colonial Chicago.  

I'm glad that the Wanamaker Building in Philadelphia is keeping its Christmas light show.  But after having walked down the boulevards of Paris at night,  seeing for myself why it's called the City of Light, with the lights twinkling on the Eiffel Tower and all the bright illuminations along the sidewalks, it made me appreciate all the more what makes Paris Paris - and how much trouble our own cities are in when there's little that makes them distinctive.  Urban planning critic James Howard Kunstler once said that there is no reason why Cleveland, Detroit, and Harlem can't be as spiritually gratifying as Paris.  He was wrong of course, for too many reasons to explain in this already long blog post, but the biggest reason is that cities in the U.S. were never built to inspire our humanity (except Washington, which proved to be a spectacular failure in that regard), and were only meant to transact business in.  

Which explains Newark.  Now a nine-to-five city of insurance and utility transactions, it offers little else after hours because of suburban flight that was all about plain damn money.

Wednesday, August 13, 2025

An American Germania

Trump wants to put his own stamp on Washington, D.C.   And nothing allows him to put his imprimatur on the nation's capital than having the National Guard and other units of the military take over policing in the District of Columbia.

The ostensible reason for sending National Guard troops to the District is to rein in out-of-control crime in the city after one of Elon Musk's former Department of Government Efficiency henchmen got assaulted in a car-theft attempt.  But the real reason that Trump is laying down the law - martial law - in D.C. is because he's a white man who wants to dominate a black-majority city whose mayor is a black woman.  It couldn't really be because of rampant crime - crime has dropped considerably in Washington for years now.  If Trump wanted to do something about out-of-control crime, he'd have sent troops to New Orleans or Atlanta - cities in Republican states.  The cities Trump plans to take his military-dictatorship road show to  - he has mentioned Chicago, Detroit and Philadelphia - are cities with large black populations in states with Democratic governors.  And New York City, his former hometown, could be next, assuming Zohran Mamdani is elected mayor in November.  And if Mikie Sherill is elected governor of New Jersey - an electoral outcome I seriously doubt at this point - Newark, which is overwhelmingly black and Hispanic and has a mayor named Ras Baraka (instead of Ralph Jones, which would likely be his name had his poet-playwright father not changed the family name from Jones to Baraka), would certainly be added to the list.  (And maybe overwhelmingly black East Orange next door, as long as the troops are in the neighborhood.)  All of this is just fine with the Republicans, who are ready with rejoinders on the need to fight crime - a reality for many even in America's safest cities - when the Democrats inevitably object to Trump's actions.  

None of that accounts for why Trump chose Washington to make an example of before any other places, having already made an example out of Los Angeles.  Trump, quite bluntly, wants to remake Washington in his image.  Why else would he be planning to build a ballroom for the White House?  Why else would he take over the Kennedy Center?  His plans to turn Washington into a Mar-a-Lago-style utopia is redolent of Adolf Hitler's plan to turn Berlin into Germania, a grand city Hitler had hoped would dwarf ancient Rome and modern Rome as well.  He had his architect Albert Speer draw up plans for a domed assembly hall so huge it would end up having its own weather inside.  When all is said and done, Speer may end up having accomplished less in Berlin than what Trump's sycophantic architects and construction firms pull off in Washington.  Trump is certainly drawn to grandiose projects much like Hitler was, and he shares an artistic sensibility with Hitler toward using size and ornament to send a message as to who is the leader and that the leader shall not be opposed or questioned.  Hitler had been a watercolor artist and knew how art and architecture could be used to project an image of strength.  Likewise, Trump has been a real estate developer with a taste for opulence and knows how to project power and wealth in his buildings.  The only difference between Hitler and Trump is that Trump may actually have more money than Hitler did.

It is therefore in Washington where Trump is planning to create a citadel of power and domination, where every aspect of life conforms to the whims of the leader.  If the White House becomes another Chancellery, what can we expect of the Capitol?  The Smithsonian Institution is already having its mission statement rewritten to emphasize a feel-good historical narrative of the nation as viewed by white patriarchs wearing rose-colored glasses rather than the multiethnic story of struggle and adversity that American history really is.  By turning the Smithsonian into a repository of the sort of history represented in children's biographies of famous Americans - biographies that leave out all of the flaws and faults of our historical figures - Trump is infantilizing the country's story.

Trump wants to enforce this with his occupying military force in the nation's capital.  It's his show, and he's directing it like the pseudo-documentarian reality TV series he once hosted.  But what happens when the fantasy is over?

Let's just say Hitler learned the answer to that question the hard way when the Red Army entered Berlin in 1945.

Monday, August 11, 2025

Kamala Out of the System

Much like Hillary Clinton released a memoir of her failed presidential campaign against Donald Trump titled "What Happened," former Vice President Kamala Harris has a new memoir of her failed presidential campaign against Donald Trump, titled "107 Days" (after the length of her campaign), thought it should be titled, "What Happened?"  Because the added question mark would be highly appropriate.

Harris appeared with Stephen Colbert on his late-night talk show a few days after he - like Harris eight months earlier - had become irrelevant.  She lamented that the system of government in America is broken, and that she plans talk to people about their lives while she tours the United States to promote her book, saying that, by not asking for anyone's vote, she can talk to them in a way that is not transactional.  All of this comes as Harris has announced that she will not run for governor of California in 2026.

"I believe, and I always believed, that as fragile as our democracy is, our systems would be strong enough to defend our most fundamental principles," she told Colbert.  "And I think right now that they’re not as strong as they need to be."

By talking to people on her book tour, Harris is planning to do exactly what she could have done as Vice President if President Biden had made it clear from the start that he would be a one-term President, which, I now believe, is what he should have done all along.  He should decided privately that he would not run again in 2024 and wait until after the 2022 midterms to make his decision public.  That would have given Harris plenty of time to talk to Americans on a non-transactional way to help her decide whether to run in 2024, as Biden's earlier withdrawal, had it happened, would have allowed other Democrats to run and make the primary/caucus campaign more competitive.

And what does Harris plan to do when her book tour is over?  She plans not to return to government "for now," but that tease may indicate another presidential run in 2028, and many Harris supporters believe she is entitled to try again, since a 107-day campaign was clearly insufficient at defeating Donald Trump.  But let's look at the big picture.  In a live recent podcast he hosted, journalist Ryan Lizza asked listeners to weigh in on whom they thought should be the 2028 Democratic presidential nominee, and they responded with the names of numerous Democrats, but the name of one particular Democrat was never mentioned.  Guess which Democrat. 

Friday, August 8, 2025

Music Video Of the Week - August 8, 2025

"Part of the Load" by Family  (Go to the link in the upper-right hand corner.)

Thursday, August 7, 2025

The Late "Late Show"

CBS canceled Stephen Colbert.

Colbert, the host of "The Late Show," will no longer deliver his witty, barbed comments about Donald Trump on late-night television.  It's not just Colbert that's going off the air; "The Late Show" is ending completely once Colbert is gone.

Almost as soon as the news came down, many observers quickly accused CBS, which infamously settled with Trump over a bogus lawsuit involving Kamala Harris's "60 Minutes" interview before its parent company completed a lucrative merger, of bending the knee to Trump to prevent him from further trying to extort the network by canceling Colbert.  Just like when CBS axed "The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour" in 1969 to appease President Richard Nixon, who was always offended by les freres Smothers' jokes about him and their opposition to the war in Vietnam.  "We weren't canceled," the late Tom Smothers said, "we were fired!"  

Good point - if it were true.  But the actual truth is that CBS's continued endeavor in late-night programming was a drain on the network.  Colbert's ratings, as MSNBC host-turned-podcaster Keith Olbermann pointed out, had been in decline for years and the show was generating less revenue for CBS as more young people - the demographic most advertisers aim at - were tuning out and opting for streaming and the like.  Given that, it's only a matter of time before the two Jimmys - Fallon at NBC and Kimmel at ABC - follow suit.

Besides, if Colbert were being canceled because of Trump, why is he being allowed to continue on TV until his contract expires - in May 2026?  If Colbert is being given ten months to say anything he wants to about Trump, then the idea of him getting fired for making fun of Trump doesn't hold water.

Some reporters do believe this has to do with Trump.  Jonathan Alter told Al Franken on Franken's podcast that he personally believes Colbert is being let go because he is constantly making fun of Trump and the MAGA movement. What Alter, a friend of Colbert's and like Colbert a resident of Montclair, New Jersey, did not mention was that his (Alter's) wife is a booking agent for Colbert's show. 

So much for full disclosure.
Stephen Colbert isn't really going anywhere.  This time next year, he'll likely have a podcast of his own in which he'll continue to ridicule Trump.  Meanwhile, CBS will for the first time since 1993 have no late-night programming at 11:35 PM Eastern, freeing the local CBS stations to go back to airing sports-extra report shows or maybe some old movies.  Or maybe CBS will bring back older reruns of current shows that haven't had any earlier episodes syndicated yet, a practice both CBS and ABC employed back in the seventies when Johnny Carson was at his peak.  I have no idea what will happen to the Ed Sullivan Theater, but chances are CBS will sell it to some young hotshot who doesn't know who Ed Sullivan was and who will likely convert it into a sports bar.

Tuesday, August 5, 2025

Tear Down This House!

This one.

Okay, now that I have your attention . . . let me set things up here.  Donald Trump is planning to make a major change to the White House, something that would never have appeared on Kamala Harris' to-do list or anyone else's . . . he's going to have a new White House ballroom built, with construction set to start later this fall.

He plans to have it done before January 2029, when he's scheduled to leave office.

It would replace much of the East Wing, as seen below.

Wonder why the rendering shows it in the wintertime?
As out of scale as it looks on the outside, the planned ballroom is just plain gaudy inside, with the inevitable excessive use of gold leaf.
More opulent than elegant, this planned expansion of the White House suggests comparisons to Mar-a-Lago for many, but for me I can't help but think of Adolf Hitler's Chancellery in Berlin, with its emphasis on size and ornament, which was designed by the Führer's sycophantic court architect, Albert Speer.
The Kennedy Center has also been compared to Hitler's palace, but at least the Kennedy Center isn't anyone's actual residence.  Someone's residency, yes; someone's residence, no.  The White House is the home of the President of the United States, who, more than a famous Hollywood actor, a renowned captain of industry, or an overexposed helium-voiced pop singer from Detroit, is America to the world.  And the White House is supposed to represent our values, not one President's.  This is different from President Truman having a bowling alley installed or President Ford adding an outdoor swimming pool.  This cheapens and degrades the executive mansion!
But, at this point, I am a fully committed secessionist, and I hope to see Trump become the last President of the United States before the country goes the way of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.  Because Washington, D.C. was culled from 64 square miles of the Maryland side of the Potomac River (Virginia added 36 square miles so that the District of Columbia would be ten miles square -100 square miles - but requested it returned in 1846; ironically, those 36 square miles became the city of Arlington, which is the home of the Pentagon and Arlington National Cemetery), I had imagined that Washington would become the capital of what ever post-American republic Maryland ended up being in, or maybe become the new capital of Canada if the northeastern states became Canadian provinces, another option worth considering, but now I know that Washington can't be the capital of any post-Union country.  Trump has already sullied it with changes to the White House already, such having just had the Rose Garden lawn being paved with granite (Hitler liked granite) and having already gotten rid of the trees in his first presidential term (Hitler got rid of the trees along Berlin's grand boulevard, the Unter den Linden, which got its name from those very trees, to have more state parades).  He's already wrecked havoc on the Kennedy Center.  What does he have planned for the Capital and the Supreme Court?  And is the Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial in jeopardy of being dismantled?
Therefore, I propose the following ideas once Washington, D.C, is no longer the capital of anything.  
First, return it to Maryland.  To avoid the prospect of Maryland having to rescue another failing city when it's already saddled with Baltimore, divide Washington into smaller towns and either add them to existing Maryland counties or make the old District of Columbia a new county - name it Douglass County, after famous Marylander Frederick Douglass.
Second, repurpose the government buildings for apartments or office space.  As for the Capitol, turn it into an art museum, as the Louvre palace in Paris became an art museum.  The Supreme Court can become a new performing arts complex to replace the spectacularly ugly Kennedy Center.   Wall up the Lincoln and Jefferson Memorials and, once the interiors are gutted and the statues are placed elsewhere, preferably in their states of origin, turn them into four-star restaurants.  Like Maison Robert in Boston occupying the former city hall.
And the White House?  Tear it down, just as the Chancellery in Berlin was.  Expand the green space south from Lafayette Square.  Get rid of any trace of Donald Trump having ever been there.  Replace the site of the Oval Office with a monument dedicated to all of the immigrants who were rounded up in the second Trump term and never heard from again.  
(As for what to do with the Washington Monument . . . yeah, I have no idea.)
This wouldn't be the first time a city built to be a national capital would cease being one.  Bear in mind that the Russian czar Peter the Great built St. Petersburg on the Baltic Sea to be a showpiece capital for the Russian Empire and replace Moscow as the seat of government.  St. Petersburg is certainly a lovely city, but when the Bolsheviks took over Russia, Lenin decided that the city was too close to Russia's western border and moved the Russian capital back to Moscow, which would become both the capital of the U.S.S.R. and the Russian Soviet Federated Socialist Republic.  (And during the Soviet era, St. Petersburg was named Leningrad.)   St. Petersburg, however, is still a repository for Russian culture. Washington is only a seat of government.  It has no reason to exist without a country to be a seat of government for.
Just as the country it is the capital of has no reason to exist anymore.