It's Ugly
More Like 68th!
Yes Virginia, This is How You Sound
"They'll Laugh at You!"
Like the Germans and World War II
He can't destroy all the evidence. Eventually it will all come out and it will be ugly.
Hahaha!
Do it, you inbred hillbillies.
Please.
How Much Time Have You Got?
Fuck This Guy
I couldn't have said it better myself.
From Greg Fallis:
This guy, I declare. This whiny, small-minded, pissy-pants guy. This privileged, lying, unworthy, lazy, ignorant guy. This vindictive, self-pitying, arrogant, despicable guy. This conceited, fuck-witted, always complaining, cowardly guy. This sour-souled, slack-eyed, gorbellied, muddle-headed guy. The fucking guy is still insisting he won the election.
I am SO sick of this guy. I'm sick of hearing his voice — his griping, carping, sneering voice. I'm sick of hearing his name and seeing it on everything from buildings to flags to signs. I'm sick of his hideous presence on television, which he haunts like some gross and malevolent spectre. I'm sick of his ridiculous hair. I'm sick of seeing his face — his slack-eyed, flaccid, pouty-mouthed, jaundiced face. I'm sick of knowing he even fucking exists. I'm SO goddamned sick of him.
I'm sick of his appallingly ignorant and loathsome adult children. I'm sick of his wife. I'm sick of ALL of his wives. I'm sick of his democracy-hating sycophants in the Senate. I'm sick of his ass-licking toadies in the House of Representatives. I'm sick of all his groveling and cringing 'news personalities' on television and in the newspapers. I'm sick of his apologists and enablers. I'm completely sick of his fawning, eyelash-batting, lickspittle Press Secretary. I'm sick of every single goddamned person in his easily-replaced, unprofessional, ill-equipped, odious, merry-go-round of a Cabinet.
Fuck this guy. Fuck everybody in his orbit. Fuck everybody who volunteered to work for him. Fuck everybody who campaigned for him. Fuck everybody who planted one of his yard signs in their yard. Fuck everybody who bought and flew one of his godawful flags. Fuck the people who made and sold the flags. Fuck everybody who voted for him. Seriously, just fuck this guy.
There. I needed that. I feel better now. Normally I read the news in the morning, then think about it for a while, calmly and objectively, before I say or write anything. But this morning that I WON THE ELECTION tweet just flat out pissed me off. It's a bright sunny day and I didn't want to let this fucking guy ruin it. So I decided to vent. Get the ugly shit out of my system. Now I can get on with my day and be happy and have fun.
Something to Brighten Your Day
Coke Will Do That Do You
I Have, and it's Delicious
A Gentle Reminder…
Truth
Fuck His Feelings
All.Of.This!!!
Someone actually had the cajones to suggest we have to be understanding of him and give him time to come to terms with losing and that we should be sensitive of his feelings
Really??
He's 74 years old, not 5
He is a bully who calls people names and makes fun of them—you think that he has feelings?!
If he has made it to 74 without coming to grips with winning and losing then there are too many people around him fearful of speaking the truth and America has just done it for them.
So FUCK TRUMP and everyone who still supports this sociopath!
As Ben Tells His Students…
"Choices have consequences."
Reality Check
Not that reality has ever been in their skill set, but…
"I Don't Really Care. Do You?"
Divinely Happy
Yes, I'm Gloating
It's a Brand New Day
Everybody look around
'Cause there's a reason to rejoice you see
Everybody come out
And let's commence to singing joyfully
Everybody look up
And feel the hope that we've been waiting for
Everybody's glad
Because our silent fear and dread is gone
Can't you feel a brand new day?
(Stolen from one of my faithful readers)
WOOHOO!!!
Triptych
We Were Wrong About America
Once again, John Pavlovitz nails it:
The delayed results of the presidential election will be revealed soon, but in many ways, those results will be secondary to what we already know now: we were wrong about America.
The fact that it was even close, the fact that more people voted for him a second time, the fact that a higher number of white women inexplicably affirmed him—it is all confirmation that whether we remove the very visible, unsightly symptom or not, the pervasive disease is still horribly afflicting us.
Numbed by a cocktail of optimism and ignorance, many of us imagined this was a sick, momentary aberration; a temporary glitch in the system that would surely be remedied: after so much ugliness, such open disregard for people of color, such inhumanity toward migrant children, such a sickening failure in the face of this pandemic—sanity would surely come to the rescue.
We were certain that we would collectively course-correct; that the pendulum that had so wildly swung toward inhumanity would come roaring back to decency in these days; that we would presently be basking in the glory of a radiant dawn referendum on all this bloated bigotry.
We thought we would be dancing on the grave of fascism.
We thought, of course the good people of this nation would come to their collective senses, leaving behind political affiliations and superficial preferences and ceremonial ties, to rescue us from a malevolence that had proven itself unworthy of its position and toxic to its people.
We were certain there would be a mass repudiation of the racism that this man has revealed and the violence he's nurtured, because for all its flaws we really believed America was better than this.
We were wrong.
We were wrong to believe that white people weaned for decades on supremacy, would suddenly embrace disparate humanity and make more space at the table.
We were wrong to believe that white Christians would finally have the scales fall from their eyes and abandon their blind adoration of this vile false prophet of enmity, and once again embrace the expansive, compassionate heart of Jesus.
We were wrong to believe that kindness and science and facts and truth and goodness would be found more valuable than the fool's good of sneering, star-spangled, American greatness.
We were wrong to hope that more Republicans would cross party lines in order to defend their country from the greatest terrorist threat in our lifetime.
We were wrong to believe that hope would rise up to cast out fear.
And most of all, we were wrong about people we know and love and live alongside and work with and study beside; about our parents, spouses, siblings, uncles, best friends, and neighbors: they are not the people we thought they were and we do not live in the country we thought we lived in.
We believed the best about this nation and we were mistaken.
To many oppressed and vulnerable communities, to people who have long known the depth of America's sickness because they have experienced it in traffic stops and workplace mistreatment and opportunity inequity and the bitter words of strangers—this may be less shocking news than it is to those of us with greater privilege and more buffers to adversity and the luxury of naiveté.
But this is the sober spot in which we stand now: realizing that our optimism about the whole of this nation was misplaced,
our prayers for the better angels of so many white Christians were unanswered, our childish illusions that people were indeed basically good and decent, seared away in their reaffirmation of something that the rest of the watching world finds reprehensible.
And now, we're left with two terribly unfortunate choices: leave the America we have, because it is so very different than the America we hoped for—or stay, realizing that we are surrounded by so many people for whom racism is not only not a deal breaker but a selling point; in a place we know is less safe and less decent and less kind than we wanted—not because of any politician but because of those who embraced him a second time, people who share our kitchen tables and churches and break rooms and cul-de-sacs.
I don't know what the right decision is.
Right now, the only thing I know is that I expected something beautiful and life-affirming was going to mark this day and it isn't.
I was certain we were better than him, but we are not.
I was so sure that even though I know hatred dies hard, that America was going to let love have the last, loudest word.
I was wrong