FUCK TRUMP

And fuck Brunswick News Inc. for terminating their contract with cartoonist Michael de Adder because reasons "wholly unrelated" to his publishing this comic on Twitter (which the assholes didn't even run in their newspapers).

This Is Making The Rounds

And is definitely worth your time.

To my Trump-supporting family,

On the morning of November 9, 2016, the America I knew and loved died.  Or rather, I woke that day to discover that it never really existed in the first place. 

Let me explain. 

I grew up in the Deep South.  I was a flag-waving, gun-shooting, red-blooded American boy.  I said the Pledge of Allegiance every morning in school, got tingles when I heard the national anthem, and fervently accepted that no other country on the planet could ever come close to the grandeur, freedom, and inspiration that the United States of America offered.  We were that City Upon the Hill that was promised to the world – a shining beacon of participatory democracy that everyone else desperately wanted to emulate but could never achieve.  We were tough on our allies, but only because we needed to push them to excel and improve.  Of course, they'd never quite catch up to us economically, politically, or militarily, but hey, that's the price of not being the USA.  The chants of "USA! USA! USA" weren't taunts, but merely celebrations of our preeminence.  And anyone's detractions were just signs of their jealousy.  Because everybody wanted to be American, right?

I was sold the American dream just like the hundreds of millions of my compatriots.  Work hard, pay your dues, and you'll succeed.  No child left behind.  All in this together.  Pull yourself up by your bootstraps.  I joined the Navy and proudly served my country because that's just what a Southern boy did.  There simply was no higher honor than being part of the vanguard protecting democracy from those who would do us harm.

Even after traveling the world with the Navy and learning that, actually, America didn't hold a monopoly on freedom, I still wasn't swayed from my categorical resolution that no country was better. No people could be better.  America resulted from the failures and lessons learned from every other country's trials and errors.  Mostly errors.  But we corrected them all.  Where other countries had endured the restrictions of authoritarianism or the unfettered chaos of direct democracy, America perfected the balance with our Constitution and its representative democracy.  Sure, we had our own fits-and-starts, which our schools taught – seizure of land and the treatment of Native Americans, the slave trade and oppression of black people, relegation of women to the home – but the America in which I grew up in the 1980s and 1990s had moved past those missteps.  Right?  Wasn't America now that happy melting pot teeming with opportunity for all, if only you tried hard enough?

Of course not.  But that was how I viewed it.  And I'm sure that's how you still think of America.  What we did to the Native Americans?  They just need to accept that we civilized them and they should be thankful.  Slavery, Jim Crow, systemic racism?  Nah, African Americans need to get over slavery, stop being ghetto thugs, and start accepting responsibility for their own communities.  And women certainly have come a long way – just don't get too uppity or think you're entitled to too much of a political view, otherwise you risk losing your innate genteelness.  (If reading this part makes you feel uncomfortable – and it probably does – stop for a second and think about why.  Your discomfort is what's left of your conscience.)

After I left the Navy and joined the real world, I saw more and more of what this country truly was.  The mistreatment of people of color, the judgment and chastisement of the LGBT community, and the everyday sexism.  Unlike the America taught in schools, this place had a lot of scars, scratches, and quite a few gaping wounds.  But still I thought none of them were terminal.  Surely Bill Clinton (for all his flaws) had it right when he said there was nothing wrong with America that couldn't be cured by what was right in America.  Surely.

Up until November 8, 2016, I genuinely believed that, despite its myriad shortcomings, America was still the country that stood up to bullies.  It valued intellect and scientific discovery.  Americans may have disagreed on specific policies, but still had faith that public servants genuinely had the country's best interests at heart.  Immigration built this country.  And we should always, always protect the innocent and welcome those fleeing poverty, war, or famine with open arms.

But America didn't elect a leader who represents any of those principles.  America didn't elect a leader with any principles.  And you did that.  You can say you held your nose and voted for the "lesser of two evils," or that you only voted for Trump because you knew he'd further the policies with which you agreed, even if you found him personally detestable.  But when you and all of the other Trump voters pulled that lever, you weren't just selecting your preferred presidential candidate.  You were selecting what America was.  And it is nothing like the America I grew up believing in.  To say that your choice and the result it brought about triggered an existential crisis would be an understatement.  My whole life, I'd been an unquestioning, patriotic servant of America because of what I'd believed it stood for.  But in a single night, everything it stood for was revealed as a fraud.  Everything I stood for was a fraud.

So now, two and half years into the alternative reality, I've come to grips that this isn't some insane nightmare.  This is reality.  And seeing how Trump supporters (yourselves included) have behaved since then, I really was a fool for ever believing America stood for anything else. 

I won't bore you with my journey to "wokeness" or why the things you tolerate literally sicken me.  Sexual predator? "They're not hot enough to sexually assault." Racist bully?  "Fake news."  Uncompassionate bigot?  "They should stay in their own damn countries."  Even if I had the capacity and patience to expound on every deviation from the America I thought existed, you wouldn't care.  Why?  Because you've stopped listening.  The rise of Fox News means you've stopped reading the papers.  And even if you did, you wouldn't be intrigued or inquisitive about what they say because you've bought into the idea that the press is the enemy of the people (except for Fox News and the National Review, which get passes because, well, why?). 

You've stopped paying attention to anyone who doesn't agree with your crystallized view of the world.  You're the mosquito of the Reagan era, completely unaware the sap has long hardened around you into amber.  And frankly, it's not even particularly pretty amber.  It's dull, opaque, muffled.  You can't see or hear through it and you don't want to.

But to be honest with you, I've lost all interest in trying to break you free.  At first, I really wanted to.  I wanted you to understand how the promise of America was broken.  I wanted you to see so we could find some way to fix it.  But every time I tried, you trotted out some line you heard Trump spew (none of which make any sense whatsoever, by the way) or that some Fox News commentator has conned you into thinking reflects reality.  So I'm done.

The America I believed in doesn't exist.  Instead, it's a different country now, irretrievably.  I get a bit melancholy about it sometimes, because promise and hope and opportunity are like political endorphins, and I miss them.  And I miss you.  I miss having conversations about our lives as though you hadn't abandoned everything we ever believed in.  I miss seeing your smiling faces without having to hold back a political tirade.  I miss spending time with you without constantly wondering how you sleep at night knowing what this country is doing to the defenseless.

Surely by now you've seen the AP's recent photo of an El Salvadoran man and his two and a half year-old daughter who drowned as they fled the violence in their home country, hoping to seek asylum in America.  They drowned because Trump won't let them claim asylum at the border entry points.  He's denying them the safety and promise that America used to stand for.  Many observers who haven't yet fully recognized their prior delusions are saying, "This isn't what we stand for."  But it is.  It's exactly what America stands for.

And that is why I'm done with you and your ilk.  We're still family; you raised me; we share the same blood.  But we come from and live in two different countries.

Sincerely,

Matthew

Source.

I Don't Want Trump Just Impeached

I want that motherfucker:

● Fully investigated.
● Indicted.
● Impeached.
● Put on Trial for Treason.
● Found Guilty.
● Dragged from the White House in chains.
● Convicted.
● Imprisoned.
● Sued in Civil Court for Damages.
● Found Guilty.
● To have every single asset seized and sold off.
● To be left penniless.

And the same for every one of his smirking spawn.

Everything We Can't Get Back

Once again, from John Pavlovitz:

One day this will all be over.

History testifies that all brutal empires fall, all hateful movements dissolve, all malevolent momentary victors eventually find themselves defeated and driven out.

Every time the pendulum has swung toward inhumanity—it has invariably comeback with even greater opposite force to bend the arc of the moral universe back toward justice again.

This will be true here as well.

America will not always be where it is today.
It will not be in such fearful, violent, jittery hands.
It will not be forever captive to a predatory minority.
It will not always be so devoid of accountability for its leaders.
It will not always be this dangerous to marginalized people and this openly hostile to diversity.

And while I take solace in these inarguable truths, they come with the bitter aftertaste of the realization that we have already lost so much that is simply irretrievable.

No matter how quickly some sense of rightness is restored here, there are so many things we will never get back:

The countless hours marshaling our energies trying to protect already vulnerable people from powerful leaders fully intent on pilling burdens upon them; moments that could have been used to make and to build and to create and to dream and to breathe.

The seemingly endless defenses we've had to mount against the most despicable of legislative assaults and Constitutional offenses from within—and the relentless friendly fire of our neighbors and families and friends and pastors.

The hundreds of sleepless nights we restlessly inventoried the sheer scale of the collective sickness we'd witnessed earlier that day, and hoping for miraculous mornings of respite that so rarely came.

The separations between us and people we once felt such natural affinity with; all the quiet disconnections, the social media explosions, and the decisive dinner table blowups—the countless relational fractures that will far outlive this Administration.

The trust we had in the center holding; of checks and balances and of good people who would not be compromised by momentary gain.

These things are gone for good.

So much time unnecessarily squandered.
So much precious daylight wasted.
So many friendships sharply severed.
So much faith burned away—
and the collateral damage to marriages and friendships and families and neighborhoods.

And no matter how much we're able to undo the damage to our systems and how much integrity we're able to return to our elections and no matter how well we're able to nationally right ourselves—we've lost some critical stuff forever.

We'll never get back the hours we've spent worrying.
We'll never get back the days we grieved the losses.
We'll never get back the words we've spoken in haste.
We'll never get back the estranged birthdays and Christmases and funerals.
We'll never get back the cherished image of people we love, that we had before all this began.
We'll never get back the full optimism we felt about the place we call home.
We'll never get back the young black men and transgender teenagers and migrant families and school shooting victims, who never mattered to those in power right now.

So yes, the History books will record the inevitable course correction of this season, and it will appear from the distance of time that we recovered—but we who are alive right now will know the truth from this painful proximity.

We'll know that we will never be able to recover everything beautiful and precious and hopeful that we lost in these days.

There is so much gone that we will never get back.

Quote of the Day

Donald Trump is not trying to get impeached. He does not want to be impeached, and he definitely does not have a sophisticated dastardly plot to turn his impeachment into greater personal power or as a strategy to create a more solidified and motivated political base. He does not have a sophisticated dastardly plot to do anything, or any other kind of plot. The man is not capable of sophistication, or any but the basest sensation-seeking dastardliness; it's all he can do to get the fast food from its cardboard container to the appropriate face-hole. He is a big stupid idiot, is what I am saying, and he likes things that feel good and wants them right now and doesn't like things that don't feel good and doesn't want them ever, and that is the extent of him. ~ Albert Burneko

Thought For Today

Future historians, sifting through the still-smoldering rubble of the 21st century will ask, "Why didn't they just drag the motherfucker out of the White House and string him up?"

Hillary Was Right

As if you need to be told.

From John Pavlovitz:

Hillary Clinton was right about everything.

She was right when she warned us that Donald Trump was in bed with Russia.
She was right when she said our election process was being irreparably compromised.
She was right when she noted his cruelty, his impulsiveness, and his recklessness.
She was right when she suggested he was beholden to a murderous foreign dictator.
She was right when she told us that he was dangerously incapable of self-control on social media.
She was right when she pointed out the toxic hatred he was cultivating and releasing in people.
She was right when she noticed the way he was dragging national discourse into the toilet.

And she was right was when she called his supporters "deplorables."

At the time of the statement in 2016, she was unfairly excoriated in the media and by Republicans—but looking back she was using sober judgement, measured speech, and incredible restraint:

"To just be grossly generalistic, you could put half of Trump's supporters into what I call the basket of deplorables. They're racist, sexist, homophobic, xenophobic – Islamophobic – you name it."

They are.

In the wake of the police shootings of black men, the street corner assaults on gay couples, the #MeToo and Black Lives Matter movements, the defacing of synagogues, the burning of black churches, the mistreatment of migrant families—Trump's supporters daily reveal their phobic hearts and their willingness to ignore vulnerable people's suffering.

"And unfortunately, there are people like that. And he has lifted them up. He has given voice to their websites that used to only have 11,000 people – now have 11 million."

He has.

He continually cries "fake news" about the legitimate Press, while disseminating the wildest of conspiracy theories from extremists media outlets, previously and rightly marginalized because they appealed to only the tiniest lunatic fringe.

"He tweets and retweets their offensive hateful mean-spirited rhetoric."

He does.

Just look at his Twitter feed at any moment during the past three years, and you'll find the unhinged, incendiary ramblings of a supremacist, terrorist sympathizer—whose account under any other circumstance—would be deactivated for its hate speech, its purposeful targeting of individuals, and its steady invocation to violence.

In 2016, Hillary was being prophetic.

She used the word "deplorable," to describe people who would soon:
applaud Muslim travel bans,
celebrate families separated at the border,
abide children being placed in cages,
demonize teenage shooting victims,
defiantly deny the value of black lives,
vilify sexual assault survivors,
bless a predator to the Supreme Court,
cheer Presidential rally cries of shooting immigrants,
approve of the suppressing of Special Counsel reports,
sanction the complete perversion of our Rule of Law.

Deplorable, was being kind. I have many other words for such people, and they're much stronger and far less diplomatic than that.

Hillary closed her now infamous comments by saying,

"Now, some of those folks—they are irredeemable, but thankfully, they are not America."

Well, she was about half right.

These people may not be America, but they represent a good 38 percent of it. That's far too much of any nation aspiring to greatness. As long as more than a third of our country blesses such malfeasance and tolerates this kind of toxicity in the name of holding power, we're going to continue to regress into chaos and implosion.

When Hillary Clinton said that half of Trump's supporters were deplorables, she was in essence claiming them to be filled with contempt for others, motivated by fear, and driven to exclusion. She may have been right in that moment—but the percentage today is actually much higher.

Anyone still supporting him has deluded themselves into an alternate reality that makes them incapable of compassion or reasonable dialogue. All that they have seen from this President and his cadre of grifters and criminals, hasn't proven alarming enough to wake them into decency or rouse their humanity alive.

Hillary wasn't name-calling, she was accurately describing the kind of inhumanity we are now seeing as people's default setting. Given their support of a man who regularly uses phrases like "Crazy Maxine," "Pocahontas," "Pencil Neck"— or "Crooked Hillary," their feigned offense at her supposedly offensive language was and is a laughably hypocritical anyway.

No, Hillary was telling the truth, as difficult as it is to admit. She was diagnosing a collective sickness that afflicts a terrifying number of Americans. The woman who should currently be helming this nation was right about far too many things, and not enough of us listened.

Hatred, bigotry, supremacy, misogyny, and violent phobia are indeed sickening and repugnant and reprehensible and yes, deplorable—or at least they should be.

Quote of the Day

I've been thinking…since it's clear the the Constitution doesn't mean anything anymore, and politicians who don't feel like following the law can just ignore it, Obama 2020!" ~ Wil Wheaton