Remember…

Remember when this country had a real President? Someone you could look up to? Someone who you respected and could trust not to start a nuclear conflagration while you slept because someone said something mean about him? Was it really so long ago? Why is there a child in charge of this country now?

Because:

1. Republican Party
2. Compliant, Ratings-Hungry Media
3. America's Oligarchs
4. Russia
5. Treason
6. Sexism
7. Racism
8. The Electoral College
9. James Fucking Comey
10. The Cult of Celebrity
11. Voter Apathy
12. False Equivalency
13. Fear-mongering rightwing media
14. Bernie Sanders
15. Jill Fucking Stein
16. Because people threw temper tantrums when their hero lost the primaries, and either threw away their vote on a lost cause or didn't vote at all.

Feel free to add your own…

Quote of the Day

The veneer of civilization, I concluded, was quite thin—a natural thought for an intelligence officer whose profession trends pessimistic and whose work is consumed by threats and dangers. Over the years I had learned that the traditions and institutions that protect us from living Hobbesian "solitary, poor, nasty, brutish and short" lives are inherently fragile and demand careful tending. In America today, they are under serious stress.

It was no accident that the Oxford Dictionaries' word of the year in 2016 was "post-truth," a condition where facts are less influential in shaping opinion than emotion and personal belief. To adopt post-truth thinking is to depart from Enlightenment ideas, dominant in the West since the 17th century, that value experience and expertise, the centrality of fact, humility in the face of complexity, the need for study and a respect for ideas. ~ Michael Hayden, former director of the NSA and CIA, in an op-ed for The New York Times

If Michelle Wolf is Your Biggest Problem, You Need Bigger Problems

Again, from John Pavlovitz:

Comedian Michelle Wolf stepped to the podium at the White House Correspondent's Dinner and verbally eviscerated everyone: The President, The Press, Mike Pence, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, Kellyanne Conway.

MAGA Nation, unsurprisingly lost their collective minds.

By their wild histrionics, you would have thought she murdered a crowd fully of concertgoers with an arsenal of high-powered weapons. (Actually, that probably would have been cause for less indignation.)

Trump supporters, Conservative pundits, and Evangelical preachers rushed to social media and to partisan talk shows, to lament the comedian's "cruel, mean-spirited, vicious words;" to clutch their pearls at the seemingly unprecedented nastiness, to openly weep over the supposed inappropriate nature of her personal attacks; to defend poor, defenseless people like Sarah and Kellyanne, so unfairly treated.

(If one could die of hypocrisy, these folks would all have abruptly left us this weekend.)

The idea that they could somehow be mortified by Michelle Wolf's WHCD remarks, and not by the vile, genitalia-grabbing, serial liar and his cadre of predators in the White House who are making America a global punchline, while doing irreparable damage to millions of people every day—is Olympic level cognitive dissonance.

That the satirical words of an entertainer could be a source of internal distress, while the prolific malevolence of a sitting President and his complicit surrogates merit only a giggle and a shoulder shrug, is a the reason we're in this mess.

And while Trump supporters lacking self-awareness in matters of righteous indignation are par for the course these days, what has been surprising, has been those outside of his adoring cult who've wagged their fingers and clicked the roof of their mouths, accusing the comedian of, "becoming the other side."

Can we stop with this, already? It's abject nonsense, it's irresponsible tone policing, and it's erecting a skyscraping straw man that foolishly changes the narrative.

As harsh and irreverent as Wolf's comments might have been, any effort to make these comparable with this Administration's tactics is a sinful false equivalency. Wolf saying rude things and calling out shameful behavior by our leaders—isn't her "becoming the other side." It isn't the same as being the people in power who actually create legislation that damages people.

I might not have gone where Wolf went, but it's astounding to me that people who support this President can feign offense, while he does such deeply offensive things to the people of this country and they're perfectly fine with it all. This should merit outrage. He should merit outrage.

Much has been made by Wolf's critics, of her personal attacks on Sarah Huckabee Sanders. Aside from the unnecessary and unacceptable body-shaming, the comedian is perfectly within her rights to name the near criminal conduct of the White House Press Secretary; who regularly stands in front of the nation, maligning the Press, vilifying the President's political opposition, and knowingly lying through her teeth regarding matters of national policy and security. She is one of the people most responsible for attempting to normalize someone quite outside of normal, and for this she should be held accountable. And as Wolf rightly pointed out, the Press is less and less willing to take on such tasks, so the jesters will have to do it.

Wolf (even brutally) calling out Sarah Sanders for lying for a living on behalf of a monster—isn't "as bad" as Sarah Sanders lying for a living on behalf of a monster.

People have said that Michelle Wolf's razor-sharp dismantling of this Administration at the WHCD "stooped to the other side's level," but this simply isn't true. We need to let that idea go because it misses the point completely.

She didn't stoop to the other side's level with her comments—she punched up, and she punched hard. Thank God people are still willing to do that.

When Wolf uses the power of the White House to craft legislation that cripples the poor and marginalized, and assails our environmental protections, civil rights, and Free Press—she'll be stooping to Donald Trump's level.

When she daily stands before a podium representing the President and claiming the Christian faith, and repeatedly and willfully lies to the American people about issues that fundamentally and profoundly affect hundreds of millions of—she'll be stooping to Sarah Sander's level.

When she enables and supports and profits from a reckless sociopath who is disregarding our Constitution and rule of law, she's be stooping to the other side's level.

As it is, she simply spoke truth that too many Americans seem unwilling or unable to see.

There is a great deal to be outraged right now:

Russian interference,
ICE raids in hospital rooms,
Eroding LGBTQ rights,
Vanishing environmental protections,
Puerto Rico still in shambles,
Flint still without clean water,
unparalleled gun homicides,
a compromised Evangelical Church,
raising hate crimes,
the sabotaging on the Affordable Care Act.

These realities should be scandalous to us, not a few outrageous words from a button-pushing comedian.

If Michelle Wolf is your problem right now—you need bigger problems.

The Worst Person Leading the Greatest Country

From John Pavlovitz:

Last week I hopped into a cab in Toronto, heading to the airport after a weekend speaking engagement.

My driver's name was Mohammed; a middle-aged man born in Afghanistan, who earned his PhD, and moved here in his twenties.

We talked about the weather, about my work; about our children, about family car trips to Disney World.

Then we got to talking about America.

As we got closer to the airport, I joked with him, that given my open critiques of the current Administration, I was unsure whether they'd let me back in, and with my feelings about the current state of thing—I wasn't all that excited to go back anyway.

Mohammed quickly grew animated.

"I just don't understand this!" he said, his voice booming, his arms forming a shrug, and his face reflecting incredulity.

"How can the worst person in the world, be given the greatest country in the world to lead? he remarked. "It's disgusting."

Before I could respond, he went on.

"The whole world is laughing at America. It's a global joke, what he's doing. It makes me so angry."

As Mohammed shared his heart with me, I was simultaneously encouraged, ashamed, and pissed off.

It was a comfort to hear a voice outside of my country express solidarity with me and the millions in America who feel like prisoners of this predatory, fraudulent Administration.

It was embarrassing to realize that for the first time in my life, I have trepidation to claim America as my own, because of all it now represents.
It angered me, that a middle-aged man from Afghanistan could be more perceptive and wise than 62 million of my countrymen—and women who've spent their lives here and have much more at stake.

It was a cab ride that I was sorry to see end.

I'm sure this President isn't technically the worst person in the world—but let's just say he's making a really strong showing in the competition.

But their was sad truth beneath his hyperbole. My new friend, Mohammed gets it all: the bigotry he's unleashed here, the hypocrisy of religious people who support him, the ineptitude that the entire world is talking about, the fractures to our national image.

He sees that the differences and the fear and the isolation that this President brokers in, are dangerous things.

Most of all he sees that this nation is being led by someone far beneath it, not worthy of it, detrimental to it.

I'm hopeful enough people in America see such things; that regardless of political affiliation, religious worldview, or nation of origin, a vast majority is as stupefied and outraged as Mohammed is these days—and ready to vote and rescue themselves.

I hope that more people in this country can see what so much of the world sees about us:

That we are a great nation.
That we are a place filled with beautiful diversity.
That we do deserve far better than this.

I said goodbye to my new friend and headed into the terminal, but the whole way home his words bounced around repeatedly in my head:

"How can the worst person in the world, be given the greatest country in the world to lead? It's disgusting."

It really is, Mohammed.

It really is.

Shower Thoughts

The smell of cotton candy has gone from, "There Must Be A Carnival Nearby" to "Who's The Douche Who's Vaping?"

Wow!

We finally got out to the movies yesterday and saw A Quiet Place.

All I can say is, "Wow! What a great movie!" and I'm so glad we got to see it in the theater instead of waiting for Netflix. This is one film what needs to be experienced in a dark theater without any sort of outside distractions.

While the general structure of the film echoes many a sci-fi trope (The Waveries by Fredric Brown immediately comes to mind), A Quiet Place ramps up the fear factor to 11 and immediately turns it into a good old-fashioned monster movie. No explanation is given as to how the creatures came to be, where they came from, or what their ultimate goal was—other than to ravenously eat any living thing that makes a noise.

The sense of claustrophobia in this movie telling the story of a seemingly isolated family in the aftermath of a global apocalypse is compounded by a skillful use of absolute silence punctuated by the movie score.

And without giving anything away, the ending is one of the best I've seen in years. It's been a while since I was in a theater that spontaneously erupted in applause when the credits started to roll.

If you're a fan of the genre—or only want to spend some quality time with a very hunky bearded John Krasinski, set two hours aside and go see it. You won't be disappointed.

(I just read there is already a sequel in the works. If they must do this, I seriously hope it isn't a sequel, but rather a prequel. Considering this film starts on "Day 89," I want to see what happened Day 0-88.)

Shower Thoughts

It's odd how we define laundry. Clothes become laundry when they're taken off and put in a basket. They remain laundry until they're washed, dried and put away and then they become clothes again.