Nov 252024
 

Yesterday,  I got my internet back, but only on one computer, not the one I usually use for this.  It had ben down since Friday, and so were my phones.  SO I didn’t hear the opera Saturday, since for the summer season (which is for one more week now) I need the internet – no internet, no opera.  Fortunately it’s one I know well, and some time ago I even downloaded an old recording of it.  And on December 7 the Met season starts, and my local radio station carries that.  Anyway, I’ve been struggling all weekend with trying to reach my provider, and this is my first chance to post.  I hope things are better with all of you than they have been this weekend.  But it’s just the electronics, not me, which are ill.  I’m fine physically,  I have all my meds now and am taking them

With the one exception that this uses the term “Christianity” and “Christian” where it should use “Christian Nationalism” and “Christian Nationalist,” this article is as good a portrait of the Republican concept of education as you are ever likely to see. Yes, there’s a lot of profanity in it. That’s just how The F* News rolls.

Mary Trump‘s observation that cruelty is the point is not new, but it’s at least as accurate as it ever was. And there is no simple answer (in fact, there’s more than one complex answer – probably as many of those as there are people on earth) to the question, “Once a person gets into that mindset, how can they get out of it?”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Claudia is saying, “You know what, we will pay for that wall after all!”

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Nov 242024
 

This past Presidential election was a disaster, as I said in my previous Sound Off! essay. Republicans will control the House and the Senate, so Congress appears likely to rubber-stamp all of tRump’s whims. The nation’s horrible swing to the right has emboldened every marque and model of hatemongers. Blacks in several Southeastern states received texts ordering them to report to the nearest plantation and pick cotton. Demonstrators on the campus of Texas State University carried signs with shamelessly sexist and homophobic messages, such as “Women are Property.” A number of people in two Michigan cities waved Nazi flags while shouting “Heil Hitler, Heil Trump.”

However, we are not finished – far from it. The forces of Good are down but not out. Besides, the election news is far from 100% bad. Voters in seven states protected reproductive rights, partially undoing the anti-choice victory in overturning Roe v Wade. Nevadans voted to end slave labor for prisoners. Sarah McBride became the first openly transgender person to be elected to the US Congress, while Texas elected its first openly LGBTQ representative. Democratic State governors are forming a coalition to resist the threats of autocracy. And a Federal judge ruled that Louisiana’s law requiring the display of the Ten Commandments in public schools is unconstitutional. Thus, we still have some hope.

The time for grieving and wailing is over. The time for resistance has just begun.

We can stymie Project 2025 and the pseudo-Christian Right’s plans to pervert the USA into a theocratical dictatorship. We can hamstring any and all efforts to destroy democracy and freedom. If you think this will take huge masses of people, take heart in this quote from Margaret Mead: “Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world; indeed, it is the only thing that has.” Look at past movements that brought about positive change – the abolitionists, the suffragettes, the civil rights crusaders, the women’s liberators. They all succeeded even though only a small fraction of the general population actively supported them.

Already hundreds of organizations are making plans to resist tRump in his second regime: the ACLU, Americans United for Separation of Church and State, People for the American Way, NRDC, Planned Parenthood, Human Rights Campaign, the NAACP, Physicians for Social Responsibility, Sierra Club, Public Citizen, Common Cause, Indivisible, Southern Poverty Law Center,  the Center for Inquiry, and many, many more. Civil rights, environmental, LGBTQ, reproductive rights, pro-science, pro-education, pro-immigrant, humanist, and other types of NGOs are preparing to stand up for what Project 2025 aims to destroy.

Resistance doesn’t have to be violent; in fact, it shouldn’t be violent. The civil rights movement in this country was all about peaceful protests. For example, the non-violent Montgomery Bus Boycott led to the desegregation of that city’s transit system. Even when freedom marchers were being beaten by vicious police, they did not advocate meeting brutality with brutality. A few people did throw rocks and set places on fire, but they were few and far between.

If you want to support the resistance, you don’t have to be another Gandhi or Dr. King. You don’t even have to take part in any protests or marches. You can donate money or volunteer time to any organization opposing tRump’s machinations. You can sign petitions, contact your elected representatives, and share on-line petitions and articles with others. You can raise plenty of hell from the comfort of your home. “Slacktivism” is still activism, and for some people it may be all they can do. As I write this, Biden is still President, and the Democrats still control the Senate; we can lean on them to do all they can to hamper tRump’s plans. We can – and must – urge Biden and all Democratic Senators to confirm as many judges as possible. And after the changing of the guard, we must lean on those Democrats who are still in Washington to throw as many monkey wrenches in Project 2025 as they can.

We probably won’t win every fight, but we can win enough to keep this country from toppling into oligarchic fascism and plutocratic authoritarianism. Besides, we will have elections in 2026, and all Representatives and a third of the Senate will be running. Remember, tRump did not get everything he desired in his first regime because millions fought back hard and steadily. We need to keep fighting, stand our ground, and maintain our own and others’ morale.

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 Comments Off on SOUND OFF! 11/24/24 The Resistance Begins NOW!
Nov 222024
 

Yesterday, I touched base with the other two moderators, since what I had thought was causing the squishing problem turned out not to be Of course this had to happen at a time I don’t have all my meds and am both low energy and low enthusiasm, but I promise I will be working on it, though it may be slow. The last of the four prescription I had to get new scrips for with the new PCP is supposed to come today, and I’ll take a dose immediately if and when it does, but it is still going to take time for everything to kick in (I know it will because it did coming home from rehab.) But I’m on the case.  I just chose a remembrance photo for today – at least if/when it squishes you won’t miss out on words.

Wonkette referred me to this by Ned Resnikoff. I am not personally knowledgeable on it, but I too have seen ominous signs relative to it – like Chesa Boudin losing his recall election, and some cities becoming harsh to the homeless. And if it’s this bad and getting worse, it should be obvious that the consequences would be catastrophic.

Here’s Margaret Atwood, in the writing burrow, with post-election predictions for which I’m confident paying subscribers have been begging. Mostly they are not that different from others’ predictions except that her sardonic tone is unique, and I suspect her fairly detailed description of the conditions under which the Pythia worked at the Oracle of Delphi may be her way of disclaiming accuracy. But I always find her fun to read, and hope you will also.

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Nov 212024
 

Yesterday, the Riccardis took the song “Who shot the Sheriff” and turned it into “I thought the tariffs” and really covered just about every discouraging point. Well done. I also learned that a 2025 commemorative stamp for Betty White will be released sometime in 2025. She’s one of those people who are/were pretty much universally loved.  I also did a little online shopping – I need to get what I need from China before the inauguration while I can still afford to.

Robert Reich on DOGE. I can’t imagine Trump** has the foggiest notion of the other meaning of the acronym – a term from the Italian Renaissance for an absolute ruler. Most people think first of Venice, but other city states also had them, notably Genoa (Simon Boccanegra was one, though the Verdi opera based on him is not 100% historically accurate.) The word is a now obsolete variant of “Il Duce.” Hiding fascism in plain sight. I’d also point out that destroying “bureaucracy” is not an admirable or a desirable goal. As i learned in MBA school, “bureaucracy” was invented to replace partisan government service which had unfairness baked in with a non-partisan, merit based system which would be unbiased. No human institution is perfect, but I would far prefer and always recommend some form of bureaucracy over any other system for running a large country. You might still get screwed by a bureaucrat, but it wouldn’t be for any personal reason. With Trump** and apparently Elno, everything is personal because everything is transactional. (And that part of Verdi’s opera – the dude saying “you gotta reward me because I made you Doge” – and not getting his way and then poisoning Simon – is quite historically accurate, and appropriate to a Trump** administration.)

Robert Hubbell points out that the “red mirage” has not ended, and that the count is still changing – certainly through this week, and maybe longer. More counts will not change the results, because of the electoral college – but we have already seen Trump** fall below 50% of the popular vote, and we may yet see him slip below Kamala’s popular vote total. So much for the “landslide” that really never was anyway.

I don’t know what to do about this -I tried everything I could think of including re-downloading it from my original source, which by the way is here – https://www.democraticunderground.com/100219725786

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Nov 202024
 

Yesterday, I received three of my four prescriptions, which included two I was flat out of. I took those two immediatele, and also added them to the three bottles remaining for theis two-week period. The fourth comes from a different pharmacy, and I was on the phone with them the day before, and that one is on its way also. I hate having tp phone for these things, but having done so, I’m glad I did. The last full prescription I had from them, after over 20 years, they sent me only half the pills, and duplicated that error with the stopgap prescription, and I had to call then, twice, to get more. I had hoped a new prescription would fix that, but no. But at lest I caught it this time before they were sent. And I am hoping the call straightened it out. Well, if not, I have 45 days to get it straight. Two of my scrips affect mood, one directly and one indirectly, so hopefully I’ll be in a better mood soon than I have been for a while. Also, I received a grocery order, cleaned up and put away some usb drives (flashm thumb, jump, whatever they are called now) and started putting downloaded classical tunes onto another (2G) for use in the car.

I can’t always find a good ending to a story in the Atlanta Black Star – and when I do, it’s often too little, too late, and at best very long in coming. So this should be no surprise really. At least it’s something.

Heather Cox Richardson posted a letter with a number of “short takes,” and that’s a good thing. It can be a mnemonic for all the stuff that’s going on, must of whuch is so crazy there’s not pont i analyzing it in depth, because it has no depth. I grant it’s tough to read.

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Nov 192024
 

Yesterday, I was stressed out by the feeling that everything I did or wanted to do was fighting with me. So I’ll likely be brief in my comments on the articles I post. Honestly, I just feel exhausted.

https://robertreich.substack.com/p/trumps-first-buddy-is-in-deep-shit
Robert Reich reports Elno is calling himself’ Trump**’s “first buddy.” Without comment on intellectual intelligence which Elno may or may not possess, it’s been clear for some time that his EQ (Emotional intelligence quotient) is a single digit.

https://joycevance.substack.com/p/the-democracy-index
Joyce Vance lays out how she plans to chronicle this Trump** administration (differently from the wayshe did so last time) in hope of minimizing distractions. I’m not sure she realizes that it’s not just the media, or MAGA, or Putin, who are actively working to distract us. When I dug out the Windows 10 laptop earlier ths year, and again when I dug out the Windows 10 desktop, I literally spent over a week on each one just uninstalling distractions. And I have not yet finished on either – I just got to a point where I could cope. But now both are getting worse. Please note too that uninstalling some of this is in no way obvious -but the amount of links providing instructions on how to do so (not all of which even work, which is part of the issue) suggests that I am far from alone in not wanting to be distracted by crap I will never use.

Belle 4 Tuesday

Cat

 

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Nov 182024
 

Yesterday, I saw Virgil and we played cribbage.  It was an interesting visit in that it really showed how unpredictable his mental acuity is – it’s all over the place.  There were time I had to remind him how many cards he should deal us.  But there was also a moment when I was telling him I had started going through my costume jewelry, including watches, of which I discovered I had way more than I thought of basically disposable watches which I hadn’t disposed of.  He asked how many, and I said I hadn’t counted but at least two dozen, maybe as much as three or even four dozen, and he responded, “Wow!  You sure had a lot of time on your hands!”  All in all it was a great visit, and the drive was good both ways.

Trump’s Not Hitler He’s Stalin. We’re Back In the USSR


This is from PolitiZoom. I don’t know that I 100% agree, but it surely is interesting speculation. When I think of Stalin, I think of anecdote such as Dmitri Shostakovich keeping a suitcase by his front door every night so that then the secret police came to get him in the middle of the night, he would at least be ready with a few small comforts. Definitely something to think about.

https://www.wonkette.com/p/new-zealand-maori-lawmakers-give
Wonkette picked up this delightful story. If the two articles I picked for Sunday did not complement each other so well, I might have kicked this up to Sunday. But we need enthusiasm on Mondays too. The Maori haka is sacred to the Maori. We could use something like that (I’m not advocating cultural appropriation, nd I don’t mean exactly hakas, but something which might function the same way. Doktor Zoom suggests Jasmine Crockett might provide suggestions.)

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Recess Appointments

 Posted by at 3:49 pm  Politics
Nov 172024
 

Heather Cox Richardson generally comes up with very pointed examples from history of people doing things wrong, and she may get to this, but has not yet as I type.

When I was in my teens I had a book by Charles Dickens called “A Child’s History of England.” It had been my mother’s, was leather bound and starting to fall apart (and got more so over time), but I loved it. The combination of actual history, combined with the unconcealed bias with which it was delivered, was irresistible to me. I no longer have it, but it is available free at Gutenberg to read or to download, and I went there to refresh my memory.

Trump**’s invocation of recess appointments, in order to make which he will have to call a recess, reminded me of when Dickens describes a dissolution of Parliament, particularly where he cites arrogance and flippancy on the part of the dissolver.  Dissolving a Parliament was a way that s monarch could get rid of a legislature whose work he did not like (I usually say “he or she” but no queen was brave enough or stupid enough to try it in the time period he covers.)  Trump** expects to accomplish something similar with recess appointments.

First, let me quote the second dissolution of Parliament by Oliver Cromwell.  He first dissolved the Parliament he inheriterd, and later called a second.  Dickens thought he did so in order for that Parliament to crown him.  It didn’t happen, and he dissolved it also.)   Since this is public domain, I’ll quote at some length:

Oliver went down to the House in his usual plain black dress, with his usual grey worsted stockings, but with an unusual party of soldiers behind him. These last he left in the lobby, and then went in and sat down. Presently he got up, made the Parliament a speech, told them that the Lord had done with them, stamped his foot and said, ‘You are no Parliament. Bring them in! Bring them in!’ At this signal the door flew open, and the soldiers appeared. ‘This is not honest,’ said Sir Harry Vane, one of the members. ‘Sir Harry Vane!’ cried Cromwell; ‘O, Sir Harry Vane! The Lord deliver me from Sir Harry Vane!’ Then he pointed out members one by one, and said this man was a drunkard, and that man a dissipated fellow, and that man a liar, and so on. Then he caused the Speaker to be walked out of his chair, told the guard to clear the House, called the mace upon the table—which is a sign that the House is sitting—‘a fool’s bauble,’ and said, ‘here, carry it away!’ Being obeyed in all these orders, he quietly locked the door, put the key in his pocket, walked back to Whitehall again, and told his friends, who were still assembled there, what he had done.

They formed a new Council of State after this extraordinary proceeding, and got a new Parliament together in their own way: which Oliver himself opened in a sort of sermon, and which he said was the beginning of a perfect heaven upon earth. In this Parliament there sat a well-known leather-seller, who had taken the singular name of Praise God Barebones, and from whom it was called, for a joke, Barebones’s Parliament, though its general name was the Little Parliament. As it soon appeared that it was not going to put Oliver in the first place, it turned out to be not at all like the beginning of heaven upon earth, and Oliver said it really was not to be borne with. So he cleared off that Parliament in much the same way as he had disposed of the other; and then the council of officers decided that he must be made the supreme authority of the kingdom, under the title of the Lord Protector of the Commonwealth. —

Altogether there are nine times where the word dissolve[s][d] is used in the book, and all refer to Parliament. Edward II was the first one – he dissolved Parliament to protect his gay lover, which did not end well for him – I think less because of the gayness than because the lover was a real jerk and rightly hated by everyone in the kingdom except the king, who died after torture in the Tower.

After that, they got through the whole Wars of the Roses and the Tudors without dissolving Parliament. It was Charles I who began the chain of dissolved Parliaments in the 17th Century = the first time to protect the Duke of Buckingham, who wa not anyone’s gay lover as far as we knoe – this was the same Buckingham who was assassinated by John Felton, as recounted in The Three Musketeers, though the reason and the circumstances in that book are pretty well pure fiction. The second time Charles I dissolved Parliament was pretty much a pure power grab, seasoned with payback for aome, two in particular who had tried to stop it.

Then came Cromwell, who was technically not a King, but was pretty well along in the process of becoming one. Dickens cuts him slack because he wasn’t officially a King, but I don’t – as a Christian Nationalist before it had a name, I find him worse than any king. The Lord did not deliver him from Sit Harry Vane, who outlived him, but was finished off by Charles II, who also did some dissolving.

It was not anti-Semitism (which existed – and has existed forever) but anti-Catholicism which led Charles II to dissolve parliament. A roundhead named Titus Oates, who has been compared to, and may have been an inspiration for, Joe McCarthy, gained a backing and would no doubt happily have killed the King’s brother and the queen, but didn’t get that far. He did get Parliament to bar the brother, later James II, from the succession, and that was when Charles II dissolved it in response. Later, he called a new Parliament, which he hoped would shoot down the Exclusion Act, which excluded Catholics from holding any public office, but instead they passed it, so he dissolved this one too.

It’s clear that the dissolution of a Parliament never did anyone’s legacy or memory any good.

Dickens was extremely opinionated, which comes through loud and clear. His facts are probably close enough to reality, but when he takes on people’s motives and the big picture of who was a good person or who was a bad person, I would not trust him for a second. But it does make for amusing reading. Should you decide to look it up, starting at the end and seing how suddenly he falls silent when the historical events begin to reach times when close relatives of the people involved are still alive, it is clear how suddenly he starts to speak no evil.

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