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Grump on Trump

nbc-fires-donald-trump-after-he-calls-mexicans-rapists-and-drug-runnersI will not vote for Donald Trump,
I do not like him on the stump;
I will not make myself a chump
I will not vote for Donald Trump.

I do not like him in debate
I do not like his words of hate;
I do not like this fake Machiavelli
I’d sooner vote for Megyn Kelly.

I will not vote for one so crude
No matter whom he can delude;
I will not vote for one so crass
To deepen our country’s moral morass.

I don’t care if he’s tough and rich
He’ll drive the country into a ditch;
I don’t care if he’ll build a wall
Since mayhem will engulf us all.

I won’t support him against Bernie,
Not against Bert, not against Ernie;
Not even if you pillory me
Not even against Hillary, see?

mickey_mouse___the_sorcerer__s_apprentice_by_xvrcardoso-d52hweqThere must be someone to prevent us
From choosing this sorcerer’s apprentice;
I’ll give my vote to some third party
Even if it’s led by Moriarty.

I don’t care how his groupies swoon
Even as each day he changes tune;
I don’t care what he’ll promise to do
Since not a word he says is true.

I will not vote for Donald Trump
To make America a toxic dump;
Not even with a stomach pump
Will I give my vote to Donald Trump.

2016: The Last Year of the Weimar Republic

995TAP_Michael_J__Fox_014In this new era of surrealism, it’s ironic that we can find prophetic wisdom in as unlikely a source as Hollywood scriptwriter Aaron Sorkin.  In his 1995 masterpiece The American President, we find this exchange between President Andrew Shepherd and his domestic policy advisor, Lewis Rothschild:

Lewis Rothschild:  People want leadership, Mr. President.  And in the absence of genuine leadership they’ll listen to anyone who steps up to the microphone.  They want leadership; they’re so thirsty for it they’ll crawl through the desert toward a mirage, and when they discover there’s no water they’ll drink the sand.

President Shepherd:  Lewis, people don’t drink the sand because they’re thirsty; they drink the sand because they don’t know the difference.

The truth is that both are right.  Deprive people of authentic leadership for long enough and they will certainly lose the ability to tell the difference between reality and illusion.

When we reflect upon the contrast between the elegant ideals set forth by revolutionary leaders two and a half centuries ago and the cartoonish ranting of the avenger seeking coronation today, there is ample reason for anxiety that has nothing to do with Nazi genocide.

Click here to read the whole article.

Caravan to Midnight with John B. Wells

caravan-to-midnight-episode-177Listen to my recent interview with John B. Wells on Caravan to Midnight:

Ancient wisdom for modern times (interview starts at about 1:40:00).

Willful Ignorance: the new normal

google-isnt-a-social-network--its-the-matrix

Maybe we really are living in the Matrix.

Day by day, even hour hour by, the headlines become more surreal and the actions of our leaders become more incomprehensible.  Who could have imagined that all the conspiracy theories of extraterrestrial mind-control and computer-generated mass-delusion would start to seem like the most reasonable explanations for where we are and how we got here.

The most recent administration scandal over the United States Central Command (CentCom) deleting military intelligence brings to a crescendo the chorus of claims of the White House stifling inconvenient truths about the Islamic State to avoid dealing with the real threat of terrorism.  Last year, the Pentagon’s inspector general began investigating after CentCom analysts protested that their findings had been manipulated to whitewash their conclusions.  Now it appears that files and emails were not only misrepresented but actually erased.

As we pass the 30th anniversary of the Challenger Space Shuttle disaster, it’s beyond mind-boggling that the culture of denial has grown worse than ever.  Back then, NASA administrators ignored warnings that O rings lose resilience at low temperatures and might fail on takeoff — which is exactly what happened.

But as irresponsible as it seems to disregard objections as insubstantial or unfounded, by what conceivable logic does one erase information because it supports an undesirable conclusion?  Can we make pneumonia vanish from a patient’s lungs by shredding x-ray images?  Can we make a brain tumor disappear by dragging the MRI results across the desktop and into the trash file?

Come to think of it, maybe this was the original strategy intended to make Obamacare viable:  destroying evidence of disease would certainly keep medical costs to a minimum.

WE HAVE SEEN THE ENEMY…

It’s not just the government.  As a society, we have become increasingly disinterested in a pesky little problem once known as reality.  Perhaps this is the inevitable result of fantasy movies and fantasy football, of virtual images and virtual messaging, of games that have become more compelling than reality, and of reality that has become more mind-bending than science fiction.  All this aided and abetted by the undo and reset buttons that instantaneously restore our make-believe worlds to perfection when things go wrong.

The rejection of reality cuts across every major issue of our times and infects every corner of political and social ideology.  Climate change advocates and skeptics alike exaggerate their claims and malign objectors.  Pro-choice zealots dismiss the horrors of late-term abortions, while pro-life zealots often refuse to even consider the complex issues of rape and incest, and sometimes even the life of the mother.  Supply-side Republicans continue to trumpet the effectiveness of a trickle-down tax structure despite the widening gap between rich and poor, while tax-and-spend Democrats cry out for fairness despite empirical and historical evidence that everyone loses.

In our information age, we are less concerned with facts than ever.  With a single click of the mouse, anyone can find legions of pundits asserting preconceived half-truths and countless articles defending outright falsehoods.  We are all adrift on a sea of misinformation, carried along by the winds of self-validation.  Had Samuel Coleridge imagined this, he might have written, experts, experts, everywhere, nor anyone to think.

Unsurprisingly, in the field of politics it’s even worse.  The most brazenly untruthful political figure in the history of the country calls for her opponents to take a lie-detector test, and a master of reality-television who has reversed himself on almost every substantive issue is winning hearts (if not minds) by branding himself as the candidate who “tells it like it is.”

If Laurence Fishburne appeared to offer us a choice between the red pill and the blue pill, which would we choose?  Have we so lost our interest in reality that we would happily opt for a world of illusion, or are we still capable of recognizing that a life of illusion is no life at all?

And again, it’s even worse in the world of politics, where neither red nor blue is likely to offer us any escape from our waking nightmare.

THE CHOICE

But we really don’t need a pill at all.

King Solomon said, “The wise man’s eyes are in his head.”  Closer to the brain than to the heart.  Looking outward, seeing inward.

What we really need to do is ask ourselves a few hard questions, then follow them up with a few honest answers.

We need to ask ourselves why we no longer value our word the way our parents and our grandparents did.  We need to ask why they felt more connected to one another corresponding through written letters than we do through face time.  We need to ask why they were willing to sacrifice for higher values when we have forgotten what higher values are.

First we have to be willing to ask ourselves these questions.  Then we might be ready to face the universal truths that are self-evident from the answers:  that trusting others and being trustworthy go hand in hand; that relationships are only worth as much as the effort that we put into maintaining them; that commitment to something greater than ourselves is the only thing that makes life worth living.

True, the world seems to be spinning toward its own destruction.  But even if we can’t save the world, we can stand strong and not allow the world to pull us down with it.  Keeping our word, showing respect to those we disagree with, offering a kind word to a stranger or a smile to a passerby — these few faint beatings of a butterfly’s wings might be enough to stir the winds of change, blowing away the clouds of chaos to let the light of reason shine once again.

Published in Jewish World Review.

Frank Reagan for President

Frank Reagan

Highly principled, hard as nails, even-keeled, dedicated to higher values, devoted to the welfare of the people he serves, and fiercely loyal to those who serve under his command.

If he’s not available, I’d settle for Tom Selleck.  Like Ronald Reagan, at least he would know how to act like a president.

Spitting Image 2:1 — The News in Emoji

imagesFacebook has reduced the entire range of human emotion to five emoticons:  Love, laughter, sorrow, anger, and wonder (wow!).  That may be a good thing, if it helps us spend less time wallowing in our feelings.  Or it may be a bad thing, further diluting the vibrancy of personal experience.

In any event, here is a sample from this week’s headlines in emoji:

Wow:  A British man legally changed his name to Bacon Double Cheeseburger.  “I have no regrets at all,” he said, despite the elevated blood-alcohol level that contributed to his decision.  The sun, it seems, continues to set on the British Empire.

HaHa:  In the most recent Republican debate, Donald Trump declared,  “I don’t repeat myself. I don’t repeat myself,” securing his reputation as a straight talker among supporters unfamiliar with the word irony.  CNN counted at least 20 times the billionaire reality TV star turned presidential frontrunner repeated himself before the evening was over.  But they’re Democrats and not to be trusted.

Love:  Melissa Click, the Mizzou professor who tried to suppress the First Amendment while creating a “safe-zone” for students last year, has been fired.  Maybe there is hope for the future of education after all.

Angry:  Apple explained its refusal to comply with a court order to break the encryption on a terrorist phone as absolutely necessary in order to protect us from terrorism.  It would be more comforting if FBI were directing its efforts against ISIS and not against Apple.

Sad:  Attempting to mock the Motion Picture Academy for marginalizing blacks, Chris Rock managed to insult Asians.   Anyone remember the old SNL skit when Dan Aykroyd took the Oscar mic as Jimmy Carter to rebuke the film industry for using the Academy Awards as a forum to honor achievement in motion pictures?

Is Ted Cruz to blame?

CTf93bAWUAA3UrUThis isn’t about politics.  It’s not even about Ted Cruz.  It’s about life.

If you want people to trust you, you have to appear trustworthy.  All the more so if you’re going to accuse your opponents of dishonesty and make TrusTed your campaign slogan.

Senator Cruz did the right thing — the only possible thing, really — by firing top aid Rick Tyler for his role in circulating a video falsely accusing Marco Rubio of disparaging the Bible.

But it may be too late for damage control.  Because the question everyone’s asking is this:  whether or not Ted Cruz knew about or approved of the video, was Rick Tyler only doing what he thought his boss would want him to do?

I’m not suggesting that I know the answer.  I’m only underscoring the urgency of the question.  And I’m offering this historical precedent.

After leading the Children of Israel to victory in the battle against Jericho, Joshua received a message from the Almighty accusing the entire Jewish people of having lied, stolen, and violated their covenant with the Divine.

In fact, it had been one person who had stolen one object from the banned spoils of war — and this without any other person even knowing of the perpetrator’s actions.  If so, why was the entire nation condemned as if they were complicit in the crime?

The answer is simple:  the thief would never have committed his act of thievery unless he believed that he would be able to get away with it.  Had there been a sufficient awareness of social conscience, had there been a palpable sense woven into the fabric of Jewish society that no one would tolerate his crime, the would thief never have dared to reach out his hand to take something that was not his.

Because an atmosphere of moral complacency permeated the national culture, the entire nation was held accountable for the actions of one man.

If we want to live in a society governed by integrity and character, we have to hold others to a high standard of personal behavior.  But that only works if we hold ourselves to an even higher standard, and show the same disdain for corruption toward our friends as we do toward our enemies.

My Interview with Bill Martinez

15-0623-Double-Standards

Click to hear my interview with syndicated radio show host Bill Martinez:

Double Standards and the Death of Civil Society

Interview begins at the 33:30 mark.  Enjoy!

 

 

Double Standards and the Death of Civilization

1aa“Don’t say what you’re thinking.”

“It doesn’t matter how you feel.”

“Honesty is not always the best policy.”

It sounds terrible, doesn’t it? And yet modern society has created an entire value system based on these axioms. It’s called political correctness.

At the same time, however, there seems to be a freakish disconnect between the cultural extremes of political correctness and libertinism. On the one hand, the list of socially unacceptable words, phrases, and ideas keeps growing longer; on the other hand, regard for verbal filtering plummets in virtual free-fall.

At first blush, we might explain this away as an obvious consequence of competing ideologies and worldviews. Certainly, the popularity of Donald Trump and Ted Cruz can be understood as a natural reaction to the vacuous rhetoric of our elected officials, and to the farcical condemnation of benign comments and legitimate opinions as “hate speech” by the chattering classes. When a prominent university attempts to censor of words like mothering, fathering, and American as “microaggressions,” the inevitable consequence will be an equal and opposite reaction from the other side of the ideological divide.

But what is truly baffling are the offenses committed by proponents of political correctness themselves.

Click here to read the whole article.

Christopher Hitchens: Almost a Hero

book-quotable-splshIt’s remarkable how we can develop a deep fascination, sometimes to the point of fixation, toward people we despise.

This is not particularly healthy: we gain much more by studying those who are worthy of our admiration and reverence, both as models for the refinement of our own behavior and as sources of inspiration that demonstrate the heights to which human nobility can soar.

But human nature produces an incessant magnetism toward the negative, no matter how much we may know better.  So I couldn’t resist clicking on Daniel Oppenheimer’s recent retrospective* on Christopher Hitchens, one of my least favorite intellectuals.

I’m glad I did.

Click here to read the whole essay.