Thursday, December 19, 2024

Felicitations

Doing some review of the last few weeks of blogs, it's all been pretty heavy, both in terms of content (America entering our Jump the Shark Era) and in terms of content (I can't think of a single defensible argument for eleven girthy paragraphs last week). Sure, the justification is there given the size of the historical moment, but one should have the self-awareness to understand the medium and why anyone might come here to read something. If you really wanted in-depth historico-political analysis by a flailing amateur, you could turn on cable news at any hour of any day. Or at least if you want that, you should probably get to it soon, before news is cowed into only being about unusual Christmas light displays or a strawberry that looks like Jesus.

To that end, I thought I would take this almost-last post of the year and, with inspiration from a YouTube video I saw, review my cat. This is in lieu of a list of stuff I read or watched because all I watched this year, well, was fucking YouTube. It's been stressful, OK? I'll do culture in 2025.

Cat

An evaluation

Date rage: 1 Sept through 19 Dec 2024. Call it a quarterly review.

Subject name: Socks*

Type of cat: Regular (like, not one of those freaky giant ones. Normal cat size, for human laps)


Quantitative Evaluation by category:

Coloration: 8/10. Technically a "tortoise-shell" type of American shorthair. Points off because, although her mottled pattern is excellent for camouflage, I've been given to understand that people call them "torties," which I cannot abide.

Physique: 6/10. Although she can look graceful and sleek, she's on the small side and, at over 2 years old, not likely to grow. As a result she comes across as fragile, which causes me to worry about her safety, which I do not appreciate.

Shedding: 10/10. Sheds almost not at all, weirdly. The only pet I've ever had that was allowed in my bedroom, let alone my bed. And not because I live alone and compensating for the seeping darkness of a home once enlivened with children's laughter, I mean just because she doesn't make the comforter look like shag carpeting. Value here cannot be exaggerated.

Vocalization: 8/10. Was very quiet at first, but now speaks primarily when spoken to, meaning we can have sorts of "conversations" as she responds, though honestly the subject matter is limited. Her positions on things like politics or global warming are embarrassingly underdeveloped, though I take responsibility for being the one exposing her to most media. Points off for being very begrudging with the purrs. They happen, but rarely and never for more than a few minutes.

Temperament: 6/10. Frickin' scared of every goddamned thing. She's used to me now, but it took a lot of work (me sitting perfectly still for hours at a time, which is luckily one of my primary skills). Three-plus months in and I'm still the only person she'll approach. Her reticence has been tough to break her out of as I'm the only person she sees normally. But even regular visitors (I have those!) send her scurrying for cover. I get it, she's small and the world is big, but there's really no need to panic and scramble away like you're Indiana Jones running from the boulder just because I'm walking toward you in a corridor. Chill the fuck out, honestly.

Personality: 7/10. I've heard many times "ooh, a tortie, torties are spicy" from people who I now hate. What they are trying to convey is that cats with this coloring tend to be combative, unaffectionate or even aggressive. But it's a coloring, not a species or even a breed. Her sister at the cat rescue was a regular tabby, it's just an expression of superficial genes. She's a regular cat. She's curious, but also cautious. The fact that she's combative and not that affectionate (or at least wasn't at first) I'm sure are coincidences.

Maintenance: 5/10. Honestly, a five is about the best any creature is going to do when what we're really talking about here is volunteering to be obligated to handle their feces. Do not enjoy. But she doesn't eat a lot. Could be worse.

Interactivity: 6/10. This one I really had to think about. She's made big strides. She annoys the shit out of me in the mornings, mewing like she wants something but keeping her distance. And she wakes me up at night now, crawling all over me when I'm trying to sleep, typically in the small hours before my alarm goes off for work. She doesn't like to play much as she gets suspicious and either flighty or defensive pretty fast. But luckily a cat that leaves me alone a lot kind of suits what I was looking for anyway: something to point to if the neighbors worried about hearing me talk to myself.

Overall score: 56/80, or 70%

For someone who was a dog guy for 50 straight years, this is a remarkable number. A bare C-minus might seem harsh, but I don't want to inflate the score in case she reads this at some point and reaches the conclusion she doesn't have any room for improvement.

I will continue to monitor thorough the next year and let you know how she gets on. I will go out on a limb and say we should allow ourselves to be cautiously optimistic.

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*I hope you know me well enough to realize I would never, under any circumstances, give my cat a name this banal. But I can't get her to sign the release forms, so I'm not taking any chances with online privacy issues going forward. So a pseudonym it is. This is the same reason I am not including her email address.

Thursday, December 12, 2024

Long Division

Since probably 9/11 I'd say it hasn't been super easy to figure out where we are or where we're going as a society. Part of that is the terrorist attacks of that day kind of scrambled everything, kicking up an obscurant cloud of dust that made everything difficult to discern, and would maybe give you cancer eventually.

Yeah, maybe you're against war in principle, but if we don't do something about the situation in Afghanistan... etc. Normally we can count on actual American politicians to help clarify things eventually by doing something monumentally stupid or in the narrowest and most obvious of self-interests, like for example invade a whole nother country completely uninvolved in the threat either real or perceived, or run an entire national political campaign around conflating being against tax cuts for the wealthy with being pro-terrorist.

So the roots of the neighbor-as-enemy political present aren't hard to discern, but it doesn't make it any easier to navigate. I've been an advocate for a saner and more sensible evaluation of our cohabitants, but it's pretty hard to do when all the ones with whom I disagree seem kinda fucking stupid. Like, I told you I wanted to be nice, why do you have to still believe bad things? I'm not sure why they don't listen. Idiots.

The election was a huge fucking bummer, pretty dispiriting for those of us who had some hope restored when Trump got his ass absolutely handed to him in 2020. It seemed at the time to be a full rebuke of a fluke election four years prior, where one dummy accidentally became president after getting whomped in the popular vote, who didn't really want the job, farted his way through it and fizzled in the face of a real international crisis. All of it was utterly predictable and ended the correct way, with a loser who hates losing getting his face smashed in, in the most public way possible. The narrative was correct.

In the last month, we've had to deal with the whiplash effect of not only the same loser not losing, but squeaking out a popular vote plurality. There's very little left to hang your indignation on anymore; all the irate, animating RESIST impulse of January 2017 is blobbily, wheezily absent. Maybe it really is just too soon, seeing as it's only been like 40 days, but over in our cozy bubble on Bluesky, the tone is way less "BURN DOWN THE PATRIARCHY" and a lot more <<sound of four domestic light beers cracking open in succession>> "...these fucking people..."

But nothing is as settled as it seems. There's not really a "mandate" to do anything since, as I said, this was an incredibly narrow win, historically speaking. Since Republicans also hold the House and Senate and the Supreme Court (we're well past the point of pretending it's not just as partisan a body as the legislature), it's more a window for a specific type of action, sort of like the window of action the Visigoths had when they entered Rome through the Salarian Gate in 410. Thieves who enjoy thieving on the mass-est of mass scales are about to all get their hands on the most money-rich thing in all of human history, the United States government. It's a complete capitulation to corporate interests, the kind of thing Ronald Reagan probably had in his mind whenever he had his last orgasm.

But at the same time, however, there's this one hyper-privileged dipshit Ivy League sociopath out there shooting one of the leaders of one of these extractive post-national human misery farms and... people seem to be not only OK with it, but cheering about it? The dissonance has caught me off guard a little. Are we a nation of "the government should be run like a business" dickheads who will be the death of us all, choosing to trust the people whose only defining feature as fully formed adults has been the avoidance of taxation, or are we an abused and tired conglomeration of raging proles ready to flip the table on this rigged card game, pushed by circumspection and want into literal bloodlust?

I read the thing from the NY Times I linked above about Trump voters and... yeah, it sounds like we're both. Part of the reason I'm not as discouraged as I should be is that it doesn't feel like a movement has broken out eager to hand over our livelihood chickens to a gaggle of suspiciously fox-shaped overseers, it's more just the anomaly of Trump. I'm finally past trying to understand why (probably because this was the last election he'll ever be able to run in), but nothing sticks to this fuckwad. If you don't actually have any principles and that is actually who you are, to your core, people will feel free to project whatever principles they have to you, even if they are entirely contradictory. People believe contradictory things all the time, it's more normal than not. A president with no ideas in a period of high uncertainty starts to make a lot of sense. Just to be clear, that is not the same as "a good idea."

The reason Trump is an anomaly is because he's not faking it. He really, genuinely believes nothing. Yet other people with no discernible principles--your Ted Cruzes, your JD Vances--walk around surrounded by a repellant stink cloud of inauthenticity. You can get elected locally, but understand that everyone actually hates you. Big donors understand you'll do exactly what they want and people will vote for you because you're Not One Of Those Others in a two-party system so, sure, they pop up. 

The challenge for Democrats is it's a mashed together party of small ideas. You have to represent something--at least say you believe in something--to get somewhere, but not so much that you make yourself unattractive to big-money donors, whom you still need because American national electoral politics are a pageant of fiscal obscenity with no end of the upward spiral in sight. We don't have the luxury of fielding a very pudgy empty suit, but that's not necessarily a bad thing. The next Democrat to win (and there will be another one, I know people forget that time does march forward and the seeming inevitability suggested by the present has always proved to be a lie eventually) will have to be someone from outside the Clinton-Obama-Biden circle (we've spent them all on a combination of age and failure) who can talk a good game and mobilize some of the spite and marginalization we all experience way down, with shaky arms and legs, trying to hold this whole stupid financial pyramid up for the benefit of a tiny few way up top.

I'm never in favor of shooting anyone, even a healthcare CEO, and I don't want to be one of these people who say "killing is bad, but...", however it is edifying seeing what people respond to. The next four years are a real opportunity to build opposition to an active and unapologetic kleptocracy already forming, with no effort to hide either its composition or intent. If we can't get people behind that, we deserve to lose. Again.

Thursday, December 5, 2024

Ink-Stained Wretches

If my research is correct (and it's 2024, so you know exactly what I mean when I say "research"),* we're about 16 years short of the 600th anniversary of the invention of moveable type and the printing press. And I have to say, it's been a pretty solid run!

I could be pedantic and argue that the real innovation was the moveable type and not the press itself (printing presses already existed), but I'm less interested in the effects than the processes, and no it's not because I don't understand processes in general, it's just that I specifically went to school to study a subject where one could plug in knowledge gaps with sophistry, word-play and the structures of rhetorical argument. You're just dealing with the wrong type of nerd for all that math shit.

It's not weird or really coincidental that within less than a century of moveable type, literacy spun out of the control of the aristocracy and the church, reshaping societies starting with something as simple as demand for access to the Bible in the local language. These demands had existed before, resulting typically in (at best) circumscription and censure but often also the horrific maiming and torturous death of the perpetrators. With that you get things like a whole-ass Reformation, a Renaissance, an Enlightenment, all movements away from (purposely or not) an orderly control of a pyramidally shaped society to a much flatter sort of arrangement where those at the top were always more in arm's reach of the ones at the bottom.

The link between print and democratization is not to be undersold or diminished. Nothing leaked out of hegemonic control faster than an idea, committed to paper, in the hands of one person just long enough to absorb it, even if the paper itself were destroyed, lost or seized. With print you get education of the masses, a middle class, labor organization, suffragettes, civil rights movements, entire subcultures of novelty and resistance both manifesting and understanding themselves on their own terms, impervious to the pressures of norms, conformity or both.

A piece of paper is an irreducible thing, a transmitter of an idea but also a tool, for dissemination of complex challenges to seemingly intractable political oppression or just long consideration as someone figures out for the first time what sound the "A" character makes.

Sure, Johannes Gutenberg smashed open Pandora's jar, but the weight of the troubles alighting collected most heavily on those in the loftier places, with farther to fall and more to lose. Those of us who remember the early internet felt the Gutenbergian thrill of seeing it happen again, the flash-fire of an idea leaving one mind and arriving at any other in the world in a literal instant, in things like dial-up BBS communities, where the world was whatever you wanted it to be. The ethos carried over somewhat to the centralization of the impulse in services like Prodigy or AOL, sacrificing the DIY scrape-by and ephemeral aesthetic for something more reliably convenient, slickly packaged and constant, at the cost of some intrusion of advertising and the horrifying idea that now it was accessible enough that your mom could actually use it.

Then a whole swirl of shit happened:

-The death of the idea of news as a loss-leading public good in favor of a for-profit model odiously perfected by Fox News
-The undermining of traditional media as a resource for basic information in favor of instant-gratification sources in social media, especially facebook and twitter
-The collapse of traditional media in an entertainment-and-profit environment as "information" and "news" become qualitatively synonymous.
-The arrival of private equity as a predatory force stripping newsrooms for parts, with no interest in the output, mission or societal value of the thing they are buying
-The necessary turn to big-money individuals to take on news organization or social media as loss-leaders again.

The last move burnished up people like Jeff Bezos for a second as saviors of a dying industry, but the problem with corporate capture is the "corporate" and "capture" parts. You can play the pro-democracy savior right up until you decide not to, and we all get to see at once that it's been too late since about 1997. The "no real choice" option as the standard bearers of old media were dying means the mastheads and bylines are now subject to the capriciousness and idiocy of worm-headed moguls who have too much money to be told "actually, that's a bad idea" by anyone around them since they first breached about $50 million in net worth. There's a reason "brain rot" was named Oxford's word of the year.

Now what we've got are people at the bottom having their ideas being dictated to them by people at the top. We're back to the pyramid shape again, but in a more literal way: a pharaoh-and-slaves model of building. The moveable type is being deployed in a way that's designed to get the slaves to thank pharaoh for the work.

This post hasn't been that funny, but it's all getting to be a little too much with the genuflection and ass-kissing since Election Day. At least it's now all explicit. The only thing we can really say with confidence is that when things really start going to shit, the press' take is going to be: why did the Democrats let this happen?


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*actually I guess I should clarify since Wikipedia only qualifies as "research" on its own for the apolitical and/or lefties. If you're on the right, "research" means nodding along to whatever Joe Rogan just credulously said "what, really? That doesn't sound right to me, we shouldn't be doing that..." to in response to a guest asserting, like, trans kids somehow deplete global food supplies or Jell-O gives you AIDS.

Thursday, November 28, 2024

Le Jour des Dindes

One accepts when one chooses to do a public thing on a regular Thursday, a full 52 Thursdays per year, that when one is American, that will mean exactly one of those Thursdays will fall on a day when you've got a bunch of other shit going on. For that reason, as in previous years, this will be a short post, with very little depth of thought behind most of it. In that way, it will only be half like all the others.

I say all this more than half way through the first Thanksgiving day of my whole life where I've got literally nothing going on. One of my children is traveling today, so we had the whole shock-your-nervous-system-into-paralysis-with-an-overload-of-carbohydrates-in-commemoration-of-Manifest-Destiny holiday fest this previous Sunday, to great effect. I had planned to half-ass it on Thursday (today) with two of my kids and store-bought turkey, but I remembered how much I like home-made gravy and that was that.

All of that said, I have used up a lot of my time today. I was up at 4 am to get my kid to LAX for his flight. I would recommend traveling on Thanksgiving Day as I got to LAX and back in under two hours, which is only impressive if you know that I live in a place where "LAX" and "two hours" in the same sentence is usually followed by some version of "Mm hmm, and then how was the drive back?" Making that kind of excellent time is a dad story I will share over and over for the rest of my life. Absolutely worth it. And premature apologies if I ever meet you in real life, as I guarantee I will recount this for you again. And again.

The rest of the day has been me on my own, still remembering the spirit of the season by ingesting way more calories than a body needs for any five days, let alone one (starting with donuts on the way home from the airport, then Indian food a few hours ago).

Then I finally watched the François Truffaut modern cinema foundational classic film Jules et Jim

I'm going to go out on a limb and say I thought it was pretty darn good, if a bit insistently French. There was like one English line in the whole dang movie! Indulgent. At least Breathless had the decency to cast an American in one of the lead roles speaking such spotty French even I could follow it. For that reason alone, if anyone at some party asks me who my favorite French New Wave director is (because I'm sure I'll be at a party out of a 1970s Woody Allen movie where shit like that happens), I'll say Godard, but refuse to elaborate. If I've learned anything about making effective points in public over the last few months it's that details are for losers.

OK, this isn't as short as I thought it would be, but I am delivering on the lack of useful content. For now I'm going back to my therapy-via-feedbag self-care program for the day. Today I am thankful for my working pancreas.

Happy Thanksgiving, America.



Thursday, November 21, 2024

Tryna Strike a Chord

It's regrettable sometimes that we do not speak German. Sure, some smart-guy will hit you with fake history about how America almost decided to make German the official language in the early days of the country, but that's just a weird lie that seems impervious to dying out no matter how many times it's debunked, like George Washington and the cherry tree or that Democrats aren't running a pedophile ring out of pizza shops.

But like all nigglingly persistent sociohistorical eggcorns, the misinterpretation is based on a thing that was spoken, but misheard or misremembered. Like for example, all this worry about Democrats or leftists being sex traffickers and pedophiles seems to have its roots in the understanding seeping into the common knowledge that, yes, at some level there was some deviancy going on at high levels in government, entertainment and business, it just turns out it wasn't necessarily all Democrats or leftists. In fact, a lot of it is coming to light now that Donald Trump is nominating all the most egregious offenders to his cabinet. It's a bold act to bring all this information into so glaring a public limelight, but what else would we have expected from Jeffry Epstein's best friend? Say what you want about old, addled, stupid Trump, but he understands brand consistency.

We're in a weird re-evaluation period after an election, where we're supposed to assess what went wrong and where we are as a people. This is where the thing I was saying before about the Germans come in, because they do have a tendency to create words with subtle, nuanced meanings that we don't seem to have quite the same facility for in English. The most famous of course is schadenfreude, the feeling of pleasure one feels at the misery or failure of another person, or verschlimmbessern, making something worse as a result of a good-faith effort to improve it, or geleineberüchtgesertz, the stringing together of nonsense sounds in order to approximate German.

What we are good at in English is the neologism, especially within subcultures, like from gaming with my kids I learned the word copium and it's sister-cognate hopium. These portmanteaus denote a mythical substance you self-generate and ingest like a drug (e.g. opium) in order to cope with an unpleasant situation (typically getting your ass beat in an online gaming lobby) or, similarly, to willfully persist in delusional hope that things aren't so bad as they seem. See, hanging out with my kids pays off in the renewal and strengthening of evolving bonds that will better stand the test of time as they grow into mature adults blah blah blah, but I also get access to the sickest GenZ slang, so I can most thoroughly embarrass myself in work meetings.

The hopium was flowing on election night as the results came in and they looked progressively (ha) worse and worse, e.g. "well, the counts from the urban areas usually come in later, let's wait and see..." Afterward, the trick has been to pick apart what are signs that things aren't a total disaster and what is pure, noxious, anti-reality copium facing down a pretty dark future.

Trump slips just under 50% of the popular vote as the last of the votes are counted over these few weeks? OK, that's pure copium. Fine, he won by less than we thought and it sure doesn't look as mandate-y as it did on the night, but he's still going to put his greasy mitt on a Bible he's never seen before and slur his way through the oath of office in two months, what difference does it make? He definitively lost the popular vote in 2016 and it didn't make the next four years any more tolerable.

But you do have to look for signs of... well, not hope as that seems a bit fantastical if you have in your head and heart priorities related to equity/equality, public health or organized labor against transnational monopolies. An election year beating for the losing party in our system is always, always a time of recrimination and regret, finger-pointing and score-settling. You have to start from zero again, building up small wins just to remind yourself and the voting electorate that it's still possible to win, that a future still exists. Of course it obviously does in a two-party system. The results are binary and can be pretty swingy (see: the last four presidential elections), so neither party is ever actually dead, you just kinda sometimes feel like it. Change yourselves wholesale or just hang out until the electorate comes around to your way of thinking, whatever. The latter is definitely what the GOP has decided to do since 2016. But I'm not sure the race-baiting populist model is the one you want to look at if you're the Democratic Party in the wilderness at this juncture.

Sometimes the early wins aren't really wins, they can just be circumstances, like celebrated pervert and sex-crimes enthusiast Matt Gaetz withdrawing from consideration as attorney-general. I wouldn't call that a thing orchestrated by Democrats, it's more a reminder that even with wins in the presidency, the senate and the house of representatives, this posse of circus geeks coming (back) into power are so shockingly inept, 51% of the time or more, whatever grand designs they make mouth-noises about in public won't come to pass as they'll be too busy stepping on their own dicks.

The consequences will still be gross and dire for a lot of people in this country, but you do want the punitive anti-human vengeance monsters to be as inept as possible. If that looks or sounds like "hope" one or both of us has made a mistake, either in the reading or the writing.

Thursday, November 14, 2024

Imagined Community

I've been thinking some fairly dark thinks since a week ago Tuesday, and should really be getting a lot darker as the president-elect starts to name names for cabinet appointments that seem to be limited to people who seem specifically unqualified to fill them, like an ethics-and-legally-challenged attorney general or a head of the Department of Health and Human Services who thinks diseases are caused primarily by insufficient wheat germ intake or, in all other cases, hoodoo.

I'm not sure if it's a good or a bad thing, though, that I seem to be taking it a lot better this time around than I did in 2016. I think the absolute collapse of the polling in that cycle, plus the basic incredulity that we as a people could elect someone that obviously stupid to be president, made it a much more whiplash-inducing collision of expectation and reality, especially coming off eight years of Obama and what seemed like a fairly stable center-left coalition of voters. Not hugely inspiring or transformation in retrospect, but at least an environment where positive sociopolitical change could be negotiated, like Obamacare. One day we'll remember the days of relatively reliable, slightly subsidized medical insurance before "coverage" devolves into your insurer just mailing you an at-home surgical supply kit (with simple pictorial instructions) in lieu of the expensive kerfuffle of in-patient professional intervention, any day now.

It's probably because these pathways have already been carved that I'm not swirling into tornado fits of rage-panic. I wouldn't even say I'm feeling numb (another common sentiment over on Bluesky, come check it out before it's all Russian porn bots, like twitter) and I know that because of the impatience I definitely feel for my fellow lefties mouthing a lot of the "take care of yourself and remember to breathe" advice through this. It's not that I discount their feelings or that huge segments of the population should rightfully panic (including civil servants, which may well include myself or people very close to me as far as you know) when a president is arriving blown into office on the bloviating winds of recrimination and punitivity, in a Stalinist kind of mode, but with fewer machine guns and more bronzer. I think it's more that a creeping, unbidden lump of nihilism has crystallized in my trachea, filtering out expressions of fear in favor of only a simmering low-level anger drowning everything else out, like a self-soothing cat's purr through a Marshall stack.

It's a hell of a thing to have your belief in your country shaken, but it's almost more shocking to come to the conclusion that belief in your country maybe isn't really a necessity at all. The idea that a country exists as an idea is definitely some New World thinking, where all our countries are way closer to the year in which they were made up out of nothing, and thus appear to rely a lot more on constant positive reinforcement than older nation-cultures. It's a combination of insecurity and romanticism that doesn't sound all that durable when you say it out loud anyway; a lot more Tinkerbell than Türkiye, if you follow. Modern Türkiye only dates back to 1923 so maybe that's not the best example, but it's an old culture and I wanted the alliteration, you get it.

America represents something, which politicians like Reagan and Obama have been able to articulate and mobilize into practical political results, but what's the right amount of investment for Regular Joes like you and me? Maybe the feelings of disappointment following an election ranging from ick to existential despair are tied too much to this overlay of Enlightenment thinking that cynics have been exploiting in four-year cycles for going on 250 years now. I mean, what's Poland, right? It's the place where the Polish people live, like literally Pole-Land. You don't gotta believe in that, it's just a cultural-linguistic truism expressed as a line on a map in Eastern Europe. It's defined as much by what it isn't (these aren't Belarussians or Slovaks and VERY DEFINITELY not Germans) as what it is. Sure, it's disappeared a few times historically, but the Poles as a people stayed in roughly the same area. There's persistence of identity not reliant on anybody's feelings... well, except for when whoever is running Russia or Germany at any point in history gets handsy, but it seems safe for now!

OK, so Türkiye and Poland, maybe not the best two examples. And yeah, here in the Western Hemisphere we don't really have the cohesion of old human migratory patterns and the development of linguistic other-ness vs. neighboring populations to give us a core to rely on if the borders imploded or were erased by a grabby neighbor (we're watching you, Canada). I guess if we broke up, we could all "go back to where we came from," but I was born in LA County, that's two counties over from where I am now. For the time being, I supposed I don't have much choice but to continue to keep believing in this silly, self-destructive place. I don't want to have to move all my stuff. I just wish all of my friends could say that

Thursday, November 7, 2024

Garbage People

I keep waiting for the vitriol to hit, or at least the despair. Something familiar and urgent, to set me on the path to what is ultimately cathartic: a scream, a cry, a punching of things perhaps/perhaps not appropriate for punching, a consuming of glutens and starches in quantities discouraged by modern medicine. You know, the normal stuff.

Maybe it's due to age and perspective or maybe a version of that where it's hard to be surprised by the same bullshit twice, but I'm finding myself way more at the deep-sigh-slow-headshake level rather than the bloood-curse-the-sun-and-moon-and-all-the-humans-beneath-both sort of a pitch. It's not that I'm not mad, it's more like your meth head son getting arrested. The first time, it's a traumatic existential brain-lance that requires you to rethink everything you thought you understood about the world and those closest to you; the seventeenth time, you politely thank the police officer who let you know and you hide the silverware before you know they're going to get out. Sure, at some level you have to deal with who they are, but you learn it's not really about you, not directly. You just want to make sure they don't set the rest of the neighborhood on fire.

Traditionally, if your party lost what felt like an important election, this is the period of time between Veterans Day and Thanksgiving for an intra-party civil war with as many sides as there are people with publishable platforms on which to express them, most of which come down to "well, she woulda won if only she had done exactly as I said." People, you see, are fucking tedious that way.

I'm not going to do that. I liked Kamala Harris and I still like her. I thought she ran a great campaign on short notice. I could see her and her people trying to strike the right balance between an economic message and the anti-Trump message to find some kind of resonance, but you know what, when people can't afford to live anywhere, even if by all other metrics we're doing way better in the U.S. than any other industrialized country since the pandemic, people are going to vote how they're going to vote. Incumbent parties are getting wiped out all over the western world, and this is what that looks like.

It doesn't look like Trump actually flipped anyone, people just stayed home. Maybe that had to do with bomb threats (by Russia maybe?) in swing states. I know I had the worry of polling place violence ahead of Election Day, maybe it was that. My primary guess after seeing the margins county by county eerily reflect the 2016 results is that we're not a mature enough country to elect a woman as president. I don't know. I just know we've done this before and we'll have to do it again: watch a stupid person who doesn't really want the job alternate between golfing and having temper tantrums en route to trying to fleece the country for as much as he can squeeze out of it (including selling classified stuff to foreign bad actors) before his time runs out.

As a chaotic half-asleep doofus, nobody really knows what he's going to do in the next four years. There are only two things we know for sure: he's not going to do the Big Thing he promised to do in his campaign (deporting tens of millions of people would be way harder than building a big stupid border wall, which he also failed at) and he's not going to run again, ever.

It's more a dusky tin than a silver lining, but hope is hope, you take it as it glimmers.

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PS: I more than understand that there's a lot at stake in people's lives, for women, for Palestinians, for trans kids, as a result of this. The point of the above was not to minimize or be glib, it's just a) to express what I'm feeling in the exact moment I'm typing, which is all this space is ever, ever for, and b) a disaster like this can only push is as far as we're willing to be pushed. Don't let the bastards get you down.