Category: Philosophy

  • The Problem With Anger — It Will Not Achieve The Result You Want

    Know this, my beloved brothers: let every person be quick to hear, slow to speak, slow to anger; for the anger of man does not produce the righteousness of God.

    ~ James 1:19,20

    # 19 on my 99 Life Tips–A List is: Anger will not achieve the result you want. If you’re angry, keep your mouth shut.


    I beg those of my readers who don’t consider themselves to be adherents to the Christian traditions, or see themselves as convinced by an appeal to scripture, just bear with me. Follow my thoughts with an open mind to the end, and with an eye towards your own past experiences.

    I can attest to the truth of the above verses in my own life. I’ve had more dramatic scenes of anger, wrath, and righteous indignation than I care to count. Times when I could not hear. I could not see. I could not think straight. A few instances in particular stand out. I will spare you the details. Suffice it to say, no one involved had any doubt about my emotional state.

    Anger has never achieved my desired result

    But NOT ONE TIME have I lashed out in anger and achieved the result I really wanted. In my entire life. Not…one…time.

    Search your own memory banks. Remember the last time you were so angry you couldn’t see straight? You struck out in the throes of that feeling, so certain of your righteousness that no argument could convince you otherwise. How did that situation turn out? Did it go the way you wanted?

    Your mileage may vary. I can only testify to my own experience. 

    When I feel angry now, I am immediately certain that if I speak or act, I will be wrong. When I am angry now, it is an indicator that I am far from the kind of person who can be a vessel of the righteousness of God.

    I’m writing this because our nation is torn apart. We treat each other, Americans, even ones who grew up together, as if we’re sworn enemies. We’ve been co-opted into believing that anyone with a different political view is a villain. We’re told that the “others” aren’t American, and they aren’t putting “America First”. That they are “taking your country”! We’ve lost our collective minds!

    I challenge you to watch the events of January 6th with James in mind. Listen to the run-up. Listen to the speeches playing upon fear, prejudice, paranoia, just stoking up the anger to a boiling venomous cauldron. Are these people quick to hear the other side? Slow to speak about them or to them?

    I’m not sure what those who marched on the Capital thought they were doing. They were acting like they believed their anger would produce the righteousness of God.

    The words of Scripture above reveal that deception for exactly what it is.

    I just want to ask you…my brother…my sister…are you angry?

    Well, You say you want a Revolution, you better change your mind instead.

    ~ The Beatles: Revolution
  • Un-Social Media

    Be careful how you Brand

    This past Tuesday, Twitter banned me for a week. I was scrolling along when I came across a tweet expressing outrage over Lauren Boebert. The freshman Congressperson from CO set off an alarm when passing through the newly installed magnetometer on her way to the House Chamber. She then refused to allow Capital Police to search her bag. I read about her refusal, thought about the context of the January 6th attack at the Capital, became ”righteously indignant” and I tweeted a reply, ”Throw her skank ass out!”

    Within minutes, an information screen appeared notifying me that I had broken Twitter’s rules against ”harassment”. I chuckled inwardly that my 5 words had somehow triggered a response from Twitter’s harassment algorithm. I’d seen much worse. But sure enough, my account was to be limited to read-only or Direct Messaging my followers (which I do not do on any social media platform). I was in the penalty box. 

    I’d like to say I rationalized my sophomoric tweet because I had knowledge of Boebert’s past criminal record. I knew of her boast that she would carry her Glock around the Capital. And in her first week in Congress, she had live-tweeted Nancy Pelosi’s movements during the siege of the Capital. Knowing these things prompted my off-the-cuff tweet. I was justified, right? But we humans confabulate rationalizations for everything we say or do. The fact that I had reasons, doesn’t make what I tweeted acceptable. The scary thing is, it was purely spontaneous. I didn’t think. I typed. My words appeared on the screen. I didn’t give a moment’s hesitation to consider the implications of my tweet. It was snarky. It was pithy. I waited for the likes and retweets to roll in….

    I become a different person when using social media than I am in face-to-face or telephone conversations in real life. My hypothesis is that I am not alone in that behavior, but that doesn’t excuse mine. I would never have said those words to Ms. Boebert in person, no matter how disgusted I feel about her politics and actions. That’s not how I speak to people in the real world. And in RL, I don’t feel compelled to ”like”, reply to, comment on, or repeat everything I hear. 

    Imagine a gathering at your kid’s __________(football game, school play, music recital). You park your car, climb out, and make your way to the venue, other parents and students streaming in the same direction. You are aware of faint snippets of unintelligible conversation floating to you in the air. There’s laughter, there’s a murmuring hum of voices below the threshold of comprehension. As the crowd begins to congregate, compressing and concentrating nearer the ticket booth, the conversations become clearer. You feel a compulsion to join in. You want to be recognized. You have a voice, and you’re determined to speak up and comment. A stranger nearby says to her companion, ”Hey, let’s go to Chili’s after this.” You lean in and crow, ”Ooh…I really like that place, don’t you love their margaritas?” Then, pleased with yourself, you turn around and begin to yell to those behind you, ”They’re going to Chili’s after the game! THIS!” pointing and gesturing at them for all to see. You are so happy to be participating. You can feel the rush of dopamine. But within seconds, several others overhear and begin to shout you down, ”Chili’s? Oh hell no! It sucks!”, ”What kind of a loser eats at Chili’s?” Soon, a heated argument breaks out. Tempers flare. Harsh words are exchanged. You feel deflated, confused, ashamed. Crazy, right?

    That level of interaction in the real world is NOT social. It’s not normal. It’s not desirable. It is intrusive, distracting, unproductive, and weird! It is socially destructive. That scene would violate every social norm hardcoded into a human from birth. But, tell me that fictional scene doesn’t play out on twitter and facebook every day. 

    Social media apps and platforms make us different. Anonymity allows you to be as crass and contemptuous, as ugly, mean-spirited, and vile as you can summon the nerve and the wit to produce. Dish it out and take it. Be quick though…someone else is going to beat you with the perfect zinger!

    With the ban on my account implemented, I still had access to scroll though the feed of tweets, but I could neither like them, reply to them, nor retweet them. No interaction. No following of new clever people. No liking their *Chef’ Kiss* rebuttals in 280 characters or less. I instantly and irrationally felt ISOLATED. I felt invisible (and not in a good way). I was going to fall so far behind that in a week’s time there would be no possibility of ever…catching…up. I inwardly chuckled at my pathetic predicament, realizing how absurd it was to feel that way over tweeting snarkitudes with complete strangers, for God’s sake. I have a measly 250 Twitter followers. So…none…in the Twitterverse

    Only a small handful of my followers know me in real life, and when we get together, we don’t gather with pocketfuls of heart stickers to plaster all over each other.

    Like I said, I’m different in real life than I am on social media. You probably are too.

    BUT NOT EVERYONE IS DIFFERENT…

    Many use social media to ”brand” themselves. They want to be popular; to be ”influencers”. They carefully integrate their digital, virtual selves with their real life selves (which makes one wonder just how ”real” they are). This behavior is one thing if you’re selling a product, or a reality tv show, but what if you’re an elected official? What if you’re a politician using the power of social media to make incivility and outright hostility your brand? The United States is living through the consequence of that sad result right now.

    We can observe what happens when politicians of either persuasion carefully curate their statements to stay ”On Brand”. This enables them to build a tribe of fiercely loyal supporters and followers; ones who will share a near vicarious identification. But a politician who builds loyalty by being an attack dog against the other party can never be conciliatory or compromising without risking the loss of those same followers who will only support the attack dog. And a politician who creates a following based upon the least common denominators of race, creed, or religion can never be a success as a statesmen able to unite disparate portions of the electorate around the greatest common denominators of humanity, dignity, citizenship, and a shared planet.

    This is an unintended, serious consequence of the ubiquity of social media, and its adoption as the preferred means of communication by political figures. Politicians feel pressure to align their real life demeanor with their social media persona in a way that a normal citizen like me, doesn’t. 

    A hardline, anti-otherside social media presence will not jive with a patient, openminded, tolerant, conciliatory RL personality. If my hunch is true, it goes a long way towards explaining the very recent deterioration of political discourse in our era. Politicians are too often protecting and projecting the social media version of themselves, which may be the worst version of themselves. Every public figure knows they are one tweet, video upload, or facebook post away from having their RL self plastered all over the SocialMediaVerse. If they are known for being mean to the other side on Twitter, heaven forbid they should fist-bump with them in the real world.

    It’s one thing for a non-public, non-elected person to be a jerk on social media. It’s quite another to have to live up to that expected ”jerk-ness” on the floor of the House, or in a debate, or during an interview. To be sure, many members of both parties are doing a fine job being consistently uncivil in RL as they are on social media platforms. I’m saying that’s not a good thing. And the possibility always exists for 280 character tweets, or out of context facebook posts, or instagram stories to become embedded with more ”meaning” to the audience of indoctrinated followers than the politician intended. Those tweets may just radicalize. The hate-soaked, loaded words may flip a switch in the hearer that creates responses and behaviors that is not exactly civilized. This is just another way in which social media may actually be making us all less ”social”. 

    So, these concerns and my twitter jail time have me thinking about some bigger questions…

    Healthy social interaction requires healthy boundaries with healthy restraints. The threshold from individual to social is the moment another person enters the picture. Most people exercise the degree of self-censure and self-restraint deemed appropriate by social customs and norms, given the context. Less restraint out with friends drinking beer at a hockey game than when gathered with family around the Thanksgiving table. Absent mental illness or gross neglect, most people grow up acquiring basic social norms that have been passed from generation to generation. These norms allow society to achieve cooperation; thereby handing off the baton of education, culture, behavior, identity, innovation, and government to one another and to each successive generation.

    When an individual breaks the norms, the group responds to censure that individual, either rehabilitating him, ostracizing him, or punishing him with expulsion in one form or another.

    Behaviors that are bad for the group are bad by definition. 

    Ethical behavior cannot exist in any meaningful way if there are not at least two people present. If it takes two to tango, it takes two to…Ethics? Ethic? An individual alone on the earth cannot practice ethical behavior. He certainly cannot sin against his neighbor. Certainly, the concept of Morality introduces a discussion of how one conducts himself towards God, but even the Bible teaches, ”how can you love God whom you have not seen when you don’t love your brother whom you have seen.” 

    An aside: I find it interesting to recall the Genesis story, that Adam, having been created before Eve, spends an indeterminate amount of time alone before succumbing to the operation that brought the second human being forth. As head gardener, he takes care of the flora. As Zoologist in residence, he names all the animals. As the Priest, the Congregant, and the Worshipper, he walks with God in the cool of the day. But there is no record of him having sinned. And this, despite the recorded declaration that both the tree of life and the tree of knowledge were present in the garden. One might derive from this cautionary tale that it takes at least two to sin against God. In fact, the NT concept of ‘faith’ is a transliteration of Hebrew and Greek words that combined connote much more the idea of ”total dependence upon”, than merely ”mental acquiescence in”. 

    Until Eve appeared, Adam was completely dependent upon God for communion and companionship and all the fruits derived therefrom. It was God who said, ”It is not good for man to be alone.” and thus initiated a search for a help meet for Adam that culminated with Adam naming the animals (thus beating Aristotle in forming the system of classification of EVERYTHING that defines Western thought), and finally, when no suitable help was found, to Eve herself being formed from Adam and presented to him. 

    Adam’s percentage of dependence upon God and attention to God lowered from one hundred per cent to some lesser unknowable percentage. We may surmise that it was this opportunity for co-dependence that created the context for temptation to act against the will of God and his command not to eat of the tree of knowledge, or in other words to become ‘self-reliant’, believing themselves capable of acting independently of God and that such action would produce a better outcome for themselves than continued dependence would produce.

    The NT has a simple, terrible, concentrated warning. ”Whatever is not of faith is sin”. The essence of sin is to act as if there is no God. To act independently of God. Alone in the world, Adam was keenly aware of his dependence. He was no less dependent once Eve arrived, he was just less aware of it.

    Without a doubt, individual expedience and utility are essential to survival. A solitary figure, alone in the world, doesn’t have the ability to sin against anyone and he doesn’t have to consult anyone’s interests but his own. He can howl at the moon, He can urinate outdoors, and not wash his hands. He can hunt and kill for the shear bloodlust and sport and adrenaline rush of it. Hell, he can go so far as to refrain from wearing a mask (since there’s no one else he might infect). But throw another person into the mix and that unrestrained individuality becomes destructive to the group, whether that group is a marriage, a family, a tribe, a company, or a state. 

    As an individual matures, one hopes he learns to cooperate. He learns to harness his individuality for the communal, collective good. If he doesn’t so mature, he is free to be a recluse. But he isn’t free to interfere in the freedoms of all other persons.

    It is the presence of another human that is the contextual genesis of morality and ethics. Ethical behavior is that which tends to the increase in overall good to the group in very general terms. It being obvious that in a group of two, one being a selfish millionaire, the other being a broke and destitute homeless person, if the millionaire becomes a billionaire while the homeless person remains broke, the aggregate ”wealth” of the group has grown, while the aggregate ”goodness” has not increased, and has even diminished.

    A primary role of society is to sort out for itself what is ”good”, and to promote that ”goodness” to all members. The means, adoption, cultivation, and enjoyment of that goodness is what we call civilization. The format and means for advancing civilization is what we call politics. It is just here that philosophers have historically played their most important role. By thinking through and sharing their ideas of ethics, aesthetics, and politics, they serve to civilize us. The basic tenet of social and therefore civil intelligence is to project oneself beyond oneself appropriately at every occasion of interaction and social intercourse. This takes a strength of will and of character far greater than succumbing to the baser tendencies of Nietzsche’s übermensch, or superman, whom Nietzsche lauded as the epitome of human-ness, a being who would be ethically impelled to exert as much dominance as his strengths, gifts, and resources allowed. I reject the ”super-man”.

    It takes no special strength of will, no special insight, and no special skill to consult my own happiness at all times and act as selfishly as my might allows. But to restrain those impulses in the pursuit of lifting up another, of relieving another’s suffering, of elevating the shared corporate ”goodness”, those are skills to be practiced for a lifetime. To cultivate a wider perspective, to walk in another’s shoes, to see with their eyes, to put oneself in their place: in short, to love thy neighbor as thyself; that is a purpose worthy of a human being.

    It is no accident that the first word of the United States Constitution is the word, ”We”. 

    I’m glad for my Twitter ban. Having my hand slapped and being told to behave like a good boy is the perfect opportunity to step back, think about who I really am, and realize that I’m a different person, projecting a different persona on Twitter. Who have I been doing that for? For ME…not for We. It made me feel better about myself to exercise what I considered clever snarkiness on Twitter. And realizing that now…mid ban…makes me reject that Un-Social self.

    That’s not who I am, nor is it who I want to be. Thanks to Twitter, I have the chance to pause and consider. I have the chance to exercise restraint and contribute only that which is positive to the conversation. I have the chance to be social.

  • We

    The framers of the United States Constitution faced a daunting task. In 1787, fresh from the heady, yet costly victory of the nine-year Revolutionary War, they met in Philadelphia to formulate the charter documents. After months of debate, sometimes heated, sometimes personal, they penned the preamble to the foundational document of the burgeoning nation, with these words, “We the People…”. 

    Taking an even more granular view, it is evident that the first of these most cherished words is the simple word, pregnant with profound meaning, “We.”

    If enough of us would stop and consider this simple fact, if WE would think of the implications of the use of that word, WE would instantly begin the process that, if followed, would achieve the re-uniting and healing of the Country.

  • To Facebook, or not to Facebook? That is the question.

    Last night I reconnected to Facebook after a multi-year hiatus. I left in anger over the revelation of Facebook’s secret mental health experiment in 2012 that targeted 700,000 users.. Facebook developers decided it would be interesting to see if they could alter user’s behaviors by creating algorithms to display articles, ads, and pages with emotionally negative keywords.

    It turns out they could affect behavior. Specifically, the more users saw negative keywords in their Facebook feeds, the more they began to create posts with similarly negative content. I was outraged. I have a daughter that was in the midst of some severe mental health challenges and I knew she was addicted to Facebook.

    She may or may not have been one of the 700,000 guinea pigs in Facebook’s “research”, but the fact remains that what we are fed by social media algorithms affects what we then “produce”. It turns out that even in the digital world we are what we eat.

    Here we are, years later, now in a toxic political environment threatening our nation, and once again, it’s fueled in large measure by social media. It turns out that the political radicalization has occurred by Facebook suggesting and feeding extreme groups to users based on their past usage patterns. We are all just a “digital profile” based upon the aggregate of our clicks, likes, and time spent on a video, images, etc.

    I’m here for now, but I’m aware and I will keep one foot out the door.

    The story linked below from 2014 has more details about the psychological experiment, and how it was justified by Facebook.

    https://abcnews.go.com/Health/consented-facebooks-social-experiment/story?id=24368579

  • Which Do You Prefer?

    Every person, myriad times throughout each day makes decisions about what to say or do from the menu of options available to them at the time of the choice. 

    This bears unpacking a bit. You are reading this right now. You could have chosen to do something else instead. But reading this showed up on the menu of choices available to you and you chose to do so. This process was in play before you knew about it, and it will continue now that you do know about it. 

    Not all options are available to choose at all times. Neither of us can fly to the moon, or even across the room under our own power, for instance, even if we desired to do so. And, to be certain, there is a catalogue of historical debate amongst philosophers and behaviorists over whether or not any of us is truly free when we choose any action. That is the age-old debate over ”free-will” vs. determinism. I am unqualified to dive too deeply into those waters, though I have taken a swim in them from time to time.

    I’m writing to bring attention to the fact that when we act as if we are free to choose, there is something driving and impelling those choices. That something I will call ”preference”. There are two or more options available on the menu; and the one we choose is the one we prefer. How could it be otherwise? 

    I’m writing this now, at this moment, rather than doom-scrolling through Twitter, crawling back into a warm bed, going for a walk in thirty degree drizzle, reading news, turning on the television, etc. I’m writing because it is what I prefer to be doing with this slot of time, energy, and attention more than anything else I could be doing. You are doing the same thing.

    It is important to note that preference does not equal desire. I have desires that I may actually prefer more than my current choice, but at the time of my choosing they were not on the available menu. I desire to be walking a secluded beach with my girlfriend in seventy degree weather with a light breeze in our hair, watching the sun come up over the ocean. But that is not on this morning’s menu. I’m sure you have desires like that.

    Our choices are driven by our preferences. This phenomenon is a fact we experience over and over. This is what makes the concept of free will feel true. Seen in that light, no one can take away another’s free will, because there is no power that can be exerted to take away another’s preference as long as more than one choice is available. You may severely limit the menu of options available to an individual. You may wickedly create for them a reality that is a constant choice between the lesser of two evils. But you cannot take away their ability to choose what they prefer from the remaining options.

    This realization has helped me interpret both my own choices and behaviors as well as those of  others. Watch what someone does or refuses to do. Listen to what they say or refuse to say. You are seeing the external manifestations of their internal preferences, moment by moment, event by event, day by day.

    I am overweight because on the whole, I prefer it to the effort and attentiveness that is necessary to lose the extra pounds. I work for my self as a commissioned salesman, with all of its accompanying risks, because I prefer it to a rigid schedule and losing autonomy in my workday.

    The example of overweight-ness is illustrative of the fact that preferential choices happen in the moment. They are myopic. They are not contemplative of the long game, unless…unless you put that contemplation on the menu. Because to be sure, I prefer health to obesity, in general. I prefer activity to lethargy, in general. I prefer self-control to sloth or gluttony, in principle. 

    A key then to making better choices, is to pick those which will be a balance of preferred outcomes both in the present and into the future.

  • Cliffhangers Galore!

    What a start to the new year, huh? Last week was momentous, and this week and the next promise more of the same.

    The country is reeling from an attempted insurrection on Wednesday, January 6th, incited by the President himself against the Legislative branch of the United States government and inside of the Unites States capital building where the Legislature was engaged in the pro forma certification of the electoral college votes from the states. Terrorist rioters roamed the halls chanting “Hang Mike Pence” and searching for Nancy Pelosi by name.

    The resultant aftermath of analysis and hand-wringing has been must-see TV of real-time history.

    There are many unknowns this morning:

    Will Mike Pence do the right thing and invoke the 25th Amendment?

    If done, will half of the remaining cabinet go along?

    Will Trump pardon himself, his allies, his children, his cronies, the participants in Wednesday’s coup attempt while he can?

    Will the House, under Nancy Pelosi’s speakership adopt and pass Articles of Impeachment?

    Will the House adopt provisions under Article 14 to remove seditious representatives?

    Will the Senate adopt provision under Article 14 against Senators Cruz and Hawley, possibly others?

    Will the Senate convict if the House passes Articles of Impeachment?

    Is there enough time left to do any of the above to remove Trump before the January 20th Inauguration date?

    How many more Trump staffers and cabinet members will resign this week?

    If you tried to write this many storylines and cliffhangers into a fictional television series, you’d be laughed out of the writer’s union.

    But here we are. Keep that seat belt fastened. The captain has not turned off the seat-belt sign.

  • I Can’t Figure Out If It’s The End or Beginning?

    This kind of thing doesn’t happen here…right?

    Yesterday, January 6th, 2021 will undoubtedly go down in history as either one of America’s darkest days or as the precursor to the end of American Democracy. 

    Most Americans, including myself, having grown up here, have also grown accustomed to a cultural bubble from which we look out at the world with a kind of smugness. We may feel ourselves blessed, or we may believe we have an exceptionalism, but we’ve felt an immunity to the kinds of upheaval that we’ve witnessed in other countries and among other cultures. 

    That smugness is gone. The storming of the Capital will be indelibly etched on the minds of all of us who sat watching it in sickening horror and revulsion. For me, it echoed the feelings of helplessness and disbelief of 9-11. 

    Yesterday showed that some former-Americans, former brothers and sisters in a shared national family, have been radicalized into something else entirely. That horde has been fed on lies and conspiracy theories. They ingested and internalized them. And yesterday they received marching orders from the President of the United States himself, Donald J. Trump, to ”go to the Capital”. With a religious-military fidelity to his command, they acted to fight back and retake ”their country”. He told them weakness wouldn’t get the job done. They rewarded his belief in them with a ”righteous” show of force. 

    If you poke your head out of the American cultural bubble, and take off the nationalistic blinders, it is entirely predictable that yesterday’s insurrection was a possibility. We have all been too naive to think this couldn’t have happened here. We don’t build madrassas in the US. It turns out we didn’t need them. Rather, we have FOX, and OAN, twitter, and facebook. 

    Politicians obviously believe in the idea that they can say things to their followers that the followers will believe. This doesn’t necessarily mean that the politician himself believes it, only that it will be beneficial to the politician to get the follower to believe it. 

    When a politician preys upon a certain type of individual who may not be the most intellectual, or may not have learned critical thinking skills, or developed the power of healthy skepticism, the politician is treating that kind of follower like one does who trains an attack dog. The politician is conditioning and controlling the follower with the promise a certain type of reward in return for a predictable behavior and response. 

    Ideologues, demagogues, religious ”prophets”, and con-men have used these techniques to train and control their adherents and ”marks” for centuries. Rarely so in America.

    The stormers of the Capital, came to Washington, DC at the behest of their leader, Donald Trump, to prevent the ”theft” of an election he has repeatedly claimed to have been ”stolen from him” and has told them was ”stolen from them”. Many came in para-military garb. Many came armed with weapons that included axe handles, hockey sticks, batons, pistols, and pipe bombs. 

    They came with flags bearing the name of their Leader, and with flags bearing the symbols of their political ideology. They came having been told they were the true Patriots and the true defenders of Freedom. They believe that about themselves. As all true-believers everywhere, they believe it enough to act on it. At the end of Trump’s speech in front of the White House, he gave the radicalized, weaponized, flag-waving mob the Capital as a target. And off they marched.

    Like a well-trained pack of dogs…

    What the hell did we think was going to happen?

    What the hell do we think will continue to happen over and over again if we allow Trump and all of his complicit conspirators who radicalized this horde and millions just like them all around the country, get away with it scot free?

    The correct response can bring this nasty, horrible chapter to an end. My fear is that our leaders are too craven to give the correct response and that yesterday was only the first thread to pulled out of the fabric of our Democracy that will unravel the whole thing. 

    It’s too early to figure out if it’s the end or beginning, but I know the bubble of naivety has burst.

  • Hair Of The Dog, Anyone?

    Last night saw the ascendance of the Democratic party to likely control of the United States Senate by the slimmest of margins with the projected victory in the Georgia run-off race of Democrat candidates Raphael Warnock and the likely victory of Jon Ossoff, whose race is too close to call at 7 am this morning. 

    Like many Americans, I watched the returns until the wee hours of the morning when GA election officials called it a night. Warnock was comfortably ahead by around 35,000 votes and Ossoff behind by about 1200 votes when I retired for a few hours sleep. I was encouraged this morning to learn that Warnock is the projected winner of his race with a margin that will be outside recount territory. 

    Ossoff has also pulled ahead in his race by some 16,000 votes as of 6:30 am. The current .38 margin would fall inside the .5 margin for a recount that could be demanded by his opponent, David Perdue. There are approximately 70,000 votes remaining to be counted and all of the media outlets are reporting that the overwhelming majority of those should break to Ossoff and will give him a recount-proof margin, thus securing a Democrat majority in the Senate.

    If that result holds, the country can finally say so long to Mitch McConnell as obstructor-in-chief in his role as Senate Majority Leader.

    The 2020 election cycle has been the dominant topic of interest for a year. Even in a year when a virus became the leading cause of death in America, we’ve grown numb to the scale of the virus numbers, but the political show has had enough plot twists to addict us.

    The deadliness of the COVID virus, having claimed nearly 360,000 American lives, can be attributed to Trump’s determination to ignore the virus in the light of his reelection bid. Then, of course, for the first time in modern history, he has refused to concede an election that he lost by over 7 million popular votes and by 74 electoral college votes 306-232.

    Today marks the certification of Joe Biden’s victory in Congress where the historically pro forma counting of the state’s electors is set to happen.

    But wait…a number of seditious GOP representatives have been joined by a handful of traitorous GOP senators vowing to ”refuse” recognition of the electoral college count, planning to mount challenges to the slate of certified electors submitted by several states.

    Trump has been championing the theory that Mike Pence can name the electors he wants in his role as President of the Senate today, because, you know, so many VPs have historically chosen their preferred presidential winners for us in the past…NOT!

    Most pundits view today’s threatened actions as a political stunt with no chance of overturning the legitimate result, but, it will be yet more political theater. And, once again, it will be must-see TV. And depending on the magnitude of the disruption the traitors incite, it could last well into the night.

    As if following the final vote tallies in GA, and watching the unfolding of the idiocy in Congress wasn’t enough, a large crowd of willfully ignorant and gullibly deceived Trump cultists and right-wingnuts are expected in Washington, DC today as well. They are expected to do what the stupid do, which is to act stupidly. I’m sure they won’t disappoint.

    In a season where even the most politically agnostic have been forced to imbibe more in the way of campaign ads, a drawn out election count, the refusal of concession by the sitting President, MAGA protests and threats, last night’s special election in GA, and the promised drama in Congress today, this has been the worst drinking game in history. 

    But with today and tonight still to get behind us, and with so much on the line, and having developed both a habit and a tolerance, all I can say is, ”hair of the dog, anyone?”

  • When “Civility” Begets Incivility

    As the father of seven children, I distinctly remember a handful of occasions that were formative for not only one of the kids in need of discipline or punishment for their own infraction, but that also served as a precedent setting example for the other kids. Instances when forbearance would have amounted to neglect, because the underlying message of “civility and patience” was likely to foster, if not encouragement of the behavior in the other children; at bare minimum an attitude of normalization.

    An unprovoked and angry child lashing out in physical or emotional violence against a sibling or parent would fall into this category, for instance. Allowing such outbursts to go undisciplined and unpunished is to allow the offending child and the rest of the family to go un-cared-for. Failure of the parent to act in such a case is not something the offending child can be blamed for, it is dereliction of parenting itself.

    The family unit consisting of parents and offspring is often referred to as the smallest social unit and the following quote by Ashley Montagu is widely accepted as true:

    “The family is the basis of society. As the family is, so is the society, and it is human beings who make a family-not the quantity of them, but the quality of them.”

    Parents, good parents, not only want their children to like them, they want to be able to like their children, too. They want to demonstrate and inculcate what it means to be good human beings.

    In unpleasant moments when a child commits an act that requires disciplinary action from the parents, the parents take the necessary response with an eye towards the future well-being of the offending child and of the family as a whole. They are willing to endure the momentary loss of positive feelings and affections from the punished child to achieve long term values like respect, stability, unity, and love within the family. They are displaying a narrative about what the family is like. They are creating emotional security by enabling a sense of confident well-being.

    Our country is at one of these watershed moments. The American Parent, which I will call the Democratic Institutions extant, has tolerated the tantrum of a spoiled child, allowing it to go undisciplined and unpunished. While true the spoiled child is no longer a minor and is ready to leave the family home, the memory of an adult-aged child pitching a 3 year-old’s fit is not going to leave when he does.

    The other children, having been brought up to believe that there were rules that applied to everyone equally, have been watching from the sidelines to see what the parent will do about the fit-throwing child. They’ve watched and heard as this child has begun to call the parent and the other children ugly names, even blaming them for his bad behavior.

    The children are now pretty convinced the parent isn’t going to do anything at all about it, and the older ones wonder what that portends, while the younger are imagining what they’ll be able to get away with.

    Does the parent seriously think this scene will ”go away” when the child leaves home, that it won’t have a malingering effect on the children who remain?

    The older children have heard a parent saying we must be ”civil” towards the brat, perhaps reach out to him, that he will grow out of it, and soon we won’t have to tolerate this behavior. And each time the parent uses the word civil, the younger children know that the parent, refusing to punish the bad-behaving sibling, has completely lost site of what civil used to mean to the family.

  • First Day of the First Week…holding breath

    Today, Sunday, January 3, 2021 is the first day of the first full week of the new year. And a momentous day it is too. Here are a few highlights of the day and the upcoming week.

    The new congress will be sworn in making the Democrat majority in the House of Representatives considerably narrower.

    Today marks the anniversary of the US killing of Iranian General Qassim Suliemani. There are concerns that Iran may attempt a retaliatory strike against American targets.

    Today also marks the beginning of what will certainly turn out to be week of tremendous consequence in the history of the United States:


    1) Tuesday is election day in Georgia for both of that state’s senate seats. The Republicans hold the senate majority going into the election by a 50-48 margin. If the two Democrats, Jon Ossof and Raphael Warnock win their special elections, the senate would be split 50-50, with newly elected Vice President, Kamala Harris, a Democrat, holding the tie-breaking vote.

    2) Wednesday is the day Congress will tabulate the electoral college votes submitted by the states. All of the states have submitted legally verified electors giving President-Elect Joe Biden a substantial EC victory of 306 votes to 232. This event would ordinarily be pro forma and largely symbolic. But there are rumblings that GOP representatives and senators are planning to challenge the slate of electors submitted by several of the states where Donald Trump lost in an effort to use the procedure to overturn the election and hand it to Trump.

    3) Lame Duck President Donald Trump has called for Wednesday to be a day of protests over what he claims is a ”stolen election” in Washington, DC. The MAGA contingent will be joined by members of several right-wing para-military groups including the infamous, ”Proud Boys” who have told their members not to wear their typical black and yellow colors, but instead to blend in amongst the other MAGA protesters. The day could turn violent. Perhaps even violent enough to provide a pretext for Trump to declare martial law in the District of Columbia or even in a broader more general sphere.