I
say very little about my personal life on this blog; it was designed
for frolic and foolishness.
But
it seems not to say anything at all about our current affairs would
be vacuous.
I
can't be as eloquent as Devlin O'Neill, or as cuttingly passionate as
Erica Scott, nor am I looking for applause, converts, or argument.
There won't be any.
Anywhere
you look on the Web is news and opinion and opinionated news. It's
feckless to preach to the choir, and equally time-wasting to try to
convince anyone at this point supporting the self-focused, ignorant,
corrupt, and inept buffoon currently in the White House that he's not
the one to secure the stability and righteousness they want. He's always been a Symptom and not
really the Cause, anyway, but a lot like gasoline on a fire lately.
I
grew up in the turbulent 60's and 70's, spending a lot of time trying
not to think about the overwhelming events. I might have been
drafted and sent to be uselessly shot in Southeast Asia in my later teen years, but meanwhile “Dark Shadows” was on, and Supergirl had begun sporting hot pants. Escapism isn't all bad, unless you stay there.
My
parents were conservative but caring people, well-educated, very
hard-working, contributing a lot to the well-being of the parts of
the world they touched, and taught those values to their offspring.
They could argue passionately about their stands, and did, but
respectfully.
The
backlash of the last decade or two, the devolution of political
parties into cartoon caricatures of themselves, the reemergence of
vicious hates we thought mostly conquered, and the celebration and
exultation of deliberate stupidity reveals a sickness very sad to
see.
But
it's not hopeless. I work in a place with a lot of young men and
women of exceptional character, who show empathy, intelligence, and a
desire for integrity and honor.
Social
media has the War of the Memes going on, and most are designed to
inflame passion, whether or not they're based on any thought or truth
(that's the definition of propaganda, and it's used by everyone in
advertising and politics and whatnot), but I did like the one I saw
today. I'll post it below.
And
then return to the regularly scheduled silliness.
A Friday Night Edit:
Hopefully DaddyCat won't mind if I post this link to his thoughtful and thought-provoking blog entry. Very worth your time:
well stated.
ReplyDeletered
I appreciate that, sir!
Deletei saw something similar on my fb feed and shared the hell out of it. this is a good one!
ReplyDeleteIt is, isn't it, Fondles Thank you.
Deletei hope you don't mind that i've linked this post to my latest entry.
DeleteI don't mind at all, Fondles, thank you!
DeleteDave, Thank you for understanding the point that as a Black American my declaring Black Lives Matter isn't about diminishing anyone else's plight.
ReplyDeleteExactly so, DaddyCat!
DeleteThank you for the reply!
By the way, I'm going to post a link to your latest, very fine blog entry. And I'm very much looking forward to rambling through your past entries, too! The current "comments' thing Blogger seems to doing has me a little puzzled.
DeleteHey Dave, No problem at all. Thanks for the compliment.
DeleteAbsolutely!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Minielle!
Delete