Friday, June 30, 2023

The On-Crack Ass Clown for June, 2023


June is one of two months in 2023 in which the calendar allows for three Ass Clown Awards - the other will be December. Fortunately, the number of Ass Clowns available as potential awardees is enormous and growing daily. Such an embarrassment of riches, of course, complicates the job of selecting a single winner, but such is the burden I square my shoulders and stoically bear.

Although the tag team of Vladimir Putin and Yevgeny Prigozhin made a strong bid for this period's award, I felt that a more appropriate winner could be found closer to home. And so it is, Ladies and Gentlemen, Dear Readers, that I name as

The On-Crack Ass Clown for June, 2024


Senator Tommy Tuberville (R, GA)


Senator Tuberville is a previous award winner, having been named our On-Crack Ass Clown for July of 2021, but returns today, just shy of a year later, with a new, and very strong claim to his second award. 

The United States Senate, once known with some rationale as "the world's greatest deliberative body*," has nowadays all but ground to a halt, unable to effectively legislate because of the partisan vitriol that prevents compromise on all but the most inoffensive of issues**. Senate confirmation of more than 250 senior military promotions and assignments, normally all but a pass-through action, have been blocked for months because of Mr Tuberville's objection to a Pentagon policy on abortion-related travel. One bit of fallout from this is that, if Mr Tuberville fails to back away from his blockade, the Marine Corps will, as of July 10th, have no confirmed Commandant for the first time in 164 years

Given the way things are going in the world, the lack of such a large number of confirmed leaders in the correct positions is more than an embarrassment, it's a national security issue. The nation's defense is being impaired because of the vanity and personal positions of a single senator whose only qualification for office is that he was once a football coach. And his justification is this: "... this is the rules. We can make a hold on anything we want.”

Ladies and Gentlemen, Dear Readers, the On-Crack Ass Clown for June, 2023, is Alabama Senator Tommy Tuberville - a man proudly and stubbornly willing to put his own ideas and beliefs above the good of the nation.

Have a good day. See you back here tomorrow for Cartoon Saturday. More thoughts then.

Bilbo

* Although this may be a myth. See this article for some history.

** And as we have seen, there's always someone who can take offense to the most inoffensive of issues.

Wednesday, June 28, 2023

"Alpha Males"


As if there weren't enough rampant stupidity going on nowadays, we now have the rise of the "Alpha Male."

The dictionary definition of an "alpha male" is "a male animal having the highest rank in a dominance hierarchy;" it is often applied to the social hierarchies of gorillas, chimpanzees, and other simians, but it has come to have its own meaning in today's human societies as a man who is "the most dominant, powerful, or assertive man in a particular group." Typical "alpha males" include champion athletes, senior military leaders, CEOs of major industries, and so on.


But nowadays, with the culture wars raging around us and insecure (mostly white) men seeing their perceived social and political dominance declining, it's become important to a lot of frightened men to self-identify as "alpha males," as if wishing would make it so. They tend to abound on Twitter, with a prime example being the fellow who identifies himself as "Nick Adams (Alpha Male)" and another being Der Furor, who strikes me as being one of the least alpha of the species. This is a typical example of one of Mr Adams' tweets (a twofer, as it also includes his worship of Der Furor) ...


He seems to have missed the irony that the most recent "Titan" in the news was the one that imploded and sank in the Atlantic. 

There are plenty of other ludicrous signs, posters, and flags depicting the flabby and inarticulate 77-year-old Furor as an imagined magnificent specimen of the "alpha male," such as this one ...
 

and this one ...


These are, of course, stupid. Indeed, they remind me of the characters who refer to themselves as incels.

I don't need to think of myself as an "alpha male" in the current context, or in any context. I try to be a good father and grandfather, deal honestly and courteously with people*, pay my bills, vote, and generally be a good citizen. My sporting days are long past: I ran on the cross-country team in high school (with no particular distinction), played and coached soccer, and (for a while) was a nationally-ranked amateur ballroom dancer in my age and experience category. Today, I work happily in my garden, exercising my alpha authority over weeds and predatory insects. I try not to take myself too seriously ... and when I do, Agnes is always happy to help get me re-grounded.

In a dramatic (and appropriate to our discussion) moment in the series Game of Thrones, Tywin Lannister (played by the brilliant Charles Dance) chastised his petulant nephew King Joffrey by telling him, "Any man who must say 'I am the king' is no true king" ...


And if you have to tell people you're an "alpha male," you need to seek some other Greek letter for yourself ... perhaps mu, for moron.

Have a good day. More thoughts coming.

Bilbo

* Until they give me reason to do otherwise.

Monday, June 26, 2023

Thoughts on Elections



I don't know about you, but I'm really sick of hearing all the noisy, evidence-free whining about election fraud. So far, the only effect of all this horse-hockey has been to undermine public confidence in our elections and in each other, which is not a good thing for a functioning democracy.

How did we get here, and what can we do to fix it?

I'm no expert in constitutional law*, and I'm at best a well-read amateur historian and political commentator, but I've been working as a trained, certified, sworn Election Officer here in Fairfax County, Virginia, for more than ten years, which I think gives me a certain amount of credibility to comment on election law and procedures. All that being said, I think most of our electoral problems** stem from the Constitution - specifically, the first clause of Article 1, Section 4, which reads

"The Times, Places and Manner of holding Elections for Senators and Representatives, shall be prescribed in each State by the Legislature*** thereof; but the Congress may at any time by Law make or alter such Regulations, except as to the Places of chusing (sic) Senators."

The obvious result of this unfortunate guidance is that we have 50 different sets of rules, regulations, and procedures to govern our elections†. This means that an observer accustomed to the procedures in their own state may look at the procedures in another state and misinterpret fully normal and legal actions as evidence of chicanery. 


Why was the Constitution written this way? I'm not sure what the historical record says, but I suspect it was to prevent some future, overly-powerful federal government from being able to dictate the results of state-level elections. 

The thing that wonders me about the wording of the Constitution, though, is that it specifies that the states control the times, places, and manner of elections for senators and representatives - not for the Presidency. 

I can tilt my head to one side, squint, and sort of see an argument for states to decide their own procedures for electing senators and representatives because of their individual needs, desires, traditions, and histories. For instance, Texans might want to settle election disputes by gunfire at high noon, where Oregonians might resort to logrolling contests, or Floridians to alligator wrestling. But when we talk about the election of a President who (theoretically) represents every single American and the nation as a whole, I think it makes sense to be uniform in our approach. How much of the flailing agony about whether to count absentee ballots before or after votes cast in person, or what the design of ballots should look like, or where the final tabulation of votes is conducted, could have been avoided if only the states all did things the same way?

I also think that we've gone so far in our attempts to prevent election fraud that we've made it easier to create forced errors that can create the illusion of fraud where none exists. For instance, here in Virginia we have very detailed and thorough procedures for making sure everything is secure and all the numbers add up. During the election process, we have very detailed guidelines of what sorts of identification are valid and what to do when there's any question of a voter's eligibility. When the polls close, we have agonizingly detailed and complicated procedures for squaring the number of voters checked in with the number of ballots issued with the number of ballots scanned by the voting tabulation machines. Every single ballot must be accounted for, every number needs to balance, and all the numbers must be painstakingly entered by hand into multiple forms for submission to various agencies. Every seal removed from every machine must be witnessed by at least two people, and returned to the correct office in the appropriate envelope. The numbers of every seal removed from or applied to anything must be certified by at least two people and carefully noted on the appropriate forms, which must be returned to the proper office in the correct envelope. Etc, etc, etc.

Can you see where there might be room for human error in all this?

All this folderol is necessary because the Constitution builds complication and uncertainty into our elections, because lawyers gotta litigate, and because power-hungry people have undermined trust in our electoral processes for cheap political advantage.

My recommendation: enact a law to standardize voting processes and procedures for presidential elections across all 50 states. Naturally, this would be difficult, because each state will want to keep its own procedures and force the others to adopt them. For this reason, a bipartisan national commission on voting standardization would need to be tasked with studying the problem and making a formal recommendation.

It's a bizarre fantasy, but you should see some of my other ones††.

Benjamin Franklin is reported to have answered a person who asked what sort of government the Founders were creating by saying, "A republic, if you can keep it." Sadly, at the rate we're going, we won't keep it much longer.

Have a good day. Vote carefully and responsibly. More thoughts coming.

Bilbo

* And neither are most of the people who howl loudest about what they think the Constitution says.

** Other than the quality of the candidates.

*** You may recall that we discussed the craziness of the "Independent Legislature" theory in a previous post.

† It's not only elections that are complicated by allowing each state to set its own rules ... consider our widely-varying standards of education (or non-education), medical care, firearms laws, etc, etc.

†† On second thought, you probably shouldn't.

Sunday, June 25, 2023

Musical Sunday


As the legal nets close in around Der Furor, his family, and those who supported his attempts to steal classified materials, an election, and a nation, I can imagine that this classic tune from Warren Zevon is a very popular song at Mar-a-Lago and other luxury hideaways ...


Of course, given Der Furor's record of ignoring the advice of his lawyers, not paying them, and throwing them under the nearest bus when necessary, he'll probably have more luck with the guns and the money.

Have a good day and enjoy the rest of your weekend. More thoughts coming.

Bilbo
  

Saturday, June 24, 2023

Cartoon Saturday


Who designs these $^&@# weeks, anyhow?

Attorney John Eastman, who devised the illegal "fake electors" scheme to help Der Furor steal the 2020 election, has gone on trial in Los Angeles and could lose his law license; an armed uprising appears to be taking place in Russia as mercenaries of the Wagner Group have attacked and apparently seized the major city and military hub of Rostov-on-Don; under pressure from right-wing extremists in his caucus, House Speaker Kevin McCarthy said he supports the idea of expunging the two impeachments of Der Furor; in the latest example of solidarity within GOP congressional ranks, Empty G referred to fellow low-wattage ultra-conservative bulb Lauren Boebert as a "little bitch;" and in Georgia, a man has been sentenced to life in prison for murdering his ex-wife's divorce lawyer and setting fire to his office ... there is no truth to the rumor that Der Furor has been considering a similar way of getting rid of his lawyers without paying them.

I was too lazy to pick out a theme for this week's collection of cartoons, so I just decided to wander through the unsorted file and pick out a few good ones for this week ...

When you run out of excuses in court ...  


As the Magic 8 Ball would say, "Signs point to 'yes'" ...


It's important to read the fine print ...


Well, that's how it worked out, anyhow ...


Times change ...


If I were a gentleman farmer, this would be my farm ...


Perhaps this is how we ended up with the House Freedom Caucus ...


I think this could be an issue for future sales ...


What Texas didn't buy, Florida did ...


"The Piranha Club" used to be my favorite cartoon strip, and I was distraught a few years back when Bud Grace stopped writing it. In this case, it looks as if Der Furor may have been in the congregation ...


And that's it for this week ... I hope there was something in the collection for each of you.

Have a good day and a great weekend ... more thoughts tomorrow, when Musical Sunday returns.

Bilbo

Friday, June 23, 2023

Great Moments in Editing and Signage


The way this week has gone, we all need a few laughs, don't we? 

For dads of a certain age, it's the best gift around ...  


Well, it certainly is! ...


They sell these at the golf club snack bar, no doubt ...


The first one is very popular at GOP luncheons ...


Thanks, but I'll pass ...


A concise summary of the GOP platform for governance ...


But is it campfireable? ...


I think I might have found Jim Jordan's problem ...


I'd go with the tissue paper if I were you ...


I wonder how many people will attend both, just to be prepared ...


And that's it for this week's collection of GMIE&S (I was too lazy to type the whole thing) ... I hope you enjoyed it.

Have a good day and be sure to come back tomorrow for Cartoon Saturday ... you know you need it.

Bilbo

Thursday, June 22, 2023

Dumb Astronomical Acronyms



Acronyms are important communicational shortcuts which allow us to save breath and column space by reducing long names to strings of letters and numbers. In many cases, particularly in the naming of laws by Congress, the acronyms are made to be clever, designed to spell out something that relates to the meaning of the law, such as the somewhat ill-named USA PATRIOT Act passed after the 9/11 terrorist attacks - "Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism."

Fevered acronyms aren't just limited to government, though. I found this cool database while perusing Miss Cellania's website a few days ago: Dumb Or Overly Forced Astronomical Acronyms Site (DOOFAAS). It contains gems like:

ARMPIT - ASKAP Rotation Measure and Polarisation InvestigaTion

BIGASS - Bright Infrared Galaxy All Sky Survey 

CASA-BLANCA - Chicago Air Shower Array - Broad LAteral Non-imaging Cerenkov Array

COCOA-PUFS - COordinated Campaign of Observations and Analysis, Photosphere to Upper atmosphere, of a Fast-rotating Star 

GADZOOKS! - Gadolinium Antineutrino Detector Zealously Outperforming Old Kamiokande, Super! 

HO-BAGS - Hubble Observatory BAckground Galaxy Survey

and,

POOPSY - Phase One Observing Proposal SYstem

Check it out ... and if you have a good acronym for anything (not necessarily astronomy-related), leave a comment!

Have a good day. More thoughts tomorrow, when we examine the latest Great Moments in Editing and Signage. See you then!

Bilbo

Wednesday, June 21, 2023

The Unitary Executive and the Independent Legislature


There have been a lot of bizarre political theories advanced in the course of our national history, but two of the most bizarre and - in my opinion - dangerous have gained new currency in this era of conservative ascendence: the "Unitary Executive" and the "Independent Legislature."

The "Unitary Executive" theory maintains that all federal government power resides in the president, who has unrestricted authority to direct every aspect of the executive branch of the government independent of any oversight or challenge by the legislative or judicial branches. It has no basis in the Constitution as written*, but has been advocated by conservatives since at least the presidency of Richard Nixon and - especially - in the era of Der Furor.

The "Independent Legislature" theory, while legally dubious, at least has a tenuous connection to the Constitution, which delegates the power to administer federal elections to the states. The "Independent Legislature" theory grows out of an interpretation of how much power has been delegated to whom, and is based on interpretation of two relevant clauses in the Constitution. One is the Elections Clause (Article 1, Section 4, Clause 1), which reads, “The Times, Places and Manner of holding Elections for Senators and Representatives, shall be prescribed in each State by the Legislature thereof; but the Congress may at any time by Law make or alter such Regulations.” The other is the Presidential Electors Clause (Article 2, Section 1, Clause 2), which reads, “Each State shall appoint, in such Manner as the Legislature thereof may direct, a Number of Electors.”

The dispute hinges on the meaning of the word legislature.

Advocates of the Independent Legislature theory insist that legislature as written in the Constitution means exactly that - the elected legislature and only the elected legislature - and that laws enacted and decisions made by state legislatures are not subject to review, challenge, or oversight by any other state-level actors, such as governors or the courts.

Both of these theories are wonderful devices for ensuring full employment for lawyers and pundits, but are questionable ... if not idiotic ... on historic and philosophical grounds.

It strains credulity to believe that the framers of the Constitution, having just succeeded in gaining independence from a king with virtually unlimited powers, would even consider creating a president with unbounded royal authority - a "Unitary Executive." The entire concept of separation of powers among the legislative, executive, and judicial branches of government argues against it.

The separation of powers also argues against the concept of an "Independent Legislature." In the absence of executive and judicial oversight, an independent legislature is no less threatening to fundamental freedoms than a "Unitary Executive." Any organ of government that can operate without challenge or oversight threatens the very nature of the government structure created by the Constitution, especially in states in which all three branches of the government are controlled by a single party.  

If you're looking for a convenient way to undermine the legitimacy of government and the truncation of our freedom, these two bizarrely un-American political theories are for you. Think about this when you decide how to cast your votes in the upcoming elections.

Have a good day. More thoughts coming.

Bilbo

* This is conveniently ignored by those who insist on the doctrines of originalism and textualism when invoking the Constitution.

Monday, June 19, 2023

The Great Seal of the United States, Updated


I originally planned this post for tomorrow, but then realized that because I'll be working as an election officer at the primary and have to be on-site at 5:00 AM, I'd go ahead and post it now, a day early ... 

On June 20th, 1782, Congress adopted the Great Seal of the United States. The front, or obverse, side of the Great Seal looks like this ...


and the somewhat less-familiar reverse side looks like this ...


The Great Seal contains all sorts of meaningful imagery, as explained here ... 


Note that the eagle's head is turned toward the olive branch, indicating a preference for peace over war, and that he holds a scroll bearing the original national motto* - E Pluribus Unum, meaning "From Many, One." 

The reverse side of the Seal is laden with Masonic imagery and with two inscriptions: Annuit Coeptis, meaning "He (the Almighty) Has Approved Our Undertaking," and Novus Ordo Seclorum, meaning "A New Order of the Ages."

The Great Seal is colorful, meaningful, and heraldically impressive, but we are no longer living in 1782. Times have changed, and many of our national ideals have fallen far short in practice.

In a 2015 post titled Thoughts About Flags, I proposed a redesign of the American flag to incorporate symbols more meaningful to today's citizens. When I realized that tomorrow was the anniversary of the adoption of the Great Seal, I decided to attempt a redesign of the Seal more appropriate to how we have developed as a nation. Sadly, my limited artistic skills fell short of the level needed to do the job properly, and so I decided to just seek a single image that would sum up our national character as it exists today. That image is, of course, an actual SEAL ...


I think this is an appropriate replacement for the traditional Great Seal, as it incorporates the things most indicative of modern America: aggression, rugged manliness**, a fetish for the unlimited ownership and employment of powerful weaponry, the cosplay of wannabe heroes who need to pack iron for a trip to Dunkin' Donuts, a camera to record the misdeeds of those around us, a spring-loaded readiness to react to perceived limits on freedom (as individually interpreted), and a mask to hide one's identity (although not, gawd forbid, to protect us from disease). 

Ladies and Gentlemen, Dear Readers, I give you the 2023 version of the Great Seal ... a sad reflection of the evolution of our national character. 

Have a good day. More thoughts coming.

Bilbo

* "E Pluribus Unum" was the original, de facto motto of the United States until July 30th, 1956, when a joint resolution of Congress established "In God We Trust" as the official national motto. 

** Not applicable to Senator Josh Hawley, despite his unintentionally comic literary aspirations.

Sunday, June 18, 2023

Fathers' Day, 2023


If you were looking for Musical Sunday, don’t despair – I have my traditional (and slightly updated) tribute to fathers today, so you'll have to wait two weeks for your music fix. You'll survive.

Today is Fathers’ Day, the day we honor the man who contributed half of our chromosomes and many of the life lessons that shaped us into who we are. 

Fathers don’t get the same degree of respect that mothers do. They work in design, rather than production, after all, and don’t earn the credit that mothers do for going through nine months of pregnancy followed by months of sleepless nights and years of worry. And truth be told, many fathers don’t earn that respect. For all too many men, fatherhood is an unfortunate side effect of good sex, and a child is an impediment to the enjoyment of life. For many men, fathering a lot of children by a lot of women is the imagined sign of a manly stud ... not of lives betrayed by a thoughtless ass who thinks with his willy instead of his brain and heart.

Luckily, though, there are many good men out there trying their best to be good fathers. It’s not an easy job, and not everyone is good at it ... but fortunately, enough do.

I have often reflected back on the course of my life, and have tried to be a better grandfather than I was a father. This is probably normal. You’ve seen more of life, and had more experiences – good and bad – to share. If you’re the grandfather, you get to be the gentle, wise, let-‘em-do-what-they-want fellow the grandchildren love to see, rather than the grouchy, tired father who has to put bread on the table, crack the whip, and enforce the discipline. You get all the joy of holding and loving the children with none of the negatives ... when the baby needs changing, for instance, there's none of that messy fuss - you just give her back to her mother. What's not to like?

I think that, from the father's perspective, we have our children too early in life. We're still learning how to be adults, and all of a sudden we're fathers, responsible for teaching our children all the lessons of life that we haven't even learned yet. Our children grow up as much in spite of our mistakes as because of our excellence in parenting.

When you get to be a father, you look at your own father differently. It was Mark Twain who supposedly once said, "When I was a boy of fourteen, my father was so ignorant I could hardly stand to have the old man around. But when I got to be twenty-one, I was astonished at how much the old man had learned in seven years."

It's true.

A good father, as I came in time to understand, is a gift beyond all price. The gold standard for fatherhood is, of course, my own father. He fought the Nazis in the skies over World War II Europe, ran his own business, raised four children and buried one, and cared for mom through the long years of misery as Alzheimer's gradually destroyed the mind of the dynamic and witty woman he loved. Dad left us eight years ago, and I no longer get to hear his jokes and stories and learn the lessons he still had to teach, yet he remains the man to whom I owe whatever shreds of honor, decency, and manhood that I can claim.

This was the man who took the war in the air to the Nazis* in 1944 ...


After the war, he turned successful businessman, running his own photographic studio and drawing the attention of the ladies ...


In 1974, he was able to celebrate the birth of his first grandchild, Jason - who is now a father with four children of his own. Yes, the geek on the left is me, and Dad's mother - my paternal grandmother - is in the middle.


And the years rolled on ... here he is in December of 2013 at his 90th birthday party in Pittsburgh, two years before his death, surrounded by the friends, fishing buddies, and family members who came out to honor him in spite of some really ghastly winter weather ...


I'd like to think I made him satisfied, if not proud.

It's politically correct nowadays to say that a child can grow up just fine in a household with same-sex parents, but you'll never be able to convince me that it's the same as being raised by a father and a mother who love each other, treat each other with dignity and respect, set a good example, teach their gender-specific life lessons, and subordinate their own dreams and desires to the momentous task of raising a brand new human being.

Have a good day. Honor your father. And if you're a father, be a good one. Your children ... and indeed, the future ... are depending on you.

More thoughts coming.

Bilbo

* The real ones, the ones that murdered millions of innocent people and destroyed most of Europe, not the imaginary ones to which ignorant people in this country compare their political opponents.

Saturday, June 17, 2023

Cartoon Saturday


The news just gets weirder all the time ...

Ted Kaczynski, the so-called "Unabomber" who murdered three people and injured 23 others during a 17-year reign of terror, died by suicide at age 81 in a federal prison hospital; a defiant Der Furor, arraigned in federal court on 37 felony charges of hoarding classified documents and conspiring to obstruct justice, denied everything, pictured himself as a victim, and immediately began fundraising; Louisiana's Fort Polk has been renamed as Fort Johnson in honor of Army Sgt William Henry Johnson, a black World War I veteran whose heroism earned him a posthumous Medal of Honor; Jack Teixiera, the American airman accused of stealing and disseminating classified information, was formally indicted by a federal grand jury in Massachusetts ... he may have trouble finding a lawyer, as Der Furor has virtually every as-yet-unindicted shyster already on retainer; and the manager of the Harvard Medical School morgue has been arrested and charged with buying and selling human remains, including selling dissected human faces for $600 to the manager of "Kat's Creepy Creations," a Salem, Massachussetts-based company who intended to tan them into leather for ... subsequent use.

This week, with our politics and our legal profession both descending into snakepits, I thought I'd pull up a collection of cartoons about everybody's favorite snake lady, Medusa.

Sometimes, it's tough to do the right thing ...  


She must have had a tough childhood ...


Imagine that ...


Oh, boy ...


I'm not sure tech support can help with this one ...


It's an understandable concern ...


The "big snake" era ...


Taking a selfie isn't always a good idea ...


The classic tale, retold ...


She has rather specialized grooming issues ...


And that's it for our salute to everyone's favorite serpent lady ... I hope you enjoyed it and didn't get ... stoned.

Have a good day and a great weekend. Come back tomorrow, when we celebrate Fathers Day, 2023. More thoughts then.

Bilbo

Friday, June 16, 2023

The Left-Cheek Ass Clown for June, 2023


The relentlessly depressing news had caused me to despair of being able to select a suitable winner for this period. I was greatly tempted to use today's award to note the most recent dishonorable conduct of such paragons of wretched behavior as Der Furor, Mitch McConnell, Kevin McCarthy, and Empty G, but an online discussion with my friend Eve-Angeline caused me to look backward - past the behavior of today's lunatics - to recognize one of the people who worked hard to make today's rampant political ass clownery possible.

Ladies and Gentlemen, Dear Readers, I am presenting the tinfoil and toilet paper crown of

The Left-Cheek Ass Clown for June, 2023


to

Newt Gingrich*


Newt Gingrich, during his twenty years (1979-1999) as a member of the House of Representatives for Georgia's 6th District, House Minority Leader, and Speaker of the House, was largely responsible for creating the conditions which laid the groundwork for the chaotic dysfunction of today's House. He has been "credited" by political scientists with undermining democratic norms through his refusal to compromise on legislation and the ethical shortcomings which resulted in a reprimand from the House and his ejection from his position as Speaker of the House in 1998.

Mr Gingrich's combative approach to politics, embrace of hateful language, and relentless hyper-partisanship laid the groundwork for Der Furor's later ability to ignore democratic norms and squander the dignity of a functioning representative government. He openly questioned the patriotism of Democrats, accused them of corruption, compared them to fascists, and accused them of wanting to destroy the United States ... all activities that comprise the standard playbook of today's GOP. In addition, he previewed today's scorched-earth Republican politics by encouraging and overseeing several major shutdowns of the federal government in an attempt to achieve his political goals.

No longer in government, Mr Gingrich continues his disruptive political role, fanning the flames of disunity by supporting Der Furor's baseless claims of fraud in the 2020 election and continuing to eschew compromise as a sign of weakness rather than a principled attempt to find common ground with one's opponents. 

Ladies and Gentlemen, Dear Readers, the Left-Cheek Ass Clown for June, 2023, is political gadfly and general nuisance Newt Gingrich ... Georgia's greatest gift to political chicanery until the advent of Empty G.

Have a good day, and be sure to come back tomorrow for Cartoon Saturday, when we will honor our proliferation of political snakes with a salute to - who else? - Medusa. More thoughts then.

Bilbo

* This is actually Mr Gingrich's second award, but his first as a solo awardee. On November 23, 2011, I presented a shared Ass Clown Award (this was prior to my adoption of the Right-Cheek/Left-Cheek/On-Crack system) to the "Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction" (the so-called "supercommittee") and to Mr Gingrich for his assertion that child labor laws were "truly stupid" and undermined the work ethic of America's children ... an amazing position coming back again in today's cruel and ugly GOP.

Sunday, June 11, 2023

Poetry Sunday


Dorothy Parker was one of the most brilliant and pithy commentators ever to snarkily grace a page. A charter member of the famous Algonquin Round Table, she traded barbs with the best of them while churning out a huge amount of clever prose and poetry. 


Today's poem is typical Parker, and might be recited by a lot of disgruntled people today ...

Symptom Recital
by Dorothy Parker

I do not like my state of mind;
I'm bitter, querulous, unkind.
I hate my legs, I hate my hands, I do not yearn for lovelier lands.
I dread the dawn's recurrent light;
I hate to go to bed at night.
I snoot at simple, earnest folk.
I cannot take the gentlest joke.
I find no peace in paint or type.
My world is but a lot of tripe.
I'm disillusioned, empty-breasted.
For what I think, I'd be arrested.
I am not sick, I am not well.
My quondam dreams are shot to hell.
My soul is crushed, my spirit sore;
I do not like me any more.
I cavil, quarrel, grumble, grouse.
I ponder on the narrow house.
I shudder at the thought of men....
I'm due to fall in love again.

I was born too late, and in the wrong place, to ever have met Dorothy Parker, but the humorist and curmudgeon in me thinks I'd have liked her ...

I cavil, quarrel, grumble, grouse.
I ponder on the narrow house.

Have a good day and enjoy the rest of your weekend. More thoughts coming.

Bilbo