I was kinda hoping we could agree to start IGNORING THE FUCK out of him around here. I do admit I’m somewhat addicted to scanning for the latest fiasco, several times a day (hour), but maybe we could do a 12-step program instead.
ETA: On second thought, we gotta ride this train to January 20th, then follow the progress of the cases that will be brought against him and his ilk.
I’m addicted too. I have the co-morbidity of watching my own government (Aus) trying to navigate a Trumpian path to #WINNING at all costs, deep corruption shit notwithstanding.
I’ve never been so enthralled (or scared) by a year as much as 2020. And that’s WITHOUT all the Covid19 stuff happening.
One bright light, Jacinda Ardern won the NZ election yesterday…maybe a beacon of hope in this terrible world?
It’s been an interminably long four thousand years.
We do need to permanently lock this thread when the election results are formally declared. Maybe have a Zoom GTG with beverages and snacks (provided for oneself, of course).
Then maybe there should be a Transition to Normalcy thread but without the CFSG’s name in the title. I don’t want to see that hateful, disgusting, vomit-inducing configuration of letters all day, every day, every where any more. In the future, I might start referring to him as DJT. Remember how everyone gave me grief for referring to him as “thump”? Good times.
Even dealing with this horrendous pandemic will seem doable once we have national leadership. Yeah, Joe is going to get all kinds of misery from all over, but that goes with the territory of being at the top. It will be rough going, but the major part (to quote Gerald Ford) of “our long national nightmare” will be over. Not ALL over, but the heart of it will have a wooden stake driven through it and its mouth stuffed with garlic.
Aside: I claim for myself the distinction of having avoided hearing DJT’s voice at all during this, his (so-called) presidency. The last time I sat and listened to him utter more than a couple of words was when he debated Hillary before the 2016 election. Since that day, whenever he has come on the radio, I immediately turn him off. I don’t watch news on TV or on my computer, phone, or kindle. I READ what he says, but I have spared myself the sound of his voice for these four years. Hell, I want some kind of a badge for that!
This.
Yesterday my nine-year-old son happened to be thinking about colleges; we talked about famously good ones, and he asked me, “what’s the WORST college?”
I told him, “You’re not going to believe this…but, what name would you give to something — anything — if you wanted to convey to everyone that it’s the WORST of its kind? The worst car, the worst tree…whatever.”
Kid: “Trump?”
Me: “You got it! There actually was a Trump U, and it was a complete scam.”
(Then I told him about Bugs Bunny’s “Whassamatta U”…)
It’s not a matter of censorship; it’s an example of how misinformation spreads. I know the argument will be “Let the people read and decide for themselves” The problem is that people are not always in a position to judge misinformation, particularly when news outlets disseminate bad information deliberately treating it as if it were newsworthy.
We live in a time when people are increasingly having a harder time differentiating between information that has legitimate foundation in fact, and information that does not, or worse, information that is partially couched in fact but uses fact to sell a larger false theme. Most of us know, for instance, that the most effective lies are those which use facts and omissions to mislead.