2018 archive
“An Armed Society Is a Polite Society” 0
If at first you don’t polite, try try again . . . .
“My grandson did not deserve to die, he didn’t,” said Stamey. “There’s nothing this little boy could’ve ever done wrong in his life for anybody to have ever done anything to him to hurt him.”
Intentional or not Benjamin Goodson is facing charges of murder.
The story goes on to say that alcohol may have been involved. Stupid was certainly involved. The shooter has been charged.
Light Bloggery 0
I am somewhat relieved at the results of the election. I have been more stressed than I have let on in these electrons.
At the least, the Trumpling has been interrupted.
And I need a break.
Afterthought:
Perhaps “impeded” would have been a much better term than “interrupted.” I gather that today was a cavalcade of crazy in Trumplandia.
I’ll catch up with the news tomorrow.
As I said, I needed a break. Watching one’s country go crazy is rather stressful.
“An Armed Society Is a Polite Society” 0
This news report finds a bright side to NRA Paradise.
(snip)
Although the tragedy has cut a young life short, good has already been born from the pain. The family says some of Alyssa’s major organs are being donated so others may live.
Jesus, Mary, and Joseph.
We are a lost society.
“Backfire Intelligence” 0
Meet the Keystone Kops of political (in)operatives: Joe Patrice dissects the plot to pay some women to gin up phony sexual misconduct allegations against Robert Mueller.
“The Other” 0
In a piece that I suspect fear will be quite useful in examining the results of this election, regardless of the outcome, Cannon Thomas explores the dynamics of “us” vs. “them.” Here’s a bit:
Here’s what mobilization against “them” looks like:
- We identify people or groups of people who are a threat to what we value and begin to have intense automatic emotional reactions to them. These emotions are well-studied and arise before we have even mentally processed the content of what the other person is saying.
- That gut emotional response shapes and informs all of our opinions and attitudes. The reaction precedes any rational awareness of the content of the issue, and our attitudes are very hard to change from that point. We create very elaborate and convincing arguments for what we already felt. People are wired to assume what they see is all there is, so we fail to realize that we are becoming entrenched in a very limited perspective.
- We minimize or marginalize the other person or group. We process them as less human, more limited or impaired on a moral level, and as less “right” than we are. How else could they fail to see what is so obvious to us?
- We mobilize against them to protect what is “right” or “good.” Sometimes we do it with the sense of being engaged in a moral good; sometimes we do it with a frustrated defensiveness. Regardless, we fight for what we believe is right.
The result, in any situation where cooperation is required, is disastrous.
Remember, for Republicans, everybody else is a “them.”
“An Armed Society Is a Polite Society” 0
Rack up another one for politeness.
The boy did not survive.
QOTD 0
Craig Washington (in a floor debate in the Texas legislature about banning flag-burning as a means of protest):
H/T to my brother for telling me of this quotation.












