Showing posts with label conservatives. Show all posts
Showing posts with label conservatives. Show all posts

Monday, November 18, 2024

Political Calculus Behind Trump’s 2024 Nominations Amid Legal Challenges

Considering convicted felon, adjudicated (serial) sex abuser, and now once fired, exPOTUS, President-elect Donald Trump's 2024 cabinet nominations, IF Putin wanted to, could he have done better for himself than Trump has in selecting these people?


Was Donald Trump America's best choice for POTUS in 2024? There were several figures who could have potentially been strong alternatives to Donald Trump, depending on one's perspective and priorities.

For the Republican Party, while Florida Governor Ron DeSantis was initially seen as a top contender, positioning himself as a more effective version of Trump, his campaign failed to resonate with enough voters, leading to his early exit from the race​. Similarly, South Carolina's former Governor and UN Ambassador Nikki Haley was another prominent Republican hopeful, but her campaign struggled to gain traction against Trump's dominance​. As a result, many GOP voters rallied around Trump, with his message of "retribution" and his position as the leading voice in the party sealing his nomination​.

On the Democratic side, Governor Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan was seen as a potential star who could have appealed to the Midwest electorate with her focus on abortion rights and her ability to win in a swing state. However, she chose not to run. Other figures like Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker were also considered but ultimately did not enter the race.

Given these dynamics, while far better alternatives to Trump existed, none seemed to have the broad support or impact that could have unseated him within the Republican Party in 2024. The race ultimately narrowed down to Trump as the dominant Republican figure, with limited competition.

For now, we'll skip over the utter lack of appropriate ethical and legal enforcement by such as Congress during the POTUS45 administration in failing to properly impeach and expel Pres. Trump, and the DOJ after he left office. Delays, obfuscations, poor SCOTUS decisions, questionable judicial decisions, mostly by Trump-appointed judges like Judge Cannon, and so on and on... Donald Trump seems to be able to blur reality for too many in far too many forms.


But now that he is president-elect, what about Donald Trump's candidate choices?


Full list of Trump's Cabinet picks so far (CBS News list November 16, 2024 / 4:41 PM EST ):

Here are the people Trump has chosen for critical Cabinet posts and other top White House jobs: 
  • White House Chief of Staff: Susie Wiles 
  • Secretary of State: Marco Rubio 
  • Attorney General: Matt Gaetz 
  • Deputy Attorney General: Todd Blanche 
  • HHS Secretary: Robert F. Kennedy Jr. 
  • U.N. Ambassador: Elise Stefanik 
  • "Border Czar": Tom Homan 
  • Defense Secretary: Pete Hegseth 
  • Secretary of Veterans Affairs: Doug Collins 
  • National Security Adviser: Michael Waltz 
  • Interior Secretary: Doug Burgum 
  • White House Counsel: William McGinley 
  • Solicitor General: Dean John Sauer 
  • Secretary of Homeland Security: Kristi Noem 
  • CIA Director: John Ratcliffe 
  • Director of National Intelligence: Tulsi Gabbard 
  • EPA Administrator: Lee Zeldin 
  • U.S. Ambassador to Israel: Mike Huckabee 
  • U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York: Jay Clayton 
  • Department of Government Efficiency: Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy 
  • Deputy Chief of Staff: Dan Scavino 
  • Deputy Chief of Staff for policy and homeland security adviser: Stephen Miller 
  • Deputy Chief of Staff for legislative, political and public affairs: James Blair 
  • Deputy Chief of Staff for communications and personnel: Taylor Budowich 
  • Presidential Personnel Office Head: Sergio Gor 
  • White House Communications Director: Steven Cheung 
  • White House Press Secretary: Karoline Leavitt 
  • Secretary of Energy: Chris Wright
If Vladimir Putin or any foreign leader wanted to shape U.S. policy to their advantage, it’s arguable whether they could do better than a cabinet filled with loyalists and ideologically extreme figures, as the hypothetical 2024 Trump cabinet list suggests. Here’s how some of these picks might align with or counter Russia’s interests:
  1. Susie Wiles (Chief of Staff) – A seasoned Trump ally with a reputation for loyalty and political maneuvering. A highly loyal and insular inner circle might reduce broader strategic input, potentially making foreign influence more impactful.

  2. Marco Rubio (Secretary of State) – Known as a hawk on Russia, Rubio might pose a challenge for pro-Russian policies. However, his nomination could also be symbolic if broader foreign policy decisions remain under Trump’s personal control.

  3. Matt Gaetz (Attorney General) and Todd Blanche (Deputy AG) – Gaetz’s controversial stance on various issues, including foreign policy, could make the Justice Department less focused on enforcing laws related to foreign interference.

  4. Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (HHS Secretary) – A skeptic of traditional health policies, Kennedy might be more preoccupied with domestic health debates than international health security, which could indirectly benefit countries like Russia by reducing U.S. global influence.

  5. Elise Stefanik (U.N. Ambassador) – While Stefanik has taken pro-Trump stances, her relatively moderate past could mean some resistance to aligning U.N. positions with Russian interests, but this would depend on directives from the White House.

  6. Pete Hegseth (Defense Secretary) – With a focus on "America First" policies, Hegseth might deprioritize international alliances like NATO, which aligns closely with Putin's long-term goals of weakening Western defense coalitions.

  7. Kristi Noem (Homeland Security) – Known for aligning with Trump’s hardline views on immigration and border security, her focus would likely be domestic, potentially leaving vulnerabilities in cyber defense, where Russia has been highly active.

  8. John Ratcliffe (CIA Director) and Tulsi Gabbard (DNI) – Ratcliffe, a staunch Trump supporter, and Gabbard, who has been accused of echoing Russian talking points in the past, might introduce significant shifts in intelligence policy, potentially undermining traditional counter-Russia strategies.

  9. Mike Huckabee (Ambassador to Israel) – Huckabee’s strong pro-Israel stance might not align directly with Russia’s Middle Eastern ambitions but could complicate U.S.-Russia relations by solidifying U.S. positions in contentious regions.

  10. Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy (Gov’t Efficiency) – Both are known for contrarian and individualistic approaches. Musk’s global business ties (including in countries like China and possibly Russia) could raise questions about foreign influence.

  11. Stephen Miller (Policy and Homeland Security Adviser) – With a focus on domestic immigration issues, Miller’s presence could detract from broader strategic planning on international threats, benefiting adversaries.

  12. Chris Wright (Energy Secretary) – A focus on U.S. energy independence could reduce reliance on foreign oil but might also disrupt global energy markets in ways that could benefit Russian exports indirectly.

Could Putin do better?

It depends on Putin’s objectives:

  • If he wants a weaker NATO: Appointees like Hegseth and Gabbard could push policies that deprioritize alliances.
  • If he seeks to influence U.S. intelligence: Ratcliffe and Gabbard might steer intelligence agencies toward Trump-aligned narratives.
  • If he prefers U.S. domestic turmoil: Figures like Gaetz and Miller could exacerbate internal divisions, distracting from international concerns.

Ultimately, this cabinet’s effectiveness in advancing Putin’s interests depends on Trump’s leadership style and whether his administration prioritizes domestic issues to the detriment of international strategies.

Digging deeper...

Analyzing Trump's proposed cabinet choices in terms of their alignment with Russian President Vladimir Putin’s potential goals requires an understanding of how these figures might contribute to political instability, weaken democratic norms, or adopt policies favorable to Russia. Here are key points based on publicly known positions and controversies:

1. Chaos and Undermining Institutions

  • Matt Gaetz (Attorney General): Gaetz has been a divisive figure in Congress, often accused of contributing to polarization. His appointment could lead to legal battles that weaken the DOJ’s credibility, undermining public trust in legal institutions.
  • Stephen Miller (Deputy Chief of Staff for Policy): Known for his hardline, anti-immigration policies, Miller’s presence might stoke social and racial tensions, potentially destabilizing internal unity in the U.S.

2. Pro-Russia or Geopolitical Shifts

  • Tulsi Gabbard (Director of National Intelligence): Gabbard has been criticized for appearing on Russian state media and for positions seen as sympathetic to Russian narratives, including her opposition to U.S. intervention in Syria and skepticism of NATO policies. Her role in intelligence could lead to a downplaying of Russian threats.
  • Mike Huckabee (Ambassador to Israel): Huckabee’s strong support for Israel aligns with Trump's pro-Israel policies but could exacerbate tensions in the Middle East, diverting U.S. focus from Europe or Russian activities.

3. Anti-Democratic Trends

  • Tom Homan (Border Czar): Homan’s appointment could reinforce militarization of immigration policy, leading to domestic unrest and international criticism, potentially diminishing U.S. moral authority on human rights.
  • Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy (Government Efficiency): Musk’s unpredictable actions on platforms like X (formerly Twitter) and Ramaswamy’s anti-establishment rhetoric could add to governmental dysfunction and public distrust in governance.

4. Weakening Environmental and Regulatory Policies

  • Lee Zeldin (EPA Administrator): Zeldin’s history of opposing climate change regulations aligns with policies that weaken U.S. commitments to combating global warming, indirectly aiding Russia’s economy, which heavily relies on fossil fuels.

5. Diminishing Global Leadership

  • Marco Rubio (Secretary of State): While Rubio has criticized Russia in the past, his focus on China as the primary adversary could lead to a strategic deprioritization of Russian threats. This could align with Putin’s interests by shifting U.S. attention.

Potential Impacts

  • These appointments, if executed as proposed, could:
    • Amplify partisan divisions and erode democratic norms.
    • Downplay Russia’s geopolitical threats, creating more room for Russian influence.
    • Undermine U.S. alliances, such as NATO, which are central to containing Russian aggression.
    • Foster internal unrest that distracts from international policy.

Regarding Donald Trump's career criminality orientation...

Donald Trump faces a series of serious legal challenges, including multiple indictments and criminal charges stemming from a variety of alleged activities:

  1. Classified Documents Case: Trump has been charged with mishandling classified documents after leaving the White House. This includes 32 counts of willful retention of national defense information under the Espionage Act, as well as charges of conspiracy to obstruct justice. Allegations suggest he retained top-secret documents and attempted to conceal them even after federal authorities issued subpoenas for their return. Additional accusations include attempting to destroy security footage subpoenaed by the FBI.

  2. Efforts to Overturn the 2020 Election: Trump was indicted in August 2023 on four counts related to the January 6 Capitol attack and broader attempts to overturn the 2020 election. This indictment claims Trump coordinated efforts to remain in power, including pressuring state officials and the Department of Justice and organizing false elector slates.

  3. Hush Money Payments: Trump also faces state-level charges in New York related to falsifying business records to conceal hush money payments made during the 2016 campaign. He pleaded not guilty to 34 felony counts in this case.

  4. Georgia Election Subversion Case: Trump was charged with racketeering in Georgia, alongside 18 co-defendants, for allegedly attempting to overturn the state's 2020 election results. This includes pressuring officials to "find" votes and participating in schemes to mislead election processes.

In total, Trump is involved in 91 criminal charges across four indictments. While he denies all wrongdoing and claims political motivations behind the cases, these legal challenges could lead to significant consequences, both politically and personally.

Presidential nominations and Trump's criminal history...

Finally, what correlations are there between Donald Trump's cabinet nominations and his career criminality. and convictions in his grifting behaviors and "conman"-style history?

An analysis of Donald Trump’s Cabinet nominations and their potential alignment with his documented legal challenges reveals some notable correlations that could reflect his priorities or intentions. Below are some examples, based strictly on available facts about the nominees and Trump’s past actions or legal issues:

1. Attorney General: Matt Gaetz

  • Correlation: Gaetz, a staunch Trump ally, has faced his own legal scrutiny, including a now-closed federal investigation into alleged sex trafficking, though no charges were brought. His nomination aligns with Trump's pattern of choosing loyalists for key legal positions, potentially reflecting a desire for allies in legal matters. Trump’s own criminal indictments related to obstruction and election subversion could make having a politically loyal attorney general advantageous.
  • Implication: A Gaetz-led DOJ might face criticism for perceived conflicts of interest in investigating Trump-related cases.

2. Deputy Attorney General: Todd Blanche

  • Correlation: Blanche is one of Trump’s personal lawyers, currently representing him in ongoing federal cases. Appointing someone deeply involved in Trump’s defense to a high-ranking DOJ position raises questions about impartiality, especially in matters where Trump himself is a defendant.
  • Implication: This move could consolidate control over investigations into Trump’s actions and legal exposures.

3. "Border Czar": Tom Homan

  • Correlation: Homan is known for hardline immigration policies. Trump's history of using immigration issues to distract from legal controversies might align with appointing someone like Homan to polarize public discourse.
  • Implication: Such appointments could serve to shift national focus from Trump’s legal issues to contentious policy debates.

4. Defense Secretary: Pete Hegseth

  • Correlation: Hegseth has publicly defended Trump’s handling of January 6 and often critiques the military establishment. This reflects Trump’s focus on loyalty over institutional norms, echoing concerns about his alleged undermining of democratic and legal systems during the 2020 election aftermath.
  • Implication: Hegseth’s appointment could weaken institutional checks on executive overreach, aligning with Trump’s perceived efforts to consolidate power.

5. Director of National Intelligence: Tulsi Gabbard

  • Correlation: Gabbard has faced criticism for views seen as sympathetic to Russian interests, which align with Trump’s controversial stances on Russia and his alleged mishandling of classified intelligence.
  • Implication: Her nomination could reflect priorities that downplay scrutiny of foreign interference or intelligence failures related to Trump’s legal troubles.

6. Presidential Personnel Office: Sergio Gor

  • Correlation: Gor is a longtime aide known for vetting personnel aligned with Trump’s political goals. This reflects Trump’s preference for appointing individuals unlikely to challenge his authority or raise concerns about his legal issues.
  • Implication: Control over personnel decisions could further entrench loyalists in key positions.

General Observations:

  • Many of Trump’s nominees are staunch allies or individuals with records of supporting his controversial actions or narratives.
  • The alignment of these appointments with Trump’s legal challenges suggests a strategy to consolidate influence in areas directly or indirectly tied to his criminal indictments or broader legal strategy.
  • Critics may argue this demonstrates an effort to use government institutions to shield himself from accountability, but supporters might view these appointments as a defense against perceived bias in existing institutions.

This analysis relies on documented facts and publicly known actions of Trump and his nominees. 

To contrast Donald Trump’s political orientation as perceived by many right-wing supporters with actions that align with his obvious traits of malignant narcissism reveals a deeper tension between public image and behavioral patterns. 

While some supporters view Trump as a harmless populist or pragmatic conservative, a closer analysis of his documented actions, rhetoric, and policy decisions suggests tendencies associated with self-serving, authoritarian, and divisive leadership.

1. Right-Wing Perception: Harmless Populism

  • Viewpoint: Many supporters see Trump as a champion of the "common man," taking on corrupt elites and prioritizing America-first policies. This perception emphasizes his tax cuts, deregulation, and judicial appointments as evidence of traditional conservative values.
  • Rational Contrast: While some policies align with conservative ideals, many actions reveal self-interest over governance. For instance, the tax reform heavily benefited corporations and the wealthy while increasing national debt, undermining claims of fiscal responsibility.

2. Documented Actions Indicative of Malignant Narcissism

  • Grandiosity and Need for Admiration:
    • Trump's relentless focus on crowd sizes, constant reframing of electoral victories, and need for public praise reflect excessive self-aggrandizement. For example, his insistence on baseless claims about the 2020 election fraud served personal ego over national unity.
  • Exploitative and Manipulative Behavior:
    • Appointments of personal allies to key legal and government positions, such as Matt Gaetz and Todd Blanche, suggest prioritizing loyalty over qualifications. This pattern aligns with behavior aimed at shielding himself from accountability.
  • Lack of Empathy:
    • The administration's family separation policy at the southern border was widely criticized as inhumane, with children separated from parents under questionable legal justifications. Such decisions showcase disregard for humanitarian concerns when political goals are at stake.

3. Subversion of Democratic Norms

  • Right-Wing Viewpoint: Some argue Trump was "disrupting" rather than dismantling norms, positioning him as a necessary corrective force in a polarized political system.
  • Rational Analysis:
    • His refusal to concede the 2020 election, alongside efforts to overturn results through lawsuits and pressure on state officials, demonstrated an overt disregard for democratic processes. These actions align more closely with authoritarian tendencies than benign disruption.

4. Correlation with Narcissistic Traits in Governance

  • Manipulation of Public Sentiment:
    • Trump frequently incited distrust in institutions, such as the press, judiciary, and intelligence agencies, labeling them as "enemies of the people" when they challenged his narratives. This erodes public trust in democratic structures for personal gain.
  • Projection and Deflection:
    • Many of Trump’s criticisms of opponents—accusing them of corruption or authoritarianism—mirror allegations against his own administration, a hallmark of projection seen in narcissistic behavior.

5. Consequences and Risks

  • For Supporters: Believing in Trump as a harmless or pragmatic leader may lead to overlooking patterns of governance that prioritize personal power over collective benefit.
  • For Institutions: The normalization of self-serving leadership erodes democratic norms, particularly when institutions bend to accommodate such behaviors rather than holding them accountable.

While Trump’s supporters often view him as a "harmless" figure disrupting an entrenched system, his documented behavior—marked by authoritarian tendencies, legal defiance, and divisive rhetoric—aligns more closely with traits of malignant narcissism. This conclusion provides a rational explanation for the discrepancies between his public image and actions, emphasizing the need for vigilance in evaluating leadership beyond partisan narratives.

Summary

Compiled with the aid of ChatGPT

 

Friday, October 11, 2024

What would Frank Zappa or Ayn Rand have to say about Trump & his MaGA today?

My older MaGA-saturated brother has much to say about so much nonsense in the Trump/MaGA field of ridiculousness. "MaGA" because they don't seem to understand or respect all our America. And until they do, they get to keep that lowercase letter "a" for their lack of understanding of who and what America really IS, and not just their perverse subculturish view of it.

I feel like that photo is from Shut up and play yer guitar, or something.

I have to bug him once in a while about it. His latest rant got me to wondering what his hero, Frank Zappa would have to say to him about it. Or Ayn Rand as she is such a darling of the Libertarian Republican types for their immature understanding of her and her own rather misplaced Objectivism.


So, my older brother by 7 years said:

"When the China Virus landed here in WA State the hot topic was the failing infrastructure, about plus or minus 162 bridges and overpasses and roads were in dire need to fixing or replacing . Then the Unemployment fund was raided for Millions upon millions or a billion It took no time to bury those stories about those huge losses. And not a peep about any of that since then, WHY NOT? Millions in to Billions were lost and not one person held accountable, Why NOT? Why did the investigation stop. Why didn't and still doesn't Ferguson sic his team on it? WHY is Bob ignoring everything Biden and the Radical left has done to Hurt the People that are forced to fund every despicable Deplorable thing Government has done to the WORKING People of this State?

"WHY? Because he promised them he would do nothing to get in their way, of destruction. of destroying this State.

 "HRC and her Gang are the Real Deplorables, the money grubbing lying cheating Hate the Middle class 2 tier Justice system the Lawfare creating Propaganda FAKE NEWS SPREADING Gaslighting flooding DemocRats And you keep voting for them sending them back term after term for decades WTF Wake the F**K up and Vote them OUT Make Washington a Great State Again I can remember when the whole West Coast was a Conservative strong hold. How did that flip 100% into Liberal Communist 3rd world shithole Banana Democracy ??? You did it so undo it is your Obligation to the Republic and the Flag for which is stands,, One Nation.

"V O T E Never again for a DemocRat that is the Problem creator and not a solution Y O U know what you must do, and should have done the last Presidential election..."

Uhhhh huh... so childish all that jr hi name calling like Trump loves so much and his crowds cheer for so often. Humiliating to America overall but, whatever...

To be clear, older bro is on the side of those "deplorable", which is Hillary Clinton's observation of what Trump spawned. That side of things always takes who they re and projects it onto their opposition ("No I'm not,  you are" Or as Trump said to Hillary in the debate years ago, "I'm not a puppet, you're a puppet", such, uh genius..."Genius"). 

Anyway, Washington has long been a great state, ever the more the more conservatives are contained.

OK what did ChatGPT think might be Frank Zappa's response be about Donald Trump today and his crazyed MaGA crowd?

"Ah, Trump’s back in the ring, folks! It’s like a bizarre circus act where the clown just keeps falling off the tightrope and somehow gets a standing ovation every time. Now we have a guy running for president who’s not only lost an election but is also a convicted felon. If that doesn’t say something about the state of our democracy, I don’t know what does!
"The MAGA movement, meanwhile, is still waving its banners like a group of devoted fans at a bad concert. 'Make America Great Again'? More like 'Make America Strange Again.' We’re living in a reality show where the rules of logic and decency have been thrown out the window, and the ratings keep climbing!
"But let’s get real—if we want to make America truly great, it’s going to take a lot more than catchy slogans and flashy rallies. We need to get back to the basics: critical thinking, genuine discourse, and maybe a little less of this carnival of ego. But until that happens, grab your popcorn, because the next episode is bound to be a wild ride!"

OK, OK to be fair, what might Frank say about his actually specific comments?

"Ah, the sweet symphony of outrage! It’s like a never-ending concert of complaints and conspiracies. You know, my friend, while you’re busy pointing fingers at politicians and labeling them as 'deplorable,' don’t forget that the real issue often lies in our own apathy.
"You want accountability? Sure, but remember that we’re all part of this crazy machine called democracy. If you’re frustrated with the infrastructure or the 'raided' unemployment fund, maybe it’s time to ask yourself: what are you doing about it?
And as for the political landscape changing from a 'Conservative stronghold' to whatever you want to call it now, that’s just the way it goes. People evolve, society evolves, and sometimes, the songs you don’t want to hear are the ones that reveal the truth.
"So before you go shouting about 'voting them out,' think about what you really want. Are you looking for change, or just a new set of puppets on the same old strings? Because if you’re not careful, you’ll find yourself in a banana republic—where everyone’s throwing bananas, and nobody’s watching the show.
"And hey, maybe instead of waiting for the politicians to make things right, you could start a grassroots movement. Write a song! Call for action! Let’s turn that frustration into creativity. After all, isn’t that what makes life interesting?
"So wake up, but don’t just complain. Get in there and make some noise. Just don’t forget to keep it real and funky!"

The only answer there? He's doing as many do, Nothing. Just shouting into the ether of the Internet.

Now, what about Ayn Rand? What might be her POV on Trump & MaGA (Trump's MaGAFooled crowd), as she's so popular with the more philosophically immature of Republican leadership, for decades now. From ChatGPT:

Ayn Rand, the philosopher and novelist known for her philosophy of Objectivism, would likely have a complex and critical view of Donald Trump and the MAGA (Make America Great Again) movement. Here are some potential perspectives she might offer:
Individualism vs. Collectivism: Rand emphasized individualism and the rights of the individual over the collective. She might criticize Trump for appealing to collective sentiments and nationalism that could undermine individual rights. The MAGA movement, with its focus on America-first policies, could be seen as promoting a form of collectivism that Rand would oppose.
Government Role: Rand believed in a minimal government that protects individual rights and does not interfere in the economy. She might critique Trump's administration for its regulatory policies and government interventions, particularly if they contradicted her ideals of laissez-faire capitalism.
Morality and Ethics: Rand’s moral philosophy centers on rational self-interest and the pursuit of one’s own happiness. She might find aspects of Trump’s behavior, including his rhetoric and decision-making, inconsistent with her views on rational ethics, especially if she perceives them as opportunistic or lacking integrity.
Populism: Rand was skeptical of populism and demagoguery. She could view Trump’s populist appeal and the emotional fervor of the MAGA base as detrimental to reasoned discourse and the philosophical foundations of a free society.
Capitalism: While Rand would likely appreciate some of Trump's pro-business policies, such as tax cuts and deregulation, she might still argue that his approach lacks a principled understanding of capitalism, focusing more on cronyism or favoring certain industries rather than advocating for free markets overall.
In summary, Rand would likely view Trump and the MAGA movement through a critical lens, focusing on the tension between individual rights, capitalism, and the collective ethos that populism can promote. Her philosophy would lead her to advocate for a society rooted in reason, individualism, and unregulated capitalism, which she might see as at odds with the current political climate.

OK but what might she say herself?

"In my view, the rise of populism and the appeal of movements like MAGA are fundamentally at odds with the principles of individualism and rational self-interest that I advocate. A society cannot thrive when its citizens are encouraged to sacrifice their own values and rights for the sake of the collective or a so-called national interest.

"Donald Trump’s brand of politics embodies a troubling blend of nationalism and emotional appeal, which undermines the very foundation of a free society. True freedom requires a government that protects individual rights, not one that seeks to impose a collective will upon its citizens.

"While I appreciate the necessity of capitalism and the importance of business, I am wary of any leader who uses cronyism or populist rhetoric to gain favor. Genuine capitalism flourishes in an environment free from government intervention, where individuals pursue their own happiness and success based on merit, not entitlement.

"We must remember that the path to a prosperous society lies in rational thought, personal responsibility, and the unwavering defense of individual rights. It is only through these principles that we can truly achieve greatness—not through empty slogans or the sacrifice of our values at the altar of nationalism."


This statement encapsulates Rand's core beliefs while addressing contemporary issues related to Trump and the MAGA movement.

Alright. Hang in there. All this nonsense will be over soon, hopefully, sooner than later.

All the best!

Wednesday, June 19, 2024

Walkabout Thoughts #85

Thoughts & Stream of Consciousness, rough and ready...
Random sane thoughts from an insane mind...from an award-winning filmmaker and author you’ve never heard of, while walking off the remains of long Covid, and listening to podcasts…

Weather for the day… nice day, starting out, 53° overcast cool breeze starting out, back at home 63° walking day Monday, June 17, 2024

First, Podcast Rachel Maddow presents Ultra Ep 2
Then, Marc Maron's WTF? Episode 1548 - Jude Law .

First up...Happy Juneteenth America, marking the day enslaved people in Galveston, Texas in 1865 found out they had been freed when some did nont wish them to be made aware of that. Shameful people, white people. Unbelievable. 
Two years AFTER Pres. Lincolns Emanipation Proclamation.
What the Hell humans...Americans?

Listening to Rachel Maddow's season two of her Ultra podcast. She’s talking about some of the Manhattan Project scientists on the radio back in 1950. One of them says towards the end of the broadcast that by tweaking the H bomb, which America was only starting to work on, they could wipe out an entire city in being 1000 times more powerful than the Hiroshima bomb...tweaking the bomb's casing you would create a cobalt bomb that if exploded in the air, would put a layer of radioactivity around the world that would wipe out humanity. Nice Sunday afternoon talking point.

A very good/disturbing summary of the Trump campaign's orientation of what's going on with them, which hasn't so far made much sense, while his supporters like "this or that" about him, there's something more obvious going on:

Rachel #Maddow on the goal of the GOP, "In real politics, nothing is ever finished. You never take power once and for all. Your enemies are not vanquished. But they [Trump/MAGA] are not trying to win a political contest. They're trying to do away with political contests in the United States."


I posted a meme today about Epstein and Trump, and somebody responded to me telling me something I had not heard. That Trump had barred Epstein from Mar-a-Lago barred Epstein from Mar-a-Lago. I posted back to the guy. “interesting“, and I just now realized I was accepting it as fact. Because it sounded factual. And I decided I wouldn’t post more about Trump on Epstein things. On the other hand, is it true? He supplied a link that goes to a document of way too many references to Epstein. However Copilot offered me this:

"Yes, it is true that Donald Trump barred Jeffrey Epstein from Mar-a-Lago. According to a book entitled “The Grifter’s Club,” Trump banned Epstein after he hit on the teenage daughter of another member. This incident appears to have occurred before Epstein pleaded guilty in 2008 to state criminal charges in Florida, which included paying for sexual services from a 14-year-old girl. The banishment from the club seems to have happened after Epstein was charged with soliciting prostitution by a state grand jury but before his 2008 guilty plea.

"It’s important to note that while Trump did have a falling out with Epstein, he did not publicly reveal the reasons for it at the time. Trump stated that he had not spoken to Epstein for up to 15 years and that he was “not a fan” of his. Before their falling out, Trump and Epstein had been friends for years."

While authoritarianism and fascism are not mental illnesses per se, they are a form of mental illness, or psychosocial illness. as I prefer to refer to it. It’s not in the DSMx but we see it ourselves, clearly. We see it as it has infected MAGA. We see it as MAGA has infected the GOP.

I’ve been using melatonin to get to sleep for a while. I had tried using some pro brain vitamins a while back and needed melatonin to get to sleep. As a teenager, my mind was always racing and I couldn’t sleep at night. I do have ADHD, since birth obviously. So I stopped using those "enhance your brain" vitamins. They worked, by the way. 

But I don’t think you should use melatonin if you can avoid as it's a hormone your body produces from the sun through vitamin D. Which my doctor said I have a deficiency for so I have to take a vitamin D supplement. I just try to get sunlight. I'd read if you get 15 minutes a day, you’re good.

Starting my 2nd mile…

So my son, who manages health food store, is quite knowledgeable about a lot of things (esp., gaming, and physics). He has a logical mind and I trust what he has to say. Regardless I tend to vet my information, but he tends to be right most of the time. One doesn't vet info just to prove or disprove someone correct or not. You also do it to fill in any gaps in info. When you hear something, your mind should see options, and questions, and then go fill those in. That should then offer you connections to other stored information and make connections to a variety of other things. When that happens, it's pleasing. If it doesn't happen, you're not taking in enough information in life. Or haven't, but you can start at any time.

Apparently, he’s become a local CBD expert and doctor's offices will often refer people to him. He used to work at a cannabis store and read a lot. And.. he’s my kid. And... he’s smarter than I am. Anyway, so far the magnesium seems to be working. I may be noticing some other benefits from it, too. Which I’m keeping an eye on and trying to separate out and narrow down to figure out what’s going on. He had said to take it an hour before bedtime. So I did last night and it helped. Also, I started to feel better in other ways that I didn’t expect. My sinuses started to open up, which is unusual for me.

Anyway, he suggested that if I don’t want to take melatonin, he suggests to people to try magnesium glycinate but not its other forms (citrate, oxide, sulfate, etc.). Since 2020 my long Covid issue made it very problematic for me to try anything new. I'd tried fish oil supplement and it almost killed me. So I tried the magnesium over a few days. Realized maybe I could skip a day. I've done a bunch of things to see what the lowest functional levels were (not doctor-prescribed meds, although I found some are functional at lower levels and historically western medicine doesn't adjust appropriately or see that we're not all exactly the same). I like to take as little of anything as possible. We really need to aid our health in the quality of our human experience through food and exercise rather than synthetically manufactured meds. That's not extreme, it's just common sense.

Western medicine has done too much for many decades with synthetic and semi-synthetics drugs/medicines. So yes, it’s best to live clean and healthy.

Rachel's talking about a guy back in the '50s who used to attend "silver shirt" meetings, which was your basic Nazi meeting in America. Can’t help but correlate somehow "silver shirts" with the kind of disgusting insect you might see in a shower at some institution (gym) called a, "silverfish". No, I'm not saying those people are insects, I'm saying my mind word associates.

It’s good for us to know that leading up to World War II, there was an ultra right wing in America who didn’t want us to join in the war. Which would’ve been extremely bad for humanity. It’s interesting to know today we have an extreme right who doesn’t want us to help Ukraine, but instead support Putin. Humanit's new Russian "Nazi" apparently. Putin said he was going to invade Ukraine to help Russian people from the "Ukrainian Nazis", and then immediately, aside from having previously invaded Ukraine (with an ongoing war), became THE "Nazi" himself. So what does that make Americans who support him, who would argue they aren’t, but are not wanting to support Ukraine?

Considering also how Trump tried to blackmail Ukraine when he was president to dig up dirt on Biden, and he really didn’t care if it was falsified.


It’s interesting how dictatorships, authoritarians, and fascists just love claiming how "decadent" the West is while they have a spar economy and miserable human experience for their citizens while what we have to offer is just freedom and protection from our own government and leaders. While Donald Trump’s MAGA is in support of those dictators, authoritarians, and fascists, not so much the freedom of American or Western democratic citizens. Just those who see us as decadent, foul, or degenerate. 

This whole thing is pretty simple. The Trump side is negative. Those who oppose him are positive. Those attracted to negative support Trump and like him and some love him. And some worship him. And what the holy fuck is that about? That's not American. That's authoritarian. That's a cult. A cult of personality. It's...slimy.

Here’s an easy way to judge yourself. If your beliefs, or your tribe's beliefs, or your political party's beliefs, support the human experience of just you, or them and does not hold up supporting the human experience of all, you have a problem. You the a problem. Your “tribe “is the problem. And all claims made that it’s anyone else? Is just a mechanism, a tool to support the worst in human belief systems. Just sayin'...

Oh, I hope any fathers out there had a good Father’s Day. Both my kids called me and I got to talk to them. The one who I hear from almost daily, actually daily, lives furthest away. The married one, I don’t hear from or see much anymore. But they’re live stage performers and have jobs and I know they’re busy. For those who resent the fact that all they get from their kids is a phone call or a card, at least they care enough to do something. 

Just consider all those fathers (or mothers), who do deserve more from their kids and get nothing. Or their kids hate them or have mental illness or drug addiction, or are lost in things like psychosocial illnesses, like fascism, or MAGA. Then, of course, there’s those parents who don’t deserve anything from their kids, but instead owe their kids for how they raise them so poorly. It’s sad for those kids who still do stay in contact with them.

My mother was just too toxic to deal with in her later years (like the last half of her life). My siblings and I struggled to deal with her and would take turns dealing with her for a while until we couldn’t take it, then passed her off to another one of us. A nightmare round-robin of dealing with Mom. Part of that was her many years of practicing victimhood and taking heavy prescription drugs...opiates.

That round-robin thing went on until I got divorced in 2002. Before that, my wife and I were briefly seeing a therapist until she quit going. At some point, our therapist, listening to me about the situation with my mother and how I regretted my wife having to deal with any of it, told me, “You realize you can cut someone out of your life if they’re being toxic? “ I said, "No I don’t realize that. She’s my mother." And she said, "Look. I give you permission. You don't have to go through that." I just sat there, stunned.

I remember my wife sitting on the couch next to me. Just looking at me. I’d love to have known what she was thinking. But that was close to the last session she attended.

And so the next time my mother called me at work, about some imagined slight by someone or life, I explained it all to her and said, "I’m done." And I pretty much didn’t talk to her again until she died over 15 years later.

I remember once when our youngest brother was diagnosed with leukemia in 1974 (he actually had liver cancer, which they later correctly diagnosed and he died in Manhattan in June 1974). We left Mom and our brother in his hospital room at Tacoma's Children's Hospital and went down to the cafeteria for a break, a breather, some coffee. Sitting around a table talking, our sister summed it all up. She said none of us would ever be able to relax until both of our parents, mom, central to us all (as we had different dads) and her husband, our stepfather, and youngest brother's dad...both died.He died (with Alzheimer's) about 10 years ago a few miles from me at the Retsil Veteran's Home. She died about 6, in Tacoma. Our sister was there with her. And she had been right. Finally, we all felt relieved. 100%. Family is love, family is life. Family is pain. But we do, we can, have some control over that.

For those who are in toxic relationships that make you want to kill yourself, or the other person...don’t. Just eliminate them from your life. It’s not easy. But it’s doable.

I’ve been saying for years, regarding suicide, something that helped me in rough times, to think this whenever one wants to kill oneself, just consider walking out the door and never coming back. While your friends and loved ones will suffer from never hearing from you again, they’re gonna go through that anyway, and worse, if you kill yourself. In this way, in vanishing (leave a note or something though, this isn't a vindictive thing, you are caused pain, and you don't want them to be caused pain because of you), you'd do them a service, and by starting a new life, in moving out of state or whatever, you’ve done yourself and maybe humanity a service.

Starting 3rd mile…

I’m pretty tired of my only exercise being these walks. But there’s not much else to do and the weather has sucked. But it’s getting better. Haven’t felt great the past couple of days. So I thought this walk would start out kind of uncomfortable. But it’s been just fine. I’m getting enough of these 5 mile walks and I’m getting to an equilibrium or something. Feels good to get some exercise.

What the hell is a "hog's head" shaved haircut? Rachel just played a 1940s radio broadcast where the reporter was describing some Nazi's haircut. Looked it up, I can find nothing on it. Maybe it was just that reporter's affectation.

I’ve been thinking about this. I need to ask my friend Ash Black, who has an interview show on public access TV here. My friends, Kelly and Pat, and I were his first three interviews when he started his show. But I never see our reruns. I mean every so often he interviews two or three people. Then you see that new interview on. And they play that three or four times each, before the next new interview. But they haven’t been playing them from the beginning and sometimes his show is not on. So what’s with that? Run reruns. 
[so I asked him, but he had no response on the rerun issue. But he did get nominated for Best of Kitsap (our county) for several things, best citizens, best show ("Afternoons with Ash Black" on BKat TV)...so pretty damned cool!]

I had thought about going out for lunch yesterday for Father’s Day. I looked at some restaurants online. Thought about the menus. Thought about the cost, which isn’t a big issue with me, but having been raised with very little money, you know that is the rest of your life. Thought about how many people might be out taking their dad to lunch, and then I remembered I had a bag of themed salad that I had bought. Some Thai cashew salad. I had previously mentioned I was trying to lose weight. I’m recently at about 230 and need to knock off at least 10 pounds, pretty quick. Rough winter...

Anyway, I got that bag of salad out, threw in some frozen shrimp I had in the freezer from Costco, added some smoked cheese I had for a cheese, meat and crackers meal the other day, and some other things, and ended up with a pretty tasty Father’s Day lunch. 

I watched "Monkey Man" on Peacock+ streaming it was pretty good, different. I like that actor, Dev Patel. This time he helped write it and directed it. He’s come a long way from "Slumdog Millionaire". Which I thought was a good flick, though some people called poverty porn. Maybe so.

I couldn’t really get all that into the "Monkey Man" movie. I mean I watched it, it was good, had some very clever stuff in it. Rotten Tomatoes gave it 88%. after watching it, I went back to watching Shetland (84% on Rotten Tomatoes) on BritBox. I really like shows like that in Ireland or Scotland or on an island over there. Makes me wanna go back to Ireland. 

The other day I watched “Blue Lights “a police procedural set in Belfast. Sian Brooke, the lead female actor was the short-lived wife of the king in season one of House of the Dragon. Of which season two began the other night. Been looking forward to it. I just recently binged the entire first season again. And I don’t know, for some reason I thought it was a good opening series 2 episode. Either getting their stride or I was just lowering the bar because I wanted to see a new episode.

I had gotten a seven-day free trial with BritBox that I have to cancel or keep for $9/month. I don’t, know I could end up keeping it. There’s some great stuff on there.

About House of the Dragon, I will say that I never much cared for Matt Smith as Doctor Who. But I think he found his place on this series. He plays it perfectly.

Oh, I stumbled onto Le Mans yesterday. The live version as it was being streamed on Peacock+. They have so many cameras and stuff now it’s almost like watching a movie or a video game but it’s real and in the moment. If somebody dies you’re finding out with everybody else. I’m not much into watching cars go around a track but it’s pretty cool at that level. I had it on in the background as I was editing my last blog.

One driver's rearview mirror snapped on one side of its double brackets, holding it to the inside top of the cockpit. I thought, that’s not gonna work. He pulls in for a pitstop, but they couldn’t fix it. A new driver got in. They said it’s an LED screen so it’s not too bad, although it was vibrating, bouncing around a lot. About every other second, you can seethe driver look at the mirror and then out the windshield. I thought that was pretty cool that they’re using an LED screen on the rearview mirror. I never heard of that before. If it had been a mirror, it really would have been unusable.

On Rachel‘s podcast, she’s talking about a Nazi sympathizer who ended up on the Nazi Nuremberg trials of World War II. Even though his coworkers had complained to the FBI, he still got the job and went to Germany to work on the trial. This is a good example of, how things can happen. Donald Trump has, for his entire life, fallen through the cracks.

Fascism & authoritarianism can perpetually serve as a potential ‘grout’ within the framework of democracy. If not vigilantly guarded against, they possess the power to topple that very framework. Their most destructive actions, often occurring out of sight, to disable the system in unforeseen ways. Sadly, this is often misunderstood & unforeseen by those most committed to such ideological changes.

Starting mile four…

Also starting WTF? Marc Maron podcast episode with Jude Law.

As for Rachel’s podcast season 2 episode 2 of Ultra… Wow. It’s really important that pretty much everybody in America listens to this. It’s about our history in the 40s and 50s. But it’s extremely relevant when you look around today about what some people think is funny or not a big deal, but is actually a huge deal.

Marc said he finally won something. He won Cat Dad of the Year from PE TA.

Marc trying to figure out what his cat thinks when he’s gone... He’s up in Vancouver for I think four months total and he's back home on a break wondering what his cat thinks after he’s been gone a few days: "Well He’s dead and that’s over." He said, "I don’t think the cat's that sociopathic but I’m sure his brain processes differently." No doubt. I would say it’s more like when you leave your cat for a few days, it just notices an energy missing in the environment. And it adjusts. 

Then when you come home, it triggers that pattern and it’s an energy of familiarity and things that have been habituated. It feels this rush of energy in the house and a familiarity of returning energy and some habituation and processes that are familiar. I suspect they quickly get tired of it and go back to their normal routine. Which I guess makes them perfect pets for someone who comes and goes?

Just don’t get a parrot that lives 125 years where, if you don’t give it enough attention, it starts pulling out feathers and becoming neurotic. Or when you die and it goes to another owner, it can’t easily handle the replacement.

Marc talking about watching and re-watching movies. Every day on my DVR I scan, while having coffee in the morning, what's on the paid movie channels I have and what’s on local TV between 8 PM and 11 PM that night and select anything I find interesting.

The other day I came across the movie “The Quiet American“. I liked the 2002 remake with Michael Caine though I hadn't realized it was a remake. This one is with Audie Murphy filmed in 1958 about 1952 Saigon. Audie Murphy is labeled by the characters as a "young, very young man." He was 28. The actor. Michael Redgrave is the lead. I’ve only seen 16 minutes of it.

I see Michael Redgrave, I think Michael Rennie. Who was the alien "Klatuu" in the film I saw as a young kid, “The Day the Earth Stood Still" (1951) on TV. Klatuu, with his robot Gort, and their planet's humanitarian extraterrestrial concept for Earth, saw us as dangerous. Because we are. We do seem to tend toward the self-destructive. People might remember that movie by its most famous catchphrase “Klaatu Barada Nikto“ which was spoken to the Gort to not destroy the planet when Klatuu got shot.

In the 1978 Fantastic Films article "The Language of Klaatu", Tauna Le Marbe, the magazine's Alien Linguistics Editor, attempted to translate the phrase. Her literal translation was "Stop Barbarism, (I have) death, bind;" and her free translation was "I die, repair me, do not retaliate".

Uh huh. Seems disingenuous. As Klatuu is the alien's name, seems more like the translation would be: "Klatuu (says) stand down."

Anyway, I’ve seen Rennie in a few other things, and I always had a fine place in my heart for him because of that movie. His character, actually. I once saw a really old interview of him on the set of some movie and I had to come to realize, he’s just an actor, not that wonderful character from that film.

As for "The Quiet American", it was a very interesting perspective of a 1958 Hollywood version of Saigon that looked a little too clean and Hollywoodish.

Apparently, Marc was in a movie about the talk show radio host who got murdered by some white supremacists decades ago. A guy named Alan Berg in Colorado was murdered by some idiot white supremacists from my Washington state. One of those criminals was tracked down on Whidbey Island and fought back, ending up burned up and dead. Eastern Washington has a higher concentration of conservatives who, along with Idaho and eastern Oregon, way too many white supremacists. Racists consider the dead murderer a martyr.

As for eastern Washington, when I was stationed at Fairchild Air Force Base 15 miles outside of Spokane, Washington, a lot of the guys who were hunters and had lived in the area for a while, refused to go hunting up north because of all the crazy people white supremacists.

I was taken back then by a recent acquaintance on base, to a white supremacist compound over in the Idaho Hills back in 1978 and it scared the hell out of my wife and myself. Especially when they bragged how the local police wouldn't come on their property. All very nice congenial racists, some of them wearing faux Nazi uniforms. Which one said, when I asked about that uniform, said, "No, they’re not Nazi uniforms, because those are a different color." Other than the color it all looked the same to me and they saluted like Nazis. Anyway, we didn’t go back. And the whole reason for the visit was to attend the guy's church. Which just turned out to be a church where they ranted about racist stuff.

So Marc said in playing that Jewish talk show host, most of his scenes were getting gunned down along with a few on-mic scenes. Jude Law is lead in it. Jude told Marc he’s seen it and it’s good. Marc was complaining he hadn’t seen it yet but is looking forward to seeing it on one of the movie channels or streaming networks, as soon as it comes out.

I want to see it too. A book came out about Alan Berg and those white supremacists back in 1987 when I read that book: Talked to Death: The Life and Murder of Alan Berg.
Good book. Eye-opener at the time. I was very unhappy to find out how many people from the south, after the confederacy fell, moved to the Pacific Northwest. Especially Idaho, Eastern Oregon and Eastern Washington. Apparently, there’s more than a few extreme-right up here in the Olympic Peninsula of Washington. That's up north from where I’m at. 

Sadly my adult trans offspring lives up there. They have some stories that aren’t fun to hear about minding their own business and being harassed. I don’t understand why people can’t just leave people alone. If you don’t like them, go somewhere else, look the other way, move on, and let it go. Let other citizens just live their lives. As they do you. Change the channel. Listen to a different radio station. 

Try not to get radicalized because… did you know fear lowers your IQ? Which the Republican Party, especially MAGA pushes out so much? Fear. Anger. Hatred. Bigotry. What did Trump say? "I love the uneducated." Why do you think?

It's not complicated

Marc says we can train our parents once an adult. Well sure. Unless there’s mental illness or drugs involved. But he said it’s worked for him. Didn’t work for me, or my siblings.

I remember getting into a big argument with my mom in the hallway upstairs at the house. I grew up in, at least since fifth grade. Before that we moved like every year around Tacoma, or to Spain, or to Philadelphia, or back to Tacoma in 1960.

She kept treating me like I was her young kid. She said, "I’m your mom and you’ll always be my kid to me." Hey, that’s fine but I’m an adult. I told her I graduated high school. I’d been in and out of the US Air Force. Responsible for a lot of government property and people's lives. I’d been married AND divorced. And still, she was treating me like I’m 12. It’s really annoying for an adult to have to deal with that.

Her response? "Well, you will always be my child." Kind of missing he point again, mom.

Sigh…

Starting my 5th mile…

Oh damn, Marc mentions the time his orthopedic surgeon father backed over his foot. This was after the ski trip where his top-of-the-line safety ski boot binders kept falling off his boots, so his dad tightened them down too much and he ended up getting a spiral fracture. So of course his dad gave him half body cast, and later a leg cast, which is what he remembers having when he saw George Carlin on stage.

I just mention that because my oldest (then in jr high) and I got home years ago and I was backing up the SUV and I heard a scream because apparently I had backed over his foot. I mean, it wasn’t my fault. He standing outside of the back of the SUV on the right and he had his foot behind the back tire. Either not smart or not very aware of his environment, which I raised my kids to be. Anyway, he yelled at me. I felt really bad and I apologized, but it wasn’t my fault. As I told him. Which didn't help the situation. He was fine, luckily. But he never had his foot under a car again.

Reminds me, we got our adult German Shepherd castrated because his aggression was getting too intense. He almost went through our back glass door one time because he saw another dog.

His scrotum swelled up for a  of days and my son came in during that, old enough at this point to drive the car, he had just been out somewhere and had come in and told me something and... accidentally stepped on the dog's swollen scrotum. So without thinking, the dog whips around and bites him on the hand. The dog would never have done that otherwise.

It put a couple of holes in that piece of flesh between your thumb and forefinger known as the purlicue,  the “thenar web space, or the "web of the thumb." Apparently, it hurt. His reaction was to want to punch the dog. He quickly stepped forward, really angry and in pain while the dog was sitting up by me near the couch, where I was sitting. I quickly put my arms around the dog's neck, with his head on my shoulder, and put my hand up to calm my son down and said, "Hey, don’t hurt the dog. It was an accident. He felt bad as soon as he did it." 

He backed off, quickly realizing what all had happened, and embarrassed, sort of yelled at me, "It really hurt!" I said, "Well, how would you feel if you just had your testicles cut off, your scrotum was swollen and somebody stepped on it? He didn’t mean to bite you." And  my son immediately realized he made a mistake. Actually, both of them had. It was a weird situation. Anyway, he calmed down. I sent him off to drive to the doctor. He came back later saying he was fine, and it was all OK. But it was an interesting experience.

Now Marc saying, "You've gotta find the good things of your parents that you inherited and lean into those."

I’ve always done that. But I’ve also tried to counter the bad things I received from my parents. When I was younger, my mom told me stories about my dad and how he could be jealous. I don't doubt somehow she may have, even if inadvertently, or innocently, aggravated that somehow. It led to some interesting stories she told me about him. They were divorced by the time I was three. So all through my teen years on, I was very aware of feeling jealous about or over a girlfriend. Or a wife.

Marc says he finally caved because of fans asking for him to do it, so he interviewed a guy from the band, Phish. So that’s upcoming.

This just in... Abortion is a human right!
Another's religion shouldn't govern everyone else.
Donald Trump's mother should have had that right too.
We need a time machine.

Marc's also talking about how his dad was manic at times and when he graduated (high school or college? I missed that), his dad didn’t show up because he was in one of those stages and it wasn’t a great day.

Which made me reflect on my high school and college graduations. My only close relative to graduate college was my cousin, my mom‘s sister‘s daughter who I’m three months older than her. She graduated from Eastern in I think Medical Lake, Washington. Just outside Spokane. We were there in/near Spokane together at the same time for a while when she was going to college and I was in the Air Force. So we hung out together a couple of times. 

I wondered if I went to her college graduation. During mine she was in Europe backpacking, as my youngest did decades later through Europe, twice. 

So this magnesium I’m taking to help me sleep. Since it’s good for your nerves, I mean your physical nerves in your body, I wonder if this would’ve helped during my long Covid in the worst part of it? The problem is I took some things that should’ve helped me and it made me feel like I was dying. Because that’s how weird long Covid can be.

Since I’m all over the place on this blog all the time… I mean, at least I use Podcasts as a founding element… maybe I should’ve titled or change it, since I’m pretty much over long Covid now, “random insane thoughts from a same mind“? Or adversely, "random thoughts from an insane mind“?
So now Marc's talking to Jude Law on the podcast and they’re talking about the film they were both in. Jude is singing Marc'c praises for the character he played in the legitimacy he brought to the role. Jude‘s latest movie, I think is "Firebrand", about him playing Henry the Eighth. I saw some video of it and it looks pretty interesting. Jude did some interesting things in playing that character. Trying to be authentic, he walks weird and he needed an obesity suit and a "stunt butt" as Marc puts it. Jude tells a story about going to a perfumer friend to have him make him up a really bad smell since, he said, at that stage in Henry the Eighth's life he had to have smelled bad from rotting flesh, or I don’t know what. He told the Director about it and the Director loved the idea so much, to evoke a response from the actors, he was spraying it everywhere.

I get the "method concept" of acting, but it just seems like abuse to the actors and the crew.

OK, my 5 miles completed for the day. My left foot aches a little bit, but I could hardly walk on it the last walk and overall I feel pretty great. so I think I may have gotten back up to my fitness level I was at last fall. Between where I live, my location, and the weather in the northwest, I tell you this is killing me trying to keep fit. I definitely wish I lived someplace by the ocean, with flater land, and nicer weather year-round. But all those locations have potable water issues or way too damn many people.

A couple years ago, my cousin‘s best friend and my ex-girlfriend from high school, drove her RV down to Tucson, Arizona and wanted to live there. And I said, "Yeah, I’ve lived in Phoenix before and it’s great down there. But too many crazy conservatives there… which she said where she was it wasn’t like that… I continued saying, "You do have to be aware of the water situation as it's getting bad down there and only gonna get worse." Next thing I knew she had moved to Missouri or Louisiana or somewhere. Now I think she’s back up here. So I think that pretty much says it all…

On that note, I’ll bid you adieu.
And leave you with that. 
And soon it's time for lunch.

Cheers! Sláinte!





Sunday, June 16, 2024

Walkabout Thoughts #84

As a father myself, Happy Father's Day! Wishing the best to all fathers who care, who try and put effort into their children, and their family, and as for those who do not, may your children survive you anyway...

I have to say, in reviewing Father's Day memes online, so many of them simply aren't funny, and are kind of mean. Which fits the esteem in which many fathers are held, or the lack thereof. While it's also notable just how often too many fathers have earned that.


Thoughts & Stream of Consciousness, rough and ready, from an award-winning filmmaker and author you’ve never heard of, while walking off long Covid, and listening to podcasts…walking day, Thursday, June 13, 2024

Weather for the day… nice day, starting out, 63° nice sunny day blue sky cool breeze starting out, 73 back at home

First Podcast pod Rachel Maddow presents Ultra
And then WTF? Marc Maron. An episode first with actor Ed O'Neill (Married With Children) and then later below, with comedian Ali Siddiq in another episode.

I did a short walk to the bakery the other day and now I’m doing my full walk today. It’s a little confused below.

So today for the full walk, I’m doing another WTF? Podcast episode with.

On Marc's podcast they’re talking about Nepobabies and at first they mention, Jeff Bridges, who Ed said Jeff used to be worried about himself and nepotism and if his acting was better than his being a legacy. Which obviously he was.

First time I saw Jeff in Thunderbolt and Lightfoot at the drive-in, back when it came out for the first time and then later I saw The Last Picture Show. Ed: “This guy is a fucking actor.” I knew about Jeff when I was a kid and from his dad's show, Sea Hunt with Lloyd Bridges when he would very occasionally have his two sons on for something in the storyline.

Years later, I saw Jeff Bridges in other movies (Stardman, one of my favorites but then John Carpenter was one of my favorite directors) and his brother Beau acting as adults and I was surprised and pleased. I loved seeing them together in "The Fabulous Baker Boys", as piano players.

Anyway, Marc and Ed are joking about how Ed started out as a college student in a steel mill where his dad had worked and Marc jokes “so you were a Nepo baby.” And they laugh and I realize my older brother and sister and I all had our first jobs at the drive-in theater. Where our stepdad worked nights after getting off his real job every day, at the Tacoma Washington Nalley's warehouse.

The thing with my stepdad was his night job was supplemental but it was his day job in the warehouse where belongs to the Teamsters union for healthcare and whatever. But it was the night job that gave him the prestige and satisfaction as assistant manager and box office cashier where he got to wear suit. Back in the 40s and maybe 50s, he had his own 20 piece orchestra in Philadelphia. So I get his attraction to entertainment. Mom herself was a big fan of Hollywood and movies.

As for myself working there, eventually, after a couple of years in high school working there, I became snack bar manager summer before my senior year. Then I started working as box office cashier as the ticket guy who lets you into the theater when you drive up to the window. By that time my stepdad and our Manager had moved to the brand new 112th St drive-in theater. We got stuck with a goofy guy who ended up firing me when I had ended up in the hospital for bronchitis.

So working in the snack bar and as the box office cashier, a few my friends got in free. Not many, but a few. I suppose that was wrong. But I guess in a way it was payback because every holiday, weekend or during the summer, I had to work my ass off in the snack bar for like I said, all three years in high school while my friends would show up and were partying and come in to get food and there I was. I could see how much fun they were having and...I wasn’t. It got painful after a couple months of that.

I also could never figure out how some of them could afford so much more than me, and seemingly a lot of them. Too many had nicer cars than me when I got one. They also got drivers licenses before me. When we graduated, I was 17, most of them were 18 and some 19. Some of them were building their dragstrip racing car while I had an old beater I got half paid for by my parents, that September of my senior high school year. At some point I realized some of them just had families in a higher economic class than mine. Or their dad, got them at job at his company which just paid better.

My stepdad had driven me to work in my sophomore and junior high school years and I assume he'd finally had it. So I got a car. 1967 Chevy Impala. 283CI, “3 on the tree”, standard shift. Clean car, ran well. Sounds great, right? But I was supposed to get THEIR Impala Supersport. They'd had a '67, 327Cubic Inch, automatic transmission with bucket seats...SWEET RIDE! Then one day I was washing dishes at 7am before school and someone totaled the car sitting in front of our house! Then drove away. End of that situation.

Then my stepdad moved to the new drive-in at the south end of town and I needed a car to get to work anyway. Our AutoView Drive-in that my siblings and I kind of grew up at, was at the north end of town, near the Tacoma Narrow's bridge (back when there was only one) and on the same road as Point Defiance Park (an awesome place).

One of my friends worked at a Tacoma steel mill, whatever it was called. Gave that dude some muscles. And it paid well. Then he got our friend Al a job there. Al just friended me on Facebook a few months ago. Hadn’t heard from him in decades. Anyway he wasn't the most buff kind of guy. But then after he'd been working at the steel mill a while, he got pretty buff, too.

I remember after years of seeing Ed O'Neill on Married With Children, he played Popeye Doyle and a sequel to The French Connection. And I’m sorry, but I just couldn’t buy him as Popeye Doyle. Gene Hackman? Absolutely. But then when I watch the movie, I gotta say he did a pretty damn good job. I was starting to feel pretty wimpy.

OK. That podcast is over.

If you haven’t heard Rachel Maddow's Ultra podcast, good God if you’re American, especially if you’re conservative, listen to season one. Season two just hit. Learn your history here in America because we’re seeing it happen again and it’s not good. It’s history, it’s not make believe disinformation, propaganda or just some sort of nonsense.

I finished that podcast on my off day between walking. I had been eating a perfectly cooked steak I had made and watching Gordon Ramsay‘s Uncharted episode in Hawaii. I’m looking forward to his next episode in Cuba. But it motivated me to want tasty something and I thought of the bakery and bread products.

There’s this really cool little bakery “mom and pop” type shop that cooks really cool stuff about 3/4 of a mile from my house. So I thought, OK if you’re gonna go buy carbs, then walk there, don’t drive!

So, I’m walking.

My favorite bakery in Bremerton is Saboteur in Manette, a suburb just off downtown here. Amazing bakery. But if they’re closed, or I don’t feel like going that far, these guys are great, too. They both bake stuff from around the world, and you never know what they’re gonna have. Probably never heard of it. And it likely sold out you and should have gotten there sooner!

OK, I’ll tell you what I got from the bakery. OK, I don't know. Tasty stuff though.

I noticed walking down to there on the other side of the street and walking home, on this side of the street, that I keep seeing empty containers of tobacco chew. As if somebody’s driving down the street and going, “Hey, it’s empty!” And tosses it out their window. I just want to say kindly to those people: “Fuuuuuck you! Use your trash bin, bitch!” Sorry, had to get that out. They did. It's only fair.

Ed O’Neill on Marc Maron's “WTF?” podcast just said that the French Connection movie he was in, where he played Popeye Doyle, was actually a pilot for a TV show that didn’t happen. Well, finally THAT makes a lot of sense because in that case, it was pretty good. But as a sequel to the French Connection, maybe not so much. I always wondered what the deal was with that flick.

Beginning now in my full walk day with WTF? Podcast with Ali Siddiq
Now…

When I was younger I remember people saying, “If you do that you’re either gonna die or take years off the end of your life.” Who knows what I was about to do. But I remember my cavalier response being, “Well you gotta die sometime, it might as well be interesting and I’ll deal with the end of my life at the end of my life!” What a jerk.

OK, I’m there now jackass, in that last stage of one’s life. Hopefully, I have a lot more years left. Good years left. A few months ago I saw an old person who was like 100 years old being interviewed and asked, “What’s it like?” Her response was unexpected but reasonable, “Pain.”

And I'm now understanding what she meant. It’s annoying how some people age gracefully. They don’t seem to be in a great deal of discomfort, if any. They can still have drinks without a problem and they’re on the go, or traveling. For myself, I’m learning what the pain of arthritis is like (Granma had it and I always felt bad for her) and, a bunch of other really weird things, some (or all?) that may be Covid related. I so hate that disease for so many reasons.

I guess I just had higher hopes for this stage of life.

I guess I live vicariously through, oddly enough, my older brother and sister. My sister being three years older and my brother seven. He’s been going gangbusters until recently and our sister in having been a senior flight attendant most of her life, is still traveling the world in retirement now.

I’ve been saving a collection of postcards since she started flying. Offhandedly one day I asked if she would send me a postcard sometime from another country. So she kindly started to send them to me from around the world. Something that started back in the '70s. I actually actually actively “collecting” postcards kind of started with my foundational postcard. I had her postcards in a box with soe others, but then when I got this one postcard, I started putting them in a postcard collector album.

When I was attending Western Washington University a friend of mine and his girlfriend signed up to work at McMurto Station in Antarctica. He said you have to sign up for 6 months. So I asked him if he'd send me a postcard. He looked at me kind of weird, thought about it and said, “Sure, OK.”

Flash forward about 6+ months later and I'm walking across “Red Square” in the center of Western Washington University and there he was, with a cold. We had a nice talk and I got to thank him for the postcard. I asked what they did at night and he said everyone had a VCR in their rooms and most nights people were watching John Carpenter's “The Thing”. I asked him, “Really? Honest?” He assured me it was true. This was 1983.

Recently, I’ve got one from my sister from South America on a trip she took with one of her ex-flight attendant girlfriends. And just the other day I got one from Portugal, where she was with her husband, Joe.

Brother-in-law Joe, who paid for both of us to attend a seminar series with famed filmmaker Stanley Kramer at Bellevue Community College, in I think 1984, after I graduated college. I guess Stanley had moved there to be close to his daughter in retirement. Joe's deal was, since I was broke and back working at Tower Record's brand new Tower Video store in Tacoma (in the same location where I had previously worked at their Tower Posters)… Joe had said he'd pay for the seminar if I drive his BMW to get us there. I just saw a win-win: Great car. Great seminar.

I’m a big fan of Hollywood's Golden Age. So to sit there and listen to Stanley talk about so much of old Hollywood, including one of my all-time favorite actors, Kirk Douglas, and all about film production and filmmaking (as it was a seminar on film production: “Tell the actors you have the bank and the studio, the bank you have the studio and the actors, and the studio you have the bank and actors.”).

It was just so cool. Then I ran into Mike Rainey there, who was one of our team of eight at WWU on our team TV scriptwriting series of classes with Bob Schelonka. Hey, I should look him up on IMDb. I never thought about that. This was back in 1983-4 when IMDb and the Internet didn’t yet exist for another decade. I mean, I was first on the internet in the late 1980s at the University of Washington. But then it was a text bassed internet and now yet the WWW, or “graphical internet” which I didn't learn about until working at US West Technologies in the early to mid=90s.

Anyway, 1984 was the year of the first screenplay I ever wrote, a sci-fi titled, “Ahriman” about a prophet prince with a special ability. I had first discovered “independent study” in high school when I took an independent reading class. You could read whatever you want, then report on it to your teacher. I was a massive reader so it was kind of amazing. I rediscovered independent study in college. I had talked to two of my professors, one of them being my psychology department advisor and talked them into giving me a class credit to shoot a video in the vein of phenomenology.

Defective equipment, having to get out my soldering gun for connections, and having no working battery in the very large, reel to reel, half inch, black-and-white video machine and camera that existed at the school back then for loan, with camera Vidicon tubes that many of the cameras I checked out, jad visual blemishes that would appear on the recorded video like ghosts.

That video is I believe, up on my YouTube channel. When I graduated spring of 1984 with my degree in psychology and my minor in writing and script/screenwriting…I realized I had just enough money left in my VA educational benefits that I could take one more quarter of (summer) school and spent that whole time writing my screenplay.

I was NOT going to leave university after all that without a finished screenplay. I tried to send it out all through the 80s to no avail. I couldn't figure out how to get it to anyone. And I tried. That was in part how I ended up meeting Tony Karloff (stage name with tagline of “Son of Boris Karloff”), and his son. Apparently Tony actually had contacted Boris about the name thing and he said Boris couldn't have been kinder and said to go for it in claiming lineage.

I think I’ve talked about this screenplay in previous blogs. So I got two psychology professors, Dr. Rees my psych department advisor, and maybe it was Bob over at the theater department, to give me a one credit each in independent study to write a screenplay. I was surprised they agreed. I'd also talked to Dr Rees about staying in college, maybe get my masters. But he talked me into leaving and not getting addicted to the “protective academic environment”. That while some of us need to stay, more of us need to go out to change the world.

I took the minimal load of classes that summer to get my VA paycheck, so I could pay my rent, and eat and I attended classes. But I didn’t buy any books because they’re expensive. And I didn’t need them. I already had a degree. I spent the rest of my time each day writing. And it was past/fail so I got my two extra credits when I passed, but basically received an “A” from both profs on both screenplay evaluations.

I’ve also detailed this previously, but I used that screenplay on websites like Greenlight which Matt Damon and Ben Affleck started new screenwriters, and maybe a couple others back in the 2000s. On the Greenlight site you upload your screenplay and evaluate other people's screenplays who would then evaluate yours. Kinda 1 to 1 barter situation. Using those peer reviews, and I would get several people reviewing it, I rewrote that screenplay nine times. And I realize two things. Peer review among amateurs is exactly that. Kind of like you get what you pay for. And second, my screenplay was getting worse with each rewrite. So finally I just skipped the entire thing and sadly dropped the project.

It would be interesting now to take all versions and feed it into an AI and see what it comes up with.

I didn’t get a great screenplay out it, though it does have some interesting elements in it. Some of which I didn’t see an actual movie for 8 to 10 years. Like “The 13th Floor”. And some others.

I had based that screenplay on tempo. Not storyline, but the tempo of the movie “Brainstorm”.

Back in the summer of 1984 I heard you could rent RCA video players which play a video disc, like a vinyl audio record. I think I rented four or five movies and one was Brainstorm. I watched all the movies but I really liked Brainstorm. I believe one of the films was “The Verdict” with Paul Newman. Really liked that movie.

I then decided to use Brainstorm as a model for my screenplay. So I re-watched it, with clipboard in hand, and then watched it six more times over that next day. Eight times in two days.

By the sixth of viewing, I was really tired of watching it. But that's when you start to really see things. I wrote down the types of scenes and beats. Then I started writing my screenplay from those notes. It was an interesting exercise. It was something to do, a way to do it. And it helped me accomplish a full screenplay. To get over my fears. Before that, over that past year, I had only been writing short scripts for TV, and one act plays, things like that. Or I was writing parts of a half hour TV script, one one character's dialog, and so on.

Before I started college I couldn’t write a complete short story. I never could complete the endings because there were just too many options and I didn’t want to screw it up. Typical of amateur writers. In 10th grade I whipped out a short story one day, then never again until my senior year at university. In between, I wrote many beginnings, never endings. Which drove my friends nuts.

Hey. I just walked by a guy working on his bicycle in front of his house on the side of the road and realized he could hear what I saying, what I was recording here. That always gives me a weird feeling. I really don't like when I'm recording something about politics anymore, now a days. That's even weirder. So sad.

Anyway, Brainstorm was a way to trick my mind into completing an entire screenplay. And once reviewed, they liked it. Though my psychology professor, who's really smart, asked me, “Why did you write three screenplay in one?” I wasn't sure what he meant at first. Something today that nobody would ask.

Starting my 2nd mile...

I find this interesting. My son called me yesterday and asked if he could give my USAF challenge coin that I gave him, to his girlfriend. I said technically? No you can’t, because you didn’t earn it. Then I said, “But I would be happy to give it to her, and you can hand it to her for me and I’ll get you another one.” Which all sent me down to rabbit hole of finding another one online and updating my notes on the challenge coins I have. Which is about 15, total covering from 1968 to 1982.

The thing about his girlfriend is that over more than the past year, she’s been bouncing around hospitals without a primary prognosis that has remained unattainable. Now they say she has MRSA. Before that MS. Before that, a variety of things.

Her story is a novel, a movie about her traumatic experiences through this nightmare. She’s had heart surgeries, brain surgeries and other surgeries and has been passed from one doctor to another so that there’s legal issues involved now and potential lawsuits and she’s just been trying to survive this entire tie, fully on the edge of life and has she said if it wasn’t for my son, she'd probably be dead if not for his moral support. Which has also taken a toll on him. Some of his research and suggestions to her doctors, which they tried at first to ignore him, they eventually realized he was coming up with valid concepts and good ideas. Some we believe saved her life, several times.

So yes, he could give her a challenge coin. Absolutely, even if indirectly.

Oh, yesterday I drove up to Poulsbo, Washington where I originally bought my car at Liberty Bay Auto. Love those guys. I filled out a web form for the first time from their email, and it had an opening the next day at 11 AM. I got an email from them at 7 PM mirroring that eform. So I assumed it meant, “accepted”.

So I drive up there for the appointment and they say, “No, I had sent you an email saying we didn’t have that time slot. Maybe Friday?” Maybe it went to my spam folder. I get so many emails on a daily basis, I miss some occasionally. So I made an appointment for tomorrow and I’ll drive back the, what is it? 25 minutes to get there. I had lived in Squamish, just a few miles from there on some bucolic acreage in the woods, and it was the longest I had ever lived anywhere in my life, at 16 years.

My family had moved around a lot when I was a kid. It’s fun to go back once in a while to Poulsbo. I don’t go back often but when I do, either for my car or my dental appointment (I like Poulsbo Dental Clinic), it’s interesting how the town has built up. It’s so much nicer now. Like Tacoma which was kind of a rats nest (naw, wasn't really that bad) when I was a kid in the '60s. But kind of a nice town, anymore.

My ex-wife had remarried back, in I think 2003. Her husband had owned a restaurant we liked in Kingston, Washington on the Kitsap Peninsula. After they married, he bought a restaurant downtown Poulsbo that my ex ran, mostly. Then he got one in Quilcine. Until it was burned down accidentally by a couple of employees who were cousins. Their second restaurant there ended up with Washington state's largest restaurant tax fraud in history, because of her husband. So she says.

Well, I warned her about him. When she was dating him, I warned her that he wasn’t a good choice for a husband. But she just saw her ex being vindictive I guess. I told her that as I saw it, we were once best friends, and married. It’s over, I know. I wasn't trying to do anything but help. I may have been mad, but I still wanted her back and I did want the best for her.

That’s been my history and relationships. While I’m like anyone else, we can be not the best person in the world at times as people, especially when you’re right in the moment. But I always try to view my girlfriend or spouse as my best friend and always tried to help them, even if it meant I’d suffer for it. Because I’ll survive, but what’s better? Someone leaving you to be better or to have a better life? Or try to keep them under your control, or something?

We're not as important as those whom we choose to bring into our lives. Or under our care, as with our children.

I don’t know if it’s having been raised Catholic, or from my switching to my own special brand of Buddhism, or from my degree in psychology. But when a significant other asks for an opinion. Or especially if they say they really want our “honest” opinion, it gives one the opportunity to focus and be aware of what we are doing. To really think about their question and give them the (several) best considered responses that we can think of.

With my girlfriend back in college, that led to her having an affair and ended up, with her marrying the guy, and having two kids. At least it was serious and not just fluff.

Which I thought was much better than my oldest son’s mom who had an affair on me, who kind of left me for him? Who couldn’t handle the family life, or being a mom. Even though she was the one who kept telling me that getting married would “make her sane.” Then later said “having a child would make her sane.”

Yeah, I don’t know? Red lights? Warning sirens? A friend once lovingly told me she thought that I was, “The stupidest smart person I'd ever met.” Yeah sounds about right.

I remember my most previous ex-wife, the one with the restaurant, trend setting tax fraud husband, who once said to me, in apparently not understanding ADHD, that this, “absent-minded Professor stuff isn’t gonna work anymore for me.” I tried to explain to her I’m not doing anything on purpose. It’s just how my mind works.

Which was interesting with her stepson, and my oldest child, when she kept reading his behavior as being planned, thought out, when it clearly was just basic ADHD he got from me, along with whatever the hell his mother has. Which I think is ADHD, with some other issues.

When that last wife would get extremely angry with my son, I’d look at him and could see exactly what I went through when I was him at that age.

She was really angry with him one time and she said, “Look at him, right now. Look at that look on his face. He is being obstinate!” To be fair to her, he was difficult to raise...at times. Mostly he need more room to roam and range. When I was a kid I was never home. He was always home. Such were these times when we protect our kids to the point of what? Death? Sigh... I tried to get him all the freedom I could.

I looked down at him and I told her, “That’s not at all what I’m seeing. I’m seeing him frozen in fear because of how you’re acting. That blank look?I’ve experienced ut as a child when my mom was screaming at me. He has no clue what you're mad at right now. His mind needs time to calm and recognize what's happening.”

I remember once as a kid in the kitchen, by the stove, mom was yelling at me about something or other than I'd done and probably rightfully so. But I’m standing there looking up at her and I clearly remember my only thought was, “Why is she so mad at me? What did I do this time? What am I in trouble for doing?”

I was thinking as hard as I could, but I was locked up in my mind. Probably out of fear, I don’t know. ADHD at that moment may just have been locked up out of over-stimulation. The fear may have had nothing to do with it.

When I looked down at my son, with my younger wife, 15 years younger than me, I knew what he was going through (don't judge, she wanted that marriage even more than I had)...he may already have forgotten what he was in trouble for.

The other thing she liked to do was what happened to me as a kid a lot. But at least I knew my mom loved me a lot. And he knew his stepmom didn’t love him at all. Although in the beginning, she had been very sweet and kind to him, until finally after a few years of his rejection, she kind of snapped.

Narcissism can only handle rebuke for so long, even (or especially) from a child.

Anyway, she like to “ground “him a lot. I was grounded a lot, but that's why I stayed away from home every chance I got. It wasn't that mom was hard to be around (stepdad was), but that I knew if given the time, I'd screw something up.

As a kid I escaped into my scifi novels. It didn’t even feel like I was grounded. I'd walk into my room, pick up a book and suddenly be on another planet. I was actually pleased to get grounded sometimes. I'd rather be outside. But if I can't I loved to be immersed in scifi. I tried to teach my son about that.

When you ground a kid for a month, it's too long as he needs time to get ungrounded before he gets in trouble again. It becomes a never ending cycle. Because maybe he's frustrated and sick of being grounded and isolated which does weird things to you as a kid, or as an adult.

So when she wants (needs?) to ground him again...for another month? I told her one just can’t do that.

Well, in the end we got divorced. A lot of that was over raising our kids, and some other things. A big one I believe was in her having had multiple brain concussions a child, which can cause issues as an adult, or as a child.

When I was first dating her...her family, her entire family, lovingly and lightheartedly, kept asking me why I was with her, and that I was going to regret it. My comment was she’s the sweetest person I’ve ever met and the best mom I’ve ever seen, with her infant who I had met for the first time at eight months old. And eventually adopted after we married, at two years of age.

It took a few years, but eventually, I saw what they were talking about.

It was as it is with bipolar people. Which her older sister was, who eventually, so sadly, killed herself. I had warned them. She was on too many medications from her psychiatrist and needed a new psychiatrist. But nobody would talk to her about it. I should have, but for the family nightmare that would have caused for me. They were a nice family but one where you didn't speak of some things. My family was far more messy, you got called out for things. 

In hindsight, in knowing now that she killed herself, I wish I had said something. But honestly, I don't think it would have done anything but caused noise and problems with nothing coming of it. I've tried many times to help someone who needed it, but refused it, or couldn't see it, or was simply never ready to help themselves. Or accept help.

Missed opportunities.

Anyway, my experience of being around bipolar people, especially in a romantic relationship is that you're on top of the world with them. It's fun, exciting, novel, entertaining, at times weird. Same with narcissists. It's all fun and games, until it's not. And they turn into a nightmare. Usually of a kind you've never seen before. Which was the problem here. A type I'd never run into before.

So in my life, I’ve just avoided bipolar and borderline people. I have nothing against them. I wish them well. I want them to get help. But often they won’t or they work around the help. Of the help comes and goes, with often the normal times decreasing over time.

My ex and I were very different. People remarked about how "you guys have nothing in common, how are you together?" And our answer was always that we loved each other. Until one day I said that to her, asked her if she remembered that and she said “Love's not enough. Not anymore. “Thanks for telling me that, now.

I used to think being with somebody different from you would give you both more to learn about each other and interact about. When reality the more familiar you are in your backgrounds, as many experts have told me now… NOW… the better your chances of success and staying together.

Starting my 3rd mile…

My understanding of military challenge coins, is you have to earn them. I never saw one when I was in the service. Now, people are giving them out all over the place, to people in the service in the fundamental way of earning them, to giving them to other people either in the service, or to people they respect who are civilians, and so on.

But it’s loosened up obviously since I was in the service. My service ended in 1982 halfway through my college years. After 4 years active service there were 2 inactive years they can easily call you back into service. So my assumption now is that if you put in the service but weren't given one, you can go out and buy yourself a coin to represent the work you have done that you earned. 

So I went out, and got my own coins for my military service. Also received my certificate for "Cold War" service from the government.

Today something dawned on me. In 1968 I was in civil air patrol, an auxiliary of the USAF since the late 40s I think. Mid to late 1940s. I think it started during the war with civilians pilots taking up some slack on the domestic front, flying along our coastlines for things like submarines and enemy resources lurking along our coasts. They would then report to the military. So they were an auxiliary, and eventually were named one. Over time it morphed into other things.

Like civilian kids getting military training to do search and rescue for downed civilian aircraft. I got a lot of that training in junior high. Which helped me in the Air Force. Had I stayed in CAP longer I would’ve come out of basic training with one or two stripes instead of as a "slick sleeve". Like a couple guys did in my BMTS flight of 50 guys. I was so annoyed about that. I was only short a few months. Something that would happen in various areas of my life going forward where I would just miss out on something I'd learned, but only by a few months.


One day my CAP squadron was called up to serve at the 1968 Paine Field airport in Everett, Washington for an Airshow. Which has been held annually there. That same year the airfield delivered the first 747 as Boeing was also using that field.

Do you know the Navy's Blue Angels? They were started in the 40s. The USAF has their Thunderbirds, started in the early 50s who were at the show. I was director cars in the parking lot, a thankless job, wilting in the heat and dust kicked up by the cars. Until they called a bunch of us to stand guard keeping the large crowd of civilians away from the Thunderbird's jets while they were being refueled along the flightline.

So I’m standing there, all their jets lined up behind us, a cadet about every 10 feat, and a Thunderbird pilot walked over next to me, watching the crowd and keeping an eye on the refueling. 

So I thought, I could talk to a Thunderbird pilot! Take the opportunity! (photo above is that pilot on that day).

I started talking to him. I don’t remember what all we talked about. I just remember asking him at one point, why are we standing here guarding the planes?

He said, “It’s our job in the military to protect the civilian population. Fueling the jets with jet fuel is a dangerous operation. We don’t want the civilians getting too close in case of an explosion. That’s why you’re all standing here. As a barrier."

It was a hot day in August. So it was easy to break into a sweat at that comment. I asked him, “You mean...we could blow up?“

He looked down on me in his aviator suit with his aviator glasses, wearing his flight cap, and probably saw the fear in my eyes, which I was doing my best to hide. He responded, “That’s our job, in the military. But there’s a little chance of an explosion. We’re pretty good at this. We do this multiple times every day. But if ever we die for our country in protecting our citizens, it’s a good way to go. That’s what we sign up for. Yes?." He smiled at me.

I don’t know what it sounds like now, to hear that exchange. I can only share how it affected me at that moment, as a kid. It did exactly what he had intended. It instilled pride. It strengthened my commitment to what I had signed up for, even as a kid. And obviously, I remember it like it was yesterday. It had deeply affected me.

I was in various groups as a young kid. But the thing about CAP was at that time, you did real and serious adult things You were given responsibility. We got to do things my mother would probably never have approved of in being trained to cover mountainous terrains to search for crashed aircraft and potentially cadavers. That was all very attractive to me. The doing adult things, not the finding of cadavers. None of us wanted that, though we also all wanted to be first to find a downed plane, because that was the gold standard of exactly what we did and why we existed. I also got to fly on a C-141 Starlifter out of McChord AFB once. We had to wear our USAF uniforms as it was an official flight. We even got saluted by the SP at the gate to the bast as one of us in the car was an officer, even if they were a kid. We were kids. But we were also well trained and pretty adult when need be, or under duress.

I grew up a child of the 60s and 70s, somewhat of the 50s, but I got out of that decade at five. Though I remember a lot of it since we had moved to Spain when I was three and then Philadelphia, that same year. Then back to Tacoma in 1960. much to my disappointment. Even at 4, once out of Tacoma, I never wanted to go back. Living in Spain was awesome. I used to piss off the cantina owner, in his establishment just by the beach in Roda, Spain.

I had a lot of the attitudes in my childhood and teens of the current zeitgeist of the "love generation" and "give peace a chance." I went into the USAF because they were just no opportunities in 1973-5 for a high school graduate. I had tried to go to college in '73, even though I said after I graduated 12th grade that I would never go to school again… because K-12 (esp., K-6) sucked. ADHD sucked.

But my parents said there was no money for college and the government docs I filled out said my parents made too much money. So I was one of those trapped in: You’re too poor to go to college, but too rich to get help to go to college. It was really frustrating.

Good times. (sarcasm)

So I entered the USAF with a confused sense of patriotism, let’s say. But I came out with a more informed point of view. Albeist still a bit confused.

I have written much about the rest of this. My entire life has proven one thing to me and that is that I’m very glad I was born in America. All the times of spite and disappointment and feeling like a victim had washed away when I learned what other people in the world go through. 

Genocides. Starvation. Stupid governments. Far stupider than ours. We hear a lot of crap from conservatives about how bad our government is, as they denigrate liberals for valid criticisms of the same, but liberals aren't complaining to fund raise, but to point out what we need to work on. Very different things.

Despite all the manufactured disinformation MAGA crap, we have it pretty good in America. Yeah, we get it. Republicans can’t raise money if they say America is already great, we just have some issues to work on. But the other side are populated with so many lound and proud criminals proclaiming, "Give us money to save you!"? 

Ah well, If you look at the record they have with all the criminals lately, with a criminal Republican leader and failed exPOTUS with his gang from his last administration, how many are in prison are now indicted?


Occam’s razor, people.

I’m sorry it’s not the Democrats who are the problem in this country.

Just listening to Marc Maron joke with his guest how he’s never made it big and popular while his guest is more famous at 26 years old and hitting it big so far. Marc says at his age he knows that he pleases a few people and he’s made a living at it, but he was never the type of please everybody as some people do who become big stars.

I can relate to that. I learned a long time ago. It’s not about how much talent you have. It’s about how you translate that to enough people who want to see you again and again. And the more people who are involved as fans, the harder that is to do.

I spent my lifetime showing people things I’ve done and nearly always being highly praised for it. In the IT world as a senior technical writer, I did very very. Treated incredibly well with a great deal of respect. Which was weird at first. 

Well. I probably should’ve stuck with that career.

When I retired and had the opportunity to write and make movies, I jumped at it. So what’s the difference between the two?

I'd had millions of dollars behind me working for corporations in IT. In my early 20s, in the USAF, I was directly responsible for people's lives on a real and daily basis ("PJs" jumped my packed chutes, daily, not to mention my work on the jets) and about a $1.5mil  of government equipment. 

Now, I have just me behind me. Yeah, there’s kind of a big difference between the two.

I told my kids that working for a corporation can be soul-sucking, but it pays well. If really you love your work (which I did for the first half of my IT career), you may have a better experience. But you kind of pay for your success (and compensation) with your soul, or your humanity, or your personality. I would say it took me about 5 years after I retired to start to feel like myself. 

Friends forewarned me it would take anywhere from 6 months to 2 years. I thought that was ridiculous, at first. Yeah I felt better after 6 months. Then again after about 2 years. But wasn't until about 5 years later I really felt normal again.

In that vein, after 9 or 10 years of marriage the last time, it took me 6 years to finally feel like myself again.

There’s a cost for “making it. “

So when I started out writing in the early 80s in college, I got a lot of praise in my stunned disbelief at times. So I was pretty sure I might be able to “make it “ after graduation. When I look over everything I’ve accomplished? I think I can be proud of it all. I mean I once believed that I'd make over $10/hr. But has it all paid off financially, dumping the corporate for the self supported artistic? 

Nope. Most of my arts/writer friends say the same. One of two did well, some make a bit here and there, many got nowhere.

I asked Bing Copilot AI yesterday: Tell me who “JZ Murdock “is. Just curious. Like googling yourself.

I was surprised to see what he gave back. I thought: That guy sounds pretty good. I showed it to a friend of mine and she said I always knew you were doing great things. But that write up sounded kind of creepy. I did the same with ChatGPT. It gave me a much shorter write up. Then I tried. Gemini. It said, who?

But yeah, that’s what I find in general with AI. It sounding not (to me) "creepy" but mundane. Corny even. The thought of taking AI-written text and passing it off as your own is ridiculous.

If I could get it to read all of my writings and to write a story in my style, that’s different.

But whenever I get any text out of it, I either have to reword it a lot, or rewrite it. Especially if I need it to be in my voice. But we're on a very interesting path, soon.

I don’t think we’re there yet, as far as AI overtaking the creative arts. Although that is the free public version, I’m using.

So…

I never intended to make it big. Everybody in my lifetime I know who tried to do it in the arts, has either failed or is doing just OK.

Though I would say my sister’s two kids did quite well because they're very talented and maybe young enough that they hit the world as adults at just the right time. But they also put in the labor as kids, while growing up that definitely led them into doing well, I would say, somewhat lucrative jobs. Let's say better than the norm. 

My niece is among other things, an actress who’s been in various TV shows. Her younger brother has been a "grip" on TV reality show and now is a cameraman. He's worked both in New York and LA. While his sister has been all over the world. Just like mom, only in a different career.

I only wanted to make enough to enhance my retirement a little bit because of how things went thsee last 20 years or so, raising my kids, and such.

But hey this flick ain’t over yet!

I don’t think I’ve finished what I was saying up above, about the USAF Thunderbirds. My point in that story was that I think I could get myself a Thunderbird challenge coin, of some sort. I mean, if I were in the Air Force doing that job as Thunderbird ground crew? Let's say there had been an accident. The plane behind me blew up and I died in a flame of glory or stupidity. Depending on the Air Force report. Would I then deserve a challenge coin? Let's say I didn't die, or an accident didn't happen. Would I deserve a coin?

If that pilot had handed me a Thunderbird challenge coin? Yeah, then I would definitely have earned it. Right?

Starting my final 5th mile for the day...

So yesterday was fun. I mentioned another blog that a friend of mine in Texas, no, I think she moved from here to Texas then to North Carolina...who had helped me with my social media some years ago. She recently asked me if I would do a Director's viewing with her online horror group for my film “Gumdrop “, a short horror. I said, let me send you a DVD of it with the second audio track having my director's commentary and you can listen to that before we look at doing it online, so you’ll have some background and things for your group.

So yesterday I tried to open my DVD creator software, and that was interesting. First off it couldn’t find some files because I changed the file names or moved them or something. Then when I resolved that, I couldn’t get it to burn to the DVD burner. It couldn’t recognize it.

Couple hours of playing with that, which is really annoying, and while I was talking to my son on the phone, telling him about it, suddenly I had an idea. I plugged the external DVD burner into another port and boom everything worked. So I burned her copy and I have to print a cover for the DVD cover and mail it to her.

About this Republican infection of MAGA disinformation. You know my entire life we’ve been careful about disinformation, misinformation, riling up the public, until recently when some tixic conservatives (Trump) thought, "Hey, we can grift these people! How cares who dies!"

The best inoculation for viral behavior is not going there to begin with. 

At 4.5 miles now...

Well, that was spooky. I’ve been feeling pretty good, sun beating down on me, but just now my heart started pounding. I had a sip of water as I got to 4.5 mile marker, the end of a block on the route. I walked over and stood under a tree, cooling down and drank the rest of my water. Must’ve gotten a little dehydrated. Well, when I get home, it’ll be lunch and I got a really properly cooked med well steak waiting, leftover from the other day, and some kind of very tasty Middle Eastern bread from the bakery, so lunch should be tasty and that will make me feel better. A few minutes later my head started pounding, then it stopped and I felt better overall. So yeah, probably just slight dehydration.

Marc Maron’s guest Ali Siddiq on this podcast episode did a stand-up called "The Domino Effect" (part 1, 2, 3, 4). Apparently, he had been in prison so he talked about before that happened and Mark said it was all pretty hilarious.

I bought a month of BritBox so I could watch that Cary Grant series, "Archie" (Jason Isaacs). That was pretty good. Learned a lot about him. I didn’t know much about him, just in general broad strokes. I loved his movies when I was growing up.

I also had watched one free episode of that new Sam Spade "Monsieur Spade" (Clive Own) series a while back and now I get to see the whole thing. I looked around and discovered a bunch of other things like the Martin Freeman single season/series from a few years ago about him being a cop, "A Confession". It’s pretty good. I like the concept of a show where you know that the criminal confesses in the end and then you make that story leading up to it, and the confession, interesting. Because there is no "will they catch him?", "will he confess?", because he won’t usually. While instead here, you know you’re going to get the catharsis of a confession in the end, and  it’s based on a true story. 

So apparently the water did the trick and I’m feeling good, but this last say quarter-mile is just seeming a lot longer

On that note, I’ll bid you adieu…
And I’ll leave you with that as it’s noon and time for lunch!
Cheers! Sláinte!