Dwain Northey (Gen X)
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/naacp-travel-advisory-florida-says-state-hostile-to-black-americans/
Remember the good old days when there were only travel advisories and or ban for, what some would call, third word countries? Well now because of the vile vitriol of one Governor Ron DeSantis the state of Florida, a vacation destination, has received a travel advisory by the NAACP.
The wannabe future President has made the climate so venomous in Florida the anyone who is a part of any minority group does not feel safe in the state. Black, Brown, LGTBQ+, these are all groups that are under attack in the Sunshine State. The majority Republican legislature and their fearful leader has passed laws that make almost everything a jailable offence and the fact that the state has very loose gun laws and a stand your ground law makes it more dangerous than being a blonde female in central America.
Florida residents are able to carry concealed guns without a permit under a bill signed into law by Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis. The law, which goes into effect on July 1, means that anyone who can legally own a gun in Florida can carry a concealed gun in public without any training or background check. This with their ridiculous stand your ground law, ‘Florida’s “Stand-Your-Ground” law was passed in 2005. The law allows those who feel a reasonable threat of death or bodily injury to “meet force with force” rather than retreat. Similar “Castle Doctrine” laws assert that a person does not need to retreat if their home is attacked.’ Makes it really sketchy to go there.
This in top of the don’t say gay rule and the new trans ruling that just passed.
“Florida lawmakers have no shame. This discriminatory bill is extraordinarily desperate and extreme in a year full of extreme, discriminatory legislation. It is a cruel effort to stigmatize, marginalize and erase the LGBTQ+ community, particularly transgender youth. Let me be clear: gender-affirming care saves lives. Every mainstream American medical and mental health organization – representing millions of providers in the United States – call for age-appropriate, gender-affirming care for transgender and non-binary people.
“These politicians have no place inserting themselves in conversations between doctors, parents, and transgender youth about gender-affirming care. And at the same time that Florida lawmakers crow about protecting parental rights they make an extra-constitutional attempt to strip parents of – you guessed it! – their parental rights. The Human Rights Campaign strongly condemns this bill and will continue to fight for LGBTQ+ youth and their families who deserve better from their elected leaders.”
This law makes it possible for anyone to just accuse someone of gender affirming care to have their child taken from them this would include someone traveling from out of state. This alone justifies a travel ban to the Magic Kingdom for families.
Oh, and I haven’t even mentioned DeSantis holy war with Disney, the largest employer in the state. I really hope the Mouse eats this ass holes lunch.
Well that’s enough bitching, thanks again for suffering though my rant.
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Art of the Deal
Dwain Northey (Gen X)

I wake up every morning now and check the news the way you check your bank account after letting a toddler hold your credit card—bracing for impact, but also weirdly unsurprised when it’s worse than expected.
Because apparently, in this upside-down masterclass of dealmaking, we’ve reached the part where the “greatest negotiator alive” has successfully negotiated… a situation where there is no deal. None. Zero. The diplomatic equivalent of proudly announcing you just closed on a house that doesn’t exist.
But don’t worry—it’s going fantastically.
See, the narrative goes something like this: we applied overwhelming pressure, made bold moves, projected strength… and in return, Iran is still dictating terms around the Strait of Hormuz, restricting traffic, flirting with tolls, and generally acting like the bouncer of 20% of the world’s oil supply.
Which, if you squint hard enough and maybe hit your head on the table first, is apparently what winning looks like now.
And I love the confidence. I really do. There’s something almost tender about the way we’re told negotiations were “going very well” right up until the moment they collapsed completely. It’s like hearing someone insist their parachute deployment is proceeding beautifully as they continue falling at terminal velocity.
But wait—it gets better.
Because when the deal you didn’t make falls apart, the logical next step is obviously to escalate things… by announcing a blockade of the very waterway you just couldn’t negotiate open.
That’s right. If you can’t make a deal, just declare louder that you made one spiritually.
It’s a fascinating strategy. Kind of like setting your own house on fire and then declaring victory over the smoke.
Meanwhile, Iran—allegedly on the ropes, begging for a deal depending on which version of reality we’re workshopping today—somehow still holds leverage over the strait, still has demands on the table, and still hasn’t signed anything resembling surrender.
But sure. Totally crushed them.
And my favorite part—my absolute favorite—is the way this all gets packaged. Because if you point out the obvious contradiction, that we attacked, destabilized the situation, failed to secure an agreement, and now face a more complicated geopolitical mess… well, that’s just fake news.
Fake. News.
Reality itself has apparently been downgraded to an unreliable source.
So here I am, watching this grand “Art of the Deal” sequel unfold, where the art seems to involve loudly insisting you’ve won while the other side still controls the board, the pieces, and occasionally the table itself.
And I can’t help but feel a weird mix of sarcasm and something softer—because we’ve seen this before, haven’t we? That moment when someone refuses to admit things aren’t working, so they just double down, smile bigger, and tell you everything is perfect.
Even as the chair tilts back a little further.
Even as gravity patiently waits.
And we’re all just sitting here, holding our breath, watching the balance wobble—being told, with absolute certainty, that this is exactly how it’s supposed to feel when you’re winning.
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Someone take Grandpa’s Keys
Dwain Northey (Gen X)

I’ve done the thing. You know the thing. The quiet, awkward, borderline mutinous family intervention where someone—usually me, because I apparently give off “bad news delivery specialist” energy—has to take the car keys away from a parent or grandparent.
It’s never dramatic in the way movies make it. No one throws keys across the room in slow motion while violins swell. It’s more like, “Hey… maybe let me drive today,” followed by a long pause that says, we both know what this really means. It’s dignity wrapped in denial, with a side of fear. Because we’re not just talking about driving—we’re talking about the slow, undeniable realization that someone we love isn’t quite with it anymore.
And we do it anyway.
We take the keys. We double-check the finances. We gently intercept the late-night “investment opportunities” that somehow always involve wire transfers and a guy named Kevin. We step in because we have to. Because pretending everything is fine doesn’t just become irresponsible—it becomes dangerous.
So imagine my confusion—no, scratch that, my absolute cognitive whiplash—when I look at the national stage and realize we apparently have a completely different standard when the person in question has access to nuclear codes instead of a Buick.
Because here’s the thing: I was around for the chorus. The loud, relentless, vein-popping insistence that Joe Biden was too old, too forgetful, too “not all there” to function. It was a full-blown national diagnosis from people who, I assume, also think WebMD is a substitute for medical school. Every pause was evidence. Every verbal stumble was a five-alarm fire. The man couldn’t tie his shoes without it being framed as a constitutional crisis.
And now?
Now we’ve got… this.
Now we’ve got a guy back in the driver’s seat—let’s call him TJT for the sake of politeness—who makes my uncle during his “I can still drive at night” phase look like a Formula One champion. The same people who were handing out cognitive report cards a year ago are suddenly very interested in nuance. In interpretation. In how words “can be taken out of context.”
Oh, now context matters. Fascinating.
Because from where I’m sitting, this feels eerily familiar. The rambling. The impulsiveness. The absolute certainty paired with increasingly questionable judgment. It’s the same energy as someone insisting they don’t need help while actively microwaving a fork.
And again—this isn’t funny in real life. When it’s your family, it’s heartbreaking. You step in because you care. Because you understand that independence has limits, and safety eventually has to win.
But in this version? In this upside-down national family meeting? Nobody wants to be the one to say it out loud.
No one’s reaching for the keys.
Or worse—they are saying it quietly, behind closed doors, in careful, measured tones that somehow never quite translate into action. Which is amazing, because I promise you, when my grandfather started drifting across lanes, we didn’t form a committee to “further evaluate lane discipline over the coming quarters.” We took the keys. End of discussion.
Yet here we are, watching someone with their hand on the levers of power—actual, global, irreversible levers—and the collective response is… what, exactly? Shrugging? Strategic silence? A deeply committed game of “if we don’t say it, it’s not happening”?
And I get it. Admitting this kind of thing at that level is messy. It’s political dynamite. It’s careers-ending honesty.
But so is letting it go unchecked.
Because the uncomfortable truth—the one we all know from personal experience—is that decline doesn’t reverse because it’s inconvenient. It doesn’t pause because it’s politically awkward. And it sure as hell doesn’t improve because people yell “fake news” at it.
We’ve lived this before, just on a smaller scale. We’ve had the conversations. We’ve made the hard calls. We’ve chosen safety over pride, reality over denial.
Which is why this whole situation feels less like leadership and more like watching a family argue over whether Grandpa should still be driving… while he’s already on the freeway.
And the rest of us are just in the backseat, gripping the door handle, wondering who—if anyone—is finally going to reach over and take the keys.
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Moon mission no one noticed
Dwain Northey (Gen X)

I would like to take a moment to congratulate humanity on achieving something truly remarkable: we launched a spacecraft, sent it all the way around the Moon, brought it back safely, splashed it down in the Pacific… and collectively reacted with the emotional intensity of someone hearing a distant car alarm and deciding, “eh, probably nothing.”
Yes, Artemis II—the long-awaited sequel to the greatest road trip in human history—finally did its hot lap around the Moon. A flawless run. Textbook. Beautiful. The kind of thing that, historically speaking, would have had humanity glued to their televisions, their radios, their neighbor’s slightly better television.
Instead, it landed with all the cultural impact of a fart in church—acknowledged briefly, awkwardly, and then aggressively ignored by everyone pretending to be focused on something more important… like their phones.
And the irony? It was nostalgic as hell.
The launch. The trajectory. The whole “swing around the Moon and come home” vibe. It was basically a lovingly recreated cover band version of Apollo 8—same setlist, same hits, maybe a slightly nicer sound system. You could almost hear Frank Borman narrating from beyond the grave: “Been there, done that, nice to see you kids kept the receipt.”
Fifty-plus years ago, we did this for the first time, and the entire planet lost its collective mind. People gathered in living rooms. Schools rolled in TVs. Humanity paused to watch three guys circle another world and read from Genesis like it was the season finale of existence itself.
Now? We’ve got 4K livestreams, multiple camera angles, onboard audio, telemetry, probably a GoPro duct-taped somewhere just for vibes—and the general response is:
“Oh cool… did you see that thing on TikTok though?”
It’s not that the mission wasn’t incredible. It’s that we’ve apparently developed the attention span of a caffeinated squirrel in a fireworks factory. We have normalized miracles. Space travel is now competing with cat videos, political outrage, and whatever fresh chaos is trending by lunchtime.
NASA basically said, “Hey, we just sent humans around the Moon again.”
And the world replied, “That’s awesome. Anyway, here’s a guy making a sandwich with a flamethrower.”
And let’s talk about the splashdown—graceful, precise, right into the Pacific like a scene ripped straight out of 1968. Parachutes blooming, capsule bobbing, recovery crews moving in like a choreographed ballet of competence.
Fifty years ago, that would’ve been the only thing anyone talked about for weeks.
Now it barely beat out “celebrity breakup” on the news cycle.
Which, honestly, might be the most impressive part of the mission: not the engineering, not the navigation, not the physics… but the fact that we managed to make circling the Moon feel routine.
We have officially reached the point where humanity can casually yawn at one of its greatest achievements.
“Yeah, yeah… Moon, got it. Wake me up when we do something new.”
So here we are—standing on the shoulders of giants, staring at the same Moon they once reached for with wonder… and reacting like it’s a rerun we’ve already seen.
Which, I guess, in a way… it is.
Just with better cameras, fewer cigarettes in Mission Control, and significantly worse audience engagement.
Progress.
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Crazy Pills
Dwain Northey (Gen X)

I wake up every morning now and do a quick systems check.
Gravity? Still working.
Coffee maker? Functional.
Reality? …yeah, no, that one’s been glitching for a while.
Because apparently we’re all just living in the Upside Down now, and no one bothered to tell me when the switch flipped.
Take Ukraine. Remember when getting invaded meant you were… I don’t know… the victim? Cute. Adorable. Very 20th century of us. Now, in certain corners of the media ecosystem, Ukraine is being reframed like it kicked in its own front door and asked for it. “Have we considered,” they say, adjusting their intellectual monocles, “that defending yourself is actually aggressive behavior?”
Right. Of course. Next we’ll be blaming smoke detectors for fires.
And then there’s Iran. The U.S. and Israel conduct strikes, bombs fall, tensions explode—and somehow the narrative boomerangs back to: “Well, Iran is the real aggressor here.” Which is fascinating, because I was under the impression that dropping bombs was generally considered a somewhat aggressive opening statement.
But what do I know? I’m clearly operating under outdated “cause and effect” software.
Meanwhile, the Vatican—you know, that famously radical, fire-breathing institution known for its edgy, revolutionary stance of checks notes “maybe don’t do war?”—decides to say, hey, perhaps bombing entire regions isn’t a great moral strategy. Wild take, I know.
And now we get my favorite subplot in this whole upside-down cinematic universe:
Mike Johnson, self-appointed guardian of all things holy, stepping up to correct… the Pope.
Not just any pope—Pope Francis or, depending on which headline you tripped over that morning, Pope Leo—you know, the guy whose entire job description is “professional interpreter of Christianity.”
And what is the Pope doing to earn this theological fact-check from Capitol Hill? Oh, nothing extreme. Just casually quoting Jesus. You know, the greatest hits: love your neighbor, maybe don’t obliterate entire populations, that kind of fringe material.
But apparently, that’s where Mike Johnson has to step in like, “Actually, Your Holiness, have you tried reading it the other way? The one where ‘blessed are the peacemakers’ comes with a footnote about strategic airstrikes?”
And I’m sorry, but we cannot ignore the absolutely chef’s-kiss detail here: this is the same guy who famously has accountability software set up so he gets alerted if his son ventures too far into the digital wilderness. Not metaphorically. Literally. Somewhere out there is a notification system that goes off like, “WARNING: potential moral deviation—possibly sports cards… possibly something spicier.”
So just to recap the hierarchy in 2026:
The Pope: quoting Jesus, suggesting peace, waving the ancient, dusty concept of “morality.”
Mike Johnson: correcting him, presumably between alert notifications and a quick review of the Book of Modern Political Optics, Chapter 3: When in Doubt, Double Down.
And the response to the Vatican’s pushback on war? Not reflection. Not debate. No, no—we’re now in the era where even the Vatican gets what can only be described as a geopolitical version of “that’s a nice little city-state you’ve got there, shame if something happened to it.”
Because in the Upside Down, consistency is suspicious, restraint is weakness, and quoting Jesus without adding a defense budget is considered naïve at best, subversive at worst.
And I’m sitting here, in my late 50s, remembering a time when words meant things. When “aggressor” wasn’t a rotating title you could assign like Employee of the Month depending on your preferred news channel. When religious authority figures weren’t being theologically mansplained by politicians with Wi-Fi monitoring systems.
Now? Now we’ve got a world where:
The invaded are the aggressors The bombed are the instigators The peacemakers are the troublemakers And the Pope needs a congressional briefing to understand Christianity
And somehow, I’m the crazy one for noticing.
At this point, I half expect my toaster to accuse me of oppression the next time I push the lever down.
Honestly, I’d laugh harder if it didn’t feel like we’re all collectively agreeing to pretend this makes sense. Like we’ve entered some bizarre social contract where pointing out contradictions is ruder than the contradictions themselves.
So yeah—coffee’s hot, gravity still works, and reality is… negotiable.
Welcome to the Upside Down.
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What happened to conversation?
Dwain Northey (Gen X)

I’ve started to suspect that somewhere along the line—maybe between dial-up internet and whatever algorithm is currently deciding what I’m allowed to be outraged about—we collectively misplaced the ability to have a normal conversation. Not a debate. Not a performative TED Talk. Just… talking. You know, the ancient, analog practice of opening your mouth and saying something imperfect while another human being waits their turn instead of drafting a rebuttal like it’s closing arguments in a murder trial.
I’m in my late 50s, which means I come from a time when if you said something dumb, someone would just look at you, pause, and say, “Well, that’s dumb,” and then we’d keep going. No hashtags. No digital exile. No immediate psychological autopsy conducted by twelve strangers and a guy with a podcast. You survived it. You learned. Or you didn’t. Either way, the conversation moved on like a normal, functioning organism.
Now? Now every conversation feels like defusing a bomb where every word is the red wire.
I find myself doing mental gymnastics before I even open my mouth. “Is this joke acceptable?” “Is this opinion going to get me socially waterboarded?” “Is breathing still allowed, or did that get reclassified as problematic while I was asleep?” And the irony is, half the time I’m not even talking to a person anymore—I’m talking to their entire invisible audience. Because nobody’s just listening; they’re curating, clipping, and preparing your sentence for trial in the court of public opinion, population: everyone with Wi-Fi.
Maybe it’s social media. Actually, scratch that—of course it’s social media. We handed everyone a megaphone, a highlight reel, and a scoreboard for human interaction and then acted surprised when conversations turned into competitive blood sports. It’s not enough to talk; you have to win. You have to dunk. You have to emerge from a casual exchange looking like you just intellectually body-slammed your opponent while a chorus of strangers throws digital confetti at your feet.
And the internet didn’t just speed things up—it flattened everything. Tone? Gone. Nuance? Buried. Context? Optional, at best. So now when you say something mildly sarcastic, someone on the other side of the country reads it like you just declared war on their entire identity. And instead of asking, “Hey, what did you mean by that?” we go straight to DEFCON 1.
Was it COVID? Maybe. We spent a couple years talking to screens, yelling at each other about masks, vaccines, freedom, science, conspiracy theories, and whose cousin’s friend’s barber “knew a guy.” That probably didn’t help. It’s hard to come back from a period where every conversation carried the emotional weight of a geopolitical summit mixed with a family Thanksgiving argument.
But I think the bigger problem is this: nobody practices talking anymore. We curate. We post. We react. But actual conversation—the messy, unscripted, occasionally awkward back-and-forth—that takes patience. It takes listening. It takes the radical notion that you might not immediately understand someone, and instead of assuming the worst, you ask a question.
We used to have to do that. There was no “unfollow” button in real life. If someone annoyed you, congratulations—you still had to sit next to them, work with them, or see them at the grocery store. So you learned how to navigate differences. You learned how to let things slide. You learned that not every disagreement was a moral emergency requiring immediate escalation.
Now, if someone says something you don’t like, you don’t lean in—you log off, block, screenshot, and assemble your digital firing squad. Conversation over. Case closed. No appeal.
And the wild part? Everyone thinks they’re the reasonable one. Everyone thinks they’re the last sane person in a world full of lunatics who just “can’t have a conversation anymore.” Meanwhile, we’re all out here treating casual dialogue like it’s a high-stakes hostage negotiation.
I miss when conversations could just… exist. When not every sentence needed a disclaimer, a footnote, and a legal team. When you could change your mind without it being treated like a betrayal of your entire identity. When listening wasn’t just the brief pause before you reload.
Maybe I’m just nostalgic. Maybe this is what every generation says when the world changes faster than their comfort level. But I don’t think so. I don’t remember conversation ever feeling this fragile—like one wrong word and the whole thing shatters into a thousand offended pieces.
So now I find myself doing something that feels almost rebellious: I try to actually talk to people. In person. Out loud. No audience. No scoreboard. Just two flawed humans fumbling through thoughts in real time.
It’s awkward. It’s imperfect. Sometimes it’s even—brace yourself—offensive.
And somehow, miraculously, it still works.
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Alone vs Lonely
Dwain Northey (Gen X)

There’s a quiet distinction I’ve started to notice more and more—the difference between being alone and being lonely. On the surface, they seem like the same thing. But for me, they’re not even close.
Being alone can actually feel like a relief. It’s when everything quiets down enough for me to hear myself think. There’s no pressure to respond, no need to perform or explain who I am. I can just exist without adjusting myself to fit anyone else’s expectations. In those moments, solitude feels less like isolation and more like space—space to breathe, to settle, to just be.
But loneliness… that’s something else entirely. Loneliness doesn’t care whether I’m by myself or surrounded by people. I’ve felt it sitting in a room full of conversation and laughter, where I’m technically included but not really connected. I can smile, nod, even join in—but inside, it feels like I’m a step removed, like I’m watching instead of participating. That’s the kind of loneliness that sticks with me.
It’s strange, really. I can be completely alone and feel fine—sometimes even at peace—and then find myself in a crowd and feel invisible. Like there’s a pane of glass between me and everyone else.
I think a lot of it comes down to presence. When I’m alone, I’m at least fully present with myself. There’s no gap between who I am and what I’m showing. But in a group, especially when the connection feels surface-level, I become aware of that gap. I notice the distance between what I’m thinking and what’s being said, between how I feel and what I’m expressing. And that distance can feel isolating.
There’s also something honest about being alone. I don’t have to filter myself or match anyone else’s energy. I can slow down, sit in silence, or let my thoughts wander wherever they go. But in a group, there’s this subtle pressure to sync up—to engage the “right” way, to keep up, to belong. And when I don’t quite fit into that rhythm, even a little, it makes the disconnect feel sharper.
So yeah, I spend a lot of time alone, and most of the time I’m okay with that. Sometimes I even prefer it. But there are moments—unexpected ones—when the loneliness creeps in. And there are other moments when I’m surrounded by people and still feel like I’m on the outside looking in.
What I’m starting to understand is that it’s not really about being alone or not. It’s about connection. Real connection. The kind where I feel seen, where there’s something genuine being shared. One moment like that can mean more than hours in a crowded room where everything feels shallow.
So I don’t think there’s anything wrong with me for feeling this way. It just means I’m paying attention to the difference. I can be alone and not feel lonely because, in those moments, I’m enough for myself. And when I do feel lonely—even in a group—it’s not because I’m physically alone. It’s because something real is missing.
And maybe that’s the point: loneliness isn’t about how many people are around me. It’s about whether I feel connected—to them, or even to myself.
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No win argument
Dwain Northey (Gen X)

I had one of those conversations the other day—you know, the kind where halfway through you start wondering if you accidentally wandered into a satire piece and no one told you.
I’m talking to this guy, right? Nice enough. Friendly. The kind of guy who says “buddy” a lot. And he’s absolutely baffled—baffled—that a country like Iran might want a nuclear weapon.
“Why would they need that?” he asks me, shaking his head like the very idea is offensive to common sense. “That’s aggressive. That’s dangerous. That’s destabilizing.”
Now, normally, I’d nod, sip my drink, and let the conversation drift off into safer waters like weather or barbecue techniques. But then I notice—because it’s hard not to notice—that he is, at this very moment, casually open-carrying what looks like enough firepower to reenact a low-budget action movie.
So I ask, gently, “Why do you have that?”
And without missing a beat, he says, “Protection.”
Of course. Protection. Silly me. I forgot we live in a world where carrying an AR-15 to buy milk is just prudent risk management.
“I just think,” he continues, “you can’t trust people. You don’t know what they’re capable of.”
And that’s when it hits me—the beautiful, almost poetic symmetry of it all. The sheer, unintentional performance art of the moment. I’m standing here listening to a man explain the unpredictable dangers of other people… while he himself is the most heavily armed variable in a ten-mile radius.
So I try. I really do. I try to bridge the gap.
“Okay,” I say, “imagine you live in a neighborhood where a bunch of your neighbors all have bigger guns than you. Some of them have pointed those guns at your house before. A few have even kicked in your door once or twice. You don’t exactly feel… safe.”
He nods. He’s with me so far. This is his language. This is his native tongue.
“And now imagine those neighbors are constantly talking about how dangerous you are,” I continue, “and how maybe someone should do something about you. Maybe take you out before you become a problem.”
His eyes narrow a little. He’s starting to feel it now. You can see the gears turning.
“So,” I say, “in that situation… wouldn’t you want a bigger gun?”
And I swear to you, there’s this moment—this tiny, flickering moment—where the light almost comes on. Where the connection is right there, hovering in the air between us like a fragile soap bubble.
And then… nope.
“No,” he says, confidently. “That’s different.”
Different. Of course it is. How could I have missed that?
Because when he feels threatened, it’s rational. It’s responsible. It’s practically a civic duty. But when an entire country feels surrounded and threatened? Well, that’s just irrational aggression. That’s madness. That’s something that needs to be stopped—preferably by people with bigger guns.
I nod slowly, because what else do you do at that point? Argue? Unpack it further? Draw diagrams?
“Right,” I say. “Totally different.”
And there I am, standing across from a man who trusts his own fear so completely that he’s built his identity around it—but can’t extend even a fraction of that understanding to anyone else. Not even as a thought experiment.
It’s almost impressive, really. The way the human brain can build these airtight compartments where logic goes in… and irony just quietly suffocates in the corner.
We finish the conversation the way these things always end—with a polite nod, a half-smile, and the unspoken agreement that reality is apparently a choose-your-own-adventure story.
And as I walk away, I can’t help but think: it’s not that he doesn’t understand.
It’s that he understands perfectly—just not in a way he’s willing to admit.
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Two Peas
Dwain Northey (Gen X)

It’s a funny thing, living in a world where the guy who lights the match also hands you a fire extinguisher—at a price, of course—and then expects a thank-you note for his restraint.
Lately I’ve been watching Donald Trump posture toward Iran, and I swear I’ve seen this movie before. Not in a theater, mind you—more like on a 24-hour news loop starring Vladimir Putin and his ongoing obsession with Ukraine.
Because the script feels awfully familiar.
Step one: create or escalate a conflict. Step two: loom menacingly over the situation like a cartoon thundercloud. Step three: offer a deal that sounds suspiciously like, “It would be a shame if something happened to your entire country… unless you do exactly what I say.” And step four—this is the important part—declare yourself the reasonable one in the room.
I mean, I must have missed the day in history class where the aggressor got to rebrand themselves as the victim-slash-peacemaker. That must have been right after lunch, when everyone was half-asleep and the teacher just said, “You know what, sure, let’s let the arsonist run the fire department.”
With Putin and Ukraine, the logic has always been breathtaking in its audacity: invade a sovereign nation, flatten cities, and then solemnly insist that peace will be achieved just as soon as the people you invaded stop resisting. “Why are you making this so difficult?” he seems to ask, while actively making it impossible.
And now here comes Trump, apparently flipping through that same well-worn playbook like it’s a self-help guide titled Winning Friends and Influencing Countries You’re Actively Threatening. The message to Iran boils down to: “We don’t want conflict… but we’re absolutely prepared to bring overwhelming force unless you comply.” Which, translated into plain English, sounds a lot like, “I’m not hitting you—you’re making me hit you.”
It’s this upside-down moral geometry that really gets me. Somehow, the country with the bigger military, the louder threats, and the first move gets to claim it’s acting defensively. Meanwhile, the country being threatened is expected to politely de-escalate by… what, exactly? Preemptively surrendering? Sending a thank-you basket?
And I get it—international politics has never exactly been a kindergarten sharing circle. But there used to be at least a thin veneer of consistency, a polite fiction we all agreed to maintain. Now it feels like we’ve dropped even that, and we’re just openly workshopping justifications in real time.
What fascinates me—if that’s the word for it—is how this framing demands that everyone else play along. We’re supposed to nod thoughtfully and say, “Yes, clearly the path to peace is for the threatened party to give in to the threats.” As if that’s not the geopolitical equivalent of rewarding bad behavior and then acting surprised when it continues.
I keep thinking about how absurd it would sound in any other context. Imagine someone breaking into your house, kicking in the door, and then offering you a deal: “Look, I don’t want to wreck the place—but I will unless you sign over the deed. Let’s keep this civilized.” And then your neighbors gather around to debate whether you’re being unreasonable for hesitating.
That’s what this all feels like—just scaled up to nations instead of living rooms, with far higher stakes and far less accountability.
And the truly dizzying part is how quickly this logic becomes normalized. Say it enough times, wrap it in enough flags and speeches, and suddenly the narrative shifts. The aggressor becomes “strong.” The threatened become “provocative.” Reality itself starts to feel negotiable.
So here I am, watching this bizarre rerun unfold, trying to figure out when exactly we all agreed to pretend that coercion is diplomacy and threats are peace offerings. Because from where I’m sitting, it looks less like strategy and more like a global game of chicken where one side insists they’re the cautious driver—while flooring the accelerator.
But sure, let’s call that restraint. That seems reasonable. Right?
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When?
Dwain Northey (Gen X)

There’s a quiet, almost uncomfortable truth that sits just beneath the noise of history: for all our intelligence, all our art, all our technology, we remain a species that learned to walk upright and almost immediately started looking for sharper sticks.
We’ve mapped the stars, split the atom, built networks that connect billions in an instant—and yet the same instincts that drove early humans to compete over territory and survival still echo in modern conflicts dressed up as ideology, nationalism, or security. The weapons have evolved; the impulse hasn’t.
And maybe that’s the real question you’re asking: when does that change?
Because the reality is unavoidable—we are all standing on the same spinning, fragile rock. This “mud ball” isn’t just poetic language; it’s a closed system. Every drop of water, every acre of fertile land, every ounce of breathable air is finite. There is no backup Earth waiting in reserve. No matter how advanced we become, we are still bound by the limits of this one shared home.
Yet we behave as if resources are infinite and divisions are permanent. We draw lines on maps and defend them as if the ground itself recognizes our borders. We build economies on extraction without balance. We treat cooperation as optional and competition as inevitable.
The tragedy is that we already know better.
Science has made it abundantly clear how interconnected everything is—ecosystems, climates, economies, even human health. A disruption in one part of the world ripples outward to affect the rest. Pandemics, climate change, supply chains—these are not local problems. They are global realities that ignore politics entirely.
And still, we default to conflict.
Part of that is evolutionary baggage. For most of human history, survival depended on small groups competing against others for scarce resources. Trust was local; suspicion was safer. That wiring doesn’t disappear overnight just because we’ve invented satellites and smartphones. Our brains are still, in many ways, operating on ancient software while trying to manage a modern world.
But evolution isn’t just biological—it’s cultural, intellectual, moral.
We’ve already expanded our sense of “us” before. Tribes became cities. Cities became nations. In many places, rights and dignity have expanded to include people who were once excluded. That arc, while uneven and often painfully slow, suggests that change is possible.
The next step—the one you’re pointing toward—is expanding “us” again. Not as a slogan, but as a lived reality: a global community that recognizes mutual dependence rather than pretending independence.
So when will we get there?
Probably not in a single moment of realization. Not in some grand awakening where humanity collectively decides to stop fighting and start cooperating. Change like that tends to come the hard way—through pressure, through consequences, through the slow accumulation of crises that force adaptation.
In other words, we evolve when we have to.
Climate stress, resource scarcity, and global instability may end up being the catalysts that push us toward cooperation—not because we suddenly become more enlightened, but because the cost of not cooperating becomes too high to ignore.
That’s the uncomfortable answer: we might not outgrow conflict purely through wisdom. We may have to be cornered by reality first.
But there’s a more hopeful layer to this, too.
Every time people choose collaboration over division, every time nations work together on science, health, or environmental protection, every time individuals see beyond identity and recognize shared humanity—that’s evolution in action. It’s quieter than war, less dramatic, but far more significant.
We are capable of it. We already do it, in fragments.
The real question isn’t whether humanity can evolve past its tendency for conflict. It’s whether we can do it fast enough—and willingly enough—to sustain the only world we have.
Because the clock isn’t waiting for us to figure it out.
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Budgets Yell Priorities
Dwain Northey (Gen X)

There’s something almost poetic about Donald Trump declaring himself the “prince of peace” while simultaneously rolling out a budget that looks like it was drafted by the ghost of the Cold War on a double espresso. A peace-time president, we are told—just one with a proposed military budget of $1.5 trillion, a number so large it stops sounding like policy and starts sounding like a high score.
It raises a simple, uncomfortable question: what exactly does “peace” mean in this context? Because historically, when nations bulk up their military to dwarf the rest of the world combined, it’s not because they’re planning a group hug. The United States already spends more on defense than the next several countries combined, many of them actual geopolitical rivals. At some point, increasing that number doesn’t signal strength—it signals intent, or at least the appearance of it.
And that’s where the contradiction becomes less amusing and more concerning. Is this the posture of a nation content to defend itself, or one quietly preparing to project power wherever it pleases? Empires, after all, rarely announce themselves as such. They just keep expanding their capabilities “for security reasons” until suddenly security requires a presence everywhere.
And now, as if the contrast needed to be any sharper, comes the other half of the argument: we “can’t afford” social programs because we need a military to protect ourselves. It’s a remarkably convenient bit of math—there’s always money for defense, but somehow never enough for healthcare, education, housing, or anything that might actually improve the daily lives of the people being “protected.”
This is where the philosophy starts to peek through, and it’s not subtle. It’s the long-running GOP small-government ideal taken to its logical extreme: a government that does almost nothing—except wage war, prepare for war, and remind you it’s keeping you safe while doing so. Roads? Maybe. Schools? If there’s room in the budget. But a trillion-and-a-half-dollar military? Absolutely essential.
It’s a worldview that quietly redefines what government is for. Not a provider of stability or opportunity, but a permanent security apparatus with a flag attached. Citizens become something closer to spectators—watching the might of their country expand while being told that basic social investments are luxuries we simply can’t afford.
And that’s the paradox at the heart of it all. If your policies consistently raise global anxiety, strain alliances, and make adversaries more defensive, are you actually making your country safer? Or are you building a fortress so imposing that everyone else starts stockpiling ladders?
It’s hard to know what’s more troubling—the idea that this is a deliberate strategy, or the possibility that it isn’t. Because if this is intentional, then we’re looking at a vision of America that leans heavily toward dominance rather than stability. And if it’s not, then we’re watching enormous decisions with global consequences being made without fully grappling with their impact.
Either way, the branding doesn’t quite match the product. A “peace-time president” presiding over the largest military expansion in modern history—while arguing that the richest country in the world can’t afford to take care of its own people—isn’t just a contradiction. It’s the whole story.
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