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.
-
Hold the Salt
Dwain Northey (Gen X)

Water is one of those things people only seem to panic about when the faucet stops working. Until then, we treat it like it just magically appears because civilization willed it into existence. Meanwhile, entire regions of the American Southwest are balancing on century-old water agreements written when people thought the Colorado River was basically infinite. Turns out, “infinite” was doing a lot of heavy lifting.
That’s why what’s happening in San Diego matters so much.
For years, Southern California was chained to imported water from the Colorado River and Northern California aqueduct systems. Every drought became a political knife fight. Every dry winter sparked headlines about rationing, lawns, reservoirs, and whether seven states were about to arm wrestle each other over who gets to shower this week. But now San Diego has pushed desalination to the point where it can provide enough water to sustain the city independently of the Colorado River system. That is not some minor infrastructure project. That is a preview of the future.
And honestly, it’s insane this isn’t being treated like a moon landing-level achievement.
Think about what desalination actually means. We are literally taking an unlimited ocean and turning it into drinking water. Humanity has reached the point where we can remove salt from seawater at industrial scale, and somehow the national conversation is still dominated by whether we need another warehouse-sized data center so AI can generate slightly faster pictures of raccoons wearing cowboy hats.
Maybe water should come first.
I’ve talked before about the idea of a desalination pipeline running from the Pacific Ocean through the Sonoran Desert toward places like Yuma. And every time I mention it, people act like it’s some impossible science-fiction concept. Meanwhile, we already built thousands of miles of oil pipelines, interstate highways, rail systems, and electrical grids crossing deserts and mountains. We can move crude oil across continents, but suddenly moving water is where society decides to become timid and financially responsible?
Come on.
The Southwest is one of the fastest-growing regions in the country, yet we still act as if the answer is squeezing harder on shrinking rivers while praying for snowpack. That’s not a long-term strategy. That’s gambling with civilization.
A massive desalination and water pipeline system could transform the region. Not just sustain it — transform it.
Think about the jobs alone. Construction workers. Engineers. Pipefitters. Plant operators. Electricians. Maintenance crews. Research and development. Environmental management. Entire industries built around water infrastructure instead of endlessly arguing about whose lawn is too green during a drought.
And then there’s the desert itself.
People hear “Sonoran Desert” and imagine lifeless wasteland, but deserts bloom when water exists. Agriculture expands. Communities stabilize. Heat resilience improves. Dust decreases. Economic growth follows water the same way it always has throughout human history. Every major civilization was built around solving water problems. Rome had aqueducts. Egypt had the Nile. The American West had dams and reservoirs. Our generation should be remembered for mastering desalination.
Instead, we’re still debating whether investing in water infrastructure is “worth the cost” while simultaneously spending billions building facilities that consume absurd amounts of electricity and water so tech companies can train larger language models to summarize recipes nobody asked for.
Priorities matter.
And yes, desalination has challenges. It uses energy. It creates brine waste. It requires enormous infrastructure investment. But you know what also has challenges? Running out of water.
At some point, people have to decide whether infrastructure exists to support human civilization or whether civilization exists to endlessly maximize quarterly profits while pretending basic survival systems are optional expenses.
Water is not optional.
The Colorado River is overburdened. Climate patterns are changing. Population growth is continuing whether policymakers like it or not. The old solutions are reaching their limits. Desalination is one of the few ideas that actually expands supply instead of just rationing scarcity more aggressively.
That’s the key difference.
Most modern water policy is about fighting over less. Desalination is about creating more.
And that mindset matters because societies that focus entirely on dividing scarcity eventually become societies permanently at war with themselves. But societies that invest in abundance — energy, water, infrastructure, technology — create stability.
So yes, I think desalination needs to become a national priority. Bigger than data centers. Bigger than corporate tax incentives. Bigger than another political argument about who gets blamed for drought conditions that everyone saw coming twenty years ago.
Because eventually every argument about economics, housing, agriculture, energy, and growth runs into the same unavoidable question:
Where does the water come from?
And if the answer can become “the ocean,” then maybe we should start acting like that changes everything.
-
Blind Obedience
Dwain Northey (Gen X)

There was a time, not that long ago, when people heard something outrageous and their first instinct was, “That can’t possibly be true.” Now the response is apparently, “Forward that immediately to everyone I know and then scream at anyone holding a calculator.”
I was standing at the gas pump the other day making a joke about inflation. Nothing dramatic. Just a sarcastic little comment about how I missed the glorious ancient era of six weeks ago when twenty-five dollars could buy something more than a gasoline-scented emotional support drizzle into my fuel tank.
And the guy next to me, with complete sincerity, looked at me and said, “Well, it’s better than getting nuked by Iran. We were minutes away from nuclear annihilation and Trump saved us all.”
Minutes away.
Minutes.
Apparently while I was deciding between regular and premium unleaded, humanity itself was hanging by a thread like the finale of an action movie written by a Facebook comment section.
That’s the level of fantasy people are living in now. Not disagreement. Not political spin. Full cinematic universe nonsense.
We have crossed the line from “I interpret the facts differently” into “I believe Tom Cruise personally disarmed an Iranian warhead with his teeth while Lee Greenwood played in the background.”
And the wildest part is how casual people are about it. They say these things the same way somebody tells you there’s a chance of rain later. No evidence. No hesitation. Just complete confidence in information that sounds like it was translated from Russian into English and then back into caveman.
“We were minutes from nuclear destruction.”
Really? Minutes? That’s fascinating because somehow not a single person was panic-buying canned beans or digging fallout shelters. The biggest crisis most Americans were facing was whether Taco Bell still had Baja Blast Zero.
But this is what happens when people marinate themselves in outrage media twenty-four hours a day. Reality becomes optional. Every event has to be the end of civilization. Every election is the “most important in history.” Every opponent is either Hitler, Stalin, Satan, or all three fused together like some kind of authoritarian Megazord.
At some point people stopped consuming news and started consuming political fan fiction.
That’s why normal conversations are impossible now. You can’t even joke about gas prices without somebody acting like they personally intercepted a nuclear launch code with a MAGA hat and a dream.
And the misinformation itself is almost secondary now. What’s really amazing is the emotional commitment people have to it. They NEED the world to be on fire because otherwise they’d have to admit maybe politics isn’t an Avengers movie and maybe their preferred politician isn’t the lone warrior standing between America and instant annihilation.
Because if the stakes aren’t apocalyptic, then suddenly you have to evaluate politicians like normal human beings instead of mythological heroes. And nobody wants that. It’s much easier to believe your guy saved humanity from nuclear doom while the other side was apparently one evil monologue away from detonating the planet.
Meanwhile, actual reality keeps limping along awkwardly in the background.
Gas is still expensive.
Groceries still cost too much.
People are still arguing online with the reading comprehension of raccoons fighting over a toaster pastry.But sure. Thank God civilization was saved during my trip to Circle K.
The truly depressing part is that this level of nonsense isn’t even shocking anymore. We’ve become so numb to absurdity that someone can say, “We were moments from nuclear war,” and nobody asks follow-up questions like:
“How do you know that?”
“Who told you that?”
“Were they perhaps selling survival buckets and colloidal silver supplements?”Nope. We just nod along while society slowly transforms into a live-action YouTube comment thread.
And honestly, maybe that’s the real danger. Not Iran. Not nukes. Not whatever imaginary doomsday scenario cable news cooked up this week.
The real threat is a population so addicted to fear and fantasy that basic reality can no longer compete with the dopamine hit of believing they’re survivors of an apocalypse that never actually happened.
-
EYE ROLL conundrum
Dwain Northey (Gen X)

Sarcasm is the native tongue of Generation X. We grew up in a world where cynicism was practically a survival skill. We were the latchkey kids, the “figure it out yourself” generation, raised on equal parts neglect, dark humor, MTV, and the understanding that if life was going to be absurd, the least we could do was laugh at it. Sarcasm was not just humor to us. It was punctuation. It was emotional armor. It was communication shorthand. Sometimes it still is.
The problem is that sarcasm only works when both people are speaking the same emotional language. Gen X tends to assume everybody understands the joke because, for us, the joke was always obvious. If somebody asked a ridiculous question, the sarcastic response was almost automatic. “No, Karen, I’m standing outside in the rain because I enjoy being damp.” That kind of thing. To us, it is playful. Efficient, even. Sometimes it is the only thing standing between us and completely losing patience.
But the world changed somewhere along the line. Younger generations, unless they were raised around sarcasm, often take words much more literally. Communication became more text-based, stripped of tone and facial expression. Suddenly, the sarcastic comment that would have gotten a laugh in 1994 lands like a personal attack in 2026. The same sentence that Gen X hears as dry humor might sound dismissive, hostile, or cruel to somebody else.
And honestly, that creates a weird internal conflict for people like me. Because sarcasm is instinctive. My first response to stupidity is almost always sarcasm. It arrives in my brain before patience even has time to put on its shoes. The sarcastic response feels natural because that is how I learned to process frustration, absurdity, and tension. It keeps me from yelling. It keeps things light in my own head. But that does not mean it moves the conversation forward.
That is the tough part.
Sarcasm can absolutely diffuse tension when the audience understands it. It can expose hypocrisy, point out obvious nonsense, and make difficult truths easier to swallow. Some of the smartest social commentary ever written was rooted in sarcasm. Gen X perfected the art of looking at a broken system and saying, “Well this seems healthy,” while the whole thing caught fire behind us.
But sarcasm can also shut people down immediately. If the other person feels mocked instead of included in the joke, communication stops right there. Instead of hearing the point, they hear disrespect. And once somebody feels embarrassed or attacked, they stop listening altogether. At that point, the sarcasm may have been satisfying, but it did not accomplish much besides making me feel temporarily clever.
The uncomfortable reality is that being sarcastic and being right are not the same thing. That is probably the hardest lesson for lifelong sarcastic people to accept. Just because a comment is funny does not mean it is productive. Sometimes the sarcastic answer is the emotional equivalent of hitting a big red “conversation over” button.
That does not mean sarcasm is bad. Frankly, I think the world could use more humor and a little less performative outrage. Sarcasm can be brilliant when it is used well. It can puncture ego, expose nonsense, and remind people not to take themselves too seriously. But like any sharp tool, it depends on how and where you use it.
The trick, I think, is learning when sarcasm is helping and when it is just reflex. Gen X grew up treating sarcasm as a default setting, but not every situation benefits from it. Sometimes people genuinely do not understand the tone. Sometimes they are asking a sincere question, even if it sounds ridiculous. And sometimes the sarcastic response says more about my impatience than about their intelligence.
That does not mean I am going to stop being sarcastic. At this point it is probably genetically fused into my DNA. But I am learning that not every conversation needs the first thought that pops into my head. Sometimes the better response is not the funniest one. Sometimes it is the one that actually leaves the other person understanding what I meant instead of wondering why I sound irritated.
Of course, that realization itself feels very Gen X too. We are the generation that mastered irony only to eventually realize that constant irony can become its own wall. So now we walk this strange tightrope: trying to stay authentic to the humor that shaped us while also recognizing that not everybody hears sarcasm the way we do.
And honestly, if nothing else, that realization is at least mildly ironic.
-
It’s not Racism
Dwain Northey (Gen X)

There’s always something oddly fascinating about the modern Republican explanation of race in America. According to them, racism is simultaneously completely dead and also somehow the fault of the people still talking about it. And nowhere is that contradiction more obvious than in their obsession with racial gerrymandering and the myth that America became a post-racial utopia the second Barack Obama was elected president.
Apparently America elected one Black man twice, so congratulations everyone, racism has officially been defeated forever. Mission accomplished. We did it. Wrap up centuries of inequality, discrimination, redlining, voter suppression, and systemic imbalance because one guy made it to the White House.
By that logic, if a woman becomes CEO of a Fortune 500 company, sexism is over too. If one kid from a poor neighborhood becomes a billionaire, poverty has been solved. It’s the political philosophy of a toddler discovering object permanence.
And what makes this argument especially ridiculous is that Obama’s presidency didn’t erase racism. If anything, it exposed just how much of it was still bubbling beneath the surface. Suddenly millions of Americans became constitutional scholars obsessed with birth certificates. People who probably couldn’t find Kenya on a map were suddenly international documentation experts. The phrases “not one of us,” “not a real American,” and “different” got tossed around so often they practically became campaign slogans.
But according to conservatives, none of that counted.
Because in their worldview, racism only exists if someone is standing in a field wearing a white hood screaming slurs into the night. Anything more subtle than that — structural inequality, discriminatory district maps, voter suppression, coded political language — is dismissed as liberals being dramatic.
Which brings us to the magic trick Republicans love pulling with gerrymandering.
They’ll swear to you that carving up heavily minority districts has absolutely nothing to do with race. No, no. They’re merely targeting “voting patterns.” Totally different. Just a remarkable coincidence that those voting patterns happen to align almost perfectly with race after several hundred years of American history.
And then comes the part where the argument completely collapses under its own stupidity.
Republicans love pointing to majority-Black districts represented by white Democrats as proof that racism no longer matters. “See?” they say. “The representative is white, so clearly these districts aren’t about race.”
Which accidentally proves the exact opposite point they’re trying to make.
The people in those communities didn’t elect someone because of the amount of melanin in their skin. They elected someone who represented their interests, values, and concerns. That’s literally how representative democracy is supposed to work. The race of the representative mattered less than whether that person actually fought for the community they served.
And somehow this concept seems impossible for many red-hat Republicans to understand because it unintentionally reveals how they themselves view politics. They accuse minorities of “identity politics” while acting as though voters can only be represented by someone who physically resembles them.
Apparently a white Democrat representing a Black district is suspicious, but overwhelmingly white conservative districts electing another angry white Republican wrapped in an American flag somehow isn’t identity politics at all. That’s just “real America.”
Convenient.
The contradiction is almost impressive.
When Black voters consistently support Democrats, conservatives call it tribalism. When white rural voters support Republicans by massive margins election after election, that’s patriotism and traditional values. When minority communities organize politically, suddenly district maps need to be “adjusted.” But when conservative districts are threatened, Republicans suddenly discover a passionate love for “community integrity” and “fair representation.”
Funny how that works.
And the district maps themselves are practically performance art at this point. Legislatures carve cities apart with the precision of a serial killer doing arts and crafts, then stand there pretending the shapes happened naturally. Entire neighborhoods get split into disconnected fragments so minority voting power can be diluted, but Republicans insist it has absolutely nothing to do with race.
They’re not targeting Black voters, you see. They’re merely targeting Democratic voters. Which in many states translates into the exact same thing, and everybody knows it.
At some point the semantic gymnastics become insulting.
Especially because the existence of white representatives serving majority-Black districts actually demonstrates something deeply American: many voters are perfectly capable of choosing leaders based on policy, competence, and advocacy rather than racial identity. Ironically, that’s the exact principle conservatives claim to believe in.
But only when the outcome benefits them.
Because the second minority communities gain enough political influence to consistently affect elections, suddenly the rules change. Suddenly voting access becomes suspicious. Suddenly maps must be redrawn. Suddenly urban populations become “problem areas.” Suddenly democracy itself starts looking dangerous.
And that’s the part Republicans can never quite explain without accidentally telling on themselves.
If race supposedly no longer matters in America, why is there always such urgency to weaken the political influence of communities of color the moment those communities start winning?
-
Baby Crisis
Dwain Northey (Gen X)

There’s a special kind of political insanity required to sit around a conference table in 2026 and solemnly declare that America’s biggest problem is that there just aren’t enough babies. Not affordable housing. Not healthcare. Not wages that haven’t remotely kept up with reality. Not the fact that most people under forty need three jobs and a roommate just to afford the luxury of existing. No, apparently the crisis is that Americans looked around at this dumpster fire and collectively said, “You know what? Maybe not.”
And then you’ve got Donald Trump, RFK Jr., and their whole elk herd of conservative natalists clutching pearls because birth rates are declining. Are you fucking kidding me?
These people act like having children is some patriotic duty while simultaneously opposing nearly every policy that would make raising children remotely survivable. They scream “pro-family” right up until someone asks for paid maternity leave, affordable childcare, school lunches, healthcare, housing assistance, or functioning public schools. Suddenly the conversation turns into a TED Talk about bootstraps and personal responsibility.
The modern Republican position seems to be: “Please produce more babies for America… but once they’re born, they’re on their own. Good luck, tiny citizen.”
That’s the part they always skip. They’re passionately pro-fetus. After that? Congratulations, kid, welcome to the capitalist Thunderdome.
They want more births while gutting the very systems that help children succeed. Cut the Department of Education. Slash social programs. Oppose childcare subsidies. Fight healthcare expansion. Attack public schools. Because apparently the goal isn’t to create educated, healthy, successful citizens. The goal is just to manufacture bodies. Bodies for low-wage labor. Bodies for the military. Bodies to keep the economic meat grinder lubricated.
“More babies!” they cry, while making sure those babies grow up in overcrowded classrooms with underpaid teachers and medical debt before they can legally drink.
And RFK Jr. somehow manages to make the whole thing even more absurd. The anti-vaccine crusader lecturing America about children is like hiring a pyromaniac as fire marshal. The man talks about public health like he learned epidemiology from a Facebook comment section in 2011.
At this rate, we’re apparently supposed to return to the 1800s model of parenting:
Have eight kids because statistically maybe four survive measles, polio, whooping cough, or whatever Victorian nightmare disease makes its comeback tour because science became “woke.”Fantastic plan.
And let’s talk about the sheer delusion of demanding population growth on an already overstrained planet. Housing shortages. Water shortages. Climate disasters. Infrastructure crumbling. Healthcare collapsing under its own weight. Millions already struggling to survive. But sure, the answer is apparently mandatory optimism and infinite reproduction.
It’s especially rich coming from politicians who spent decades making family life economically impossible. Younger generations aren’t refusing to have kids because they hate children. They’re refusing because they did the math. You can’t raise a family on patriotic slogans and conspiracy podcasts. Daycare costs more than rent in some places. College tuition looks like organized crime. Healthcare is basically a subscription service where the monthly prize is not dying.
And after all of that, these same politicians stand there confused, wondering why birth rates are dropping.
Really? You built a society where people can barely afford groceries and then acted shocked when they decided maybe adding a dependent human being into the equation wasn’t financially responsible.
What these people actually want is the nostalgia of a 1950s America that never really existed for most people: women at home, cheap labor plentiful, unquestioned authority, and endless population growth feeding the machine forever. They romanticize giant families while ignoring the fact that back then one income could actually support one.
Now both parents work full time, and even then people are drowning.
But instead of fixing any of that, the solution from Trump, RFK Jr., and company is apparently:
“Have more babies. Also we’re cutting the programs that help babies. Also vaccines are suspicious. Also public education is bad. Also no paid leave. Also no childcare assistance. Also wages are your problem.”That’s not a family policy. That’s a hostage situation.
-
Counting
Dwain Northey (Gen X)

For years, mail-in voting was treated like one more boring part of democracy. Republicans voted by mail. Democrats voted by mail. Military members overseas voted by mail. Elderly people voted by mail. Nobody suddenly clutched their pearls because Grandma in Phoenix dropped her ballot in a mailbox three days before Election Day. Then came 2020, and suddenly millions of Americans were told that the same system used for decades had magically transformed overnight into a criminal conspiracy because Donald Trump lost.
What fascinates me is that people keep confusing “counted” with “received.” Those are not the same thing. In states like California, you already get notifications that your ballot was received and accepted. The system knows your vote exists. It’s been verified. Your signature matches. Your ballot is legitimate. But because election officials often can’t begin processing or tabulating until Election Day or after the polls close, the public sees votes appearing later in the evening or over the next few days. And somehow that became “suspicious.”
My thought is simple. Why not separate tabulation from certification in a way people can actually understand?
Imagine every legally received early ballot and mail ballot being processed and tabulated ahead of time into a secure offline server. Not released. Not publicly counted. Just prepared. Then, at the official beginning of Election Day or the moment polls close, election officials essentially flip the switch. Instantly, millions of already verified votes populate all at once. Candidate A has this many votes. Candidate B has this many votes. Done.
No mysterious “dump” at 2 a.m. No television graphics making it look like ballots are being wheeled in from a back alley in a spy movie. No commentators pretending normal counting procedures are a constitutional crisis because urban counties take longer to process larger populations.
Because the reality nobody likes to admit is that counting votes takes time. Especially in populated counties. Especially when you want accuracy. Apparently Americans want elections run with the precision of a Swiss watch but the speed of a Taco Bell drive-thru.
The irony is that many of the same people screaming about late-counted ballots also demand strict verification, signature matching, chain of custody procedures, and anti-fraud protections. All of that takes time. You cannot simultaneously demand more security and then lose your mind because counting isn’t instantaneous.
And here’s the part I keep coming back to: if votes were already tabulated and locked into secure systems before Election Day, what would the conspiracy argument even become? The ballots didn’t “appear.” They were already received legally before the deadline. The totals would simply populate at once when counting officially begins. The timeline would become harder to weaponize politically.
Of course, I’m sure critics would immediately invent another reason to distrust it because modern American politics has become less about evidence and more about whether your side won. If your candidate wins, the system worked beautifully. If your candidate loses, suddenly every election worker is apparently part of an international crime syndicate run out of a suburban community center.
What gets lost in all this is that election workers are mostly ordinary people doing an incredibly tedious job under ridiculous pressure. They’re not movie villains in dark rooms altering democracy with dramatic music playing in the background. Most are exhausted county employees trying to figure out why a printer jammed for the fourth time while cable news personalities scream about the end of the republic.
I just think Americans need to better understand the difference between ballots being received, tabulated, certified, and publicly counted. Those are separate steps. And maybe if the process looked cleaner and more immediate to the public, fewer people would fall for the idea that democracy is being stolen every time numbers update after 9 p.m.
Because apparently in modern America, if a vote takes longer than ordering something on Amazon, half the country assumes it’s fraud.
-
Rabbit Season
Dwain Northey (Gen X)

There’s a very specific kind of irony unfolding around the alleged White House Correspondents’ Dinner shooter’s “not guilty” plea, and it almost feels like a live-action version of “rabbit season, duck season.” Because according to reports, the suspect’s own manifesto supposedly ranted about not being able to live under a government “full of pedophiles.” Which creates an absolutely spectacular legal headache if the defense strategy becomes, “No, no, Donald Trump wasn’t the target.”
Because then the obvious follow-up question becomes: “Interesting. So if Trump wasn’t the target… are you admitting the shooter’s reasoning excluded him from the category he described?”
Congratulations. In trying to avoid one political landmine, they’ve stepped directly onto another one while juggling lit dynamite.
It’s like watching lawyers attempt legal Twister on a floor made entirely of conspiracy theories and cable news clips. Left foot on “he didn’t mean Trump.” Right foot on “the manifesto specifically mentioned government pedophiles.” And suddenly everyone in the courtroom is pretending basic sentence structure is impossible to interpret.
This is the modern political era in America: where every statement immediately folds into a Möbius strip of denial, reinterpretation, and accidental self-owns. Nobody can just say what they mean anymore because every argument now comes with splash damage. One side screams, “He was targeting Trump!” while the other side desperately tries to explain why he definitely wasn’t — without accidentally implying they agree with the manifesto’s logic.
That’s the part that makes this so absurd. The defense almost has to perform a Looney Tunes routine in real time:
“Duck season!”
“Rabbit season!”
“Trump season!”
“No wait—”And somewhere in the background, the entire country collectively realizes we’ve reached the point where political discourse sounds less like constitutional debate and more like two raccoons fighting in a dumpster behind a failed casino.
Of course, the simplest answer is probably the boring one: deranged people write deranged manifestos, and trying to extract coherent ideology from insanity usually ends badly. But that would require everyone to stop turning every tragedy into a partisan scavenger hunt for “gotcha” moments. And in modern America, that apparently violates the laws of physics.
-
Silencing our voice
Dwain Northey (Gen X)

For years, I’ve listened to politicians explain to me that gerrymandering is not voter suppression. And technically, in the most lawyerly, hair-splitting, “depends on what your definition of is is” kind of way, they’re right. They’re not stopping me from physically casting a ballot. Nobody is standing outside the polling station snatching pens out of my hand like some democracy-themed mugging. I still get to vote.
What they are doing is making sure my vote matters less.
And apparently that distinction is supposed to comfort me.
Gerrymandering is basically political engineering disguised as cartography. It’s taking communities, especially minority communities or urban populations that tend to vote differently than rural conservative areas, and cracking them apart like a windshield hit by a brick. One district gets sliced into three. Another gets stretched across half a state like melted mozzarella cheese on a bad pizza commercial. Suddenly neighborhoods that actually share interests, schools, infrastructure, and culture are split apart because somebody in the state legislature decided the map looked better if democracy resembled a hostage situation.
Republicans will tell you this is just politics. Completely normal. Perfectly legal. Nothing to see here.
And again, technically, they’re right. Gerrymandering isn’t usually about preventing votes from being cast. It’s about diluting those votes after they’re cast. It’s the electoral version of turning down the volume on voices they don’t want heard.
You can pack voters into one overwhelmingly blue district where Democrats win with 85% of the vote, then spread the remaining Democratic voters thinly across five other districts where Republicans win 52 to 48. Congratulations. Same number of people voted, but magically one side now controls nearly everything. It’s democracy by optical illusion.
The House of Representatives is where this game matters most because House seats are geographic. Draw the lines right and you can practically preselect who wins before a single ballot is cast. Politicians love talking about “the will of the people” while simultaneously using software sophisticated enough to make Vegas odds makers blush.
But when it comes to Senate races or presidential elections, the game changes because you can’t gerrymander an entire statewide vote the same way. You can’t redraw Arizona into twelve tiny Floridas just because you don’t like Maricopa County. So when certain politicians realize the numbers aren’t going their way statewide, suddenly the strategy shifts from dilution to outright negation.
That’s where we saw the real mask slip off.
Because after the 2020 election, Donald Trump and his allies weren’t trying to redraw congressional districts. They were trying to throw out entire batches of votes. Entire counties. Entire cities. Entire populations that happened to vote against him.
And somehow we were all supposed to pretend that was about “election integrity.”
Funny how election integrity always seems to mean invalidating somebody else’s election.
That’s the important distinction people dance around. Gerrymandering says, “You may vote, but we’ll reduce the impact afterward.” Election denialism says, “You voted, but we may simply pretend it never happened.”
One weakens representation. The other attacks the existence of representation altogether.
And the truly amazing part is how calmly this all gets discussed now. As if carving up districts to engineer outcomes or attempting to discard lawful votes are just normal policy disagreements, like debating highway funding or whether schools need better cafeteria food.
Two hundred and fifty years after declaring independence from a king, we somehow arrived at a political era where some Americans are perfectly comfortable with the idea that voters shouldn’t really choose leaders anymore. Leaders should choose voters. And if voters still make the “wrong” choice, apparently the solution is to either dilute their voice or erase it entirely.
But sure, they’ll remind me with a straight face that technically it isn’t voter suppression.
Technically.
-
Gen X reflections on loneliness
Dwain Northey (Gen X)

There’s a particular kind of loneliness that sneaks up on Gen X people because we were practically raised to pretend it didn’t exist.
We were the “figure it out yourself” generation. The latchkey kids. The generation that got handed house keys, microwaved pizza rolls, and vague instructions like, “Be home before dark.” Nobody asked us if we were overwhelmed. Nobody sat us down to explain emotional bandwidth. Half of us grew up believing that if you could survive sarcasm, neglect, and drinking from a hose, then congratulations, you were emotionally prepared for adulthood.
Turns out, surviving and coping are not always the same thing.
I’ve been alone plenty of times in my life. That part isn’t new. I know how to occupy silence. I know how to distract myself. I know how to keep moving because Gen X practically turned emotional compartmentalization into an Olympic sport. We learned early that when life punches you in the mouth, you crack a joke, shrug your shoulders, and go to work the next morning.
But lately, the loneliness feels different.
Ever since my son’s wedding, something shifted in me. Not in a bad way exactly. The wedding was beautiful. I was proud. Happy. Emotional in that weird Gen X way where you try not to cry openly because somewhere deep in your brain a voice still says, “Keep it together.” But after all the noise faded and everybody went back to their lives, the quiet hit differently.
It’s profound now.
Not dramatic. Not cinematic. Just heavy.
The kind of loneliness that shows up at random moments. Standing in the kitchen. Folding laundry. Driving somewhere with no real urgency to get there. It’s the realization that parts of your purpose have changed, and nobody hands you instructions for what comes next.
And the strange thing is, I don’t even necessarily want people around me every second. Gen X people are notoriously independent. We don’t suddenly become social butterflies because we’re lonely. Most of us would rather wrestle a bear than “open up” in a group setting with soft lighting and a feelings worksheet.
But loneliness isn’t always about physical isolation. Sometimes it’s about feeling untethered.
I think a lot of us chemically enhanced our way around these feelings for years. Alcohol. Weed. Pills. Constant distractions. Endless scrolling. Noise. Anything to keep the silence from getting too loud. And I’m not judging anybody who does. Life is hard. People cope however they can.
But for me, I can’t really go that route. I don’t have the bandwidth for it, mentally or emotionally, and honestly I know myself well enough to know that escaping something isn’t the same as dealing with it.
So I sit with it instead.
Which sounds noble until you actually do it.
Because sitting with loneliness is uncomfortable as hell. There’s no soundtrack. No inspirational montage. Just you and your thoughts at 2 a.m. wondering why being needed less somehow hurts more than you expected it to.
And I wonder constantly how other people deal with it. Especially people who don’t numb themselves chemically. How do they carry it without letting it hollow them out? How do they make peace with the silence without becoming consumed by it?
Maybe part of the answer is admitting it out loud.
Gen X was taught resilience, but not vulnerability. We learned how to endure almost anything except emotional honesty. We can survive layoffs, divorces, recessions, wars, and existential dread with a sarcastic one-liner and a cup of bad coffee. But saying, “I feel profoundly lonely lately,” somehow still feels illegal.
Maybe because admitting loneliness feels too much like admitting weakness.
But I don’t think it is weakness anymore.
I think it’s the bill that comes due after a lifetime of being the strong one.
And maybe the only real way through it is understanding that loneliness isn’t proof that we failed at life. It’s proof that we loved people deeply enough for their absence, their growing up, or their moving on to leave an echo behind.
That echo just gets loud sometimes.
-
Administration or regime
Dwain Northey (Gen X(

It’s funny how language tells on people before they even realize it.
For decades we talked about presidential administrations. The George Washington administration. The Ronald Reagan administration. The Barack Obama administration. Even when Americans bitterly disagreed with a president, there was still an understanding that the office itself was temporary. Administrations come and go. Terms end. Power transfers. That was the entire revolutionary point of the experiment.
About 250 years ago, Americans fought a war specifically because they were tired of having a king. We literally declared independence from one. The whole sales pitch of the country was, “Hey, maybe one guy shouldn’t have unlimited power forever.” It was kind of our thing.
And ever since then, every president — good, bad, mediocre, scandal-ridden, or forgettable — has had an administration. Because presidents were supposed to be temporary stewards of a constitutional republic, not permanent rulers basking in loyalty worship.
But now? Suddenly people casually talk about the Trump regime.
Regime.
That word is doing a lot of heavy lifting.
A regime isn’t just a government. A regime is something entrenched. Something that doesn’t particularly enjoy opposition, criticism, elections, or the whole inconvenient idea that eventually someone else gets a turn. Historically, regimes are what happen when leaders start confusing public service with personal ownership.
Nobody ever said “the Eisenhower Regime.”
Nobody whispered fearfully about “the Carter Regime.”
And somehow “the Trump Regime” gets tossed around like it’s perfectly normal vocabulary in a constitutional democracy.Which, honestly, feels like America looked at 250 years of democratic tradition and said, “You know what this country really misses? Monarchy. But make it spray tan.”
Apparently it only took two and a half centuries for part of the country to decide maybe kings weren’t the problem — maybe we just hadn’t found the right one yet. And unfortunately, after all this time, the chosen de facto monarch turns out to be a straw-haired, orange-painted buffoon who rants online at three in the morning like your divorced uncle after six beers and a Facebook conspiracy binge.
And the truly remarkable part is how many people treat this like strength. The more he attacks institutions, the more some supporters cheer. Courts, elections, the press, the Constitution itself — all suddenly become optional obstacles standing in the way of Dear Leader’s feelings.
That’s where the “regime” language stops sounding accidental and starts sounding revealing.
Because a term implies service. An administration implies stewardship. A regime implies permanence. Ownership. Loyalty to the ruler over loyalty to the republic.
And it tracks with the broader shift we’ve watched happen in real time. Presidents used to at least pretend they served institutions larger than themselves. Now politics resembles a bizarre fusion of celebrity worship, grievance culture, and apocalyptic religion. Criticism becomes betrayal. Losing elections becomes impossible to accept. Reality itself becomes negotiable as long as the right people stay in power.
That’s how you drift from “administration” to “regime” without even noticing the road signs.
And when people point this out, the response is always outrage. “How dare you compare this to authoritarianism?” Well, maybe stop using authoritarian vocabulary while demanding authoritarian behavior. That would probably help.
Because historically, regimes are not famous for peaceful transfers of power. That’s kind of their defining characteristic.
Meanwhile Democrats are still standing in the corner clutching parliamentary procedure manuals like substitute teachers trying to restore order in a classroom fire.
Maybe that’s why the shift in language feels so important. Buried inside one little word — regime — is the assumption that power is supposed to stay put. That the leader is supposed to remain. That elections are merely annoying formalities instead of the foundation of the entire system.
And once a democracy starts romanticizing strongmen and flirting with the idea of kings again, history suggests the ending is rarely patriotic music and a civics lesson. Usually it’s just the slow realization that the people who screamed loudest about freedom were perfectly happy trading it away for someone who promised to hurt the people they disliked.
You must be logged in to post a comment.