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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Thanks, I guess
Dwain Northey

It’s Sunday, which means at some point someone is going to tell me to “have a blessed day” or “I’ll pray for you.”
And every time it happens, I have the same reaction: thank you, I think?
I know it’s meant kindly. I know most people who say it are sincere. They’re wishing me well in the language that makes sense to them. But if I’m being honest, I never quite know what I’m supposed to do with it.
Maybe that makes me a heathen.
When someone asks if I pray, the answer rattling around in my head is usually, “I talk to myself, but I don’t expect answers.”
That’s probably the closest thing I have to prayer.
I spend plenty of time having conversations in my own head. I argue with myself. I analyze things to death. I replay conversations from ten years ago at three in the morning. I imagine alternate outcomes to events that are long over and done with. If there were an Olympic event for overthinking, I’d be standing on the podium.
But I don’t expect a voice to answer back.
I don’t expect divine guidance to arrive in a beam of heavenly customer service.
And if I eventually come up with a solution to a problem, my first thought isn’t that an omnipotent creator of the universe just slipped me a note.
My first thought is usually, “Well, after obsessing over this for three weeks, I finally figured something out.”
I suppose that’s where I land these days—somewhere in the agnostic neighborhood, with one foot drifting toward atheism.
I don’t know.
And unlike a lot of people, I’m comfortable saying I don’t know.
Maybe there’s something bigger than us. Maybe there isn’t.
Maybe there is some grand architect of the cosmos. Maybe the universe is simply the result of physics, probability, and an absurd amount of time.
The truth is that nobody knows for certain.
What fascinates me is how confidently people speak about things that are, by definition, unknowable.
Some people talk about God as if they have Him on speed dial.
They’ll tell you exactly what He wants, who He approves of, who He disapproves of, which political candidates He likes, which football teams He blesses, and apparently which parking spaces He reserves.
Meanwhile I’m over here wondering what to have for lunch.
The older I get, the more suspicious I become of certainty.
The universe is unimaginably large. We are riding a rock through space around an average star in one galaxy among billions. We understand only a fraction of how reality works.
Yet somehow people are absolutely positive they know the intentions of the creator of all existence.
That’s a confidence level I can’t even muster when choosing a streaming show.
So when someone says they’ll pray for me, I genuinely appreciate the goodwill behind it.
They’re expressing care in the framework they understand.
But for me, prayer looks a lot more like reflection.
It’s sitting quietly with my thoughts.
It’s wrestling with questions.
It’s examining my own actions and motivations.
It’s trying to be a decent human being because it’s the right thing to do, not because I’m worried about a cosmic performance review.
Maybe that’s faith.
Maybe it’s skepticism.
Maybe it’s just being a Gen X kid who grew up questioning everything and never quite stopped.
Whatever label applies, I find more comfort in questions than answers.
I don’t need certainty.
I don’t need to believe that every good outcome was divinely arranged or that every bad outcome is part of some master plan.
Sometimes life is beautiful.
Sometimes life is cruel.
Most of the time it’s complicated.
And when I sit alone talking to myself, trying to make sense of it all, I don’t expect answers from the heavens.
I’m just trying to understand the world, one internal conversation at a time.
If God is listening, that’s fine.
But I suspect most of the answers I’ve ever found came from the same place they always have:
the messy, confused, stubborn little voice inside my own head.
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Road Billboards
Dwain Northey (Gen X)

Legalize Freedom
I was driving the other day and passed one of those giant billboards planted squarely in Trump Country.
The message was simple:
“Legalize Freedom.”
Now, maybe it’s because I’m Gen X and my brain immediately goes to the sarcastic setting before it reaches neutral, but my first thought wasn’t agreement. It was a question.
Freedom for who?
Because that’s become the real question in modern America.
Everybody loves freedom when they’re talking about themselves.
Freedom to say what they want.
Freedom to own what they want.
Freedom to worship how they want.
Freedom to live how they want.
No argument there. That’s the whole point of freedom.
But somewhere along the way, a lot of people stopped at that sentence and never read the next chapter.
Because the moment someone else’s freedom enters the conversation, suddenly there are conditions.
Freedom for them, but not for those people.
Freedom for my religion, but not yours.
Freedom for my speech, but not your speech.
Freedom for my lifestyle, but not your lifestyle.
Freedom for my opinion, but if you disagree with me you’re a communist, socialist, Marxist, groomer, traitor, globalist, or whatever insult happens to be trending this week.
The loudest self-proclaimed defenders of freedom often seem remarkably uncomfortable with the idea that freedom applies equally.
What they really mean is freedom from consequences, freedom from criticism, and freedom to remain the dominant voice in the room.
That’s not freedom.
That’s privilege wearing a freedom costume.
I keep hearing people scream about freedom while simultaneously demanding book bans, restricting what teachers can discuss, deciding who can marry whom, determining which religions belong in public spaces, regulating medical decisions, and telling private companies what speech they should permit.
Apparently freedom is sacred right up until somebody uses it differently than you would.
The irony is almost impressive.
America’s founders argued, fought, and eventually built a system around the radical notion that people would disagree. Freedom wasn’t designed for unanimous opinions. Freedom is easy when everyone agrees with you.
The test comes when they don’t.
The real measure of whether someone believes in freedom isn’t how they treat people who think exactly like them.
It’s how they treat people they can’t stand.
Do they still defend their rights?
Do they still support their ability to speak?
Do they still recognize their humanity?
Or do they immediately try to shove them outside the circle?
That’s the part that keeps bothering me.
Because increasingly, “freedom” has become less about individual liberty and more about tribal membership.
If you’re inside the tribe, you’re free.
If you’re outside the tribe, you’re a threat.
And once you’re labeled a threat, suddenly all those lofty principles become negotiable.
So when I drove past that billboard proclaiming “Legalize Freedom,” I found myself agreeing with it.
Absolutely.
Let’s legalize freedom.
For everyone.
Not just Christians. Not just atheists.
Not just conservatives. Not just liberals.
Not just white people. Not just minorities.
Not just men. Not just women.
Not just people we agree with.
Everyone.
Because freedom that only applies to people who think like you isn’t freedom at all.
It’s just another form of control with better marketing.
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Some times you just have to walk away…
Dwain Northey (Gen X)

A few weeks ago, I found myself in one of those conversations that reminds me why it’s a miracle I don’t need to see a psychologist or psychiatrist daily just to keep my head from exploding.
I was talking to a MAGA supporter who was passionately defending Trump’s decision to bulldoze part of the White House complex to build a ballroom. Now, everyone is entitled to their opinions. You like the ballroom? Fine. You think it’s classy? Fine. You think every government building should look like a casino lobby designed by someone with an unhealthy relationship with gold leaf? That’s your business.
But then came the history lesson.
Apparently, according to this self-appointed scholar of American architecture, the White House was built “over 250 years ago,” was basically falling apart, and the East Wing was one strong windstorm away from collapsing into a pile of colonial rubble. Trump, in his role as America’s greatest builder, was simply saving the nation from imminent disaster by knocking it down and replacing it with a ballroom.
I just sat there blinking.
You ever have one of those moments where someone is so confidently wrong that your brain stalls out? Like a Windows computer trying to process an impossible command?
Because here’s the thing.
This person didn’t realize they were talking to somebody who actually spent time in Washington, D.C. I lived in the Maryland-D.C. area during my military years in the 1980s. I’ve toured the White House multiple times. I’ve been through the East Wing. I’ve seen the interiors.
Now, am I claiming to be a preservation architect? No.
But I know the difference between an aging historic building and a structure that is supposedly one gust of wind away from becoming a historical reenactment of The Three Little Pigs.
The White House isn’t some abandoned farmhouse leaning at a forty-five-degree angle while raccoons nest in the attic. It’s one of the most maintained buildings on the planet. Every administration spends money preserving it. Structural engineers inspect it. Preservation specialists monitor it. Renovations happen constantly.
The notion that the East Wing was held together with duct tape, prayer, and George Washington’s ghost is absurd.
Then there was the claim that foreign leaders don’t visit because the interior is embarrassing.
Really?
So for decades presidents have hosted kings, queens, prime ministers, diplomats, military leaders, Nobel Prize winners, and every imaginable head of state, but somehow nobody noticed the White House was secretly a run-down Motel 6?
That’s quite the conspiracy.
I’ve seen the White House. Millions of Americans have seen photographs, documentaries, tours, and state events from inside the White House. It is not embarrassing. Historic? Yes. Traditional? Absolutely. Different from a luxury hotel? Thank God.
Because it’s not supposed to be a luxury hotel.
It’s the White House.
There’s something fascinating about the way partisan loyalty can create alternate realities. The argument wasn’t really about architecture. It wasn’t about preservation. It wasn’t even about the ballroom.
The conclusion had already been reached:
Trump did it.
Therefore it must have been necessary.
Therefore the building must have been falling apart.
Therefore the East Wing was doomed.
Therefore everyone who disagrees is wrong.
It’s a chain of logic that starts with the answer and works backward to invent the evidence.
As a Gen Xer, I grew up believing that if you were going to make an argument, facts mattered. You didn’t have to agree with me, but at least bring something to the table besides fan fiction disguised as history.
The truly funny part is that if this person had simply said, “I like the ballroom and I think it’s an improvement,” we’d have had a perfectly normal conversation.
Instead, they had to invent a version of reality where the White House was apparently moments away from being condemned by the Department of Buildings.
At some point I realized there was no point arguing. You can’t reason someone out of a position they didn’t reason themselves into.
So I just nodded and let them continue explaining the White House to someone who had actually walked through the White House.
Sometimes wisdom is knowing when a debate has become performance art.
And sometimes the most patriotic thing you can do is quietly marvel at the fact that the East Wing somehow survived another gentle breeze without collapsing into a heap of historical debris, proving once again that reality remains stubbornly resistant to political fan fiction.
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Symbols
Dwain Northey (Gen X)

Symbols, History, and the Meanings We Inherit
One of the strangest things about being human is our obsession with symbols. We carve them into stone, paint them on cave walls, stitch them onto flags, tattoo them onto our skin, and spend centuries arguing about what they mean. Yet symbols themselves are neither good nor evil. They are marks, shapes, and patterns. The meaning comes later, assigned by people, cultures, religions, governments, and sometimes by history itself.
Walk through the ruins of an ancient temple anywhere in the world and you’ll find symbols whose original meanings have been lost to time. Some represented fertility, some prosperity, some the sun, some the cycle of life and death. Ancient people used symbols to explain a world they didn’t fully understand. They weren’t creating political slogans. They weren’t designing logos for future hate movements. They were trying to make sense of existence.
The problem is that symbols don’t stay frozen in time.
Perhaps the most famous example is the swastika. Long before the twentieth century, it appeared in Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and numerous ancient cultures across Europe and Asia. For thousands of years it represented good fortune, spirituality, eternity, or the movement of the sun. Then the Nazi Party appropriated it and transformed one of humanity’s oldest symbols into one of its most hated. Today, for much of the Western world, the symbol is inseparable from genocide and fascism.
But history is full of similar examples. Runes, eagles, sun wheels, and various geometric patterns existed for centuries before extremist groups adopted them. A symbol can spend two thousand years representing one thing and fifty years representing something else, yet the more recent meaning often overwhelms the older one in public memory.
This creates a difficult question: how much intent matters?
Suppose someone has a symbol tattooed on their chest. Maybe they got it when they were eighteen. Maybe they thought it looked interesting. Maybe it came from a video game, a history book, a motorcycle club, or a vague fascination with ancient cultures. Maybe they never researched its origins. Maybe they only learned years later that someone else had attached a darker meaning to it.
Can we automatically convict them of beliefs they may not hold?
Intent matters. Context matters. Knowledge matters.
That doesn’t mean symbols are harmless. A person displaying a symbol associated with hate should understand why others react strongly to it. Historical trauma is real. People don’t experience symbols in a vacuum. They experience them through the lens of history and memory.
At the same time, assuming we know someone’s entire worldview because of a single image can be dangerous. Human beings are messy. Ignorance exists. Ambiguity exists. People make mistakes. Meanings change across cultures and generations.
Dan Brown explored this idea in The Da Vinci Code and his other writings about symbolism. Much of the mystery wasn’t about the symbols themselves but about how people interpreted them. The same symbol could be viewed as sacred by one person, sinister by another, and completely meaningless by a third. The conflict often came not from the mark itself but from the stories attached to it.
Perhaps that’s the real lesson of symbols.
Ancient civilizations created many of these images as representations of nature, spirituality, mathematics, astronomy, or human experience. Most were never intended to divide people. They certainly weren’t designed to become banners for modern political movements thousands of years later.
History, however, has a habit of rewriting meanings.
A symbol may begin as a prayer, become a decoration, evolve into a political emblem, and eventually become a warning. None of those meanings completely erase the others, but they do accumulate, layer upon layer, until interpretation becomes complicated.
Maybe the challenge is learning to hold two truths at once. A symbol can have ancient origins that were peaceful and meaningful. It can also carry modern associations that are painful and destructive. Recognizing one truth doesn’t require denying the other.
The ruins of the ancient world remind us that symbols often outlive the people who created them. Long after empires fall and languages disappear, the marks remain carved in stone. What changes is the story we tell about them. Sometimes that story honors the original meaning. Sometimes it distorts it. And sometimes it tells us more about ourselves than it does about the people who first carved the symbol into the rock thousands of years ago.
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22 Doctors
Dwain Northey (Gen X)

The latest reporting says Donald Trump underwent examinations by 22 different specialists during his most recent presidential physical.
Now, forgive me if I’m not a medical expert, but I always thought the healthiest person in human history would require fewer doctors, not enough specialists to field a baseball team with a bullpen.
Apparently I’ve been doing health all wrong.
You see, when ordinary Americans need to see a specialist, they wait weeks or months for an appointment. They argue with insurance companies. They get referred to another doctor, who refers them to another doctor, who orders a test that insurance refuses to cover until Mercury enters retrograde and three forms are faxed to a machine built during the Reagan administration.
But Donald Trump gets 22 specialists.
Twenty-two.
That’s not a physical. That’s a medical convention.
Most 79-year-olds would consider themselves lucky if they had access to a primary care physician they liked. Donald apparently has enough specialists examining him to recreate the entire cast of a medical drama.
And remember, this is the same Donald Trump who has repeatedly been presented to us as the healthiest specimen ever to occupy the Oval Office. Not healthy for his age. Not in good shape for a man approaching eighty.
No.
We’re talking about the mythology. The legend. The man who, according to years of political storytelling, possesses boundless energy, perfect cognition, unmatched stamina, and enough vitality to personally defeat time itself.
Which naturally raises a question.
If he’s so extraordinarily healthy, why did he need 22 specialists?
I can’t wait to hear the spin.
Fox News will probably explain that Trump’s health is so magnificent that every branch of medicine demanded an opportunity to study it.
Cardiologists wanted to observe perfection.
Neurologists wanted to document the greatest brain ever assembled.
Orthopedists wanted to understand how a human spine could carry an ego of that magnitude without collapsing.
Future textbooks will apparently contain chapters titled “Trump: The Medical Miracle.”
Perhaps they’ll claim these specialists weren’t checking for problems at all. Maybe they were collecting samples for future cloning programs. Scientists from around the world gathered in awe to preserve DNA from the healthiest 79-year-old to ever walk the Earth.
Because that’s the only explanation that makes more sense than admitting that a nearly eighty-year-old man might actually require extensive medical evaluation.
The real issue isn’t even Trump himself. He’s seventy-nine. Seventy-nine-year-olds have health concerns. That’s normal. That’s reality. That’s being human.
The issue is the absurd contrast between the mythology and the facts.
We’re told he’s superhuman while simultaneously watching an army of specialists conduct examinations. We’re told he’s stronger than men decades younger while receiving levels of medical attention unavailable to virtually every American citizen.
And let’s not ignore the elephant in the examination room.
No ordinary American has access to 22 specialists for a routine physical.
Not teachers.
Not factory workers.
Not retirees living on Social Security.
Not veterans navigating the healthcare system.
Not the millions of Americans who postpone appointments because they can’t afford them.
But somehow taxpayers are helping fund a level of medical access that most citizens could never dream of receiving.
That’s the part that should irritate people regardless of party.
Because while Americans argue over deductibles, copays, and insurance networks, one politician receives what amounts to a comprehensive tour of modern medicine and then emerges to be declared the healthiest human being since the invention of the stethoscope.
Maybe he is healthy.
Maybe he’s not.
But if it takes 22 specialists to confirm you’re the healthiest man alive, perhaps the rest of us should stop pretending that’s what extraordinary health looks like.
To most Americans, extraordinary health looks like not needing 22 specialists in the first place.
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Solar Punk IV
Dwain Northey (Gen X)

Beyond Solar: The Many Paths to a Solarpunk Energy Future
When people hear the term solarpunk, they often imagine cities covered in rooftop solar panels, gleaming glass towers draped in greenery, and communities powered entirely by sunlight. Solar energy is certainly an important part of that vision, but a truly sustainable future cannot depend on a single source of power. A resilient solarpunk society would embrace a diverse energy ecosystem that includes wind, geothermal, biofuels, and other renewable technologies working together to replace the carbon-based fuels that have dominated human civilization for the last two centuries.
The irony is that many of these energy sources are not futuristic inventions at all. They are ancient forces that humanity has known and utilized in various forms for thousands of years. Wind has propelled ships across oceans since antiquity. Geothermal heat has warmed homes and baths since the days of the Roman Empire. Plant-based fuels have powered engines since the earliest experiments with automobiles. In many ways, the solarpunk future is not about discovering new sources of energy but rediscovering and modernizing the gifts nature has always provided.
Wind power is perhaps the most obvious companion to solar energy. While solar panels generate electricity during sunny hours, wind turbines often produce energy at different times, including at night and during seasonal periods when sunlight is weaker. This natural partnership creates a more balanced electrical grid. Modern wind farms can generate enormous amounts of electricity without consuming fuel or producing greenhouse gases. In a solarpunk future, offshore wind farms, community-scale turbines, and innovative urban wind technologies could provide clean energy to millions while reducing dependence on coal, oil, and natural gas.
Geothermal energy may be even more exciting because it taps into a resource that never stops. Beneath our feet, the Earth contains tremendous amounts of heat generated by radioactive decay and residual energy from the planet’s formation billions of years ago. Unlike solar or wind, geothermal systems can provide steady, reliable power twenty-four hours a day regardless of weather conditions. In a solarpunk world, geothermal plants could serve as the dependable backbone of renewable energy infrastructure, supplying electricity and heating while producing virtually no carbon emissions.
Biofuels also have a role to play, though they must be developed thoughtfully. Soy-based ethanol and other plant-derived fuels offer a renewable alternative to petroleum. Plants absorb carbon dioxide as they grow, and when those plants are converted into fuel, much of that carbon simply returns to the atmosphere in a cycle rather than introducing carbon that has been locked underground for millions of years. While biofuels are not a perfect solution and must be balanced against food production and land use concerns, they can help decarbonize sectors that are difficult to electrify, such as aviation, shipping, heavy machinery, and certain industrial processes.
The solarpunk approach would likely expand beyond soy into a wide variety of sustainable biofuel sources. Agricultural waste, algae, hemp, forestry byproducts, and even municipal organic waste could be transformed into energy. Instead of viewing waste as garbage, future communities could see it as a resource waiting to be reclaimed. This circular approach aligns perfectly with the solarpunk philosophy of reducing waste and maximizing ecological efficiency.
Hydroelectric power, tidal energy, and wave energy would also contribute to a diversified renewable grid. Rivers, ocean currents, tides, and waves contain immense kinetic energy that can be captured with modern engineering. While each technology has limitations, together they create a portfolio of renewable resources that can support one another when conditions change.
Perhaps the greatest advantage of this diverse energy mix is resilience. A city powered entirely by one technology is vulnerable to interruptions. A city powered by solar, wind, geothermal, biofuels, energy storage systems, and smart-grid technology can adapt to changing conditions. When the sun sets, wind turbines may continue spinning. When the wind calms, geothermal systems continue operating. When demand spikes, stored energy and renewable fuels can fill the gap.
Critics often argue that renewable energy cannot meet modern civilization’s needs. Yet humanity has spent generations investing trillions of dollars into extracting, transporting, refining, and consuming fossil fuels. Imagine if those same resources had been invested in renewable technologies decades ago. The question is not whether renewable energy is capable of replacing fossil fuels. Increasingly, the question is why we waited so long to make the transition.
The solarpunk future is not merely about cleaner energy. It is about reimagining our relationship with the planet. Carbon-based fuels represent an economy built around extraction, consumption, and depletion. Renewable energy represents an economy built around stewardship, regeneration, and balance. Wind continues to blow. The Earth continues to radiate heat. Plants continue to grow. The tides continue to rise and fall. These processes have existed for eons before humanity arrived and will continue long after we are gone.
A mature solarpunk society recognizes that nature is not an obstacle to overcome but a partner to work alongside. By embracing solar, wind, geothermal, biofuels, and other renewable technologies, we can build communities that are cleaner, healthier, more resilient, and more harmonious with the natural systems that sustain life. The future may not be powered by a single miracle technology. Instead, it may be powered by the collective wisdom to use the energy sources that have surrounded us all along.
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Purity
Dwain Northey (Gen X)

The modern Republican purity test is one of the strangest political phenomena I’ve ever witnessed. Not because it exists—every political party has standards, at least in theory—but because of who is administering the test.
Apparently Republicans have decided that the Democratic nominee trying to unseat Susan Collins in Maine is disqualified because he has a questionable tattoo and allegedly engaged in sexting that his wife was aware of. Notice the wording. Not unsolicited photos. Not criminal allegations. Not accusations of assault. Sexting. Between consenting adults. A personal matter inside a marriage.
This is supposed to be the scandal that shocks the conscience of the nation.
Meanwhile, the same people clutching their pearls over a tattoo have spent the better part of a decade defending behavior that would have ended political careers in any previous generation.
The current President of the United States was convicted on 34 felony counts and has been found liable for sexual abuse in civil court. Yet somehow I’m supposed to believe that a tattoo on a Senate candidate is where we’re drawing the line.
The same Republican Party that spent years telling us character doesn’t matter, personal conduct doesn’t matter, fidelity doesn’t matter, criminal convictions don’t matter, and allegations don’t matter has suddenly rediscovered Victorian morality because a Democrat has some ink they don’t like.
That’s not a standard. That’s a double standard.
Then there’s the Secretary of Defense, whose tattoos have generated controversy and speculation for years, along with past allegations of misconduct. Republicans either dismissed those concerns outright or accused critics of being hysterical. Apparently questionable symbolism is only a problem when it’s attached to a Democrat.
The deeper problem is that Democrats are constantly expected to meet standards that Republicans abandoned years ago. Democratic candidates are expected to have perfect personal lives, perfect social media histories, perfect language, perfect records, and perfect judgment stretching back to high school.
One bad tweet from 2009? Career-ending scandal.
One awkward tattoo? National emergency.
One consensual personal relationship? Endless cable news discussion.
Meanwhile, Republican politicians can survive affairs, indictments, convictions, extremist rhetoric, corruption allegations, ethics investigations, and conduct that would have been politically radioactive twenty years ago.
The message seems clear: Democrats must be flawless. Republicans merely need to be Republicans.
And that asymmetry drives me crazy.
Because if we’re going to have standards, let’s have standards. Apply them to everyone. If tattoos matter, they matter for everybody. If sexual misconduct allegations matter, they matter for everybody. If criminal convictions matter, they matter for everybody.
What we have instead is a political system where one side is expected to pass a white-glove inspection while the other side is judged on a curve so generous it might as well be a circle.
Republicans have spent years arguing that voters should overlook character flaws, personal scandals, and even criminal behavior in pursuit of larger political goals. Fine. That’s an argument, even if I disagree with it.
But if that’s your position, you don’t then get to transform into the morality police every time a Democrat has a tattoo, sends a text message, or has some personal issue that would barely register if there were an “R” after their name.
At some point the hypocrisy becomes so obvious that it’s impossible to take seriously.
The purity tests aren’t about morality.
They’re about politics.
And pretending otherwise insults everyone’s intelligence.
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Solar punk III
Dwain Northey (Gen X)

Growing the Future: How Community Gardens and Local Farming Can Transform a Solarpunk Society
When people imagine the future, they often picture towering skyscrapers, flying vehicles, and increasingly advanced technology. The solarpunk vision offers a different possibility. Rather than seeing humanity separated from nature by concrete, steel, and endless consumption, solarpunk imagines a future where technology and ecology work together. It is a future filled with renewable energy, green architecture, walkable communities, and an economy that values sustainability as much as growth. One of the most powerful and achievable steps toward that future may be something surprisingly simple: growing food close to where people live.
Community gardens, urban farms, rooftop agriculture, and neighborhood food forests have the potential to transform communities in ways that go far beyond providing fresh vegetables. They can reshape how people interact with one another, strengthen local economies, improve environmental health, and reconnect people to the natural systems that sustain life.
In many modern cities, food often travels hundreds or even thousands of miles before reaching a grocery store shelf. This transportation requires fuel, refrigeration, packaging, and extensive infrastructure, all of which contribute to pollution and waste. A solarpunk future seeks to shorten these supply chains. Local farming allows food to be grown near the people who consume it, reducing transportation emissions while increasing resilience against disruptions caused by climate change, economic instability, or global crises.
Community gardens represent perhaps the most accessible form of local agriculture. An empty lot that once collected trash can become a vibrant space filled with vegetables, fruit trees, pollinator plants, and people working together. These gardens transform neglected land into productive ecosystems. Bees, butterflies, and birds return. Soil health improves. Rainwater is absorbed rather than running off into storm drains. The garden becomes not only a source of food but also a source of ecological restoration.
The social benefits can be even more significant. Modern society often isolates people from their neighbors. Many individuals can live on the same street for years without ever learning each other’s names. Community gardens create opportunities for cooperation and shared purpose. People from different backgrounds work side by side planting, watering, harvesting, and learning from one another. The garden becomes a gathering place where knowledge is exchanged across generations. Elder gardeners share decades of experience while younger participants bring new ideas and energy.
A solarpunk future also embraces creativity in food production. Vertical gardens can transform the walls of apartment buildings into living ecosystems. Rooftops can host greenhouses powered by solar energy. Public parks can incorporate edible landscapes filled with fruit and nut trees instead of purely ornamental plants. Schools can maintain educational gardens where children learn biology, ecology, and nutrition through direct experience. Even small spaces such as balconies and patios can contribute to local food production through container gardening and hydroponic systems.
Food forests represent another exciting possibility. Unlike traditional agriculture, food forests mimic the structure of natural ecosystems. Layers of trees, shrubs, vines, herbs, and ground-cover plants work together to create self-sustaining environments that require less maintenance over time. A neighborhood food forest can provide fruit, nuts, berries, herbs, and habitat for wildlife while simultaneously cooling urban areas and capturing carbon from the atmosphere. Such spaces blur the line between park and farm, creating beautiful landscapes that nourish both people and ecosystems.
The economic impacts of localized agriculture are equally important. Money spent at local farms and community-supported agriculture programs tends to remain within the community rather than flowing to distant corporations. Small-scale agriculture can create local jobs while encouraging entrepreneurship. Neighborhood markets, cooperative food networks, and community kitchens can all emerge around local food production. This creates a more resilient economy that depends less on distant supply chains and more on local relationships.
Perhaps most importantly, community gardening and local farming help cultivate a different mindset. They remind people that food does not originate on grocery store shelves. They reconnect communities to the seasons, the weather, the soil, and the countless living systems that make human life possible. In a world increasingly dominated by screens and digital experiences, gardening offers something tangible and grounding. It teaches patience, stewardship, and an appreciation for long-term thinking.
The solarpunk future is not merely about replacing fossil fuels with solar panels. It is about reimagining humanity’s relationship with the natural world. Community gardens and local farming embody this philosophy perfectly. They combine practical sustainability with social connection, environmental restoration, and economic resilience. They transform vacant spaces into living landscapes and strangers into neighbors.
In the end, the path toward a greener future may not begin with some revolutionary technology. It may begin with a seed planted in a shared garden, cared for by a community that understands that the future grows best when people grow it together.
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Am I a Cold Bastard?
Dwain Northey (Gen X)

I occasionally find myself wondering whether there is something wrong with me when it comes to grief.
Not because I don’t feel sadness when someone dies. Not because I don’t understand loss. But because when I witness overwhelming, hysterical grief, my reaction is often different from what seems to be expected.
The thought that creeps into my mind is one I suspect many people have had but few are willing to admit.
Who is this really for?
The person who died is gone. They are beyond my help, beyond anyone’s comfort, beyond tears and anguish and sleepless nights. Nothing I do now changes their circumstances. No amount of sobbing brings them back. No amount of suffering improves their situation.
Which means the grief belongs entirely to the living.
And that realization has always left me feeling conflicted.
When I watch someone consumed by grief, I can’t help but notice that the pain is usually centered on what they have lost. The conversations become about the empty space in their life. The memories they won’t make. The phone calls they won’t receive. The birthdays, holidays, and milestones that will now feel incomplete.
In that sense, grief feels selfish.
I don’t mean selfish in a cruel way. I don’t mean selfish as an insult. I mean selfish in the most literal sense possible. The grief is about my loss. Your loss. Our loss. It is about the wound left behind in the people who remain.
Sometimes I wonder if acknowledging that makes me coldhearted.
Society seems to expect grief to be dramatic. We are taught that the greater the display of suffering, the greater the love that existed. Yet I have never been entirely convinced that this is true.
I’ve seen people turn grief into a performance. I’ve seen people become so consumed by mourning that the life of the person who died almost becomes secondary to the emotions of those left behind.
That has never sat comfortably with me.
If someone I love dies, I want to remember them. I want to tell stories about them. I want to laugh at the ridiculous things they said and celebrate the moments that made them who they were. I want to acknowledge the sadness without making the sadness the entire story.
Because death is not a surprise ending. It is the ending waiting for all of us.
Knowing that doesn’t make loss hurt less, but it does make me question the purpose of endless despair. If I truly cared about someone, shouldn’t at least part of my focus be on the fact that they lived rather than the fact that I now have to live without them?
Maybe that sounds harsh.
Maybe it sounds detached.
Maybe some people would read this and conclude that I am, in fact, a cold bastard.
But I don’t think that’s quite right.
A cold person wouldn’t care about the loss at all. A cold person wouldn’t spend time thinking about what grief means or why people experience it the way they do. A cold person wouldn’t wrestle with these questions.
I think what bothers me is not grief itself. Grief is natural. It is inevitable. It is the price we pay for caring about other people.
What bothers me is the expectation that grief must consume us, that suffering itself is somehow a measure of love.
I don’t know if I believe that.
The older I get, the more I find myself believing that grief is fundamentally for the living. The dead no longer need anything from us. What remains is our pain, our memories, our regrets, and our love.
Maybe that is what grief has always been: love with nowhere left to go.
And if recognizing that makes me different from some people, then so be it.
I’m still trying to figure out whether it makes me coldhearted.
So far, I don’t think it does.
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Solar punk II
Dwain Northey (Gen X)

Hempcrete and the Architecture of a Solarpunk Future
One of the most intriguing building materials emerging in discussions about a solarpunk future is hempcrete. While gleaming solar panels, vertical gardens, and renewable energy systems often dominate visions of sustainable cities, the materials used to construct those communities may be just as important. If humanity hopes to build a future that is both technologically advanced and environmentally responsible, then we must rethink not only how we power our buildings but also what those buildings are made from. Hempcrete offers a compelling glimpse into that possibility.
Hempcrete is a biocomposite material made from the woody inner core of the hemp plant, known as hemp hurd, mixed with a lime-based binder and water. The result is a lightweight material that can be formed into walls, insulation panels, or building blocks. Unlike traditional concrete, hempcrete is not typically used as a structural material. Instead, it is used alongside timber, steel, or other framing systems to create highly insulated, breathable walls.
What makes hempcrete particularly attractive in a solarpunk future is its relationship with the environment. Conventional construction materials often come with significant ecological costs. Cement production alone is responsible for a substantial portion of global carbon emissions, while steel manufacturing requires enormous amounts of energy. Modern construction frequently extracts resources from the earth, consumes vast amounts of fossil fuel energy, and leaves behind structures that are difficult to recycle.
Hempcrete represents a different philosophy. Hemp grows rapidly, often reaching maturity within a few months. During its growth cycle, the plant absorbs carbon dioxide from the atmosphere through photosynthesis. When the hemp is harvested and incorporated into building materials, much of that carbon remains locked within the walls of the structure. Combined with the carbon-absorbing properties of the lime binder, hempcrete buildings can potentially become carbon-negative, meaning they store more carbon than was emitted during their production.
This concept aligns perfectly with the core values of solarpunk. Rather than merely reducing environmental damage, solarpunk seeks systems that actively improve ecological health. The goal is not simply to be less destructive but to become regenerative. Hempcrete embodies that principle by transforming buildings from sources of carbon emissions into long-term carbon storage systems.
The advantages extend beyond carbon sequestration. Hempcrete provides excellent thermal insulation, helping buildings remain cooler in summer and warmer in winter. This reduces the need for energy-intensive heating and cooling systems. In a solarpunk city powered by renewable energy, every watt saved through efficient building design reduces strain on the electrical grid and makes communities more resilient.
Hempcrete is also naturally breathable. Traditional construction methods often create airtight structures that can trap moisture and encourage mold growth. Hempcrete walls allow moisture to move through the material without causing damage, helping regulate indoor humidity levels and creating healthier living environments. This characteristic reflects another recurring solarpunk theme: designing buildings that work with natural processes rather than constantly fighting against them.
Durability is another surprising benefit. While some people hear the word “hemp” and imagine something fragile or temporary, hempcrete structures can last for decades. The lime binder continues to cure over time, gradually strengthening the material. Hempcrete is also resistant to pests, fire, and rot, reducing maintenance requirements and extending the lifespan of buildings.
In a broader economic sense, hempcrete could help decentralize construction supply chains. Hemp can be cultivated in many different regions, allowing communities to produce a significant portion of their building materials locally. A solarpunk future often emphasizes local production, regional self-sufficiency, and resilient economies rather than dependence on distant industrial centers. Farmers could become suppliers not only of food but also of sustainable building materials, creating new economic opportunities while reducing transportation emissions.
Of course, hempcrete is not a miracle solution. It cannot replace every conventional building material, and scaling production would require investment, regulatory adaptation, and agricultural expansion. There are also challenges involving building codes, manufacturing infrastructure, and public familiarity with the material. Yet many transformative technologies begin with precisely these kinds of obstacles.
The significance of hempcrete lies not merely in its practical benefits but in what it symbolizes. For more than a century, industrial development has often treated nature as a resource to be extracted and consumed. Hempcrete suggests an alternative path—one in which buildings emerge from renewable biological systems, store atmospheric carbon, and integrate more harmoniously with the ecosystems around them.
In the solarpunk imagination, cities are not sterile landscapes of steel and concrete standing apart from nature. They are living environments where architecture, agriculture, technology, and ecology are woven together into a coherent whole. Hempcrete is a small but meaningful step toward that vision. It demonstrates that the materials of the future do not necessarily have to be more synthetic, more energy-intensive, or more disconnected from the natural world. Instead, they may come from fields of rapidly growing plants, transformed through thoughtful engineering into homes, schools, and communities that help heal the planet even as they shelter the people who inhabit them.
If solar panels provide the energy of a solarpunk future, hempcrete may help provide its walls. Together they represent a future in which human progress is measured not by how much nature we consume, but by how effectively we learn to build alongside it.
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