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.

  • Memorial Weekend

    Dwain Northey (Gen X)

    Every year, right around Memorial Day, America performs one of its favorite rituals: loading the SUV like it’s a doomed Arctic expedition, stuffing coolers with enough processed meat to trigger three cardiologists simultaneously, and hitting the highway in search of “freedom.” Freedom, apparently, now costs $5 a gallon again while half the country pretends not to notice because the wrong guy isn’t in the White House anymore.

    It’s remarkable how quickly political outrage evaporates when party loyalty enters the room. Just a couple years ago, Republicans acted as though slightly elevated gas prices under former President Joe Biden were evidence of societal collapse. Every television station carried dramatic footage of gas station signs like they were hurricane warnings. Politicians clutched fuel pumps the way medieval priests clutched crosses during exorcisms. Conservatives screamed that Americans were being financially tortured every time they filled up a Ford F-350 large enough to annex a neighboring state.

    The price of unleaded was apparently the defining moral issue of Western civilization.

    Now? Silence so complete you could hear a gasoline droplet hit pavement.

    Gas prices climb again heading into the summer holiday season, families are calculating whether they can afford a road trip that doesn’t require a second mortgage, and suddenly the same people who once treated fuel costs like an impeachable offense have developed the emotional range of a brick wall. Apparently expensive gas is patriotic now. Or maybe it’s just “complicated.” Funny how economics always becomes complicated when your own side is holding the receipt.

    And in strolls Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy, looking less like the nation’s infrastructure chief and more like a man auditioning for a reboot of The Waltons sponsored by Buc-ee’s. While Americans stare at gas pumps like they’re reading ransom demands, Duffy is reportedly off filming a reality show involving his Brady-Bunch-on-growth-hormones-sized family caravaning around the country for wholesome Americana content.

    Because that’s exactly what struggling Americans want to see this summer: a government official with a television pedigree piling ten children into a giant luxury vehicle and saying, “Pack up the family and hit the road!” as if gasoline is still ninety-nine cents and comes with a free set of steak knives.

    It feels less like public service and more like a tourism commercial produced by people who have never had to check their bank account before buying groceries.

    And honestly, the symbolism could not be more perfect for modern politics. Americans are told inflation is under control while paying more for everything from fuel to hot dogs, and meanwhile elected officials are essentially filming lifestyle content. We have reached the point where governance itself feels like a reality television crossover event. Congress argues in clips designed for TikTok. Presidential campaigns are branded like streaming series. Cabinet secretaries behave like influencers with federal pensions.

    Somewhere along the line, politics stopped being about solving problems and became a content creation economy with flags in the background.

    What makes the hypocrisy especially absurd is how selective the outrage machine has become. Under Biden, every nickel increase in gas prices was supposedly proof that America was descending into socialist ruin. Stickers saying “I did that!” appeared on pumps nationwide like a bumper-sticker version of economic theory. Cable news panels practically held candlelight vigils for suburban commuters.

    But now, as families prepare for one of the busiest travel weekends of the year facing similarly painful costs, the outrage has vanished into thin air like cheap ethanol fumes.

    No emergency hearings.
    No screaming chyron graphics.
    No politicians standing beside Chevron signs looking like Civil War widows.

    Just cheerful reminders to enjoy summer travel while the average family silently calculates whether staying home and grilling discount hot dogs is now considered a luxury vacation package.

    That’s the real frustration simmering beneath all of this: not merely the gas prices themselves, but the realization that so much of the political theater around them was exactly that — theater. The outrage was never about ordinary Americans struggling. It was about weaponizing inconvenience when politically useful and ignoring it when politically inconvenient.

    And perhaps nothing captures modern America better than this image: families debating whether they can afford to drive to Grandma’s house while a reality-show-ready transportation secretary caravans across the country smiling for cameras, assuring everyone that the open road still represents freedom.

    Freedom, of course, available now at participating gas stations for the low, low price of your entire paycheck.

  • Ballroom

    Dwain Northey (Gen X)

    There’s something almost poetically absurd about the idea of Donald Trump commissioning a “big beautiful ballroom bunker,” some gold-plated underground Versailles crossed with a casino convention center and a Bond villain panic room. You can practically see it already: twelve stories beneath the earth, marble columns imported from somewhere he can’t pronounce, chandeliers large enough to interfere with low-flying aircraft, and every surface lacquered in enough gold leaf to blind future archaeologists.

    Because of course that’s where this all ends.

    Not with quiet dignity. Not with reflective memoirs. Not with a presidential library containing carefully preserved documents and awkward portraits like every other former president. No, no. We’re talking about a subterranean mega-palace built somewhere beneath Florida bedrock or directly under a golf course fairway, equipped with Diet Coke fountains, a McDonald’s emergency ration wing, and an “election truth chamber” where prerecorded rallies loop endlessly for the surviving faithful after civilization collapses.

    The official explanation, naturally, would be national security.

    “We need it because America is under attack,” they’d say, while aggressively refusing to acknowledge that half the attacks might stem from antagonizing every ally on Earth while treating diplomacy like a WWE promo segment. NATO fractured, intelligence alliances strained, foreign leaders openly mocking us at summits, and suddenly the White House unveils plans for what looks suspiciously like the Emperor’s throne room from Star Wars designed by a man whose aesthetic sense peaked at Atlantic City in 1987.

    And you just know he’d insist it isn’t a bunker.

    “It’s not a bunker. Bunkers are losers. This is a luxury defensive freedom residence.”

    A luxury defensive freedom residence with blast doors.

    A thousand-year backup generator.

    And enough self-portraits to haunt the next geological epoch.

    But the truly surreal possibility — the one hovering just beyond parody — is that the whole thing eventually stops being an escape hatch and becomes a mausoleum. Because if there’s one thing history teaches us, it’s that strongman vanity projects always end up trying to outlive mortality itself. Pharaohs had pyramids. Roman emperors erected statues. Dictators commission giant portraits where they look mysteriously thirty years younger and significantly more athletic.

    Trump? He’d demand a ballroom crypt.

    Imagine it. Future tourists descending an escalator lined with giant screens replaying cable news clips from 2016 while “God Bless the USA” echoes through climate-controlled corridors. At the center: a massive crystal chamber illuminated from beneath like a Vegas seafood buffet.

    And there he is.

    Preserved.

    Bronzed.

    Suspended in a glass casket like some strange fusion of Lenin, Elvis, and a department store mannequin left too close to a tanning bed.

    Hands folded over an unsigned Bible.

    Hair shellacked into immortality.

    A recording activated every twenty minutes:

    “Many people are saying this is the greatest resting place ever constructed. Better than Lincoln. Better than Washington. Tremendous embalming.”

    Schoolchildren would shuffle past while exhausted tour guides try to explain to future generations that yes, this actually happened, and no, nobody fully understands how a nation founded by Enlightenment thinkers eventually built a golden underground shrine to a man who argued with windmills and sharpies.

    And outside the bunker-mausoleum-ballroom-palace-whatever-the-hell-it-is, the country itself would probably still be arguing. Half the population insisting it’s a sacred monument to patriotism. The other half staring at it like archaeologists discovering a lost civilization destroyed by ego and cable television.

    Because that’s the final absurdity of it all.

    Not merely the bunker.

    Not the chandeliers.

    Not the imagined embalmed display beneath a golden dome.

    It’s that somewhere, deep down, everyone can almost believe this is plausible. That in the year 2026, the line between satire and projected infrastructure proposal feels thinner than tissue paper. That the joke barely needs exaggeration anymore.

    And that may be the saddest part of all.

  •  Mutually assured destruction

    Dwain Northey (Gen X)

    The tragedy of nuclear politics is that every nation always claims its weapons are for “defense,” while simultaneously insisting everyone else’s are an existential threat. That contradiction sits at the center of our current tension with Iran, and it has haunted international politics since the first mushroom cloud rose over the desert.

    Years ago, the nuclear agreement negotiated during the administration of Barack Obama was imperfect, but it represented at least an acknowledgment of reality: countries do not simply surrender strategic leverage because another nation demands it. The agreement was never about friendship or trust. It was about verification, inspections, and buying time through diplomacy instead of escalation. It recognized a simple truth that history keeps teaching us over and over again — nations under pressure seek deterrence.

    But that agreement was torn apart, and once it was, the message sent to the world was unmistakable: treaties can disappear with elections, and guarantees are temporary. That kind of instability does not reduce nuclear ambitions; it accelerates them. If a country believes agreements are fragile while threats remain permanent, then nuclear capability starts to look less like aggression and more like insurance.

    And we have seen this movie before.

    Not long ago, Americans were told that if Pakistan obtained nuclear weapons, catastrophe was inevitable. The rhetoric was apocalyptic. Commentators spoke as though the Earth itself would crack open the moment Pakistan crossed the nuclear threshold. Civilization would collapse. Irrational actors would launch missiles at random. The world, we were assured, stood on the edge of annihilation.

    Yet Pakistan acquired nuclear weapons, and the world did not end.

    That does not mean proliferation is good. It does not mean nuclear weapons are safe or moral. It means reality turned out to be more complicated than fearmongering. Nations, even unstable ones, generally understand that nuclear war is suicide. Mutually assured destruction may be one of the darkest doctrines humanity has ever conceived, but it has also prevented direct conflict between nuclear powers for generations. The weapons are horrific precisely because everyone knows using them would be catastrophic.

    Which raises the uncomfortable question few governments want to discuss honestly: why do some nations believe they need these weapons in the first place?

    In the Middle East especially, no conversation about nuclear ambition can avoid Israel. Israel exists in a hostile region and has long viewed strategic superiority as essential to survival. Its undeclared nuclear capability has served as a deterrent for decades. But neighboring states see that same deterrent through a different lens. To them, nuclear imbalance feels less like stability and more like permanent vulnerability.

    That does not justify authoritarian regimes pursuing weapons programs. It does not excuse extremism or regional aggression. But pretending nations pursue nuclear arms in a vacuum ignores the obvious. Countries often seek the same “stick” their neighbors already possess because they believe vulnerability invites domination.

    And that may be the saddest truth about humanity.

    For all our technological advancement, our politics still operate on prehistoric instincts. Bigger club. Bigger wall. Bigger bomb. Nations speak endlessly about peace while simultaneously insisting peace can only exist if they possess the capacity to erase civilization several times over.

    Imagine explaining that to future generations.

    Human beings mapped the genome, walked on the moon, built artificial intelligence, and connected the globe through instantaneous communication — yet still organized society around the idea that security depends on maintaining enough thermonuclear weapons to destroy millions of innocent people within minutes.

    There is something profoundly broken in that logic.

    In an ideal world, every nuclear warhead on Earth would be dismantled forever, or launched harmlessly into deep space where they could never threaten another child, another city, another civilization. True security would come not from parity of destruction, but from collective disarmament. Humanity would finally mature beyond the idea that survival depends on holding a gun to everyone’s head simultaneously.

    But we do not live in that world.

    We live in a world where nations distrust one another so deeply that no one wants to disarm first. Every country fears being the only one left vulnerable. Every government assumes someone else will cheat. So the cycle continues: one nation arms itself for protection, another responds out of fear, and soon both sides point to the other as justification for escalation.

    That is the prison nuclear politics has built for modern civilization. Everyone claims they are acting defensively. Everyone feels threatened. Everyone insists the danger comes from somewhere else.

    Meanwhile, humanity continues balancing its future on the edge of weapons it should never have created in the first place.

  • Looking Back from the Future

    Dwain Northey (Gen X)

    History has a habit of changing the names on the buildings while keeping the story eerily familiar.

    A hundred years from now, it is entirely possible that figures like Bill Gates, Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, and Mark Zuckerberg will be discussed the same way historians now discuss Andrew Carnegie, John D. Rockefeller, and J. P. Morgan. Not because the industries are identical, but because the patterns are.

    The Gilded Age robber barons consolidated steel, oil, railroads, and banking. Today’s tech titans consolidated data, media, cloud infrastructure, retail logistics, communication, and increasingly, the public square itself. Carnegie controlled the steel that built the nation. Rockefeller controlled the oil that powered it. Morgan controlled the financing that stabilized or strangled entire sectors of the economy. The modern equivalents control something arguably even more powerful: information, attention, and digital dependency.

    Future historians may look back on the early 21st century and see the rise of the “Digital Gilded Age.” They may describe a world where a handful of unelected billionaires quietly accumulated levels of influence once reserved for governments. Not through armies or political office, but through platforms people voluntarily carried in their pockets every waking moment.

    Amazon became more than a store; it became infrastructure. Meta became more than a social network; it became an emotional and political ecosystem. Microsoft embedded itself into global business and government operations so deeply that modern civilization effectively runs on its software backbone. Musk’s companies extended influence into transportation, satellites, communications, artificial intelligence, and even the mythology of technological salvation itself.

    And like the industrial barons before them, these men cultivated dual identities. Carnegie built libraries while crushing unions. Rockefeller funded universities while monopolizing oil markets. Morgan stabilized markets while tightening financial control. Likewise, Gates became associated with global philanthropy and public health while Microsoft spent decades accused of monopolistic practices. Bezos funds journalism and space exploration while Amazon workers became symbols of modern labor exhaustion. Zuckerberg speaks of “community” while critics argue his platforms accelerated polarization, surveillance capitalism, and the commodification of human attention. Musk is simultaneously viewed as an innovator, provocateur, industrialist, and chaos engine depending on who is telling the story.

    That contradiction may become the defining feature of their legacy.

    Because history rarely treats immense wealth kindly at first. During their own era, Rockefeller and Carnegie were either worshipped as geniuses or condemned as parasites. A century later, they are remembered as both. The same may happen here. Schoolchildren in 2126 may learn that Musk accelerated electric vehicles and private spaceflight while also normalizing billionaire influence over geopolitical discourse. They may study Bezos as the architect of frictionless commerce and the man who helped hollow out local retail economies worldwide. Zuckerberg may be remembered less as the inventor of social networking and more as one of the architects of algorithmic social engineering. Gates may emerge as the most rehabilitated figure historically because of philanthropy, much the same way Carnegie’s libraries softened public memory of his brutal labor conflicts.

    But perhaps the most important comparison to the Gilded Age is not wealth itself. America has always had wealthy people. The real comparison is consolidation.

    The late 19th century concentrated physical industry into trusts. The early 21st century concentrated digital existence into platforms.

    The old monopolists controlled what people bought. The new monopolists increasingly control what people see, believe, discuss, fear, desire, and vote for. Rockefeller could influence the price of kerosene. Zuckerberg’s algorithms can influence elections, social movements, public health narratives, and the emotional temperature of entire nations in real time. Carnegie could suppress a strike in one factory town. Modern platform owners can alter the visibility of information globally with a software adjustment measured in milliseconds.

    That is a scale of influence the old industrialists could scarcely imagine.

    Future historians may also note how governments struggled to react. Just as late-stage industrial capitalism outpaced regulation in the 1890s, the digital economy outpaced democratic institutions in the 2000s and 2010s. Legislators often appeared technologically illiterate while corporations accumulated unprecedented quantities of behavioral data and market leverage. Antitrust discussions that once focused on railroads and oil pipelines evolved into debates over app stores, cloud servers, AI models, online advertising, and control of information ecosystems.

    And just like the original Gilded Age, the public reaction may eventually produce a political reckoning.

    The Progressive Era emerged because Americans eventually decided concentrations of wealth and power had become dangerous to democracy itself. Trust-busting, labor protections, financial regulations, and antitrust enforcement followed. A century from now, historians may frame our era as the volatile transition period before societies finally decided how much authority private technology empires should possess.

    Or they may conclude we never truly solved it.

    Because unlike Carnegie or Rockefeller, today’s oligarchs do not merely own industries. They own the mechanisms through which billions of people interpret reality. And history may judge that as either the greatest innovation of the modern age — or the moment democracy quietly outsourced itself to algorithms and billionaires.

  • What color is terrorism

    Dwain Northey (Gen X)

    There’s apparently a magical dividing line in America, and it has nothing to do with morality, violence, or even whether people are dead. No, the dividing line is whether your name sounds like it belongs on a Fox News chyron next to the words “suspected extremist” or whether it sounds like the guy grilling hot dogs at the Fourth of July parade while ranting about “protecting freedom.”

    If your name is Mohammed, Miguel, or Carlos, and you so much as raise your voice in public after someone rear-ends your car, congratulations — half the country is ready to convene a Senate hearing on “the growing threat.” Suddenly every cable news expert becomes a body language analyst. “Did you see the intensity in his eyes?” Yeah, Karen, he just got hit by a Buick.

    But if your name is Kyle, Donald, or John, and you walk into a Walmart dressed like you’re auditioning for a low-budget militia documentary carrying enough firepower to invade a small nation? Well, now everybody has to be “careful” not to politicize the tragedy. Thoughts and prayers. Candlelight vigils. Long discussions about mental health. Maybe a profile from old classmates saying, “He was always quiet.”

    Quiet? So is a rattlesnake before it bites somebody.

    And somehow the conversation always circles back to how this is “the price of freedom.” Really? Interesting definition of freedom we’ve got going here. Apparently freedom means elementary school children practicing active shooter drills before they can spell the word “constitution.” Freedom means parents getting texts from schools that begin with, “This is not a drill.” Freedom means we’ve normalized body armor for third graders while lawmakers wear AR-15 lapel pins like they’re merit badges from the world’s dumbest Boy Scout troop.

    Meanwhile, if a brown guy leaves a backpack unattended at an airport for six seconds because he had to tie his shoe, Homeland Security suddenly acts like they’re reenacting a season finale of 24. Entire terminals locked down. Bomb squads. News helicopters. “Possible terror incident.”

    But some pale dude posts a 900-page manifesto online filled with racist conspiracy theories, then drives three states over with assault rifles and murders innocent people? Ah, tragic lone wolf. Just another isolated incident. Amazing how isolated these incidents are when they happen every other week.

    And I’m exhausted pretending we don’t all see it.

    We’ve created this absurd double standard where melanin automatically equals suspicion while whiteness comes with an endless reserve of excuses. One group gets treated like they’re guilty before they even speak. The other gets every possible benefit of the doubt after they’ve literally opened fire.

    The irony is staggering. The same people screaming about “law and order” are often the first to explain away domestic terrorism when the perpetrator looks like their nephew Chad who “just got mixed up online.” Funny how terrorism only counts when it comes with an accent.

    And before somebody inevitably clutches their pearls and says, “Don’t make this about race,” I’d love to hear what alternate magical explanation exists for why entire communities are treated like suspects while others are treated like unfortunate misunderstandings. Because from where I’m sitting, the pattern isn’t subtle anymore. It’s tattooed across our politics, our media, and our justice system in neon lights.

    At this point, America doesn’t have one definition of terrorism. It has a sliding scale based on skin tone, surname, and whether the shooter’s yearbook photo looks like he once played JV baseball.

    And we all know it. Some people are just more comfortable lying about it than others.

  • GOP History

    Dwain Northey (Gen X)

    The history of the Republican Party is one of the strangest political evolutions in American history because the party that began as the party of union, federal power, and moral responsibility has, in many ways, transformed into something even its greatest Republican presidents would barely recognize. If you dropped Abraham Lincoln or Theodore Roosevelt into today’s political climate, modern Republicans would probably accuse both men of being dangerous radicals.

    The Republican Party was born in the 1850s out of opposition to the expansion of slavery. Lincoln’s central mission was preserving the Union. That was his obsession, his defining cause. But unlike many politicians of his time, Lincoln’s view of the Union was inseparable from a basic belief in human dignity. He believed slavery was morally wrong. He believed people should not be property. He believed labor had value beyond the profit it generated for wealthy men. His Republican Party was not anti-government. In fact, it believed government had a responsibility to build the nation through infrastructure, industry, railroads, education, and national unity.

    Lincoln’s Republicans were nationalists in the truest sense. They believed the federal government should actively shape the country. Today’s cries that “government is the problem” would have sounded bizarre to the party that literally fought a civil war to preserve federal authority.

    But after Lincoln’s assassination, the party began drifting toward the interests of industrial capital. America exploded economically during the Gilded Age, and with that explosion came men like John D. Rockefeller and Andrew Carnegie. Industry created immense wealth, but also immense corruption. Railroads, oil monopolies, steel empires, and banking interests began exerting enormous control over American politics. Republicans increasingly became associated not with protecting workers or defending the public good, but with protecting commerce and industrial expansion at nearly any cost.

    Money had always mattered in politics. But during the Gilded Age, money stopped merely influencing politics and began dominating it outright.

    Workers were crushed under brutal labor conditions. Child labor was rampant. Monopolies strangled competition. Political machines sold influence openly. The federal government often acted less like a protector of the people and more like private security for industrial titans.

    And then came Theodore Roosevelt.

    Roosevelt was one of history’s great contradictions. He was born wealthy, educated among elites, and came from privilege most Americans could barely imagine. Yet he developed a worldview that wealth carried obligation. Much of that came from his father, whom Roosevelt idolized. He believed power demanded responsibility. To Roosevelt, being rich was not permission to exploit society; it was a duty to contribute to it.

    The Republican establishment never fully trusted him.

    As governor of New York, Roosevelt became a nightmare for entrenched corporate interests because he actually believed government should regulate abuse. Party bosses hated his independence. The old Republican machine tried to sideline him by pushing him onto the vice presidential ticket under William McKinley. The vice presidency at the time was largely ceremonial political exile. The calculation was simple: put Roosevelt somewhere harmless where he could stop causing trouble.

    Then history intervened.

    McKinley was assassinated in 1901, and suddenly Roosevelt became president.

    Corporate America panicked.

    Roosevelt immediately began using federal power aggressively. He attacked monopolies with antitrust lawsuits. He confronted railroad barons. He pushed consumer protections, food safety regulations, environmental conservation, and labor reforms. He wasn’t anti-capitalist. Far from it. Roosevelt believed capitalism was necessary and productive. But he also believed unchecked corporate power would eventually destroy democracy itself.

    That is the key distinction.

    Roosevelt believed corporations existed within the nation. Modern corporate politics often behaves as though the nation exists to serve corporations.

    Roosevelt’s “Square Deal” philosophy was built around balance: labor, business, and the public all had interests government was obligated to protect. To modern hyper-corporate politics, that philosophy almost sounds socialist, which would have amused Roosevelt enormously considering he was a fiercely patriotic capitalist.

    After leaving office, Roosevelt grew increasingly disgusted with the Republican establishment. He believed the party was abandoning reform and surrendering completely to corporate conservatism. When he attempted to return to power in 1912, the Republican machine blocked him in favor of William Howard Taft. Roosevelt responded by launching the Progressive Party — the famous Bull Moose Party.

    That split the Republican vote and helped elect Woodrow Wilson.

    But the important part historically is this: Roosevelt’s movement showed there was already a civil war inside Republicanism more than a century ago. One side believed government should restrain concentrated wealth for the good of society. The other believed protecting capital itself was the highest political priority.

    That fight never really ended.

    Over the decades, the corporate side largely won.

    The Republican Party of Dwight D. Eisenhower still retained some remnants of Roosevelt-style governance. Eisenhower expanded infrastructure massively with the interstate highway system and accepted much of the New Deal framework. Even Richard Nixon created the EPA and supported forms of federal regulation that would be denounced as tyranny today.

    But beginning in the late twentieth century, especially after Ronald Reagan, the Republican Party increasingly fused free-market absolutism with cultural grievance politics. Government became the enemy unless it benefited military expansion or corporate interests. Regulations became evil. Labor unions became targets. Taxes on wealth became treated almost as moral crimes.

    And eventually that evolution culminated in the modern Trump-era Republican Party.

    The irony is staggering.

    Lincoln believed government existed to preserve democracy and human liberty. Theodore Roosevelt believed government existed to prevent wealth from consuming democracy entirely. Both men believed concentrated power was dangerous whether it came from slaveholders or monopolists.

    Today’s Republican Party often treats concentrated wealth as virtue itself.

    The modern doctrine that “corporations are people” would have horrified both Lincoln and Roosevelt, albeit for different reasons. Lincoln believed labor was superior to capital because labor created capital in the first place. Roosevelt believed corporations were tools, not sovereign entities entitled to dominate public life.

    Neither man would likely survive politically inside the current Republican coalition. Roosevelt would be attacked as anti-business. Lincoln would probably be called a federal tyrant. Both would be accused of believing government has too much responsibility toward ordinary people.

    And that may be the clearest evidence of how dramatically the Republican Party has changed.

    The party that once fought a civil war to preserve the Union and later battled monopolies to preserve democracy increasingly defines freedom almost entirely through the lens of wealth, deregulation, and corporate influence. What began as a movement centered on national purpose and civic responsibility has, over generations, become a party where money is often treated not simply as influence, but as the measure of virtue itself.

    Lincoln and Theodore Roosevelt believed America was a nation first and an economy second.

    Modern Republicanism often sounds like it believes the exact opposite.

  • Not even hiding the theft

    Dwain Northey (Gen X)

    There is something almost artistically absurd about watching a man sue the government while simultaneously being the government. It is like watching someone rob their own house and then call the police demanding compensation for emotional distress. And yet here we are, in the latest episode of “America: The Reality Show Nobody Asked For,” where Donald Trump apparently decided that the taxpayers should finance both sides of his legal tantrums.

    The original lawsuit was already ridiculous enough. Ten billion dollars over the release of his tax returns. Ten. Billion. Dollars. Not because his taxes revealed some vast criminal conspiracy against him. Not because they exposed state secrets. No, because the public got to see what generations of presidents willingly disclosed without behaving like a raccoon cornered in a dumpster. Every president understood that transparency was part of the job. Donald treated it like the nuclear launch codes.

    And now, after a judge reportedly all but laughed the case toward the courthouse exit by calling it what amounts to legal fan fiction, suddenly Donald wants to “settle.” Funny how that works. When the courtroom starts smelling less like victory and more like sanctions and embarrassment, the tune changes quickly.

    But here is where it stops being merely absurd and starts drifting into full authoritarian cosplay.

    Instead of walking away from a nonsense case, now there is talk of funneling $1,776,000,000 — yes, they are apparently trying to be cute with the symbolism — into compensating the people who “defended” him and were supposedly unfairly prosecuted by the Justice Department. Because nothing says “respect for American democracy” quite like turning the 250th anniversary spirit of the United States Declaration of Independence into branding for a taxpayer-funded political slush fund.

    That number is not accidental. It is political merchandising masquerading as patriotism. Wrap yourself in enough flags, slap “1776” onto the check, and suddenly we are all supposed to ignore the fact that this is still public money being redirected toward Donald’s orbit of loyalists, allies, and grievance collectors.

    Think about the breathtaking audacity of that for a second. The government paying enormous sums of taxpayer money to people tied to efforts surrounding his own political and legal chaos, because in his mind they are victims. Not victims of injustice necessarily, but victims of loyalty backfiring.

    And the insult piled on top of the corruption is the staggering hypocrisy of it all.

    This is the same political movement that suddenly develops a fiscal panic attack anytime someone suggests expanding Affordable Care Act subsidies so working families can afford insulin or cancer treatment. School lunches for children? Apparently socialism. Feeding hungry kids somehow becomes an unbearable burden on the federal budget. Student debt relief? Outrage. Housing assistance? Too expensive. Helping veterans get healthcare faster? Well now we need to have a “serious conversation” about spending.

    But somehow a $1,776,000,000 taxpayer-funded loyalty payout to Donald’s political orbit is supposed to be perfectly reasonable.

    Apparently the treasury only becomes sacred when ordinary Americans might benefit from it.

    Need help paying medical bills after a lifetime of work? Sorry, tighten your belt.

    Need your child to have lunch at school? The budget deficit is a grave concern.

    Need affordable healthcare so you do not die rationing medication? Personal responsibility.

    But if Donald wants billions directed toward allies, loyalists, and people connected to his endless drama machine, suddenly Republicans discover that the money printer exists after all.

    It is the same old scam dressed in a red hat: austerity for the public, luxury socialism for the politically connected.

    That is not normal democratic governance. That is oligarch behavior. That is the kind of thing you expect from strongmen who treat the treasury like their personal checking account. The political equivalent of a mob boss saying, “The family took some hits protecting me, so the public can cover the bill.”

    And the terrifying part is that none of this even shocks people anymore.

    We are talking about a man who has normalized levels of corruption that, twenty years ago, would have detonated Washington like an asteroid strike. Imagine telling Americans in 2005 that one day a president would openly try to redirect billions toward allies and loyalists after being caught in endless scandals, while simultaneously attacking the courts, the press, elections, and the rule of law itself. Republicans would have fainted theatrically onto antique fainting couches while cable news screamed about tyranny for eighteen straight months.

    Now? Half the country shrugs while the other half screams into the void.

    And of course the red hats will defend it. They always do. If Donald walked onto Fifth Avenue and announced he was nationalizing taxpayer funds into the “Trump Vindication and Yacht Expansion Freedom Fund,” there would still be somebody on television explaining how this is actually brilliant 4D chess against the deep state.

    What makes this especially grotesque is the complete inversion of conservative rhetoric. These are the same people who spent decades yelling about government waste, fiscal responsibility, and abuse of taxpayer money. Remember when Republicans acted like funding public libraries was the first step toward Soviet collapse? Now suddenly the idea of billions flowing toward political loyalists is apparently patriotic.

    Small government, unless the government is writing checks to our guy.

    Law and order, unless our guy broke the law.

    Fiscal conservatism, unless our guy wants a golden parachute financed by the middle class.

    It is amazing how flexible principles become when cult worship enters the room.

    And that is really the heart of it. This is not about conservatism anymore. It is not even about policy. It is about loyalty to a man whose entire political philosophy boils down to, “What benefits me personally?” Everything else is secondary. Institutions, laws, ethics, precedent, democracy itself — all disposable if they interfere with Donald’s ego or his bank account.

    The truly chilling thing is how closely this mirrors the behavior of authoritarian figures around the world. The enrichment of allies. The punishment of critics. The manipulation of state power for personal revenge. The endless insistence that every investigation is illegitimate while every loyalist is a persecuted martyr. This is the playbook. It always has been.

    And yet millions of Americans looked at all of this and said, “Yes. More of that.”

    Apparently the swamp was not meant to be drained after all. It was meant to be privatized.

  • Words; let’s get specific

    Dwain Northey (Gen X)

    Language is more than communication; it is architecture for thought. Certain words do not merely replace simpler cousins — they carry entire histories, philosophies, and emotional textures within them. A true lover of language understands that vocabulary is not about sounding intelligent for its own sake. It is about precision. Sometimes a plain hammer will do, but sometimes you need a scalpel.

    Take the word lexicon. Technically, it means the vocabulary of a language, a person, or a field. Yet calling something a lexicon instead of merely “a collection of words” changes the weight of the sentence entirely. “Vocabulary” feels academic and clinical, while lexicon suggests something living and cultural — a verbal fingerprint unique to a people, profession, or era. A mechanic has a lexicon. So does a poet. So does every generation that invents slang faster than dictionaries can catalog it. The word itself feels expansive, almost sacred, because it implies not just words, but identity through words.

    Then there is zeitgeist, that wonderfully German import that English adopted because no native equivalent quite captures its meaning. You can say “spirit of the times,” but that phrase lacks the gravity and elegance of zeitgeist. The word encompasses the intellectual, emotional, political, and cultural atmosphere of an age all at once. It is not simply trendiness or public opinion. It is the invisible current moving beneath society — the collective mood that defines an era before history books name it. The 1960s had a zeitgeist. The digital age has one too: restless, instantaneous, fragmented, perpetually connected yet oddly isolated.

    This is why some words tower above their lesser comparisons. They are not merely synonyms; they are vessels carrying nuance that simpler substitutes spill onto the floor. Language lovers treasure these words because they compress entire ideas into single elegant forms. A rich vocabulary is not linguistic vanity. It is the recognition that human experience is too complex to be painted entirely with broad strokes.

    Words matter because precision matters. And sometimes one perfect word can illuminate an entire thought in ways ten ordinary ones never could.

  • South Will Rise Again?

    Dwain Northey (Gen X)

    There was a time when conservatives insisted the judiciary was supposed to practice “judicial restraint.” Remember that? Judges were allegedly humble constitutional librarians who simply interpreted the law, not philosopher-kings in black robes rewriting society from the bench. Adorable little fairy tale, that. Because the current incarnation of the Supreme Court of the United States appears to have discovered a far more exciting hobby: speedrunning the post-Reconstruction South while pretending it’s all just “originalism.”

    Every few weeks now feels like another episode of Confederacy: The Reunion Tour. Voting rights? Suspicious. Affirmative action? Gone. Diversity initiatives? Apparently the greatest threat to civilization since disco. You half expect the next ruling to begin with, “After careful constitutional analysis, we have determined that the Civil War was a bit of an overreaction.”

    The intellectual premise behind many of these decisions seems to boil down to this: America elected Barack Obama twice, therefore racism has been defeated forever. Mission accomplished, everybody. Pack it up. Apparently centuries of institutional discrimination evaporated the moment a black family moved into the White House. By that logic, because someone once ate a salad, obesity has been cured.

    Anyone who actually lives in America knows this argument is a complete bag of bullshit.

    You can see racism in housing disparities, sentencing disparities, hiring discrimination, school funding, voter suppression efforts, and the fact that every time someone says the words “systemic racism,” half the country reacts like Dracula seeing sunlight. But according to this Court, if racism still exists, it must only survive in magical isolated pockets, certainly not in the systems built over centuries and reinforced by policy decisions. No, no. The systems are perfect now. Meritocracy reigns supreme. Please ignore the billionaire legacy admissions student rowing crew member behind the curtain.

    And the most maddening part is the historical amnesia. Civil rights legislation didn’t appear because America was functioning beautifully and everyone was just feeling generous one afternoon. The Civil Rights Movement happened because states — particularly in the former Confederacy — spent generations perfecting the art of denying black Americans equal rights while technically avoiding saying the quiet part out loud. Poll taxes. Literacy tests. Gerrymandering. Segregation academies. “States’ rights.” Funny how “states’ rights” historically always seems to mean the right to treat minorities like second-class citizens.

    The Court now acts offended whenever anyone notices patterns. If a state closes polling places in heavily minority districts, aggressively purges voter rolls, redraws maps with surgical precision, and just coincidentally makes it harder for black citizens to vote, the Court’s response is essentially: “Well unless Governor Cletus McSegregation personally rode into town on horseback yelling slurs through a megaphone, we cannot possibly infer discriminatory intent.”

    It’s a legal standard so absurd it would fail a kindergarten class. A five-year-old can recognize when one kid keeps “accidentally” excluding the same classmate over and over again. But some of the sharpest legal minds in the country stare at decades of patterns and conclude, “The evidence is inconclusive.”

    What makes this especially dangerous is the smug insistence that dismantling protections is somehow proof of equality. That’s the con. They argue that because discrimination is illegal, discrimination therefore no longer meaningfully exists. It’s like removing the fire department because arson is technically against the law.

    And underneath all the polished legal jargon sits the same old reactionary fantasy: America was better before all these civil rights laws complicated things. Before minorities, women, labor groups, and marginalized communities got uppity and started demanding equal treatment. The nostalgia embedded in many of these rulings is impossible to miss. It’s less “constitutional fidelity” and more “Make Jim Crow Subtle Again.”

    Of course, defenders of the Court insist critics are overreacting. They always say that right before another precedent gets tossed into the woodchipper. Roe v. Wade? Settled law — until it wasn’t. Voting Rights Act protections? Essential safeguards — until they weren’t. Affirmative action? Longstanding precedent — until it wasn’t. At this point, the phrase “settled law” has all the durability of a gas station napkin in a hurricane.

    The tragedy is that these decisions don’t happen in a vacuum. They ripple outward into schools, workplaces, elections, policing, and public discourse. They send a message about whose grievances are taken seriously and whose are dismissed as whining. And increasingly, this Court seems deeply concerned with protecting the feelings of people offended by discussions of racism while showing far less concern for the people actually dealing with it.

    History has a nasty habit of repeating itself when powerful people convince themselves the work of equality is already done. Reconstruction ended early because America got tired of protecting black citizens from racist state governments. We all know what followed: nearly a century of legalized discrimination and terror. So when people look at this Court and say it seems weirdly eager to hollow out civil rights protections piece by piece, they’re not imagining things. They’re recognizing a pattern America has seen before.

    The Confederacy lost the war. But sometimes it feels like its legal theories are making one hell of a comeback tour.

  • Making the sausage

    Dwain Northey (Gen X)

    People love the myth of the lone political savior or lone political villain. One guy walks into office, waves a magic wand, and suddenly everything is fixed or destroyed entirely because of one human being. That’s how campaign ads work. That’s how cable news works. That’s how social media works. It’s simple, clean, and completely ignores how government actually functions.

    Take New York City for example. People will say, “Mayor so-and-so balanced the budget,” or “Mayor so-and-so saved the city financially.” Maybe they helped steer the direction, sure, but mayors do not govern alone. A mayor without a city council is basically a guy screaming ideas into the void. Every budget, every zoning change, every infrastructure package, every public service investment has to go through layers of negotiation, votes, compromises, and political horse trading. If a mayor succeeds, it usually means there was at least some level of cooperation between the executive office and the legislative body.

    The same thing applies in Los Angeles. The mayor gets either all the credit or all the blame depending on who’s yelling on Twitter that day, but the reality is more complicated. When policies moved forward with support from the city council, Los Angeles saw meaningful improvements in transportation, housing initiatives, public works, and local development. When there was resistance or obstruction, progress slowed down or stalled entirely. That’s not weakness. That’s democracy. Democracy is messy because it requires consensus, compromise, and negotiation between people who don’t always agree.

    And that’s where the contrast becomes glaring when you look at modern Republican governance, especially under Donald Trump. A huge amount of the damage people associate with Trump didn’t even come from legislation. It came from executive orders, unilateral decisions, regulatory destruction, and a political party that increasingly abandoned the idea of being a legislative body and instead became a cheering section. Congress is supposed to debate policy, shape legislation, provide oversight, and act as a co-equal branch of government. Instead, large chunks of the GOP behaved like their primary responsibility was protecting one man politically at all costs.

    That’s the fundamental difference people miss. Democrats often move slowly because they tend to work through coalitions, committees, public debate, and negotiation with legislatures. It can be frustratingly slow. Sometimes painfully slow. But that’s because they’re usually trying to get buy-in from multiple groups and operate within institutional frameworks.

    Republicans in many states increasingly operate under a “we have power, so we do it now” philosophy.

    Look at California. Voters wanted independent redistricting commissions to reduce partisan gerrymandering, so the issue was put before the public and passed democratically through ballot initiatives. Virginia moved in a similar direction through reforms supported by voters. Whether someone agrees with every outcome or not, the process involved public participation and voter approval.

    Then you look at states like Georgia, Alabama, Florida, and Texas where legislatures often ram through heavily partisan district maps designed to predetermine outcomes before a single vote is cast. Courts object, legislatures ignore them, and somehow the conversation always circles back to “election integrity” while districts are drawn like someone spilled spaghetti across a map.

    And then comes the irony of all ironies: the same people who scream the loudest about “freedom” and “small government” are often the quickest to centralize power when it benefits them politically. They override local governments, punish cities that disagree with state leadership, remove elected officials they don’t like, and pass laws specifically designed to weaken opposition voting blocs. That’s not grassroots democracy. That’s top-down power projection.

    Democracy is supposed to involve friction. It’s supposed to involve arguments, debate, compromise, and sometimes painfully incremental progress. The fact that Democrats often need consensus to get things done is treated as weakness, while Republicans bulldozing policies through with brute-force majorities is somehow framed as strength.

    But there’s a reason one approach feels slower. Building things takes time. Maintaining institutions takes effort. Governing responsibly requires cooperation.

    Breaking things is easy.

    You can wreck decades of policy with a signature on an executive order. You can gut agencies, undermine public trust, slash regulations, and inflame division almost overnight. Destruction is fast. Construction is slow.

    So no, politicians do not operate in isolation. The mayor who succeeds usually had a council working with them. The president who passes landmark legislation usually had congressional support. The governors who accomplish lasting reforms usually built coalitions.

    But when one party increasingly treats compromise as betrayal and governance as domination, you stop getting democratic cooperation and start getting political strong-arming masquerading as leadership.

    And that distinction matters more now than ever.