Category Archives: Food for Thought

A great idea

One of my favorite YouTube prepper channels just put out a WWIII Victory Garden Challenge video, with some great ideas on how to increase your personal food security:

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Some very good advice

I came across a video with very good advice on how to cope with all the craziness going on in the world:

I’ve always been a news junkie, long before the internet and smart phone age. I loved reading newspapers, and news magazines. While I was growing up the news on TV or radio was not 24-hour and I think we were better off with less access to all this media drama and incitement all day long, every day.

One thing I can say about war coverage is it comes with a whole bunch of information operations from all sides in conflicts. What reporters report on the ground may not be accurate and the social media information streams become filled with alarming images that I have no way to figure out details and accurate information about them.

Focus on the things you can control in your own life. I do urge people to stock up on extra food, water and supplies. I’ve believed that’s a good idea since my childhood Girl Scout days, but even with my prepping efforts I realize that at the end of the day, lots of things I didn’t “prepare” for will likely happen and I’ll have to just deal with it.

Each day, when faced with challenges and adversity, we should learn to take a deep breath and then suck it up and drive on. Oh, and don’t forget how to smile and enjoy all the many good things that happen, even amidst all this craziness.

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Each day brings hope

What I hope Americans understand is that what’s happening in Ukraine will touch their daily lives here in America, even if our country isn’t involved in the war on the ground.

Sanctions against Russia come with costs to America, especially if China and other countries work with Russia to retaliate. Both Russia and China have been stockpiling grain and advising their citizens to stock up on necessary food.

“MOSCOW, RUSSIA — Russia plans to release about 75,000 tonnes from its government stockpile to the domestic market during the first quarter of 2021, state trader United Grain Company told Reuters on Jan. 14.

Sales will begin on Jan. 20, Reuters reported.”

https://www.world-grain.com/articles/14743-russia-to-release-wheat-from-state-stockpile

Here’s a CNN report on China from November 2021:

Hong Kong/Seoul CNN Business —  

“China is telling families to stock up on food and other daily essentials as bad weather, energy shortages and Covid-19 restrictions threaten to disrupt supplies.

The country’s Ministry of Commerce late Monday issued a notice directing local governments to encourage people to stockpile “daily necessities,” including vegetables, oils and poultry, in order to “meet the needs of daily life and emergencies.”

The agency also urged local authorities to make sure that people have an “adequate supply” of essentials this winter into next spring. And it told those authorities to keep prices stable — a source of anxiety in recent weeks, as the cost of vegetables has surged throughout China because of unusually heavy rainfall that has hurt crops.”

https://www.cnn.com/2021/11/02/economy/china-food-supply-covid-vegetables-intl-hnk/index.html

I wish we had leaders here who had calmly urged Americans to prepare and worked to try to unite our country, but all we get is more hyper-partisan craziness spewing from both sides.

The yada, yada, yada I mentioned the other day means none of us can change what Putin’s doing or even what our own leaders are doing, but we do have control over how much news and social media we consume.

If you asked me what you should do now, I’d urge you to limit your news and media consumption, as the first belt-tightening you do as things get worse. I’d urge every American to work to strengthen their relationships with their family, friends and neighbors and find ways to help each other. I’d urge them to stock up food, water and basic supplies, because inflation and supply problems are likely to escalate. I’d urge them to pray.

Pray for our troops who are deployed around the world, working to keep us all safe.

Focus on what you can do each day, not on how bad things are. Each day brings hope.

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Planting a few seeds of hope

The news here in America and beyond is alarming. While Russian military action is definitely possible in Ukraine, China might feel emboldened to make some military moves too. However, for the past few years, I’ve been thinking that China and Russia are already setting the stage to wage a major economic war against the West. America and the West are more politically unstable than at anytime in my lifetime and while most of us have been lulled into believing America is invincible and the world’s only remaining superpower, I don’t believe that’s true.

The main lesson I learned from the pandemic was how thoroughly incompetent and unprepared our government is at both the federal and state level. If there was a major economic system failure (or multiple failures), nothing I’ve seen in either political party’s leadership reassures me that there are comprehensive plans in place, let alone any contingency plans and most of all I doubt they have the resources and vital supplies stockpiled to keep our nation functioning. All across our major institutions, but especially among elected leaders, there’s an alarming lack of competent leadership and this applies to both major political parties.

Here’s an interesting video about Russia and China stockpiling efforts by Chris at City Prepping, a very informative emergency preparedness YouTube channel:

I have been seriously stocking up on food and other supplies since the Great Toilet Paper Shortage of 2020. Before that I always had lots of food stocked up (and other stuff), but I had no preparedness plan. While I’d like to think I have enough food stocked up now to last close to a year, I know I don’t have enough water stored, even though I have stored more water in the past couple years. I also know that the food I have now could be at risk, if there was a natural disaster that required evacuation, prolonged power outages, theft, or even if other family members needed help. Most of all having store-bought canned goods and supplies is great, but it likely would not be an easy resource to replenish if shortage problems worsen.

Counting on our federal or state government for anything seems extremely risky, after watching their performance in the past few years. Even the state governors who didn’t destroy the economy within their states with extreme “social mitigation” policies, sure seemed more concerned about the partisan politics and getting their daily talking points into the news media spin cycle than about ordinary citizens’ well-being.

I’ve been trying to learn as much as I can about emergency preparedness and have been following an excellent Prepper School series on YouTube, by Sensible Prepper, where the information is presented without any fearmongering or hysteria. Yesterday was Vol. 12 and definitely worthwhile:

Several weeks ago I was in my backyard looking around and thinking about how empty it is. There’s a storage shed that needs to be torn down, because it’s in sad shape. There’s a willow tree and a few shrubs. That’s it. I used to have a vegetable garden, flower beds, a swing set, and even a clothesline, but as my husband’s health declined over the years, I asked my sons to remove the chain-link fence and gate where I had my vegetable garden, remove the clotheslines, and even my flowers went too. We hired a lawn service to take care of the mowing. My husband put together that swing set for our first granddaughter, who started college this past fall.

As I was looking around, I noticed a couple small patches of mint starting to grow out. Living in growing zone 8b, we have some stuff growing year-round here. We get a few nights a year that temperatures drop below freezing, but the ground hasn’t frozen for the almost 30 years I’ve lived here.

That mint was a gardening mistake I made about 25 years ago, when a friend gave me a few pieces of mint from her garden. The cuttings were in a damp paper towel inside a plastic bag, which I left sitting on my kitchen counter a few days before planting. Those cuttings looked more dead than alive, but I planted them in a flower bed in the back yard.

Mint is very invasive. That mint took off and spread into the back yard and patches even spread along the side of the house and into the front yard. Over the years more and more of the mint died off, so I was surprised to see these two small patches. I picked a few pieces of mint and started it in a small flower pot and put it on the windowsill in my kitchen. It’s already growing.

These pieces of mint growing made me feel hopeful for some reason and I began to look at my backyard with an eye to the future, instead of thinking about all the life that used to be there. I also thought about my vegetable garden, where my husband did all the heavy-lifting work, yet he always called it my garden.

Instead of following all the partisan politcal spin theater that fuels our 24/7 news media lately, I’ve been spending time watching gardening videos and learning more about raised bed gardening, which is what I’m going to attempt. I also started pulling out my old gardening books and reading, because I felt like I forgot a lot since I last planted a vegetable garden.

My husband was way more organized than I am and he would sit and sketch out plans and measurements, while my mind was filled with daydreams of pretty flowers and abundant bounty from the vegetable garden. I was full of big ideas and dreams; he was big on setting up infrastructure first. He grew up in Baltimore and knew nothing about gardening, but he figured out the garden set-up and watering with drip irrigation. He knew nothing about composting, so I showed him some composting bin ideas in gardening books and he set to work building two large wooden composting bins. I never turned the compost pile or pushed a single wheelbarrow of compost to spread on the garden. He did that.

I am not sure how much I can tackle by myself at 61 years old, so I asked my sons for help with setting up some raised beds and then I will try to do as much of the rest by myself. I talked to one of my sisters and she set up raised beds several years ago and she told me she set up shelves with grow lights in her basement to start her seeds. I priced a utility-type shelving unit and grow lights and will be setting that up in the next week. I’ve been pricing supplies for raised beds and other gardening supplies too.

I bought plenty of seeds.

Working on a vegetable garden seems like it will be time better spent than paying attention to the political blowhards on Twitter and in the news media. I can’t do a thing to change the big events unfolding in the world, but I can attempt to utilize my time better and perhaps even plant some seeds of hope in my own backyard.

2/7/2022 Update: I took the little pot of mint out in the sunroom to snap a photo. Please excuse the dirty table and windows, but I haven’t used that room since my husband died last year. It was his room. He was a smoker and sat out there to smoke and watch TV. Here’s a hint about bringing any plant matter from outside into the house – it might bring some unwanted friends along too. The pieces of mint came with some fungus gnats, I think these are. So, I stuck a yellow sticky trap in the pot and it’s dealing with them so far.

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Freedom Isn’t Free

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Our American heart

Just when the partisan spin garbage left me feeling totally disgusted, GWB comes through with the message we all should take to heart:

https://twitter.com/TheBushCenter/status/1256607729151619073

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Finding hope amidst the carnage

There were two mass shootings in America within 24 hours, one in El Paso, Texas, yesterday and one in Dayton, OH, in the wee hours of the morning today.

Yesterday, when the El Paso story broke, I was watching a stupid sci-fi movie, Idiocracy, which one of my sons insisted I would love (I didn’t).  In that movie, set hundreds of years into the future, America’s gene pool and culture had declined dramatically, where the English language had eroded into gibberish and mindless slogans, education had been demonized and the American system had descended into chaos, and corruption,  with a WWF type star running the country.

A male and female from the present were frozen in a top secret military experiment, where they were supposed to be awakened in the near future, but they ended up being frozen for several hundred years.  When these two average people awakened they found themselves,literally, the smartest people in the world.  The man had been a dud in the Army, who did nothing to distinguish himself as a soldier, while the woman had been a prostitute, who was conned into being a part of the experiment.

The movie Idiocracy was made in 2006 and here we are in 2019 with a WWF type star as president and most days the mindless spin word games leave me wondering what the heck happened to America.

In 2019 America, the media news cycles are largely driven by the blue checkmark crowd of political and thought leaders who drive the media spin cycles on Twitter.  President Trump also uses his Twitter account to drive spin cycles.  We live, not in an Idiocracy, but a Twitterocracy. News Media people and politicos on Twitter drive the other American news formats, especially the cable TV spin cycles.

Today’s reporting has been a mix of law enforcement reporting updates, reports on the victims, pundits and politicians assigning blame for the shootings (well beyond the two shooters) and as can always be expected massive politicization, before the bodies of the murder victims are even cold. It’s a rather ghoulish national media and political spectacle.

At the end of the day, it appears the El Paso shooter was motivated by white nationalist sentiments and the Dayton. OH shooter was an Elizabeth Warren supporter, Satanist and anti-gun violence advocate (try making sense of that, if you can). My personal opinion is what likely motivates these killers is probably a complex combination of factors, like mental illness, erosion of family, decay of civic culture, social alienation, violent culture, malign online groups that fuel hate.  Of course, America’s 24/7 scorched earth spin war, which the media avidly aids and abets, certainly probably could be a contributing factor too.

My point is, it’s doubtful we can pinpoint one specific cause, even though many people want some specific cause, that they can fixate on as the source of the evil, because it’s much easier to believe that, “if we only got rid of that cause, that would fix the problem”.  For many on the Left, Trump is the cause and removing Trump from office is the solution.  For many others on the Left, the cause is guns and more gun laws will fix the problem.

I’ve never owned a firearm in my life and never want to own one.  I understand the strong views of people on both sides of the 2nd Amendment debates and constant battles over gun laws.  That said, sure there might be some more gun laws that might keep guns out of mass shooters hands, but at this point enough details aren’t known about these two mass shooting incidents to have a calm debate about whether the law the Democrats are hyping today would have had any impact on either of these two shootings.

The reality  that the “causes” are complex and there  isn’t some magical, easy-fix political solution to end these mass shootings, particularly those carried out by white nationalists, who are reported to be using online forums to radicalize and spread their racist ideology, ramp up racial fear and incite rage, doesn’t sit well with many Americans.  People like believing there are political solutions to slaying violent ideologies (see all the true-believers that American military might could destroy radical Islamist ideology).

This is just my opinion, but positive cultural changes in America begin in the hearts of good citizens, good neighbors, and strong families.  We can all work toward that end, in our own small ways.  Each tiny effort can begin the change.  Of course, having strong leaders in America, from all walks of life, working to spread calm and  positive messages, instead of turning everything in America into a vicious political battle, would help a great deal too, but judging from most of the Twitterocracy thought leaders, and partisan political peeps, I wouldn’t hold my breath on that happening.

And here we come to President Trump and his endless ginning up anger and flirting with white nationalists in his rhetoric.  While I don’t believe it’s fair or productive to run around calling him a racist or white nationalist, he has never come out and tried to distance himself from white supremacist or denounced their hate-filled ideology.  As the person holding the biggest megaphone in America, it’s way past time for him to strongly denounce white nationalism and white supremacy ideology.

The best thing the news media could do for America is abandon their cozy spin nest on Twitter and get back to reporting who, what, when, when, why and how, instead of being major players in the partisan spin wars, which churns out of the Twitterocracy every day in America.  Yes, even Trump knows Twitter drives the American news cycles in America and propels the Left’s spin narratives, which is why he clings to his personal Twitter account.

And the best thing each of us average citizens can do is try to take care of our families, our friends, our communities and pray that each small drop of kindness adds up to large enough waves to begin changing the tide in our country.

Finding hope amidst the carnage won’t be easy,  but we could each resolve to spread some kind words and work to do some good deeds… that’s a start.

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Gorsuch Offers Great Life Advice

“My advice to law students is very simple: work hard, learn to write and speak effectively, never give up on your passions, treasure your family and friendships, find time to do public service, and learn to win — or lose — graciously.

More than all of that, know that you will have many regrets in life — things said or done, or left unsaid or undone — but the one thing you will never regret is being kind.”

https://ijr.com/law-student-receives-advice-justice-gorsuch/

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A blog post from 2016

Well, it’s Mother’s Day, so I’ll skip the politics today.  I’m going to rerun a blog post from a few years ago, but  if some writing inspiration strikes after a couple more cups of coffee, perhaps write something new too.  Here’s Hand-me-downs:

Hand-me-downs

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A hand-me-down book from my childhood

Fair warning, this is going to be another backwoods PA story from my childhood.  Escape while you can:-)

I was born in 1960 and grew-up in a small village in the Pocono Mountains.  Our end of the county was and still is called the West End (which is synonymous with hicks).  Most of our neighbors were of PA German ancestry, although even in the 1960s, the urban exodus to the Poconos had begun.   The Poconos had been a vacation spot for city dwellers since the Civil War era, but during my childhood many of these urban visitors began building homes in the Poconos and staying year-round.  Many of the locals hold the urban dwellers moving into their peaceful country neighborhood as loud, boorish, pushy, stupid and very rude.

Back in the 90s, a phone conversation with my mother railing about some “stupid New Yorker” about sums up the sentiment and the disconnect.  My mother was complaining about some woman from New York who wanted the township to pay for street lights in her little residential area in the Poconos.  The woman also apparently had thought sidewalks would be a good idea.  My mother, like most locals, ended her complaints with a statement that went pretty much like, “I wish these damned city people would go back to the city and leave us alone!”

However, that unknown woman from New York got a very different reaction than my mother dealing with our pastor’s wife, who was not only New York City born and bred, but also Jewish.  The parsonage was right across the road from our home, so our pastor’s wife was also our neighbor.  My mother adored our pastor’s wife, my mother adored her elderly mother too, who would come and visit for several weeks at a time when I was a child.

It’s often interesting how many people will prejudge an entire group of people, but when they are in a situation where they are dealing with an individual from that group and getting to know him or her, all of sudden common ground can be found and friendships blossom.

Spending my adult life around Army communities, I’ve always been very grateful for the experience of being able to meet so many people from so many different countries, backgrounds, and experiences.  The thing that binds Army communities is soldiers with a common mission.  Their wives, no matter if they are foreign-born or American invariably become friends, share recipes, share in the worries when their spouses deploy, and share in a sense of community.

Finding that common ground in America is an existential crisis, not media hysteria about “fake news” or “Russian influence”.

The partisan political divides, listening to political pundits, reading news from various political stripes and observing comments on Twitter, facebook, etc., make me feel like these groups live on different planets, not in the same country.

So, back to my childhood, in a family with six kids, with widely different opinions.  For instance, conservative me, has a far-left brother, who was really into zero population growth as a cause.  When he lectured me when I was pregnant with my third child, asking if my husband and I thought our genes were so good that we had to spread them around with so many children, well, I didn’t get angry.  I smiled at him and replied, “Well, now that you mention it, yes, we do.”  I also told him I wanted 5 or 7 kids, because I like odd numbers (although we stopped “spreading our genes around”, overpopulating the world, at 4 kids).

No matter how angry we were at each other or how vehemently we disagreed, when it was dinner time, we all had to sit at the table and behave civilly.  My parents didn’t want to hear how mad we were or how much we disagreed or whether we had been fighting all day about something – we had to sit at the table and eat our dinner.  There was no taking your plate to another room or screaming at each other at the table allowed.

Especially with the advent of the internet, the splintering of America has escalated, where there’s really very little discussion in online political discussion forums, only hyper-charged partisan attacks.  Each side generates talking points, which the political combatants hurl back and forth non-stop.  Poll numbers get tossed in to validate positions, although really polls are meaningless – they’re the opinions of a few people extrapolated to represent the opinions of very large groups of people.

I’ve met many wonderful people from New York City and other urban areas.  I’ve also met some total assholes right where I grew up, who were locals.  And it shouldn’t even have to be said in America, but we’ve got to start talking to each other and move beyond our own little cocoon of people who think just like we do or hold the same political views.

We need to start embracing getting to know people as individuals.

The same goes for considering political viewpoints and here again, my mother taught me that you can’t make anyone believe anything.  My oldest sister is 8 years older than me and she had friends in high school, who like her, read a lot.  Along with wearing hand-me-down clothes, I became a proud collector of hand-me-down books.  Anything my sister or her friends were ready to discard, I was ready to add it to my “collection” of books.  I read the entire Warren Commission Report in paperback, I got a copy of To Kill A Mockingbird.  I still have the Watchwords of Liberty, filled with great American quotes.  I also ended up with paperback histories like:

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Then somehow I ended up with:

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So, while you might expect my conservative, staunch Republican mother to want this book out of her house, you’d be wrong.  She told me she didn’t believe in Marxism, but to decide for myself.  She gave me a copy of a little booklet (which I gave to someone), called, Good Citizen and she told me this booklet had a lot of interesting information on America.  So, I read Marx’s Concept of Man and then I read her Good Citizen booklet and many other books too.

In 1976, the American Bicentennial fueled a bunch of books on the American Revolution and my American love affair with The Constitution and our republic bloomed like cherry blossoms in Washington springtime.  I was hooked on American ideals.  I had started adding to my hand-me-down book “collection” with books I bought with babysitting money – books like:

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I also got enthralled by The Kent Family Chronicles, that John Jakes series commemorating the 200 year anniversary of America.  By that point, I was sold on The Constitution, sold on American ideals and Marx sounded like depressing whining about “unfairness”, where there’s never any hope for individuals to aspire to anything… just endless reliance on imposition of command economy enforcers to decide on what’s fair and relentless fueling class warfare. The American Bicentennial fueled a life-long love of reading American history.  My short time in the Army expanded that to loving to read military history too.

In life, we all have some really dumb ideas and beliefs.   That’s the truth!  No one gets through life being perfect and all-knowing.  For instance, I abhor violence and had this idea that all behavior is learned, so when I had kids, I didn’t want my kids to be violent.  I didn’t want my sons to have any toy guns, because I believed that would encourage violence.  I believed this despite the fact that I got into plenty of fistfights as a kid fighting bullies.

My mother and sisters laughed at me and told me I was stupid.  My husband just rolled his eyes.  My toddler sons, well, they turned everything into a weapon, to include their older sister’s Barbie dolls.  They were very destructive and liked to clobber each other, while there I was telling them in this prissy voice, “you’ve got to be nice!”  My daughter didn’t take to them wrecking her stuff and she smacked them when they touched her stuff.  So much for my toy guns make boys violent belief.

When I told my mother about my sons throwing everything and turning everything into a weapon, which my daughter had never done, my mother said, “welcome to the world of boys.”

Here’s another story on “boys” from a few years later.  We were living in Germany and I was throwing a birthday party for one of my sons.  My next-door neighbor had a lot of very colorful finches in a cage and she decided to let them fly loose that day.  They were getting ready to PCS back to the states.  My daughter came running in the house to tell me that all these little boys had sticks and were trying to kill these little finches that were sitting in the bushes around the house.  So, I walked outside and there was this group of little boys, bloodlust in their eyes, gleefully trying to kill these tiny birds with big sticks.   They were barbarians!  In that moment I realized that there is something about males and violence that is probably hard-wired.  And I realized that my “be nice” idea had been idiotic all along.

What people believe can’t be forced, so it’s best to try to find that common ground, I keep blabbing on about.  Here again, I think my mother had the right idea there too – get people to sit at the same table and share a meal, insisting that everyone be polite.

Simple as it may be, perhaps just getting people to share a meal and talk might work miracles, where all the social programs have failed.  Here’s an old LB blog post from 2014:

“I’m always amazed at how when people sit down to share a meal, the petty squabbles subside, conversations almost invariably turn to family and home.  A friendly dinner table is the world’s most under-tapped peacemaking tool.  The simple act of breaking bread together at a table of brotherhood doesn’t seem all that hard and once people can come together and peacefully share a meal and conversation, then all the other politicized barriers fall to the wayside.  Community potlucks could rebuild communities and not cost taxpayers a dime.  Believe it, because it’s true and with so much animosity and hatred in America, at the very least neighbors might make new friends, so there’s no downside to the endeavor.”

https://libertybellediaries.com/2014/11/29/another-home-truth/

I also quoted my mother’s least favorite poet, Maya Angelou in that post.  I’m not a fan of Angelou’s poetry either, but she sure nailed a home truth with this quote:

“Hate, it has caused a lot of problems in the world, but has not solved one yet.” –
http://www.goodreads.com/quotes/26244-hate-it-has-caused-a-lot-of-problems-in-the

Again, finding ways to heal the divides in America is an existential necessity.

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More proponents of a “Kill Them With Kindness” plan

I like cutesy pictures and saccharin sweet sayings, so here’s what I look at on the hutch above my PC.

An op-ed in the Washington Post a few days ago, The Dalai Lama and Arthur Brooks: All of us can break the cycle of hatred, caught my attention.  It was a short piece about the deluge of angry word flying across the internet.  The Dalai Lama and Brooks write:

“Human beings have a deep longing to live together in harmony. People only feel completely alive when experiencing loving bonds with one another. Everyone, of all faiths and no faith, knows this truth, and most profess it openly.

And yet people fight incessantly. Even though war is blessedly absent in most countries today, these are deeply polarized times. Words too often are delivered with contempt; philosophical differences are likened to warfare; those who simply disagree with another are deemed “enemies.” Often it is on the Internet — which was launched as a forum for unity — where people attack one another, under the cloak of anonymity.”

Their answer to defeating the growing “war of words”, especially online,  is very simple:

“Respond with kindness. Want to say something insulting about people who disagree with you? Take a breath and show generosity, instead.”

As I am typing this, Twitter is aflutter with another Trump-generated outrage spin cycle about Trump’s vicious attack yesterday on the late senator, John McCain, while standing in front of Army tanks and the American flag.  This spin cycle will agitate for a few days, but nothing will really change, despite a firestorm of words flying in the media, covering this latest Trump spin blitz.

Our politics very much reflects our culture and despite many anti-Trump politicians and pundits asserting, “This (meaning Trump) is not who we are,” sadly, Trump very much reflects who we are.

The truth is, in an America where good character and being truthful matters, neither of our two thoroughly corrupt 2016 presidential contenders would have been their party’s choice.  If either party had any ethical standards, they would have rejected such completely mendacious candidates, who were under so heavy a cloud of corruption, and who both have glaring character flaws.   We embrace a culture dominated by social media celebrity, Reality TV stardom and a news media entrenched in promoting political spin cycles.  Absent this media dominated culture, neither Trump nor Hillary would have risen to the top and diligent investigative reporting in the news media would have sunk both of them.

You don’t need a degree in psychology or fancy clinical terms to see that both Trump and Hillary lie outrageously and they both have the disturbing habit of doubling down on their lies, even when there’s video of them saying or doing the exact thing they are denying.  They launch media spin campaigns to bolster their lies rather than admit they lied.

In real life most people with even a bit of a moral compass, recognize thoroughly mendacious people like Trump and Hillary as people to be wary of and untrustworthy, but in American politics now, most Americans chose one of them to lead America…

That speaks to our American culture, where too many people prefer to jump on the latest popular spin train rather than standing up for any sort of moral principles.

Many conservatives and NeverTrumpers made their peace with Trump as POTUS, happily consoling themselves with “But Gorsuch” type rationalizations and trying to skim past the recurring Trump-instigated outrage spin cycles, like this bizarre spectacle of Trump’s attack on McCain yesterday.  Likewise, many Democrats chose to ignore the obvious Clinton corruption.

How many Americans will choose to start being kind and generous when facing hostile attacks?  Well, judging from a couple of decades of watching… and experiencing, social media behavior, even a few people beginning to lead this “kill them with kindness” approach, assuredly, is a welcome glimmer of hope.

The Dalai Lama and Brooks “Kill Them With Kindness” plan, naturally, resonated with me, because it’s the only way to defeat the massive SPIN information war that drives, not only American media, but also American culture.

Since 1998, I’ve wished a thousand times, and more, that I had never posted any comments online, but perhaps working toward writing less about politics and more about things that matter much more to me might be a good thing. Sometimes all it takes is a small gesture to change the tone, so I welcome the Dalai Lama and Brooks suggestion and will work to try to change the only person I can control… myself (and the tone of my blog  &  social media comments).

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