Troll in Chief will stomp workers and businesses for revenge against Canada.

h/t Parnas Perspective, Canada.

It’s all about Don-Don, our degenerate baby man in charge.

I love Canada using Ronald Reagan to troll Donald Trump (see video in the link to Parnas Perspective below).

I heard something about the Toronto Bluejays trolling Trump with Reagan then saw the Parnas Perspective this morning.

Of course, Trump responded in his typical way.

I don’t hate Donald Trump, but I think he sucks at his job. He said he was going to drain the swamp but he made himself King of the Swamp Monsters instead.

I prefer a President who isn’t a pathological liar or an infomercial con-artist. In other words, I prefer every other United States President of my lifetime.

It took Donald Trump to make me appreciate Ronald Reagan. I hated Ronald Reagan. I believed in Reagan, then felt betrayed. Beirut and Iran-Contra deepened my sense of betrayal.

Donald Trump got me elected to public office. I never thought I was qualified to hold public office until Trump got elected in 2016. Trump made me realize anyone… anyone could get elected, if they had the right organization.

Democrats had a tendency not to show up for local elections, not to pay attention. In April 2017, Dems could barely wait for the opportunity to say NO to Trump. In conservative Vernon Township, where Republicans ran unopposed four years before, the Vernon Township Democratic slate started a Blue Wave that overturned Republican control of Lake County for the first time in almost 100 years.

After we won every contested office, Dems reduced the property tax levy and increased social services.

Four years later Democrats ran unopposed.

Trump made me nostalgic for the Hollywood Actor who knew how to play the part. As a public servant, I appreciated the validity of Reagan’s message that taxes could be reduced without hurting social services if we cut corruption and waste. On a local level, this proved true. It’s time again to hear his message about markets and for everyone to wake up and see that we have a corrupt incompetent President who uses his power to leverage pay-to-play and filling the deep dark hole in his soul with appeals to his vanity and ego.

He’s sick. I’ll pray for him, but I also think we should move past his failures and his enablers. It is time for Truth and Reconciliation. Let’s end these toxic policies and divisions that hurt our Republic.

We can yet be the shining city on a hill, instead of the gaudy status symbol of a degenerate, pathetic man.

https://substack.com/home/post/p-177008362

“Don’t be stupid, be a shmahtee, come and join the Dazi party.”

Word to my bolshevik bastard former comrades:

Shabbat Shalom, motherf*ckers.

May 22 proved to be a timely moment to remind my Facebook and anti-social cesspool X audience that I fracked out of the DSA on April 6, 2023.

I’ll take DSA GOING STRAIGHT TO HELL for 500, Alex.

The struggle for ecology, feminism, and a more democratic control of resources getting replaced by the enraged and homicidal Lefty Jihad.

What is the influence of Russian, Iranian, Saudi, or Qatari Petro-dollars and organized crime on the American Left?

Since it’s not AIPAC money we’re talking about, I guess we’ll never know.

Shoeless Joe, Pete Rose, That Guy, and My Old Man.

Today would have been my dad’s 84th birthday had he not died in a hospital not long after his 80th. Since he is not here to give his opinion, let me share it with you: He told me many times that the lifetime ban from baseball for Shoeless Joe and Pete Rose should only apply to the span of their mortal time on Earth. He believed Shoeless Joe belonged in the Hall of Fame and he believed that Pete Rose ought to be posthunously inducted there. I agree with Pops. Pete’s lifetime ban is expired.

He also insisted that you not mention the name of that guy that is now running against Vice President Kamala Harris.

My dad was a proud independent conservative. He served in Vietnam and he was weirdly proud to have voted for Barry Goldwater. He was not so proud about Vietnam, though he made his peace with it and started wearing his Vietnam Veteran cap later in life… and he started displaying his medals on a plaque on the wall. Prior to that, he kept them in a drawer for a couple decades.

But he never made his peace with that guy. In his last year, he opened up considerably about the war. It was more than I wanted to know. Like I said, he made his peace with it. He said the one thing that never made sense was being with a buddy talking to him one minute and then a minute later he’s gone, because of a small hole. He got over Vietnam somewhat, made his peace with it, but it took almost half a century and there wasn’t that much time for that guy that insulted the gold star parents of a fallen soldier and got away with it and became President, anyway… my dad didn’t live to see Joe Biden elected, nor see that other guy behaving like a disrespectful clown at Arlington Cemetery.

You couldn’t mention that guy’s name around my dad, so I won’t mention it, but f*ck that guy.

If you vote for that guy, I respect your right as an American to vote your conscience, but as my father’s son, I must say again, f*ck that guy. He deserves a lifetime ban more than those other guys did.

https://www.facebook.com/share/r/1CTD71zr4d/?mibextid=wwXIfr

This is a personal blog and it is not approved by any candidate, campaign, or political party.

I don’t always speak for my affiliations and my affiliations don’t always speak for me.

Poser-in-chief Jill Stein getting absolutely smoked while being a poser.

Moments like this make Elon’s anti-social virtual cesspool worthwhile.

Check out the 2nd clip in Mehdi Hasan’s X post. Also, Jill Stein quoting “corporate duopolist” JFK is precious.

This is a personal blog and it is not approved by any candidate, campaign, or political party.

I don’t always speak for my affiliations and my affiliations don’t always speak for me.

Friends, colleagues, fellow citizens… support Gloria Witt for Congress in southside Virginia.

The Coordinated Dream Team in southside Virginia… Kamala Harris (Tim Walz), Tim Kaine, and Gloria Witt.

When I came to Danville, Virginia in 2008, we pulled off one of the biggest upsets in decades. We won the deep red 5th District by about 800 votes. The record turnouts in Danville had a lot to do with it. Barack Obama at the top of the ticket had a lot to do with it, but that’s not the whole story. Me and Marcus Hughes having conversations in Cardinal Village (walking into the middle of a gun battle one time) had a lot to do with it. Bryant Hood and Steph Spissu getting out at midnight in the 6th Ward to make sure the right door hangers were in place after a report about Republicans switching them up… that had a lot to do with it.

We met many new voters and people that hadn’t voted in a long time. They were excited about Barack Obama, but they didn’t know that Tom Perriello was going to help Barack in the Congress until we had those conversations.

Volunteers walking their home turf in every part of Danville. That had everything to do with it. Felicia King and her crew of teenagers in 11. Ms. Virginia in 6. Ms. Gloria working the front desk. The ladies that ran the Danville Voter Contact Machine phone bank… that had more than a lot to do with it.

But we also had conversations with Republicans and won their votes. They thought Barack was going to raise taxes. They didn’t know he was raising the top rate and was going to give them the largest payroll tax cut in history. They found out Barack was running to put money in their pockets, just as Kamala, Tim Kaine, and Gloria Witt are fighting for working people today.

We brought people together and pulled off an upset and we’re getting the band back together to do it again.

I’m down here helping my friend Joshua Norris. I met him while he was volunteering in 2008 and now he’s campaign manager for Gloria Witt. We’re both doing whatever we can to build back the Danville Voter Contact Machine. At minimum, we will get extra votes for Kamala and the Tims (Walz and Kaine) but it would be especially meaningful to win this Congressional seat again.

The Dems haven’t won it since 2008, but we have a good candidate that can draw a broad coalition and pull off the upset. We want Kamala to win but we also want to make sure she has the people in Congress that will help give working families a #BetterDeal.

Help us help them. I have phone calls to make and doors to hit, so please pass this blog around your personal network and help us support the organizing work that will make this deep red seat blue… again.

We have a chance to make history and do what’s best for our country.

Gloria Witt campaign manager Joshua Norris and organizer Adam Broad at the Obama Reunion Party. Salt Shed. Chicago, IL

BELOW: THIS IS THE DONATION LINK FOR ACT BLUE. PLEASE DONATE AND PASS IT AROUND.

https://secure.actblue.com/donate/broadcoalitionforgloriawitt

This is a personal blog and it is not approved by any candidate, campaign, or political party.

I don’t always speak for my affiliations and my affiliations don’t always speak for me.

#ThankYouJoe

My latest email from Bernie

Some good points about Kamala Harris and the #BetterDeal #TeamKamala is promoting as an alternative to infomercial con-artist Donald Trump.

Adam –

Listen to Donald Trump, turn on Fox News, or follow any Republican on social media and you will hear or see the constant claim that Kamala Harris is more “radical” and more “far left” than Bernie Sanders.

No.

Let me simply say, for better or for worse, Kamala Harris is not more progressive than I am.

It is always hard to respond to Trump’s lies because, a day later, his lies become even more preposterous. But, as we come together to defeat Trump and elect the Vice President, let me just remind you of one simple fact:

The so-called “radical” and “far left” agenda that we are fighting for is, in poll after poll, far more popular than Donald Trump, more popular than the Republican Party, and it is supported by a strong majority of the American people, including Republicans and Independents.

When Trump, Republicans, and even some members of the corporate media try to scare you with words like “radical” and “far left” it’s important to understand what those policies actually mean and to know that these “radical” ideas are already in place in many countries around the world.

When we talk about guaranteeing healthcare as a right for all our people, we’re talking about the ability to get the healthcare you and your loved ones need without fear of going bankrupt. We’re talking about the ability to change jobs without fear of losing your healthcare.

When we talk about paid family and medical leave, we’re talking about being able to spend the first few months with your newborn child without rushing back to work the next week, and we’re talking about being able to care for a loved-one who is sick without having to worry about missing a paycheck.

When we talk about tuition-free college, we’re talking about the ability to get an education without having to leave school with crushing debt. We’re talking about the ability to start a business and create jobs without having to worry about decades of student loan payments.

When we talk about a “Green New Deal,” we’re talking about a planet that is habitable for future generations — with less drought, famine, floods, extreme weather disturbances, disease, and human suffering.

When we talk about raising the minimum wage, we’re talking about people not having to work two or three jobs just to make ends meet for their families.

When we talk about expanding Medicare to cover dental, hearing, and vision, we’re talking about our seniors being able to chew the food they eat, listen to the sound of their loved ones’ voices, and see the world around them.

When we talk about passing the PRO Act, we’re talking about giving working people a greater voice on the job to negotiate better pay and benefits for them and their families. We’re talking about people just trying to make a living while CEOs are making a killing.

When we talk about letting the government negotiate the price of prescription drugs, we’re talking about making sure people can afford the lifesaving medicine they need without having to choose between their health and food or utilities.

When we talk about overturning Citizens United, we’re talking about making it so the wealthiest people and corporations in this country do not have the ability to buy our elections and our democracy.

When we talk about strengthening public education, we are talking about the ability to make sure that all of our children, regardless of income, get the education they need to prepare themselves for the future.

When we talk about strengthening and expanding Social Security, we’re talking about making sure all of our seniors can retire and live out their lives with dignity.

And when we talk about making sure the wealthy pay their fair share, we are simply saying that it is time we have a government and an economy that works for everyone in this country, not just the top 1 percent. It’s time that we dealt with the unprecedented level of income and wealth that we are currently experiencing.

That is NOT a radical agenda.

The Republican Party and Donald Trump: More tax breaks to billionaires, budgets to cut Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, letting polluters destroy our planet, letting drug companies charge whatever they want for medicine…

That is radical.

So here is our job in the next few weeks — and I need your help to get it done:

Please contribute $27 to my campaign and I will use the donations we receive to travel the country to rally progressives to defeat Donald Trump and to elect the most progressive Congress possible this November. We’ve already had great events in Wisconsin, Minnesota, New Hampshire, Maine and New York. But much more needs to be done.

Adam Broad was on the 2020 slate of Bernie Sanders delegates in IL-10 and was a co-founder of Our Revolution Lake County and Our Illinois Revolution. After supporting Bernie Sanders in the 2016 Democratic Primary, he volunteered in the general election for Hillary Clinton in Iowa, served on the Tenth Dems Election Protection Team, and represented the Democratic party at a recount in Wisconsin.

This is a personal blog and it is not approved by any candidate, campaign, or political party.

I don’t always speak for my affiliations and my affiliations don’t always speak for me.

Adam Broad: Candidate Profile.

Editor’s Note: This candidate profile from 2018 is re-blogged to build Adam Broad’s public political resume.

Adam Broad, running for Lake County Clerk 

Posted February 06, 2018 10:00 pm (Daily Herald)

Lake County Clerk (Democrat)

Note: Answers provided have not been edited for grammar, misspellings or typos. In some instances, candidate claims that could not be immediately verified have been omitted. 

Bio 

City: Buffalo Grove

Office sought: Lake County Clerk

Age: 53

Family: Married to Dr. Lisa Peck. She has 3 adult sons from a previous marriage: Howard, Neil, Adam Rosen. My son from a previous marriage, Deacon, 16, lives w/ his mom in Naperville. He spends weekends breaks w/ us when we can talk him out of the basketball gym. My mom, Karen Fabian is retired lives in Chicago. My dad, Michael Brodzky, is a Vietnam vet living in Plainfield. At 77 still works full-time running his limousine company. My brother Matt is an actor living near LA. My sister Melissa is in sales lives in Park Ridge.

Occupation: Tracker/Field Researcher

Education: Dropped out of HS at 16 and moved in with my grandparents in Buffalo Grove working full time in my grandfather’s scrap metal business. I joined the Marines at 17. Was Honorably Discharged after being injured in a training accident. Earned my GED while attending night school. Completed 3 years of undergrad as a philosophy major Southern Illinois University at Carbondale. Left school to pursue life as a writer-activist. Got into professional politics in 2000 by becoming a student-organizer with the Strategic Consulting Group’s Democratic Campaign Leadership Program.

Civic involvement: Currently a co-organizer of Our Revolution and a member of 10th Dems Voter Protection Team. For the past 8 yrs, been involved with J Street. Past and current donor to a wide variety of progressive causes and publications, SPLC, NAACP, In These Times, Dissent. Active in protest politics in Carbondale from the mid ’80s to early ’90s: The Divestment Movement against Apartheid South Africa and protesting Contra aid. Recruited writers and co-organized alternative newspaper, Satyagraha, as contributing editor. Volunteer Legal Assistant at Land of Lincoln Legal Assistance in 1988.

Elected offices held: Vernon Township Trustee since May

Questions Answers 

Regardless of whether this is a problem, what can the clerk do to reduce harassment, especially sexual harassment against women, in the office? Are new policies needed?

First, the clerk must absolutely follow state-mandated policy. Second, As Vernon Township Trustee, I contributed to implementing a new, strict policy against harassment before it was mandated by the state and I am currently being sued for contributing to the enforcement of this policy. It is a matter of public record that the threats and execution of legal action against me, along with concurrent smears about my motivation and character, do not deter me from standing up for workers. If the current policy of the Clerk is not as strict as the one we implemented in Vernon Township, I will make it so. If it already is, I will hold myself accountable to it, not only to the public, but to my co-workers. Accountability is a vital part of a positive work place culture and it is a two way street. I must be accountable to my co-workers in any office and I will gain respect by giving it.

Do you believe same-sex couples should be able to marry? Regardless of that personal belief, will you support the legal right of same-sex couples to marry if elected?

I do. And I do.

How will you ensure the security of ballots and guard against hacking efforts?

Recruiting, training, and deploying volunteers for massive Get Out The Vote efforts was part of my work as a campaign and voting rights organizer. This managerial skill can be applied for having a larger roster of better-trained election judges. Through my volunteer Voter Protection work and otherwise being active in local politics, I know we have many excellent judges. They are a great resource. Some could use more training and help. Poll watchers, with the right training and supervision, can be a great resource matching the number of voters with ballots cast. Cross-checking, rather than purging voters, might be a method for providing numbered paper receipts not only confirming tabulation, but as a way for voters to verify online that the numbered receipt matches the record. Admittedly, cyber-security is not an area of expertise for me, but as a first step, my friend of over 40 years, Dan Dagher, a retired USAF Colonel formerly assigned to the Pentagon currently working as a cyber-security analyst, thoughtfully prepared research for me to study. I intend to complete that and build on it. Aside from education and diligence, if elected, networking with relevant experts and agencies to discover options and policies would supplement my duties as clerk. 

Are there additional measures the county should take to allow for fair and equal access to voting for all residents?

Greater access to early voting might increase election integrity through greater participation and a larger timeframe for properly resolving discrepancies. Long lines and inconvenient access is discriminatory against citizens who work long hours and those who have limited options for childcare.

What are your thoughts on consolidating the county clerk’s and recorder’s offices? How would this benefit/hurt the county?

I am open to reviewing a cost-benefit analysis and would attend public hearings on this matter. I am currently involved in a consolidation effort within Vernon Township. The hearings are ongoing and I have not yet cast my vote on that matter though I am finding compelling reasons for consolidating our highway department into the Township government, mainly because it’s inefficient to disburse public funds carte blanche with no system of accountability in place. In principle, consolidating government sounds attractive as a matter of reducing bureaucracy, but in practice there is the danger of eliminating one unit to create a larger, less accountable unit. The devil is in the details.

What other issues, if any, are important to you as a candidate for this office?

I want to learn the full effect of the crosscheck purge in Illinois and I want to prevent it from happening again. I do not know the exact impact of the crosscheck purge on Lake County, but as a volunteer with the Tenth Dems Voter Protection Team I did see an example of a scrubbed voter in Lake County being turned away from the polling place and being treated rudely by an election judge and then leaving rather than casting a provisional ballot. To me, one voter in the county illegally denied the right to vote, or being denied the vote because of bureaucratic imposition that, in effect, suppressed the vote, is unacceptable. This sort of thing: votes “legally stolen” has a tendency to breed cynicism and further erodes democracy. Rather than being disillusioned, I am now compelled to make a difference to end such practices.

Please name one current leader who most inspires you.

Barack Obama, not just nostalgia for basic competence and dignity. He personifies HOPE many of us continue to realize.

What is the biggest lesson you learned at home growing up?

War has a price that can’t be calculated by counting killed or wounded in action or lost treasure. 

If life gave you one do-over, what would you spend it on?

I’d give it to someone who really needed it.

What was your favorite subject in school and how did it help you in later life?

History. It brought me to progressive politics. 

If you could give your children only one piece of advice, what would it be?

Don’t be a hero fighting in a war. Be a hero that prevents a war.

Email from David Sirota, publisher of The Lever

(I’ve been at a loss for words and what I come up with seems inadequate. I appreciate this view from David Sirota. – Adam Broad)

Let me start with an admission: I don’t personally enjoy talking about the Israel-Palestine issue, and I certainly cannot stand the culture of hot takes that surrounds the entire conflict. I don’t like it because it’s painful for me and my family, as Jews. There. I said it. Yes, me and my family are Jewish.

For those of you who have followed my work over the last 25 years, you’ll notice I almost never write or talk publicly about my religion or Israel. That’s because my Judaism is my personal internal creed, and not some part of a public brand or persona. But in light of all the bloodshed in Israel and Palestine over the last few days, I’m going to break that tradition. 

If you sense that I have a lot of angst over all of this, you’re right. In a world where we are not allowed to admit our vulnerabilities, I’m being vulnerable with you by admitting that yes, this issue is deeply difficult and painful for me. So I’m asking you to actually hear what I’m saying. You don’t have to agree with all of it, but I’m asking you to really listen and accept this as someone genuinely struggling with how to process all of this.

My family has experienced its share of antisemitism, including our ancestors who fled the horrors of Eastern Europe in the early 20th century. My family has experienced it in the here and now too — as a radio host and journalist, I get periodic antisemitic hate mail and threats. When I was on radio here in Denver, every day of those five years on the air I walked by a photo of the previous host Alan Berg, who was literally gunned down by Nazis in our city. 

In light of that, the images of Hamas terrorism deliberately targeted at innocent Jewish civilians evoked for me all of the horrible history of my ancestors being terrorized across generations — targeted because of their identity, culture, heritage, and religion. So the very first thing I want to say here is that Hamas’s terrorism is completely unacceptable. There should be no “but” or justifying qualification on that statement. It’s unacceptable, period, full stop.  

Through much of my childhood and early adulthood, Israel was supposed to be a stronghold against that violence and for a better future. It was seen as a beacon of democracy — and specifically left-labor social democracy — in a region of autocrats and dictators. (I think people forget that Israel had labor governments for a very long time.) It also stood as the only haven on Earth from the antisemitism that has raged across this planet for a thousand years. 

Unfortunately, since that time, Israel has radically changed in ways that have broken my heart and the hearts of so many Jews there and across the world. 

The Israel of today is governed by a far-right regime that has decided upon militarism and occupation rather than peace and some kind of two-state solution. And that far-right vision has all too often been normalized by the American media and political establishment. 

The long history of persecution against the Jewish people, plus the hostile nature of the surrounding Middle East, has been the longtime rationale for Israel being a heavily armed and fortified country that zealously defends its internal security and external borders with a powerful military. But this Israeli regime has used that military power in inhumane and indefensible ways that dishonor the Jewish-based principles it purports to stand for. 

We’re now watching the U.S.-armed Israeli army go way beyond defending Israeli citizens and territory, and to now mass bombing 2 million people in Gaza, half of whom are children. This country formed in direct response to the violence of the Holocaust is now committing war crimes. That’s totally unacceptable, and nobody should be silent as that happens. 

The murder of Palestinian civilians is just as unacceptable as the murder of Jewish civilians — and yet somehow, that basic statement of universal values is now considered outrageous or taboo in a political discourse that has been deliberately manipulated and polarized into yet another “you’re with us or against” us binary.

I reject that binary because it is fundamentally manipulative. Partisans on both sides want us all polarized rather than unified in defense of ALL human lives, and the right of both Israelis and Palestinians to live in peace and security. 

At this dark moment, I have a few requests of you. I want you to listen to all of them — don’t stop listening just because you feel uncomfortable. And let me be clear: The following points are not in order of importance. 

First request: Acknowledge that antisemitism is real in parts of both the right and left, and try to combat it where you can. Right-wing antisemitism is obvious — it’s white supremacy and Nazism. Antisemitism on the left is different — it can be cloaked in the language of social justice. 

But try to understand that when left-affiliated groups seem to celebrate this week’s Hamas attacks or imply that all Jews support the actions of the state of Israel, that is painful and destructive. I think the modern iteration of this form of antisemitism comes from the old antisemitic idea that Jews are a powerful world-controlling cabal and thus the hatred of — and murder of — Jews is supposedly more morally justifiable in a social justice frame, especially in the context of the Israeli government’s immoral occupation. 

But here’s the thing: There’s nothing righteous or “social justice”-ish about hating Jews and supporting those who murder them. That’s antisemitism.

Second request: Please acknowledge that the Israeli government is run by right-wing extremists whose occupation is inhumane. The Netanyahu government’s actions in Gaza right now might not be called “terrorism” by the media and other world leaders, but they are obviously inhumane and likely war crimes. Those who mindlessly cheer on Netanyahu are sowing the kind of xenophobia and Islamophobia that should have no place in this world. And sorry, if you’re Jewish and listening to this and ready to accuse me of somehow being disloyal or a self-hating Jew by saying these obvious truths, that Jedi mind trick doesn’t work on me. Take that nonsense somewhere else.

Third request: If you are cheering on Hamas’ murder of Jews, or cheering on the Israeli government’s murder of Palestinians, then please go to LeverNews.com right now and unsubscribe from The Lever. I don’t want you as a subscriber. I want a readership and listenership that values humanity and human life. 

Fourth request: Before you tweet, post on Facebook, or do anything impulsively in this debate, take a moment and ask yourself whether you are insensitively using the massacre of innocent people on both sides just to channel your priors and play politics. Because if that’s what you are doing, that’s not helpful — it’s part of why we are in this crisis. 

We have dehumanized this conflict — and so many other conflicts — into just another tribal political battle where we pretend the issues are so simple. But I’m sorry — they are not. 

That gets to my final request: Stop pretending this is easy, simple, or binary. One side says this is only about terrorism and security. The other side says this is only about occupation and oppression. But the Israel-Palestine conflict involves all of those things and more — occupation, oppression, militarism, identity, culture, religion, political ideology, security, antisemitism, Islamophobia, and more. 

It’s not an attempt at false equivalency. There are very real villains in this conflict, and there is no justification for the atrocities we’ve seen. What we need to internalize is that there are victims on ALL sides of this crisis. The people being killed and injured are all human beings.

David Sirota

In a society that always wants things reduced to simplicity, this IS incredibly complex. If we’re ever going to forge a real solution here, it is going to require us all to grow up, appreciate that complexity, and then behave not just like adults, but like actual human beings.

I know that’s asking for a lot — neither Hamas nor many Israeli government leaders are acting with any humanity at all. But we all have to start thinking like human beings, and take time to really try to understand what’s actually going on, and feel the pain, horror and anguish on both sides of this disaster. 

That’s not the “both sides” trope we’ve all gotten used to in American politics. It’s not an attempt at false equivalency. There are very real villains in this conflict, and there is no justification for the atrocities we’ve seen. 

What we need to internalize is that there are victims on ALL sides of this crisis. The people being killed and injured are all human beings. They are referred to in the media as Israelis and Palestinians, but they are all people, like you and me. 

In this dark hour, we need to recommit ourselves to tuning out all the propaganda trying to further dehumanize this conflict. We need to really try to unpack the roots of what’s going on. So let’s do that. 

Thinking of the fallen, those that mourn, and a prayer for peace.

The legacy I inherited from my father included a hand-me-down Dick Butkus jersey and the last gifts he gave me just before he died: a book by Abraham Rabinovich, The Yom Kippur War (The Epic Encounter That Transformed The Middle East), and a vintage Panasonic Radio.

I wore the jersey to work this past Friday to honor Butkus, whose death was announced the previous day.

Friday was also the anniversary of my dad’s death. October 6, 2020. Six days after he turned 80 in the hospital, and also the anniversary of the Yom Kippur War in 1973.

Anyone close to me knows Pops was a Vietnam veteran. He was also a US military advisor to Israel.

In addition to books like Ethics of Our Fathers, or My People, the Story of the Jews by Abba Eban, he gave me The Tanks of Tammuz by Shabtai Teveth. The book was personally inscribed to him by an Israeli General.

When my dad’s family fled what is now Ukraine, Some went to the British colony formerly controlled by Turkey that became the modern state of Israel. We had cousins in the Irgun. Other family came here. The rest disappeared.

My last name comes from a city in modern Ukraine called Brody (pronounced Brawd-dee). 9,000 to 10,000* Jews lived there before the Nazi invasion. Most** of them were murdered by the Nazis and their Ukrainian auxiliary.

I’ve been trying to write about all this for the past few days, but I’ve been pretty blocked up until I started using my Facebook status as a composition platform.

I was hoping to make some sort of grand statement, but right now I’m just trying to cope and get through the day. The world was really closing in on me a few weeks ago. I dealt with it responsibly and got by with a little help from my friends. My spirits lifted. Now it’s closing in on me again. This is a good opportunity to stop brooding and get out of my own head.

Here’s a prayer for those that mourn, whether they are family, enemies, strangers, or related to departed football players:

Shalom.

The Righteous of all Nations will have a share in the World to Come.

(*Broad note 9/1/2025: I originally cited over 100,000 off the top of my head. Further research indicated that I unintentionally exaggerated the Jewish population of Brody just prior to WW2. Over a decade prior to the original post of this blog, I started a research project on Brody. My error was based on faulty memory of what I had read years earlier. When I resumed studying the history of Brody I realized I made a terrible mistake.)

Wiki: History of the Jews in Brody https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Jews_in_Brody

Holocaust Historical Society UK: Brody https://www.holocausthistoricalsociety.org.uk/contents/ghettosa-i/brody.html

(** Broad note 9/1/2025: Originally I stated “less than 20 survived” There’s a report of hundreds that survived in the woods as partisan fighters. Again, faulty memory and not fact-checking myself while writing off the top of my head. A simple google search would have given me pause.)

A Broad Coalition is Dead. Long Live A Broad Coalition.

A Labor Day Facebook Selfie Shattered Years of Solidarity. New Blogs and Podcasts Probably Won’t Repair the Damage, but I’ll Give It the Old College Try.

The whimsical lefty-ish side of me upset a couple of my Trumpy former Union Brothers.

DISCLAIMER: THIS T-SHIRT IS A JOKE. I am not, nor have I ever been, a member of the Communist Party. I do not and have not ever identified as a Marxist, though there was one year in the 80s when I read Lenin and walked around for several months chanting “Something, something bourgeois this!” and “Something, something bourgeois that!”

The backstory of why, after brief exploration, I became disillusioned with the hard left as a political avenue (aside from the pay being worse than the austerity of Reagan-era minimum wage jobs) can be summed up briefly: the New World Order, left or right, looks the same to me regardless where I am standing. I resigned from the Democratic Socialists of America. I can and I will criticize the stupid anti-Jewish politics of DSA, so I saved myself the trouble of being tossed out for lacking group think. I still have love and respect for some of the comrades. They are not all virulently anti-Israel or mindless cop haters, but enough of them are. They are the hard left I rejected in the 80s when I chose DSA to work within the Democratic party. Their anti-liberal rhetoric gives me Reagan flashbacks just like Joe “There will be deductibles!” Biden does.

We’re looking at a boot stamping on a human face forever, but instead of working for a more perfect union, we’re having a massive political fight about what color the boot should be or what color the face should be. Of course, our forever might not be long for this world.

Cooperation, tolerance, and peace are supposed to be dead hippie dreams and after all, the military-industrial complex won’t have it while there’s money to made reducing human population during an escalating climate emergency… just one of a few ecological catastrophes threatening all mammals on Earth. Many mouths need food and water while our capacity to provide both is on the verge of collapse. Happy fracking New Year! Frack the ground water! Frack us all!

The pandemic might be spring training for the brutal summers ahead. I had decided that I am neither little, nor Dutch, nor a boy. Nothing I can do will plug the leak and stop the fire or the flood. Nothing I can say will give Grandpa Joe a clue or make him seem more cogent or deprogram anyone from the Orange Scumbag Cult.

Yet, here I am. Recently unretired poet and punk rock poser turned blogger and podcaster. I believe that libtards and deplorables need to come together, but I get discouraged from that idea when a guy I befriended and respected for years sends me a bunch of hateful stupid crap for posting a picture on Facebook wearing an existential comics T-shirt. I told dude: it’s a joke, but he insisted that I want to destroy America and should move to China.

G-d forgive me, but I told him “Go die!”

Sometimes I suck as an organizer and sometimes I suck as a person.

And speaking of sucking as a person… here’s our former President. I’ve tried to give the devil his due, but my former #DemExit comrades on the left are wrong about the threat level of this Twitler.

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/trump-jews-rosh-hashanah_n_6507ece3e4b04435d25fcd5f

Unfortunately, they may be correct about the threat level of his main political alternative, President Joe Biden.

We can have a reasoned policy debate on the success or failure of this administration, but I fear the outcome of the next Presidential election will be determined by the obvious perception that this President seems less cogent than Reagan did while serving his second term with Alzheimers disease.

I suspect if Reagan or Trump were conducting US policy in East Europe the same as Biden, Democrats would be soiling themselves in hysteria, but we seem strangely detached.

Again, maybe because both parties ignored the warning given by President Eisenhower and the needs and wants of war profiteers has become more important, on a policy level, than the lives of Americans or Ukrainians or the fate of humanity in general.

Our government does a great job of working for the people that control it… just follow the money to see who that is, but not so much for We, The People, left or right. Political power works for the powerful, left or right, but no so much for We, The People.

I have some ideas about fixing this and I’d like to get some folks to sign off on those ideas. I intend to look at some of the ideas other folks have about fixing this.

It’s not all doom and gloom, but don’t kid yourself. There’s some fracking doom and gloom out there and we better wake the frack up. Step One: sound the alarm. Step Two: All hands on deck! All hands on deck!