My worst jobs ever: Several in the running
It's a close call (unlike the 2020 election, despite trump's claims—and did you know that lowercasing the “t” in his name is de rigeur?). And I won't fall for the “law” bait—i.e., it'd be way too easy to cite lawyering as life's worst job. It would be in the running had I not spent my 40 years lawyering as a polluter reiner-inner.
The candidates are the non-music jobs I had ‘twixt undergrad and grad school. Part of it was about quick and dirty— literally and figuratively—ways of making at least a little money; the other part was about this bougie boy learning what it was like to work with one's hands. Those jobs are in a virtual, and I don’t mean in the web sense, tie for worst.
First we’ll mention the landscaping job I had in Chapel Hill during an undergrad summer and the one I had outside Albuquerque, NM, in the summer after receiving my undergrad degree. That’s when I first learned how bad I was at manual labor. . .
Is Biden to Blame?
Postmortems and finger-pointing following the Democratic debacle on Election Day (i.e., the restoration of a now even more-untethered Donald Trump) are inevitable.
Previously, I have come down hard on Joe Biden, for his obstinate refusal to step aside in the face of obvious physical and mental weakness—and, also obviously, for going back on his word not to run for re-election.
At the risk of piling on an old man, I could not help but agree this week with virtually all of what conservative New York Times opinion columnist Bret Stephens had to say in a succinct analysis of where Joe Biden’s presidency went wrong—and how it doomed the Democrats to defeat . . .
In defense of the elite
In these post-election days, elites have taken a pummeling. They’ve been repeatedly blamed for losing this election, thus sacrificing our democracy. They’ve been variously accused of contempt for “the great unwashed,” for ignoring the needs of the common people, for disdain toward Joe Sixpack and obliviousness to all those blue-collar folks getting their morning coffee in rural Pennsylvania diners.
And that’s, apparently, what voters rebelled against.
Listen to Bernard Goldberg in the Washington newsletter, The Hill:
“Trump’s win is a rejection of elite condescension…For quite some time, elites have looked down on ordinary Americans. The elites thought they were smarter than the folks who live in “flyover country,” who they often saw as hayseeds who ate at places like Red Lobster. And you got the impression that they not only thought they were smarter than ordinary Americans, but that were better than ordinary Americans.” . . .
Arts and artists: more necessary than ever
The voices of artists are essential to democracy.
Moving to New York to study dance in 1973, I retailed at Macy’s and was an answering service operator, janitor, artist model and office assistant to support myself. Short-term contracts and unemployment benefits subsidized my performing career. In between tours, I finished my college degree in psychology and was a nanny and pre-school teacher.
After a vision quest in the Himalayans, I managed two dance companies and a festival. Philanthropy called; suddenly I was funnier and smarter, until I left the foundation—accolades and joyful embraces ceased overnight. Moving to Minneapolis, the culture wars of the ‘90s had me battling right wing media, religious leaders and politicians who cared little about the truth so long as they could raise money off controversy. . . .
Having been Far away on election day
Before we left the country for a few weeks abroad, we wondered whether it would be better or worse to not be in the states for Election Day. We really couldn’t decide.
Turns out, it was much, much better.
Instead of being immersed—really submerged—in it all, we explored ancient streets. Instead of following minute-by-minute vote tabulations, we drank some ouzo. Instead of falling into despondency after the tabulations were finished, we ate moussaka. Instead of commiserating with friends on the days after, we wandered through the ruins of the Minoan civilization.
It was, that is, easy—maybe too easy—to forget what was happening, what had happened, 6,000 miles away. . . .
A Source of Inspiration
This fall, I’ve been reading Clara Bingham’s book “The Movement: How Women’s Liberation Transformed America 1963-1973.” It has immersed me in this decade of turmoil and huge social and cultural changes.
I was too young to really experience and understand the events happening in the U.S. during this time period. As a young woman in the early 1980s, I didn’t realize how lucky I was to be able to walk into a bank and open a checking account without a man’s signature or to apply for a credit card or to get a prescription for birth control pills and walk into a pharmacy to have it filled, no questions asked. . . .
Up is down
You know that Donald Trump, President-elect Donald Trump, has in recent days nominated some flagrantly unqualified and deeply wrongheaded nominees to fill some of the most important positions in the government of the United States.
To review, a few:
Now-former Congressman Matt Gaetz, himself the subject of an ethics investigation in the House, as Attorney General.
Former Representative Tulsi Gabbard, whom Republican Senator Mitt Romney has accused of having embraced "actual Russian propaganda," as Director of National Intelligence.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who subscribes to a number of unsubstantiated scare stories about polio and Covid vaccines, as Secretary of Health and Human Services.
Allow me to note that these appointments are not only terrifying but surreal. . . .
blue abandonment
Trump is saying the election gave him a “very big mandate.”
Rubbish. It wasn’t a mandate at all. It wasn’t even a “red shift” to Trump and the Republicans.
It was a blue abandonment.
We now know that nine million fewer votes were cast nationwide in 2024 than in 2020. . . .
Our President Again — a very quick video
Not easy to know what to say after what happened last week at the polls in the United States. It is tragedy. It is nightmare. Here I note that it is also farce.
Click here for a half-minute video meditation on the return to power of Donald J. Trump.
Dieting plans designed for us
As we’ve gotten older, so has our metabolism. That’s why we’ve all probably gained some weight since the days when we could actually fit into our old college sweatshirt.
Metabolism, as we all well know, is the sum of the chemical reactions in the body's cells that changes food into energy. When your metabolism slows and it and you can sometimes barely get out the door in time for a 2 p.m. urologist appointment, it’s time to think about dieting.
I mean, we could, of course, eat a bit less, but that may be too complicated. So, instead, we have several popular dieting plans that many of us follow. . . .
The Most Depressing Elections of Our Lives
In reverse order of terribleness:
7. Reagan defeats Mondale 1984. President Ronald Reagan seemed astoundingly lucky. He had survived a deep recession, which knocked out inflation, and then benefited from a booming economy. Walter Mondale, a fine senator, seemed miscast as a presidential candidate and hurt by having served as vice president in the seemingly mostly unsuccessful Carter administration. The result of this election was not surprising.
6. Nixon defeats Humphrey 1968. Richard Nixon’s awfulness was manifest. Nonetheless, it was difficult to get too upset over this election because we were so unexcited about the guy who lost: Vice President Hubert Humphrey, who, while a committed liberal, proved unwilling to break with President Lyndon Johnson on the Vietnam War.
5. Reagan defeats Carter 1980 . . . .
Perplexed
As I approach my ninth decade, and, supposedly, increased wisdom, there are still things I just don’t understand.
I don’t understand pineapple on pizza.
I don’t understand Barry Manilow.
I don’t understand how Donald Trump could have once been our president.
I don’t understand daylight savings time.
I don’t understand how to pronounce correctly the Greek word for thanks.
I don’t understand why so many people are suddenly gluten intolerant.
I don’t understand how, four years ago, 74 million people voted for a man who would foment an insurrection. . . .
I’m Old and I’m Proud
For much of my life, when I looked around a room, I would be pleased if I could convince myself, as I could upon occasion, that I was one of the younger people there.
There were two reasons for this, both kind of obvious, but let me—since what I’m about to say is less obvious—spell them out:
· First, there was the satisfaction of having accomplished something—something that qualified me for entry into that room—that people more experienced than I had accomplished.
· And, second, I felt in some way more vital, less stuck in the past, than the venerable people around me in that room.
I was, in other words, a bit of a youth chauvinist. Common enough then and now. Nothing too weird about that, right?
What’s weird, what’s not so obvious, is that when I look around a room nowadays, I sometimes find myself enjoying being one of the older people in that room. I take a certain satisfaction in being one of the wrinkled. . . .
Let’s allow ourselves A Rant
What a F%#king Sh*T Show!
Ok, I am glad I got that off my chest.
How in the world did our country get it so wrong!
Are we really that stupid?
Is it true that 52% of adults read at only a sixth-grade level? Maybe that’s it. Why did 54% of white women vote for him but 93% of black women voted for Kamala? Why would any women vote for a regime that wants to demean us, demoralize us, abuse us, defy our rights, and grab us by our pussies any time they want . . . .
The President We Deserve…?
If there is any bright spot in the election of an ignorant criminal traitor as President of the United States—and the companion election of a Republican Senate (and at this writing, even a GOP House) it is that Democrats finally may get their heads out of their butts and form a political coalition that includes everyone, not just people who look and act like me.
Maybe the best quote I saw postmortem was this from an unnamed Democrat, quoted in the WashPost:
“I will say this,” one House Democrat said. “The Democratic Party has a major working-class voter issue. It started a decade ago as a working-class White issue. It’s now gotten even worse and spread across racial lines.” . . .
“What rough beast”
No.
No, no, no.
Seven time zones away, seven hours later in the day, we awoke to the inconceivable news.
We had gone to bed with hope that America was the America we believed in. We woke to find that we lived in a very different America.
We saw first that North Carolina, our state, had, for the third consecutive time voted for the pathological.
We saw next that Georgia had gone down the same horrible path, then Pennsylvania. We had just finished breakfast when the last of the dominoes fell.
We clicked on the Times website and read that in every state that had counted its votes, Trump had improved on his performance of 2020. How was that possible? How could memories be so short? . . .
fURTHER reading about Our Generation
Here’s some of what we have seen recently that might be of particular interest to our generation. (Apologies for any pay walls.) Send us what you have seen at WritingAboutOurGeneration@gmail.com.
Memory Loss Isn’t the Only Sign of Dementia, Dana G. Smith, New York Times, Sept. 26, 2024
An ode to aimless wandering, Simon Armitage, The New Statesman, Oct. 16, 2024
Rare gene mutation helps people resist Alzheimer’s disease, Carolyn Y. Johnson, Washington Post, June 19, 2024
5 Surprising Things That Make You Age Faster, Anna Medaris, AARP, June 11, 2024
Did You Know There's a Right Way to Nap? Here's How to Do It Correctly, Amanda Capritto, CNET, Oct. 8, 2024
Aging hits us in our 40s and 60s. But well-being doesn’t have to fall off a cliff, Jessica Hamzelou, MIT Technology Review, Aug. 15, 2024
Our list of the most Consequential Elections of our Lifetime—Revisited
Some months ago, we ranked the presidential elections of our lifetime in order of how consequential we believe they were or would prove to be—consequential in a good or bad way. For that list, with explanations, click here. Here is the election we selected back then as the most consequential.
#1 2024 Trump versus Harris. This is the only election on this list upon which we do not yet have the benefit of hindsight. And it must be kept in mind that it is always easy to see the current election as among the most consequential ever. However, we do have reason to believe that Trump’s far-right backers might be less ineffectual this time—as evidenced by their “Project 2025.” And he, or his family–as evidenced by the 2021 attack on the Capitol–might, if they gain power, never agree to peacefully surrender it.
And the short version of the other rankings: #20 1976 Carter defeats Ford. #19 2012 Obama defeats Romney. #18 1956 Eisenhower defeats Stevenson. #17 1992 Clinton defeats Bush. #16 1948 Truman defeats Dewey. #15 1996 Clinton defeats Dole. #14 1960 Kennedy defeats Nixon. #13 1984 Reagan defeats Mondale. #12 1952 Eisenhower defeats Stevenson. #11 1988 Bush defeats Dukakis. #10 2004 Bush defeats Kerry. #9 1968 Nixon defeats Humphrey. #8 2008 Obama defeats McCain. #7 1972 Nixon defeats McGovern. #6 2020 Biden defeats Trump. #5 1980 Reagan defeats Carter. #4 2016 Trump defeats Clinton. #3 1964 Johnson defeats Goldwater. #2 2000 Bush defeats Gore.
Can We On This Day, Election Day . . .?
Most politicians try to make their opponents seem inept and threatening. But no politician in recent memory has falsely demonized his opponents to the extent that Donald Trump has.
—Can we on this day, Election Day, bring at least a modicum of civility back to American politics by defeating Donald Trump?
_______________________
Yes, the attacks by the Harris campaign on Donald Trump have also been unusually sharp. But those attacks have been supported by many of those who worked with the former president during his first term—including his vice president.
—Can we on this day, Election Day, reject the presidential aspirations of a former president who was called “fascist to the core” by the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff under him, who was said by his own chief of staff to have praised Adolf Hitler? . . .
“What were Americans thinking?”
There was a time, in the late 1960s and early 1970s, when Americans traveling abroad wore maple leaf pins. The idea, of course, was to be taken as Canadians, not that country responsible for the reprehensible Vietnam war.
We are traveling abroad now, and I wish I had that pin. I wish we didn’t represent the country that might be electing a sociopath.
We’re not the only country, of course, facing a rising fascist wave. And the wave has already crested in places like Hungary. But we are the country that used to tout itself as the bastion of democracy, of freedom.
And where we may be heading seems more than scary and inconceivable. It seems embarrassing. It seems humiliating. . . .