1.13.2026 – morally bankrupt

morally bankrupt
past the point of no return
unhinged entirely

I asked ChatGPT to give me words that describe someone who has finally gone too far, gone past the limit.

ChatGPT responded!

Here are words and phrases that capture the idea of someone who’s finally crossed the line / gone past the limit, grouped by tone and nuance:

Blunt / Strong
Unhinged
Out of control
Over the edge
Beyond saving
Past the point of no return
Too far gone
Irredeemable

Psychological / Emotional
Unraveled
Broken
Fractured
Unstable
Snapped
Lost
Unmoored

Moral / Ethical
Corrupted
Depraved
Debased
Morally bankrupt
Tainted
Fallen

Poetic / Dramatic
Crossed the Rubicon
Burned the last bridge
Stepped into the abyss
Past the brink
Overreached
Damned
Claimed by the dark

Colloquial / Modern
Off the rails
Went feral
Lost the plot
Unchecked
Unhinged entirely

Quiet but Heavy
There’s no coming back
Something in them broke
They chose the wrong side
They crossed a line they can’t uncross

I ask you, which of these terms has NOT been used in a headline at sometime, somewhere in the last year to describe some action by the current person in office and his administration?

Then, I ask you, when will enough be enough?

Famously, Senator Joseph McCarthy also met this grading scale and most of these terms were used to describe his actions and his list of 205, 57, no 81, to finally, 1 known communist in the State Department is 1 too many.

According to Wikipedia:

While he never produced a verified list of communists, his investigations had significant consequences:
> 500+ people were called to testify before his subcommittee.
> Over 2,000 government employees lost their jobs as a result of his investigations and the general climate of the “Red Scare”.
> Zero of the individuals he publicly named were ever convicted of subversion or espionage.

The Senator kept at it until finally, in the famous televised Army-McCarthy hearings (televised by the way, because network newcomer ABC had such a weak afternoon programming schedule they could afford to broadcast the hearings live), Joseph Welch, the defense attorney appearing for the US Army looked at the Senator and on live TV asked, “At long last, have you no decency?”

If you have ever seen the movie, Anatomy of a Murder, set in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, Joseph Welch was hired by the director Otto Preminger as a legal consultant and Preminger ended up casting Mr. Welch as the mild mannered Judge in the movie.

This quiet, unassuming man, looked at Joe McCarthy and said in his quiet, unassuming voice, “At long last, have you no decency?”

And he held up a mirror to the country and the country said, BLEEECHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH, where did this McCarthy guy come from?

Where have you gone, Joe DiMaggio?
Our nation turns its lonely eyes to you

1.12.2026 – tyrants remember

tyrants remember
hurrah for flag of the free
it waves forever

Other nations may deem their flags the best
And cheer them with fervid elation
But the flag of the North and South and West
Is the flag of flags, the flag of Freedom’s nation.

Hurrah for the flag of the free!
May it wave as our standard forever,
The gem of the land and the sea,
The banner of the right.
Let tyrants remember the day
When our fathers with mighty endeavor
Proclaimed as they marched to the fray
That by their might and by their right
It waves forever.

The Stars and Stripes Forever, music AND LYRICS by John Philip Sousa.

By a 1987 act of the U.S. Congress, it is the official National March of the United States of America.

Goodness gracious but remember the times when Congress used to ACT and we didn’t have to take to streets to protest on behalf of Democracy, Life and Liberty?

Sing out for liberty and light,

Sing out for freedom and the right,

Sing out for Union and its might,

It waves forever.

Street protest – Bluffton, SC Jan. 11, 2026

1.11.2026 – stand firm for the right

my hope this tragic
incident will strengthen the
determination

stand firm for the right
which exists in this country
of peaceful dissent

This should remind us all once again that when dissent turns to violence, it invites tragedy.

It is my hope that this tragic and unfortunate incident will strengthen the determination of all the Nation’s campuses-

-administrators, faculty, and students alike-

-to stand firmly for the right which exists in this country of peaceful dissent and just as strongly against the resort to violence as a means of such expression.

President Richard Nixon in a Statement on the Deaths of Four Students at Kent State University, Kent, Ohio, on May 4, 1970.

A two stanza haiku.

I have questioned in the past whether such a thing exists and the answer I got from my brother who teaches poetry, which you can under the heading, What is a Haiku?, and he said I could name anything I wanted to a name a haiku … not that it made a haiku.

Which is good enough for me so today’s haiku has two stanzas.

Some time ago I was talking with another one of my brothers, I have 8 so I guess I am always talking to a brother about something, and I worried about the state of affairs impacting our country.

I felt the country was teetering on the edge of the abyss.

He countered that when he was in college, the prevailing discussion was pretty much the soon.

Protests, riots and dissension were tearing the county apart in the 70’s.

Leaders from the President to Civil Rights icons and Senators were being gun downed in city streets.

And students had been shot and killed by the National Guard.

At that time, he put forward that the county came through that period of history.

And I shut up and pondered.

I was 9 years old when on May 4, 1970 when a troop of the Ohio National Guard opened fire on a crowd of Kent State University Students who were protesting the expansion of the war in Vietnam by US forces moving into Cambodia, killing 4 people and wounding 9.

I don’t remember it.

Two of my brothers were off in Ann Arbor (someone in my family was always off in Ann Arbor) and I don’t remember my parents talking about it.

It took a long time for the news and the information and the images to filter out from Ohio.

I recently read that to slow down the spread of information, Kent State asked Bell Telephone to turn off the phones in student dorms.

There were photographs that appeared on the TV news.

There were stories on the radio news.

But it really wasn’t until Life Magazine arrived in mail boxes and news stands across the Nation that story hit home.

Not in the split seconds of today but 11 days later.

And it wasn’t in a message on a phone or email, but in a magazine that demanded that you stop and take time in absorb the images and the story.

A question was asked by the father of one the student who was killed, “Is this dissent a crime? It it a reason for killing?”

We are asking that question again.

Bernard Miller, the father of Jeff Miller, the student lying dead in the famous Pulitzer prize winning photo, said in the Life Magazine article, “But shooting into a crowd of kids – THAT is violence. They say it could happen again if the Guard is threatened. They consider stones threat enough to kill children. I think the violence comes from the government.”

What do I remember about Kent State from back then?

I must have heard stories and such that come down to a 9 year old and I was inquisitive and at sometime I came across the Reader Digest magazine with an article about the shooting.

I read it and tried to understand but what stuck in brain was the story related by a Kent State student.

The student told how Kent State shut down for 6 weeks and all the students were sent home.

Traveling with his friends on the Ohio Turnpike he told how a toll booth operater leaned out to take their money, noticed their Kent State parking sticker and held up four fingers.

They asked why the four fingers?

And the toll booth operator said something along the lines of, “We got 4 of you this time.

1.10.2026 – an attack on law

an attack on law,
order, puts officers at risk
every single day

“This was an attack on law and order. This was an attack on the American people,” said Vance, who maintained it has not been portrayed that way by many journalists.

“The way that the media, by and large, has reported this story has been an absolute disgrace,” he added. “And it puts our law enforcement officers at risk every single day.”

“What you see is what you get in this case,” Vance said, downplaying ambiguity about the circumstances that led to the shooting.

The officer was clearly acting in self-defense, Vance said. He framed Good as “a victim of left-wing ideology” who was spurred by an alleged network of politically motivated groups to interfere with law enforcement.

“I can believe that her death is a tragedy while also recognizing that it is a tragedy of her own making,” Vance said.

JD Vance as quoted describing recent events in Minneapolis, Minnesota in the article Vance blames victim of fatal ICE shooting at White House briefing (Associated Press 1/8/2026).

Taking a wide angle view of events and reactions, it’s lucky that the ICE officers of today were not on duty back on January 6th at the US Capital.

I am reminded of an exchange on the old tv show, Northern Exposure between Dr. Dr. Joel Fleischman and Morning DJ Chris Stevens.

Chris Stevens: “Joel, I think that you’re confusing the truth with facts.”
Dr. Joel Fleischman: “No, the facts change, Chris. The truth is constant.”
Chris Stevens: “Oh, on the contrary, my friend: The truth changes. The truth about Custer. Hero or villain? Civilizer or agent of genocide? The truth slips and turns. The facts remain the same.”
Dr. Joel Fleischman: “Yeah? What about light? Particle or wave? I mean, it exhibits qualities of both. When the truth is finally known, the facts will be made to accommodate the truth.”

1.9.2026 – folly to assume

folly to assume
the demands of his ego
will be satisfied

Trump is a vain and petty man, and it is easy to impute psychological motives to his actions. But it is folly to assume the demands of his ego will be satisfied by symbolic victories. Revulsion and desire are two sides of the same coin, and it is clear that Trump covets the kind of unaccountable power Maduro enjoyed — to enrich his family and cronies, to intimidate political opponents, to muzzle the press, to flood the streets of his country with armed men who do his bidding. Trump has managed to do a measure of all of these things. No doubt he intends to do more.

From the New York Times Opinion piece, This Is Trump’s Small Trick to Destroy American Democracy by Lydia Polgreen.

I am reminded of the bully in the movie, A Christmas Story.

The movie, A Christmas Story was based on the book, But In god we trust all others pay cash by Jean Shepherd.

It is interesting to point out that the evil bully, Scut Farkus is not the bully in the book.

Grover Dill is.

Of Grover Dill, Jean Shephard writes, “Dill was a Running Nose type of Bully. His nose was always running, even when it wasn’t. He was a yelling, wiry, malevolent, sneevily snively Bully who had quelled all insurgents for miles around. I did not know one kid ‘who was not afraid of Dill, mainly because Dill was truly aggressive. This kind of aggression later in life is often called “Talent” or “Drive,” but to the great formless herd of kids it just meant a lot of running, getting belted, and continually feeling ashamed.

Farkus shows up in Jean Shephard’s second book of growing up in Indiana memories titled, “Wanda Hickies Night of Golden Memories and Other Disasters.”

Again and again, something a supporter of the current feller in the Oval Office said.

“He fights my battles for me.”

Dill or Farkus, the movie, Ralphie says, “In our world, you were either a bully, a toady or one of the nameless rabble of victims.”

I was part of the nameless rabble of victims.

Difficult for me to imagine being a Grover Dill or Scut Farkus fan.

I mean, really?

I support the Scut Farkus and the Grover Dill people of this world.

They fight my battles for me.

Really?