morally and
intellectually and
politically
Readers of this blog will know that I bemoan that I started this haiku nonsense to recognize word play and use of words and not as an avenue to point out the shortcomings of the man currently in the high office of president.
While that is a short and easy avenue to take, I do want to return to my roots and recognize the word play in the NYT Opinion piece, If You Love America, Cringe for It by Bret Stephens.
Mr. Stephens is a NYT contributor who takes part in a weekly piece called the conversation where he takes the conservative view of things in a conversation with another writer, Frank Bruni, who takes the liberal view side and they converse and write up their conversation as a column.
For today, Mr. Stephens did not need a liberal view to counter to write If You Love America, Cringe for It.
His feelings did not need a conversation with a liberal to show themselves and he did with marvelous word choices when he wrote:
To exist as a sentient American in the age of Trump is to live in a perpetual cringe — morally, aesthetically, intellectually, politically. If the administration were a play or film script, it would be neither farce nor tragedy but instead a kind of absurdist travesty, “Waiting for Godot” meets “Pulp Fiction” meets “Dumb and Dumber.”
Lets take that paragraph apart.
That first sentence first.
To exist as a sentient American in the age of Trump is to live in a perpetual cringe.
(Remember the scene in the movie Amadeus when the Emperor wants Mozart to write an Opera in German and his Director of the State Theater say … But not German, I beg your Majesty! Italian is the proper language for opera. All educated people agree on that. Too which the Emperor replies, ‘ahaaa’.)
Once again that first line, To exist as a sentient American in the age of Trump is to live in a perpetual cringe and I admit that would eliminate most of his followers. I mean, define sentient?
The Merriam-Webster online dictionary says, “capable of sensing or feeling : conscious of or responsive to the sensations of seeing, hearing, feeling.”
So to exist as an American capable of sensing or feeling, conscious of or responsive to the sensations of seeing, hearing, feeling, certainly excludes anyone who supports this guy.
Then live in a perpetual cringe.
Yes! That so perfectly describes life since George W. Bush described the 2016 Inaugural Screech as That’s Some Weird Shit!
I have lived in a perpetual state of cringe since then and let me tell you, its taking a toll!
What might he do next?
What might he NOT do next?
What might he say next?
What might he NOT say next?
CRINGE!
Then the wonderful word choice, like battleships majestically steaming through a harbor.
Morally!
Aesthetically!
Intellectually!
Politically!
BOOOM BOOM BOOM BOOM!
Sadly it is …
Morally!
Cringe!
Aesthetically!
Cringe!
Intellectually!
Cringe!
Politically!
Cringe!
Mr. Stephens then states: For 10 years, I’ve watched my former political party work overtime not to cringe; to pretend that the Vesuvius of verbal infamies erupting daily from Trump’s mouth is either unimportant, or hilarious, or calculating and shrewd.
Republicans turned their tolerance for the president’s mental goo into a shot-drinking contest — the more you drank, the manlier you were supposed to be.
John McCain and Mitt Romney refused to play, to their everlasting credit; other Republicans, less admirably, did so only after Trump had ended their political futures.
To be sure, Mr. Stephens is a Republican and he brings in the other party writing:
But for 10 years, too, I’ve also watched the president’s opponents fail to appreciate the necessity of cringing — by understanding their role in Trump’s rise.
The Democrats and their media enablers who, until June of 2024, insisted Joe Biden was fit for a second term (surely knowing, somewhere in the dim recesses of their minds, that this could only help Trump) are complicit.
So are the progressives who, on one cultural issue after another, shoved the Democratic Party so far to the left that it became the very caricature of what MAGA-world said it was.
Not sure I can hold with that entirely but here is the problem.
We cannot afford the luxury of pointing out who is more to blame for where we are now.
We are all in this together.
Its the Americans capable of sensing or feeling, conscious of or responsive to the sensations of seeing, hearing, feeling against those folks who are out searching for the whoever vandalized the reflecting pool in Washington and don’t let anyone tell you different.
No time to point fingers.
No time to try for the high ground between members of the Americans capable of sense.
As Mr. Lincoln said, We must disenthrall ourselves, and then we shall save our country. We — even we here — hold the power, and bear the responsibility.




