The Year of Thinking Dangerously

When I was a high school sophomore it was 1963, my favorite year for English. We read Lord of the Flies, Brave New World, and 1984, all on the  ALA Banned Books list.  I had no idea how subversive my English teacher was until I read about Banned Books in graduate school over thirty years later.

The novel Lord of the Flies by William Golding tells of a group of prep school boys crashed on a deserted island in the Pacific. One of them, Jack, tries to establish a rough democratic order on the island, but he is overthrown.Within weeks they become tribes of savages preying on each other. One boy is killed, others forced into hiding. At the end they are rescued by naval officers in a destroyer, out searching for them.

The novel portrays a Darwinian view of human nature. The violence and bullying is undeniable, but totally believable. We were neither shocked nor corrupted by the events of the novel.  We read other dystopian books, but this one was about boys our age and younger.

Our teacher also assigned us a novel by B.F. Skinner, Walden Two, a true utopian novel.   We still believed in the degeneracy of human behavior, because of LOTF, 1984 and Brave New World. 

In an informal poll at the end of the year, we voted Lord of the Flies our favorite book.   I don’t think we were damaged by the year of thinking dangerously. We were certainly challenged to think about human nature. I hardly remember the books I read in any other year of K-12 schooling.

I’m not sure how often Lord of the Flies is taught anymore. In 1992 the book was challenged in Waterloo, Iowa schools because of profanity, lurid passages about sex, and statements defamatory to minorities, God, women, and the disabled. I don’t remember any of that.

One teacher appeared on an interest group in 2024 to say, “I’ve taught this book many times and I’m still struggling to figure out what the “lurid passages about sex” are. Violence for sure, a little profanity, definitely bullying the kid with glasses, but sex? What on earth are they talking about?” Clarissa Cline

Other challenges aimed at the inappropriate portrayal of human nature

  • Challenged at the Owen, N.C. High School (1981) because the book is “demoralizing inasmuch as it implies that man is little more than an animal”;
  • The novel was challenged at the Olney, Texas, Independent School District in 1984 because of “excessive violence and bad language.”

I suppose some adults in 1982-82 believed teenagers should be protected from that level of barbarism. They would be shocked by what we can easily view on TV today.

  • A committee of the Toronto, Canada Board of Education ruled on June 23, 1988, that the novel is “racist and recommended that it be removed from all schools” after parents objected to the book’s use of racial profanity, saying that the novel denigrated Black people, according to the ALA https://www.thoughtco.com/lord-of-the-flies-banned-challenged-740596

Probably the use of the “N” word stirred some of the racial accusations, but I recall those as careless slurs, not a theme of the novel. There were no Black children among the survivors of the crash.

If I taught this book today in high school, I would read the first chapter aloud to my class, and they would be hooked. It is one of the best openings of a novel I’ve read. I hope they wouldn’t watch the movie instead, because it is a poor representation. Thank goodness it wasn’t available in 1963, the year of thinking dangerously.

 

 

You Can’t Say You Weren’t Warned in 1948

1984 is so timely that it is the theme of this year’s Banned Books Week.

Censorship Is So 1984 — Read for Your Rights! With the escalation in attempts to ban books in libraries, schools, and bookstores around the country, George Orwell’s cautionary tale 1984 serves a prescient warning about the dangers of censorship.

Banning books is pretty tame amid the tyranny of state of  Oceania in 1984. Yet we are on the threshold of its dark realm of thought control, and we have sighted the Ministry of Truth. See Chapter 1 to see how easily we slip under its spell.

Is it possible it has been over three-quarters of a century since the publication of 1984? The book that once was the forewarning of totalitarianism is now an unfolding plan. George Orwell projected this dystopian nightmare from the psychological techniques of World War II, and he  has become the psychic prophet of the early Twenty-first Century.

Contemporary readers have caught up with Orwell by devouring paperbacks sold for the 75th anniversary.

Sales also spiked for the 75th anniversary editions of 1984 and Animal Farm, both written by George Orwell. Sales of 1984 jumped 192%, to about 19,500 copies sold, putting it 10th place on the bestseller list . . . (https://www.publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/industry-news/publisher-news/article/96997-dystopian-novels-see-post-inauguration-sales-boost.html)

Because it is so timely and so timeless, I believe 1984 is  the single most crucial reading in the upper high school curriculum. It is not for middle school and  less mature high school readers. It is dark, devious with some focus on sexuality as liberation.  Many parents would feel uncomfortable with Winston and Julia’s passion.

But for mature high school readers it is more essential than Shakespeare. What would the censors say to that?

In May 2023, the Republican governor of Iowa, Kim Reynolds, signed into law Senate File 496, Mostly, SF 496, which is the subject of an ongoing legal battle, bans books that feature L.G.B.T.Q.+ characters or progressive themes such as feminism or are written by people of color. But the legislation also sweeps up several authors whose works lampoon totalitarianism and that were sent east by the C.I.A. book program, including Aldous Huxley, Kurt Vonnegut and Orwell, whose “1984” and “Animal Farm” are both on banned lists.

Legislation that targets books about censorship is the most diabolical, freedom-sucking attack on human rights we could ignore. It’s happening under our noses, but we’ll miss the odor if we are not heeding the  warnings of Brave New World (Huxley), Player Piano (Vonnegut) and 1984.

Orwell was trained in semantics; he understood how thinking can be altered by language. In 1984 he devised a whole grammar to control thought. One basic strategy was “doublethink,” the automatic mental shift from one meaning to the other. For example, the Party slogan:

War is Peace

Freedom is Slavery

Ignorance is Strength

Can you recognize contemporary examples? You can read all this in the very first chapter of 1984.  No wonder it is considered a dangerous book. No wonder its sales are multiplying.

Censorship may be the mild version of 1984, but there’s a reason some states want to ban it. Books enhance the imagination, and we need a very little stimulus to imagine 1984 in 2025.

 

 

 

 

To Kill an American Classic

You may be astonished that a Pulitzer-Prize-winning novel could be banned from public schools, but To Kill a Mockingbird has an extensive history of challenges from both the left and the right wings of critical censorship.

The vast majority of court challenges come from the use of “racial slurs” unsuitable for young readers. These challenges are less surprising, because school boards have heard the same challenges against another classic, Huckleberry Finn, by Mark Twain.

“Chris Sergel, vice president of Dramatic Publishing, once acknowledged they receive many requests for specific words to be changed or removed, but they’re always denied them.” https://www.pbs.org/newshour/education/to-kill-a-mockingbird-remains-among-top-banned-classical-novels.

The novel by Harper Lee won the Pulitzer Prize for Literature in 1960 when it was first published. The central plot line depicts an Alabama lawyer defending a Black farmer from false charges of rape of a White woman.  The story takes place in the Depression and is told from the perspective of his young daughter, Scout, and the observations of her older brother, Jem. The most disturbing content is the conviction of Tom Robinson, the Black farmer, on false testimony.

The American Library Association has tracked attempts at banning this book since 1970. Here are a sample of objections that have eliminated the book from the school curriculum.

1981 Challenged in Warren, Ind., by black parents who felt it represented “institutionalized racism under the guise of good literature.”

1985 Challenged in Kansas City and Park Hill, Mo., middle schools for profanity and racial slurs.

1985 Challenged by local NAACP & black parents of Casa Grande Elementary School District (Ariz.) for sexual and racial content.

1996 Banned in Lindale, Texas, for content that “conflicted with the values of the community.”

2012 A student at Colleyville Heritage High School in Texas was given an alternate book assignment when parents challenged the novel’s use for racial and political content.

The challenges in Warren, Indiana and Casa Grande Elementary School, Arizona appear from liberal groups protecting their students from the shock of racism. The challenges in Lindale Texas and Colleyville Heritage High School in Texas object to the “values” and “political content.”

So Mockingbird has been attacked for both language and content with the vast majority of cases on language. That would represent the distribution of most book banning attempts. The conclusion might be that book bans are no different on classics than on contemporary YA fiction.

If only one book had to be required for  middle or high school readers, I would choose this one. One of the most  humane and just characters in fiction is Atticus Finch, the father and the lawyer. If students only viewed the Academy Award-winning movie, starring Gregory Peck,  they would get the same impression of him as in the novel.

Of course I would prefer them to read the novel.  I might read some of the objections to the novel from book challenges. That usually gets students fired up. I might read excerpts from the trial scene to create the suspense that motivates students to read. I might ask them to respond in writing to poetry from Maya Angelou or Langston Hughes. Whatever it takes to whet their appetites for the novel.

Most students really care about racism and most are not offended by the shock of racial slurs in a book. If those words really hurt I might assign a novel from Jacqueline Woodson like Brown Girl Dreaming or Tom Sawyer, Mark Twain’s less controversial novel.The individual words are only part of the message.

The story is the thing, with its courageous characters who oppose racism.

 

 

 

THUG

Based on Missouri SB 775 The Hate You Give would not be excluded from public school classrooms, because of  its “serious artistic significance.”Cover art for the novel The Hate U Give, published in 2017. The cover art depicts a young African-American female teenager holding a title card with the novel's title; the title card obscures the entirety of the teenager's torso, and the only visible clothing includes a red hairband, blue denim cut-off shorts, and white athletic shoes.

On the other hand, The American Library Association listed the book as one of the ten most-challenged books of 2017, 2018, 2020, and 2021 “because it was considered ‘pervasively vulgar,'” contained “drug use, profanity, and offensive language,” as well as sexual references, and “was thought to promote an anti-police message.”[73]One parent of a student in the Springfield schools said, “The F-bomb was used at least 89 times.” https://cbldf.org/2018/02/missouri-school-pulls-the-hate-u-give-twice-for-review/
Yet The Horn Book Magazine,[32] Kirkus Reviews,[6] Publishers Weekly,[33] and Shelf Awareness,[34] among others, named it one of the best young adult novels of 2017. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Hate_U_Give for an impressive list of awards and finalist recognitions.

The title The Hate U Give is inspired by THUG LIFE, Tupac Shakur’s famous acronym that stood for “The Hate U Give Little Infants F***ks Everybody.” Written from the viewpoint of Starr Carter a 16-year-old African-American girl, it depicts a life lived on the boundary of Black and White neighborhoods, schools, friends, law enforcement and other concerns. It reveals the polarizing perspectives of race, generations, and politics as seldom seen so clearly in Young Adult fiction.

The crime is not that a policeman (“One-Fifteen”) makes the fatal error of shooting a Black male reaching into his car to check on Starr, his passenger. The crime is that city’s citizens line up against each other accusing and defending the action, until a final public rally at the end of the novel grapples with the issues.

The crime would be that young adult and adult readers alike did not pick up or read this book because of the F-bombs, the controversy of policing, or the sexual dilemma of a couple trying to sort out emotional and physical love. No one who cares about these issues will be offended by how Angie Thomas handles them.

If young adults or adults dismissed this novel they would miss

  • a diversity of public reaction to a shooting of a Black teenager by a White policeman
  • the code switching challenges for Starr, living in a Black community, but attending a private school in a White neighborhood
  • the complications of policing represented by Starr’s father, a reformed gang member and her uncle, a Black policeman
  • the stress of peer relationships around the shooting, including Starr’s boyfriend and her two girl friends, some of them critical of Starr’s public stand against the shooting
  • the dilemma of Starr and her boyfriend, Chris, trying to decide what are their boundaries for intimacy.  Parents would find their decision-making exemplary for teenagers.
  • the hold of gangs on reformed former members, grappling with loyalty and moral choices

The tension and resolution of these conflicts makes this book exceptional as honest examination of racial and sexual dilemmas. No issues of race, class or sexuality are examined by simplistic standards of right and wrong.  The novel wades deep into these conflicts and offers readers a thoughtful process for addressing moral and social dilemmas.

Sometimes the books that arouse the most controversy give us the most insight and hope for peace.

 

 

 

 

 

The Number One Target of Book Bans

Since its publication in 2007 The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie has been the number one challenged and banned book in adolescent fiction.  The censors condemned the book for: “sexual references, profanity, violence, gambling, and underage drinking, and for religious viewpoint.” As usual, they could not see the forest for the trees.

They saw the profanity; they overlooked Rowdy, an abused and violent tragic . They saw the references to “boners” and masturbation; they ignored the humorous insecurity of a 14-year-old.  They noticed “underage drinking,” but they forgot the fatal relationship of Native people with alcohol.

They overlooked that the novel develops deep relationships between a teenager with his best friend, with his parents, with his sister. They missed the moving compassion of his teachers, coaches and his wise grandmother. They missed the transformed relationships with a white girl, a white nerd, and a white team mate. In some cases the relationships are sprinkled with silly profanity, in one case with tame sexuality.

Sherman Alexi was an award-winning script writer before he wrote The Absolutely True Diary. His screenplay, Smoke Signals, won the Audience Award and Filmmaker Trophy at the 1998 Sundance Film Festival. Later his 2009 collection of short stories and poems War Dances won the 2010 PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction. This young adult novel won the 2007 National Book Award for Young People’s Literature.  True Diary has some of the poet’s style.

Junior (aka Arnold), the 14-year-old protagonist, makes age-appropriate comments on sex, yet the only sex act in the entire novel is a reference to masturbation, not graphic, but with enough detail to make you laugh or shudder. Pretty normal adolescent thinking, but it would disturb the censors.

Since the story takes place on  a Spokane Indian Reservation, you can expect some hard topics: violence, racism, poverty, child abuse, depression, alcoholism, anorexia, bulimia. In particular alcoholism strains family resources and relationships. This is a well-known issue among Native people.

Because it’s a Reservation you have to expect some implication of white governmental policies in the poverty and alcoholism and depression and violence. The criticism is faintly bitter, a clear indictment of Indian Reservations and their consequences. The struggle of the main character to leave the reservation for a more promising future explains the title “part-time Indian.”

You might have heard it said of the white man’s curriculum “To kill the Indian to save the child.” As his teacher Mr. P told him: “We were supposed to make you give up being Indian. Your songs and stories and language and dancing. Everything.”

Mr. P tells him to leave the reservation to go to a white school and learn to hope. Hope is what was drained from the Spokane Indians as they were “educated.” Hope can only be recovered by leaving the poisoned environment.

The real reason I love this book is for these features I call “poetry:” the white space, the short paragraphs, the drawings, the caricatures of the “Part-time” Indian. It is poetry for the struggling reader offering visual cues and humor and an insecure inner voice.  It is not juvenile; it is adolescent striving toward adulthood.

True Diary has a poetry of  short paragraphs and rough drawings in Junior’s diary. Every important character has labeled drawings with notations like his older sister : “acne scars that somehow make look tough and pretty at the same time;”  “‘distressed'” blue jeans (shoplifted from Macy’s).” These diary drawings substitute for long character descriptions that usually hold back the pace of fiction.

Many secondary teachers dream of an accessible book for their struggling readers that treats them as mature people. This is the answer to that dream.

 

Book Banning’s Impact

College teachers will tell you with shock that many students admit they have never read a complete book before arriving on campus. These are students who have been admitted  to college. How is that possible?

Students do not have to read complete books to graduate from high school. Not that books aren’t assigned, but secondary students have work-arounds to avoid reading. Instead of reading an assigned book, students can watch the DVD, find online book reports, read Masterplots or some digest of literature.  AI has become a brilliant consultant. They can debrief students who have actually read the book this year or last.  They can figure out the basics from class discussion. They can be extremely resourceful to avoid actual reading. Hence many walk through the college portals without having completed a book.

Motivating students to actually read has become critical to teaching any subject that requires literacy. I object to wholesale banning of books, because relevant and contemporary reading is one way to break ground for literacy. Banned books are a likely means of motivation. I’m not talking about trashy reading. Young adult literature can have great depth with conflicts relevant to crucial issues for teenagers. It invites discussion and enhances understanding. It inspires better writing than the so-called classics that take young readers to rarified places.

Censored books may occupy timely and relevant  places. They can occupy essential places. Below is my short list of banned, yet “must read” books for high school students. I will address each of these May 6-10. May 11 will be the wrap-up.

The American Library Association has compiled book  challenges and banning statistics since 2001, by year and by decade.  Before that they created informal lists of Top 100 Challenged and Banned Young Adult Books.  Lord of the Flies and  1984 come from that period of time.

Title (Author)

Rank for Challenges  and Year

Reason for Banning

Source
The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-time Indian (Alexie) #1  – 2014 sexual references, profanity, violence, gambling, and underage drinking, and for its religious viewpoint American Library Association
The Hate U Give (Thomas) #4  -2018 banned and challenged because it was deemed “anti-cop,” and for profanity, drug use, and sexual references American Library Association
To Kill a Mockingbird (Lee) #10- 2011 violence and its use of the N-word

 

American Library Association
Lord of the Flies (Golding) Highly ranked among all- time challenges by American Library Association

 

profanity, “lurid passages about sex”, and “statements defamatory to minorities, God, women, and the disabled.”

 

See The Waterloo, Iowa, and Duval County, Florida, schools challenge in 1992

 

1984 (Orwell) Highly ranked among all- time challenges by American Library Association Challenged in the Jackson County, FL (1981) as “pro-communist and contained explicit sexual matter.”

 

2004 Banned Books Resource Guide by Robert P. Doyley

 

Book-Banning: The Impact on Literacy

With the publishing of the “School Reading Report Card” (the National Assessment of Educational Progress) politicians and parents take critical aim the causes of illiteracy.  They blame bad teaching, low standards, poor curriculum,” brainwashing” and recently: Diversity, Equality and Inclusion and its influence on faculty hiring and books assigned.

Literacy is complicated. It involves what you read and with whom, how you read and why you read, where and when you read. Book-banning groups prefer to target a single cause of illiteracy, because that is how they get protesters fired up.

Subject matter alone can create book challenges and bans. Multicultural books like All Boys Aren’t Blue, by George M. Johnson, Gender Queer: A Memoir by Maia Kobabe, The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison, The Perks of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky are the four most challenged for 2024. They are vulnerable targets of the attack on Diversity, Equality and Diversity.

Over the years book banning has even extended to novels we know as “classics” today.  Some of these include Huckleberry Finn (Mark Twain), Of Mice and Men (John Steinbeck), To Kill a Mockingbird (Harper Lee) and 1984 (George Orwell). Some of these books trespassed on forbidden language, such as racial and developmental slurs employed by Twain, Lee, and Steinbeck. Orwell was cited for “pro-communism idea/ sexuality.” He invented his own language.

Restrictions on reading are not the same as censorship, no matter what teachers say. Fahrenheit 451, where objectionable books are destroyed by flame-throwers, is censorship. Eliminating the presence of a book within the geographic borders of a town is de facto censorship, since it creates financial and opportunity barriers to reading a book. Allowing an alternative reading to a book assigned is not censorship, since it meets a literacy goal addressed by its alternative.

” De facto censorship”  means the practical effect of a law. Driving a book from schools and libraries eliminates the opportunity of reading for those who are least likely to read: readers who are impoverished by financial resources or social environment at home and at school. They do not purchase books, and they do not have them in their homes. Eliminating public access is no less than censorship for disadvantaged readers.

What you read is the focus for Banned Books Week (October 5-11).  It has become a world-wide event, spotlighting state and local book challenges and bans on books in schools, libraries, or any public institution.

Banned books are a potential cause of illiteracy. They are challenged by their moral tone, their focus on character identity, their lack of difficulty, or their political controversy. None of these descriptions relate to actual quality. Public protesters struggle to define “quality” so they don’t bother with it. Sometimes they demand “the classics” of literature.

Before I slip into stereotypes I am glad to say that many parents and interest groups have good reasons for restricting books.  Restrictions allow choices or limitations on student reading. For example, in school there are required books, books selected from a short or long list, and the free choice of books when students their own books within a defined universe. Only required books force students to read controversial literature.  Some disputed books can also be available on special shelves in the school library.

Restricted access is the solution, not complete censorship.

Banned Books Week starts Sunday, October 5. Let’s get ready.

The Peacemaker

The Peacemaker

At his address to the United Nations this past Tuesday (September 23) President Trump claimed he had settled seven wars over the past seven months. No doubt this claim took the General Assembly aback. Who knew there were seven declared wars in progress, and when were they settled?

The authoritative Snopes news investigators checked his claim by studying the seven wars at the root and this is what they found:

Trump’s record of preventing wars over the past six months is mixed. Numerous parties have disputed his role in the events, and most of the deals he has brokered appear to be temporary solutions to long-standing issues. Trump has also been unable to resolve current crises between Russia and Ukraine, as well as stop Israel’s ongoing bombardment of Gaza. As such, Trump’s claims are highly exaggerated. 

https://www.snopes.com/news/2025/09/26/trump-end-7-wars/?utm_source=mail.snopes.com&utm_medium=newsletter&utm_campaign=alligator-alcatraz-investigation-simon-cowell-pi-phone&_bhlid=d071aae8d239197fd9c2c952ef6065ec587c557d

Please check the link above for details of these “settlements,” some of which ended with one side declaring the President should be recommended for the Nobel Peace Prize. In many cases the other side claimed his involvement in negotiations was negligible. They would not second the nomination.

This excerpt from the Snopes article typifies the evidence of peace settlements. You can read about the six other “settlements” in the article linked above.

  • The two South Asian countries have long fought over the territory of Kashmir and faced their latest conflict after an April 2025 attack by armed groups that killed 26 people in Indian-administered Kashmir. . . Neither country has officially declared war in many of their major conflicts including this one. 
  • Trump claimed the two countries agreed to a “full and immediate ceasefire” after talks mediated by the U.S. Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif thanked Trump “for his leadership and proactive role for peace in the region.” However, India’s foreign ministry said Trump played no role in mediation: “Talks for ceasing military action happened directly between India and Pakistan through existing military channels, and on the insistence of Pakistan. Prime Minister [Narendra] Modi emphasised that India has not accepted mediation in the past and will never do.”
  • In June 2025, Trump hosted Pakistan’s Chief of Army Staff Gen. Asim Munir — considered to be the most powerful figure in Pakistan — at the White House, and Munir reportedly called for Trump to be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.
  • While Pakistan praised the U.S. for its mediation efforts, India denied U.S. involvement, leaving the full extent of Trump’s role in question.

This is not the kind of evidence that would impress the Nobel Peace Prize investigators. Most of the negotiations Trump sponsored had comparable results, including the persistence of the conflict after the negotiations were declared “settled.”

Like many of the President’s claims of accomplishments this is bravado and half true at best. To think that he could convince the United Nations General Assembly and the Nobel Prize evaluators exhibits delusion or the “Art of the Deal” mentality. In that mentality the President can invent a reality that will beat down the objections of the parties to the deal. It doesn’t matter if it is true, as long as he can make it so.

The President demonstrates some influence on foreign leaders, such as Pakistan’s Chief of Army Staff Gen. Asim Munir, but he does not command respect across the globe. He will not be able to impose his will on everyone he targets, even with the power of tariffs. He cannot constitute his own reality abroad as he does at home.

If the President and his followers dispute the research of Snopes, they are disputing one of the few authoritative and non-partisan research agencies in the United States. At some point we have to accept some reality, and it is unlikely to come from the State Department, as you can see in the above promotion, “The President of Peace.”

The truth can be a hapless orphan in the hands of a propaganda machine, but the truth is the truth nonetheless. There will be no Nobel Peace Prize for the President, and it will not be because he is the victim of some international conspiracy.

 

 

The MVWSAS

In my echo chamber there has been a lot of optimism about polling, promising new candidates, and local activism. I like the positive spin, and I am a fan of Heather Cox Richardson, who cheers us as proponents of democracy. We have to step up for the next election.

Still the pessimist in me wants to warn about the kind of optimism we had in 2024, when the polls seemed to tilt in our favor. Then the silent, but deadly voter stepped up and elected Donald Trump. My personal theory is that we were surprised by the MVWSAS– the Male Voter with Short Attention Span.

I have to be careful here, because that title could easily describe me. Sometimes I lean into the soundbites, and I am not easily persuaded.  Sometimes I look into the mirror and see the MVWSAS, but I am resisting him.

The MVWSAS is a big fan of democracy as long as his team is winning. It is all about winners and losers, as our peerless leader has assured us. This voter will always talk a good game about respecting and supporting our leaders when “our ” leaders are in charge. During the Biden administration we heard a lot about unconstitutional appropriation of power, because the wrong team was on the field. There was a lot of hooting and hollering when Biden assumed charge of alternative energy and environmental regulations. Unconstitutional seizure of power! the opposition cried.

Then the home team came on the field, reversing the environmental reforms; appropriating power from the Department of Justice; establishing tariffs and abolishing the Department of Education without Congressional approval; other expansions of executive authority. No objections from the ruling Party, even from Congress, which, ironically has been completely emasculated.

When you see democracy as a game, there is no contradiction in this thinking. It is no different when you go to a sporting event and harass the umpires or referees, because they don’t give your team a break. When a call goes in your favor, you give them some love. “Now you’re seeing the plate.” “This is a good umpiring crew, isn’t it?”  All the time you are judging the officials depending on whether your team is winning. Sensible, right?

You can see why this voter may rush to the polls to make sure the right officiating is on the field. Otherwise the game is spoiled. These are passionate fans, even if they are not reflective thinkers. They love talk shows and podcasts, where fans run off at the mouth, without giving objective evidence.  If there is evidence, it come with a “home field” advantage.

Another attribute is the “SAS” part of the species. “Short attention span”  is not a sign of low intelligence, but it may entail stubbornness. All members of the political universe could be guilty of this, but the MVWSAS believes it is a virtue to be loyal, rather than flexible.

“Stubbornness” will not be identified in the negative for the “SAS” male, because it is translated as “certainty.” Lack of certainty signals a weak constitution or weak convictions. “Fallibility” does not belong in the MVSAS portfolio.

The portfolio contains a self-assured male with no time / inclination for listening or considering new ideas.  In all fairness, we could describe some female voters the same way, especially when they find solidarity.The MVWSAS not so much.

For some reason many of the MVWSAS fly under the radar, so they don’t record in the polls. They may be what Nixon called the “silent majority.” Some of them are anything but silent. It’s just that we underestimate their numbers. Can’t say why.

This reference group does get not enough notice in the heat of the campaign, especially among women with long attention spans.  They may overestimate the malleability or determination to vote among the MVWSAS. They are not open-minded, but they are registered and loaded for bear.

The answer is simply to get more open-minded voters out to the polls, as the Obama loyalists did once.  The occasional MVWSAS may stray over the line, but they are surely not a good  investment of time. They don’t run in the independent crowd, but they do run, and they vote. We just have to out-hustle them.

 

 

 

 

Political Fantasies 101

When any government official tells you to blame “antifa,” our alarm bells should ring out. We should not nod our heads without thinking and enter the twilight zone of scapegoats. An alert mind will not carelessly slip into someone else’s fantasy without asking: Should I believe this?

The President recently signed an executive order designating “Antifa” as a “domestic terrorist organization.  . . . a militarist, anarchist enterprise that explicitly calls for the overthrow of the United States Government, law enforcement authorities, and our system of law. It uses illegal means to organize and execute a campaign of violence and terrorism nationwide to accomplish these goals.” [https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/09/designating-antifa-as-a-domestic-terrorist-organization/]

“Antifa” is the President’s favorite target. Just as anti-gun organizations automatically blame every shooting on the NRA or the lack of gun regulation, so the President has his own convenient source of violence like the Charlie Kirk assassination.

However, “antifa” is an imagined threat.

“. . the director of the FBI during Trump’s first term, Christopher Wray, explained that antifa, which is short for “antifascist,” is an ideology and not an organization, the executive order says antifa is.”  [https://news.bloomberglaw.com/us-law-week/trump-signs-order-designating-antifa-as-domestic-terrorist-group]

When Charlie Kirk was assassinated, the President was quick to assign blame to the “radical left,” and the next day he officially designated “antifa” as a “domestic terrorist organization.” Actually, under the law, there’s no official designation called “domestic terrorist organization.” But it sounds deadly, so why not?

Giving the “domestic terror” status to antifa elevates rumor to fact. Either the President knows it is a rumor, or he has unconsciously merged fantasy into reality. We don’t have to live in the President’s fantasy. If anything, during a crisis we need to keep a grip on reality.

Lack of evidence has never prevented the President from voicing opinions about guilt or innocence or causes of a crime. Generally district attorneys caution public figures from offering their opinions prior to trial, because they could influence the jury.  The President never exercises that caution about guilt or innocence. He wants to influence the verdict of a trial.

It could all be innocent play for an autocrat, until real people get named as members of antifa. Any political activist could qualify as an agent: George Soros (financier), Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (U.S. Representative), John Stewart (comedian), all law-abiding citizens from the left-wing. On a bad day the President could claim they were secret associates of antifa.

Raising the specter of a domestic terror organization offers red meat, if you feel hungry to blame someone or something for the tragedies of American life.  Voters can be activated by anger and perceived injury. They will go to the polls to foil anything that can be called a “domestic terror.”

But if you are a voter and want to take a shot at evil, please be sure it is a real evil. Stand for “truth, justice and the American way,” if you are inspired to stand for something. Just make it a real something. Don’t participate in someone else’s fantasy.