A week hence, the United
States of America will see the inauguration of the Kleptocrat (no, I don’t
believe you’re going to see his name on my site; I’m doing my part to not contribute
to his web analytics) as President. So I think this story from yesterday’s New
York Times is timely. The headline is certainly instructive: “In Iowa,
Trump Voters Are Unfazed by Controversies.”
Because remember what
I said about magical thinking? When you’ve made up your mind as to the
preferred outcome, the facts—not even blizzards of them—do indeed not faze you.
This is crystalized in a quote from one of the people the Times reporter interviewed to ask if he had any second thoughts, given
the disclosures of questionable dealings with Russia [and a shedload of other
high crimes and misdemeanors I’m just too discouraged to enumerate, but which include
refusal to divest his business holdings, nominating an entire skulk of
corporate foxes to guard the working guy’s henhouse and allegedly engaging
Russian prostitutes to pee on a hotel bed once occupied by Michelle and Barack
Obama, because he’s that kind of vindictive frat boy].
No, Al Ameling does not.
“The way it is nowadays, unless I see positive proof, it’s all a lie.”
(He didn’t specify what
constitutes positive proof, but I’m guessing that he would have to see and hear
the Kleptocrat in flagrante delicto,
in person—because those libtards
could fake all kinds of photographs and videos you know—shooting heroin with 12-year-old
naked Russian hookers covered in canola oil and glitter in order to even ask
himself the question if there might be something—just the very faintest whiff of
something—that might be in any way unsavory associated with this guy. But he’d accept any explanation up
to and including flat out denial of the whole thing that he was seeing and
hearing in person.)
But I didn’t need to
read the entire article (although I did) to know what was going on. The photo directly
under the headline basically told the story:
And it depresses me no
end. I wonder how many of these men are going to like having their Medicare
replaced with vouchers? And how they’re going to like the new co-pays on their cholesterol
and erectile dysfunction meds?
To counter this
oppressively ghastly reality (because—while I do clap for Tinkerbell—I’m not
delusional, and this is the world today), I’ll leave you with another photo. It
was shot within spitting distance of where the inauguration ceremony will take
place (any bets on whether the Kleptocrat whips out a crown—for which he will
bill the US taxpayers—and place it on his own head?), but a long, long time
ago.
I gotta hold on to
something.