Sunday, March 30, 2025

Catch 22, the Movie

I just watched Catch 22 again. I had read the book in med school, I think, primed by my roommate, Ollie Korshin, who loved it. Ollie had a weird sense of humor, but interesting. He was also a prime devoté of all the Donald Duck comics, especially those featuring Scrooge McDuck. I think the common thread must be over the top characters. I don't know what the genre is, but there are movies and books where the characters are caricatures, “a picture, description, or imitation of a person in which certain striking characteristics are exaggerated in order to create a comic or grotesque effect.”

I had seen the movie before, of course, and hadn't really liked it, although I was sharp enough to realize that the repetitive flashbacks to Yossarian in the plane where Snowden is dying in his arms, feeling cold as shock sets in, and Yossarian is reduced to reassuring him that everything will be OK, is the underlying motif. But now it has just rocketed up to my number one anti-war movie – that question of what is the #1 anti-war movie recurs frequently. I think Dr. Strangelove, which shares a genre with Catch 22, whatever that genre is named, is #2, or maybe you could switch them around. Since movies stay as they are and since movies are a conversation between the print and the viewer, it must be me who has changed.

Pretty much everyone in Catch 22 is a caricature except Yossarian, the only sane and normal person, except maybe Luciana, the whore he wants to marry but who dies when the supercilious pipe-smoking Aarfy throws her out the window after he fucks her because it would tarnish his preppy image if the truth got out. In Dr. Strangelove, Mandrake is a normal human being, and maybe the President, but that might be it. The normal vs. the crazy others in the world, I guess that's the description.

Catch 22 has PTSD before PTSD had a name, or at least an acronym. That's the point of Yossarian and Snowden, how it recurs – that's PTSD. And then there is moral injury, in spades, shown but not named, because the name came in the 1990's, invented by my high school and undergrad classmate, Jonathan Shay, in his book Achilles in Vietnam. You can see the impulse to throw faux medals over the White House fence, because here in World War II the officers are doing the same obscene shit as we heard about with Vietnam, when soldiers are ordered to do unholy acts that are perversions of war, which upsets them deeply, and then they are given medals with the hope that the medals will obscure the sins.

What a strange term, perversions of war. It's OK to kill soldiers but not civilians. Why is it OK to kill soldiers? Because they will kill you if they can, or they will take important things from you. OK, OK, what's the alternative? I can't think of any. But still, perversions of war. Wow.

The irony that pervades it heightens the sadness rather than undercutting it, I think. It's the irony that lifts it above the other anti-war movies, I think. More than Paths of Glory, for instance. Such an anti-official movie, completely appropriate for the 60's. The insistence on true human relationships in one man, and the bureaucracy and of course, capitalism, and common social conventions and the ignorance of most people. All the perversions of society visited upon war.

Catch 22 has unspeakable tragedy, dressed up with irony, which is hilarious, but can you really laugh? Can you really laugh at Strangelove? The sadness, craziness. Irrational idiocy of bureaucracy. The good war, they say, WW II. Of which there is not one true example in history. Justified war, that there is. But not good. And crazy personal lives that keep going on. Crazy. Irony, irony. You have to hold the concepts in your mind at the same time. The absurdity that is both hilarious and tragic. Maybe Kafka, maybe that's the antecedent. Maybe Vonnegut, with all that craziness from PTSD, living on Titan and being watched by aliens as you procreate – Vonnegut and Joseph Heller were friends, which is so appropriate.

How can you laugh at tragedy and malignant craziness? It's more like gaping at it, maybe. I wonder if it's in Cervantes. We invent new names for things, which is good, but it was always there, lurking somewhere.

Budd Shenkin

Protesting in Walnut Creek

I took to the streets yesterday, at Walnut Creek, putting my body on the line. I was ready to be arrested, I guess – better have a lawyer lined up to call. Well, that's pretty dramatic. In fact, I grabbed a pre-made sign and joined other middle aged or older protestors, some with kids, and lined the streets of the Broadway Plaza shopping center with some occasional mild chants, no opposition, occasional car honks of support, a closed Tesla show room, and gave witness of opposition to the coup. I missed Ann, with whom I also gave witness, once in front of the Grand Lake Theater in Oakland, another time in Maui. When we were younger, we protested separately, with other partners, she in Berkeley, me in Washington, DC. Giving public witness of opposition might have some effect – it certainly did with Vietnam – and it feels good to be at least doing something. I'm preparing to do it again, this time with a sign that I will prepare at home.

There were maybe 2,000 people there – not just a handful, not just 100 – yet there was no press or TV coverage at all that I could see. (Later, I saw that the San Jose Mercury News and East Bay News covered it.) Rachel Maddow tries to highlight nationwide protests at the beginning of her shows, but it's really a minimal number of people. What'll it take? Missing a social security check would do it, maybe – it's actually amazing how important those checks are, even to people I know personally, in my social class. There have been so many outrages so far, and so little resistence. It's lamentable. But I'm out there.

I was told about this Saturday protest by my Saturday walking partner, Mary Lou. She's from a conservative family in Missouri, is surrounded by conservative friends at work, but she knows her own mind, and is given to public and private events. So we met there at noon, walked around together, I took some pictures, and I was glad my gluteous medius was recovered enough for me to endure our 2.75 mile traditional walk around the Lafayette Reseervoir, and our traditional wonderful breakfast at Millie's American Kitchen with our friends the owners, Aimee and Victor, and then to stand around and walk the protest. Then as the manifestation was coming to an end, I said to Mary Lou, want an ice cream? I thought I remembered an ice cream store near the pretzel wagon just outside Macy's and Starbuck's. Sure enough, there is was, Haagen-Daz, so I had coffee ice cream and she had chocolate. We sat outside and ate it at a table that I used to sit at on Saturday mornings while Ann got her hair cut nearby, and I would work on this or that on my computer. It was familiar.

Today I remembered “stopping for ice cream” when I was a kid, maybe early or mid teens, and for some reason I was in the car with my father driving and my mother riding shotgun and one or two of the other kids in the back seat with me. It was somewhere near Upper Darby, I think. My father said, “What about a softserve ice cream?” My mother said OK. Then my Dad said, I think there's a Dairy Queen just over this rise here. My mother looked askance at him. He was having some trouble with his weight. “You're really disgusting,” she said. Clearly, he had not been adhering strictly to a diet. He just took it and we stopped.

So, clearly, it imbedded itself indelibly in my mind. I sure didn't want a marriage where my wife would say that to me. No way.

Explains a lot.

Tuesday, March 25, 2025

Organizing The Democrats

I continue to think that the biggest problem the Democrats have is organizing themselves. Polls reveal that most people back the Democrats on issues. The problem remains of selling the people on the brand of the Democrats - oh so tarnished! - and finding the right messengers.

It's important to remember that the claim of a Trump mandate is false. It was not a landslide.  Given the low rating of Biden and the last minute substitution of Kamala, it's pretty remarkable.

Popular vote:

Trump -- 31.78%

Harris - 30.84 %

Third party - 1.06%

Didn't vote - 36.33%

It was a very close election.

How to organize the Democrats? Clarify roles.

There are some who are excellent at hosting local events - best are Bernie and AOC, but others do well, too, like my friend Eric Swalwell.

Others do well on talk shows -- Jamie Raskin is excellent, Swalwell, lots of others.

Others could do well making statements in congress.  Upstage Schumer and Jeffries with those who can really sell. They are there! Find them the proper stage around the halls of Congress and watch them make the case.

There are others who excel in the written word. Let them write.

Then, who can conduct this orchestra? Get a council, as I've suggested before, to get the strategy together, define the main themes, who presents them where - organize! Pete Buttigieg would be great at this, especially with his McKinsey consulting background, Pete could probably recommend a fine new organizational structure for the Democratic Party.

I continue to think of this all as an organizational problem.  Get rid of the senior dominance, remember that there is no "i" in "team," find some ways to pull together the disparate threads of the Democratic message and make it stick, find a couple of charismatic leaders, and then play the game. You can't tell who wins until you play the game.

Budd Shenkin

Thursday, February 27, 2025

What Is To Be Done?

My close friend Rick responds to my first post today:

Only a madman wouldn't agree with your frustration, anger and fear about what is happening.  RFK is one thing, but the insanity is everywhere: from breathtaking conflicts of interest (the FAA today is reported to be cancelling its $4 billlion contract with Verizon — to award the work to Elon Musk!!)  to unimaginable insensitivity to human suffering (hundreds of thousands of people who depend on USAID for basic food/survival have been suddenly cut off and literally left to die. Research programs are stopped, whole departments are experiencing massive layoffs without plan or reason. Migrants are being treated like terrorists and locked up in Gitmo. Our allies are being treated like our enemies, and our enemies are being courted like allies. Tariffs will soon cut us out of all global markets, handing them to the Chinese. Musk's mission is being managed by a 23-year old and a 25-year old with no prior government experience, slashing jobs with their machetes (much like the Red Guard in China).  History is brazenly rewritten with no thought for the truth ("Zelensky is a dictator!  Ukraine started the war!"). Trump calls himself "King" and talks about a third term (although all that may be deliberate bombast from him).  The EPA is being dismantled; so is the FAA. So is the FDA.  The FBI and DOJ are now partisan arms of the presidency, positioned to pursue his political enemies with abandon. 

God help us.

But when you say that the Dems are organizing to fight, I remain very skeptical.  Lawsuits?  Sure, bring 'em. But don't count on the courts to support you. Filibusters? Sure, they can work to delay pieces of legislation here or there, but the public hates it, thinks that's a big part of the problem, and they will not reward the Dems at election time for scorched earth legislative tactics. 

Maybe there are emerging Democratic leaders who will make sense and draw support. I'm skeptical. I suspect we're going to be riding this madness for four more years and can only hope that the country holds together that long. 

I responded to Rick:

I think resistance is necessary.  Playing dead turns out to being dead.

What kind of resistance?  I think it's got to be explaining what's happening.  Understanding comes first.  Find ways to communicate.  Work hard at it.  Find out who can do it, and how.  Refuse to be suppressed.  It's necessary to fan the flames of a popular movement, and find the leaders, and the group of leaders.

BTW - In making the case, I would show what happened in Hungary, and compare it to what is happening with Trump.  It's also what happened in Putin's Russia -- the co-conspirators loot the public treasury.  That's something people can understand.

One more thing - how do you convince people?  You tell them, you tell them again, and you don't stop telling them.  Did you even hit a nail just once, and see your work done?  Nope - you have to drive it in again and again.  It's the same with public opinion.  Gotta drive it home.

Myself, I'd also do it not just with domestic issues, but with foreign policy.  I know traditionally the public "doesn't pay attention," but I don't believe that's always true.  "We are now lining up with our enemies, Communist Russia has become Oligarch Russia - and we're lining up with them!  Who are our oligarchs - name them!  What are they doing with the press - show the examples.

The problem of democracy is that it presents tools for a determined group of anti-democrats to take over the levers of power.  That's what we're seeing here.  The very last guardrail is public opinion, and that must be the aim of the resistance now.  Public Opinion.

Budd Shenkin

It Looks Like Our Epoch Really Sucks

​I looked at what RFK Jr is doing now. Might as well put the Taliban in charge, I thought, not totally logically, but that's what I thought. Put a stop to all that vaccine development - thanks, you awful twisted stupid damaged POS. And then I posted about our current condition:

Stupid, Destructive, Mean, Greedy.

Not to mention psychopathic and sociopathic.

How long, o God, how long?

This is just the start.

The worst era ever has begun.

This all happens and Carville and others, the "we have no power" crowd, say let it fall, and let people know who's responsible. I say, AYFKM?? That's such a responsible look! Don't you realize that Dems were deposed partially because they were seen as being ineffective, as "Not keeping us safe?" That's what the crime in the streets, making theft a misdemeanor, not protecting the borders is about, to some extent. It's not all just xenophobia and prejudice. Ineffective and misguided, those are the charges. Not being focused on the real problems, which is not misuse of pronouns, and then keeping a government that takes 8 years to get anything done. You really want to add more substance to the charge of "ineffective?"

So, help is coming, resistance is coming, we just don't know from where. The state AG's are coming together. The Blue State governors will be coming together. Pete Buttigieg is there, organizing and verbalizing. I hope the formal congressional leadership will have the wisdom, even if they keep their titles, to step aside and let the capable Dems come to the fore, those who know how to act, how to explain, how to persuade.

Meanwhile, how mean and stupid can they be? We're finding out.

Budd Shenkin

Saturday, February 22, 2025

Resistance To Trump Coup - We Need Political Resistance Councils

It is astonishing that the Democratic party is even weaker than we thought it was. We’ve known that it’s sclerotic and geriatric, we’ve known that the leadership can’t talk its way out of a paper bag, we’ve known that it is riven by interests with singular, narrow foci. We’ve known that its kennel of consultants is mediocre in everything but continuing to get contracts for their mediocre services. We know that its leadership has been mostly focused on keeping officials in their jobs. We’ve known that the official leadership has few leaders. We’ve known that the senior leadership has occupied itself with keeping talented junior leaders out of leadership, and comfortably stifled so that little need change within the Democratic party apparatus. We’ve known that, even to the end, when the institutions supplied all the tools necessary to cage the tiger, they couldn’t get traction on the Mueller Report, and even when they were in power, all they could offer was the infuriatingly incompetent and much-more-than-cautious Merrick Garland, may his name live in perpetual infamy. No one even raised a rumpus about his two years of delay, and his appointment of sworn Biden enemies to investigate him and his family. No, silence is their specialty.

Yes, the evidence was there. The congressional leaders couldn’t even give a coherent speech — Schumer reads his speech into the lectern, and for all her virtues, Pelosi’s ability to explain and inspire is in the bottom 20th percentile. Those who could speak had to do it on their own, in what TV time they could cadge. The evidence was there.

But still. One has to still be astounded at the confused passivity of the Democratic party in the face of a coup — or an autogolpe — that was telegraphed explicitly by Trump. He said what he was going to do! Project 2025 laid out the roadmap! Trump said his appointments would be different this time! He said he would have a tariff war! He said he would side with Russia! He said Urban has it right! He even said that in his view elections were unnecessary.

So don’t act surprised, you dolts. Yes, you are deer in the headlights. You just aren’t the right person for the job that has to be done now. Schumer, where is he? Any leaders think of bringing the senate to a standstill, filibustering appointments that are in themselves a punch in the face? Chris Murphy and others urge leaders to shut the Senate down, but they don’t. Are Republicans the only ones who own the filibuster? Anyone think of stopping calling the paid-off and intimidated Republicans anything except “our esteemed friends on the other side of the aisle?” They are the enemy! Ever hear the term “going to the mattresses?” If not now, when?

Listen to the rally cry of our friends Chuck and Hakeem — “We have no power!” Wow, that will get the millions cheering. Passivity is widespread. Jackie Rosen, fresh off a difficult race for senator from Nevada, when she should be ebullient and energized that she won, instead echoes — “We’re the minority.” Hakeem goes off on a book tour to Chicago — I guess there’s nothing to do in Washington because, after all, you’re in the minority.

OK, people tell me: don’t get angry at the Democrats, get angry at the Republicans, they’re the one doing the damage. I say, look at sports. If an opposing team gets stronger and your home team doesn’t meet the challenge, do you get angry at the opposition, or do you assail you home ownership — what are you doing? Are you just cheap? Are you thinking of moving away and you want to lose? What’s your GM doing? You get angry at the malfeasance of your team, not the strength of the opposition. I admit the analogy breaks down when it comes to cheating — the Astros will never be forgiven, and there was Inflategate. We can indict Trump for his lying and cheating — but after all, did the Dems make good on it when they had control of the DOJ? Answer — no, they whiffed. Which they are very good at doing. I’m really pissed.

So OK, I’m pissed off. But what is to be done? Most of them recognize the danger, they see the ongoing destruction, but they were somehow built for another situation, for quiet discussions and compromise, for mutual respect of differences. They weren’t built for war. But war has come for them. It was coming, but most people wish things away and then are caught unawares. Look at the US congress and the Republican party in the late 1930’s, even when Hitler invaded Poland for God’s sake, it took Pearl Harbor for them to acknowledge the obvious. So we can’t expect more today. That’s the way comfortable politicians are. So what is to be done?

The geriatric and constitutionally cautious bumps on the log have to move to the rear seats and make room for the active, alert, dynamic crowd. The leadership won’t move, let them stay where they are. We need to form a Resistance Council.

A Resistance Council will be self-creating. The vibrant leaders need to form it themselves, and not wait for anyone’s permission, just declare themselves the Resistance Council, devoted to active resistance. They will try to educate the public in an organized, persuasive way. They will hold regular teach-in sessions, in a venue more elevated than the steps of the Capitol — hire a hall, if needs be. Hire professional media people, and get top people to volunteer, to do it right, the way the J6 Committee did, but not taking the time J6 could — we need to fly into action right away. And they will put private and public pressure on our congressional leaders to resist — to gum up the works in an organized fashion, to embarrass our Republican opponents and even our Democratic static friends into moving the congress into true opposition.

The leaders of the Resistance Council to actually lead. They will mobilize and organize all those who want to be part of the Resistance, while keeping the council leadership small enough to handle.

Who are the obvious candidates for membership in the leadership of the Resistance Council? Here are some starting names: AOC, Chris Murphy, Pete Buttigieg, Jamie Raskin, Adam Kinzinger, Bernie Sanders, Reuben Gallego, Jasmine Crockett. This council would plan the PR campaign and plan the congressional actions. They would raise money for legal support against actions the Trump administration will bring, and solicit lawyers to set up pro bono legal defense councils for all the charges Trump will bring.

The states will also need to organize themselves to resist — just today the Governor of Maine challenged Trump to his face, and he tried to bully her down — that’s who he is, would-be mobster. J.B. Pritzker has put himself forward. The Governors and state AG’s should start their own council and coordinate with the congressional Resistance Council. We need a whole bunch of Resistance Councils.

If it’s The War To Save The Republic, we have to act like it. Bring it on. Recognize it. Don’t run away from it. Organize and win. And keep it focused. It’s not just the liberals, although they are the ones I mentioned by name. There will be many others.

This is one fight that has to be won. And to win, it has to be organized. And to be organized, the let’s-wait crowd and the we-don’t-have-any-power crowd have to leave the stage and let the active ones come to the fore.

Budd Shenkin

Thursday, February 20, 2025

Evil and Dumb, How Do We Spell The Name?

‪ Trump is so dumb he thinks the game is still making deals and making money (which he actually never could do.) So he joins Russia to shakedown Ukraine - Russia gets control and USA (and prob Trump privately) get rare earths. And he expects to be celebrated for a Mafia play. He thinks it's all money. ‪ We don't say "evil" much anymore; we clean it up with the more clinical "sociopathic." Which is fine, except I'd add also "psychopathic." But maybe "stupid, evil, very cruel" covers it well. But whatever terms we use, we need to act and resist. buddshenkin.blogspot.com/2025/02/will...