Jul 4, 2026

Parallels

Some pretty good stuff on Facebook these days.


Hey, MAGA

Calling us "communists with Trump Derangement Syndrome" is a strong indicator that you've fully adopted the actual Communist Playbook, and gone total Useful Fuckin' Idiot.


Happy Freedom Day


Overheard


Grief can be a form of patriotism too.

Today, many of us won't be celebrating at the local parade, or grilling in the backyard with friends and family, or oohing and ahhing at the fireworks later tonight.

Not because we hate our country, but because we love it too much to pretend everything is fine.

Right v Wrong


Belle

While Trump has no problem packing a room with uniformed service members, his taint-licker SecDef will gladly come down on Maj Watson with both feet.


250 Years Ago

Number one rule - hard and fast:
The government works for us, not the other way around.

When you notice government no longer belongs to you, it's time for some big changes.


Neil's Prophesy Revisited

(originally published Jan 9, 2025 - so, did it all fall down? Is the YouTube short still a thing?)

2026 is the year the internet dies.

As legacy media fades into the distance of the receding past, people who now denounce "mainstream news" as fake or untrustworthy, will come to know that their favorite fringe sites, and their "alternative" news is what's actually fake. But instead of changing their minds and either moving to resurrect the old ways, or searching out credible new sources of information, they'll just dismiss it all as totally unreliable - and the entire internet will implode, grinding The Information Age to a halt.

Seems a bit silly, but hey - ya heard it hear first, kids.



I didn't know when in 2026, Dr Tyson meant, so here it is, about the time we start to gear up for the 2026 mid-terms - assuming we still have elections.

This is really scary, typing this in January 2024, under what most people think are credible threats to American democracy, and the free flow of information.

Today's Today



In a brief essay that appeared ca 1925, poet Katharine Lee Bates described her inspiration for writing "America the Beautiful," the poem that would evolve into one of the nation’s best-loved patriotic songs, during a trip to Pike’s Peak in 1893.

Bates was a professor at Wellesley and had traveled west to teach a summer course in Colorado Springs. Bates and the other professors decided to "celebrate the close of the session by a merry expedition to the top of Pike’s Peak." They made the ascent by prairie wagon.

At the top, Bates later wrote, she was inspired by "the sea-like expanse of fertile country . . . under those ample skies," and "the opening lines of the hymn floated into my mind." Those opening lines—"O beautiful for spacious skies, / For amber waves of grain, / For purple mountain majesties / Above the fruited plain!"—would eventually become the lyrics of one of the best-known songs in American history.

Bates finished writing "America the Beautiful" before leaving Colorado Springs but didn’t think of publishing it until two years later. The poem was first printed in a weekly newspaper, The Congregationalist, on July 4, 1895.

Bates’s patriotic words were soon set to music, most popularly to composer S. A. Ward’s "Materna," the tune to which we sing it today. Celebrating "country loved" and the "patriot dream," the song resonated with Americans from all walks of life and became enormously popular. Within twenty years, Bates (after revising some of the lyrics in 1904) had "given hundreds, perhaps thousands, of free permissions" for "America the Beautiful" to appear "in church hymnals and Sunday School song books of nearly all the denominations; . . . in a large number of regularly published song books, poetry readers, civic readers, patriotic readers . . . in manuals of hymns and prayers, and anthologies of patriotic prose and poetry . . . and in countless periodicals."

While Bates was initially surprised by the poem’s success, she later reflected that its enduring "hold as it has upon our people, is clearly due to the fact that Americans are at heart idealists, with a fundamental faith in human brotherhood."