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10 Ways to Positive Gossip
Compliment their accomplishments: Discussing someone's accomplishments or achievements in a positive way can be a great way to gossip about them without being negative.
Share their good deeds: Gossiping about someone's good deeds or kind actions can show others how they can make a positive impact on the world.
Talk about their talents: Sharing stories of someone's talents, whether it be in sports, music, or other hobbies, can be a way to celebrate their strengths.
Highlight their positive personality traits: Gossiping about someone's kind and caring personality traits can help others to see the best in people.
Share a funny or heartwarming story about them: Gossiping about a humorous or uplifting experience that you had with someone can be a great way to spread joy and positivity.
Discuss their personal growth: Talking about someone's personal growth and how they have overcome challenges can be a source of inspiration for others.
Share their good news: Gossiping about someone's positive news, such as a new job, engagement, or pregnancy, can spread joy and positivity.
Discuss their community involvement: Gossiping about someone's involvement in the community, such as volunteering or charity work, can inspire others to get involved.
Highlight their skills and expertise: Gossiping about someone's skills and expertise can be a way to recognize their hard work and dedication to their craft.
Celebrate their successes: Gossiping about someone's success and how proud you are of them can be a way to spread positivity and build others up.
10 Ways to Bad Gossip
Damages Reputations: Gossip can spread untrue or unverified information that can damage a person's reputation, even if it is not based on facts or evidence.
Hurts Feelings: Gossip can be hurtful and offensive, causing people to feel angry, sad, embarrassed, or humiliated.
Creates Tension: Gossip can create tension and conflict between people, leading to broken relationships and damaged trust.
Spreads Misinformation: Gossip often lacks factual accuracy, leading to the spread of misinformation and confusion.
Divides Communities: Gossip can create division and conflict within communities, causing people to take sides and leading to further tensions and problems.
Damages Self-Esteem: Gossip can negatively impact a person's self-esteem, causing them to doubt themselves or feel like they are being judged by others.
Encourages Bullying: Gossip can be used as a tool for bullying, with individuals targeting specific people and spreading rumors to harm them.
Destroys Careers: Gossip can harm professional reputations and cause people to lose jobs or miss out on career opportunities.
Alienates People: Gossip can alienate people, making them feel excluded or left out of important social groups and events.
Breeds Negativity: Gossip can create an overall atmosphere of negativity, leading to a lack of trust, respect, and communication between people.
Makers of the Flag
Delivered on Flag Day, 1914, before the Employees of the Department of the Interior, Washington D.C. by Franklin K. Lane, Secretary of the Interior. This morning, as I passed into the Land Office, The Flag dropped me a most cordial salutation, and from its rippling folds I heard it say: “Good morning, Mr. Flag Maker.” “I beg your pardon, Old Glory,” I said, “aren’t you mistaken? I am not the President of the United States, nor a member of congress, nor even a general in the army, I am only a government clerk.” “I greet you again, Mr. Flag Maker,” replied the gay voice, “I know you well. You are the man who worked in the swelter of yesterday straitening out the tangle of that farmer’s homestead in Idaho, or perhaps you found the mistake in that Indian contract in Oklahoma, or helped to clear that patent for the hopeful inventor in New York, or pushed the opening of that new ditch in Colorado, or made that mine in Illinois more safe, or brought relief to the old soldier in Wyoming. No matter; whichever one these beneficent individuals you may happen to be, I give you greeting, Mr. Flag Maker.” I was about to pass on, when The Flag stopped me with thee words: “Yesterday the President spoke a word that made happier the future of 10,000,000 pesos in Mexico; but that act looms no longer on the flag than the struggle which the boy in Georgia is making to win the Corn Club prize this summer. “Yesterday the Congress spoke a word which will open the door of Alaska; but a mother in Michigan worked from sunrise until far into the night, to give her boy an education. She, Too, is making the flag. “Yesterday we made a new law to prevent financial panics, and yesterday, maybe, a school teacher in Ohio taught his first letters to a boy who will one day write a song that will give cheer to the millions of our race. We are all making the flag.” “But,” I said impatiently, “these people were only working!”Then came a great shout from The Flag: “The work that we do is the making of the flag. I am not the flag; not at all. I am but its shadow. I am whoever you make me, nothing more. I am your belief in yourself, your dream of what People may become.“I live a changing life, a life of moods and passions, of heart-breaks and tired muscles. “Sometimes I am strong with pride, when men do an honest work, fitting the rails together truly.“Sometimes I droop, for then purpose has gone from me, and cynically I play the coward. “Sometimes I am loud, garish, and full of that ego that blasts judgement. But always, I am all that you hope to be, and have the courage to try for. “I am song and fear. Struggle and panic, and ennobling hope. I am the day’s work of the weakest man, and the largest dream of the most daring. “I am the constitution and the courts, statutes and the statute makers, soldier and dreadnought, drayman and street sweep, cook, counselor, and clerk.“I am the battle of yesterday, and the mistake of tomorrow. I am the master of the men who do without knowing why. I am the clutch of an idea, and the reasoned purpose of resolution.“I am no more than what you believe me to be and I am all that you believe I can be. “I am what you make me, nothing more.“I swing before your eyes as bright gleam of color, a symbol of yourself, the pictured suggestion of that big thing that makes this nation. My Stars and Stripes are your dream and your labors. They are bright with cheer, brilliant with courage, firm with faith, because you have made them so out of your hearts. For you are the makers of the flag and it is well that you glory in the making.” Putnam’s ready Speech Maker.
Back in 2016 or so I read a book by the positive psychologist Martin Seligman “Flourish” where he suggested walking 10,000 steps everyday for your health. I read it and began a habit of walking. One that has become a lifelong habit and today i still her my steps in even after 7 years since first reading about walking 10,000 steps.
So then when the pandemic began everybody sort of got into doing the things I’ve been doing for a while like walking and gardening. But these traditions are not new, they’ve been around forever even if people have only recently began getting into these things.
So here is a California thing you as elected leaders should be aware of. Pilgrims and doing a pilgrimage to a church and living “the way of the pilgrim” is a major tradition in Europe. Non Catholics and Catholics alike have enjoyed going on 500+ km walks over multiple weeks as a life changing accomplishment and personal growth. In America we learn about 2 guys named Lewis and Clark who went on a journey, but hardly any American over the last 150 years or so has had the need to walk from St. Louis to Astoria. The Oregon Trail and Santa Fe trail has become a where in the world is Carmen San Diego video game trivia question. My point being is that us Americans don’t do these long walks from our history. But Europeans do them to learn their history.
Now California is somewhat an anomaly in the USA when it comes to pilgrimages. Especially since one guy about 10 years ago got together with some friends and decided to walk from San Diego to Sonoma visiting every Spanish mission which took them about 90 days. Also they were probably the first people to have walked to every mission in a hundred years. But since the pandemic these long treks are becoming more popular.
The point is that California is kind of the one spot in the USA where an actual “El Camino” exists. They were built about 30 miles apart from each other which is about how long it takes for someone to go from place to place on horseback.
I saw on the news recently that Sacramento Unified School District is changing some names of their schools including Kit Carson and John Sutter. The logic is because according to some people and professors in CA they were part of the genocide of Native Americans in CA. One of the new names of the schools is Miwok.
But if CA were to apply that logic to every name in CA you would have to change the name of almost everything in CA. California would need a new name because it comes from a best selling book in Spain about an island ruled by women who murdered every man who tried to get on the island by feeding them to their puma cats they kept as pets. It was a fictional tale kind of like Wonder Woman’s island popular among explorers. When Spanish explorers discovered the peninsula in northern Mexico they named it Baja California, when the arrived on land in San Diego they named the land “California”.
A couple hundred years later they began building missions along the coast to convert natives to Christianity.
This is kind of a problem with the name of Sacramento, as far as I know there is no legend of bones of a saint or something who is buried in Sacramento. And San Francisco is not Tuscany or anywhere near Assisi in Italy.
But there is an odd name thing that is going on in the political correct world.
Why Europeans go on pilgrimages in part is to escape city life and learn humbleness and history, and get a sense of connectedness to their fellow humans and shared history.
There’s no reason CA can’t do that via roads. We have disconnected and connected roads with names all over the place. All are signs to help point us in a better direction. And road trips are pretty much as American as pie and football on Sundays.
The best route for CA is obvious, it points to San Francisco and Lincoln Park where there is an art museum and memorials. Along the way are smaller towns like Davis, Vacaville, Fairfield, Suisun, Benicia, Martinez, Richmond, each with backroads and city streets to get to know the towns a little better by getting off the interstate. You can even take Mission Street in SF to Mission Delores and all the way to Santa Clara where it ends at another Spanish Mission.
It could also be kind of fun for Southern Californians to go from a Spanish mission to another Spanish mission but do it in a way that avoids the interstate and freeways.
It would be like doing s European thing but in a better and more improved and quicker American Way.
Title: Embracing the Sacred Journey: The Importance of Making a Pilgrimage in Europe
Introduction:
In the heart of Europe lies a rich tapestry of sacred destinations, each holding profound historical, cultural, and spiritual significance. Pilgrimages have been an integral part of European tradition for centuries, offering individuals a transformative experience that transcends mere travel. Whether driven by religious devotion, personal reflection, or a desire to explore the depths of one's soul, embarking on a pilgrimage in Europe can be a truly life-changing endeavor.
1. Connecting with History:
Europe's soil is imbued with stories from time immemorial, tales of saints, sages, and ordinary individuals who embarked on extraordinary journeys. From the Santiago de Compostela Camino in Spain to the mystical isle of Iona in Scotland, pilgrimages in Europe offer an opportunity to walk in the footsteps of ancient travelers and connect with the vibrant tapestry of human history. The sacred sites, churches, and monasteries encountered along the way become living witnesses to the faith, devotion, and struggles of those who came before us.
2. Spiritual Awakening:
A pilgrimage is not merely a physical journey but a profound inner quest for spiritual enlightenment. It allows individuals to detach from the hustle and bustle of everyday life, fostering introspection and contemplation. The serene beauty of nature, the sacred silence within holy places, and the camaraderie of fellow pilgrims create an environment conducive to spiritual growth and self-discovery. The transformative power of a pilgrimage lies in its ability to ignite a spiritual awakening, offering solace, clarity, and a renewed sense of purpose.
3. Cultural Immersion:
European pilgrimages provide an extraordinary opportunity to immerse oneself in diverse cultures, customs, and traditions. Whether it's the awe-inspiring grandeur of the Vatican City, the ethereal beauty of Mont Saint-Michel in France, or the mystical folklore of Ireland's Croagh Patrick, each pilgrimage route is a gateway to experiencing the unique blend of art, architecture, music, and cuisine that define Europe's rich heritage. Engaging with local communities, partaking in rituals, and witnessing centuries-old traditions help foster a deeper understanding and appreciation of European cultural diversity.
4. Personal Reflection and Healing:
Pilgrimages have long been associated with healing, both physical and emotional. The act of embarking on a pilgrimage can be a catalyst for personal reflection, allowing individuals to confront inner struggles, seek solace, and find emotional healing. The physical challenges encountered along the journey often mirror the obstacles faced in life, encouraging pilgrims to persevere, build resilience, and emerge stronger. Whether seeking solace, seeking forgiveness, or seeking direction, the pilgrimage offers a sacred space for individuals to confront their own truths and embark on a path of personal transformation.
5. Community and Camaraderie:
One of the remarkable aspects of a European pilgrimage is the sense of community that emerges among fellow pilgrims. Shared experiences, common goals, and the camaraderie of the road create bonds that transcend nationality, age, and social backgrounds. Along the journey, pilgrims have the opportunity to engage in meaningful conversations, share stories, and support one another. The pilgrim's path becomes a microcosm of society, reflecting the ideals of compassion, empathy, and interconnectedness that form the essence of the human experience.
Conclusion:
Embarking on a pilgrimage in Europe is a journey that transcends physical boundaries and delves deep into the realms of spirituality, history, culture, and self-discovery. It offers a unique opportunity to forge a connection with the past, find solace and healing, and immerse oneself in the diverse tapestry of European heritage. The act of pilgrimage reminds us of our shared humanity, ignites a sense of wonder, and reminds
1. Camino de Santiago (The Way of St. James), Spain: The Camino de Santiago is a network of routes that converge at the shrine of St. James the Apostle in Santiago de Compostela. The most famous route is the Camino Francés, starting in St. Jean Pied de Port in France and spanning approximately 800 kilometers.
2. Via Francigena, Italy: The Via Francigena is an ancient pilgrimage route that stretches from Canterbury in England to Rome, Italy. It passes through picturesque landscapes, historic cities, and cultural sites, offering a profound journey of over 1,800 kilometers.
3. St. Olav's Way, Norway: St. Olav's Way, or Olavsleden, is a pilgrimage trail leading to the Nidaros Cathedral in Trondheim, Norway. This route follows the path taken by King Olav II in the 11th century and offers a scenic and spiritually significant journey.
4. St. Cuthbert's Way, England/Scotland: St. Cuthbert's Way is a 100-kilometer trail that crosses the border between England and Scotland, ending at the Holy Island of Lindisfarne. It follows the footsteps of the 7th-century monk, St. Cuthbert, offering a tranquil and scenic pilgrimage experience.
5. The Holy Land, Israel and Palestine: The Holy Land is a significant pilgrimage destination for Christians, Jews, and Muslims alike. It encompasses sites such as Jerusalem, Bethlehem, Nazareth, and the Sea of Galilee, offering pilgrims the opportunity to trace the footsteps of religious figures and connect with their faith.
6. Lough Derg, Ireland: Lough Derg is a remote island in County Donegal, Ireland, and is a popular site for Catholic pilgrimages. Pilgrims undertake a three-day pilgrimage known as the "Station Island Retreat," involving prayer, fasting, and contemplation.
7. Mont Saint-Michel, France: Mont Saint-Michel, located in Normandy, France, is a stunning island abbey and a UNESCO World Heritage site. It attracts both religious and non-religious pilgrims who come to admire its architectural beauty and experience its spiritual ambiance.
8. Rila Monastery, Bulgaria: The Rila Monastery, nestled in the Rila Mountains of Bulgaria, is a revered Eastern Orthodox pilgrimage site. Pilgrims visit the monastery to pay homage to its founder, St. Ivan of Rila, and to seek spiritual solace amidst its picturesque surroundings.
These are just a few examples of the numerous pilgrim routes available across Europe. Each route carries its own unique history, spiritual significance, and cultural experiences, providing pilgrims with a diverse range of options to embark on a sacred journey.
My birthday just happens to fall on Canada Day. But as you can see Canada’s national day does not quite match with timeline. It is a Downton Abbey somewhat fictional birthday. They never declared war against Britain or fought off some European power to gain Independence like every other country in North and South America. Mexico not only kicked they Spanish out they also fought off the French. Canada has independence by Parliament passing laws and they maintain the monarch as the head of state.
Even after this coronation Canada has to issue new passports and change things to “King” instead of “Queen”. How “Independent” or “Sovereign” is the country if their head of state lives in another hemisphere and is known as “The Sovereign” with a divine right to rule. My point being is that Canada has a history and national identity problem that us Americans don’t have.
Now if we examine this timeline a little closer we can discover some odd things about Canada. This is just some personal annoyances because Canada happens to share a birthday with me
Remember that these benefits may vary for different individuals, and the manner in which history is studied can influence the mental health outcomes. It's essential to approach historical study with curiosity, open-mindedness, and a focus on personal well-being.
It's important to note that the mental health benefits can vary from person to person, and political correctness should be approached with genuine intention and respect for others.
American barbecue is a culinary tradition deeply rooted in the nation's history and culture, with regional styles that highlight the diverse flavors and techniques across different parts of the United States.
The origins of American barbecue can be traced back to the indigenous Native American tribes, who practiced various methods of cooking meats over open fires. These techniques were later adopted and adapted by European settlers. However, the true transformation of barbecue in America took place during the 17th and 18th centuries when enslaved Africans brought their unique culinary traditions, including slow-cooking meats over wood fires, to the Southern states.
As the Southern United States became an agricultural powerhouse, barbecue became a staple of plantation culture. It was a communal activity where large quantities of meat were slow-cooked for hours, often in pits dug into the ground. Barbecue was not only a means of sustenance but also served as a social gathering, bringing together people from different backgrounds.
These additional regional styles exemplify the diverse and rich tapestry of American barbecue, showcasing how different areas have developed their own unique flavors, cooking techniques, and sauces based on local traditions and ingredients.
Problem: Trump in 2024 (a little foreshadowing, this is the only problem I’m ever going to address in these rhetorical weekly staff meetings until I get a job)
Word Problem: I don’t have enough words or mental energy to explain the problem with that much empathy or delicately, but that’s my personal problem to figure out.
But the essential problem is that the psychology of political correctness tends to not view reality as a series of never ending binary choices, as a psychology it is in the habit of turning everything into some kind of shade of grey or color of the rainbow or college lecture nobody really cares about.
Economy = debt ceiling, inflation, default; and endless yada yada yada about those five words.
Binary solution to this word problem
Economy = Individual people either do or do not have money to buy something because individual people either do or do not have a job that puts money either in or out of their bank account.
It’s a K-I-S-S to the average person that might work in a Union hall somewhere in 2024.
It works for other words too
Binary solution
Gender = Sex People have that’s either good or bad or sometimes some other shade of grey. Or people don’t have sex. In other words people are either celibate or not celibate in a consensual way.
People either don’t think that much and don’t say that much about what it means to be heterosexual or lgbtqia or they think and say a lot about it.
People are either parents and had to go through a process of getting a birth certificate. Or they are not parents and have not gone through that kind of process.
All of this are personal family decisions in which laws are passed or not passed.
The rhetorical word problem of “Gender assigned at birth” is problematic. I am one of those non parents who have not gone through that process before, but I’m also fairly certain that those certificates are not like multiple choice options on a test of some kind or assigned seats in school. It’s not like a doctor walks in and goes “the calendar says its May 28th, but we can just fill out another date and time if you want to, we can make this baby’s birthday August 88th or something else if we want to.” (That’s a joke btw, but if something like that ever becomes something that happens I highly suggest having the next kid at a different hospital)
My point is that some things can’t just be made up and there is nothing wrong with expressing some binary logic sometimes.
Cars are either stick shift or automatic and have either two pedals or three. But the wheels on a car can only go in binary directions, forward or backward. A manual car with a clutch is either in a gear or in neutral it can’t be in two gears at once. Planes are either in the air and sky or on the ground. There are civilians and people serving in the armed forces.
Voters will either vote for somebody or not vote for somebody. People will either Vote or not Vote. Campaigns either get donations or don’t get donations and an interest group either supports or doesn’t support a candidate. I admit there are many different shades of wins and losses in this game between the two political parties of Democrats and Republicans but the binary rhetoric of this paragraph still kind of works.
Because a sports team either wins or loses and is either on offense or defense and either scores or does not score some kind of point. Gamblers will either win or lose money resulting in more or less money going in or out of their bank account.
The main problem is that political correctness makes it difficult to see the numbers of the election clearly. Percentages have a way of getting confusing and irritating in the world of politics because even though getting 90% of a subset of the population is fantastic, if that subset of a population is only 8% of the total population then its really only like getting 7 point something out of a 100.
But even though 38% and 44% is a lot less than 90%. That 38% and 44% represents a higher percentage of the total population 35% and 32% and results in more votes. Which makes that 44% of the white woman vote the equivalent of getting close to 400% (because 8 x 4=32) of the Black Woman vote which is a mathematical impossibility. (I think, well if that’s ever happens it would be a voter anomaly worth looking into.) My point being is that the white woman vote in the Democratic Party is roughly 4 times the size of the black woman vote.
In honor of California's hometown of Sonoma California being founded by a man born on the fourth of July, and in honor of the statue of Mariano Vallejo in the townsquare holding a book that translates to "Lost Memories" I thought I would share excerpts from an old book I purchased earlier this year in Chico California at "The Bookstore"
California a Landmark History was published in 1941 by the Oakland Tribune and is written by Joseph R. Knowland who was chairman of the Historic Landmarks Committee, Native Sons of the Golden West since 1902. He also is a former chairman of the California State Parks Commission and was a Member of Congress from 1904 to 1915.
This book chronicles the preservation and markings of early day shrines of early California History. (I also supplement the knowledge in this book with facts I find on the internet)
In San Diego County in Pt. Loma stands a plaque and monument to Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo who first arrived on the shores of the Golden state on September 28th, 1542. The plaque reads as follows.
"Here at Point Loma Head on the Afternoon of September 28th 1542. Juan Rodriguez CABRILLO Distinguished Portuguese Navigator in the service of Spain commanding the flagship San Salvador Made his first Alta California Landfall and thus discovered what is now the state of California. Cabrillo with his companions came ashore on Point Loma at what is now Ballast Point and This port "closed and very good" which they named San Miguel. Cabrillo's Caraveles Assembled at Navidad Mexico under the orders of Don Antionio de Mendoza sailed from that port June 17, 1542."
A boulder on Cabrillo Boulevard in Santa Barbara contains an inscription "In Memory of Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo who discovered and explored Santa Barbara in 1542. Died in 1543, and was Buried on San Miguel Island."
In 1579 Sir Francis Drake landed in Marin County California and declared the land "New Albion" and claimed it for England.
This book (from 1941) makes the claim that they discovered a plaque Sir Francis Drake nailed to a post in the 1930's. Early examinations claim it was genuine, however other investigations in the 1970's and the early 2000's have concluded this brass plaque to be a hoax. It was a creation and a joke that went too far by local historians who were way too interested in history and they forged a plaque and a fascinating story. But I am sure it had a desired effect of getting normal people more interested in local history then they otherwise would have been.
(I've done the hike in Pt. Reyes to the small inland channel he landed on. To get there all you have to do is take Sir. Francis Drake Boulevard. It's a good hike and you can actually see wild deer and the coast.)
The Viceroy of New Spain in 1602 the 5th Count of Monterrey (Monterrey Mexico is named after his wife and was founded in 1596) sent the explorer Sebastian Viscaino north from Mexico. On this expedition the cities of Ensenada Mexico were founded, along with further explorations of the San Diego Bay, along with the naming and discovery of the Monterey Bay along the Central Coast of California, and the naming of Catalina Island.
Sebastian Viscaino landed in Monterey near the spot of the Military Reservation in Monterrey where a small creek entered the bay. Under an Oak Tree a mass was performed and a ceremony was held taking possession of the land in the name of Spain. When Junipero Serra arrived in 1770 he held mass under this very same tree. The tree stood until 1903, the trunk was dug up and placed in the rear of San Carlos Presidio Church within the city of Monterrey. A tablet was placed on the trunk thanks to the efforts of an R.M. Mestres and H.A. Green.
In 1904 following a fund-raising campaign launched by the San Francisco Examiner, and assisted by the California Historic Landmarks League the land was purchased and turned over to the State of California. On the site now (in 1941) stands a plain but impressive granite monument, erected through the generosity of James Murray of Monterey. Viscaino later sailed as far north as Cape Mendocino.
A century and half elapsed after Vicaino's exploration before the advent of the Franciscan Missionaries and the founding of the California Missions.
This email is written on my phone late at night, so please forgive the mistakes that will arise.
I saw Governor Newsom on MSNBC the other day on Jen Psaki’s show. He was in Alabama talking about how not every democrat needs to agree with each other on everything. For a couple of days that’s been rattling around my head and I thought I would share a story.
In the summer of 2015 three major events happened in roughly the same week. One was Trump going down the escalator and calling Mexicans rapists while announcing he was running for President. The second event was the Supreme Court overturned California’s Prop 8 ban on gay marriage thereby making Gay Marriage legal nationwide. And the third thing that week was that democrats decided that transgender rights were what the next fight would be. Somehow one week in mid June of 2015 set the stage for the next 8 years.
A few weeks later former Assemblymember Cristina Garcia treated her staff and intern (me) to Thai food. And we discussed the future and politics and stuff. Assemblymember Garcia said something like “I can see the politically correct world here begin asking people what their pronouns are which now is a not done normally but probably will become common. So what are your preferred pronouns Dylan?”
To which I replied “I support your freedom of speech to say whatever you need to feel good or better or something.”
Which is an answer. But she persisted after a little laugh and asked again after expressing empathy to a hypothetical transgender person.
To which I replied “so people actually care about how they are referred to by others when they are being talked about behind their back? And these people have preferred pronouns?”
To which the Assemblymember responded “yea something like that. So what are your preferred pronouns.”
To which I replied. “I. I is my preferred pronoun in this hypothetical.”
To which she responded “I is a pronoun but I is me. I can’t refer to you behind your back as I.”
And then I said “yea but I think “i” is a pronoun that people don’t use enough. Isn’t there a psychology around about I statements being a good communication trick? I think I remember reading that at some point. But I get your point, but didn’t How to Win Friends and Influence solve this already? Isn’t “the name is the sweatest sound someone could here” sort of cover referring to people in gossip. Can’t you just say Dylan?”
And then she said “yes, true, I think you’re right, but also no. Because Bob Dylan exists and he’s Dylan.”
So I responded with “I would actually say you can use my initials, but those are D.C. so that won’t work either. Frankly I don’t care you can call me whatever like I said I support your right to free speech”
The Thai food came soon afterward. But I’m sharing this here to make a small point.
The Democratic Party is a Big Tent Party with a whole bunch of different views. One problem is that some things that become normalized within the tent isn’t that normal to people outside of the tent. And sometimes these things just show up. People get exhausted trying to keep up so they just go with whatever flow is happening at the moment.
Here is something that exists.
Judges, Psychiatrists, Scientists have countless different kinds of politics within those groups, each individual has their own politics and there are millions of them. But those professions tend to share at least this one basic principle in common.
They make decisions based on a set criteria or conditions that must be met. Judges follow procedures and decide cases based on law that explain the criteria of right vs wrong. Psychiatrists observe patients behavior and logic to determine if they fit into a diagnosis described in a book, scientists like biologists define life based on a number of different criteria. These professions are a like an endless maze of binary decisions of right vs wrong, good vs bad, yes or no, but based on conditions and criteria established by their profession.
Political correctness sometimes forgets this reality. “Virtues Signaling” such as asking people for their pronouns is kind of like trying to fill a fictional social reputation bank of some kind. And it has with it an underlying acceptance of an unknown criteria fo sorts. For example not asking for someone’s pronouns can be problematic because it can be construed socially as a rejection of a growing social norm. But asking for someone else’s pronouns is as if you accept s social professional norm and meet s criteria of some sort that will hopefully advance your reputation which will result in better job prospects in the future.
That’s basically the psychology of it.
But the problem is that unlike Laws, the DSM, or science books there is no politically correct book of correct criteria. There is no book or author that says something like “If someone engages in the following behaviors in line with this set of political correctness they are to advance within this big tent this way.”
I’m not writing that book. But I think some politically correct person should form a committee to get whatever they want people to do down on paper. It’s like trying to play a sport with a group who is constantly moving the goal posts and changing the rules.
hypothetically let’s say normal voters and democrats show up expecting to watch American football on a hypothetical college campus. But instead they are met with a group of people who can’t get what sport they are supposed to be playing straight and needed to form something like 25 committees to figure out. One group thought it was soccer, but that’s also 3 or 4 soccer teams arguing about fair pay and males and females teams. Another group showed up wanting it to be played as flag football to avoid concussions, another group wants to remove the goal posts entirely and kick around a rugby ball and call it Gaelic football, ofcourse there’s also Aussie Rules Football, there’s probably a lone Canadian who showed up wanting to play Canadian Football.
Meanwhile the voters in the cheap seats are just scratching their heads looking at the mess that’s being played out on the field. It doesn’t take long before they decide to hit up the country music concert on the other side of campus for a change of scenery.
Somewhere in this late night email is a working metaphor for American Politics I think both sides could laugh at. At the end of the day if Democrats and Republicans can’t laugh together at least once over something they can’t really run a country together that well.