Visually Stunning

  • More about conservative comments about San Francisco;
  • Paul Krugman wonders why MAGA hates the planet;
  • How conservatives prioritize big families: quantity over quality;
  • Connecting dots between mentions of Tom Holland and his book DOMINION;
  • The MAGA attitude of contempt for others, as seen recently by Pam Bondi;
  • And some early Philip Glass: A Madrigal Opera.

Which locals come to take for granted, of course.

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Another item about conservative hatred of San Francisco.

Salon, Sophia Tesfaye, 10 Feb 2026: Super Bowl bursts popular right-wing media myth, subtitled “Conservative commentators and podcast bros backtrack on what they’ve said about San Francisco”

I always thought the idea of San Francisco as a dystopian nightmare was some kind of bit. An exaggeration made meme, something people said with a wink to signal their politics more than their understanding of reality. I didn’t realize just how many Americans actually believe it so deeply that they could travel across the country, step off a plane and walk through one of the most visually stunning cities on the continent — only to be shocked that they were lied to.

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Another item about conservative hatred of science.

Paul Krugman, 16 Feb 2026: Turning Our Back on Clean Energy, subtitled “Why does MAGA hate the planet?”

Krugman opens by discussing recent weather events and the accelerating of climate change. Then:

…the Trump administration has gone to war against any and all efforts to limit climate change. The administration is also imposing a “blockade” against wind and solar projects, delaying or even revoking permits, whether or not these projects have received federal subsidies.

Now, there isn’t a genuine scientific dispute about the reality of global warming and its causes. There isn’t even a serious dispute about the costs of fighting climate change: the economics of green energy are more favorable than they have ever been.

So what’s going on? The Trump administration hates science and science-based policies in general; look at its war on vaccines, which will end up causing an enormous number of deaths. Its assault on universities threatens the best scientific research centers in the world. Its irrational treatment of immigrants means the best and brightest from the around the world no longer want to come here. But in the case of energy, its destructive policy largely reflects the corrupting influence of big money.

Then history about how alarm about the changing climate has been around for at least 40 years. Then to the current situation, which boils down — as I’ve noted — to the greed of the billionaires who are buying the government and getting regulations cancelled so they can make more money. And enrich the Trumps.

At this point, moreover, it’s not just about normal channels of political influence, nor it just about domestic billionaires. We now live in a time in which U.S. policy is shaped by sheer, naked corruption (enabled in part by the Koch takeover of the courts). Notably, Middle Eastern petrostates, which have a strong interest in blocking the energy transition, have played a huge role in enriching the Trump family.

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Another item about conservatives’ warped morality of quantity, not quality.

Salon, Amanda Marcotte, 16 Feb 2026: MAGA loves bad dads, subtitled “Raising kids should be about quality, not quantity”

What makes someone a good father? Answers vary. Some folks might cite being hard-working or handy, but most people would likely circle around concepts of well-being and strong values. Good dads make kids feel safe and loved. They raise children with moral fiber, to care about the people in their lives as well as the larger world around them.

But MAGA media has a very different idea of how to measure the worth of a father. They believe it’s by how many kids he has produced. In this worldview, the father deserves most of the credit, despite putting almost no effort into the production side of having babies. In an era when most people can barely afford to raise one kid, this focus on quantity isn’t just tone-deaf. It reduces kids to a commodity, which in turn encourages neglectful, toxic or even abusive approaches to parenting.

Charlie Kirk. Pete Hegseth. JD Vance, Elon Musk. Stephen Miller. Trump. Mike Johnson. Others.

This morality is warped because it, presumably, is based on Biblical injunctions to “be fruitful and multiply,” an admonition that might have made sense to struggling desert tribes thousands of years ago when infant mortality was very high. It doesn’t make sense today, and is counter-productive in the long-term. (That “Quiverfull” movement is also implicated here.)

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Another item about interpreting history through bias.

Three days ago my first item mentioned a book by historian Tom Holland called Dominion, which gave Christianity credit for the idea that the weak and poor deserved moral recognition. The name and title rang a bell, but I couldn’t place it. Today I did. Richard Dawkins discussed the book in this post on his Substack and I discussed his post in my post of 31 Oct 2025. The connecting theme might be that Holland takes the Bible very literally, and is biased to interpret history to give maximum credit to Christianity. Motivated thinking.

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The MAGA attitude.

NY Times, opinion by Frank Bruni, 16 Feb 2026: I Hold Pam Bondi in Contempt

I imagine Pam Bondi getting ready for one of her appearances on Capitol Hill by practicing in front of a mirror. She hones her glare. She perfects her sneer. She rehearses her lines, such as they are.

“Washed-up, loser lawyer!” That’s for Representative Jamie Raskin, Democrat of Maryland. What the phrase lacks in poetry it makes up for in pithiness. It’s just four short words, two of them conveniently conjoined with a hyphen. Even Bondi can remember that much.

“Failed politician!” That’s for Representative Thomas Massie, Republican of Kentucky. Two words. Insults are all about efficiency.

But it’s not Bondi’s script that matters most. It’s her voice, and the attorney general got the tone of it — the poison in it — just right when she spat those put-downs at those men during her, um, testimony before a House panel last week. She didn’t merely ooze contempt. She gushed it, so that all she communicated during more than four hours of nasty exchanges was how loathsome she found her interrogators. Which was obviously her goal. Her mission.

MAGA has adopted the contempt that they felt the Democratic elite directed toward them. Bruni concludes:

She opted for contempt. It’s the Trumpian way. But is it the American one? Has the country sunk quite this far? I don’t think so. She and her fellow insultmongers aren’t owning the libs; they’re beclowning themselves. And it’s a repellent circus.

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Early Philip Glass. I’ve been sorting through all my Glass CDs — I think I have over 100. Using Wikipedia’s List of compositions by Philip Glass, I’ve been sorting most of them chronologically, and listening to them that way. Glassworks was the first release I became aware of, but earlier pieces were released later. Today I’m listening to a piece called A Madrigal Opera, composed in 1980 and so between Satyagraha and Akhnaten. Oddly, this is rather more basic than those two, relying more on the repetitive arpeggios, without any soaring melodies. Here’s a section from YouTube. Some of these melodies were later used in Koyaanisquatsi.

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The Clash Within

  • How there isn’t a clash of civilizations (e.g. Christian vs. Muslim) so much as a clash between modernity and those who resent it: WOKE vs MAGA;
  • Items about ensuring the “right” people will vote, the erosion of the separation of church and state, Trump’s relentless self-promotion, and how the destruction of the US vaccine market will hurt the entire world;
  • Philip Glass’s Glassworks.
– – –

Another big picture piece today.

Thumbnail history. In the early 1990s Francis Fukuyama published a book called The End of History and the Last Man which argued, in part, that liberal democracy was winning the international war of governments. Samuel P. Huntington wrote a response called the Clash of Civilizations that objected to Fukuyama’s thesis. A few years later 9/11 happened, which seemed to discredit Fukuyama and confirm Huntington.

The present article, if I can guess before I read it, says the true clash isn’t between different cultures or religions, it’s internal — a clash between basic (even primitive) and advanced human nature. MAGA vs. WOKE. Continue reading

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The Trump Administration Declines All Knowledge

  • Satire from The Atlantic based on the Trump administration’s renunciation of scientific conclusions about climate change;
  • Conflicted ideas about the state of the world;
  • How Gallup will stop tracking presidential approval rates;
  • Another movement from Akhnaten: Attack and Fall
– – –

Suitable for this administration, and the MAGA crowd. (And the flat-earth crowd.)

The Atlantic, Alexandra Petri, 14 Feb 2026: Trump Administration Announces That We Don’t Know Where the Sun Goes at Night, subtitled “After deciding carbon dioxide does no harm, it was the logical next move.”

A new ruling from the Trump administration says that when the sun disappears at night, we don’t know where it goes. All remaining top scientists have been taken from their positions and tasked with getting to the bottom of this.

Continue reading

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Regressing to Might Makes Right

  • How Trump is reviving pagan values in which might makes right, while historian Tom Holland gives Christianity all the credit for ideas of inherent morality (ideas the administration is ignoring), which I dispute;
  • Author Rod Dreher think the Enlightenment was a mistake, and would prefer the certitudes of Middle Age religion;
  • Germany understands that Trump has destroyed the world’s rules-based order;
  • Charts showing the increasing isolation of the US on the world stage;
  • Brief items on Trump’s racism, a white nationalist up for Senate confirmation, and how trust in American healt care has plummeted since RFK Jr. took over;
  • Philip Glass’s “Hymn to the Sun,” from Akhnaten.
– – –

As I’ve been saying. They’re all hypocrites — they’re primitive, racist tribalists who openly flout the ideals they claim to venerate, the ideals that people better than them have established in recent centuries.

NY Times, guest essay by Leighton Woodhouse, 11 Feb 2026: Donald Trump, Pagan King [gift link]

Prime Minister Mark Carney of Canada recently described the world that President Trump is dragging us into with this aphorism: “The strong do what they can, and the weak suffer what they must.”

Continue reading

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Renouncing Reality, Yet Again, to Make Money

  • The Trump administration denies climate change, in favor of big business;
  • Trump is best on cashing in;
  • Paul Krugman explains why deportation don’t create jobs and will lead to more deaths of native-born Americans;
  • Brief items about conservatives and small government; the end of CBS News; theocracy; how women need to be imprisoned; and how evangelicals need to outbreed the left;
  • An NFL writer finds San Francisco to be a delightful place; “they lied to you” about the city.
– – –

The big story, once again:

NY Times, 12 Feb 2026: Trump Administration Erases the Government’s Power to Fight Climate Change, subtitled “The Environmental Protection Agency rejected the bedrock scientific finding that greenhouse gases threaten human life and well being. It means the agency can no longer regulate them.”
Continue reading

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How Crises Disappear

  • How Trump has quietly withdrawn National Guard troops from various cities;
  • Adam-Troy Castro predicts that the ballroom, the Kennedy Center overhaul, and the arch, will never happen;
  • John Pavlovitz on how Bad Bunny reminds MAGA that they’re losing;
  • Amanda Marcotte on why evangelicals will never dump Trump;
  • Paul Krugman on the banality of MAGA evil: Howard Lutnick.
– – –

Let’s note this first.

Washington Post, today: National Guard troops were quietly withdrawn from some U.S. cities, subtitled “The deployments encountered repeated legal setbacks that stymied President Donald Trump’s desire for a show of force in Los Angeles, Chicago and Portland, Oregon.”
Continue reading

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Wrecking Ball Politics. Wentithy.

  • The most beautiful news of 2025, from Information is Beautiful, due mostly to science and technology;
  • Items from JMG about MAGA and conservative outrage;
  • Items about Trump administration’s wrecking ball politics: destroying climate regulations, the global international order, the government’s alliances with Harvard and educational resources in general;
  • Short items about anti-abortion and measles, outrage over hearing about other faiths, and a racist tired of being called a racist;
  • Another section of Einstein on the Beach.
– – –

Consider some good news — where progress is being made.

Click through to the site, where text boxes appear as you hover over each colored block, offering links to background information.

Information Is Beautiful: Most Beautiful News of the Year 2025.

Perhaps needless to say: these are all accomplishments of science, technology, and even politics.

Continue reading

Posted in Conservative Resistance, Music, Politics, progress | Comments Off on Wrecking Ball Politics. Wentithy.

These Are the Days, My Friend

  • Alternate takes on Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl Halftime Show performance;
  • The Bulwark ranks Trump 2.0’s most racist moments;
  • JD Vance was booed at the Olympics, but NBC edited the boos out;
  • About that “He Gets Us” ad campaign;
  • Pete Hegseth is taking the US military backward;
  • A GOP rep thanks Jesus for Trump;
  • How Fox News has completely ignored that racist Trump video about the Obamas, while smearing ICE victim Alex Pretti dozens of times;
  • Bits from Facebook; John Pavlovitz on Epstein victims; the decline of burglary and robbery; Trump’s monuments to himself; America’s credibility; about the movement against processed foods;
  • And Philip Glass’s Einstein on the Beach.
– – –

Mostly headlines today, to catch up.

Slate, Nadira Goffe, 9 Feb 2026: Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl Performance Was Pure Joy, subtitled “The Puerto Rican superstar’s halftime show wasn’t what conservatives feared. It was something else entirely.”

Slate, Heather Schwedel, 9 Feb 2026: I Watched the “All-American” Super Bowl Halftime Show. It Was Even More Embarrassing Than You Imagined.

Continue reading

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How the War on Woke Reflects the Basics of Human Nature

Just one piece today, a longish piece I’m going to go through fairly carefully, since it puts current issues about MAGA and conservative regression into a broad context, broader I’d say than the 400 years stated in the title.

Salon, Andrew O’Hehir, 8 Feb 2026: MAGA’s war on “woke” has a long history — like 400 years, subtitled “Trump and Stephen Miller don’t just want to erase the 20th century. Their dream is much bigger than that”

Beginning:

One explicit goal of the second Trump administration, if not its defining mission, is to undo the recent past and rewrite history to fit its own master narrative. Continue reading

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The Core Motivation of Trump, and MAGA

  • More about the Obama video: how Trump has Obama Derangement Syndrome; how what motivates Trump, and MAGA, is racism;
  • So why does Trump think he’s going to heaven?
  • Short takes on ignoring the second amendment, MAGA cultists tricking voters, taking credit for things Biden did or that they voted again, Trump wants more stuff named after him, and how Todd Starnes thinks gays are ruining Wendy’s.
– – –

More on yesterday’s news. Which, as some have pointed out, might have been deliberately intended as a diversion away from… everything else. But especially ICE and Epstein.

NY Times, opinion by Maureen Dowd, 7 Feb 2026: Trump’s Obama Derangement Syndrome

Continue reading

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