One of the best factor we are able to say about 2022 is: It might have been worse.
Washington
Dave Barry’s 2022 Year in Review
The subsequent day, after the information media ran a bunch of scary headlines, the White Home Workplace of Explaining What the President Really Meant defined that the president wasn’t suggesting that we had been going through Armageddon per se, however was merely, as is his wont, emitting phrases, one in every of which occurred to be “Armageddon,” and all people ought to simply settle down.
So we dodged a bullet there.
And there have been different constructive developments in 2022:
— Tens of millions of Individuals on social media realized — it took them some time, however they lastly bought there — that no one needs to know the way they did on “Wordle.”
— For the thirteenth consecutive 12 months, the New York Yankees did not even get into the World Sequence.
— Better of all, the looming apocalyptic menace of catastrophic world local weather change was lastly eradicated due to the breakthrough discovery that the answer — it has been staring us within the face all this time — was to throw meals at artwork.
So 2022 had some positives. Which isn’t to say that it was good. Actually it was the alternative of fine, particularly, unhealthy. The economic system continued to stagger round just like the final stoner out of Burning Man. We misplaced Angela Lansbury, Sidney Poitier, Loretta Lynn, Gilbert Gottfried, Christine McVie and Meat Loaf. Democracy died no less than 3 times.
Possibly Armageddon wouldn’t have been so unhealthy.
Anyway, it’s over. However earlier than we transfer on to 2023, it’s time to don surgical gloves, attain deep down inside the large bag of silly that was 2022, and see what we pull out, beginning with …
… which begins with the world getting into the third or probably eighth 12 months — no one remembers anymore — of the pandemic. The American public is significantly divided: All people who’s sporting a masks hates all people who isn’t sporting a masks, and vice versa. Either side are one hundred pc supported by The Science.
Vaccines additionally proceed to be a topic of heated disagreement, to the purpose the place — chances are you’ll vaguely recall this — Neil Younger calls for that his music be faraway from Spotify. It is a sentence we by no means envisioned writing in reference to vaccines, however right here we’re.
America faces three main crises: spiking covid-19 circumstances, hovering inflation and an alarming surge within the quantity of people that assume it’s okay to carry loud FaceTime conversations in public. The nationwide temper is gloomy, and it’s taking a heavy political toll on President Biden, as voters more and more query whether or not he’s as much as the job of main the nation, or for that matter ending his sentences.
In keeping with the polls, the 2 largest considerations of the general public, by far, are the pandemic and the economic system. Consequently Congress is targeted, laserlike, on: the Senate filibuster rule. It is a legislative tactic that’s evil when the opposite facet makes use of it however good when your facet makes use of it. For the time being the Democrats need to change the rule, so in fact the Republicans, led by Sen. Mitch “I am smiling, rattling it” McConnell, are against altering it, which suggests Washington is consumed by a bitter, vicious, nasty, name-calling battle pitting the Democrats towards Sens. Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema, who’re additionally Democrats.
Ultimately, as is so usually the case with these burning points that devour the nation’s capital, nothing occurs, which is the entire level of the constitutional system of checks and balances put into place by the Founding Fathers, all of whom — and it is a testomony to their knowledge and foresight — are useless.
In the meantime the nationwide debt, for the primary time ever, creeps over $30 trillion, which is greater than your complete U.S. economic system is price. Thankfully that is nothing to fret about. Overlook we even introduced it up.
In different monetary information, increasingly more individuals are shopping for “cryptocurrencies,” which attraction to traders as a result of the cryptocurrency market isn’t managed by the federal government. As an alternative it’s managed by 13-year-old Justin Weeblemonger of Teaneck, N.J., who runs the entire shebang out of his PlayStation 5. (Justin additionally controls airline fares.)
In sports activities, Georgia defeats Alabama within the AT&T Ram Vans Allstate Capital One Disney Bob’s Burgers Dr Pepper Gatorade Siri Taco Bell Bowl to turn out to be champions {of professional} faculty soccer.
Talking of vehicles, in …
… there may be bother in, of all locations, Canada. The information up there may be that the capital metropolis, Ottawa (from the Algonquin phrase “adawe,” that means “Washington”) is besieged by a large protest convoy of vehicles, clogging the streets, honking horns, blocking site visitors and making it inconceivable for anyone to get anyplace. Granted, that is the scenario just about daily in, for instance, New York Metropolis, however apparently in Canada it’s a huge deal. As tensions mount, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, in a controversial transfer, invokes emergency powers enabling the federal government to freeze the protesters’ entry to beaver pelts.
Ha-ha! We’re poking some good-natured enjoyable at Canada, which is definitely a contemporary nation and an vital buying and selling accomplice that we rely on to produce us with many very important issues. Celine Dion is just one instance. In all seriousness, the Canadian trucker strike is a major occasion that raises some vital points, which everybody instantly stops caring about due to the scenario in Ukraine.
Ukraine is a nation that, by means of poor planning, is situated proper subsequent to Russia. That is unlucky as a result of Russian President Vladimir Putin, a person who relaxes by placing kittens right into a meals processor, has lengthy needed to determine nearer ties with Ukraine, in the identical sense {that a} grizzly bear needs to determine nearer ties with a salmon.
On Feb. 24 the Russian military invades Ukraine. Everybody assumes the Russians will simply prevail, however the Ukrainians put up a surprisingly sturdy resistance (we’re utilizing the time period “resistance” within the sense of “bodily combating again,” versus “tweeting defiant hashtags”). A lot of the world rallies across the underdog Ukrainians and their charismatic president, Volodymyr Zelensky, a former comic and actor who’s principally the alternative of Vladimir Putin. (Though to be honest, if Putin did comedy, he would kill.)
On the medical entrance, many states and municipalities drop their masks mandates as elected officers turn out to be conscious of latest scientific knowledge exhibiting that there’s a sturdy statistical correlation between imposing masks mandates and never getting reelected.
In sports activities, the Winter Olympics, held within the quaint and picturesque ski resort of Beijing, appeal to a U.S. viewing viewers estimated to be Al Roker’s fast household. In a massively enormous professional soccer improvement, Tom Brady proclaims his retirement, which suggests we are able to lastly transfer on after many a long time of listening to in regards to the historic greatness of Tom Brady.
Talking of stars, in …
… Will Smith slaps Chris Rock throughout the Oscars and is arrested for assault.
No, that’s what would occur to a noncelebrity resembling your self. Will Smith, then again, sits again down and shortly thereafter receives an Oscar and a standing ovation. This incident leads to a large outpouring of media assume items from media thinkers pondering the importance of The Slap. This story dominates the information for days, receiving much more protection than the warfare in Ukraine, which continues to be happening however which sadly, from a public relations standpoint, doesn’t contain any American celebrities.
In financial information, inflation continues to worsen regardless of intensive efforts by the Biden administration to elucidate that it’s attributable to Vladimir Putin, company greed, covid, supply-chain points, world local weather change, the filibuster rule, the homicide hornets and varied different elements completely unrelated to any insurance policies of the Biden administration. For its half, the Republican Nationwide Committee points a proper assertion declaring that “rampant inflation locations a horrible monetary burden on American working households, and we completely hope it stays unhealthy till the midterm elections no wait we didn’t imply to say that final half out loud.”
The Senate Judiciary Committee holds hearings on President Biden’s Supreme Courtroom nominee, Ketanji Brown Jackson. She is clearly certified, so this is a superb alternative for Republican senators — who consider the Democrats behaved like scum in hearings for equally certified Republican nominees — to indicate that they’ve extra decency and sophistication. However in fact that is inconceivable beneath our present political system, beneath which the first operate of presidency is to realize revenge. So the Republicans get even by behaving scummily towards Jackson, thus reinforcing the rising public notion that either side are scum.
In different legislative motion, the Senate passes a invoice that might make daylight saving time everlasting, that means Individuals would now not have to regulate to a time change twice a 12 months for no obvious motive. The invoice is referred to the Home Languishing Committee, thereby guarding towards the hazard that Congress may really accomplish one thing helpful.
In leisure information, the venerable Rolling Stones announce that they may hit the highway this summer season for his or her Drool on the Microphone Tour. This would be the Stones’ seventh tour since 2003, when their bodily our bodies lastly disintegrated into small piles of mud and so they had been changed by holograms. The excellent news is, ticket costs for the brand new tour will begin as little as $150. The unhealthy information is the $150 seats are so removed from the stage that the sound won’t attain them till after the live performance is over.
Talking of growing old superstars: Tom Brady, practically six full weeks after beautiful the sports activities world by asserting his historic retirement, as soon as once more stuns the sports activities world by asserting that he’s popping out of retirement, thus triggering a long-overdue wave of tales in regards to the historic greatness of Tom Brady.
In different sports activities information, the Main League Baseball lockout ends as homeowners and gamers approve a collective bargaining settlement, with some rule modifications meant to make their product extra enticing to fashionable followers, together with beginning video games within the seventh inning, referring to runs as “touchdowns” and at some random level in each sport releasing a big venomous snake within the infield. Additionally, noncompetitive franchises such because the Minnesota Twins shall be permitted to finish their seasons in mid-August as a result of, within the phrases of MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred, “What’s the purpose?”
Talking of basic American establishments in peril, in …
… Elon Musk says he needs to purchase Twitter for $44 billion, which works out to at least one greenback for each apocalyptic tweet emitted in regards to the sale by alarmed verified Twitter customers who’re deeply involved in regards to the precedent of permitting billionaires to purchase main media platforms, which have historically been small mom-and-pop operations like The Washington Put up and Fb. One other verified concern is that Musk favors “free speech,” which we’re placing in citation marks as a result of though it sounds good — Free speech! — if everyone seems to be allowed to have it willy-nilly, the general public may very well be uncovered to misinformation that has not been verified by the verifiers, versus the present scenario, by which all the pieces on Twitter is one hundred pc correct.
In the meantime, for a number of thrilling hours, a trending matter on political Twitter, which we swear we do not make up, is “testicle tanning.” Don’t even ask.
In pandemic information, a federal decide guidelines that the Facilities for Illness Management and Prevention can’t require individuals to put on masks on airplanes and different public transportation. This results in a relaxed and rational debate on the advantages of masks, with either side citing scientific knowledge to help their positions, and no one accusing anyone of getting unhealthy motives. Then Dorothy wakes up and he or she’s again in Kansas.
On the financial entrance, inflation continues to pressure the economic system regardless of intensified efforts by the Biden administration to have the president learn teleprompter statements about it between journeys to Delaware.
In different management information, Florida’s combative Gov. Ron DeSantis, all the time in search of new issues to fight, takes on an insidious menace to the state’s households and the American lifestyle: Disney. The difficulty is that Walt Disney Co. expressed an opinion deemed unacceptable by the governor, leaving him with no alternative however to signal a regulation that might:
1. Strip Disney of its particular authorized standing (at present it’s categorized as a “Kingdom”).
2. Require Donald Duck to placed on a pair of pants.
3. Require Disney to, quote, “undo no matter it did to the governor’s official automobile” (at present it’s a pumpkin).
Talking of insidious threats, in …
… Individuals be taught that there’s a new medical hazard for them to be nervous about: “monkeypox.” The CDC, in an official assertion, notes that there are “only a few confirmed circumstances” and urges the general public to “stay calm,” including that “all of us need to die someday.”
In the meantime dad and mom scramble desperately to search out child formulation amid a scarcity that has left U.S. retailer cabinets naked, though there are plentiful provides overseas. In an emergency effort paying homage to the legendary Berlin Airlift, the U.S. authorities offers short-term aid through the use of an Air Pressure transport aircraft to fly 35 tons of American infants to Germany. The operation is deemed successful, though, as an official famous, “afterward we needed to burn the aircraft.”
The warfare in Ukraine continues however receives much less and fewer protection in the USA as Individuals flip their consideration to the historic Johnny Depp vs. Amber Heard defamation trial. At concern is Heard’s 2018 Washington Put up op-ed alleging that Depp, as soon as the embodiment of cool within the position of dashing pirate Captain Jack Sparrow, has developed a case of face bloat and at present appears to be like, quote, “just like the proprietor of a struggling water-bed retailer.”
The nation is shocked when an 18-year-old with a disturbing social media historical past makes use of a semiautomatic rifle he obtained legally to commit a horrific mass homicide. Ten days later, the nation is once more shocked when one other 18-year-old with a disturbing social media historical past makes use of a semiautomatic rifle he obtained legally to commit a horrific mass homicide. Clearly nothing might have been carried out to stop these tragedies, so the nation has no alternative however to attend till it’s time to be shocked once more.
On the inflation entrance, meals and gasoline costs soar to report highs, however Individuals are capable of take consolation within the repeated reminders by President Biden that each one of that is Vladimir Putin’s fault.
Talking of fault, in …
… Johnny Depp wins his historic defamation lawsuit, with the jury ordering Amber Heard to repay the 783 billion person-hours the American public wasted watching the trial. The decision unleashes a wave of considerate media assume items the likes of which the nation has not seen since Will Smith slapped Chris Rock.
In financial information, Individuals develop more and more alarmed as the worth of a gallon of gasoline and the worth of the common 401(ok) plan quickly converge from reverse instructions. For its half, the White Home is rising more and more irritated by the way in which individuals maintain whining about hovering inflation and the collapsing inventory market and the opportunity of a recession whereas ignoring all of the constructive financial accomplishments that the Biden administration has achieved regardless of the efforts of Vladimir Putin, who — WHY DO PEOPLE KEEP FORGETTING THIS — is the reason for all the pieces unhealthy.
The U.S. Supreme Courtroom, in what authorized consultants view as proof of a shift to the suitable, guidelines that each one earlier court docket selections had been fallacious.
The Home Choose Committee to Examine the Residing Hell Out of January sixth hears testimony, a lot of it from former members of the Trump administration, that leaves goal observers with solely two doable interpretations of Donald Trump’s actions on that day:
One: Trump is a pathological narcissist who, in his delusional effort to cling to energy, ignored the sane adults on his workers and listened as a substitute to Rudy Giuliani — which is like getting authorized counsel from a Magic 8 Ball — and in the long run confirmed an utter disregard for the sanctity of his workplace, the rule of regulation, the welfare of the nation and the bodily security of hundreds of individuals.
Because the busy summer season journey season will get underway, industrial aviation is severely disrupted throughout the nation as a result of — it is a recurring drawback — massive numbers of people that have bought tickets from the airways are exhibiting up at airports anticipating the airways to really transport them to their meant locations. “They maintain giving us their cash,” states a baffled airline-industry government, “and we frankly do not know why.”
Talking of touring, in …
… President Biden, on an official go to to the Center East, is broadly criticized for fist-bumping Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, an alleged human-rights violator who’s believed to have ordered the homicide of Washington Put up columnist Jamal Khashoggi. Responding to the criticism, the White Home press workplace explains that the president “thought it was a distinct Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.”
In different international information, Boris Johnson proclaims that he’s resigning as prime minister of Britain so he can spend extra time on his hair.
On July 4, America’s Independence Day celebration is marred by a horrendous mass killing allegedly dedicated by a younger man who had an especially disturbing social media historical past however was nonetheless capable of legally receive a semiautomatic rifle. As you’ll be able to think about, everyone seems to be shocked.
In monetary information, Elon Musk proclaims that he now not needs to buy Twitter and can as a substitute use the $44 billion to purchase two Springsteen tickets.
The Home Jan. 6 committee, concluding Section 1 of its investigation, votes unanimously to reinstall Donald Trump within the presidency so he might be impeached a 3rd time. The committee additionally proclaims plans for “January 6: The Musical.”
The nation enjoys a welcome break from all of the detrimental information when NASA releases photos captured by the James Webb Area Telescope — essentially the most highly effective area telescope ever constructed — exhibiting, in spectacular, never-before-seen element, a useless squirrel on the roof of a Walmart in Plano, Tex. A NASA spokesperson guarantees that the pictures shall be much more spectacular “as soon as we work out level it towards area.”
In Moscow, a 7-year-old boy has his finger damaged by a robotic he’s competing towards in a chess event. We don’t make this up. “The robotic broke the kid’s finger,” states Sergey Lazarev, president of the Moscow Chess Federation, including, “That is, in fact, unhealthy.” The robotic is instantly employed as director of buyer relations by the U.S. airline {industry}.
Because the month involves an in depth, the economic system dominates the information with the Commerce Division reporting that the U.S. gross home product shrank for the second consecutive quarter. Historically this has meant that we’re in a recession, however President Biden reassures the nation that it really is not a recession, for causes clearly acknowledged on the teleprompter. This triggers a heated debate in Washington between Democrats and Republicans about whether or not we’re or will not be in a recession. As all the time, the actual winners are the American individuals.
Talking of heated, in …
… a political firestorm is ignited when FBI brokers search Mar-a-Lago, Donald Trump’s private residence and social gathering rental venue, and seize categorized paperwork in addition to what a Justice Division supply describes as “a number of thousand misappropriated packets of White Home ketchup.” Trump declares that that is a part of the Pretend Information Deep State Witch Hunt; his opponents declare that Trump is lastly — This time IT’S REALLY HAPPENING, PEOPLE — going to be arrested for one thing. And thus the Donald Trump Present, now in its 373rd week, continues its seemingly interminable run on the middle stage of American politics, like “The Phantom of the Opera,” besides it by no means even will get to intermission.
In different political information, Congress passes the Inflation Discount Act, which is able to cut back inflation as a result of it says so proper within the title. The act may also decrease prescription-drug costs, repair local weather change, reform the tax system and supply each certified American with a pet. That is considered as a much-needed win for the Biden administration and a lift for the Democrats heading into the midterm elections, the place they might additionally profit from the truth that in numerous key races the Republicans have determined, for tactical causes, to appoint lunatics.
President Biden additionally proclaims a large program to forgive lots of of billions of {dollars} in scholar mortgage debt. Additionally all people who failed faculty chemistry will get bumped as much as a B-plus. As is so usually the case with huge authorities applications, that is fashionable with the individuals who will profit from it and unpopular with the individuals who can pay for it.
In worldwide information, Home Speaker Nancy Pelosi lands in Taiwan, strips off her pink pantsuit to disclose a camo pantsuit beneath, swims throughout the Taiwan Strait and single-handedly destroys a Chinese language naval base. At the least that’s you’d assume occurred, based mostly on the Chinese language response to the Pelosi go to, which is to virtually begin World Struggle III. God solely is aware of what would have occurred if we had despatched, say, Cher.
A Texas jury awards practically $50 million in damages to 2 Sandy Hook dad and mom of their lawsuit towards Alex Jones, who’s often described within the information media as “a conspiracy theorist” as a result of it will be unprofessional to explain him as “a big speaking bowel motion.”
California environmental regulators, all the time within the forefront of efforts to save lots of the planet, decree that by the 12 months 2035 will probably be unlawful for any automobile on the state’s highways to have wheels.
Talking of states taking motion, in …
… Ron DeSantis, who we remind you is governor of Florida, makes use of Florida state funds to constitution two planes in Texas, which isn’t a part of Florida, and has them transport a gaggle of migrants from Venezuela, which can also be not a part of Florida, to Martha’s Winery, one more place that’s not a part of Florida. This might be a hilarious gubernatorial prank if not for the truth that these are precise human beings, versus Muppets to be deployed in a cynical sport of Migrant Whack-a-Mole.
Martha’s Winery responds to DeSantis’s stunt by welcoming the migrants with open arms and providing them a everlasting residence for practically two full days earlier than having Nationwide Guard troops ship them off to the mainland. For its half, the White Home blasts DeSantis for undermining the administration’s program for coping with the humanitarian disaster on the border, which is to faux that there isn’t any humanitarian disaster on the border.
As Russian forces endure mounting losses in Ukraine, an more and more determined Vladimir Putin, in what observers say is a transparent violation of worldwide regulation, annexes Connecticut.
In a authorized improvement that causes widespread swooning on MSNBC, New York Lawyer Normal Letitia James recordsdata a lawsuit accusing Donald Trump of falsifying enterprise data, issuing false monetary statements and failure to pay $327 million price of parking tickets. Only for enjoyable, Trump declares that he’s responsible, whereas the Democrats name the lawsuit a politically motivated witch hunt. Everybody enjoys a hearty snigger earlier than order is restored.
On a sadder word, the world mourns the dying of Queen Elizabeth II, the beloved monarch who reigned over the UK throughout its transition from the middle of an enormous world empire to a preferred vacationer vacation spot roughly the scale of a pickleball court docket. She is succeeded by her 143-year-old son, King Charles the Uncomfortable, who shall be formally topped subsequent 12 months in a conventional British ceremony-gasm that includes quite a few horses.
In response to one more viral TikTok “problem” video, the Meals and Drug Administration points an pressing bulletin stating that individuals who eat hen that has been marinated in NyQuil “most likely need to die.”
NASA, culminating a $300 million planetary protection venture, efficiently crashes a spacecraft into an asteroid 7 million miles away, solely to find that the impression has nudged the asteroid, which beforehand posed no menace, right into a collision course with Earth. Purple-faced NASA officers instantly make a “semi-urgent” request for one more $300 million.
Talking of cash, in …
… the nationwide debt creeps up by one more trillion and now exceeds $31 trillion, however once more that is nothing to fret about as a result of it has completely no financial penalties. We don’t know why we even hassle protecting monitor.
Talking of cash: Elon Musk proclaims that he has determined to purchase Twitter in any case, as a result of the one Springsteen tickets he might get for $44 billion had been “manner the hell up within the balcony.”
However the huge story in October is politics, as voters put together to forged their ballots in what all people on cable TV agrees would be the most traditionally historic midterm elections because the daybreak of time. At concern is nothing lower than the destiny of the nation, with the voters selecting between two opposing philosophies of presidency, as clearly laid out to the American public in a number of billion {dollars}’ price of informative TV commercials: On one facet is the social gathering of far-right, election-denying, coup-supporting, anti-democracy, environment-destroying, racist sexist homophobic transphobic gun-worshipping proslavery “Handmaid’s Story” Ku Klux Klan fascists who’re literal Nazis; on the opposite facet is the social gathering of utmost radical leftist, anti-family, anti-border, pro-rioter, criminal-coddling, tax-raising, economy-wrecking, godless un-American Communist baby-killing groomer pedophile intercourse perverts. The selection is yours, voters!
In the meantime the Home Jan. 6 committee subpoenas Donald Trump in a historic authorized motion that jubilant Democrats say will lastly and many others. whereas a defiant Trump says and many others. The committee additionally votes to completely designate Jan. 6 as a Nationwide Day of Pondering About January 6.
In sports activities, the World Sequence will get underway in a contest between — this bears repeating — two groups apart from the New York Yankees.
Overseas, Liz Truss resigns as prime minister of the UK after a turbulent time period lasting somewhat beneath 14 minutes. She is changed by Rishi Sunak, whose identify might be rearranged to spell “Is A Hunk, Sir.” In China, President Xi Jinping wins an unprecedented third time period when delegates to the Communist Get together congress unanimously elect, after cautious consideration, to not die.
Talking of issues of life-or-death significance, in …
…because the historic midterm elections strategy, with the destiny of democracy hanging within the steadiness, verified blue examine mark media personalities on Twitter focus with a ferocious depth on the one most crucial concern going through the nation, if not the world: the standing of verified blue examine mark media personalities on Twitter.
The issue is that Elon Musk intends to cost individuals $8 a month for a blue examine mark, which might imply any nonelite rando might get one, which might be a blatant violation of the U.S. Structure’s Twitter Verification Clause. Some verified customers go as far as to declare, on Twitter, that they’re significantly contemplating leaving Twitter, though it isn’t instantly clear what they’d do with the additional 14 hours per day.
The verified drama on Twitter is interrupted, briefly, by the midterm elections. For weeks the political consultants, counting on Scientific Polling Information, have been predicting a Purple Wave, with the Republicans taking management of the Home and Senate in addition to massive swaths of Canada. The outlook is so dire that the New York Occasions tweets out an inventory of 5 “evidence-based methods” for dealing with election nervousness, together with — we swear we do not make this up — “Plunge your face right into a bowl with ice water for 15 to 30 seconds.”
However then the voters — who do not need entry to Scientific Polling Information — go to the polls. It takes some time to get the ultimate outcomes, partly as a result of Arizona has chosen to tabulate the vote on a malfunctioning Etch-a-Sketch. However in the long run the Purple Wave seems to be extra of a pinkish squirt, with many of the candidates belonging to the Republican Get together’s Loon Wing dropping.
It’s an excellent final result for the Democrats, not counting the 14 New York Occasions readers who, tragically, drown of their ice-water bowls. It’s an particularly unhealthy final result for Donald Trump, who, after many of the candidates he backed lose to Democrats, lashes out on the apparent reason behind the Republicans’ poor efficiency: Ron DeSantis. A number of days later, Trump, having established what sort of a winner he’s, proclaims that he’s — Why not? — working for president once more.
With the midterms out of the way in which, the main target {of professional} journalism returns to Twitter, and which skilled journalists are leaving Twitter, and the place they’re going, and whether or not Twitter will survive. In case you assume we’re exaggerating the quantity of consideration this matter receives from the journalism occupation, then clearly you aren’t knowledgeable journalist.
In finance, the large story is the catastrophic collapse of cryptocurrency big FTX, which implodes as shocked traders uncover that perhaps it’s not such a terrific thought to belief your cash to an organization with a meaningless identify and an incomprehensible enterprise mannequin headed by the fourth runner-up in a John Belushi look-alike contest.
In the meantime the World Cup will get underway in Qatar, a small desert nation with no soccer custom that was chosen to host the world’s largest event by officers of FIFA, soccer’s world governing physique, as a part of an effort to increase the attain of their sport into areas of the world able to paying very massive bribes.
Talking of scandals: Leisure-industry big Ticketmaster comes beneath intense criticism when tens of millions of disenchanted Taylor Swift followers uncover that all the tickets to Swift’s upcoming live performance tour have been bought by Bruce Springsteen.
Because the month attracts to an in depth and the nation prepares to have a good time Thanksgiving, President Biden, in a beloved lighthearted White Home custom, pardons fortunate turkeys named “Chocolate,” “Chip” and — this was a shock last-minute addition — “Hunter.”
Talking of surprises, in…
…the World Cup, in a significant upset, is gained by the plucky underdog nationwide staff of Qatar, which didn’t, technically, win any video games, however however is awarded the championship trophy due to what FIFA officers describe as “an enormous quantity of sportsmanship.”
In a historic milestone for the U.S. area program, the Artemis 1 spacecraft, after a 25½-day voyage that took it previous the Moon to a degree 260,000 miles out in area, returns to Earth to select up the crew. “To any extent further,” states a red-faced NASA spokesperson, “we’re going to verify they’re on board earlier than we launch.”
On the political entrance, there’s a refreshing new “vibe” in Washington as the 2 main events, lastly previous the poisonous nastiness of the midterm elections, sit up for the brand new 12 months — a possibility to finish the cynical partisan gamesmanship and as a substitute search frequent floor in a honest effort to unravel the issues that the American individuals really care about, such because the epidemic of unlawful medicine that we apparently ingested earlier than penning this sentence.
As a result of in actuality there isn’t any new vibe in Washington. Washington is “Groundhog Day” with Congress as Invoice Murray. The one change is that the Republicans have narrowly regained management of the Home of Representatives, which suggests they will spend the following two years searching for revenge on the Democrats. For instance, they might kind a Home Choose Committee to analyze the Home Choose Committee that investigated January 6. In fact, the Democrats nonetheless management the Senate, which suggests they might retaliate by forming a Senate Choose Committee to analyze the Home Choose Committee investigating the Home Choose Committee that investigated January 6. Thus the legislative department of the federal authorities might spend the following two years probing itself, like some form of deranged proctologist.
And if that isn’t sufficient political pleasure, we are able to additionally sit up for two soul-sucking years of buildup to the 2024 presidential election, which might very properly wind up being a contest between — talking of “Groundhog Day” — Joe Biden and Donald Trump. That’s proper: The voting public might face a alternative between two males who’re each, based on the polls, unpopular with greater than half of the voting public, and who will each be older, in 2024, than the Adirondack mountains. However that’s the form of quirky political situation we typically wind up with on this nation, due to the distinctive system of presidency created by our Founding Fathers, who’re rotating of their graves like sizzling canines on an airport food-vendor grill.
So in the intervening time the scenario seems grim. And but there are many causes to really feel hopeful in regards to the future. To call only a few: (NOTE TO EDITOR — Please insert some causes to really feel hopeful in regards to the future, if you happen to can consider any).
Thus it’s with a sense of guarded optimism that we, as a nation, attain the tip of this disturbing 12 months and, fortunately, enter the vacation season. The festivities are considerably subdued this 12 months, as inflation forces customers to chop again; based on the U.S. Commerce Division’s Bureau of Conifer Statistics, the Median Family Christmas Tree Peak (MHCTH), which final 12 months was “LeBron James,” at present stands at “Danny DeVito.”
But it surely’s nonetheless the vacations, a time after we collect with family members from close to and much, assuming those from far had been capable of promote sufficient blood plasma to afford the airfare. So let’s neglect in regards to the 12 months we simply went by means of. Let’s give our family members an enormous outdated vacation hug, and revel in this second.
And on New 12 months’s Eve, as we put together, nervously, to face 2023, let’s be sure you have an enormous calming bowl of ice water useful when the clock reaches midnight, and we are saying:
Dave Barry is a Pulitzer Prize-winning humor columnist and writer.
Washington
Purdue vs. Washington player grades: Boilers wake up in second half
Purdue vs. Washington player grades: Boilers wake up in second half
Team GPA: 3.4
Sparse-shooting big man Great Osobor made more 3s than Purdue, but the Boilers won in the paint.
No. 17 Purdue (14-4, 6-1 Big Ten) had initial trouble dispelling Washington (10-8, 1-6), in a similar result on the scoreboard to the Boilers’ win against Minnesota. But, as in that game, Purdue climbed out of a halftime hole to show its superiority away from home in the second half. The main difference Wednesday was that the Boilers created open 3s for themselves and struggled mightily to make them, second period included.
Instead, Purdue found its inside presence via junior point guard Braden Smith’s offensive orchestration and racked up a free throw margin the Huskies couldn’t compete with.
Player stats below, with ratings to follow:
Braden Smith: A-
He played sped up all night, increasingly as the game wore on to its final minutes. The result was more turnovers than usual for the junior guard, but also a great deal of credit for the Boilers’ win.
Smith’s attacking and probing opened things up for Trey Kaufman-Renn (19) and Caleb Furst (15), even if the jumpers never fell in their usual quantity.
Without Smith’s 3 in the mid-second half, it could have been a different ballgame. Instead, he knocked it down, mean-mugged the crowd, and a, “Let’s go Boilers,” chant was clearly audible from my TV speakers in the mid-second half.
Smith’s motor also propelled him to five steals, and Purdue scored 18 points off turnovers.
Fletcher Loyer: B+
Loyer’s first field goal dropped through the net at the nine-minute mark of the second half. Then the rest came. The junior scored 12 points in the final 20 minutes as Washington had too many things to worry about to contain him.
He was uneasy handling the ball and passing in the first half, perhaps due to the bizarre slickness of the court caused apparently by a film on the hardwood or lack of an adequate sticky pad by the scorer’s table, per referee chatter picked up by the broadcast.
Plus, often underrated, Loyer is phenomenal at drawing fouls on defense. He got a big one with less than two minutes to go, and hit a 3 on the other end to stymie the slim chance Washington was clinging to.
Trey Kaufman-Renn: B+
Kaufman-Renn came alive in the second half after an awkward opening period with four turnovers. Once he and Smith found their pick and roll magic, and a few baseline dump-offs here and there, it was all Purdue.
C.J. Cox: B-
Quiet night from the field, but made good decisions and dribbled dangerously enough to shift Washington’s defense.
Caleb Furst: A-
It was an up-and-down game on the defensive side of the ball for Furst: He forced Wildcat star Great Osobor into a big man air ball – all backboard – early in the first half, but got spun around off-ball in the mid-second for an Osobor bucket.
But offensively, he was exactly what Purdue needed. Fifteen points on a perfect night from the field and excellent at the line. Three offensive boards, too.
Myles Colvin: B-
Had his moments as an off-ball weapon on offense, but otherwise quiet as part of a poor shooting night all around for Purdue.
Camden Heide: B
Out-athleted the Huskies with three rebounds (one offensive) and an authoritative swat in the late second half.
Gicarri Harris: B-
Provided good defensive minutes, matching up well with Washington’s athletic guards.
Raleigh Burgess: NA
Played his three minutes, ran like crazy in them, took a seat.
How I do these
A lot is anchored to Game Score, a metric invented by John Hollinger which (quite imperfectly) estimates a player’s box score contributions. It’s just a starting point for the grades, and it’s readily available. During the game, I focus most of my attention on watching defensive reps, box-outs, offensive movement/involvement, and non-assist passing. I’ll add all the off-ball value to these grades that my eyes can catch.
Further, these are role dependent – my grades answer a question that goes something like, “How well did a player take advantage of the opportunities they were given?”
Late game heroics earn bonus points, and the opposite is true for important errors. Oh, and I hate missed free throws.
Washington
New Washington governor plans to build an efficient government that helps people
Incoming Washington state Gov. Bob Ferguson outlined his plans Wednesday to help individuals while also making government more responsive and efficient, during his inaugural address as the state Legislature convened for its first week of session.
Ferguson, 59, was the state’s top prosecutor for more than a decade before being elected Washington’s 23rd governor. He replaces Gov. Jay Inslee, a national political figure who has served three consecutive terms — the longest in state history.
Ferguson, a Democrat, takes over at a time when Washington faces a budget shortfall of at least $12 billion over the next four years. His budget proposal calls for reducing state agency spending by at least $4 billion, while protecting K-12 education, public safety and the ferry system.
But he stayed away from the numbers during his 30-minute address. Instead, he delved into his family’s history while calling out to specific lawmakers, both Democratic and Republican, about his desire to work with them to support law enforcement, farmers and young people.
“Let us listen to one another without consideration for party so that the strongest argument prevails,” he said. “That is how we do our best work.”
Ferguson said he supports the Homes for Heroes legislation, which ensures access to low-interest home loans for officers, firefighters and health professionals. He also backs efforts to address the youth mental health crisis and said he wants to adopt reasonable limits on the governor’s emergency powers.
He said he would work with President Donald Trump “where we can,” but added: “We will stand up to him when we must, and that most certainly includes protecting Washingtonians’ reproductive freedom.”
To that end, Ferguson said he would immediately sign an executive order directing the Department of Health to convene a roundtable of experts and policymakers to work on the issue.
He also wants the state to pass a law that prohibits the National Guard from other states from coming into Washington to advance any of the president’s agendas without the state’s permission.
“Texas and Montana have adopted similar policies,” he said. “Washington must join them.”
Washington ranks last in the country for the per capita number of law enforcement officers, he said. His proposed budget plan calls for $100 million every two years to increase the number of law enforcement officers in Washington state. He also wants to invest $600 million in the capital budget to build more housing and spend $240 million every two years to guarantee school lunches for every Washington student.
Free breakfast and lunch should be part of a basic education, he said during his address.
“This will improve learning for kids and save money for working parents,” he said.
Ferguson said government can stand in they way of a state’s fiscal strength and stability, so he wants to speed things up, improve customer service and make sure individuals are at the center of every decision made.
“I’m in politics because I believe in the power of government to improve people’s lives,” he said. “At the same time, we must recognize government does not always meet that promise. So let me be clear — I’m not here to defend government. I’m here to reform it.”
Washington
The Trump Resistance Inside Washington's National Cathedral
President Jimmy Carter entered hospice care when he was 98 years old. Nine months later, his wife of 77 years, Rosalynn Carter, whom he described as, “my equal partner in everything I ever accomplished,” died. Carter said he wanted to live long enough to cast his vote for Vice President Kamala Harris for president. On October 16, he fulfilled his wish but ultimately failed to achieve his goal of defeating Donald Trump.
Perhaps Carter just could not, or did not want to hold on to see Trump return to the Oval Office. On December 29, just three weeks before Trump’s inauguration, Carter passed away at the age of 100.
On January 9, Carter’s casket arrived at the steps of the Washington National Cathedral. It was draped in an American flag and borne by a special military honor guard. Before entering the towering cathedral doors for his state funeral, the Episcopal Bishop of Washington, Mariann Edgar Budde; Reverend Randy Hollerith, Dean of the cathedral; Reverend Rosemarie Logan Duncan, the Canon of Worship; and Reverend Sean Rowe, the Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church, placed their hands on the coffin and prayed.
The invited guests were already seated inside, including every living U.S. president and vice president (excluding Dick Cheney). Most of the Supreme Court was there, the House and Senate leadership, foreign heads of state, and some 3,000 additional guests. As we waited inside, spiritual music chosen by Carter and his wife was performed by the United States Marine Chamber Orchestra, Armed Forces Chorus, and the cathedral choir. When suddenly the music shifted to something more contemporary, I realized that pianist David Osborne was playing “The Wind Beneath My Wings.”
The funeral marked more than the death and celebration of President Carter. It exposed the profound challenges that lay ahead for both our government and the nation as we prepare for Trump to not only resume the presidency, but do so at a time when the climate crisis is wreaking unparalleled devastation and right-wing resentment politics having gained enough ground to elect Trump president again, give Republicans control of the House and Senate, and build an ultra-conservative Supreme Court.
The funeral was an unexpectedly fitting location for a handoff Carter had fought so vigorously to avoid. The cathedral has often stood as a symbol of resistance to Trump, his politics, and policies — and is prepared to continue to do so in the times ahead.
In 2019, midway through the previous Trump administration, Bishop Budde, Dean Hollerith, and cathedral Canon Theologian, Reverend Kelly Brown Douglas, released a searing statement, likening Trump to Senator Joseph McCarthy, and asserting, “As faith leaders who serve at Washington National Cathedral — the sacred space where America gathers at moments of national significance — we feel compelled to ask: After two years of President Trump’s words and actions, when will Americans have enough?”
One year later, Bishop Budde made national news after President Trump stood before St. John’s Episcopal Church in Lafayette Square — the most historic and famed church within the diocese — after having violently cleared a Black Lives Matter protest so that he could hold up a bible for a photo op. Bishop Budde strongly condemned Trump’s actions, calling both his message and posture “antithetical to the teachings of Jesus and everything that we as a church stand for.”
These and others members of clergy officiating Carter’s service and in leadership at the cathedral have not only demonstrated tools for a Trump resistance, but also embody those attributes and aspirations most vigorously pursued by Carter, but which Trump has pledged to squash: diversity, equity, inclusion, racial justice, gender equity, LGBTQ+ rights, the rights of immigrants and migrants, environmental justice, climate action, human rights, and the separation of church of state.
These include retired Bishop Gene Robinson, the first openly-gay Bishop in all of Christendom; Reverend Leonard Hamlin, cathedral Canon Missioner, whose work includes ending gun violence and advancing racial justice and reconciliation; and Reverend Douglas, one of the first Black women to be ordained a priest in the Episcopal Church and a leader in the fields of womanist theology, racial reconciliation, social justice, and sexuality and the Black church. In her most recent book, Resurrection Hope: A Future Where Black Lives Matter, Douglas warns of Trump: “In 2016 America elected a clear white supremacist as president.”
While they are nonpartisan, and clear that all are welcome at their cathedral, including the president-elect and his followers, leaders of the cathedral tell me that moving forward they fully intend to hold anyone who tramples their spiritual values accountable while also ensuring support for those most likely to be the targets of harm. Their strongest contempt is for white Christian nationalism, a movement that has embraced Trump and to which Trump has offered not only a platform but also real political power.
Bishop Robinson likens this moment in our history to that which preceded the Civil War.
“As far as I’m concerned, anything that devalues another human being is violent,” Reverend Douglas tells me. “That goes for racist, sexist, misogynistic, transphobic ideology. It’s violent, and we have to name the violence. We have to stop the violence. That’s our task.”
From a Confederate Flag to Racial Justice
Despite its name, the Washington National Cathedral has no formal connection to and receives no direct support from the federal government. But it does maintain a special place in the federal sphere. In 1893, a congressional charter authorized a cathedral dedicated to religion, education and charity. Construction in the gothic style began in 1907 atop Mount St. Alban, the highest peak in the city, when President Theodore Roosevelt helped lay the foundation stone and ended 83 years later, when President George H.W. Bush oversaw the laying of the final stone in 1990. It is the sixth-largest cathedral in the world and the second-largest in the nation.
It is also constantly reinventing itself, such as the addition in the 1980s of a sculpture of Darth Vader’s head to its 112 grotesques (think “gargoyle,” except that a gargoyle serves a function — to spout water — or gargles, otherwise, it’s a “grotesque”).
Its many arches and small recessed chapels provide a surprisingly welcoming environment even to the non-religious. Multicolored light paints over the grey limestone as the sun moves across the sky and cuts through the 215 stained glass mosaic windows covering the cathedral walls. Though a member of the Episcopal church, the cathedral holds itself as “a house of prayer for all people.” Dean Hollerith is keen to open the building to the public, hosting yoga classes, talks on energy justice and the climate crisis, and guest speakers including Liz Cheney.
The cathedral is also wrestling with its own racist past.
In addition to providing its own regular services, the cathedral serves as host to many key moments of national celebration and mourning. Carter’s is its fifth presidential funeral, following those of Dwight D. Eisenhower, Ronald Reagan, Gerald Ford, and George H.W. Bush. President Woodrow Wilson is buried within the cathedral.
Had any of the attendees of Ford’s funeral in 2007 looked to their right, they would have seen the Confederate flag emblazoned within stained glass windows of the church. Two window panes commemorating Stonewall Jackson and Robert E. Lee were donated to the cathedral by the United Daughters of the Confederacy (UDC) in 1953. They remained installed there for 64 years.
On January 5, I sat in one of the many small chapels in the cathedral, a yellow and red pillow hand-stitched with an image of Sojourner Truth on the seat before me. Reverend Douglas had just delivered a Sunday Sermon steeped in messages of hope, love, and resistance and then bid personal farewells to a long line of enthusiastic parishioners. Now changed out of her voluminous white robes, she opted for a somewhat oversized brown checkered jacket atop her white clerical collar, while maintaining her signature red lipstick and white pearl earrings.
Reverend Douglas came to the cathedral in 2015. When I ask what it was like for her to look upon those windows for the first time, she instinctively closes her eyes and tightens her lips. Pain travels rapidly across her face as she chooses her words carefully. “Unwelcoming” is the word she finally settles on. In Resurrection Hope, she has a good deal more to say on the topic, describing their placement as a kind of blasphemy. “A display of these men within sacred spaces insinuates theological legitimacy for white supremacist ideologies and values. Such a display provides a sacred canopy over the Lost Cause narrative, which of course was the intention of the UDC in placing these memorials there,” she writes.
Douglas served on a task force formed to plan for the windows’ removal, part of a broader movement to confront monuments to white supremacy across the nation. “We embarked on a journey of trying to change the narrative of this place around race, and really engaging in issues of racial justice,” she says.
In 2017, a white supremacist mob brandishing torches and weapons descended on Charlottesville, Virginia, to stop the removal of a statue of Robert E. Lee. “After Charlottesville happened, we knew the windows had to go,” Douglas says. The windows were promptly removed. In September 2023, the church installed the “Now and Forever Windows” heralding racial justice and the Civil Rights movement created by the eminent Black artist Kerry James Marshall.
In her book, Douglas details Trump’s overtly racist response to the broader movement, describing how he has “shamelessly trafficked in white supremacist and anti-Black rhetoric.” Trump defended the Charlottesville mob, saying some were “very fine people.” He tweeted, “Sad to see the history and culture of our great country being ripped apart with the removal of our beautiful statues and monuments,” and in 2020, Trump warned, “a radical movement is attempting to demolish this treasured and precious inheritance. [They] have torn down statues of our founders, desecrated our memorials.”
Douglas shares a text from her son, which reads, “He [Trump] literally is reigniting the KKK…. Supporting these confederate statues is really about the same thing as supporting the KKK — white supremacy. How come white people can’t see that?”
Pray Today, Protest Tomorrow
A few days before Carter’s funeral, Dean Hollerith takes me on a tour of the cathedral. If you want to humanize a massive religious institution, there’s no better way than seeing the wine bottles lined up in the attic placed there across a century by the masons who constructed the building. Out on the roof, the highest vantage point in the city, he encourages me to look not out at the Washington Monument, but instead down under my hands. The roof’s tiles are marked with etchings made by students who have snuck up to the perch over the decades to write, “Stan was here” and the kinds of drawings more typically found on a teenager’s notebook than a church edifice.
Seated in his comfortable yet modest office deep within the cathedral, Dean Hollerith describes arriving at his job in 2016 just in time to host the traditional prayer service following inauguration of the president. He reiterated that all are welcome to the cathedral, but, he says, “you know, we can pray for you today and protest you tomorrow, right?” On the same day that Dean Hollerith and Bishop Budde led the inaugural prayer service for the new Trump administration, they immediately put on their tennis shoes and spent the rest of the day at the Women’s March.
A few months later, Hollerith condemned the Trump White House and Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ use of the Bible to justify separating immigrant children from their parents, calling it “the same lopsided reasoning used to justify slavery.”
On December 12, 2020, demonstrators from a pro-Trump rally, including members of the Proud Boys, marched through Washington D.C. ripping down Black Lives Matter banners outside two historically Black congregations, Asbury United Methodist Church and Metropolitan AME Church, and setting one banner on fire. Bishop Budde and Dean Hollerith denounced the “racist and religious overtones surrounding the effort to discredit the presidential election,” stating: “We reject the version of Christianity that seeks to provide a mantle of spiritual authority to the poison of White nationalism…. What we are witnessing is nothing less than idolatry — the worship of someone other than God as though he were God.”
And less than one month later, following the January 6 insurrection at the Capitol, Bishop Budde and Dean Hollerith released a video informing the president that there had been no fraudulent election, and denouncing his actions to call supporters to the U.S. Capitol, feed their conspiracy theories, and whip them into a frenzy. They warned, “To those who see this as a Christian endeavor, or something to be blessed in the name of Jesus, there is nothing Christian about what we are witnessing today. Nothing.”
Matthew Shepard’s Ashes
Reverend Hamlin says that the best tool of resistance is not just speaking but embodying and acting upon one’s values. In 2018, the cathedral provided a resting place for the ashes of Matthew Shepard, a gay student who died of injuries inflicted in a brutal hate crime in 1998.
Standing in the cathedral crypt alongside Reverend Hamlin, Bishop Robinson shares how, for 20 years, Shepard’s parents had not buried their son’s ashes, fearing that his grave would be desecrated by the Westboro Baptist Church, a designated extremist hate group and family-based cult that picketed Shepard’s funeral. They asked if the cathedral would consider taking the ashes. The Dean responded, “This is where Matthew belongs.” For Robinson it was a critical moment. “It’s not just a church welcoming Matthew’s ashes, it was the freaking National Cathedral!” he says, shock still filling his voice.
The chapel where Shepard is interred has become a place of pilgrimage. “The vast majority of the Christian world is still anti-gay. The Roman Catholic Church teaches that we are intrinsically disordered,” Robinson says. “For this place, sitting high on this hill overlooking Washington, to do this thing offers comfort and solace and hope to all kinds of kids who are still suffering.”
On November 30, 2023, Reverend Mother Felix Culpa of the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence, an order of queer and trans nuns, read at a service held at the cathedral honoring Shepard, and naming him a “modern day martyr.” The cathedral commissioned a spiritual portrait of Shepard by Kelly Latimore, a preeminent iconographer of contemporary icons.
Later, they commissioned several more paintings by Latimore, now featured in an exhibit on the seventh floor depicting people across time advocating for social justice, including Rosa Parks, John Lewis, Martin Luther King Jr., Maya Angelou, a woman helping a man receive clean water in Flint, Michigan, based on the parable of Jesus the Good Samaritan, and a migrant mother and her young son held captive in a cage based on the Madonna and Child.
The Cathedral and Carter’s Environmental Legacy
The National Cathedral, like Washington itself, is progressive and political. It nonetheless came as a surprise that while I sat at the cathedral café after observing services on December 29, I just happened to find myself beside two cathedral parishioners who are also both veterans of the Carter administration’s Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
Dr. Stan Meiburg is Executive Director of the Andrew Sabin Family Center for Environment and Sustainability at Wake Forest University and William Dickinson is President at the Environmental Policy Network. Back in 1977, Meiburg was a graduate student at Johns Hopkins University just starting what became a 39-year career at the EPA, during which he rose to become deputy administrator during the Obama administration. Dickinson began his services under Ford, continuing with Carter, and culminating in a 16-year career at the agency, including serving as Special Assistant to the EPA administrator for Toxics and Pesticides.
“I had great pride in being a part of this administration,” Meiburg later tells me. “It was inspiring.” Dickinson describes Carter’s EPA as the most impactful in U.S. history. (Rolling Stone contributing writer Jeff Goodell calls Carter “America’s greatest environmental president.”)
Meiberg and Dickson describe Carter’s EPA as the antithesis to what the Trump administration pursued in its first term, and the destruction it now intends to accomplish over the next four years, particularly with the support of the right-wing U.S. Supreme Court.
Both shared a long list of achievements and bristled at a revisionist history that Carter’s only serious achievements occurred after he left office. This still relatively new EPA was tasked with writing and enforcing the rules needed to implement a new suite of critical laws, including the Clean Air Act, the Clean Water Act, and the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (managing hazardous waste). They also worked to confront the climate crisis and support passage of the Superfund program which holds industries responsible for cleaning up (or paying to clean up) hazardous and polluted land.
The Carter administration was not only an environmental advocate, but also virulently anti-monopoly and painfully aware of the risk of a growing concentration of wealth and power in the hands of a few individuals and mega-corporations. I detail in my book, The Tyranny of Oil, Carter’s historically aggressive Federal Trade Commission under the leadership of Michael Pertschuk. He argued that the FTC should be “the greatest public interest law firm in the country.” Among other antitrust actions, he relentlessly pursued the fossil fuel industry. President Reagan’s FTC then dismissed his case against the oil companies.
Meiburg and his wife now live in North Carolina, but they return to attend cathedral services. He describes being raised a Southern Baptist “just like President Carter,” he tells me. “I know what small Baptist country churches look like and the cathedral is a long step from there, but it’s not a step of discontinuity.”
A Funeral to Honor the “First Millennial”
At George H.W. Bush’s funeral in 2018, the presidents and their wives all sat together in the front pew of the cathedral with the vice presidents seated behind them. As a family member of the deceased, former President George W. Bush and wife Laura were seated across the aisle.
At Jimmy Carter’s funeral last week, the presidents and vice presidents were largely unchanged, but their seating arrangement was quite different. Gone was the long front row. In its place were just four chairs in which President Joe Biden, First Lady Jill Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris, and the Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff were seated. Behind them sat the former presidents and their wives, followed by the vice presidents and their wives. Thus, Harris was seated in front of, rather than behind, Trump.
In a rare occurrence for such an event, Michelle Obama was notably absent from Carter’s funeral. This meant that Obama and Trump were seated side-by-side and the two quickly took advantage of the unique opportunity launching into a lengthy discussion. At the end of the funeral, I spotted them appearing to depart in a different direction than the other presidents, perhaps heading off to speak together further.
Garth Brooks and Trisha Yearwood sang a radiant rendition of John Lennon’s “Imagine,” one of Carter’s favorites. He once said of the song, “In many countries around the world — my wife and I have visited about 125 countries — you hear John Lennon’s song ‘Imagine’ used almost equally with national anthems.” Atlanta gospel singer Phyllis Adams and pianist Leila Bolden moved even the non-spiritual attendees with their transformative performance of “Amazing Grace.”
As the eulogies progressed, it became clear that much of the proceedings had two primary goals: celebrating the life and work of Jimmy Carter and sending out warnings to and about the president-elect. Many focused on Carter’s honesty, integrity, and adherence to the rule of law, even when it cost him politically.
President Biden repeatedly emphasized Carter as a man of great character whose life demonstrated how “we have an obligation to give hate no safe harbor and to stand up to what my dad used to say is the greatest sin of all, the abuse of power.”
Seeming to target both Trump’s policies and the power exerted over him by billionaires including Elon Musk, the world’s richest man, Jimmy Carter’s grandson, Joshua Carter, said that until his death, his grandfather worked to confront “the richest people in the world using their enormous wealth to buy a nation’s poverty,” and identified “the most serious and universal problem on our planet as the growing chasm between the richest and poorest people on earth.”
Reverend Andrew Jackson Young Jr., a renowned civil rights leader, served as Carter’s Ambassador to the United Nations. In that role, Young brought Carter’s historic effort to advance human rights to international diplomacy. “Dr. King used to say that greatness is characterized by antitheses strongly marked. You’ve got to have a tough mind and a tender heart, and that was Jimmy Carter,” Young shared.
John Carter, another grandson of President Carter, and chair of the Carter Center Board of Trustees, extolled Carter’s efforts to end racial discrimination, advance gender equity, end mass incarceration, and decriminalize marijuana. He said of the Nobel Peace Prize winner, “He gave voice to dissidents, stood up to dictators, brought countries together in peace. His heart broke for the people of Israel, it broke for the people of Palestine, and he spent his life trying to bring peace to that Holy Land.”
As a climate crisis driven by fossil fuels decimates huge swaths of California in historic fires, Carter’s grandson was one of several speakers to herald his historic climate and environmental leadership: “50 years ago, he was a climate warrior who pushed for a world where we conserved energy, limited emissions, and traded our reliance on fossil fuels for expanded renewable sources.”
John Carter added, “He was the first Millennial. And he can make great playlists.”
After the service concluded, I spoke with Bishop Budde. She felt exalted by the celebration of President Carter. But when asked about Trump, she said matter-of-factly that “Trump seeks to dismantle everything I stand for.” She plans to organize, “to get political, find like-minded constituencies. We have to lobby, we have to show up and debate, all those things we have to do as people of faith, as part of a civic society.” Whether or not they’ll have an effect is another question, one she says is largely out of their control, including if the media will pay attention. “Every once in a while, Antonia, in my 13 years as Bishop, the traditional media notices and gives us our proverbial 15 seconds,” she adds, “Even Rolling Stone, if we’re lucky.”
“But the one thing I can control is I’m going to show up.”
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