There are bluebirds in our apple tree this morning and I am sad for them. Sad for the tree, too. The tree is a crabapple tree, technically. It’s an old tree, bursting with fruit. The tree doesn’t know who won or lost an election or what an election is. The birds don’t know, either, and I’m happy they get to have that. We also haven’t had meaningful, measurable rain in five, six weeks now. We’ve wildfires popping up just a few miles away. It’s November 6th and will be 80 degrees today. The tree and the birds must know they’re thirsty. They will know if fire comes for them.
I’m sure the rain will come, and I’m hopeful we will be untouched by fire, but I also know the lack of rain will dry us out more often, just as I know it’ll flood more often, and I know the fires will come more often, and the tornadoes, too. And you like to hope that someone in charge has a plan, that they believe in this reality going on around us, that they share in the same reality we do. But we’re not there anymore. We lost that yesterday. We lost a lot yesterday. (Perhaps chief among them the illusion that we shared one country, or even one collective reality.) I don’t know why or how we lost it, precisely. We can unpack it however we want to — the mainstream media sanewashed the man; the woman was a woman and men would rather choose to control women than vote for them; don’t forget the racism, can’t forget the racism; the woman ran the wrong campaign and cozied up to the GOP and didn’t say enough about Gaza and global warming; it was the economy, stupid; it’s Russia; it’s disinformation and misinformation and Musk and RFK and the price of milk and the cost of rent and something about the border and something about COVID and —
What I know is that I don’t know. What I know is the things I thought I knew, or that I believed were true, really aren’t, and that once more I exist in need of a word, perhaps a German one, that expresses both the act of being shocked and a total lack of shock at the exact same time.
I knew he could win. I half-expected it. And yet all parts of me strained against the illogic of it, the sheer incredulity of the possibility of his win. People looked at his first four years, at COVID, at January 6th, at all his promises, his crimes, at all his people, at all the ones who told us he was a fascist, a dictator, an anti-democratic nightmare, and they said, “Yeah, him again, let’s fucking go.” And they pressed the self-destruct button, using the system of democracy to attempt to undo the system of democracy.
People chose this. In considerable number. This, grotesquely, is democracy in action. Though a democracy mauled into a cruder shape by disinformation.
This is a doom post. I don’t want it to be (and I’m sorry for it) but I also don’t want to be flippant or twee. I don’t want to hashtag-resist you into trying to have hope on a dark day. Perhaps some dark days must simply be dark and we must be in that darkness. Maybe we need to let people have their hopelessness today. Let them have their doom. Do not scold. Give them no stirring platitudes nor poetry of resistance. Just let people sit and ruminate however they must on the hard mad road ahead.
Because that road ahead is hard, and it will be maddening. We’re in some very serious trouble. The climate, the environment, those bluebirds and that tree, are at stake here. Our friends — especially transgender folks, cisgender women, really anybody who isn’t a straight white Christian dude with money — is going to be worse for wear at some point soon, even if they voted for him. It’ll be up to us to help them, to protect our friends, even when we don’t know how, even when we may need that protection ourselves.
Our democracy is in danger — all the lights on the console are blinking red, and the klaxons are deafening. Is there a deportation force coming? Are we really going to ban vaccines? Are we going to put Musk and RFK Jr. in charge of important levers and buttons? How deeply will we cement a corroded, cruel SCOTUS majority and for how long, and will we even be able to turn the tables on that again? I don’t know. It really isn’t good. A lot was on the line yesterday and while I like to think we, as the at-this-point-cringey-cliche goes, left it all on the field. The stakes were high and we lost. And there may be a lot of suffering in the wake of that.
This isn’t a post with a plan, this isn’t a pep talk, this isn’t about hope. I’m wallowing in the doom for a moment. Maybe it’s foolish. Maybe I shouldn’t be doing that, or telling you about it. But I wanted to say it, to be true to where my head and my heart are at. I want it to be okay to feel shitty. To not force joy. I don’t want some artifice of hope. To be a lantern in this tunnel right now feels false. I feel like I need to be in the darkness here, to be one with it, to become part of this new, lightless reality. I’ll get there. I’ll get back to a better place. But right now I want to realize how much trouble we’re in before I tell you how we deal with it. Maybe the worry and the fear will motivate me. I don’t know. I’m sitting with it. I’m considering the trouble, the doom, the darkness. I’m thinking about the bluebirds and the crabapple tree. And I’m hoping somewhere in the darkness I find a way forward.
If you need it, there’s 988 Lifeline — call or chat.
And the trans lifeline, too, here.
Paul weimer says:
Indeed. All I can do is plod forward, but I feel like I am plodding into the darkness, never to return.
November 6, 2024 — 9:10 AM
Lyn McCarty says:
Agree and appreciate every word. Thanking you for honesty and space to feel the shock and grief without shame. If I may, (look at me asking permission) I have a suggestion. Cease buying things from Amazon or any place that spoils the universe by delivering them to your home—support local brick and mortar businesses. Delete social media accounts that spoil the humble unselfish collectivistic consciousness of humanity. Eschew materialistic greed—don’t buy junk, relearn the satisfaction of making things, repairing and reusing things, giving away things with no expectation of return benefits to you. Be kind, always.
November 6, 2024 — 9:36 AM
scottsemegran says:
I’m with you. Sadness doesn’t quite cover it.
November 6, 2024 — 9:15 AM
Patrick Raring says:
Never would I think that the Dark Side would win (Fear leads to Anger. Anger leads to Hate. Hate leads to Suffering.). I thought for sure more than half of the country would choose positivity, common sense, kindness, and hope.
November 6, 2024 — 9:17 AM
Doug Daniel says:
The results are still coming in, but I am willing to bet that more than half did. Remember, the electoral college is a kink in the straight democratic process we wish we had.
November 6, 2024 — 9:21 AM
taosmoxie says:
She lost by 1.5% of the popular vote. Yet he claims a “mandate” – he’s already started. Now I’m off to finish my novel. Art matters in times like these (as we learned in round one).
November 6, 2024 — 9:28 AM
Doug Daniel says:
Thank you for the correction. What I get for flapping my gums before checking the numbers.
November 6, 2024 — 9:40 AM
Raven Black says:
The fact that the results aren’t 100% confirmed is the ONLY thing keeping me from losing my mind.
November 6, 2024 — 9:55 AM
Barrie Rosen says:
More than half the country would rather have that creature then elect a woman of color. I knew it was bad out there, I just didn’t know HOW bad. My privilege shielded me from the full force of the racism, if not the misogyny.
AOC called it. She said we should have stuck with Biden and she was right.
November 6, 2024 — 11:46 AM
Jennifer Bolin says:
Thank you, Chuck. I needed to acknowledge the doom. I will sit with mine too. My quiet doom.
November 6, 2024 — 9:17 AM
Doug Daniel says:
Thanks for this. You encapsulated my feelings perfectly, far better than I could have expressed it at the moment. The plain fact of the matter is that we are in for a time of trial and trouble. It’s impossible right now to see what is on the other side, or how far we have to go to get there.
November 6, 2024 — 9:19 AM
Stephanie says:
Those who call themselves Christians and voted for Trump missed the boat and don’t realize it. Love your enemy, shelter the alien, forgive, and take care of others is the true Christian message. I can call myself whatever I want but actions speak louder than words.
November 6, 2024 — 10:47 AM
Book Hogs says:
Completely devastated.
November 6, 2024 — 9:22 AM
Linda McCann Jeffers says:
My kids (recent college grad and college senior) are making plans to leave this country. They asked me to explore dual citizenship possibilities for them. They don’t want to stay and do the work to fix this mess we created, and who can blame them. If they leave and I have the excuse to leave to “be with them” I may just take it. I’m exhausted and I’m pretty privileged. I can’t imagine what this is like for some people.
November 6, 2024 — 9:24 AM
John Harding says:
Yeah. Similar situation for me too. I’m so tired of this BS and I wonder if I’ll just give up and leave…
November 6, 2024 — 10:15 AM
Susan says:
I envy you the ability to get away. Sadly, I don’t have it. At least, not at this time. Good luck to you if you get out.
November 6, 2024 — 12:06 PM
Brian Jay Jones says:
My daughter is getting her PhD in Vancouver, Canada. And she ain’t coming back. They’ve lost a brilliant mind. But she’s safer there now, especially when she decides to have kids.
November 6, 2024 — 12:18 PM
Jacey Bedford says:
And presuming there’s anything left of the world in 2028, there’s JD Vance waiting in the wings. Looking at it from my side of the Atlantic, it doesn’t look good (big understatement). I want my family back home (from VA) before the brown stuff hits the whirly thing, but there’s not much chance of that, jobs being what they are. The Orange Criminal scares me shitless, and he’s not even MY president. The lunatics are truly in charge of the asylum. My condolences, America.
November 6, 2024 — 9:24 AM
taosmoxie says:
Thank you for reading my broken heart, mind, and spirit. We WILL find a way forward through this darkness. We must.
November 6, 2024 — 9:25 AM
Melinda says:
i
November 6, 2024 — 9:27 AM
Candace says:
I just…don’t know what to do now.
November 6, 2024 — 9:28 AM
Melinda says:
Well, let’s try that again. Yes, I am not doing well this morning, assuming I could actually have an idea what to do.
I practice Soto Zen. I don’t think I can even Zen my way forward right now.
November 6, 2024 — 9:29 AM
Heidi Wilson says:
I didn’t even make it till my meditation timer went off this morning. Try again this afternoon….
November 6, 2024 — 9:40 AM
Lancelot says:
logischeverwirrung — a logical confusion
geschocktnichtgeschockt — shocked and unshocked
best I got right now.
November 6, 2024 — 9:31 AM
Kara says:
Feels weird to say thank you for a doom post, but thank you.
November 6, 2024 — 9:35 AM
Natalie Walker says:
It’s not only Americans who will pay for this folly. It is the world. Here in Canada we are already prepared to see deep recession, if not outright depression, and a worsening and hastening of the catastrophic climate change now in progress. What will be left for our children, our grandchildren, when power is wrested back into the hands of intelligent, compassionate people? Not much, I’m very afraid.
November 6, 2024 — 9:37 AM
Michele Boyd says:
In looking for a way to make sense of the catastrophe – I scoured my inbox for words from Chuck and there you were. Thank you so much for that. A port in the storm and such. And thank you for describing how I and [I hope?] many others feel and confirming we just have to feel it for now. I am getting on with my international move poste haste during the feels and hoping the new overlords will still allow departures if I don’t get out by January. The move has instantly changed from a fun, flippy, late-in-life adventure to live in Europe (and although I also thought it could be justified for “just in case he wins” I could not truly believe it would happen) to Don’t-bother-me-I’m-digging-a-tunnel while dirges play in the background (interspersed with messages from the Overlord’s robot speaker I foolishly CHOSE to put in my home some years ago as if it were a toy to play music or ask what time or weather is like an old-fashioned 555-1212 operator…but I digress. Just: THANK YOU.
November 6, 2024 — 9:38 AM
Heidi Wilson says:
Set up a recurring donation to the ACLU this morning. You’ll feel better. I did.
November 6, 2024 — 9:39 AM
Rebecca Douglass says:
Did that a couple of years ago. And the Union of Concerned Scientists.
November 6, 2024 — 11:10 AM
Tom Witherspoon says:
I went to bed around Midnight. My partner joined me three hours later. “He won,” she wept as she crawled into bed beside me. I held her and we both wept and promised to love each other and be there for one another and that no matter what we would not give into the darkness. We drifted off to sleep.
I awoke two hours later. She was breathing softly, sleeping. I got up, and wrote 880 more words for my WIP.
I have always been a glass-half-full kinda guy. I always light a candle against the darkness. But, you need the darkness in order for the candle light to shine. I hope that my light, however meager, lights someone’s way.
I will go on. I will grieve. I will go on. I will grieve. I will go on.
November 6, 2024 — 9:39 AM
Courtney Cantrell says:
I think it’s okay to just feel shitty and wallow today. And for the coming days. Maybe not for *weeks*, because that amount of gloom tips us over into something more insidious that looks an awful lot like resignation. But for now, yes: we do get to heartbroken and scared and desperately sad. And, as Spider Robinson says, the more we share our pain with each other, the more we’ll be able to bear it.
November 6, 2024 — 9:41 AM
Ruth Nestvold says:
There’s also “Erschütterung” – complete shock. But what I’m mostly feeling right now is “Freudlosigkeit” – lack of joy. Close to lack of anything. I kind of expected it, but I still can’t believe.
So I’m going to go wallow in my Freudlosigkeit now …
November 6, 2024 — 9:42 AM
James Wilson says:
I had a comment about teaching my cat something- blah, blah- even a cat is smart enough to- blah, blah- interference to learning not to do something stupid.
But. JUST FUCK!!
November 6, 2024 — 9:43 AM
Kathleen says:
Is it ok to cry? Because I’m not a woman who cries unless I’m grieving. I am crying.
November 6, 2024 — 9:46 AM
Kathleen Michele Gilberd says:
Thank you for this post. We need to mourn, and I am tempted to hide under my desk for a while. But then, as you say, we will need to gear up to help our friends, ourselves, this world fight against a level of fascism and repression that’s hard to imagine. We’ll get there.
November 6, 2024 — 9:49 AM
Tim Vandehey says:
I’ve been eating burned mint chocolate chip cookies and watching a “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” marathon on Prime since getting home from a watch party last night. That’s my plan for today: sloth, depression, worst-case scenario thinking, and Buffy. Tomorrow, I’ll start to rally. Because I have two daughters of childbearing age, who have finally made friends here in Kansas City and are terrified at the thought of leaving those friends—some of whom are transgender and have the GENUINE right to be terrified—behind to relocate to Timbuktu or the Ho rainforest or some other alleged haven. There are no havens. This is the world we have chosen for now.
I’ll start to rally because the hatemongers and fearmongers love the idea of the rest of us curling up in a ball, sucking our thumbs, and mewling over how unsafe we feel. I’m one of those straight, white men with money (not Christian, and I won’t fake it to “pass”, Mike Johnson), and living here in an overlooked blue city, self-employed and tariff-resistant, there’s a good chance my life will remain relatively untouched by the chaos to come. But that doesn’t mean I get to run.
I’ll mourn the sharply clawed reality that the country I live in isn’t mine anymore, that it isn’t what I thought it was, and that more people in it have unspeakably ugly souls than I ever thought possible. Yes, I’ll mourn that. What I won’t do is assume the worst. I’ll prepare for it, but I won’t surrender to it. I’ll reach out to LGBTQ+ and immigrant friends. I’ll make art and music. I’ll make sure my daughters have access to healthcare no matter what I have to do. I’ll donate to groups pushing back, write the truth, and try to change minds one at a time. But I won’t cower or live in anxiety and fear.
November 6, 2024 — 9:49 AM
janinmi says:
Well, that tips it. Thank you for your words, Tim — I’ve been vacillating for months over certain actions I can take locally, and you’ve helped me see that no matter now sick I get, it pales next to what might happen to those less privileged than me in my small town. It might take me a while, but I’m gettin’ outta the house and fighting the good fight in person a little more often in future.
Chuck, processing emotion is necessary, and your words are spot on. Thanks.
November 8, 2024 — 1:07 PM
Lynn Foss says:
I feel like we are so doomed. It’s hard to see forward or even see anything ahead that’s good. Having said that it’s going sound weird when I thank you for this. Maybe we can inch forward to find something good and worthy. I will hope that your bluebird and crab apple tree will gather the strength to fight for out collective futures. Thank you, again.
November 6, 2024 — 9:53 AM
S. Edwards says:
I was on the phone at 4:30 am with my trans niece, who is terrified, trying to face this. I think it’s okay to take the day, to just be angry or afraid or what the fuck. Take the day. I told her, we’ll take 72hrs, listen hard. I don’t know what comes next, but for today, I’m taking the day. Here’s to the bluebirds and the crabapples and the promise of rain.
November 6, 2024 — 9:55 AM
Shanon says:
I’m not usually a commenter on political messages, but I find comfort in knowing someone else feels as sick as I do about the next four years. What have we done?
November 6, 2024 — 9:56 AM
Clark Carlton says:
Deep thanks, Chuck. You are right that now is not the time for a pep talk, it’s a time to grieve. Nor is it a time for talking about leaving the U.S.A. for Canada or elsewhere. Trump’s presidency is likely to pass the baton to China as the dominant superpower and it will also strengthen the rise of an imperial Russia. We may become like those two autocratic nations and be a democracy in name only. The Billionaire Boys Club is succeeding in controlling the world. Trump is their puppet and the real president is Elon Musk. And as you rightly point out, the real casualty in this election is our one and only Earth being ravaged by climate change.
Grieve now then fight like hell.
November 6, 2024 — 9:56 AM
MaryAnn Lockard says:
Thank you, Chuck
November 6, 2024 — 9:57 AM
M. Oniker says:
Thank you for writing what I couldn’t. I’ve thought all of that. I’ve been crying off/on all day. Americans voted democratically to end democracy, wtf? Over 70 million? I’ve lost all words.
November 6, 2024 — 10:03 AM
Will Humphreys says:
I’m with you. Thanks for expressing this
November 6, 2024 — 10:11 AM
John Harding says:
Thanks. I’m crying here
November 6, 2024 — 10:12 AM
Eve says:
Me too.
November 6, 2024 — 11:16 AM
rebecca vandenbrook says:
Thank you for this.
November 6, 2024 — 10:14 AM
Tanya Stewart says:
I’m sitting here before the screen, shelllshocked that a humanoid so ugly, so horribly flawed, could have been reelected to the highest office in this country, and by how many people for what qualities? Both parties made their candidate choices not by how well they could represent the people, but by how well they pandered to the corporations. We, the People—all of us who just want to breathe deeply and live the lives we choose—don’t deserve this unending horror.
November 6, 2024 — 10:26 AM
Heather says:
Goodbye women’s rights, goodbye public health, goodbye freedom of the press. Goodbye environment. I couldn’t watch results last night. I just knew it was going to be bad. I woke up actually feeling nauseated and I hadn’t even checked to confirm the results yet. It’s worse this time because there is no one who will be willing to stop him. He’s got his panel is sycophants and ass kissers ready to wreak chaos. All for the joy of watching it happen. Why do insecure white men keep winning. Why can’t enough people stand up to the bullshit and stop it.
November 6, 2024 — 11:10 AM
Heather says:
Whoops I meant to post this as a general reply and didn’t mean to post it as a response to yours. Sorry
November 6, 2024 — 11:14 AM
Lyn McCarty says:
I am a Boomer, born in ‘52. I have always thought of myself as a feminist. Never before have I truly felt like one the way I do now. I finally fully realize that I am less because I am female. I am now less, as well, because I am old. I thought we made a difference, but it was not enough.
November 6, 2024 — 11:20 AM
Sue Hendricks says:
Amen sister!
November 6, 2024 — 11:44 AM
Marvin Day says:
I normally just read your posts. I don’t comment. But today I will. I voted for Harris but I also knew Rump would win. I’m trying hard to understand the POV of folks that voted for him. Some of them I would consider good friends. And the common thread amongst all them is, they feel disenfranchised by their own government. They feel like less than citizens. They all know he’s a monster, but they believe he’s a monster that can represent them And can make changes they can identify with and benefit from. As we all know, the moment human emotions become a factor things get complicated. One friend of mine said he just wanted to see what would happen. As if inviting a mad Max style dystopian future. My own mother hasn’t voted since Reagan. She said that she voted for him and the next day her jeans still fit the same way and the food still tasted the same. That nothing in her life changed so what was the point?
My long-winded point is somewhere along the way Rump became the symbol for people that are fed up and want some sort of drastic albeit disastrous change. Or at least with a small amount of people I talked to, most of them are so disillusioned by the entire process that they just don’t care and would rather watch Rome burn.
And to add to your doom speak: we are the only major civilization that hasn’t collapsed. Every other one throughout the entirety of history has. Most of them multiple times. So I guess we are due.
November 6, 2024 — 10:28 AM
Sharon M Galbraith Ryer says:
Yeah.
Thank you.
November 6, 2024 — 10:34 AM
Cup Of Tears says:
Why don’t you ALL move to a nice, cozy communist country since you want it so badly? You could live in the “comfort and joy” of being with like-minded people. Please move. In the meantime, I am enjoying a huge cup of liberal tears and it tastes so damn good. Cheers
ps I know you will delete this, and I don’t care. Because I know you read it first, you little communist lover you.
November 6, 2024 — 10:46 AM
terribleminds says:
You’re an author, right? JC Coy / Nickie Asher?
November 7, 2024 — 8:24 AM
Lyn McCarty says:
People dedicated more to self than those around them do not always realize how they hurt themselves. Selfishness and resentment cause a person to die a little bit every day. I’ll live fully now and wait to die at the end of a life in which I stand up for right. “Where there’s a man who has no voice, there I shall go singing. These hands are small, I know. But they’re not yours, they are my own. And I am never broken. In the end, only kindness matters.”
November 7, 2024 — 8:53 AM
Nicholas S Ackerman says:
It is hardly communist to want a Federal government run by competent people who value human rights and fairness for all, without discrimination, while also being ready to address threats and problems in a responsible fashion. I know “love it or leave it” is a common conservative refrain, because of the desire to have a homogeneity of perspective and opinion, while forgetting all the bad stuff that underlies American history, but you don’t get to deport your opponents.
Enjoy your mean-spirited moment of ascendancy. Just don’t forget your joy when you’re paying higher prices from tariffs, you’re breathing dirty air, drinking poisoned water, eating tainted food, your friends on the coast have lost their homes to flooding, you can’t get Federal relief from storm damages, your social security benefits collapse because they were converted to 401Ks that lose money, you can’t afford prescriptions, and you can’t afford insurance.
And who will you blame when all three branches of government are in the Republican fold?
November 7, 2024 — 5:22 PM
bennydonalds3 says:
What’s so communist about equal rights for women, gays, and minorities? And green energy is being encouraged by some capitalist and communist countries, and neglected by some capitalist and communist countries. Both communist and capitalist countries care about border security and restrict immigration. Both capitalist and communist countries spent a lot of money on defense.
November 9, 2024 — 7:45 AM
ksol says:
Chuck — all morning, I’ve been hanging onto the quote: “Art harder, motherfucker.” I’m living by that today.
November 6, 2024 — 10:49 AM
M. Elizabeth Ticknor says:
I absolutely understand where you’re coming from. I feel the weight.
In 2016, it scared me.
In 2020, it scared me but it also made me angry, and there was relief when things didn’t go the way I feared.
I’m not scared this time. I’m angry. Not because there’s nothing to be afraid of, but because *I’m going to do something about it*.
I wrote a thing, today. I wrote a 1,000 word essay about how controlling the bodies of mothers and letting them bleed out in hospitals because the doctors aren’t allowed to perform life-saving procedures violates the Geneva Convention.
I’m going to try to figure out actionable ways to help queer/trans youth in my community.
I’m not saying you shouldn’t feel bad. I also feel bad. But I did my best, and I’m going to keep doing my best, and I will do this regardless of election results because *I have children* and I want them to grow up in a better world than I did.
I’m sorry that it’s hard. I’m sorry that it’s going to be frightening, and dangerous. I know it feels hopeless in this moment. I’m not asking you to fight (though I know you have, and I know you will).
I just wanted to let you know that you’re not in it alone.
November 6, 2024 — 10:55 AM
Kathleen S Allen says:
I’m confused how he won since three swing states haven’t been counted yet. I’m so hoping it isn’t true once those states are counted.
November 6, 2024 — 10:56 AM
Natasha Peterson says:
Thanks for writing. I’m with the bluebirds. He won by only 1.5% of the popular vote. Maybe think about staying engaged as a constituent. Maybe continue to call and email your representatives nay and yay which, believe it or not, makes a difference on The Hill — the notion of measured public intolerance and opinion.
November 6, 2024 — 11:02 AM
Lyssa says:
Thank you.
November 6, 2024 — 11:12 AM
Lakis says:
Thank you for being honest. This one hurts.
November 6, 2024 — 11:12 AM
Eve says:
Thank you,Chuck. I’m in the darkness with you, not listening to the media. Just writing my words, with music in my ears to calm my nerves.
November 6, 2024 — 11:14 AM
Ryan McGinn says:
Thank you for your words, Chuck. You say how I’m feeling better than I can express.
For today, I’m taking the approach my wife suggested – making my world small, only focusing on today. Go to work, spend time with my family, etc. Big picture can wait a couple of days.
November 6, 2024 — 11:15 AM
Michelle says:
Thank you for so eloquently stating how so many of us feel today. I am struggling and I don’t want to be talked at or offered false hope. As a friend said, the sun rose we will be okay. That is likely true but right now I don’t, can’t, give a tinker’s damn.
November 6, 2024 — 11:17 AM
Beth says:
Thank you for posting this. I’ve been thinking similar thoughts and it is nice to know that I am not alone in needing to process the darkness of what ever the hell awaits us in the next few years or decades. We will come out on the other side – probably, but at what cost?
November 6, 2024 — 11:21 AM
Kristi Belcamino says:
Thank you for this
November 6, 2024 — 11:21 AM
Constance Hillman says:
Thank you. It sounds trite, but I needed this. Thanks.
November 6, 2024 — 11:22 AM
Eric James Pederson says:
Yes, I think this is right: we must absorb the reality, no matter how dark. We must live in reality. There are monsters in our future, elected and empowered. Now we know that, and we will have to work on moving past our fears. We are still, always, the protagonists of our own lives.
November 6, 2024 — 11:25 AM
bennydonalds3 says:
Eventually his policies will create a recession. We just have to be ready to take advantage of buyer’s remorse.
November 9, 2024 — 7:40 AM