Thursday, June 25, 2026

Faisal R. Khan: A Generational Shift In Politics and Public Consciousness

 A message from my friend Faisal Khan.
Excellent and spot on! 
— Molly


A message to my readers and followers:
If you are uncomfortable supporting progressive and Democratic Socialist political movement, agenda, or policies; if you have reservations about speaking out against the genocide and ethnic cleansing of Palestinians, the US and Israel illegal bombing of Lebanon, or the war in Iran; and if you are unwilling to challenge anti-Muslim racism, Islamophobia, or the targeting of Muslims, Black and Brown communities, and the Somali community in Maine and beyond, then we are not allies.
I see many in Maine speaking out on a wide range of issues, yet remaining silent or hesitant when it comes to Muslims, the Somali community, war crimes, the genocide against Palestinians, the bombing of Lebanon, the war in Iran, or criticism of Israel’s genocidal policies. At this point, those distinctions need to be clear.
Everyone is free to make their own choices. As for me, I will be moving forward with building a new coalition that centers these voices and these concerns in Maine. Everyone is welcome to participate, but these communities and perspectives will no longer be treated as an afterthought.
The progressive and Democratic Socialist movement is bigger than any one candidate, whether it’s Mamdani, Platner, Abdul El-Sayed, or any other emerging leader. What we are witnessing is not simply the rise of individual politicians but the growth of a broader movement that is challenging a political status quo that has failed too many people for too long. The recent New York City elections offer a glimpse of a future that demands bold action on healthcare, housing affordability, healthcare accessibility, economic justice, and civil rights, while also refusing to stay silent on genocide, war, Islamophobia, racism, and the targeting of Black, Brown, immigrant, and Muslim communities.
This is not a passing moment; it is part of a generational shift in politics and public consciousness. The question is not whether that shift is coming, it is already here. The question is whether you choose to be part of it or remain attached to a status quo that is rapidly losing legitimacy and support. Especially in Maine politics, it is time to be clear about where we stand. The days of selective solidarity and convenient silence are coming to an end. People are paying attention to who speaks up when it matters and who remains silent when the costs are higher.
The future will be shaped by those willing to stand consistently for justice, dignity, and human rights for all, not only when it is politically safe, not because performative solidarity is trendy, but when it is politically difficult. The generational shift is already underway. What remains to be seen is who will help lead it and who will be left trying to defend an old politics that no longer meets the moment.

EXCELLENT — Chris Hedges: The Joke is on Us

This is an excellent and deeply important article by Chris Hedges. And it will also be a hard read to digest and absorb for many, especially those who are unaware of the shadow side of what is for countless Americans beloved late night talk shows. 

For some time now I have sensed this shadow side of the satire that is normalized, but have personally struggled with truly seeing or naming it. Because it is uncomfortable. That said, there are times when I recoiled when watching Colbert interview the likes of Hilary Clinton, for example, and other neoliberals. I knew that there would be no probing questions, no going deep into what was most needed to be exposed and revealed. Yes, laughter and relief from these incredibly dark times is important. And it is also true that when laughter serves as a subtle, or not so subtle, distraction from and enabling of a toxic status quo, no one is helped. Instead we are harmed.

I'm finally at a point where I can face the deeper truths Chris Hedges articulates so well in this piece. "This satire does not attack corporations or the war industry. It ignores the decay and rot within our political institutions, including the Democratic Party, which created Trump. It pretends we live in a democracy. It breeds cynicism, not resistance."

May courage and a profound commitment to truth be contagious. — Molly

We are the Joke - by Mr. Fish

The retreat into satirical attacks on Trump and his supporters fuels the solidification of fascism.


The buffoons who orchestrate fascism, with its quack science, idiocy, penchant for violence and grotesque hypermasculinity, are ripe for satire. It is easy, as late-night comics do — and as the cabarets did for the Nazis in Berlin — to pillory the goons, misfits and mediocrities who hold power and spew fascist bile. But this form of satire blinds opponents to its destructive power and murderous core. It ignores the real centers of power. It does not engender resistance. It engenders disdain and cynicism. It furthers the social and political divide between us, the “enlightened” and “educated” elite, and them, the despised and ridiculed “basket of deplorables.”

There are two forms of satire. That of the educated elites, which dominates the commercial media, ridicules the foibles and pretensions of Trump and his hapless followers. This satire does not attack corporations or the war industry. It ignores the decay and rot within our political institutions, including the Democratic Party, which created Trump. It pretends we live in a democracy. It breeds cynicism, not resistance. It is characterized by a repugnant moral and intellectual superiority and heartless demeaning of the underclass. It fosters the social divisions and alienation that feeds fascism.

Antonio Gramsci warned that elitist satire is counterproductive. He called for a “passionate sarcasm,” which targets the machinery of power. Satire, he wrote, must excoriate the dominant myths and ideologies which buttress capitalism and fascism. It must expose not only the moral and intellectual bankruptcy of fascism, but acknowledge the legitimate grievances of those under its spell. It must focus on the institutions that perpetuate injustice and social inequality.

“Trump has also been necessary to expose the plastic progressives, the liberal anti-Trump imperialists who, in their opposition to Trump’s deal with Iran, can only look like warmongering imperial psychopaths,” writes Nate Bear. “From all those sharing memes on social media about surrender, from the Democrats and CNN talking heads decrying the deal, to Jimmy Fallon dragging Trump for giving Iran back the money the US stole, there is no articulation of an alternative to endlessly bombing Iran. There’s no anger from liberals over dead Iranians, or at the imperial state, at Zionism or the embedded death machinery that made this violence possible. No, they’re just embarrassed for empire. And they don’t want to recognise the limits of that empire.”

Elitist satire — whether on “Saturday Night Live” or other late-night shows — punches down. It seduces liberals into believing that the thugs and grifters who have taken power are too stupid and too inept to last. There are millions of political exiles who understand how this self-delusion, this failure to take fascists seriously, is the great facilitator of fascism. They too once dismissed the goons who now run their countries as a joke.

The Turkish writer Ece Temelkuran, driven into exile by the regime of Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, in her book “Nation of Strangers: Rebuilding Home in the 21st Century,” lays out the familiar pattern:

It begins with a movement that divides society into two: the ‘real people’ versus the ‘corrupt elite’, and with a leader who insists they alone embody the ‘real’ people. The next step is the dissolution of truth and the prioritisation of loyalty above decency. Then shame is dismantled. The leader breaks the long-standing political and moral consensus with unprecedented relentlessness. The longer they remain in power, the boundaries of what is acceptable begin to stretch. What once felt unthinkable or despicable gradually becomes normal. As the institutions that hold democracy together are quietly hollowed out and the very definition of democracy is rewritten as being simply majority rule, universal values — human dignity and the rule of law — are replaced with a fierce nationalism, a proud victimhood, and a rewriting of history. Cruelty and ruthlessness are deemed just, not only in the highest echelons of politics but also trickling down to daily life. The circle of who counts as ‘us’ grows smaller, while millions of fellow citizens are recast as permanent suspects.

As Temelkuran warns, Americans, like those in other nations that have been down this path, “...soothe their fears by repeating the same illusionary line, ‘The institutions will hold.’ They do not yet dare to recognize their future country, and soon, they will not be recognized as citizens unless they follow the new rules in Trump’s America.”

Comedians such as Kimmel function like the cabaret star, Fritz Grünbaum, who during Nazism, once quipped when the power went out during a performance: “I can’t see a thing, not a single thing; I must have stumbled into National Socialist culture.” Grünbaum would eventually find himself in the Dachau concentration camp — along with other actors, performers and satirists — where he died of tuberculosis.

The Nazis moved swiftly to close the cabarets — along with all institutions that defied Nazi control — and replaced them with mindless variety shows. They hated mockery as much as Trump, who after Stephen Colbert’s final show, gloated that Colbert was “finished” and called him a “total jerk.” Trump also shared an AI-generated video of himself throwing Colbert into a dumpster, slamming down the lid and dancing. Trump wrote that Colbert’s exit was the “beginning of the end” for other late night hosts.

Jokes about dictators in totalitarian regimes are a criminal offense. Satire is permissible in fascist states only when employed to mock political opponents and demonized minorities. It is not permissible when directed at centers of power. As Gramsci pointed out, the consolidation of power by fascists requires them to win the “cultural battle,” by dominating the public discourse, policing language — including satire — and redefining social, cultural and political norms.

Elitist satire is a pressure-release valve. But because it refuses to confront the roots of our political, social and cultural degeneration — which preceded the Trump presidency — it solidifies the fascist project it seeks to destroy. It reduces the catastrophe to the clown show around Trump: the sycophantic cabinet secretaries, ICE Barbie or Robert F. Kennedy Jr’s bizarre war on medical science. It does not address our failed democratic institutions — the academy, elections, courts, Congress, or the media. It deflects attention from the billionaires and corporations that have slashed regulation, imposed austerity and deindustrialization and distorted the economic and political system to facilitate the largest upward transfer of wealth in U.S. history. It does not address the murderous war industry or the domestic security apparatus that makes us the most watched, monitored, spied upon, tracked and photographed population in human history.

This elitist satire simplifies the complex social, economic and political forces we must dismantle. It ignores or pays deference to the subterranean forces that created Trump. Gramsci’s “passionate sarcasm” is too revolutionary and too truthful to be broadcast on media conglomerates such as CBS.

“Laughter is our reaction to immediate incongruities and those which do not affect us essentially,” the theologian Reinhold Niebuhr noted in “Humor and Faith.” “Faith is the only possible response to the ultimate incongruities of existence which threaten the very meaning of our life.”

“There is no laughter in the holy of holies,” Niebuhr continued. “There laughter is swallowed up in prayer and humor is fulfilled by faith.”

When satire is the end point, it is deleterious. It masks what is coming. It must be, as Niebuhr pointed out, the entry point. It must push us, as Gramsci understood, into hard analysis and the organization of mass movements that alone can save us from tyranny. It must cease to play into the hands of a polarized nation, one where opposing factions write each other off as irredeemable. It must acknowledge that given the gravity before us, laughter is not enough.

Please go here for the original article: https://chrishedges.substack.com/p/the-joke-is-on-us

Please go here for Chris Hedges' substack: https://chrishedges.substack.com/

I have seen Chris Hedges speak more times than I can remember and his books have long lined my bookshelves. Chris is a national and international treasure whose work I will continue to recommend to everyone. Blessed be the courageous truth-tellers.

Monday, June 22, 2026

Thích Nhất Hạnh: When We Look With the Eyes of Compassion

Photo by Molly
When We Look With
the Eyes of Compassion

Every time we breathe in and go home to ourselves and bring the element of harmony and peace into ourselves, that is an act of peace. Every time we know how to look at another living being and recognize the suffering that has made her speak or act, and we are able to see that she is the victim of suffering that she cannot handle—that is an act of compassion. When we can look with the eyes of compassion we don’t suffer and we don’t make the other person suffer. These are the actions of peace that can be shared with people.

— Thích Nhất Hạnh 

e.e. cummings: I Thank You God For Most This Amazing

Photo by Molly
I THANK YOU GOD FOR MOST THIS AMAZING

i thank You God for most this amazing
day: for the leaping greenly spirits of trees
and a blue true dream of sky; and for everything
which is natural which is infinite which is yes
 
(i who have died am alive again today,
and this is the sun’s birthday; this is the birth
day of life and of love and wings: and of the gay
great happening illimitably earth)
 
how should tasting touching hearing seeing
breathing any–lifted from the no
of all nothing–human merely being
doubt unimaginable You?
 
(now the ears of my ears awake and
now the eyes of my eyes are opened)

 e.e. cummings

Dr. John Gartner on Donald Trump

There are many layers to the horrors that we face today and the long trajectory that has brought us into the nightmare of this fascist era. That said, one part that needs to be illuminated again and again is the reality that the current President of the United States suffers from deep untreated trauma, the symptoms of which impact and pose a profound danger to our country, other nations, and life on Earth. This cannot be overstated. 

And while this is true, it also continues to need to be emphasized that Trump remains a symptom of something much greater than this one man and his fascist administration. It is these depths that are so vital to plumb, recognize, understand, and act upon out of the consciousness and wisdom of a highest good for us all. — Molly


Dr. John Gartner, a medical professor at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, said this week that Donald Trump represents the most severe case of psychological illness he has encountered in four decades of clinical work, and that the trajectory is worsening.
“In 40 years of clinical practice and almost 30 years of teaching psychiatric residents, I've never encountered a patient as sick as Donald Trump,” Gartner said on The Daily Beast's podcast. “He's so many standard deviations away from what we would normally consider normal, and that it's coming to a head now is in his fantasies of being this military conqueror.”
Gartner, who has not examined Trump directly, has been tracking what he describes as accelerating cognitive deterioration. Earlier this year, he told iNews the decline was progressing “almost week over week” across four clinical indicators: language, memory, behavior, and psychomotor performance. Last month, he suggested the pattern was consistent with frontotemporal dementia, a condition characterized by disinhibition and impaired judgment.
On the podcast, Gartner connected that decline to what he sees as an increasing appetite for military confrontation. “He actually gets incredible gratification from destroying things and hurting people and feeling powerful through that,” he said. With poll numbers falling and the possibility of losing both houses of Congress, Gartner argued that Trump may look to his role as commander in chief as the one remaining source of unchecked power. “He will still be the commander in chief, and he's going to want to exercise that power in a way that makes him feel powerful.”
Gartner described Trump as “grooming” the public for nuclear conflict, driven by what he characterized as sadism and a desire for historical notoriety as a military figure. Trump has previously compared himself to Napoleon, Alexander the Great, and Julius Caesar, Raw Story noted, despite never having served in the military.

Jeremy Scahill: Iran Enlisted “Senior Psychologists” to Help Craft Messages to Trump Ahead of Agreement

 Deepest gratitude, as always, to Jeremy Scahill.
— Molly

An Iranian official told Drop Site that Trump’s “reactions improved noticeably" after the psychiatric professionals joined the negotiating effort.


In an effort to navigate President Donald Trump’s erratic behavior during the indirect negotiations aimed at ending the war, Iran’s negotiating team enlisted the help of psychiatric professionals to develop an assessment of the U.S. president’s mental condition and to assist Iranian negotiators in crafting messages passed to Trump by regional mediators.

“We added two senior psychologists to the negotiations’ advisory circle so that we can shape messages intended for President Trump from the perspective of managing what we regard as psychopathic behavior pattern,” an Iranian official told Drop Site. He said the psychologists began assisting Iranian negotiators following the initial round of bilateral talks in Islamabad in April as the two sides began exchanging proposed terms for a potential Memorandum of Understanding.

“[Trump’s] reactions have improved noticeably since we began incorporating the recommendations of these advisers into our messages and written communications,” said the official, who was not authorized to speak publicly.

“Because the exchanged texts will ultimately become part of the historical record, we conduct our negotiations in a manner that ensures the relative weight and sophistication of each party’s negotiating techniques will be evident should these communications be made public in the years ahead,” the official added.

The Washington Post recently reported that 22 medical specialists examined Trump as part of his latest checkup, saying it was “nearly double the number of specialists who assessed Trump for his past medical checkups as president.” The report added that this “represents the most medical specialists to assess a president for a single visit.”

On Sunday night, Trump and Iran announced that they had reached a preliminary agreement for a Memorandum of Understanding, to be signed in Geneva, Switzerland on June 19.

Watch Jeremy Scahill discuss his reporting on Democracy Now!:


Please go here for the original article: https://www.dropsitenews.com/p/iran-trump-psychologists-ceasefire-negotiations

Please go here for more from Jeremy Scahill and Drop Site News: https://www.dropsitenews.com/s/jeremy-scahill

Pema Chödrön: The True Practice of Peace

Photo by Molly

The True Practice of Peace

To the degree that each of us is dedicated to wanting there to be peace in the world, then we have to take responsibility when our own hearts and minds harden and close. We have to be brave enough to soften what is rigid, to find the soft spot and stay with it. We have to have that kind of courage and take that kind of responsibility. That's true spiritual warriorship. That's the true practice of peace.

— Pema Chödrön
From Practicing Peace In Times of War 

Sunday, June 21, 2026

John O'Donohue: A Solstice Blessing

Photo by Molly

A  Solstice Blessing

1

Somewhere, out at the edges, the night
is turning and the waves of darkness
Begin to brighten on the shore of dawn.

The heavy dark falls back to earth
And the freed air goes wild with light,
The heart fills with fresh, bright breath
And thoughts stir to give birth to colour.

2

I arise today

In the name of Silence
Womb of the Word,
In the name of Stillness
Home of Belonging,
In the name of Solitude
Of the soul and the Earth.

I arise today

Blessed by all things,
Wings of breath,
Delight of eyes,
Wonder of whisper,
Intimacy of touch,
Eternity of soul,
Urgency of thought,
Miracle of health,
Embrace of God.

May I live this day

Compassionate of heart,
Clear of word,
Gracious in awareness,
Courageous in thought,
Generous in love.

John O’Donohue
From To Bless the Space Between Us

Reflections On Father's Day

 

Happy Father's Day to all! These are images of the fathers I have loved and the fathers who I cherish today. Pictured here is my father John Strong, my sons' father Jim Murray, my three sons Matthew and Kevin and Brian who are today loving fathers themselves, and my beloved husband Ron — who is an amazing step-father to Alli and to my three sons and wonderful grandfather to our six grandchildren. I share this with the deepest gratitude and love, and also with the conscious awareness that Father’s Day can be an occasion for both joy and celebration and also tenderness, sadness, and complex emotions. Bless us all. 🙏💜Molly