"Whenever I go into a restaurant, I order both a chicken and an egg to see which comes first"

Saturday, May 23, 2026

The Savagery Within - Our Hardwired Violent Nature And The Fairy Tale Dreams That Deny It

Violence is a feature of the human condition; and given this 10,000 year history of murder, slaughter, and mayhem, we are unlikely to change. Despite hopeful  claims to the contrary, violence is a permanent, ineluctable, predictable expression of human nature

The same genes that gave us Hitler, Stalin, and Pol Pot; the same savagery that Mungo Park witnessed in tribal forests of Africa, the same headhunters of Melanesia, and the same absolute terror of White Wolf, the Comanche chief who to send a message to Union troops invading sacred Indian ground, raped, mutilated, and defiled white men, women, and children are within us. 

Professor Steven Pinker has argued that the world is indeed progressing toward a more peaceful, collegial and less contentious place.  However most reviewers conclude that  there is  no evidence that violence – or the proclivity for it – has decreased. 

In fact, the 21st Century seems a far more dangerous and potentially violent place than the one that preceded it, one of the most violent in history. Pinker’s vision of coming world peace is fancy.  Opinion is divided on questions of human nature and history.  There are many who still put great faith in the civilizing nature of Man, his ultimate goodness, and his ability – through the State – to accomplish civilized ends. 

There are just as many others who believe that we are still (until truly radical changes in our DNA are made) like Shakespeare’s kings – aggressive, acquisitive, self-interested, and capable of anything to achieve our ends.  Society and its institutions have provided us with an architecture within which we are reasonably and temporarily safe; but that architecture is only as strong as those human beings who built it…..And that is why it seems that it will fall and rise again in recurring cycles of violence.

Josef Conrad was always concerned about the nature of violence.  In The Heart of Darkness Kurtz's dying words are 'the horror...the horror...'. a realization that he and all humanity were like the tribal savages around him - violent, inconscient, brutal, murderous, and pagan.  It is Kurtz's dalliance with tribal power that leads to his undoing, and at the moment of death realizes the true nature of the life he is leaving. 

 

Joseph Conrad in Victory created Ricardo a man of ‘feral’ violence, a man whose every instinct propels him to rape and murder.  He is a man without a moral compass, without reflection, and without a scintilla of humanity.  He is brutal, without contrition, and as willful as a savage, hungry animal.

Cormac McCarthy, perhaps the modern writer most attuned to the nature of violence writes about it consistently. In the case of the Trilogy as well as No Country for Old Men, McCarthy answers his own urgent question. Violence is primal.  It may be repressed and hidden from view, but it is prone to spasm from time to time and will torment our illusions.

So what to make of the One Worlders, the unreconstructed pacifists who see hope for the human race, a decrease even elimination of violence, and the coming of a verdant, collaborative, congenial utopia? There have always been such idealists, but the belief in such progress is remarkable, almost impossible to understand.  Wars have been a feature of society since the first human settlements. 

Genghis Khan and his Turkic-Mongol army swept out of the steppes and slaughtered tens of millions from Japan to Europe. The Hundred Year War and the War of the Roses were but two of the more well known; but there were over 100 major world conflicts in the 16th century alone including among others the Portuguese-Mamluk, Friulan Muscovite-Lithuanian, Polish-Teutonic wars.   

There were no fewer in the 18th century, and the Age of Enlightenment did nothing to prevent or deter violence. The 20th century had fewer wars but more devastating and comprehensive ones. 

In World War II  there were 70–85 million fatalities  In World War I, 20 million.  In the Russian Civil War, 7–10 million; the Chinese Civil War, 4–9 million; the Second Congo War, 2.5–5.4 million; the Crusades, 1–9 million; the Vietnam War, 1.3–3.9 million; the Korean War, 1.2–3 million and in the American Civil War, 600,000–1 million. 

So what to make of the pacifists, the One Worlders who believe that with faith, hope, charity and an undeterred progressivism, violence can be overcome and that a peaceful, verdant, compassionate, and harmonious world can be in our future?

It is remarkable if not impossible that faced with this recorded history, there are those who still believe that violence and the tendency to war is not innate in human nature.  That the survival instinct has not changed in millennia, and that there has been no progress, not even a tentative movement towards world peace since the first human settlements.

It is equally surprising that people choose to ignore childhood - the aggressive, territorial, self-defensive and self-promoting instincts of children. Cooperation, consideration and collaboration have to be beaten into the two-year old, and even with consistent training and education, fights over property, women, causes resurface and persist. 

Bob Muzelle was one of these heady idealists.  He was first converted back in college where the Reverend William Bard Coughlin, chaplain at his Ivy League university, and leader of the campus peace movement of the Sixties, took him in.  What changed him from a patrician, Boston Brahmin, steeped in Revolutionary War pride and a lineage that went back to George Washington and the knights of England to an advocate for nuclear disarmament, world peace, and communal harmony was a mystery. 

All agreed that Rev. Coughlin was a charismatic leader, a man with passion, a soaring oratory, and the weight of Christian tradition behind him; but still, there must have been something in Bob's past that flipped the switch - perhaps his cousin Tom's torturing of the frogs he caught in their summer home on the Vineyard. 

Tom had an electric Lionel railroad set and realized that if he hooked the transformer to frogs' legs he could electrocute them.  'Watch this!', said Tommy as a pinioned frog convulsed as the volts and amps surged through him. 

Or the Wild West shoot-'em-ups on early television and at Saturday matinees; or his grandfather's tales of The Great War, the barbed wire, the Gatling guns, and the trenches.  Something did it, and Bob went from a descendant of Lexington and Concord, Gettysburg, the Marne, and Iwo Jima to a peacenik and defiant advocate for disarmament. 

Nothing deterred him.  Even the drumbeat of war and its constant presence - Vietnam, Central America, Iraq, Afghanistan, the Middle East, and minor wars of his generation - could not disabuse him of the notion of human kindess. 

The election of Donald Trump, especially in his second term, threw Bob into a renewed frenzy of protest.  When most of his colleagues had retired to Florida and were spending time with their grandchildren, Bob was still at the barricades when Trump and Israel took it upon themselves to bomb Gaza to smithereens, denying the Palestinian people their right of return; or when Trump and Israel invaded Iran, killing thousands in a so-called war for freedom and justice; or when the US marines and Special Forces invaded Venezuela and kidnapped its president. 

Once again and true to his progressive roots, Bob discounted the innate, inherent, ineluctable violent human acquisitiveness ever since Neanderthalic tribes bashed each other with rocks and jawbones and rather than promote mitigation - or even the policies of countervailing force that at least gave the world a tentative peace during the Cold War - he shouted 'Stop this war...Stop the killing...Stop the murder...'. 

Of course the world was on tenterhooks because never before - even in the Soviet period - had there been two such balanced, equal, and determined adversaries, America and China.  As long as parity remained and as long there was mutual economic benefit to peace, the missiles would remain in their silos, but eventually they would be fired. 

The American defense budget - or rather, as Bob liked to put it, the offense budget given America's first-strike ambitions - was staggering, eating up trillions in revenue that could be used to house the homeless, help the poor, and stop global warming.  China and Russia were no different, and what was the point of a huge armory if you don't use the weapons therein housed?

'Please, Bob, relax', said his wife Corinne herself a committed liberal but with some give in her, an occasional piece of foie gras, a glass of Moet & Chandon, or smelling the roses.  Her pleas went nowhere.  Bob would die in his traces, topple over at a protest, or pass away during one of his famous incendiary calls to action.  There was no way to stop him. As former National Rifle Association President Charlton Heston famously said when asked if he would give up his right to bear arms, 'I'll give you my gun when you pry it from my cold, dead hands'.

Bob was as defiant.  From Corinne's point of view Bob was not showing his best - his inner compassion for the world's victims of violence.  He was becoming a sour, nasty old man who wouldn't shut up. 'There, I've said it', said Corinne to no one in particular.  It was a marital betrayal, but God help her, it was true.  Her beloved, admired husband was going off the rails. 

There are two givens in life - one, idealists never give up, and two, there will always be wars.  Of course most of us live within the bookends, reasonably happy, taking what comes and tending to the burgers on the grill, nothing wrong in that, stoicism has never gone entirely out of favor. 



Friday, May 22, 2026

Mary, Mary Quite Contrary - Congressional Harpies And The Smarmy Mix Of Race, Gender, And Ethnicity

Kamala Harris was the ideal candidate for the progressive era - the perfect storm of being a woman, the daughter of a black man and an Indian mother - and she flogged that trifecta to death.  The American public was having none of it however, and rejected this shrill, garbling, entitled harridan. 

Harris was the new uppity woman, confident of her privileged position of being a thrice victimized patriot.  Of course her black father was an economics professor in majority white universities, and didn't have to act white because he subscribed to all the ethical and moral prescriptions of American success.  

Her Indian mother was not a lettuce picker, a leaf-blower, or an enchilada street vendor but a proper, well-educated Hindu well assimilated into white Christian society.  So her cries of victimhood were seen as hysterical posturing - a political hack trading on her trifecta but without a reasonable, coherent thought in her head. 

 

Defeat is not something that a politician like Kamala Harris can consider, and so she keeps teasing the American electorate about a possible second run for President in 2028.  She is unbowed, uncontrite, and unaware that she is perhaps the least able, the least desirable, and the least attractive candidate in the Democratic field ever.  'I am a woman for the ages'. she said in a speech to the Ohio Progressive Union in Chillicothe. 

She banged on for what seemed hours speaking in tongues, barely decipherable but with intensity and passion. Hearing her speak was like watching a sound and light show, a carnival of clowns and mountebanks, banging each other with toy hammers, doing somersaults, and squeezing Clarabell the Clown horns.  Sturm und Drang, sound and fury signifying absolutely nothing.  

If there were more of a cipher on the political stage, it would have to be Dimwit Danny, the guy who opened and closed the shutters at Kamala's big events, chosen for his mental diversity. 

'Daniel is one of my closest advisors', said Kamala in an MSNBC interview.  Not in the traditional, political advisory role, of course, but 'the voice of the people, the forgotten, the dismissed, the undervalued'.  When Danny was cornered, microphones in his face and pushed to answer how he advised the former Vice-President, he responded simply, 'I bring light and air into the room'. 

Kamala was last seen with AOC - Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the woman whom Senator John Kennedy (R-La) said is the reason there are instructions on a shampoo bottle, or who in a hilarious viral send-up, says 'Great news! My IQ test came back negative!' 

She is a clone of Harris - an entitled woman of color, a Puerto Rican running on rice and beans, East Harlem tenement soul, the glory of La Raza and promises that La Lucha Continua. 

She shows her teeth like a barnyard dog, but has no bite to go with the bark.  She reads from prepared scripts which attack the Cabinet members who must testify before her committee, but then fumbles and squiggles when they refuse to be cowed by her bullying and retort with facts and figures. 

'We are soulmates', she said when she and Kamala appeared together in Philadelphia.  'Soul sistahs', she said, doing a chicken-neck and a gang sign and smiling up at Harris.  'Bonded in bond with gold trim', the Democratic ticket for president in 2028, just the dyad America needs, a vacant duo, a cackling twosome of intellectual wannabees. 

These women have the national stage because of their infamy (Harris) or because of a cafe-au-lait cuteness (AOC), but the other members of the cabal - Tlaib, Omar, and Pressley - are pretenders to progressive leadership.  

The queen of the harem is Ilhan Omar, a Somali elected in a Muslim-prevalent district in Minnesota, likely a player in the multi-billion dollar Somali-sponsored fraud in that state, a tireless succubus, as airy and vacant as her political sisters, and a cipher.  

The Palestinian bulldog Tlaib, Hamas shill and Islamic hegemonist, and Pressley, a good, solid ghetto mama fill out The Squad, that clucking hen party of Democratic women out for 'social justice and the consignment of Donald Trump to hell'

'Quite a woman!' (真是个了不起的女人) said Xi Jinping, President of China, basking in the international spotlight just having hosted Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin in the Imperial Palace, referring to AOC brought to his attention by a senior aide to prepare his boss for the Trump visit. 

Trump said, 'Indeed she is', and both world leaders had a great laugh over the idiocy of the woman and the utter impossibility of the likes of her ever showing up in China. 'But what can I do?'. 

Of course if in the unlikely event someone like AOC were ever to turn up in Beijing, she would immediately be clapped in irons and sent to some remote gulag.  'I have my ways'. Xi replied to Trump through an interpreter. 

In a congratulatory call to Donald Trump after his 2024 election - despite the war in Ukraine - Putin shared with the American president his satisfaction at his victory.  'Where do these women come from?' (Откуда эти женщины), he said, referring to Kamala Harris, and the two adversaries apparently had a good laugh.  'I have gulags for them', Putin said to which Trump replied, 'I wish'. 

When the conversation was leaked to the press, the Left was up in arms, their convictions about Trump confirmed.  He was an autocrat in waiting, a Russian sympathizer, a racist bigot, and a misogynist ape.  The President, nonplussed as always, replied, 'Well, who wouldn't be happy if that harpy weren't around?

There is a move in Congress to pass a law forbidding any foreign-born citizen to run for political office and to remove those that squeezed in under more tolerant Democratic administrations; and when asked, Trump said he thought it a good thing, although he added 'I would really like to send that idiot Ilhan back to Somalia, to the shithole country where she belongs'.  

This caterwauling, pissy, uppity crew is American exceptionalism writ large - not a caricature, but an example of democracy gone badly awry. If this is what America has to offer to the world, then Putin and Xi have nothing to worry about. 

Trump unfortunately cannot slam them into some South Dakota Indian reservation, but he and his colleagues can show them up for the demagogues they are.  The American people already wise to their shenanigans will not put up with much more. 

'Good riddance to bad rubbish', the President said. 

Thursday, May 21, 2026

The Remaking Of America - The Middlebrow, Impossibly American Revolution Of Donald Trump

America was founded on Enlightenment principles - logic, wisdom, the pursuit of happiness, faith in God, individualism, and the rule of law.  Rousseau and Locke were the mentors of Jefferson, Adams, Hamilton, and Franklin.  America was to be a country in which individual enterprise would be the way to prosperity, but only if practiced within a respect for community, polity, and commonwealth. 

America has had its ups and downs over centuries and these principles have been tested as the country developed from a small, rural, agricultural state to a world industrial power.  Contrary to the Founding Fathers' vision, government grew exponentially and became more than just a caretaker of Constitutional law but an intervener in civic and personal affairs.  

Despite the Civil War which broke the nation apart, it retained a certain moral ethos and a respect for foundational principles.  Jefferson and Hamilton argued over  electoral authority - Jefferson, a populist, believed in the rule of the majority; Hamilton a federalist, concerned about mob rule insisted on an intermediary body of wisemen who would mitigate the naturally selfish and self-interested demands of the majority.  It was a system which respected the rights of the individual to vote his conscience, but which restrained the natural human tendency to favor the near-at-hand. 

Over the decades, this system - wise and reasonable in principle - failed in practice.  The Senate, supposedly a body comprised of men of good judgment, patriotism, and national interest, devolved into the same caterwauling, parochialism as the House of Representatives.  'Government for the people, of the people, and by the people', spoken by Abraham Lincoln in his Gettysburg Address, renewed Americans' belief in participatory, inclusive government; but in the years following Lincoln, this principle became distorted, eroded, and nearly forgotten. 

Government became the prime mover, the interventionist higher power, and the be-all and end-all of constitutional authority.  Fueled by radical Republicanism during Reconstruction, government was a Big Brother who would put the Union back together but only succeeded in driving it further apart.  The punitive sanctions imposed on the South only created resentment, hatred, and a commitment to reestablish slavery. 

 

Government never retreated.  It could not stand by while the giants of industry - Rockefeller, Carnegie, Mellon, J.P. Morgan, and Vanderbilt - built an unimaginable machine of productivity and prosperity.  Government, seeing itself becoming marginalized, supernumerary in the great private sector expansion of the times, felt obliged to put the reins on capitalist expansionism, and in so doing expanded its influence and power. 

Years later FDR and his New Deal further expanded the reach and influence of government.  Roosevelt effectively created the welfare state and institutionalized progressive liberalism.  Although postwar enterprise enabled the private sector to recover ground and become once again the center of American economic might, the following years of the Sixties and beyond reversed the trend and returned the country to government-led monopoly. 

The Biden Administration was perhaps the worst, most exaggerated, most distorted government in history, for it took governmentalism to an extreme degree.  Capitalism was to be limited, restricted, and ultimately dismantled in a long overdue period of social reform.  The individual would be subsumed within the ethos and control of the state which arrogated to itself unabridged power. 

Not only did progressives hope to create a country where all enterprise was filtered through government authority and tested against a received code of behavior, they introduced outlandish, absurd policies and programs that defied logic and history.  Their DEI - Diversity Equity Inclusivity - program which distorted the American belief in equal opportunity and value and in so doing divided the country along racial, ethnic, and gender lines instead of reinforcing unity and universal adherence to a common ethos. 

It was a disaster of monumental proportions.  It was George Orwell, Big Brother, Animal Farm and 1984 all over again. 'Four legs good, two legs bad', shouted the usurpers, the new authoritarian dictators; and the Biden claques did the same thing.  'Heterosexuality bad, homosexuality good...white bad, black good...women good, men bad', they claimed and went about reconfiguring government to accommodate these twisted ideas. 

 

Government was no longer JFK's the best and the brightest, but the most colorful, alternately gendered, small, plus-sized, and defiantly progressive one.  

Then, to the surprise of most observers, Donald Trump won the presidency of the United States, beating an entitled woman who ran on nothing but her sex.  'It is time for a woman to run this country', said Hillary Clinton, 'and this woman will'. 

Not only that after four years of the destructive, divisive, and corrosive Biden Administration, Donald Trump beat another entitled woman this time one who added race to the mix.  'It is time for a black woman to lead this country', Kamala Harris said, 'and I am the black woman to do it'.  

The American public was fed up with the bullying, pandering, hectoring, and intimidation of progressives who condemned them universally - racist, misogynist, homophobic to the core, Harris said, 'but I will right the ship and show Americans a new direction'. 

 

In the endorsement of Donald Trump Americans rejected such anti-American sentiments and the arrogance of political poseurs and elected a President the likes of which the country had never seen.  A big, outsized, personality; an outspoken, rude, profane, but brutally honest politician, he not only proposed a new conservative agenda but intended to reshape American political and social culture.  His first four years were remarkable for their unabashed, unique, and revolutionary governance and in his second, current term he intends to finish the job. 

Trump is the first real American president.  He is middlebrow, unabashedly fond of glitz, glamour, arm candy, yachts, and mansions.  He is a man of Hollywood, Las Vegas, and the mean streets of New York without a drop of Kennedy's Camelot, a White House of Pablo Casals, Robert Frost, and the elegance of haute couture.  He is without a scintilla of Bush I's patrician heritage, Kennebunkport, old English reserve, Chippendale and Townsend, Copley and Remington. 

Trump is brashly Wild West.  He is a gunslinger, a fan of OK corral resolution to disputes, a territorial Westward expansionist, a man who not only believes in the principle of individual enterprise, effort, and influence but embodies it.  His razing of USAID and his march down Independence Avenue not only challenged the bureaucratic rule of Washington but began to eliminate it. 

 

His geopolitical moves against Venezuela, Gaza, and Iran restored American unilateral military options.  His loosening of private industry to drill for energy and rare earths have restored American energy independence and positioned it well for the AI future.  His rejection of the hyperbole of climate change and the transparent designs behind the hoopla to increase the size and influence of government have stopped the progressive tide; and his rollback of the most absurd gender-shifting ideas of progressivism has restored the central, irremediable ethos of America. 

It is for all of these reasons that the Left so hates him - a visceral, absolute, reflexive, universal hatred.  Anything and everything the President does is wrong, objectionable, and anti-democratic.  His turpitude, aggressive totalitarian ambitions, and his total disregard for the poor, the marginalized, and the disadvantaged make him a neo-Hitler, a man as devoid of moral direction as Stalin; a Pol Pot, a horrific example of human nature in the extreme.  Plus the fact, he is so bourgeois