ha!
finally
the truth
This summer, while visiting
Washington, D.C., with my
son, we went inside the Jeff er son
Memorial and read the inscrip-
tions on the walls out loud. One
quote struck me deeply: “I am
not an advocate for frequent
changes in laws and constitu-
tions, but laws and institutions
must go hand in hand with the
progress of the human mind.
As that becomes more devel-
oped, more enlightened, as
new discoveries are made, new
truths discovered and manners
and opinions change, with the
change of circumstances, institu-
tions must advance also to keep
pace with the times. We might
as well require a man to wear
still the coat which fi tted him
when a boy as civilized society to
remain ever under the regimen
of their barbarous ancestors.”
Th is excerpt from a letter by
Th omas Jeff erson resonated with
me immediately. Jeff erson— the
original originalist— would have
been appalled at some of our
recent Supreme Court decisions.
Brad Erickson
Iowa City, Iowa
Jill Lepore replies:
In high school I had a won-
derfully pudgy and eccentric
tenth-grade history teacher. He
taught in a second-story room
with a wide plate-glass window
that looked out at a mountain
in the distance, whose silhouette
resembled a sleeping giant. In the
middle of an especially boring
lesson—the accidental presidency
of John Tyler, say—he’d lumber
across the room and haul himself
up onto the radiator beneath
the window and lie down on it,
exactly lining up his belly with
the mountain’s summit, his head
and feet with its smaller peaks:
he, the giant. He’d sigh, settling
in, and then he’d appear to nod
off . We’d wait, a little nervously.
And then suddenly and in a
whirl of motion you could not
imagine as within the capacity
of so large and old and ungainly
a man, he’d roll off the radiator,
leap to his feet, and cry, “Th e
giant wakes!” And it would be
very thrilling, and we’d all snap
to attention, and he’d move on
and—somehow, somehow—he’d
make the fall of the Whig Party
gripping. In short, I heartily
agree with these readers, and I
hereby off er my assurance that
the whole point of my sleeping-
giant analogy with reference to
Article V of the Constitution,
aside from being a nod to a
beloved teacher, is that somehow,
somehow, and I suspect one day
soon, “the giant will wake” !
https://cdn.theatlantic.com/media/magazine/pdfs/202602.pdf
These recent months have been like being slapped in the face by some arrogant bully. For the immediate present it feels disorienting and shocking. But after taking some breaths, and maybe a refreshing nap, it becomes time for the sleeper to awake.
My body doesn’t want to leave the house anymore.
It loses its taste for food.
It sits in chair by window
Drinks seltzer in evening. Tea these mornings
A student’s first task should be to abandon your idea of your self. To abandon your idea of your self means that you should not be attached to this body.
Even if you have understood the sayings of the ancients and sit all the time like iron or stone, if you remain attached to this body, it is impossible to attain the way of the buddhas and enlightened ancestors, even in myriad eons over a thousand lifetimes.
Dogen (1200-1252)
My body gets ready to disappear.
It’s ok.
It’s how these things go.
How long
Do you
Want to live?
Let me
Ask you —
Where does
Breath go
When it rains?
Breath beholds
Bodies
We have unparalleled firepower, unlimited ammunition, and plenty of time - Watch what happens to these deranged scumbags today. They've been killing innocent people all over the world for 47 years, and now I, as the 47th President of the United States of America, am killing them. What a great honor it is to do so! Thank you for your attention to this matter. (DJT, 3/12/26, social media post)
When his time comes
As it will
We will wonder
How he happened
There will be flowers
Muscle words and grand
Hyperbole — then, quietly,
Things go on, as they do
Let it go, let all of it go
That’s what things do,
They go — we’ll
Never understand why
QLAYAA, Lebanon — The bells rang, their peals obscuring the buzz of the Israeli drone overhead as the casket of Father Pierre al-Rahi arrived at the parish he had served.
Only days before, Al-Rahi had stood in the very churchyard where the crowd assembled Wednesday for his funeral. He had announced that the people of Qlayaa would ignore Israel’s evacuation orders for southern Lebanon and remain.
“He gave us strength to stay rooted here. He kept repeating, ‘We’re staying,’” said Eveline Farah, a 67-year-old resident.
And he had lived up to his word, Farah added. So when an Israeli tank shell struck a house in the village on Monday, Al-Rahi and others rushed to help the elderly couple living there.That was when the second shell struck, wounding Al-Rahi and five others. He bled to death later that day, bringing home to Qlayaa, one of the few Christian-majority areas in Lebanon’s south, the latest conflict between Israel and the Islamic militants of Hezbollah. It’s a war no one here wants.
https://www.latimes.com/world-nation/story/2026-03-11/priests-death-in-lebanon-brings-war-to-community-that-wanted-peace
And The National Catholic Reporter: https://www.ncronline.org/news/lebanese-maronite-catholic-priest-killed-israeli-tank-fire-southern-lebanon
[The next few lines are what a desolate philosopher who sees war as insanity might write.]
The crime is not ignorance. The crime is failure to discern the core of care longing to ascend to the surface of human interaction. We know it is there. It wishes to ascend of itself to the material manifestation of social, ethical, and political recognition.
Human greed obfuscates. The craving for power and recognition obviates care crawling up from obscurity to the light of human practice. Core care like spring seed pushes itself toward manifestation. But the heel and boot of personal aggrandizement and pretense stomps it back down into dark soil. The ugliness of human power ambition cannot abide the longing of the human spirit for peace, justice, and the humanitarian way.
We seem to be stuck in a desolate and deficient psyche and psychology of egoistic accrual of self-determined ideopathy decidedly recondite and obtuse. Not only don’t we know who and what we are, we don’t care to consider the deeper constitution and implication of our raison-d’être.
[I end here. “I” ends “here."]
Perhaps better said: me ends here.
“Here" is all there is.
“Me” absents. Me abstracts. Me takes an erasure to reality-as-it-really-is, rather fabricating a reality that mendacity tries to weave with swollen tongue and cancerous ambition.
“I” doesn’t know anything.
Intentionally pretending to know what is best, to know anything true, and absenting what is here, is the death-knell we hear transposing healing loving silence into the cynical noise of war, deceit, and perversion.
I am ashamed of myself.
It feels I've lived far too long.
Not worn out by fields, nor slain by stones or arrows, bullet or shrapnel. No one in my neighborhood slit my throat. No Circus Maximus chariots impaling my body or wild animals tearing my flesh, no gladiators whipped my back with barbed metal,
OUR ANCESTORS' SHORT LIVES
--by Wislawa Szymborska
(Translated by Stanislaw Baranczak and Clare Cavanagh)
Few of them made it to thirtyOld age was the privilege of rocks and trees.Childhood ended as fast as wolf cubs grow.One had to hurry, to get on with lifebefore the sun went down,before the first snow.Thirteen-year-olds bearing children,four-year-olds stalking birds’ nests in the rushes,leading the hunt at twenty—they aren’t yet, then they are gone.Infinity’s ends fused quickly.Witches chewed charmswith all the teeth of youth intact.A son grew to manhood beneath his father’s eye.Beneath the grandfather’s blank sockets the grandsonwas born.And anyway they didn’t count the years.They counted nets, pods, sheds, and axes.Time, so generous toward any petty star in the sky,offered them a nearly empty handand quickly took it back, as if the effort were too much.One step more, two steps morealong the glittering riverthat sprang from darkness and vanished into darkness.There wasn’t a moment to lose,no deferred questions, no belated revelations,just those experienced in time.Wisdom couldn’t wait for gray hair.It had to see clearly before it saw the lightand to hear every voice before it sounded.Good and evil—they knew little of them, but knew all:when evil triumphs, good goes into hiding;when good is manifest, then evil lies low.Neither can be conqueredor cast off beyond return.Hence, if joy, then with a touch of fear;if despair, then not without some quiet hope.Life, however long, will always be short.Too short for anything to be added.
Maybe good and evil are unknowable.
Still we think or utter prayers to the Great Unknown hovering and weaving in and through our consciousness. We continue to pray for a good life, productive life, a life that has meaning and conscious kindness.
Optimism is possible.
We hide and we seek similarly. We know when we do wrong. We know when we do right. We are not ignorant. Ignorance is a costly excuse pretending we do not understand our behavior.
Even if we cannot fathom there is a God (or there is God) we ought to pray. As a youth I was taught that "Prayer is the lifting of the mind and heart to God."
Even if you subscribe to the awkward notion that "God is not yet," you could understand the thinking that suggests that manifestation is the continual origination of what is coming to be.
This line of thought is generative.
Perhaps we've not understood creation and procreation. If not to enrich existence and enliven reality for the benefit of all life, then why bother?
If there was another line to Szymborska's poem, perhaps:
"So add nothing, let out source and grace."
Radically, at root, there is for us, source and resource, eternal invitation, to resound and rejoice.
it has been cold here
yesterday was warm, hoo-ray!
Enso eats outside
I’ve decided not
to die this week, maybe next
on Saint Joseph’s Day
no irishman should
die on seventeenth, when doors
of heaven are closed
Tonno wrote:
Under evergreens
I walk along a pathway
Now gone to sight
Beneath autumn leaves strewn there
By winter’s mountain winds.
Tonna (1289-1372)
I add:
snow plough piles
up by boat, surprising
dooryard they sink
into themselves --
coffee perks on stove
wfh (1944-20-?)
It seems sun light and warmth return from long vacating jaunt out through space and dark matter turning back to small blue marble earth not a minute too soon where we in northeast thought dread was another wool blanket about be drawn over face dark nights dark mornings cold news.
We welcome this prodigal meandering back into closer sphere encircling our stoic patience to ground where thousands of cracked seed shells and grateful finch cardinal squirrels gray and red grasp edge of winter coming to end in few more days pulling spring threads forward millimeter by millisecond to red farmhouse.
Who are we
In one another’s life
In prison yesterday
Reading Andy Weir’s The Egg
We’re five expressions
Of one person and one dog
Pondering the ontology
Of such a circle theorum
Where two radii of a circle
Form an isosceles triangle
Lines and angles equal
To each other — the dog
Not having any of it
Stretched on rug between us
back at Ragged Mountain,
I remember Merton’s writing:
AT THE CORNER OF FOURTH AND WALNUT IN LOUISVILLE
In Louisville, at the corner of Fourth and Walnut, in the center of the shopping district, I was suddenly overwhelmed with the realization that I loved all those people, that they were mine and I theirs, that we could not be alien to one another even though we were total strangers. It was like waking from a dream of separateness, of spurious self-isolation in a special world, the world of renunciation and supposed holiness. The whole illusion of a separate holy existence is a dream.
I have the immense joy of being man, a member of a race in which God Himself became incarnate. As if the sorrows and stupidities of the human condition could overwhelm me, now I realize what we all are. And if only everybody could realize this! But it cannot be explained. There is no way of telling people that they are all walking around shining like the sun….
Then it was as if I suddenly saw the secret beauty of their hearts, the depths of their hearts where neither sin nor desire nor self-knowledge can reach, the core of their reality, the person that each one is in God’s eyes. If only they could all see themselves as they really are. If only we could see each other that way all the time. There would be no more war, no more hatred, no more cruelty, no more greed….
At the center of our being is a point of nothingness which is untouched by sin and by illusion, a point of pure truth, a point or spark which belongs entirely to God, which is never at our disposal, from which God disposes of our lives, which is inaccessible to the fantasies of our own mind or the brutalities of our own will. This little point of nothingness and of absolute poverty is the pure glory of God in us. It is so to speak His name written in us, as our poverty, as our indigence, as our dependence, as our son-ship. It is like a pure diamond, blazing with the invisible light of heaven. It is in everybody, and if we could see it we would see these billions of points of light coming together in the face and blaze of a sun that would make all the darkness and cruelty of life vanish completely…. I have no program for this seeing. It is only given. But the gate of heaven is everywhere.
(Excerpts from Thomas Merton’s Conjectures of a Guilty Bystander, Part Three, The Night Spirit and the Dawn Air, pp. 156-58, in old Image paperback edition) https://ancientanswers.org/words-to-live-by/thomas-merton/at-the-corner-of-fourth-and-walnut-in-louisville/
I feel, lately, I have nothing to say.
“Negation is a refusal of existence. By means of it a being (or a way of being) is posited, then thrown back to nothingness.” (--p.11, Being and Nothingness, Jean Paul Sartre)
...
Consciousness moreover can not produce a negation except in the form of consciousness of negation. No category can "inhabit" consciousness and reside there in the manner of a thing.
The not, as an abrupt intuitive discovery, appears as consciousness (of being), consciousness of the not.
In a word, if being is everywhere, it is not only Nothingness which, as Bergson maintains, is inconceivable; for negation will never be derived from being. The necessary condition for our saying not is that non-being be a perpetual presence in us and outside of us, that nothingness haunt being. (p.11 ibid)
I dwell in a haunted house of appearances and disappearances.
An hour was lost in the middle of night just gone by.
And the current war?
March 5 - Scores of people have been killed across the Middle East since the U.S. and Israel attacked Iran on February 28, with Gulf states that host U.S. military bases and personnel as well as Lebanon quickly drawn into the conflict.Here are the death tolls from the war as reported by countries as of March 5, the sixth day of the war. Reuters has not independently verified these deaths.IRAN At least 1,230 people killed, including 175 schoolgirls and staff killed in a missile strike on a primary school in Minab in the country's south on the war's first day, according to the non-profit humanitarian group Iranian Red Crescent Society. It was unclear if the overall death toll included Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps military casualties.The Reuters Iran Briefing newsletter keeps you informed with the latest developments and analysis of the Iran war. Sign up here.
ISRAEL Ten civilians killed, including nine people in an Iranian missile strike on Beit Shemesh near Jerusalem on March 1, according to Israel's ambulance service Magen David Adom. The Israel Defense Forces has not reported any military casualties.
LEBANON At least 77 people killed in Israeli strikes, according to Lebanon's health ministry.
BAHRAIN One person killed after fire broke out in Bahrain's Salman Industrial City following missile interception, according to the interior ministry.
KUWAIT Three people, including two Kuwaiti soldiers, killed in Iranian attacks on the country, according to Kuwait's health and foreign ministries.
OMAN One person killed after a projectile hit the Marshall Islands–flagged product tanker MKD VYOM off the coast of Muscat.
UNITED ARAB EMIRATES Three people killed, according to UAE's defense ministry.
U.S. MILITARY Six U.S. service members were killed in a strike on a facility in Kuwait, according to U.S. Central Command.
SYRIA Four people were killed when an Iranian missile struck a building in the southern Syrian city of Sweida on Saturday, state news agency SANA said.
• IRAQ At least 13 people were killed, according to Iraqi health authorities, including 11 militiamen, one army soldier and one civilian, based on health registration figures.Compiled by Jonathan Allen, Jana Choukeir, Menna Alaa El Din, Maayan Lubell, Pesha Magid and Ahmed Rasheed; Editing by Don Durfee, Cynthia Osterman, Aidan Lewis
These are some instances of refusing existence. The minds of two men at censorious play.
As much as my evaluating and calculating mind might urge the non-existence of Netanyahu, Trump, Putin, and Mohammed bin Salman, and the reconstitution and re-existence of Jamal Ahmad Hamza Khashoggi along with the return of the above referenced de-existence of the war-dead, there seems to be no current physical or spiritual mechanism to reliably effectuate such miraculous apparition.
No one has found the lines of communication once operated by Edgar Cayce and Jesus of Nazareth. Our sick and dead remain sick and dead (as far as we know) for now.
And, up in the Russia Ukraine sorrowful fiasco?
AI Overview
Estimates for the Russia-Ukraine war show significantly higher Russian casualties, with sources like CSIS suggesting Russia has around 1.2 million total casualties (killed, wounded, missing) and 275,000-325,000 killed, compared to Ukraine's 500,000-600,000 total casualties and 100,000-140,000 fatalities; this translates roughly to a 2:1 or 2.5:1 casualty ratio favoring Ukraine, though figures vary, and both nations keep precise data secret, with battlefield losses for Russia estimated at roughly double Ukraine's.
Key Casualty Estimates (as of early 2026):
Russia: ~1.2 million total casualties (killed, wounded, missing), with ~325,000 killed.
Ukraine: ~500,000-600,000 total casualties (killed, wounded, missing), with ~100,000-140,000 killed.
Ratio & Context:
Ratio: Russian battlefield losses are often cited as roughly double Ukraine's, around a 2:1 or 2.5:1 ratio.
Scale: Russia's losses are staggering compared to major conflicts since WWII, exceeding its losses in all previous wars combined, according to CSIS.
Data Challenges: Both sides protect their military data, so figures come from intelligence estimates, independent analysis (like CSIS), and open-source investigations.
In essence, while exact numbers are elusive, reports consistently indicate Russia is suffering disproportionately higher casualties in the conflict.
Also see CSIS, Center For Strategic and International Studies, "Russia’s Grinding War in Ukraine”.
I used to think Sartre’s book Being and Nothingness too large and too difficult to navigate, preferring (oddly) Heidegger’s Being and Time for casual reading in my Audible library. I’ve long enjoyed Sartre’s Huis Clos (No Exit) with its “Hell is other people” vibration. Over the years, for those who suspect a cynic’s dépêcher message of misanthropic scorn, I’ve adopted a semantic somersault that posits there are no “other” people and hence no hell.
The n’autre (no other) realization throws all of existence and negation into a new kettle of fish that gurgles on low heat filling kitchen with a new fragrence the ghosts of Sartre and Heidegger take in with their French wine and German beer.
We are killing ourselves. Tell that to Netanyahu, Trump, Putin, and bin Salman. They won’t understand it, They’re counting the money coming through their doors, human life be damned.
They have no consciousness of the not.
And the rest of us? What are we conscious of?
What haunts us?
What haunts you . . .
My friends?