simone
“No one is more arrogant toward women, more aggressive or scornful, than the man who is anxious about his virility.”
– Simone de Beauvoir, The Second Sex.
(Photograph by Henri Cartier-Bresson, 1946).
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sheepfilms
Three Goblin Art
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
almost home
cherry valley forever
Cosimo Galluzzi
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official daine visual archive

JVL
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Not today Justin
hello vonnie
Claire Keane
todays bird
$LAYYYTER
Mike Driver
Cosmic Funnies
Monterey Bay Aquarium
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
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@dreaminginthedeepsouth
simone
“No one is more arrogant toward women, more aggressive or scornful, than the man who is anxious about his virility.”
– Simone de Beauvoir, The Second Sex.
(Photograph by Henri Cartier-Bresson, 1946).
Chen Chi-kwan (陳其寬)
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“During the Age of Glass, everyone believed some part of him or her to be extremely fragile. For some it was a hand, for others a femur, yet others believed it was their noses that were made of glass. The Age of Glass followed the Stone Age as an evolutionary corrective, introducing into human relations a new sense of fragility that fostered compassion. This period lasted a relatively short time in the history of love-about a century-until a doctor named Ignacio da Silva hit on the treatment of inviting people to recline on a couch and giving them a bracing smack on the body part in question, proving to them the truth. The anatomical illusion that had seemed so real slowly disappeared and-like so much we no longer need but can't give up-became vestigial. But from time to time, for reasons that can't always be understood, it surfaces again, suggesting that the Age of Glass, like the Age of Silence, never entirely ended.” ― Nicole Krauss, The History of Love
Anna’s.album :: from my Great-Aunt’s photo albums on flickr
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Let the place of the solitaires Be a place of perpetual undulation. Whether it be in mid-sea On the dark, green water-wheel, Or on the beaches, There must be no cessation Of motion, or of the noise of motion, The renewal of noise And manifold continuation; And, most, of the motion of thought And its restless iteration, In the place of the solitaires, Which is to be a place of perpetual undulation. ~ Wallace Stevens
you are the beholder
“People often say that ‘beauty is in the eye of the beholder,’ and I say that the most liberating thing about beauty is realizing that you are the beholder. This empowers us to find beauty in places where others have not dared to look, including inside ourselves.”
-Salma Hayek
風を綯う日々-ねじ曲げられるもの The Days of Twining Wind-Things can be bent ed/50 59.5 x 45.0cm 2005年 林孝彦 Takahiko Hayashi copperplate print with chine collé( etching)
* * * *
“Something I heard an archaeologist say in Oslo about deep time returns to me: Time isn’t deep, it is always already all around us. The past ghosts us, lies all about us less as layers, more as drift. […] The problem is not that things become buried deep in strata – but that they endure, outlive us, and come back at us with a force we didn’t realise they had. […] We all carry trace fossils within us – the marks that the dead and the missed leave behind. Handwriting on an envelope; the wear on a wooden step left by footfall; the memory of a familiar gesture by someone gone, repeated so often it has worn its own groove in both air and mind: these are trace fossils too. Sometimes, in fact, all that is left behind by loss is trace – and sometimes empty volume can be easier to hold in the heart than presence itself.”
— Robert Macfarlane, Underland: A Deep Time Journey
[exhaled-spirals]
soli :: @solisolsoli :: "She does not miss you" by Pragati Sahu
* * *
‘I’m coming back to you, the real world, crowded, dark, and full of fate— '
-Wisława Szymborska, from Map: Collected and Last Poems (via luthienne) The Merry Wanderers (2013) by Andrea Kowch, US painter
Christopher Majka
How to summarize the Iran fiasco? Donald Trump has created a colossal mess that effects not only the US and Iran but has repercussions for the entire world. He has no idea how to clean it up and all the possible options are equally unpalatable.
How confused and unnecessary this debacle is is highlighted by this: When asked if the US might try and seize by force the Iranian's stockpile of enriched uranium, Trump said that that was unnecessary because the material is now buried so far underground (from the American bombing in June 2025) that the Iranians don't have the means necessary to excavate it. If so, this completely undermines Trump's pretext for starting the war with Iran in February 2026 because there was an "imminent threat" that Iran was going to develop a nuclear weapon (!)
This is American politics in the era of Trump: complete self-contradictory madness delivered by a narcissistic lunatic who can't even keep his pretexts straight. And he is supported by a ship of fools known as the Republican Party who pay no heed to his greed, corruption, ineptitude, and dementia. As they say, you couldn't make this up. ~ Christopher Majka
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"Just two weeks ago, opening the Great American State Fair, President Trump triumphantly declared: “For the first time in 3,000 years, we are going to have peace in the Middle East.”
It was typical bravado for Mr. Trump. But the “peace” he was celebrating — the cease-fire with Iran that on Wednesday he declared “over” after less than a month — was already beginning to unravel. The result was perhaps predictable for a 14-paragraph memorandum of understanding that skirted major issues and was hastily assembled so Mr. Trump could declare he had reached a deal, any deal.
Now Mr. Trump appears to be confronting the consequences of his haste, and of his assumption, born of his time in the real estate business, that his adversary would prize economic benefits over the revolutionary ideology that has driven its politics since the 1979 Iranian revolution. That has left him facing a range of unpalatable options amid seemingly intractable sticking points over the fate of Iran’s nuclear program — to say nothing of its missile program, its support for terrorist groups and its repression of its own people.
At the NATO summit in Ankara, Turkey, on Wednesday after the two sides had exchanged strikes, he threatened major new combat operations. Those included seizing a key Iranian oil processing island and attacking the country’s infrastructure and desalination plants, which experts have said could constitute a war crime. (Mr. Trump did say he was most hesitant to hit the desalination facilities.)
But Mr. Trump has made such threats without following through before, and he added on Wednesday that he did not anticipate a return to full-scale war. Such a move has little domestic support, and some of Mr. Trump’s Republican allies fear the economic and political consequences less than four months before the midterm elections. No one is more aware of that calendar, or Mr. Trump’s hesitation to repeat the experience of the spring, than the Iranian leadership.
The president could instead reimpose the American blockade of Iranian ports, an attempt to cut off the country’s economic lifeline. But that would require a continued, intense American presence in the region, and while Mr. Trump contended in April that it would lead to Iranian economic collapse, his earlier imposition of it did not.
Or he could elect to live in a world of neither war nor peace, an era of episodic skirmishes in the Persian Gulf, punctuated by periodic negotiations, with traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, a key oil-shipping route, greatly reduced from the 130 or so ships that passed through each day before the war. The energy markets would most likely adjust; to some degree they already have.
But for a president who promised a quick, cost-free confrontation with an old adversary — “four to six weeks” was the White House prediction in the opening weeks — an ongoing conflict would amount to near-total failure on the mission he initially set out upon. And the price would be staggering: The Pentagon has already asked Congress for about $70 billion to cover the early operations around Iran, and the cost rises every week.
“The problem is that all the options — endure, escalate or agree — are unattractive in different ways,” Richard Fontaine, the chief executive of the Center for a New American Security and a former aide to Senator John McCain, said on Wednesday. “The likeliest outcome is a continuing series of low-level, tit-for-tat attacks, followed by frantic diplomacy by mediators, the emergence of a new and fragile cease-fire, and then probably another round of strikes.
Mr. Fontaine added: “It will be a long oscillation between cold war and low-level hot war.”
Many of the problems Mr. Trump is facing today were exacerbated by the cease-fire deal itself. It left unresolved, for a later negotiation that Mr. Trump now says he has little interest in pursuing, the fate of Iran’s stockpile of near-bomb-grade nuclear fuel, the most prominent among the administration’s shifting reasons for attacking Iran on Feb. 28.
The agreement appeared to hand Iran at least some control over passage through the Strait of Hormuz, the superweapon that Tehran, and specifically the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps, has skillfully manipulated to drive up oil prices, and now has used to justify attacks on tankers and cargo ships not hewing to its new rules.
“What we’re seeing now is Iran, and more specifically the I.R.G.C., trying to exert control over the strait and declaring that this control is their sovereign right,” said Kevin Donegan, a retired Navy vice admiral who served as a Navy commander in the Middle East. “That’s the main card they have to play, and as a result we can expect they will continue to try to disrupt any ship traffic that uses routes different from the ones they have published.”
The deal was silent on Iran’s missile arsenal, the key issue for Israel. And it depended on a cease-fire in Lebanon, though the parties to that conflict, Israel and Hezbollah, were not signatories of the agreement. And it set an unrealistic deadline, 60 days, to deal diplomatically with those and other issues that months of active combat had failed to resolve.
There are, of course, many more turns ahead in this drama. Mr. Trump threatened again on Wednesday to try to seize Kharg Island, where giant tankers collect Iran’s oil and head to world markets. He may seek to seize the 60 percent enriched nuclear material deep underground at Isfahan, a mission for which Special Operations forces have trained extensively, though he dismissed the need for it on Wednesday.
“We’ve already got the nuclear material, because it’s so far underground,” he said, noting that the Iranians do not have the heavy equipment needed to unearth it.
If Mr. Trump is right about that, and many nuclear experts agree that the material would be enormously difficult to recover, it raises a fundamental question: If the nuclear fuel was successfully buried in the June 2025 American bombing of three major nuclear sites, why did he go to war to begin with? His statement on Wednesday, a repeat of comments he has made several times in recent months, undercuts the argument he made in the days after the initial attack in February that there was an “imminent” threat.
That initial justification has been overtaken by subsequent contradictions. Mr. Trump has periodically praised the new Iranian leadership, and even its new supreme leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, the son of the slain ayatollah, as more “reasonable.” He has said many times that, unlike their predecessors, the new leaders would open up the strait and dilute the nuclear stockpile because it will be in their economic interest.
Vice President JD Vance sounded exactly that note last month, when he was signing the memorandum of understanding in Switzerland.
“The coolest thing about the progress we’ve made over the last few weeks is that you see people within the Iranian system, senior leadership, even I.R.G.C. officials say, ‘You know what, we may have some animosity, we may have some mistrust, but we recognize the way that we’ve done business with the United States for 47 years is a mistake,’” he said.
On Wednesday, Mr. Trump had a different word for those leaders: “scum.”
“They are sick people. They’re led by sick people, and they’re vicious, violent people,” he said, adding: “As far as I’m concerned, it’s just a waste of time dealing with them.”
Eric Schmitt contributed reporting.
David E. Sanger covers the Trump administration and a range of national security issues. He has been a New York Times journalist for more than four decades and has written four books on foreign policy and national security challenges.
Ricoh Gr 3 Italy
Urban Street Photography
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“All my life I had been looking for something, and everywhere I turned someone tried to tell me what it was. I accepted their answers, though they were often in contradiction and even self-contradictory. I was naïve. I was looking for myself and asking everyone except myself questions which I, and only I, could answer. My problem was that I always tried to go in everyone’s way but my own. What and how much had I lost by trying to do only what was expected of me instead of what I myself had wished to do?” - Ralph Ellison, Invisible Man
Jim Palmer
Eyes and Eggs, 1983, Jean-Michel Basquiat :: Medium: pencil,paper,cotton
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"Even if you're going to live three thousand more years, or ten times that, remember: you cannot lose another life than the one you're living now, or live another one than the one you're losing. The longest amounts to the same as the shortest. The present is the same for everyone; its loss is the same for everyone; and it should be clear that a brief instant is all that is lost. For you can't lose either the past or the future; how could you lose what you don't have?"
- Marcus Aurelius Meditations
brain pickings [whiskey river]
New York City Images: 1850-1980
Ruben Iglesias
Happy 250, America! (Koni Nordmann - Workman Tony Soraci Kissing Miss Liberty During Her Restoration, NYC, 1984.)
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“You begin to have nostalgia for disappointment,because at least that means you had expectations” ― Sarah Kendzior, The View From Flyover Country: Essays by Sarah Kendzior
+
“The election of the first anti-American president was caused neither by electoral whim nor by the good fortune of a charismatic madman. His rise was made possible by a coterie of criminals who do not want to be punished but delight in being caught. Flaunting their criminal impunity is part of the thrill. Their belief that they would never be held accountable is logical since they had never faced serious consequences despite spending decades committing illegal acts. In fact, they had reaped ample rewards. Now, finally, they had the greatest reward of all: the power to rewrite law itself.” ― Sarah Kendzior, Hiding in Plain Sight: The Invention of Donald Trump and the Erosion of America
“But there is a difference between expecting an American autocracy and accepting it, and I refuse to accept it. Every loss we endure is a reminder of the gifts we still hold, and of our obligation to fight for a better future for the next generation” ― Sarah Kendzior, Hiding in Plain Sight: The Invention of Donald Trump and the Erosion of America
It is scary how quickly we stop seeing people. Labels become so loud that they drown out the ordinary, sacred details of a human life. A wife making her husband's lunch after thirty years of marriage. A father leaving before dawn to go to work. Three sons who learned perseverance because they watched it every day at their own kitchen table.
How is it that we've become comfortable talking about entire groups of people without ever wondering who they tuck into bed, who they're grieving, or what dreams carried them here in the first place? That should shame us. It should make us stop and ask what we've allowed to happen to our own hearts.
This essay was written by conservative, Bill Kristol. (He and I disagree about many things but his post reaches beneath politics and reminds me what decency sounds like.) :
"Lorenzo Salgado Araujo, killed by agents of our government while driving to work early Tuesday morning in Houston, was fond of telling his three sons, “Que siempre le echemos ganas en esta vida.” The Washington Post offers this rough translation: Give it your all, and never give up.
This is a Mexican proverb. But who hasn’t heard similar sentiments expressed by other immigrants from other places at other times and in other languages? We native-born Americans often have it relatively easy. We can be quick to grumble when the going gets tough. It’s often our immigrants who remind us that the better response to life’s challenges is unstinting effort and determined perseverance.
And so it’s often immigrants who remind us about the importance of work.
Ronaldo Salgado, Lorenzo’s eldest son, emphasized yesterday that his father was “a man who understood that good things come to those who put in hard work.”
It’s often immigrants who remind us about family.
Araujo’s son said yesterday that his late father was “a family man” and that yesterday was “the first day without him for all of us, and it is heartbreaking to know that my mom did not make lunch for my dad before going to work—the first time in their 30+ year marriage.” Araujo worked hard throughout his three decades in the United States so that he could support his family and raise their three sons. “He wanted nothing else in life but to provide for his wife and see his sons become great people,” Ronaldo said.
And it’s often from immigrants that we learn about generosity.
According to the Post, Araujo was known as someone whose door you could knock on if you were looking for work, and he would help you. “He deserved to live a quiet life as Lorenzo Salgado Araujo, a husband, father and a job creator for dozens of men who also wanted the American Dream,” Ronaldo Salgado said.
And it’s from immigrants that we often are reminded about the importance of education.
Araujo and his wife had little formal education, but were determined that their three sons would go to college. Ronaldo told The Bulwark’s Adrian Carrasquillo that his father would remind him and his brothers “that we needed to do well in school so we don’t end up like him in the sun.” As Adrian reported, “Ronaldo, 29, graduated from the University of Houston; Lorenzo Jr., 27, from Tufts University; and their youngest brother is in college now.”
It is these young men who are calling for a full and honest investigation into why a peaceful and law-abiding man was killed while driving to work by agents of our government. It is they who are seeking the truth about what happened and asking the public to come forward with any new video or images that might shed light on their father’s death. It is they who are trying to hold our government to American standards of responsiveness and accountability and decency.
And it is our government that is stonewalling and covering up, refusing so far to provide any information at all about what happened Tuesday morning in Houston. It is our government that appears to be blocking independent investigations by the Justice Department or by local authorities. But not to worry: The Department of Homeland Security inspector general, we are assured, will add this case to the more than 600 complaints of misconduct by DHS employees that his office is now investigating.
We should be grateful that Ronaldo Salgado Araujo came to live here in the United States, to build houses for Americans, and to raise three American sons. Araujo was not yet an American citizen, though he had in the last eighteen months filled out paperwork and provided documentation, references, and fingerprints in an effort to regularize his immigration status. But he had lived as an American, de facto if not de jure, for the last thirty-five years. As his son said, he had sought to live the American Dream and to help others to do so.
His son also remarked, “My father was always a strong man and never wanted us to know if he was in pain. He never complained.”
Our current government, by contrast, is led by weak men who constantly complain, and who benefit from exploiting other Americans’ weaknesses and anxieties. Our current leaders talk endlessly about American exceptionalism, while turning us into an unexceptional country presided over by thuggish apparatchiks.
I dare say Ronald Salgado Araujo was a better American than they are."
--William Kristol
(Via Michelle Shindell)
July 10, 2026
Events on Thursday illustrate why each day of the 2026 midterm campaign will be filled with peril for Republicans who have tied their fortunes to a rapidly declining megalomaniac. We should never hope for bad news for the president because such news invariably means suffering or injury for the American people. But we must also recognize that every outrageous act by Trump and his sycophants causes more Americans to walk away from Trump and all that he represents.
Trump cobbled together a paper-thin winning coalition in 2024 by convincing Americans that he would quickly deport the “worst of the worst” illegal immigrants in the US; instead, his armed thugs are literally assassinating and kidnapping law-abiding, productive, long-term residents of the US striving to comply with complex immigration rules. And his promise to keep America out of “forever wars” has turned into a “forever war” of his own making that has emboldened a terrorist state and inflicted financial hardship on the American people.
But there is more. As he inflicts pain on the American people, he is on a narcissistic binge of naming existing landmarks and monuments after himself while he hints that he will construct new monuments to himself by defacing the historical and cultural landscapes that belong to all Americans.
Some people are attracted to preening bullies like Trump, but most have an instinctual dislike for blowhards who make everything about themselves and their insatiable egos.
We can’t rely on Trump to defeat Republicans during the midterms. That task is ours. But we should recognize that Trump provides new fodder for attacking Republicans and presenting Democratic values and ideas in a positive light. As campaign consultants and party insiders snipe at one another over Graham Platner, we must remember that those family disputes pale in comparison to the stories generated by Trump and his thugs every day of the week.
The first story in today’s news is a tragic one that will unfold over the coming weeks as ICE struggles in vain to conceal the truth about another killing of an innocent American resident.
ICE agents kill a motorist in an apparent case of mistaken identity.
ICE agents in Houston shot and killed the driver of a van with three people inside. The agents were allegedly laboring under the mistaken belief that the person they were searching for was in the van. He was not. See The Guardian, Man killed by ICE agents not intended target of immigration arrest, DHS says.
Like other unprovoked ICE and Border Patrol shootings, the officers claim that the victim “weaponized their vehicle” by trying to run into or over the ICE agents. Per the Guardian,
It is a defense the agency has used in other high-profile incidents, including when Renee Good was killed in Minneapolis and in the shooting of two Venezuelan men in Oregon earlier this year. Video evidence contradicted both of these descriptions.
Although the facts are still developing, video obtained by Houston television stations appears to show an unmarked ICE vehicle pursuing the victim’s van, driving into the oncoming lane through a construction zone, and cutting off the van. See New video angles emerge of ICE pursuit through Houston neighborhood before shooting | kvue.com. (“Another video from a nearby medical clinic shows the ICE SUV, which had no visible emergency lights, appearing to cut off the van.”)
Although DHS says it is investigating the matter, similar claims in Minneapolis were used to shut down state investigations into the killings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti. DHS has already disclosed that the agents were not wearing body cameras, and ICE is detaining the only witnesses to the killing. These troubling developments suggest that DHS and ICE are attempting to suppress bad news or get ahead of it. Either way, Trump has unleashed a lawless, untrained, deadly force that is killing Americans and residents who are productive, law-abiding members of society.
Late update: The Washington Post received written statements from passengers in the victim’s van that dispute ICE’s version of events. See WaPo, Migrants who saw man killed by ICE in Houston say he did not ram officers. (Gift article, accessible to all.)
Per WaPo,
The three men who were arrested during an immigration operation that resulted in the fatal shooting of Lorenzo Salgado Araujo said a federal officer fired at them almost immediately after exiting his vehicle and that at no point did the driver veer in his direction. The migrants are disputing key elements of the Department of Homeland Security’s account of what transpired during a chaotic traffic stop in a predominantly Mexican American neighborhood in Houston on Tuesday. They spoke from immigration detention with attorney Hugo Balderas-Ibarra, who shared their written and oral accounts with The Washington Post. DHS released a statement hours after the deadly shooting saying that Salgado Araujo had rammed an Immigration and Customs Enforcement vehicle and “weaponized” his white work van “in an attempt to run over an ICE law enforcement officer.” “That is a lie,” wrote Jose Trinidad Rojas, 51, in a handwritten statement. “It is impossible for them to say that they were going to get run over … there were no officers in front of or behind the vehicle. They were on the sides.”
As in Minneapolis, ICE and Border Patrol officers sparked national outrage that forced Trump to back down and fire key members of his cabinet and other senior officials. It appears that we may be headed for another showdown with the administration. As in Minnesota, we will defeat the Trump administration, and the battle itself will give Democrats additional reason to vote like our democracy depends on the outcome of the midterms. Because it does.
War resumes in Iran.
The second pillar of Trump’s campaign was that he would refrain from engaging in “forever wars,” which is exactly what his war on Iran is beginning to look like. Over the last five days, the hostilities between the US and Iran have been indistinguishable from a hot war. See NYTimes, As U.S. Steps Up Attacks on Iran, Prospect of All-Out War Rises. (Gift article, accessible to all.)
Per the Times,
The U.S. military says it sharply increased its attacks on Iran this week, as both countries extended a cycle of hostilities that has all but shattered a truce intended to pave the way to a long-term peace deal. American military officials say they hit about 170 targets in Iran during strikes on Tuesday and Wednesday, 15 times the number struck during a previous round of attacks in late June.
Trump has no plan for exiting the war against Iran. The US bombed Iran for nearly a month and failed to beat the nation’s leaders into submission. The notion that additional sporadic bombing will accomplish what a months-long air campaign could not achieve is ridiculous.
Trump’s canary-in-the-coal mine, Joe Rogan, said on Thursday,
We might’ve f---ed it up by going to Iran. . . . This war is not something anybody that’s conservative wanted. Most people don’t want it, except supporters of Israel. They’re the only people that seem to be thinking it’s a good idea in this country. Most people are horrified by the idea, because Trump was elected [and] one of the pillars that he stood for, apparently, was that he doesn’t want any more wars.
See The Hill, Joe Rogan criticizes Donald Trump’s Iran war stance: ‘Might’ve f‑‑‑ed it up’.
When Joe Rogan turns on Trump, millions of young white men take notice. Trump’s net favorability ratings are already at historic lows. The resumption of fighting and the increase in gasoline prices that will inevitably follow will make it more difficult for Republicans in the midterms—because they have enabled and protected Trump’s highly umpopular war of choice against Iran.
Concluding Thoughts
I have included a new astrophotography image in today’s newsletter, the first in many months. See Daily Dose of Perspective. I did so for two reasons: I gave a talk at the Westwood Village Rotary Club on Thursday about my astrophotography (at the invitation of a reader, Bob S.) My talk reminded me of all the reasons that contemplating our place in the universe is a healthy and helpful practice.
More importantly, I am beginning to receive emails from readers who are once again turning away from the news. For some, it is the cumulative disillusionment of the treatment of Epstein, and the campaigns of Graham Platner, and Eric Swallwell. For others, it is the Supreme Court. One reader today said that the conspiracy to hide Mitch McConnell’s health status (or even his life or death status) was too much. She said she would continue to support the newsletter with a paid subscription but would stop listening to the daily audio and instead listen to books on tape because she just couldn’t take any more “fiction being paraded as news.”
I began publishing the astronomy photos during the very difficult and emotional debate over whether Joe Biden should step out of the 2024 presidential race. I published a handful of photos to help me remain calm during that period, and readers encouraged me to continue the practice. I published astronomy photos until I began publishing photos of daily protests from across the country, which I believe the mainstream media is ignoring. Candidly, I didn’t have the time to do the astrophotography and curate and publish the protest photos. The latter displaced the former.
But I hear the same angst and pain now that I heard in 2024. I believe that perspective is one of the most critical components to maintaining a healthy, positive attitude during difficult times. So, I will return to my practice of publishing daily photos of my astronomy. But the time crunch remains, so I will recycle photos from the last 18 months, interspersed with new photos taken on a current basis—as is the case with the photo of the galaxy known as Messier 101, included below.
I raise this point not to discuss my photos or time constraints. I raise this issue to say that if you feel the last two months have been particularly hard emotionally, you are not alone. It is also important to say that if you need a break, take it! It is far more important for you to be part of the long-term renewal of America than for you to exhaust yourself with continued resistance today.
There are literally tens of millions of Americans who are engaged in this battle. No single person carries the fate of our nation on their shoulders, so do not make yourself feel guilty over how much effort you can contribute at any given moment. To paraphrase Joe Biden’s speech at Union Station in November 2022, “We need just enough of us acting for all of us to preserve democracy.”
We are going to make it through the challenging period. Do what you can, help when you can, and trust that someone will step in to fill the breach when you need a breather. And try to keep things in perspective. Tonight, in my backyard in Los Angeles, my telescope collected photons that began their journey from M101 more than 21 million years ago—long before humans (or even apes) existed. That’s the light you see when you look up at the night sky. So, yes, the next two years will be rough, but we will ultimately prevail. If it takes two years—or three or four or six, that’s okay.
[Robert B. Hubbell newsletter]
LETTERS FROM AN AMERICAN
July 9, 2026
Heather Cox Richardson
Jul 10, 2026
Today marks the anniversary of a dramatic reworking of the U.S. constitutional order.
On July 9, 1868, Americans changed the U.S. Constitution for the fourteenth time, adapting our foundational document to construct a new nation that brought the principles of the Declaration of Independence to life. They required the federal government to protect the equal rights of all American men.
In 1865 the Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution had prohibited slavery on the basis of race, but it did not prevent the establishment of a system in which Black Americans continued to be unequal. Backed by President Andrew Johnson, who had taken over the presidency after actor John Wilkes Booth murdered President Abraham Lincoln, white southern Democrats had done their best to push their Black neighbors back into subservience. So long as southern states had abolished enslavement, repudiated Confederate debts, and nullified the ordinances of secession, Johnson was happy to readmit them to full standing in the Union, still led by the very men who had organized the Confederacy and made war on the United States.
Northern Republican lawmakers refused to accept this caricature of freedom. There was no way they were going to rebuild southern society on the same blueprint as existed before the Civil War, especially since the upcoming 1870 census would count Black Americans as whole persons for the first time in the nation’s history, giving southern states more power in Congress and the Electoral College after the war than they had had before it. Having just fought a war to destroy the South’s ideology, they were not going to let it regrow in peacetime.
Congress rejected Johnson’s plan for Reconstruction.
But then congressmen had to come up with their own. After months of hearings and debate, they proposed amending the Constitution to settle the outstanding questions of the war. Chief among these was how to protect the rights of Black Americans in states where they could neither vote nor testify in court or sit on a jury to protect their own interests.
Congress’s solution was the Fourteenth Amendment.
It took on the infamous 1857 Dred Scott v. Sandford decision declaring that Black men “are not included, and were not intended to be included, under the word ‘citizens’ in the Constitution, and can therefore claim none of the rights and privileges which that instrument provides for and secures to citizens.”
The Fourteenth Amendment provides that “[a]ll persons born or naturalized in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.”
The amendment also addressed the Dred Scott decision in another profound way. In 1857, southerners and Democrats who were adamantly opposed to federal power controlled the Supreme Court. They backed states’ rights. So the Dred Scott decision did more than read Black Americans out of our history: it dramatically circumscribed Congress’s power.
The Dred Scott decision declared that democracy was created at the state level, by those people in a state who were allowed to vote. In 1857 this meant white men, almost exclusively. If those people voted to do something widely unpopular—like adopting human enslavement, for example—they had the right to do so. People like Abraham Lincoln pointed out that such domination by states would eventually mean that an unpopular minority could take over the national government, forcing their ideas on everyone else, but defenders of states’ rights stood firm.
The Fourteenth Amendment overturned that idea, recognizing the federal government’s power to protect individuals even if their state legislatures passed discriminatory laws. “No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws,” it said. And it went on to say that “Congress shall have power to enforce, by appropriate legislation, the provisions of this article.”
The principles behind the Fourteenth Amendment were behind the 1870 creation of the Department of Justice, whose first job was to bring down Ku Klux Klan terrorists in the South.
Those same principles took on profound national significance in the post–World War II era, when the Supreme Court began to use the equal protection clause and the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment aggressively to apply the protections in the Bill of Rights to the states.
The civil rights decisions of the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s, including the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision outlawing segregation in public schools, come from this doctrine. Under it, the federal government took up the mantle of protecting the rights of individual Americans in the states from the whims of state legislatures.
Opponents of these new civil rights protections quickly began to object that such decisions were “legislating from the bench,” rather than permitting state legislatures to make their own laws. They began to call for “originalism,” the idea that the Constitution should be interpreted only as the Framers had intended when they wrote it, an argument that focused on the creation of law at the state level. Famously, in 1987, President Ronald Reagan nominated Robert Bork, an originalist who had called for the rollback of the Supreme Court’s civil rights decisions, for a seat on that court.
Reacting to that nomination, Senator Ted Kennedy (D-MA) recognized the importance of the Fourteenth Amendment to equality: “Robert Bork’s America is a land in which women would be forced into back-alley abortions, Blacks would sit at segregated lunch counters, rogue police could break down citizens’ doors in midnight raids, schoolchildren could not be taught about evolution, writers and artists could be censored at the whim of the Government, and the doors of the Federal courts would be shut on the fingers of millions of citizens for whom the judiciary is—and is often the only—protector of the individual rights that are the heart of our democracy….”
At the time, Bork’s supporters expressed outrage at what they insisted was Kennedy’s smear campaign, for surely the right-wing attack on the protections of the Fourteenth Amendment would never so completely undermine modern society.
And yet in 2026, here we are.
LETTERS FROM AN AMERICAN
HEATHER COX RICHARDSON
“I don’t want my children to chase American illusions marketed as American dreams, but I want them to understand why things went wrong, to appreciate everyday miracles and not think them small, to have reverence for the good that endures and work to protect it, a republic if you can keep it, a family that would remain American whether or not America remains. We would love America out of defiance, and defy America out of love.”
― Sarah Kendzior, The Last American Road Trip: A Memoir
"What Trump offers is an easy escape from the pain. To every complex problem, he promises a simple solution. He can bring jobs back simply by punishing offshoring companies into submission. As he told a New Hampshire crowd—folks all too familiar with the opioid scourge—he can cure the addiction epidemic by building a Mexican wall and keeping the cartels out. He will spare the United States from humiliation and military defeat with indiscriminate bombing. It doesn’t matter that no credible military leader has endorsed his plan. He never offers details for how these plans will work, because he can’t. Trump’s promises are the needle in America’s collective vein.
The great tragedy is that many of the problems Trump identifies are real, and so many of the hurts he exploits demand serious thought and measured action—from governments, yes, but also from community leaders and individuals. Yet so long as people rely on that quick high, so long as wolves point their fingers at everyone but themselves, the nation delays a necessary reckoning. There is no self-reflection in the midst of a false euphoria. Trump is cultural heroin. He makes some feel better for a bit. But he cannot fix what ails them, and one day they’ll realize it."
[From the Atlantic article 2016 "Opiod of the Masses" :: by J.D.Vance of course]
To many, Donald Trump feels good, but he can’t fix America’s growing social and cultural crisis, and the eventual comedown will be harsh.
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Image: Alchemy - Mercury and sulfur personified / Unknown artist / Wikimedia Commons (from Wellcome Collection) / Public domain.
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The Great Work
“There is no absolute distinction between the alchemist and nature, between the inner and outer worlds. All are part of one creative, evolutionary process. Because of this alchemy has always possessed a spiritual dimension, since it is not possible to participate in the Great Work of Nature without experiencing a self-transformation. In order for the work to be successful, total participation is required. Alchemy is a comprehensive science of the cosmos in which both humanity and the larger universe are implicated.”
~ David Fideler, Restoring the Soul of the World: Our Living Bond with Nature’s Intelligence.
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