Don't wait to "feel like writing." Write when you have the opportunity to write. Never wait to be in the mood. Start writing and you'll get in the mood.
— Michael Wade, from "The Not-So-Odd Habits of Writers" (Substack, 2025)

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Don't wait to "feel like writing." Write when you have the opportunity to write. Never wait to be in the mood. Start writing and you'll get in the mood.
— Michael Wade, from "The Not-So-Odd Habits of Writers" (Substack, 2025)
I hope you’re reading Michael Wade on Substack.
The story of America is never-ending but these books are a good start.
What are you reading?
Old School
Michael Wade is one of my mandatory, daily reads. I encourage you to take a few minutes to read this short article Michael published a few days ago. These are sound recomendations for a successful future. Is It Time for Old School? If there was a way to do so, I would “write” this blog with one of my fountain pens.
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Loose labeling is a sign of loose thinking.
By: Michael Wade
Published: Aug 2, 2025
The terms “Nazi” and “Fascist” are so loosely used these days they are beginning to mean “someone I don’t like.” You’re far less likely to hear “Communist” as a slur. The fact that it has not attained the same taint as the others is worthy of study.
A few years after the end of the Cold War, former Secretary of State Alexander Haig and a friend were dining at a packed Moscow in-spot. When the friend joked that the restaurant was so opulent that they could have been in Beverly Hills, Haig responded, “This place has fewer Communists.”
And that brings me to a proposal.
At a time when there is a serious anti-Semitism problem on university campuses and a shocking number of people root for Hamas, our high schools and colleges need to devote more time and attention to what I’d call Totalitarian Studies. The Holocaust and the evil practices of Hitler’s regime obviously deserve more attention, but so does the wretched story of the communist countries.
Why? Because the horrific history of those regimes has often been given a pass.
Consider the description of Communism given by Britannica Kids, a publication of the Encyclopedia Britannica. Communism is framed as a rather benign system for sharing burdens and preventing poverty.
Its lengthy record of slaughter and oppression is neatly scrubbed.
Here’s an excerpt: “After World War II ended in 1945, the Soviet Union encouraged many countries in eastern Europe to set up Communist governments.”
Encouraged?
Think of all that is cloaked behind that mild word: occupation by the Red Army, oppression by the Soviet secret police, confiscation of property, the death of free speech, and the imprisonment and murder of political dissidents.
It’s hard to believe that blunder was done inadvertently.
“Soft on Communism” used to be a political description. Unfortunately, in many cases, it was an apt one. When President Reagan called the Soviet Union an “evil empire”, he received a sizable amount of criticism for his candor.
But he was right on target. The Soviet Union was evil, and it was an empire. And it killed millions of people. Combine the Soviet figures with the butchery of the Communist Chinese government and Communism easily holds the world record for its slaughter and oppression of human beings.
The fact that calling someone a Communist does not appear to have the same punch as its Nazi and Fascist counterparts makes one wonder about the amount and quality of the time given in grade and high schools to examining the real record of the Communist regimes.
I’m sure that the students are still reading George Orwell’s Animal Farm and Nineteen Eighty-Four, but are they given the roots of those novels?
Are they familiar with the purges depicted in Darkness at Noon by Arthur Koestler? Do they know about The Gulag Archipelago revealed in the book of that name by Alexander Solzhenitsyn or his One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich? Have any of them or their teachers ever read Coming Out of the Ice by Victor Herman? Have they read Against All Hope: A Memoir of Life in Castro’s Gulag by Armando Valladares? Is there any mention of Life and Death in Shanghai by Nien Cheng?
Are they aware of the Soviet regime’s cold-blooded murder of the former Russian Czar, his wife, and their children while they were in Soviet captivity?
Do they know about the intentional famine that killed millions in Ukraine? Do they know what the Pol Pot regime did in Cambodia? Are they aware of what happened during the cultural revolution in China? [Do they even know that a totalitarian regime is in power in China?]
Some films, such as The Lives of Others, The Killing Fields, and Mr. Jones could be helpful teaching tools just as Schindler’s List and the extraordinary documentary, Shoah, should be part of Holocaust education.
James Clavell’s book and film The Children’s Story came out during the Cold War, but both are still timely.
Classes in Totalitarian Studies could explore the mindsets of ruthless totalitarian regimes and how monstrous things have been done by idealistic people striving to create and impose a utopia.
Contrasting the American Revolution with what happened after the revolutions in France, Russia, China, and Iran would provide powerful contrasts.
If that seems like a lot of work, here’s some good news: After a single classroom hour, the students would be far ahead of the editors of Britannica Kids.
==
These omissions aren't accidental or an oversight.
“Every record has been destroyed or falsified, every book has been re-written, every picture has been repainted, every statue and street and building has been re-named, every date has been altered. And that process is continuing day by day and minute by minute. History has stopped. Nothing exists except an endless present in which the Party is always right.” – George Orwell, "Ninteen Eighty-Four"
The aristocracy who control education understand that If people know too much about the reality of the previous revolutions, they'll be less likely to sign up for their next one.
If I Die tonight
If I should die tonight in this war of materialism, capitalism, and empire building, and you find my body lying on the cold asphalt in a pool of blood. Understand I attempted my best. I was fighting to stay in sunlight, fighting to be on a freedom ride. I know I could have been a better father, son, brother, lover, husband. But even after I gave it all my best thoughts, I still only knew what I knew. I lived by the gun with determination and hustle collecting funds. I counted on cash money not tomorrow; the rent is always due. My demons became soldiers and comrades. Facing fears that came with tears. I’ve seen and done things that will never allow me to go back. Tell the babies, Daddy lost his way home, he may not make it back. So, I push forward, I didn't choose life, life chose me. Living a life comparable to a nightmare so others can live their dreams. What a sick way of thinking I'm living free. Walking the earth with bedazzled shackles around my wrist calloused hands picking treasures out of dirty gutters. This I do because I promised you tomorrow. I've stolen many tomorrows’ knowing tomorrow was never mine to see. This was the only way I knew, you're the reward worth every risk. I need you to know if I should die tonight.
If I should die tonight in this war of principalities, immoralities, and ritualistic informalities. Please know I forgive you; I thank you, and I love you. To no one else have I ever felt close. Now I sit with you as a ghost haunting your memories missing you more than life itself. I didn't have a clue as to when I was going to be right. So, I left you my love to hold until I return to take its place in your arms. I’ve seen and done things that will never allow me to go back. Change brings losses and lessons to teach accountability. This "Y" on our road will now only travel one, it will not allow us to walk side by side any longer. Make no apologies because it was all you are that brought forth the best in me. I have your love and memories forever with me. If I should die tonight.
‘There Are Places’
Photography of Michael Wade
Just Due by Michael Wade
In life some have been able to obtain/maintain what I like to say are the finer things. Nice cars, pretty girls on their arm, these were things held, but these things lacked substance. Things of substance love, family, honest living were the things that slipped through fingers. Wasn’t meant to be held by some. Was not in the cards in hand to play in the game of destiny. The sun shining through dark clouds one looks up at and sees is false hope. A light that shines through a doorway (opportunity) many are forbidden to walk through. What is freedom when you live encased within, confined to savage rules? How is freedom protected when politically misused by government tools? Judges benched due to their ability to pre-judge. Cases with blanks filled in by D.A.'s with the ink of innocent blood. A story locked away until it’s time to care. Equality isn’t equal to anything & fairness has never been fair. Swing low sweet chariot smoke fills the air. Burning down these buildings are only adding more weight to what is already oppressing. Constantly contesting the already tested with tempers flaring. Never in peace have the dead who have died due to injustice ever rested. Therefore, the city burns. The guilty know the truly righteous & by them are protected. For who will look after their loves if they share a cage or sit together to rot away the remaining of their days. Sacrifices must be made. Sacrifice of life, love, man-given liberty. This is a pact amongst descendants that has been made. To ensure the existence to see another day. To fight the extinction of the Black Family. By chains, cages & blood are how the wages of reparations was to be paid. Now here we are 2020 and justice is due, the bill will be paid.
The Long Haul (1957) Ken Hughes
July 19th 2020