Comic Strip of the Day Editorial cartooning

CSotD: The Perils of Paying Attention

Ian Boothby is right: Paying attention to what’s going on is not good for you. Unfortunately, failure to pay attention to what’s going on is even worse for everybody in the long run.

And while there may be some dark satisfaction in schadenfreude, hoping for people to realize what they’ve wrought won’t stop what they’ve wrought from happening to all of us.

RJ Matson notes the utterly bizarre collection of mokes nominated for Trump’s cabinet, and it’s certainly not the brain trust hoped for in each new administration. Here the dark satisfaction is remembering that JFK and LBJ did, indeed, assemble a brain trust and it proceeded to lead us into Vietnam, all the time assuring us that it wouldn’t.

Those who refused to vote for Harris because of Democratic policy towards Gaza are like those who voted for LBJ because Goldwater threatened expansion in Vietnam, except that Trump has been quite open about his willingness to let Netanyahu “finish the job.”

Still, given the way Anne Derenne (Cartoon Movement) sums up the outcome, you have to either be a dedicated hawk or have a truly twisted sense of things to find satisfaction in it. At least the new administration won’t waste a lot of crocodile tears over it.

The whole world really is watching. Harry Burton notes the outrage over the International Criminal Court leveling war crime charges against Benjamin Netanyahu and the lack of outrage over the wreckage that once was Gaza.

But stay tuned, because Trump’s chosen ambassador, Mike Huckabee, is a Christian Zionist who doesn’t think there are such things as Palestinians, and loves Israel because he believes it will be the site of Armageddon, when good Christians like him are swept into heaven and Jews and Muslims are not.

Though while we wait for that, Jared Kushner — who would not be among the enraptured — would like to develop some seaside properties.

“It’s a little bit of an unfortunate situation there, but from Israel’s perspective I would do my best to move the people out and then clean it up,” he explained.

Meanwhile, Peter Brookes finds a bit of dark humor in Trump’s gathering cabinet, bringing up a quote of dubious authenticity but delightful applicability, even with Gaetz no longer in the picture.

And if Wellington didn’t really say that, he did call British soldiers “the scum of the earth,” adding “it really is wonderful that we should have made them the fine fellows they are.”

Well, we’ll see about that, but the question at the moment is whether the GOP will stand solidly behind Trump’s remaining nominees, some of whom are dedicated rightwingers, which isn’t all that shocking, and some of whom are astonishingly incompetent and unfit, which may not matter.

With Gaetz gone, Nick Anderson (Tribune) says, attention is turning to another person with a history of sexual hijinx, including a forcible rape which his supporters say didn’t happen because she didn’t press charges.

Which may have been because she received a substantial payment or because she is like a very large number of women who decide against going through the agonizing process of prosecuting rape.

But Pete Hegseth has a marital history that mirrors Trump’s, with plenty of adultery and divorce. This seems stunning to those who remember Gary Hart having to drop out of the presidential race over a fling and even moreso for those old enough to remember when we thought Nelson Rockefeller’s divorce was the end of his political career.

However, times change, and it’s not that nobody cares anymore. It’s that not enough people care to make a difference.

John Deering (Creators) notes the potential for Brainworm Bobby’s bizarre notions to do actual damage to people, though he employs an historical myth to make his point.

But, certainly, if Kennedy is able to end mandatory vaccinations in schools, there will be more cases of now-preventable childhood diseases, some of which can cause permanent damage and even death.

His spreading of distrust has already had a reported impact in Samoa and there won’t be much satisfaction in “I told you so” if his foolishness harms more children.

Better to anticipate the damage Michael de Adder predicts, should Trump be able to impose the tariffs he thinks will take us back to the Gilded Age of robber barons we experienced in the late 19th century. And it seems likely that his appointees and his congressional supporters will make this possible.

The trade war with China that he touched off with tariffs in his first administration had serious impact on American farmers’ soybean trade, and a more widespread financial conflict would both raise prices for American consumers and heavily damage overseas markets for American companies.

Again, it is perverse to take satisfaction in misery, but there could be some strategic value in this if it hits before the 2026 midterm elections.

Economists are predicting that Trump’s proposals would greatly increase the deficit, but that’s a more gradual process and it’s somewhat distant from the kitchen table issues that swing elections.

However, if the price of eggs made a difference in 2024, the price of everything would likely make one in 2026.

There are other immediate issues bursting upon the scene, including, as Pat Bagley notes, the ridiculous uproar over bathrooms.

On the left, Nancy Mace’s absurd fears are being answered by people pointing out how often the sexes mingle in restrooms with no bad results.

But the real question is not about bathrooms but about bigotry, ignorance and hate, which persists despite there being no record of anyone ever undergoing major surgery and lengthy hormone treatments in order to sneak into the ladies’ room.

Meanwhile, as seen in this Gary Varvel (Creators) cartoon, the same mob that shouted “Lock her up!” at Hilary Clinton over dubious charges of receiving email in her residence instead of in her office is throwing media-driven conniption fits over “Lawfare” when an actual felon is convicted of actual felonies.

It’s not surprising, of course, but it’s not helpful, either, and repeatedly asking, “What if a Democrat had done this?” doesn’t provide a scintilla of change.

But take heart, Kal Kallaugher suggests. We really can’t expect our nation’s main bromance to last forever.

A blow-up in time for the midterms might just be the tonic we need.

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Comments 17

  1. Not clear to me what point Deering was trying to make by including a reference to herd immunity in the comic? You only get herd immunity when most of the population is vaccinated against the disease in question, and RFK has made it pretty clear he hates vaccines.

    1. Some of the Faux “News” talking heads thought we’d get herd immunity if we let COVID run through the entire population sans vaccines.

    2. The maga idea of herd immunity is their confidence in winning the survival of the fittest lottery.

    3. What is proposed is that immunity conferred by having the disease is preferable to immunity acquired by a vaccine. Basically, what this comes down to is an experiment in gain of function with humans as the experimental animal. You know, that kind of experiment in the lab that sends the RW screaming up the walls about irresponsible research by scientists with viruses—but our research is controlled by how we package the virus to prevent a dangerous outcome. Herd immunity is uncontrolled expression of the virus mutating in the humans with the disease. About the only comfort one can take is to realize that an exceedingly lethal mutation is less likely to spread as fast because it kills the host, reducing the spread.

    4. Smallpox blankets were in fact used as an early form of what we would know call ‘germ warfare’.
      “Yet, the most infamous records of intentionally spreading smallpox to Native Americans occurred in 1763 at Fort Pitt (present day downtown Pittsburgh). On June 24, 1763, William Trent, a fur trader commissioned at Fort Pitt, wrote in his journal after a failed negotiation between the British and the Delaware tribe. He stated that they had given the emissaries food, and as Trent wrote, “Out of our regard to them we gave them 2 Blankets and an (sic) Handkerchief out of the Small pox (sic) Hospital. I hope it will have the desired effect.”” (https://asm.org/articles/2023/november/investigating-the-smallpox-blanket-controversy)

      See also https://www.history.com/news/colonists-native-americans-smallpox-blankets)

      No, it’s not a ‘myth’. It’s an example of the atrocity of war.

    5. Herd immunity is when people develop immunity from having the disease and living in a population where most others, in the herd, have had it. A belief that the disease itself makes you immune. Doesn’t happen with covid or smallpox. Huge lie as children just get it over and over and it has been proven that this virus hurts your immune system. People use this argument NOT to get vaccinated.

  2. Thoroughly off topic, but the Washington Post dropped Mike du Jour from its print edition and replaced it with Crabgrass. I’ve been a fan of Crabgrass ever since I saw it here, and I’m glad to see that it’s getting more exposure, even if there are only about a dozen WaPo print subscribers left.*

    *Include me. It’s my local paper, and my wife prefers the print version. I’m going to stick with it for a while longer.

  3. I’d like to know how Muslim voters who punished the Democrats feel about these two news items.

    “Pam Bondi, Trump’s pick to replace Matt Gaetz as the nominee for attorney general, wants to crack down on pro-Palestinian protesters and reinstate Trump’s Muslim “travel ban.” She is also a registered lobbyist for Qatar.

    Trump aids are mulling measures to suppress the Palestinian protest movement, including potential deportations of foreign students involved in pro-Hamas activities. (NBC News)”

  4. I wish I noted the name of the MSNBC contributor who pointed out that he knows what’s in all his own personal cabinets, but from what he’s observed Trump’s version is less a cabinet than a junk drawer.

  5. Smoot Hawley (and its part in the advent of the Great Depression)

  6. Herd immunity happens when enough members of a population have resistance to a given disease that someone who is naive to that disease is unlikely to get it. The percentage needed is determined by how infectious the disease is, for example, canine distemper is 95% needed and related measles is 96% if my memory serves. Both resistance from vaccines and resistance from previous infection vary among diseases. Some in those two categories simply are not as effective for as long as one would desire.

    It becomes important to be aware of disease levels (with waste water monitoring very useful, ditto hospital reporting) and to not forget precautions. Along the latter line, NJ is making the option of outdoor dining permanent (which makes sense) though it might be happening because restaurants found it profitable more than in carefully wise preparation for the next epidemic.

    1. There is also the variant of the virus to be considered. This is one of the great things about the mRNA vaccines that they can be modified as the dominant variant changes.

  7. “But Pete Hegsith has a marital history that mirrors Trump’s”

    (suggestion for an editor of this article: check this part of it)

    1. Multiple wives, cheated on them, had affairs, accused of assault … what??

  8. Doesn’t every legislator’s office have its own bathroom?

    (I thought I knew the answer, but I guess I’m assuming)

  9. I think Trump’s plan for protecting women is to put as many sexual predators as possible in his cabinet to keep them out of circulation.

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