There's no darker glass, at least in metaphor, than a monitor or TV screen. I had occasion to rewatch the film Civil War recently and, juxtaposed with radio and video coverage of the current mess in the Middle East, especially Israel's ongoing invasion of Lebanon, makes for sobering viewing. And the movie's deliberately incoherent conflict (it's about war correspondents, after all, not war) looks less and less so as time goes by. Even the alliance between Texas and California as the "Western Forces:" if you had told an American or Russian in 1932 that they were gong to end up fighting on the same side of a major war within a decade, they would have laughed at you. A separatist California and a Texas "taking back its Lone Star" might find themselves with as much in common as Churchhill and FDR did with Stalin.
The United States of Civil War aren't united. Some regions are in denial; a vast sweep of states are, apparently, largely untouched. Others are less fortunate, crowded by internal refugees or wracked by war, buildings bombed, populations decimated, civil government gone or powerless.
The second Trump administration has shown a marked propensity to route FEMA disaster relief (and similar aid) to GOP-supporting states and cites, and not to Democrat areas. This is entirely aside for any overall reductions in aid: whatever there is to be had, you're a lot less likely to receive it if you live in a blue region than if you live in a red one, no matter how you chose to vote.
ICE and CBP enforcement has shown a similar pattern, leaning more heavily on cities and states with Democrats in power and far less where the Republicans hold a majority of elected offices.
Depending on where you live, it's life as usual, and what's all the fuss about -- or it's anything but usual.
Civil War? You're already soaking in it, in the slow, nightmare preliminary steps.
There's still time; we may yet wake up, get a sip of water or take a trip down the hall, and return to blissful rest. Or the nightmare could turn for the worse.
None of us can be sure how this movie, these very American dreams, will play out.
The 2026 and 2028 elections are crucial. Choose wisely.
Update
1 year ago
