So This is How The World Ends

Our Leaders’ Lack of Empathy and Contact With the Real World is Contributing to the Failure of American Politics

New clip from the third movie : r/DowntonAbbey
In the popular 3rd Downton Abbey movie, “The Grand Finale,” Lord Grantham and his wife tour a London apartment. Contemplating the indignity of downsizing and leaving his luxurious Abbey, he turns to his wife and says, “So this is how the world ends.”

“Let them eat cake!,” a quote famously attributed to Marie Antoinette, is likely, according to many historians, not something she actually uttered. It more often can be considered a journalistic cliche. But it has, undeniably, become a slogan suggesting just how callous and out of touch leaders can be. More likely, Antoinette, was part of an aristocratic class unwilling to relinquish their financial privileges, including gambling and garish spending on jewelry and furnishings. We might be intrigued to know of the rumors that she plastered the walls of her chateau with gold and diamonds. Rumors aside, our current White House resident, one Donald Trump, has unabashedly adorned the walls of his residence with assorted gold fixtures and accessories-all while support for children’s food programs and health-care go unfunded.

Trump Called Up His 'Gold Guy' to Give the White House a Mar ...
Trump has literally gilded the White House in gold.

I, for one, want my representatives to know not only what the inside of a grocery store looks like, but more importantly, what it means to struggle with the highest ground beef and coffee prices in decades. I demand that politicians know what it’s like to have worked for a minimum wage, mopped the floors in a restaurant, and to have ridden on public transportation. These experiences would, by necessity, help these folks understand the challenges that most Americans face day-to-day. And they might help them develop the empathy, humility and understanding essential when developing policies and advocating for their constituents.

Say what you will about Bronx-born U.S. Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, but after graduating from Boston University, she worked as a waitress and bartender. Recently elected New York City mayor, Zohran Mamdani worked, not too long ago, as foreclosure prevention and housing counselor. In that job he helped lower-income immigrant homeowners in Queens with eviction notices and efforts to prevent them from being evicted from their homes. He claimed that “the experience motivated him to run for office to address the housing and affordability crisis.”

While we may not be able to require candidates running for office to have had such real-life experiences, I suggest supporting those who have worked in the real world. It’s humility, empathy and an understanding of the experience of average Americans that’s dangerously lacking from Trump and just about everyone in his administration. Just this week, he vetoed a bill that would have ensured clean drinking water for 50,000 people living in southeastern Colorado. His water, I suppose, likely flows from golden spigots whenever he’s thirsty.

This past week we learned of the passing of Tatiana Schlossberg, 35, granddaughter of former President John F. Kennedy. While struggling with leukemia, she spent many of her final months confined to the hospital. After receiving a stem cell transplant, her hair fell out. In a show of solidarity and compassion, her younger brother, Jack, shaved his head. And to prove that empathy knows no age, her young son wore a scarf to cover his head when visiting the hospital, as his mother needed to do.

At nearly the exact same time, Trump was making light of the murders of Rob Reiner and his wife, Michele. After a lifetime of racist theatrics, including preventing Black New Yorkers from renting apartments in his father’s apartment kingdom, and demanding the death penalty for 5-young Black men who were unfairly accused of beating and raping a jogger in Central Park, Trump now focuses his racism on America’s Somali population, amongst other groups.

Familiarity doesn’t necessarily breed contempt as the old proverb says, but in actuality, it encourages empathy and humility. We must demand representatives who know and value both. And while Marie Antoinette may never have uttered those exact words, “Let them eat cake,” Trump’s gilding of the White House and destruction of the East Wing-all while many American’s wonder how they will financially survive 2026, is much more dangerous than just words.

And, as if icing on an already obscene cake, Trump has announced the building of a Triumphal Arch, modeled after the famous French Arch, and already nicknamed the Arc de Trump. It symbolically portends the end of compassion and justice in our political system-the end of the political world as we know it.

One can be both privileged and compassionate, affluent and empathetic, famous and yet humble. We must demand more from our political leaders.

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Walking to Victory

U.S. President Donald Trump models himself after Hungary’s long time Prime Minister, Viktor Orban. He likes his tough, take-no-prisoners approach. He admires his control of the Hungarian judicial system and the press, and his authoritarian stands on immigration and homosexuality. Orban is the mafia boss Trump has always aspired to be.

But my recent trip to Hungary revealed there’s a little fly in the ointment, a Tinkle Bell of sorts pulling pranks in the Hungarian firmament. He’s Peter Magyar, and his name literally translates to Peter Hungary. Mr. Magyar, intending to upset Orban in the national election next April, laced up his shoes and walked over 200-miles from Budapest to northwestern Romania, Hungary’s neighbor, on what he called the “One million steps for peace and national unity initiative.”

Peter Magyar, 44, of Hungary’s opposition party, TISZA (photo courtesy of Wikipedia)

According to Hungarians I spoke with, throughout his walk Magyar reached out to everyone he could, including traditional Orban supporters. He listened, answered questions, and was strikingly non-defensive. His approach was a significant departure from Orban’s defiant stands against the EU, non-traditional families, and immigrants. The average Hungarian increasingly wonders why their country is consistently near the bottom of European economic measures. They have witnessed for years now how successful Hungarian businesses have been squeezed out by Orban’s family and friends, the value of their enterprises finding its way into Orban’s coffers.

Viktor Orban, Prime Minister of Hungary. His leadership of Hungary’s economy is increasingly being questioned by many Hungarians (photo courtesy of Wikipedia)

Here in the States another political upstart, N.Y.C. mayoral candidate, Zohran Mamdani, a Democratic-Socialist, also decided to employ walking as a political strategy. Mamdani similarly walked the length of Manhattan meeting and greeting a diverse group of New Yorkers along the way. They apparently liked what they heard. He has walked and listened his way to victory, winning yesterday’s NYC mayoral election by a nearly 10-points.

Zohan Mamdani, 34, walked to victory as Mayor of the largest U.S. city (photo courtesy of Wikipedia)

So too, Magyar in Hungary. Polls show Magyar and his opposition party running ahead of the entrenched Orban. His task is not a simple one. But it perhaps shows that many Hungarians have had enough of Orban and his raping and pillaging of Hungary under the guise of nationalism.

Both performances, that of Magyar in Hungary and Mamdani in New York City, offer hope for us here in the U.S. as we painfully watch Trump fray our Democracy and ignore the Constitution. Ridding America of Trump and his Make America Great Again (MAGA) acolytes will require more than one or two newsworthy walks. Nevertheless, here’s hoping lovers of democracy everywhere can unite and force Trump, and like-minded thugs like Orban, masking as patriots, to take their own long walks along some very short piers. 

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Never Again

Who will bend this ancient hatred, will the killing to an end?
Who will swallow long injustice, take the devil for a country man?
Who will say “this far no further, oh lord, if I die today?”
Send no weapons no more money. Send no vengeance across the seas
Just the blessing of forgiveness for my new countryman and me
Missing brothers, martyred fellows, silent children in the ground
Could we but hear them could they not tell us “Time to lay God’s rifle down.”
Who will say, “this far, no further,” oh Lord, if I die today?

Belfast to Boston, James Taylor, from the album, October Road

“Never Again” in 5-languages

“Never Again” was an expression we heard over and over again as children-even in my non-religious household. They were words on the wind in Hebrew Schools, during religious holidays, even along the non-sectarian stretches between holidays. We should never forget, could never forget, the Holocaust, but even more, we committed ourselves to never allow such a horrific tragedy to take place again.

An unparalleled tragedy it was. Having lived in both Hungary, and Latvia, I have come to appreciate the relatively recent dark-era of Jewry in Europe that occurred during the 1st half of the 20th century. During the last 4-months of WWII, 600,000 Hungarian Jews were rounded up and hurried off to Nazi death camps. Daugavpils, the 2nd largest city in Latvia, was almost 60% Jewish, as recently as the 1920’s. At one time, the city had more than 50-synagogues. Many Jews were taken prisoners by the Nazis and shot in the surrounding forests and dumped into mass graves. Today, there is one remaining synagogue and a Jewish population in the hundreds. This was the angst of the holocaust. We said, “Never again.”

Yet, we watch a genocide underway in Gaza. The State of Israel, following the lead of Netanyahu and his Right-wing government, is destroying the Palestinian State, its society and its people. Israel, long heralded as the only democracy in the Middle East, is rolling out the unthinkable, a never ending death carpet of bombing, destruction, killing and assassination.

“Never Again.”

Defenders of Israel say any criticism is antisemitic. If you criticize Israel, they claim, you are standing against Israel and the Israeli people. But this is problematic to the core. What if one believes that the destruction of Gaza and its people is against the best interests of Israel? What if a reasonable person believes that the destruction of Gaza ensures generations of hatred against Israel? This perspective sees Israel through the eyes of young Palestinian youths who are witnessing the incessant destruction of the world as they know it. How could this possibly be good for Israel’s future?

Never again is happening again. But this time, Jews are not the object of the hate and death, this time, the Israeli establishment is the subject. They are the exterminators.

This truth in no way justifies the actions of Hamas on that horrible day, October 7, 2023. That day, resulted in the deaths of 1,200 people and the taking of about 250 hostages. That day will live in infamy.

In Gaza, 61,722 Palestinians, mostly women and children, have been killed since that day in October, according to the Gaza Ministry of Health ( MoH). A joint World Bank and UN assessment estimates that around 70% of all the structures in Gaza have been damaged or destroyed as of August, 2025. Furthermore, they report that 81% of the roads have been destroyed or damaged, 68% of agricultural land has been damaged, 84% of health facilities have been damaged or destroyed. Finally, almost all the children of Gaza are out of school.

This was the scene recently where the Israeli army attacked 5-Palestinian journalists, claiming one worked for Hamas. They provided no evidence to back this claim. (Photo courtesy of the New York Times)

This is not a game of semantics. But let’s be clear. Genocide is “an act committed with intent to destroy, in whole or part, a national, ethical, racial or religious group.”

Never again. What they must have meant by “Never Again” all this time was never again to Jews. As the world is convulsing politically no one seemingly has the time or inclination to demand: This far, no further. Treating this racism, this genocide, as a typical or minor matter indicts us. We need a domino effect of clarity and courage to end this insanity. It’s way past time to lay God’s rifle down.

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Teach Your Children Well

Recent social media post

Donald Trump and those on the political Right have rode into town on their high horses brandishing their right, so they say, to change America’s school curricula.  Oklahoma’s State Superintendent, Ryan Walters, has claimed that President Joe Biden, teachers unions and “their enablers” have pushed the Bible out of schools. “I’m proud to bring it back,” Walters has said, according to the Oklahoma Voice.

In Florida, Politico reported, Governor DeSantis has “rolled back higher education diversity programs, engaged in a high-profile feud with the College Board over its African American studies course and worked with other Republicans to reshape higher education in Florida by installing key allies in statewide posts.” “Because it’s a war on truth, I think we have no choice but to wage a war on woke,” DeSantis said.

In Texas, according to Spectrum News 1, the State Board of Education was recently told by that State’s Attorney General Office, that “U.S. Supreme Court precedent allows for the bible and religion to be taught in public schools in a non-proselytizing way.”

The Right is rallying around a bigoted and arrogant self-professed guru on all things educational, Dennis Prager. In one video, he role-plays the voice of his ideal public school principal saying to the students on the first day of school, “If you want to claim an ethnic identity as a student here, other than American, go attend some other school.”

Collectively, the Right wants to whitewash American history by deleting or banning all Black History classes because, as they widely tout, they make students feel “guilty” about being American. The problem is, if you spend any amount of time carefully listening to most of these advocates, their ignorance of both American history and educational practice, is shockingly obvious, and their racism, almost always, painfully apparent.

A recent poll asked the question, Should American schools should teach Arabic Numerals as part of their curriculum? The survey completed by 2,313 people revealed the following results:

Yes…………….29%

No………………57%

No opinion…..14%

To many, the term “Arabic Numerals” sounds foreign and threatening. I suppose then it would make sense that the term would stoke fear in the American Heartland. School Boards throughout the country will no doubt be adding a discussion of a response to this threat to agendas at their board meetings. “Arabic Numerals” are, of course, the numbers we all currently use in all our schools, the digits 0-9. The numbers are called “Arabic Numerals” because they came to Europe via the Arabic, or some offer, alternatively, the Indian, world.

Debates are certainly in order. But that’s just it, how can we have a reasonable debate about how to teach our children well, when the Ryan Walters, Ron DeSantis’ and Dennis Pragers of the world, hold advanced degrees in fear, loathing and racism?

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Something is Very Rotten in the state of Denmark

May be an image of 1 person and street
A quiet moment in Tallinn’s Old Town

What’s rotten of course is not something that’s occurring in Denmark, but rather the stench coming from my home, the United States. It’s the smell emanating from the rogue band of outlaws about to ride roughshod across America’s political, social and moral landscape. It’s justifiably setting off all sorts of alarms, creating new cottage industries, including countless articles on how to survive the coming apocalypse with titles like 10-Transformative Tips to Prepare for a Trump Presidency and Coping Tips for a Second Term.

For me, travel is the best elixir for all that ails about American politics. A stocking cap, my backpack and a wrinkled map is just about all I need. And the map, that’s optional. Somewhere I once read that a good cleanse of the soul could be had by just getting on a random tram and taking it to the end of the line. I’ve done that with good results many a time.

Alternatively, I love hopping a ferry to just about anywhere. My thick-treaded shoes can make a visit to a city park a memorable adventure. Sure, walking the 500-mile Camino de Santiago is guaranteed to help you leave Trump and his acolytes so far in the rear view mirror as to make them as small as their actual moral stature. But just to be clear, you don’t have to leave your seat to do some traveling. A gaze out the window tracing the flight of your local swallow works just fine.

Watching seagulls from aboard the ferry crossing Delaware Bay

Oh, and about Denmark…”‘Farewell, farewell,’ said the swallow, with a heavy heart, as he left the warm countries, to fly back into Denmark. There he had a nest over the window of a house in which dwelt the writer of fairy tales. The swallow sang ‘Tweet, tweet,’ and from his song came the whole story.” You don’t need a boat or plane ticket to get to Denmark. Just get a hold of a book from the author of that quote, Hans Christian Andersen, himself an amazing traveloguer.


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