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Space Colonists Will Likely Resort to Cannibalism, Scientist Says




"They are going to eat each other if there is no other way to survive."

As if things weren’t going to be tough enough for future space colonists, experts now say that they’re likely going to face food troubles — and that might just turn them into cannibals.

Charles Cockell, professor of astrobiology at Edinburgh University, spoke to Metro about the challenges astronauts will face if and when humans attempt to colonize places such as Jupiter’s moon Callisto and Saturn’s moon Titan.

Specifically, Cockell stressed that if the farming and crop systems failed, the colonizers would likely face very dire consequences unless they received regular supplies from Earth. If they’re far away enough — or if Earth collapses completely — this might not be possible.

To underscore his point, he pointed to Sir John Franklin’s 1845 exploration of the Arctic that resulted in the crew cannibalising each other.

“Franklin’s crew tried to find the north-west passage on ships in the late 19th century — they were the most sophisticated pieces of technology available at that time,” Cockell said. “They had tinned food, which was the new technology — and yet, they got lost, stranded and they ended up degenerating into cannibalism.”

“If you put a group of people on Callisto, things start going wrong and the plant growth module breaks down, they are going to eat each other if there is no other way to survive,” he later added.

While this might seem like a fairly bleak prediction, Cockell’s message actually serves more as a warning. The crop systems would need to be tested and refined on places like the Moon and Mars before colonizers are yeeted off into the far reaches of space.

Only after adequate testing can we be certain that colonizers won’t have to do their best Donner Party impression to survive.

“If you are going to dump 20 people several hundred million kilometers away from the Earth in an instantaneously lethal environment on a moon, you better be sure that is going to work because if it doesn’t it is going to fall apart quite quickly,” he said.

Caffè, il più clamoroso equivoco gastronomico d'Italia di Massimiliano Tonelli (Repubblica)



Zero cultura, zero sostenibilità, zero rispetto, mediocre qualità media. Svalutazione sotto ogni aspetto: dagli stipendi dei baristi al prezzo della tazzina che dovrebbe costare almeno il doppio. Però siamo convinti di bere il miglior caffè al mondo…

L'Italia, l'Italia tutta intera, ha un grandissimo problema irrisolto col caffè. Ma come nei più classici psicodrammi, non se ne rende conto e non lo ammetterà mai a se stessa. Non ancora, per lo meno.

DAVVERO IL CAFFÉ ITALIANO E’ IL MIGLIORE DEL MONDO? (NO!)

Una comunicazione errata e in cattiva fede, una retorica superficiale, elementi di goffo sciovinismo, forme passivo-aggressive di machismo ci hanno convinti di consumare il miglior caffè del mondo. Da Napoli a Trieste siamo persuasi che il nostro espresso sia buono, fatto come si deve, ortodosso. Mentre quello di tutti gli altri paesi che ci circondano, dalla Francia alla Germania passando dal Regno Unito è una brodaglia imbevibile. Da prendere in giro stile tifo calcistico.

Non siamo nazionalisti in nulla, sconosciamo le vere peculiarità, unicità, storia, eccellenze del nostro paese ma su determinate merceologie alimentari (pizza, pasta asciutta e appunto il povero caffè) diventiamo alfieri della purezza della nazione. E manco a dire che la buttiamo sulla cultura considerato che al caffè (e ai caffè, intesi come locali) il mondo intellettuale italiano deve moltissimo. Macché: in Italia siamo proprio convinti che la tazzina di caffè nostrana sia davvero il meglio quanto a sapore e profumo. Peccato che per i motivi che andremo a sviscerare, beviamo tra i caffè più mediocri d’occidente.

Il mondo celebra il caffè (e i mille modi per prepararlo)Lara De Luna

Questo malinteso ha spiegazioni culturali, sociali e antropologiche nelle quali non entreremo, ci limiteremo a spiegare però che gli elementi per giustificare questo senso di superiorità semplicemente non esistono. Anzi, proprio a cagione di questa spocchia in Italia si beve attualmente il peggior caffè del mondo. Il motivo è che questo atteggiamento dei consumatori (orgoglioso ma al contempo impreparato, ignorante, miope) viene volentieri cavalcato dalla filiera per massimizzare i margini di guadagno a detrimento della qualità. Consumatori che comprano prodotti scadenti e sono pure contenti, nessuna industria chiederebbe di meglio…



TUTTE I FALSI MITI SUL CAFFÉ

Il caffè, insomma, è il più grande equivoco, il più clamoroso malinteso gastronomico italiano. Siamo avvinghiati alle nostre certezze, ma la verità è l'esatto opposto. E continuiamo a scambiare i difetti del prodotto per pregi.

Qualche esempio? Con automatismo quotidiano zuccheriamo il caffè pensando la cosa sia normale, ma una bevanda che per essere bevibile ha bisogno di edulcoranti è una bevanda che ha dei problemi e che ci crea dei problemi costringendoci ad assimilare etti di dannoso saccarosio ogni mese. Siamo convinti che il colore del chicco di caffè sia nero, come quello che vediamo nelle campane trasparenti al bar, mentre la tostatura ottimale è marroncino tenue: è nero perché abbrustolendolo si eliminano tutti i difetti (e i pregi) appiattendo il sapore a quel caratteristico aroma di carbone. Tostando il caffè in quel modo i torrefattori sono così nelle condizioni di comprare partite di prodotto scadente, fallato, acerbo. Spuntando prezzi bassissimi e massimizzando i margini. Siamo convinti che il caffè debba costare 0,80 centesimi, al massimo un euro. Se il prezzo sale gridiamo al furto e cambiamo bar. Non ci rendiamo conto che ogni caffè sottoprezzo (sotto i 2 euro è sempre sottoprezzo, non a caso in tutto il resto del mondo il corrispettivo quello è) genera sfruttamento, lavoro nero, sofferenza in tutta la filiera, dalla piantagione fino al bar. Al nostro bancone di fiducia una tazzina può venire via a pochi centesimi solo se dietro c'è un barista sottopagato, mai formato, assunto al nero, sfruttato. E così consideriamo inaccettabile spendere il giusto per un caffè, ma poi giriamo l’angolo e andiamo a manifestare a favore della sostenibilità e dei diritti...



Altri paradossi? Siamo convinti che il caffè faccia male. Ma il caffè è un semplice frutto tropicale, come può “far male”? La caffeina agisce sul sistema nervoso, è vero, ma il tenore di caffeina è alto se il caffè proviene da una filiera agricola non idonea. La caffeina è una reazione dell’alberello del caffè contro parassiti e altre anomalie. Se dunque il caffè viene piantato e allevato in condizioni ottimali di caffeina ne produce una quantità normale. Sulla caffeina poi i luoghi comuni si sprecano, come quello che vuole il caffè ristretto più ‘forte’ di uno lungo: ma la caffeina è solubile nell’acqua, quindi un caffè filtro ha più caffeina di un espresso che ha a sua volta più caffeina di un ristretto. Insomma, un grovighlio di false credenze, supersatizioni e malintesi che si ripetono ogni giorno per milioni di volte e impediscono a questa merceologia di evolvere come meriterebbe.



E poi c’è il gusto. In Italia abbiamo la certezza che la tazzina di caffè abbia quel sapore lì. Proprio quello lì: di carbone. Non è così: il sapore del caffè è altra cosa. Alle volte si avvicina ad una densa spremuta di frutti rossi, a volte al sentore pungente degli agrumi, talvolta addirittura ai profumi fermentati del vino o certe tipologie intense di the. Quella bevanda che abbiamo banalizzato e trasformato in una sorta di medicina da trangugiare velocemente in piedi, non è più caffè: è una estrazione di chicchi bruciati, carbonizzati da un trattamento dozzinale. Ovvio che poi “il caffè fa male”…

COME FAR USCIRE IL CAFFÉ DALLA BANALIZZAZIONE?

Ovviamente non tutte le tazzine sono così. Ci sono dei bar che cercano di lavorare con un pizzico di attenzione in più, ci sono tostatori più attenti che selezionano la materia prima, ci sono perfino grandi torrefazioni industriali che hanno annusato l’aria e stanno debuttando nell’universo del caffè sostenibile e di ricerca.

La prima resistenza viene però dalla clientela che negli anni (il rito del caffè espresso al bar è relativamente recente) si è assuefatta. Tuttavia altre merceologie ci raccontano che atteggiamenti conservatori in ambiti che sembravano immutabili possono modificarsi rapidamente. E’ avvenuto col vino a partire dagli anni Ottanta, poi con la birra e il boom delle artigianali, infine col pane da un lustro a questa parte. Anche l’olio ci sta provando così come l'aceto. E pensate alla pizza: fino a vent’anni fa una pizza era una pizza, ora sappiamo vita morte e miracoli del lievito e ogni dettaglio sul mugnaio che si è occupato della farina… Tutti prodotti che erano banalizzati all’inverosimile e che sono in via di rinascita all’insegna di una nuova consapevolezza e attenzione da parte di chi produce, compra, consuma.

Il caffè riuscirà a prendere lo stesso sentiero? Riuscirà a conquistare la dignità che oggi non ha nei consumi domestici e in quelli fuori casa? Per provare a rispondere alla domanda abbiamo coinvolto alcuni tra i più importanti esperti del settore in Italia: torrefattori, baristi, formatori, imprenditori, cuochi. Fanno parte a vario titolo di quella che nel mondo è chiamata la "Terza Ondata" del caffè, il movimento quasi ventennale che punta a togliere questo alimento dal cono di banalità in cui è precipitato. Sono gli alfieri dello “specialty coffee”, un modo completamente diverso di vedere il caffè e l’universo che gli gira attorno. A Loro abbiamo chiesto un parere sulle responsabilità di questa situazione e idee su come si possa uscirne.

Torna il rito del caffè al bancone: ne sentiva la mancanza il 60% degli italianidi Eleonora Cozzella31 

IL PARERE DI ANDREJ GODINA

Esperto di caffè, autore di numerosi libri, formatore

Uno dei motivi per cui il settore è rimasto indietro è che le torrefazioni ad un certo punto, tra prestiti e comodati d’uso di macchinari, sono diventate delle società finanziarie che guadagnano più dagli interessi che dal prodotto. E dunque il prodotto conta meno: conta solo il margine di guadagno. Il caffè è una pura commodity. Incredibile anche l’omogeneità del prezzo della tazza. Miscele scarse e caffè di buona qualità 100% arabica alla fine costano pressoché la stessa cifra. Sarebbe possibile nel vino avere calici tutti a prezzo omologato indipendentemente dalla provenienza? Il prezzo della tazzina va diffrenziato, questo servirà a comunicare al consumatore che esistono delle articolazioni, che esistono alcuni caffè che sono specialties e altri che non lo sono e costano meno. E infine una nota sui baristi: finché saranno sottopagati e non formati non se ne uscirà. Spesso chiedo al barista la marca di caffè che sta servendo: neppure quella conosce, figuriamoci il resto. Tra l’altro rispetto ad altre filiere, il barista è strategico: nella filiera del vino il sommelier stappa e serve un prodotto preparato da altri, idem con olio, il cioccolato. Nella filiera del caffè l’ultimo protagonista della filiera ha lui il compito di preparare e trasformare. Dunque ha il massimo della responsabilità e il minimo della responsabilizzazione: questo ruolo si deve trasformare radicalmente.

IL PARERE DI DARIO FOCIANI

Barista e torrefattore a Roma con Faro

Non dimentichiamoci che c’è stata una grande disinformazione diffusa. Che ha permesso di fare marginalità di guadagno clamorose alle torrefazioni. E così abbiamo infilato nella testa delle persone il fatto cheil caffè è un prodotto semplice, banale; quindi chi apre una caffetteria di ricerca non riesce a convincere i consumatori che la tazzina non si può pagare un solo euro e il break even diventa un miraggio. Questi prezzi generano sfruttamento. E, attenzione, sfruttamento non soltanto agricolo nei paesi in via di sviluppo: sfruttamento anche di chi sta al bancone. E se per miracolo tutti sono messi in regola, quel bar avrà costi fissi così alti che non potrà andare a ricercare la qualità.

Il caffè sconta un consumo “istantaneo”, che dura pochi secondi, richiederebbe molta attenzione ma gliene viene dedicata pochissima e per un intervallo di tempo minimo. Così come viene dedicata poca attenzione in generale alla colazione. Un pasto bistrattato che assomma mediocrità a mediocrità: riflettiamo sulla qualità media di cornetti e brioche. Non aiuta, infine, la nostra dieta mediterranea che non prevede tanti sapori acidi a differenza del nord Europa e quindi ci fa consideare estranei i profumi dei caffè pià ricercati.

Una proposta? Le associazioni che si dedicano al caffè specialty si occupino un po’ meno di gare e competizioni e un po’ più di formare il consumatore medio!



IL PARERE DI FRANCESCO SANAPO

Barista e torrefattore a Firenze con Ditta Artigianale

Io credo davvero che lo specialty sia il futuro del caffè e dell’industria del caffè. Dietro a questa parola non c’è solo un prodotto di qualità, ma c’è sostenibilità. Lo specialty è l’unico prodotto che può garantire evoluzione ai popoli dei paesi tropicali dove si coltiva caffè. Lo specialty è l’unico comparto dell’industria del caffè che non genera povertà nella filiera. Come si fa a pensare che ogni tazzina che serviamo generi povertà? E poi stare nell’ambito dello specialty permette di riconoscere la vera professionionalità del barista e una nuova rinascita delle caffetterie. Puntare sullo specialty significa ringiovanimento di tutta la filiera anche per quanto riguarda l’ospitalità a 360 gradi. Chi propone specialty ha necessariamente attenzione maniacale in tutto: dalla musica alle luci, dal design al benessere complessivo dell’ospite. Cambia proprio il paradigma di un settore che è abituato a lavorare solo sulla quantità e mai sulla qualità.

Come si fa? Bisogna dar valore alla tazzina e modificare l’attitudine di come si è bevuto in caffè fin’ora ovvero come fosse un farmaco. Comunicando con i consumatori e spiegandogli che bere tazzine di caffè a 1 euro è, semplicemente, uno scandalo.

The Coffee Hunter: Francesco Sanapo e l'essenza del caffèdi Alfredo Polito



IL PARERE DI GIANNI TRATZI

Consulente e formatore a Milano con Mezzatazza

Il barista - mestiere relativamente giovane - è purtroppo ancora un mero macchinista. E’ addestrato esclusivamente ad essere veloce e a ripetere meccanismi, non è invece formato sul prodotto e questo ha delle conseguenze: vedendo comportamenti automatici, privi di narrazione, i consumatori considerano il caffè come qualcosa di poco importante, una cosa da buttar giù senza darci peso. Non hai una soglia d’attenzione adeguata quando bevi un caffè come invece hai quando bevi un vino. Un’altra responsabilità? Riguarda le torrefazioni che negli anni hanno nascosto le origini del caffè, hanno impedito che i clienti associassero un sapore ad un terroir e ad una provenienza: tutto nascosto dietro al loro brand e alle loro scelte d’acquisto della materia prima. C’è anche da dire che non abbiamo una regolamentazione adeguata a rendere virtuosi per i torrefattori gli acquisti di materia prima. Ora però grazie alla tecnologia questo gioco di celare tutto regge meno: la filiera era sconosciuta, oggi mi basta digitare “coffee plantation” su Google e posso documentarmi, vedere video, approfondire.

IL PARERE DI MASSIMO BONINI

Torrefattore a San Secondo Parmense con Lady Cafè

C’è stata un’evoluzione incredibile negli ultimi 15 anni, dunque sono ottimista. Ora secondo me ci vuole una svolta e sono convinto che sia legata al mondo della ristorazione. I ristoranti sono gli unici che posso farci fare un salto in avanti. Un esempio? Non faccio nomi, ma cinque dei sette ristoranti con Tre Stelle in Italia utilizzano caffè mediocre. Ma se non sono loro ad adeguare il livello del caffè al resto dell’offerta quando mai saremo credibili a parlare di caffè di ricerca? Ci vuole integrità: se tu vieni da me in torrefazione e prima del caffè ti offro un bicchiere di vino, te lo offro di una qualità paragonabile ai miei caffè. Basterebbe che i ristoratori - tutti i ristoratori - curassero il caffè come curano la ricerca delle loro materie prime e l’olio, il pane o ancora di più il vino per determinare un cambiamento radicale e rapido. E infine c’è il fattore prezzo: smettiamola di bere caffè “per esigenza”, iniziamo piuttosto a bere il caffè “per esperienza”. Se fai un’esperienza coinvolgente, poi non hai difficoltà a pagarla un po’ di più.

IL PARERE DI CHIARA PAVAN

Chef assieme a Francesco Brutto a Mazzorbo (Venezia) con Venissa

Noi ormai serviamo solo specialty coffee al ristorante. Perché? Perché è una scelta di coerenza rispetto a tutto il resto del nostro progetto gastronomico. In primo luogo perché significa scegliere dei fornitori piccoli, sostenibili, che operano in maniera corretta coi loro lavoratori e con l’ambiente. La nostra filosofia è tutta su sostenibilità e ambiente, come possiamo dunque fare scelte diverse? Come possiamo servirci da grandi torrefazioni rischiando di portarci in casa chi adopera le leve dei prezzi al ribasso e dello sfruttamento? Insomma ci è parsa una scelta più che ovvia e anzi consideriamo incredibile che il mondo della ristorazione fatichi così tanto ad appassionarsi ad un ambito che coinvolge quasi come il vino e permette di proporre riflessioni al cliente che vanno di pari passo alla cucina. Ecco perché proponiamo diverse varietà, diversi terroir, micro torrefazioni dall’Italia e dal mondo. Oltretutto i vari metodi di estrazione (V60, aeropress, french press, espresso) in sala risultano assai scenografici, significa che i clienti si interessano, approfondiscono e noi facciamo cultura ogni giorno. Reazioni? Ottime! Appena estraiamo un caffè filtro in V60 al tavolo, tutti i tavoli circostanti chiedono informazioni e ordinano anche loro.

PASQUALE POLITO

Barista e torrefattore (oltre che fornaio) a Bologna con Brisa

Mi occupo di pane e di caffè. Il caffè è qualcosa di ancor più quotidiano del pane e le cose quotidiane rischiano di diventare “normali”: per la qualità è un rischio. Anche il vino quando era bevuto quotidianamente a casa per accompagnare pranzi e cene faticava a spiccare il volo in termini di qualità. La tazzina di caffè è uno di quei baluardi di normalità che si frappongono al cambiamento. Sta a noi creare delle fratture aprendo spazi dove si possa infilare la curva degli innovatori che sono tanti perché il dibattito sul mondo del caffè si sta creando ed è in crescita. E poi c’è la strada inevitabile della conoscenza profonda: corsi, formazione, viaggi in piantagione, cooperazione continua con la concorrenza. Resta il deficit di comunicazione: dobbiamo essere degli instancabili comunicatori per far veicolare questa passione (e questa problematica) con la chiave ludico della leggerezza e magari dello scherzo, senza appesantire ma facendo capire ai cittadini che c’è uno scoglio da superare e una sfida da cogliere per migliorare. Non so voi, ma io non credo che ci sia nessuno che berrebbe un caffè spensierato consapevole delle ingiustizie sociali che ci sono dietro quella tazzina…

Fulvio Damiani ha chiuso il collegamento

 


 Fulvio Damiani era democristiano




Fulvio Damiani

Fiorentino si è laureato nel ’62 alla Facoltà di Scienze Sociali e Politiche “Cesare Alfieri” di Firenze. Allievo dei Prof. Giovanni Spadolini e Giovanni Sartori si è sempre interessato di politica nazionale già dal Giornale del Mattino dove nel ’62 ha iniziato la professione di giornalista. Venuto a Roma nel ’67 ha lavorato ai notiziari del Giornale Radio diretto da Vittorio Chesi fino al ’69 e nello stesso anno fu chiamato da Willy De Luca al telegiornale dove è stato giornalista politico fino al ‘96 seguendo tutti i maggiori avvenimenti sia in studio che come inviato. Dal ’97 al ’99 è stato notista a Telemontecarlo e successivamente ha condotto a Stream Tv una trasmissione settimanale in diretta “Italia domanda” di analisi e approfondimenti sulle diverse problematiche italiane. Ha diretto un quotidiano di informazione su Internet (www.romaone.it) che, essendo dotato di studi televisivi, consente dibattiti ed interviste “on line”. Autore di saggi ed articoli su quotidiani italiani e stranieri ha scritto un libro sul mondo della comunicazione, Obiettività e Potere (D’Elia Ed.)

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Ecco questo era Fulvio Damiani noto volto del Tg1 per almeno vent'anni.

Ma Fulvio, per chi ha avuto l'opportunità di conoscerlo da vicino, era molto di più.

Nel ristretto gruppo di ex fiorentini emigrati a Roma, Fulvio rapprresentava a pieno titolo il personaggio di gran stile.

Ma non rifiutava le zingarate che ogni tanto organizzavamo quando ci trovavamo tutti quanti invitati ad una cena con ospiti accidiosi e pieni di sé.

Gilberto Fabretti, Cesare Palandri e Fulvio Damiani venivano dall'esperienza  fatta al Giornale del Mattino di Firenze. 

La mia strada professionale era stata molto diversa ma a Roma avevamo rinverdito una antica amicizia.

Come quella sera che, annoiati per la sicumera di un colonnello dell'esercito Incontrato a casa di un amico, avevamo deciso sull'unghia di imbastire una trucida storia assolutamente inventata.

Gilberto Fabretti nel gruppo era il più mansueto e docile.

Così all'impronta cominciammo a raccontarci di quando Gilberto frequentava i bordelli di Calcutta. Pensate voi.

Ognuno di noi aggiungeva qualche particolare inventato ma venduto con grande sicurezza, dando consistenza ad una storia che finì per scandalizzare l'odiato colonnello il quale, dopo la frutta, si alzò con una scusa qualsiasi e prendendo a rimorchio l'insulsa consorte lasciò la serata.

Stavamo bene insieme noi quattro fiorentinacci ed era un piacere ritrovarci per festeggiare qualche evento circondati dalle nostre famiglie.

Gilberto e Cesare se ne sono andati alcuni anni fa.

Adesso è la volta di Fulvio che chiude la sua pagina di vita con dignità, mettendo fine ad un calvario che gli aveva determinato persino l'amputazione di una gamba.

Alla carissima Anna che gli è stata vicina con tutto il suo amore inviamo il nostro abbraccio vero e affettuoso.

Difficile augurare buon anno.
Oscar
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Ciao zio Fulvio, 
mi mancherai molto. 
Sfogliero'  i bei ricordi dei momenti passati tutti insieme, con i fratelli, il babbo, le risate, le chiacchierate più serie, il tuo impegno, la tua intelligenza, la tua ironia, il tuo affetto per noi. 
Ci hai regalato tanto. Ma sopratutto  ci hai insegnato che l'amicizia vera è una terreno sicuro dove si può trovare serenità senza condizione. 
Possa tu riposare in pace, e continuare a seguirci. 
Ti porteremo sempre dentro di noi.
Federico F.
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Ciao Oscar , mi ricordo molto bene di Fulvio Damiani , ero molto giovane , però lo ricordo perché mio padre guardava i suoi programmi , gran  Bel giornalista , elegante . 
Grazie Oscar di averlo ricordato . 
Bruno 

Americans Diverge on Perils and Lessons of the Jan. 6 Capitol Attack (TWJ)


WASHINGTON—Nearly a year after the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol by Trump supporters, Americans are divided over how serious it was, who is to blame and the punishments that have been imposed, underscoring the broader polarization facing the country and fanning concerns about the state of the democracy.

A recent Quinnipiac poll found that 93% of Democrats and 56% of independents considered it an attack on the government, while only 29% of Republicans said the same. A Pew Research Center poll showed a declining share of Republicans who believe it is important that rioters be prosecuted, with 57% expressing support in September, down from 79% in March—while Democrats were steady at 95%.

The events of Jan. 6 are now the focus of congressional and criminal investigations. While Democrats plan a Capitol vigil to mark the anniversary, former President Donald Trump has promised a news conference at his Mar-a-Lago estate to revisit his false claims of a rigged election, allegations that helped drive the Jan. 6 riot.

Interviews with voters across the U.S. reveal disparate impressions of the day, with some describing it as a dangerous attack on democracy, others viewing it as a protest that got out of hand and still others saying Democrats and the news media have overblown the severity of the attack.

“It’s just ugly, an ugly time,” said Judy Bouffleur, 80 years old, of La Crosse, Wis. “It’s OK to protest something that you disagree with but this was just—I was just horrified. To me Jan. 6 is a culmination of our lack of respect for each other. It’s been leading up to that for years.”

‘To me Jan. 6 is a culmination of our lack of respect for each other. It’s been leading up to that for years.’— Judy Bouffleur of La Crosse, Wis.

Roy Barlow, of Dartmouth, Mass., said the protesters “looked like they were on a guided tour.” Mr. Barlow, who gave his age as over 50, said that “outside some initial violence getting over some barricades to get inside, they just walked around the Capitol.”

The attack took place the day Congress was meeting to certify the Electoral College results and President Biden’s victory. The day of the riot, Mr. Trump addressed a noontime crowd at a “Stop the Steal” rally at the Ellipse and encouraged supporters to march to the Capitol. Hundreds then clashed with police, scaling walls and smashing windows. One intruder, Ashli Babbitt, was shot dead by a Capitol police officer, who was later cleared of wrongdoing. Several police officers were severely injured.





Jan. 6 Commission, Prosecutions Could Yield Revelations Despite PartisanshipExpectations are low that the Jan. 6 commission will be much more than a setting for a partisan food fight. But as WSJ’s Gerald F. Seib explains, even partisan food fights can bring to the surface important information, as might ongoing court cases. Photo illustration: Todd Johnson

Mr. Trump was impeached in the House over his role, and acquitted in the Senate despite seven GOP senators voting guilty along with all Democrats, with the tally short of the two-thirds needed to convict.

Text messages recently released by the Jan. 6 House committee indicate a number of people close to the president saw the attack as dangerous and wanted him to intervene quickly.

The text messages, sent to then-chief of staff Mark Meadows, “leave no doubt that the White House knew exactly what was happening here at the Capitol,” said the committee’s vice chairwoman, Rep. Liz Cheney (R., Wyo.), one of the few outspoken GOP critics of Mr. Trump. “Our democracy was inches from ruin,” said panel chairman Bennie Thompson (D., Miss.).

Mr. Trump eventually released a video that day telling supporters “we love you” but also “go home in peace.”


Then-President Donald Trump’s role Jan. 6 remains an uncomfortable subject for many Republican lawmakers.PHOTO: MANDEL NGAN/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE/GETTY IMAGES

A year later, the riot and Mr. Trump’s role remain an uncomfortable subject for many Republican lawmakers. Mr. Trump has characterized the Jan. 6 attack as a simple protest and claimed the actual “insurrection took place on Nov. 3,” referring to Election Day. Several GOP senators declined to say what they thought of those remarks when asked in recent weeks.

“I don’t have anything for you on that,” said Sen. John Kennedy (R., La.). “I’d have to see all that in context,” said Sen. James Lankford (R., Okla.). “I think it’s really time to move on,” said Sen. Roger Marshall (R., Kan.). “We should be talking about inflation,” he added.

The public is also splintered over Mr. Trump’s false assertion the election was rigged. Three out of four Republicans in an NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist poll conducted in October said Mr. Trump was right to question whether the election was rigged due to “real cases of fraud that changed the results.” There is no evidence of widespread fraud, and audits of millions of ballots in key states affirmed the presidential result.

Some voters question whether the events and investigation of Jan. 6 were intended to keep Mr. Trump out of office, while others reject that view.

“I think it was set up to make Trump look bad. He didn’t say ‘Go riot,’ ” said Christine Perozeni, 72, of Parma, Ohio, who like other Trump supporters questioned whether there were instigators in the crowd. “I’m telling you, there’s an entity out there that will do anything they can to keep Donald Trump from being in office ever again,” said Marcia Focht, 63, of Tiffin, Ohio.

“I hold Trump absolutely responsible,” said James Roush, 73, of Tempe, Ariz. An independent voter who said he has supported candidates from both parties, these days he is unhappy with the GOP’s embrace of Mr. Trump. “The way they’re trying to capture the rhetoric to mold a message around falsehoods just sickens me,” he said.


While Congress was meeting to certify the Electoral College results, hundreds of protesters converged on the Capitol.PHOTO: ERIC LEE/BLOOMBERG NEWS

There is evidence of only a handful of rioters with left-wing affiliations. More than 700 people have been charged in connection with the attack, and face a variety of charges depending on their alleged involvement in the violence.

“I wouldn’t call it an insurrection; I would call it a gathering of rather stupid people,” said Greg Tate, 70, also of Tempe. He believes the former president could have done more to stop the riot. Mr. Tate also said he believes some prosecutions have been too aggressive. “I don’t mind the statement of ‘Hey you can’t attack our country,’ but I think that people have rights too,” he said.

Others expressed concern about broader disillusionment with the government.

“Listen, I do think people are actively considering giving up on democracy in this country. And that does explain part of the reason why people marched on us, why people tried to overthrow the government,” said Sen. Chris Murphy (D., Conn). “We’ve got to show people that government can deliver for them,” he said, arguing for passage of Mr. Biden’s stalled economic agenda.

Jeremey Stewart, 45, a Trump voter from Pueblo, Colo., rejected labeling Jan. 6 an insurrection. But, he said, “I believe there may be one coming. There are enough Americans that are getting fed up with this game that’s being played, this political game.”

‘I wouldn’t call it an insurrection; I would call it a gathering of rather stupid people.’— Greg Tate of Tempe, Ariz.

For Anthony Pardal, 36, of Reston, Va., the attack felt personal. He once worked in the Capitol for a Democratic senator and met his future wife there. The memory of what happened shouldn’t fade or be sanitized, he said.

“What’s it going to be like next time if we continue to go down this route where we kind of split off into our tribes and there’s no accountability? I know people kind of roll their eyes but our democracy really is fragile,” Mr. Pardal said.

Tutti sapevano tutto.


Non per insistere troppo o per dare sfogo a un interrogativo che mi ossessiona. Ma adesso, quando già si affilano le armi per l’elezione del nuovo Capo dello Stato, possibile che nessuno tra i 101 (e forse più) del Pd che impallinarono nel segreto dell’urna Romano Prodi, peone o dirigente che sia, della prima o dell’ultima fila, si alzi in piedi per dire: sì, sono stato anche io a sabotare la candidatura di Prodi.

Cos’è, spirito di omertà, mancanza di un briciolo di coraggio, malattia tribale e correntista? Sono passati tanti anni ormai da quel lontano 2013 e poi il numero consistente dei franchi tiratori elimina la spiegazione dei casi isolati, del boicottaggio di pochi irriducibili. Per arrivare a 101, dopo che i gruppi parlamentari avevano sostenuto all’unanimità il nome di Prodi come successore di Napolitano, bisognava organizzare la fronda (anzi, le fronde), perdersi in mille riunioni semiclandestine, captare i messaggi dei capi-corrente, gironzolare tra incontri e abboccamenti, garantire la disciplina e la compattezza sabotatrice delle diverse truppe.

Tutti sapevano tutto. Poi, certo, non c’è la prova provata, tutti possono negare, appena scappa fuori un nome la pioggia di smentite, ma come ti permetti, come osi mettere in discussione la mia cristallina lealtà. Poi però passano gli anni: abbiamo i pentiti di mafia, i pentiti dei patti corruttivi, eccetera eccetera. Ma qui l’omertà è più forte ancora, il segreto meglio custodito non viene ancora alla luce, uno dei passaggi fondamentali della recente storia repubblicana è ancora avvolto nell’oscurità. Su, un po’ di coraggio, non vi mangia nessuno. Non ci vuole niente: sono stato io, e la dignità è salva.

Pierluigi Battista Giornalista, scrittore

La mia nuova targa personalizzata


 

Grande ottimismo tra i repubblicani per la riconquista di Senato e Camera nel 2022


GOP optimism grows over possible red wave in 2022
BY TAL AXELROD -  (The Hill)

With less than a year to go until the 2022 midterms, Republicans are increasingly bullish on the prospect of a red wave that could flip both chambers of Congress and end Democrats’ unified control in Washington.

Heading into 2022, Democrats find themselves on their back foot, defending their narrow House and Senate majorities – and President Biden – against a fusillade of attacks over stubbornly high coronavirus cases, inflation, the bloody Afghanistan withdrawal and more. Biden’s approval ratings have nosedived to the low 40s, portending a possible drumming at the ballot box next year – and they haven’t stopped falling.

The House is viewed by many on both sides of the aisle as likely to fall into Republican hands, given Democrats’ razor-thin five-seat majority there. However, despite a favorable map for Democrats, the party’s 50-50 majority in that chamber could be toppled too.

“I've been telling Democrats, especially Democrats in targeted seats, enjoy the holidays, and you got a decision to make: retire or lose next fall,” Rep. Tom Emmer (R-Minn.), the chair of the National Republican Congressional Committee, told The Hill.

Emmer cautioned that a GOP House majority is not guaranteed, though he asserted that as many as 70 Democrats could lose their seats in a possible wave, warning “in this environment, no Democrat is safe.”

Fueling the GOP optimism is a confluence of factors, both historic and current.

The party in the White House customarily loses seats in the midterms. GOP waves helped flip the House toward Republicans in 2010 and the Senate four years later, while a blue wave helped win Democrats back the lower chamber in 2018.

On top of that, Biden’s falling overall approval ratings have been coupled by lower approval by voters of his handling of several specific issues, including the coronavirus and the economy. That’s helped fuel a GOP advantage in the generic congressional poll, where, in part due to gerrymandering, Democrats typically need a slight edge to at least pull even.

Taken together, Republicans see a path to taking back at least the House, particularly given its narrow margins. Recent waves have flipped dozens of seats, and the GOP must net just five in 2022.

“I'm very confident that we're gonna take back the House,” said Rep. Don Bacon (R-Neb.), who represents a suburban swing district near Omaha. “I think that on the key issues right now, all the energy is on our side. And when I look at all the polling data, it matches what I see in the district, voters are concerned about inflation, crime, the border, Afghanistan, and all those issues are in our favor.”

Beyond the overall irritation with the current state of the country, along with specific frustrations on policy issues, Democrats face structural headwinds in a redistricting year.

The map-drawing process, which is still underway, could alone get Republicans the seats they need. But already Republicans have fortified their advantages in states like Texas and Georgia, where there is unified GOP control of the state government and the redistricting efforts.

“Redistricting is going to be an obstacle,” said Texas Democratic Party Chair Gilberto Hinojosa.

That confluence of factors is leading Democrats privately – and in some cases publicly – to concede that their grip on the House is tenuous.

“The environment is particularly dour, both because of rising prices, economic anxiety, frustration about feeling stagnant when it comes to covid, that it is not behind us despite the fact that we've been living with it for two years,” Democratic pollster Molly Murphy said. “If this environment holds, it's going to be pretty damning.”

That reality has apparently set in with at least some Democrats on Capitol Hill. Roughly two dozen are retiring from the House, either to leave politics altogether or run for another office.

By the end of 2017, the year before the GOP was swept out of the House majority, 25 House Republicans had announced they would not seek reelection.

“They're running for the hills,” GOP pollster Robert Blizzard said. “I think they see the writing on the wall.”

Frustrating Democratic efforts to keep the House are the issues with which Biden and the broader party are being blamed. Presidents have limited control over inflation, and while aspects of the coronavirus response, including on testing, is in Biden’s wheelhouse, no lawmaker could have prevented the omicron variant from hitting U.S. shores.

Compounding that, Democrats’ latest legislative efforts have fallen apart over a sprawling social and climate spending bill – opening up Democrats to GOP attacks on their competency and cohesion.

That leaves Democrats with limited legislative options to turn the tide, leading some to suggest a tonal shift from touting previous accomplishments could be key to ameliorating the party’s chances in 2022.

"I think understanding that people are pissed off and that that's okay and that there's an understanding of what those lives are like and a desire, and the goal is fixing those things and looking in touch with people, those are the things that Democrats can do tonally," Murphy said. "I think pointing to, 'Hey, things are actually great' just sounds totally tone deaf.”

To be sure, Democrats also have legislative accomplishments to highlight, including a nearly $2 trillion coronavirus relief package passed earlier in the year and a $1 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill that was signed into law just a few months ago.

Some Democrats say those are valuable weapons in the party’s arsenal – as long as they’re effectively messaged.

“I think our chances are great. We just need to do good things and tell people about it,” Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney (N.Y.), the chair of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, told The Hill, adding that he’d advise candidates to “run like the mayor.”

“I've been clear that we need to do a better job of messaging,” he continued, “and I think you'll see us do that.”

A GOP majority is still not guaranteed. While Republicans are boastful that House control is within their grasp, some voice concerns that infighting could tarnish their brand.

Former President Trump and his style of politics that proved toxic in the 2018 midterms still loom large over the party, and the current House GOP conference is wracked by divisions, as recently indicated by vocal rebukes from conservatives against centrists who backed the bipartisan infrastructure legislation.

On top of that, the party has had to answer for comments from some lawmakers that advocated violence against Democrats or were Islamophobic.

“It's not a choice between Coke and Pepsi. It's a choice between Coke and arsenic,” said Democratic strategist Jesse Ferguson. “The Republican brand is now toxic in a lot of the country.”

Democrats are projected to have better odds in the Senate, where a competitive map will be key to possibly offsetting a poor environment.

Democrats’ top defensive opportunities lie in Arizona, Georgia, Nevada and New Hampshire – four states that President Biden won in 2020. Meanwhile, Republicans are defending open seats in Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, which Biden also won, as well as North Carolina and Ohio.

With that dynamic, Democrats say that the Senate is a toss-up – instead of the House, which likely leans Republican.

“Within the Senate battlefield there are more than enough seats for Democrats to retain control and also more than enough seats for Republicans to flip it,” Ferguson said.

However, there too Republicans are bullish that a Senate majority is within reach.

Biden won Arizona, Georgia and Nevada each by about 2 points or less, though Republicans flipped Virginia’s governor’s mansion by 2 points in November and narrowly lost New Jersey’s gubernatorial race. The contests from those two states represented 12-point and 13-point swings from 2020, respectively, far more than needed in several states Democrats are defending.

“I feel good about Republican chances of taking control, but it's definitely a very competitive map,” Blizzard said.

“In a state like Pennsylvania, Biden won by a point. So, if that shifts even 3 or 4 points, that could be enough. Nevada, same thing. Georgia, same thing. Arizona, same thing. If you start flipping Arizona, and Georgia and Nevada and New Hampshire, that's a net of four seats right there. So, I would bet on Republicans to win the Senate in ‘22.”

Una moderna storia di Terra Santa


di Cosimo Risi

La novella ha per protagonista la dodicenne Rachele Luzzatto di una benestante famiglia del Nord Italia. Il padre, ebreo non praticante, le proibisce di recitare la parte di Maria nella recita scolastica: già troppi Ebrei abbiamo sacrificato agli Italiani, complici dei Tedeschi, per cederne un’altra sia pure per finta. Il nonno paterno le confessa che scampò alla deportazione riparando in una canonica e camuffandosi da vice parroco. La nonna materna è atea: non esiste alcun Dio per gli Ebrei né per i Cristiani, siamo tutti esseri umani.

Rachele è alla vigilia del Bat Mitzvah, studia l’ebraico per recitare la formula di rito per il passaggio all’età adulta. Non ha preclusioni verso i Cristiani, in Italia l’atmosfera è impregnata della ricorrenza natalizia, di cui gradisce i doni anche se non è la sua. Ama il panettone e la pizza, trascura la kasherut ma evita di mangiare i salumi di maiale (almeno fino al Bat Mitzvah, l’ammonisce la madre).

La figlia unica è l’ultimo lavoro di Abraham Yehoshua: “un libro di addio, un libro di commiato da me come scrittore”. Lo dichiara a Yediot Ahronot: il vecchio tumore si è ripresentato aggressivo, da laico affronta il destino con un misto di sollievo e rassegnazione.

Gli feci da interprete alla buona in alcune occasioni. Gli organizzatori dei convegni lo invitavano senza pensare che il suo italiano non gli consentiva di seguire le conversazioni informali. Gli traducevo l’essenziale in francese.

A Viareggio, giugno 2006, mi chiese di sottrarlo ad una cena per assistere al secondo tempo di Italia–Ucraina, Mondiali di Germania. Vincemmo, lui esultò con noi, la nostra Squadra era la sua. Si meravigliò del chiasso, a suo parere esagerato per un successo intermedio. Gli spiegai che Viareggio era la patria di Marcello Lippi, il genius loci. Pronosticò che avremmo vinto il Campionato.

Yehoshua appartiene alla schiera degli intellettuali impegnati, un’abitudine in disuso da noi e ancora viva nel suo Paese. Era acceso sostenitore della soluzione due popoli – due stati. La separazione dietro a confini riconosciuti sarebbe stata la chiave per la convivenza fra Israeliani e Palestinesi. La perdurante occupazione dei Territori era una minaccia alla pace e una ferita alla natura democratica dello Stato d’Israele.

Da qualche tempo Yehoshua ha cambiato opinione. La formula non è più viabile. La diffusione degli insediamenti rompe l’unità geografica della futura Palestina. Le due comunità sono così intrecciate fra loro sul campo che separarle sarebbe più difficile che integrarle in qualche modo.

Gaza e Cisgiordania non sono territorialmente contigue ed hanno dirigenze politiche divergenti. L’Autorità Palestinese non celebra più le elezioni dal 2006, l’ultima tornata, in programma nel 2021, è stata rinviata sine die.

Il lungo Governo Netanyahu ha derubricato la questione palestinese dall’agenda regionale, la priorità andava al caso iraniano. Gli Accordi di Abramo del 2020 hanno cementato la convergenza fra Israele e alcuni paesi sunniti del Golfo, sullo sfondo è il comune timore verso l’Iran come potenza nucleare.

L’attuale Governo Bennett – Lapid si muove lungo la stessa linea, con alcuni gesti spettacolari. La visita di Yair Lapid a Rabat per inaugurare la sede diplomatica, la missione di Naftali Bennett ad Abu Dhabi e il colloquio con il leader arabo più significativo, il Principe Ereditario Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nayan.

Yehoshua propende per la soluzione unitaria dello stato bi-nazionale. Quale sia il percorso concreto è da vedere. I problemi non mancano. Anzitutto è da considerare il timore degli Ebrei che il divario demografico con gli Arabi li renda estranei nel paese da loro costruito nel 1948. Haaretz lancia una sorta di sondaggio sul modello istituzionale: confederazione a tre con la Giordania, federazione, regime alla sudafricana, eccetera.

Nuove storie accadono in Terra Santa. Mansour Abbas, il leader islamista della United Arab List alla Knesset, dichiara che “Israele è nato come stato ebraico e tale resterà”. La frase è pronunciata in arabo, in risposta ad un giornalista arabo, davanti al pubblico di Tel Aviv. La Lista sostiene il Governo Bennett dall’esterno, qualcuno fra i suoi critica Abbas per non aver avuto il coraggio di accettare un incarico ministeriale.

L’autorevolezza di Yehoshua è tale che l’idea genera la discussione. Non è l’uscita dell’intellettuale in cerca del momento di celebrità. La vera gloria gli verrebbe solo dall’Accademia svedese. Mai un Nobel per la letteratura è stato assegnato ad uno scrittore israeliano.

di Cosimo Risi

Is there anything positive we can say about 2021?


By Dave Barry (WP)

Yes. We can say that it was marginally better than 2020.

Granted, this is not high praise. It’s like saying that somebody is marginally nicer than Hitler. But it’s something.

What was better about 2021? For one thing, people finally emerged from their isolated pandemic cocoons and started connecting with others. Granted, the vast majority of the people who connected with us this year wanted to discuss our car’s extended warranty. But still.

Another improvement was that most stores got rid of those one-way anti-covid arrows on the floor. Remember those, from 2020? You’d be halfway down a supermarket aisle, and you’d realize that you’d gone past the Cheez-Its but you couldn’t turn around and go back because you’d be going AGAINST THE ARROWS, which meant YOU WOULD GET COVID.

Ha ha! Was that stupid, or what? Fortunately in 2021, we followed the Science, which decided that the coronavirus does not observe floor arrows. On the other hand, the Science could not make up its mind about masks, especially in restaurants. Should everybody in the restaurant wear them? Should only the staff wear them? Should people who are standing up wear them, but not people who are sitting down, which would seem to suggest that the virus can also enter our bodies via our butts? We still don’t know, and we can’t wait to find out what the Science will come up with for us next.

Anyway, our point is not that 2021 was massively better than 2020. Our point is that at least it was different. A variant, so to speak. And like any year, it had both highs and lows.

No, we take that back. It was pretty much all lows, as we will see when we review the key events of 2021, starting in …

January

… which dawns with all eyes on Washington, D.C., where President Donald Trump, as chief executive of the most powerful nation on Earth, is trying to get somebody to answer the intercom. This is difficult because pretty much everybody in his administration except Melania has bailed. The only people still in contact with Trump are the members of his inner circle of trusted wack jobs, who are counseling the president in his ongoing effort to prove that the presidential election was RIGGED in a massive conspiracy that — although too complex and sophisticated for the so-called “courts of law” to understand — is transparently obvious to the My Pillow guy.

On Jan. 6, Congress meets to certify the votes of the so-called “electoral college.” Meanwhile Trump gives a lengthy speech to a Stop the Steal rally, declaring repeatedly that the election was a fraud and somebody needs to do something about it. He concludes by telling the fired-up crowd to “walk down Pennsylvania Avenue and get violent.”

Okay, he didn’t say those last words out loud. But soon afterward the Capitol is invaded by thousands of people who are fiercely loyal to Trump and determined to ensure that his enduring legacy, as president, will be that he inspired a tragic, futile and utterly stupid riot at the U.S. Capitol.

Okay, that wasn’t their goal. But it is what they accomplished.

The Capitol riot is widely condemned, with much of the blame falling on Trump. He swiftly receives the harshest punishment allowed under the Constitution: He is permanently banned from Twitter, the first sitting president to suffer this fate since Chester A. Arthur. Also he is impeached again. Two weeks later Trump leaves the White House for good, with only quick action by the Secret Service preventing him from being hit by the screen door on his way out.
Trump swiftly receives the harshest punishment allowed under the Constitution: He is permanently banned from Twitter. Also he is impeached again.



The spotlight now shifts to incoming president Joe Biden, who takes the oath of office in front of a festive throng of 25,000 National Guard troops. The national healing begins quickly as Americans, exhausted from years of division and strife, join together in exchanging memes of Bernie Sanders attending the inauguration wearing distinctive mittens and the facial expression of a man having his prostate examined by a hostile sea urchin.

Meanwhile on the pandemic front, there is good news and bad news. The good news is: Vaccines are increasingly becoming available to senior citizens, and they can make vaccination appointments on the Internet. The bad news is: Many of these seniors are still trying to communicate with their computers by shouting into the mouse.

In financial news, the big story is the spectacular rise in the stock price of GameStop, a video game retail chain that has not sold an actual video game since the Clinton administration. The skyrocketing stock price is the result of small investors taking advantage of a short squeeze margin-call algorithm to leverage the arbitrage and thus create a classic liquidity debenture. In other words, we have no earthly idea what is going on with GameStop, but it seems to be interfering with the efforts of wealthy hedge-fund people to get even wealthier, so we are all for it.

Speaking of business, in …

February



… with many difficult challenges facing the nation, Congress finally sets aside the bitter bipartisan wrangling of 2020 and moves forward to the pressing business of holding another impeachment trial for Donald Trump. In a scathing indictment of his involvement in the Capitol riot, the House Democratic impeachment managers charge that Trump, by feeding the Jan. 6 Stop the Steal rally “wild falsehoods” about the election, “is practically and morally responsible for provoking the events of the day.”

No, wait, those aren’t the scathing words of the House managers: Those are the scathing words of Republican Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell! Who then votes to … acquit! McConnell is part of a broad ideological coalition consisting of 43 Republican and zero Democratic senators, which means Trump joins the distinguished list of U.S. presidents, including Abraham Lincoln, who technically were not convicted of anything. And thus our political and media classes, after literally years of obsessing about Donald Trump, are finally free to continue obsessing about Donald Trump for the foreseeable future.

A massive ice storm blasts much of the nation, taking an especially brutal toll on Texas, where record-setting cold temperatures knock out power to large areas and wreak devastating havoc upon millions of cells in the brain of Sen. Ted Cruz, who, despite being (Just ask him!) the smartest person on the planet, decides this would be a good time to dash off to Cancún. Meanwhile the management of the Texas power grid is harshly criticized by members of Congress who could not personally reset a home circuit breaker without the help of at least four consultants and a pollster.

In the month’s most positive news, the NASA rover Perseverance, after traveling 293 million miles through space, lands safely on the surface of Mars. Technically it was supposed to land on Venus, but as a NASA spokesperson observes, “a planet is a planet.” The rover sends back breathtaking video revealing that Mars has an environment consisting — as scientists have long suspected — of dirt.

In sports, the ageless Tom Brady leads the Tampa Bay Tom Bradys to victory in the Tom Brady Bowl, with the MVP trophy going to Tom Brady, who celebrates with his supermodel wife, Mrs. Tom Brady.

Bite us, Tom Brady.

Speaking of victories, in …

March



… congressional Democrats pass the Biden administration’s covid-19 relief package, which will cost $1.9 trillion, which the United States will pay for by selling baked goods to foreign nations. In a prime-time address after signing the bill, President Biden says there is “a good chance” that Americans will be able to gather together “by July the Fourth.” He does not specify which one.

Meanwhile, as millions more Americans are being vaccinated every day, medical experts on cable TV unanimously agree on the following facts:

⋅ The situation is definitely getting better.

⋅ Or not! There are all these “variants.”

⋅ If you are vaccinated, you may resume leading a normal life.

⋅ NOT SO FAST, BUCKO.

⋅ At least we can stop wearing these masks pretty soon.

⋅ Or maybe we should keep them on! For years!

⋅ Although nobody knows why, since — to quote the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention — “most of you morons are wearing them wrong anyway.”

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, whose leadership during the covid-19 crisis has been (Just ask him!) so excellent that he was able to publish a book about how superbly he handled the crisis way before the crisis was anywhere near over, comes under intensified scrutiny over allegations of sexual harassment and underreporting of nursing-home deaths. Cuomo resists calls for his resignation but puts a temporary hold on development of a “Hamilton”-style musical based on his life (working title: “Cuomo”).
International shipping is seriously disrupted when the Suez Canal, which a lot of us forgot about after ninth-grade history class, is blocked by a container ship.



Prince Harry and Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, in their ongoing effort to escape the unbearable scrutiny resulting from their association with the British royal family, spend two hours on national TV talking with Oprah Winfrey about the British royal family. Plans are announced for a concert to benefit the beleaguered couple, headlined by Willie Nelson.

On the wokeness front, Dr. Seuss joins the lengthening list of individuals who are deemed to be Problematic, which also includes George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Pepe LePew and Mr. Potato Head. Also people are starting to take a hard look at the Very Hungry Caterpillar, and if you have to ask why YOU ARE PART OF THE PROBLEM.

International shipping is seriously disrupted when the Suez Canal, which a lot of us totally forgot about after ninth-grade history class but apparently is still a thing, is blocked by a massive container ship that became wedged sideways after the pilot attempted to take a shortcut suggested by Waze. After six days of frantic efforts, tugboats are finally able to free the ship, aided by an unusually high tide and what maritime experts describe as “a really big jar of Vaseline.”

Meanwhile the situation at the nation’s southern border rages out of control. We are referring here to Miami Beach, although things are also not great on the Mexico border. The big debate in Washington is whether to describe the border situation as a “crisis,” which is a solid indication of how likely Washington is to actually do anything about it.

But as winter turns to spring, the national mood begins to shift, and in …

April



… a new spirit of racial harmony spreads across the land, a spirit that is best described by the words “April Fools.”

But seriously, the national mood remains racially tense. A major issue is Georgia’s new voting law, which critics say targets minorities, and which prompts Major League Baseball to move the All-Star Game out of Atlanta. There is no comparable effort to move the Masters golf tournament, which by long-standing tradition is held in 1958.

Meanwhile in a Minneapolis courtroom: Whew.

There is some welcome news on the covid-19 front as the CDC declares that it is not necessary to wear a face mask “provided that you are fully vaccinated, and you are outdoors, and you are part of a small gathering, and everybody in this gathering has also been fully vaccinated, and all of you periodically, as a precaution, emit little whimpers of terror.” The CDC adds that “we, personally, plan to spend the next five to 10 years locked in our bedroom.”

President Biden, in his first speech to Congress, promotes his infrastructure plan, which would cost $2.3 trillion, and his American Families Plan, which would cost $1.8 trillion, with both plans to be funded by what the president describes as a “really big carwash.”

In other executive-branch news, Major, one of the two official Biden administration German shepherds, is sent away from the White House for what a spokesperson calls “additional training.” Since moving into the executive mansion, Major has bitten two people, one of whom was a Secret Service agent, although reportedly not the same one who was bitten by Rudy Giuliani.

In Congress, a group of Democratic legislators introduces a controversial bill that would add four justices to the Supreme Court. This bill is expected to be hotly debated, especially since, under a provision inserted by Sen. Edward Markey (D-Mass.), it would also permit the New England Patriots to have 15 players on the field.

The Census Bureau announces that some states will lose seats in the House of Representatives because of a nationwide population shift toward what demographers categorize as “regions with Waffle Houses.”

In other state news — this is a true item — Randy Quaid announces via tweet that he is “seriously considering” running for governor of California against Caitlyn Jenner. We see no need to add a punchline here.

In space news, the NASA Mars rover Perseverance deploys Ingenuity, an $80 million mini-helicopter that becomes the first aircraft to make a flight on another planet, ascending to an altitude of nearly 10 feet, from which vantage point scientists on Earth are able to determine that the Martian environment consists of what a NASA spokesperson describes as “even more dirt than we originally thought.”

Speaking of scientific developments, in …

May



… the CDC further relaxes its covid-19 guidelines in response to new scientific data showing that a lot of people have stopped paying attention to CDC guidelines. At this point these are the known facts about the pandemic in America:

⋅ Many Americans have been vaccinated but continue to act as though they have not.

⋅ Many other Americans have not been vaccinated but act as though they have.

⋅ Many of those who got vaccinated hate Donald Trump, who considers the vaccines to be one of his greatest achievements.

⋅ Many who refuse to get vaccinated love Donald Trump.

What do these facts tell us? They tell us that we, as a nation, are insane. But we knew that.

In a chilling reminder of the U.S. infrastructure’s vulnerability to cyberattack, Colonial Pipeline is forced to shut down a major East Coast fuel pipeline after suspected Russian hackers break into the corporation’s computer system and obtain naked photos of top executives with a duck.

We’re kidding, of course. The duck was fully clothed. In any event, the pipeline is reopened after Colonial pays the hackers a ransom of nearly $5 million, thereby sending a stern warning to any would-be future hackers that this is an excellent way to obtain money.

President Biden proposes a fiscal 2022 federal budget of $6 trillion, to be raised by what the White House describes as “an exciting new partnership with Herbalife.” In other administration news, Major the former White House dog escapes from his rehabilitation facility and robs a convenience store.
The big story is the rise in the stock price of GameStop, a chain that has not sold an actual video game since the Clinton administration.


The northeastern United States witnesses a majestic natural phenomenon that takes place just once every 17 years as trillions of Brood X cicadas emerge from the soil, shed their skins and — like countless generations of cicadas before them — are harshly criticized for their lifestyle decisions by millennial and boomer cicadas.

The world heaves a sigh of relief after a huge rocket booster, which had been in an unstable orbit, plummets to Earth without hitting an inhabited area. Many scientists believe that the rocket was launched by China, but the Chinese government insists that it most likely originated in a bat.

In other space news, the Mars rover Perseverance deploys Courage, a $53 million blender that becomes the first appliance to successfully produce a frozen daiquiri on another planet.

In sports, the Kentucky Derby is again tarnished by scandal when drug tests reveal that the apparent winner, Medina Spirit, was carrying, instead of a human jockey, what race officials describe as “a highly modified Ken doll.” But the PGA Championship has a happier ending when Phil Mickelson, in a feel-good story that inspires older guys everywhere, loses to Tom Brady.

Speaking of older guys, in …

June



… President Biden goes to Europe to participate in an important and historic photo opportunity with the other leaders of the Group of 7 economic powers, which are Germany, Japan, the United Kingdom, the United States, Google, Facebook and Mattress Giant. In a formal joint statement issued after the meeting, the leaders declare that everybody had, quote, “a nice time.” Biden also meets with Queen Elizabeth II, who has met with every U.S. president since we started having them.

Biden then goes to Geneva for a summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin, during which Biden warns Putin that these darned Russian hackers better stop hacking into the U.S. infrastructure, or by golly we are going to call shenanigans. Putin insists that Russia has nothing to do with the hacking or “any future hacking incidents currently in the planning stages.” Putin offers to help investigate the problem by means of a special investigation app that he helpfully installs on Biden’s phone. The two leaders then engage in a ceremonial exchange of Social Security numbers. Both sides describe the meeting as “fruitful.”

In sadder administration news, Champ, the other White House dog, passes away. Major, speaking through his legal team, declares that he has an alibi.

New York City holds a mayoral primary featuring several thousand Democratic candidates and an estimated one Republican. The big issue for voters is the rising crime rate, as exemplified by the discovery that Staten Island is missing. In an effort to make the election more exciting, the city decides to use a new “ranked choice” voting system scientifically designed to eliminate the possibility that anybody will ever know for sure who actually won. The Democratic front-runner is believed to be either (A) former police captain Eric Adams, who is the Brooklyn borough president as well as possibly a resident of New Jersey, or (B) the late Ed Koch.

U.S. intelligence officials release a much-anticipated report on UFOs contradicting speculation that mysterious aerial phenomena observed by military pilots are extraterrestrial spacecraft. “In fact,” concludes the report, “it’s dragons.”

In other space news, the rover Perseverance celebrates its fourth month on Mars by deploying Fortitude, a $279 million rotating multifaceted reflective sphere believed to be the first fully operational disco ball on another planet.

But the news turns grim again in …

July



… as covid-19, which we thought was almost over — this is like the eighth or ninth time we have thought this — appears to be surging again in certain areas because of the “delta variant,” which gets its name from the fact that it is spread primarily by fraternities. The problem is that many Americans have declined to be vaccinated, despite the efforts of pro-vaccine voices to change the minds of the skeptics by informing them that they are stupid idiots, which is usually a persuasive argument. In response to the surge, the CDC issues new guidelines urging Americans to “do the opposite of whatever we said in our previous guidelines, not that anyone is paying attention.”

In the month’s most upbeat story, Richard Branson and Jeff Bezos (who owns The Washington Post) pioneer a new era in billionaire leisure travel by going up in private suborbital spacecraft. The two flights are radically different: Branson’s takes off in New Mexico and returns to Earth in New Mexico; whereas Bezos (who we remind you owns The Washington Post) takes off in Texas and comes down in Texas. Space enthusiasts say these missions will pave the way toward a future in which ordinary people with millions of spare dollars will be able to travel from one part of a state to a completely different part of that state while wearing matching outfits.

In other space news, the Mars Rover Perseverance celebrates Independence Day by deploying Intrepid, a $172 million laser-activated extruded-meat cylinder believed to be the first hot dog successfully prepared on another planet. Unfortunately, because of a software glitch, Intrepid’s $37 million Condiment Propulsion Module (CPM) overshoots its target and squirts 27 grams of specially engineered space mustard onto Valiant, the $52 million first-ever extraterrestrial picnic blanket.

In Tokyo, the pandemic-delayed 2020 Olympic Games (motto: “Later, Smaller, Sadder”) finally get underway with the majestic Nasal Swab of Nations. This is followed by the ceremonial lighting of the Olympic Torch, which for safety reasons is a small vanilla-scented bath candle that is immediately extinguished to prevent it from attracting crowds. Let the Games begin!

In other sports news, major NCAA rules changes allow college athletes to cash in on name, image and likeness for the first time ever, wink wink. The biggest beneficiary, signing a sponsorship deal estimated to be worth more than $100 million, is the University of Alabama’s highly touted incoming freshman quarterback, Tom Brady.

The month ends with the delta-variant surge worsening, bringing back mask mandates and social-distancing requirements as health experts, government officials and the media join together to convey the following clear, consistent and reassuring message to the public:

⋅ You should get vaccinated, because the vaccines will make you safe.

⋅ But remember that even if you get vaccinated, you can still get infected.

⋅ Also you can infect others and kill them.

⋅ So just because you’re vaccinated, don’t go around thinking you’re safe.

⋅ NOBODY IS SAFE, YOU FOOL.

Speaking of confusion, the big story in …

August



… is the withdrawal of American forces from Afghanistan, a country that, thanks to 20 years of our involvement, has been transformed — at a cost of many lives and more than $2 trillion — from an undemocratic society into an undemocratic society with a whole lot of abandoned American military hardware lying around. Most Americans agree that we have accomplished our mission, which is the same mission that the Russians had in Afghanistan before us, and the British had before them; namely, to get the hell out of Afghanistan.

The Biden administration, noting that the president has more than 140 years of experience reading teleprompter statements about foreign policy, assures everyone that it has a Sound Exit Plan allowing for Every Possible Contingency, and insists that the withdrawal is going well. This assessment is confirmed by observers on the ground, particularly Jen Psaki, with the ground in her case being the White House press briefing room. Observers who are actually in Kabul paint a somewhat darker picture of the withdrawal, more along the lines of what would have happened if the Hindenburg had crashed into the Titanic during a soccer riot.

It is a tragic time for America, particularly our military, but it is also a time when we are reminded that when things go bad, we are a nation whose leaders can be relied upon to step up and not take personal responsibility. The Biden people blame Trump, for naively making a bad deal with the Taliban; the Trump people blame Biden, for botching the exit.

So in the end — this is the beauty of our current political environment — everybody has somebody else to blame, and nobody is responsible. American leadership has come a long way since the days of Dwight Eisenhower, who, on the eve of D-Day, wrote a short, plainly worded letter, to be published if the invasion failed, in which he said that the blame was his alone.

What a loser.
The Milk Crate Challenge briefly takes center stage as the latest fun new way for Internet dimwits to injure themselves.



In more positive news, the Food and Drug Administration grants full approval to the Pfizer coronavirus vaccine, a move that opens the door, at last, for millions of unvaccinated people to come up with a new excuse not to get it.

Meanwhile the delta variant continues to surge, especially in the South. Among the worst-hit states is Florida, where Gov. Ron DeSantis, faced with skyrocketing case numbers, focuses, laserlike, on the root problem: local school boards flagrantly attempting to make decisions about local schools.

In other state news, Andrew Cuomo announces that he is resigning as governor of New York because he is a warm and loving human being who did absolutely nothing wrong.

On the fad front, the Milk Crate Challenge briefly takes center stage as the latest fun new way for Internet dimwits to injure themselves. There is no conclusive proof that all of these “challenge” fads — the Tide Pod Challenge is another example — originated in a laboratory in Wuhan, China, but you have to wonder.

Meanwhile global climate change continues to be a big concern as scientists release disturbing satellite images showing that the Antarctic ice sheet, for the first time in thousands of years, has developed a Dairy Queen.

Speaking of disturbing, in …

September



… the coronavirus vaccine controversy escalates when distinguished rapper/epidemiologist Nicki Minaj issues a tweet stating that her cousin in Trinidad had a friend who got vaccinated and became impotent and his man fruits swelled up and his fiancee canceled their wedding. We are not making this up. The Minaj tweet instantly becomes international news, receiving more attention than any statement made in the past year by Anthony Fauci. Numerous health authorities dispute Minaj’s assertion, including Trinidad Health Minister Terrence Deyalsingh, who states that the nation has had no known vaccine-related cases of masculine balloonage. Nevertheless Minaj stands by her story and posts another tweet, using the hashtag #BallGate (we are still not making this up), stating that she has been invited to the White House to discuss the situation. Questioned about this by reporters, press secretary Jen Psaki says that the White House offered to arrange a phone call between Minaj and a White House doctor, producing forehead slaps from millions of Americans who cannot speak to their own doctors without spending roughly a month on hold. Eventually the story peters out and America moves on, but not before our national average IQ has dropped at least 15 points.

In the ongoing 2020 presidential election, Donald Trump — who insists that there was MASSIVE FRAUD in Arizona and he actually beat Joe Biden — is finally vindicated when a company hired by the Republican-controlled state Senate to review the ballots concludes that …

Okay, it concludes that Trump did, in fact, lose; in fact he lost by even more votes than originally reported. Trump, reacting to this finding, declares that it proves there was MASSIVE FRAUD in Arizona and he actually beat Joe Biden. And thus the healing begins.

In other state news, voters in California, which operates under the Perpetual Recall system of government, decide that for the time being they will keep Gov. Gavin Newsom, who campaigned on the slogan “The Other Candidates Are Even Worse.” (We feel compelled to note here that “Gavin Newsom” is an anagram for “Veganism Now.”)

In space news, the Mars rover Perseverance deploys Excelsior, a $141 million robotic leg developed for NASA by Nike, and uses it to successfully kick what appears to be the first-ever field goal on another planet, only to have it nullified by a holding penalty.

The month ends with major drama in Washington, where Democrats are locked in a vicious ideological battle with … okay, basically with themselves, over how to pass two spending bills, one for infrastructure costing $1 trillion and one for miscellaneous items costing $3.5 trillion, which sounds like a lot of money until you understand that the entire amount will be funded by leprechauns. It’s an exciting time to be alive if you’re the kind of person who enjoys — and who doesn’t? — interminable slogs through an incomprehensible legislative process.

The excitement continues to build in …

October



… as the Democrats spend the entire month engaged in increasingly frantic efforts to reach some kind of budget agreement with themselves, even going so far as to consider reducing the $3.5 trillion to only $1.75 trillion, which in Washington is viewed as barely enough for gratuities. Meanwhile the Republicans, led by Mitch McConnell, sit around getting pedicures. President Biden, for his part, takes several trips to Delaware. Vice President Harris also engages in important activities.

But the big story is the worsening economy, which is showing a number of disturbing trends:

Inflation continues to be a pesky problem, with food prices soaring and gasoline approaching $4 per gallon everywhere in the nation except California, where, for environmental reasons, it is $137.50.

⋅ The labor shortage has become so severe that for the first time since it began keeping records, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, which produces a monthly report on the nation’s employment situation, does not have enough workers to produce the monthly report.

⋅ U.S. consumers are seeing more and more empty store shelves caused by disruptions in the supply chain from China, which despite being our global archenemy currently manufactures every product consumed by Americans except Zippo lighters. Economists warn that the supply-chain problems threaten to put a damper on the holidays, a time when Americans traditionally gather together in big-box stores to fight over TV sets.
The delta variant gets its name from the fact that it is spread primarily by fraternities.


Speaking of threats: American military and intelligence officials express concern over reports that China has tested a nuclear-capable hypersonic missile, although a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson states that it was “probably a bat.”

In other disturbing developments, Facebook suffers a worldwide outage lasting several harrowing hours, during which billions of people are forced to obtain all of their misinformation from Twitter. Later in the month Facebook Chief Execudroid Mark Zuckerberg announces that, to better reflect Facebook’s vision for the future, the parent company is changing its name to the Washington Redskins.

In sports the “feel good” story is the New York Yankees, who, for the 12th consecutive year, do not even get to the World Series (neither, incredibly, does Tom Brady). The two teams that do qualify are the Houston Astros, whose players openly carry wads of cash on the field so they can bribe umpires, and the Atlanta Braves, whose home field is in Atlanta, Ga., a location that was morally unacceptable to Major League Baseball in April but is okay now because, to quote an official statement issued by MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred, “shut up.”

As the month ends, Biden heads to Rome for a Group of 20 summit with the top leaders of the world’s most important economic powers, except for China, Russia, Japan and Mexico, whose top leaders are unable to attend because of previously scheduled dental appointments. Nevertheless the president is able to successfully participate in a series of discussions that are characterized by the White House communications staff as “verbal.”

The nonstop presidential action continues not stopping in …

November



… as President Biden heads to Glasgow, a city located in Scotland or possibly Wales, to participate in COP26, a 190-nation conference on climate change attended by more than 30,000 political leaders, diplomats, bureaucrats, experts, spokespersons, observers, aides, minions, private-jet pilots and of course Leonardo DiCaprio. After an incalculable number of catered meals and lengthy impassioned speeches making the points that (1) the climate crisis is real, (2) this is an emergency, (3) the time for action is NOW, (4) we cannot afford to wait ONE DAY longer, and (5) WE ARE NOT KIDDING AROUND THIS IS SERIOUS DAMMIT, the participating nations hammer out a historic agreement declaring, in no uncertain terms, that they will definitely, no excuses this time, gather next year for another conference, which, in a clear indication of progress, will be named “COP27.” Take that, climate change!

But the big November excitement takes place in Washington, where Congress finally passes the $1.2 trillion infrastructure bill, intended to repair the nation’s crumbling roads and bridges through the acquisition and deployment of 48 billion rolls of duct tape. This is the first big legislative win for Biden, who travels to New Hampshire to promote the new law by making a speech on a bridge constructed in 1939, which immediately thereafter collapses.

During this time Vice President Harris also is very involved in various things that she is doing.

In a stunning political upset, Terry McAuliffe, the heavily favored Democratic candidate for governor of Virginia, is defeated by Republican Glenn Youngkin, a political novice. Exit polls show that the deciding issue, especially among independent voters, was the fact that the letters in “Glenn Youngkin” can be rearranged to spell “Nun Lying On Keg,” whereas “Terry McAuliffe” gives you “A Firefly Rectum.”

As the busy holiday travel season gets underway, millions of travelers flock to the nation’s major airports. This comes as a big shock to some of the nation’s major airlines, which apparently had not been informed that the holidays can be a busy travel time. As one distraught airline executive put it: “Suddenly all these people just showed up with tickets they apparently purchased from us. How in God’s name is anybody supposed to plan for THAT?”

In other holiday news, Joe Biden, carrying on a fun presidential tradition, ceremonially “pardons” two Thanksgiving turkeys, Peanut Butter and Jelly, who are sent off to retire on an Indiana farm, where they are eaten by Major the former White House dog. On Thanksgiving Day itself, families all across America pause to observe Thanksgiving just as the Pilgrims did, by buying things on the Internet.

On the economic front, the Biden administration, seeking to counteract the steep rise in gasoline prices, orders the Department of Energy to release 50 million barrels of oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve. Within minutes a dozen towns in East Texas are flattened by an oil wave estimated to be 200 feet high. “Apparently,” states a red-faced department spokesperson, “you’re supposed to release the oil into a pipeline.”

Meanwhile, in response to a global shortage of maple syrup, the Federation of Quebec Maple Syrup Producers announces that it is releasing 50 million pounds of syrup from its strategic reserve. You probably think we are making this item up, but we are not.

As the month draws to a close, anxiety mounts worldwide over yet another coronavirus variant, called “omicron,” which we are pretty sure is also the name of one of the lesser villains in “Avengers: Endgame.” Everyone — government officials, medical authorities and the media — assures the public that while the new variant is a cause for concern, there is no reason to panic because OHMIGOD THEY’RE BANNING TRAVEL FROM AFRICA THE STOCK MARKET IS CRASHING THE VACCINES MIGHT NOT WORK WE ARE ALL GOING TO DIE POSSIBLY AS SOON AS THE MONTH OF ...

December



​... which begins with the nations of the world united in a heartwarming humanitarian effort to make sure that omicron stays in the other nations of the world. The U.S. government considers tough new restrictions on international travelers, including requiring their planes to circle the airport for seven days before landing, but eventually settles on a compromise under which the planes will be allowed to land, but the passengers must remain in the airport eating prepackaged kiosk sandwiches until, in the words of a CDC spokesperson, “all of their germs are dead.”

​President Biden, in a reassuring address to the nation on his strategy for dealing with a potential winter coronavirus surge, urges Americans to “do what it says on the teleprompter.”

​Meanwhile the media, performing their vital, constitutionally protected function of terrifying the public, run story after story documenting the relentless advance of omicron, with headlines like “First Omicron Case Reported in Japan,” “Omicron Now Reported in California,” “Omicron Heading Your Way,” “OMICRON IS IN YOUR ATTIC RIGHT NOW,” etc.

​On the legislative front, congressional leaders, facing what we are required, by the rules of professional journalism, to describe as a looming deadline, work feverishly to prevent an unprecedented partial shutdown of the federal government for the 27th or 28th time. Finally they hammer out a deal under which the government will be temporarily funded via a loan from an individual named Vinny, to be repaid in cash by Feb. 18 or else Vinny takes legal possession of the nuclear aircraft carrier of his choice.

​No, that would be insane. Although not as insane as the way we actually fund the federal government.
On Thanksgiving Day, families pause to observe Thanksgiving just as the Pilgrims did, by buying things on the Internet.

​In other economic news, investors are alarmed when the Federal Reserve Board issues a formal statement declaring that it has no earthly idea what a “bitcoin” is, and it’s pretty sure nobody else does either.

​In holiday-season news, travel in the Midwest is snarled when the U.S. Department of Agriculture, seeking to alleviate a shortage of Christmas hams, releases 17 million head of pig from the Strategic Pork Reserve, blocking every major road into and out of Iowa and causing the region to smell, in the words of Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds, “even worse than usual.”

​Finally, mercifully, the troubled year nears its conclusion. As the nation prepares to celebrate New Year's Eve, the mood is subdued and thoughtful. People are still getting drunk and throwing up, but they're doing this in a subdued and thoughtful manner. Because nobody knows what 2022 will bring. Will it suck as much as this year? Will it suck more? Or will it suck a LOT more? These appear to be our choices.

​Perhaps, as we face the new year, we should look beyond the confines of our troubled planet for reasons to hope. Perhaps we can turn for inspiration to the plucky NASA rover Perseverance, which, as 2021 draws to a close, sends a message back to Earth across millions of miles of space. It's a simple message, but one that resonates deeply with all of humanity: Perseverance has detected omicron on Mars.

​Okay, so that’s not very hopeful. But don’t let it stop you from ringing in 2022 on a festive note. For one night, forget about the bad things. Be festive, party hard and, in the words of Anthony Fauci, “remove your mask before you throw up.”

​Happy new year.

Dave Barry is a Pulitzer Prize-winning humor columnist and author.