“The 60 Million Dollar UFC, White (Trash) House Takeover Should piss Off Every Decent American
… What in the white trash hell was that?
How did we get here?
I’m not talking about the perfect storm of corruption, toxic religion, and white nationalism that has resulted in the unthinkable ascension to power of one of the most reprehensible, festering sacks of organic matter to ever leave his putrid slime trails on the planet.
Greater minds can unpack the complex historical and social explanations for the inexplicable sequel given to the greatest single collective electoral error in our history.
What I want to know is how, at the precipice of our two hundred and fiftieth year as a Republic, have we devolved into the disgraceful public urination that took place at our nation’s Capitol.
If you took every stereotype of the ugly American, the most monstrously exaggerated caricatures of us as a people, the absolute worst clichés of this nation at our most base, most ignorant, and most vile, and you fed it into an AI program with the prompt: make something truly disgusting—this is what you’d have ended up with.
We should be the United States of Embarrassment today. There should be nonpartisan vomiting and facepalming all across this nation after witnessing this wasteful, 60-million-dollar, star-spangled, asinine, white supremacist dudebro circle jerk on the lawn of the People’s House, our house.
Watching this garish Temu Roman Colosseum cosplay filled with grifters, predators, and criminals should infuriate every single American who has a shred of self-respect or love of country left.
In any other iteration of our country, this would not stand. Knowing that their taxes were funding an opulent, violent, phobic birthday party for a cognitively failing serial pedophile would propeled our proud and patriotic forebears into a complete overthrow of those in power.
In a time when people have to choose between paying their rent, or affording routine healthcare, when families can’t afford groceries or to fill their gas tanks, when we’re funding foreign genocides and domestic concentration camps, when we’re told we can’t afford to house or feed or care for the most vulnerable—this should make our blood boil.
More than that, it should wake us all the hell up: conservative, moderate, or liberal; Democrat, Independent, or Republican; straight or queer, well off or struggling, native born or immigrant, to the reality that we are all being played.
The billionaires (and the trillionaire) are mocking us all right now; dismantling the systems and protections designed to care for each of us, ignoring the Constitution, discarding morality, hoarding the wealth that was meant to be shared, devouring our natural resources, turning us against one another—and giving us a sweaty, bloated 60-million-dollar middle finger to us in the process.
November should be a reckoning for these narcissistic vampires once and for all, but we shouldn’t wait that long. Last night should be enough. This should be the final straw for every human being who calls this place home, rousing each of us out of whatever apathy, denial, political tribalism, wishful thinking, or American exceptionalism that has kept us on the sidelines.
The white trash, classless stupidity on the White House lawn last night was a microcosm of the prolific mockery of America that this President and his accomplices have made for ten years now.
These people believe that we’re ignorant, that we’re lazy, that we’re too distracted and soft to give a damn about the fact that they’re fleecing us, that all we need is a the easy high of fireworks and faux patriotism to lull us into inaction.
If we allow them to prevail, we’ll have proven them right.
I believe that the government should not favor any one religious group, including my own.
I believe people should be free to live according to their own beliefs.
My faith compels me to pursue the common good for all, not control.
There are many of us out here.
The reason I don’t want a “Christian nation” isn’t because I’m against Christianity.
It’s because I have studied church history in depth and have seen the tremendous harm caused by the church crawling into bed with the empire.
Separation of church and state is best for everyone.
It is a patriotic act to oppose Christian nationalism.
It is a patriotic act to uphold the separation of church and state.
It is a patriotic act to uphold the freedoms of all your fellow citizens, no matter if they believe the same thing as you do or not.
The separation of church and state protects Christianity rather than threatens it.
It protects Christianity from becoming corrupt by the allure of political power, wealth, and privilege, which causes it to abandon the gospel of Jesus.
It protects Christianity from nationalism.
It helps keep Christianity Christian.
Once the church crawls into bed with the empire, it loses its ability to prophetically speak truth to power. It becomes a mouthpiece for the empire instead.
Beware of any Christian movement that needs a government in order to succeed.
Beware of any government that needs a Christian movement in order to succeed.’
(The God Podcast) ‘the great Dr. Jane Goodall recorded this message in March 2025 with the understanding that it would only be released after her death. And now, from Heaven, her voice has come back to remind us what truly matters:
Do you have people that you don’t like?
“Absolutely, there are people I don’t like. And I would like to put them on one of Musk’s spaceships and send them all off to the planet he’s sure he’s going to discover…”
Would he be one of them?
“Oh, absolutely. He’d be the host. And you can imagine who I’d put on that spaceship.”
Who?
“Along with Musk would be Trump and some of Trump’s real supporters. And then I would put Putin in there.
And I would put President Xi. I’d certainly put Netanyahu in there and his far-right government. Put them all on that spaceship and send them off.
In the place where I am now, I look back over my life.
I look back at the world I’ve left behind. What message do I want to leave? I want to make sure that you all understand that each and every one of you has a role to play. You may not know it, you may not find it, but your life matters.
And you are here for a reason. And I just hope that that reason will become apparent as you live through your life. I want you to know that whether or not you find that role that you’re supposed to play, your life does matter and that every single day you live, you make a difference in the world.
And you get to choose the difference that you make. I want you to understand that we are part of the natural world. And even today, where the planet is dark, there still is hope. Don’t lose hope. If you lose hope, you become apathetic and do nothing.
Above all, I want you to think about the fact that we are part when we’re on planet Earth. We are part of Mother Nature. We depend on Mother Nature for clean air, for water, for food, for clothing, for everything.
And as we destroy one ecosystem after another, as we create worse climate change, worse loss of diversity, we have to do everything in our power to make the world a better place for the children alive today and for those that will follow.
You have it in your power to make a difference. Don’t give up. There is a future for you. Do your best while you’re still on this beautiful planet Earth that I look down upon from where I am now…”
(Letters from God) [and video of Dr. Jane Goodall]:
“When in the course of human events it becomes necessary for a people to break from a leader who governs with cruelty, contempt, and corruption, a decent respect to the opinions of humankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.
We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all people are created equal, endowed with inherent dignity and unalienable rights—among these are life, liberty, equality, and the pursuit of justice.
That to secure these rights, governments derive their power from the consent of the governed. When a leader becomes destructive of these ends, it is the right and duty of the people to refuse allegiance and to stand united in the defense of their freedoms.
The current holder of high office has shown himself to be unfit to lead a free and just society.
* He disrespects women, mocking survivors of violence and stripping away their rights.
* He fuels racism and white supremacy, scapegoating communities of color and denying their equality.
* He assaults free speech, attacking the press, punishing dissent, and spreading disinformation.
* He exploits public office for private gain, enriching himself and the billionaire class while abandoning the poor and working people.
* He undermines justice, ignores the rule of law, and places himself above accountability.
* He disregards science, endangering lives in times of crisis and sacrificing the planet for profit.
* He fans division and incites violence to maintain power, wielding fear as a weapon against the people.
Time and again, we have protested peacefully, spoken truthfully, and appealed to our shared humanity. We have been met with indifference, hostility, and violence. A leader who governs through hatred and greed is unfit to govern at all.
Therefore, we, the people of conscience and conviction, do solemnly declare our independence from this tyrant and all he represents.
We withdraw our consent.
We refuse to be complicit in cruelty.
We reject the abuse of power for personal gain.
We stand for dignity, truth, equality, and justice for all people.
With firm reliance on each other and unwavering hope in our collective strength,
We pledge to resist oppression in all its forms,
To uphold the rights of the vulnerable,
And to build a future grounded in compassion, courage, and shared humanity.
Let this declaration be both a breaking and a beginning.”
1) I love SchoolHouse Rock songs (I was born in Santa Clara, California, USA). I thought everyone knew SchoolHouse Rock at first, but then I realized that it was only from 1973 to 1985, and 1993 to 1996:
I’m not sure if Elon Musk had SchoolHouse Rock songs in Pretoria, South Africa, but he is basically the same age as me (well is birthday is June 28, 1971; and my birthday is March 22, 1967).
So, (on ‘Twitter’ — yes I still call it ‘Twitter’ not ‘x’):
[Elon Musk]: “Consistent with President
@realDonaldTrump’s instructions, all federal employees will shortly receive an email requesting to understand what they got done last week.
Failure to respond will be taken as a resignation.”
Maureen Twomey (@Maureen_2me) :
“Since I don’t work for the federal government, instead did you forget the song ‘No More Kings’ ?🤨
2) I have always been a democrat. In 1983, when I was 16 years old, I became a Christian.
Some people thought, ‘So are you now a republican?’
(Me) ‘If President Jimmy Carter (who is a Christian) becomes a republican, I will maybe consider that then …”
(Still a Christian/Catholic now. And still a democrat.)
BUT …
The first time I voted was in 1988, I didn’t vote for President George H. Bush, and I didn’t vote for Bob Dole, President George W. Bush, John McCain, Mitt Romney but they are all good decent people I think.
P.S.: Totally other topic: I always do creative holiday cards every year (since 1993; well two times I just bought cards. In 1999 was too busy to think of a witty card. And in 2000, I had a huge stroke (d’oh!).
Anyway, here’s my Dec. 2024 holiday card:
Jan. 20, 2025 when Joe Biden was still President, the open Dow Jones was $43,528. etc.
Now, March 13, 2025, Donald Trump is President, and the Dow Jones is $40,813.57…
This is last years holiday card. Maybe I should just send this holiday card again, in Dec. 2025? Hmm …
“One week after the Palisades Fire, for a three-generation family.
I had a “Go bag” in the front closet of my house, a small black duffel bag I could barely zip closed, full of journals I had saved for so many years it seems pointless now, my inner life from childhood through young motherhood. I can see the bag clearly, a little dusty, on the left side on a shelf. A window in the closet let in light to see the persistently-returning spider webs, and the long jackets that are my one fashion flair. The orange one that was too tight but I kept it anyway because it was pretty, and the giraffe-print fuzzy fabric Betsy Johnson jacket I’d had to convince myself I could gift myself for my birthday 20-ish years ago. Just now I realize that I wore it in December, to the Sklaar Brothers show in Silverlake (another story of kindness of strangers, those guys). I’m glad the jacket got one last fling.
The thing is, I wasn’t at home when the fire started. When I left for work that day, one of the 2-3 days I spent downtown in lawyer mode, the day was lovely. Christopher and I walked our dogs down Toyopa to Drummond, toward Sunset and the Alphabet Streets. Our dogs had led us where they’d wanted to go, and as we stood at the corner of Sunset and Drummond, waiting for the light to change to green, giving the dogs a treat for their patience, we did what we always did: looked toward the hills toward our left and said, God, this place is so beautiful.
I felt refreshed from a winter break spent at home, the office having closed for the holidays. I’d brought my office plants home in a big box, to make sure they’d survive and get plenty of water, and I had decided to bring most of them back on Thursday. I had one small plant in my car when I left my home the last time, 8am on Tuesday, January 7. It was my 2-year anniversary as a staff attorney at Immigration Center for Women and Children, and I was meeting a new client that morning, an unaccompanied immigrant child, and interviewing her about her worst day, the reason she’d had to flee home.
After our meeting, around 12:30 pm, I saw my family group texts. My son and husband had seen dark smoke and heard sirens, and left home before any evacuation order, thinking they’d be back by evening. They’d left with our dogs, their laptops, and my son’s clothes to play basketball and then cover UCLA basketball.
By the time I saw the texts, they were at my niece’s apartment in Santa Monica.
A mile away from them, in my childhood home, my parents were gathering medicine and leaving, too. Soon after, my sister would flee her home midway between ours, after taking photos of the encroaching flames from her balcony, the townhouse between our elementary school and our high school.
By afternoon, we realized no one was going home that night. We called a friend in Larchmont who welcomed us, fed us, gave us beds, and was packing his own go- bags by the second night at his house, as fires spread and ash rained down.
Around 9pm on Tuesday, my friend since kindergarten texted our tight-knit writing group of six that her house was gone. Disbelief, sorrow, foreboding.
I heard the wind still gusting, saw the orange light of flames by a neighbor’s house through our Ring-dupe camera, until the image went black. I went to bed knowing, fearing, still hoping. Most of all, I hoped that my parents’ house would be spared.
My parents’ house was a magical place for our family. Nearly 100 years old, and they lived there for half of its existence. It held forth at the top of the bluffs — Pacific’s palisades, a wild place I roamed as a kid with my best friend Roberta from across the street, building forts and collecting snails. It was a normal home in the sense that it hosted all our birthday parties, sleepovers, Sweet Sixteens, high school musical cast parties, extended family Thanksgivings, and my sister’s and my Bat Mitzvahs and weddings. And it was a special house, as a place that always welcomed us. When their first grandchild was born, they bought a crib for sleepovers, and each of their four grandchildren slept in it. We all had either on our own keys, or knew where the hidden key hiding place was and the alarm code and the password if you screwed it up. I could tell you now because it wouldn’t matter, but I won’t.
It was also an unusual home in that there they welcomed masses of people, the site of political fundraisers. It is where many people met candidates for President, Senate, Congress, and mayor, with an expansive gorgeous view of the Pacific.
I awoke Wednesday morning to my mother’s text. Their home was gone.
As texts among family and friends and neighbors flew, everyone trying to get information about their house, we read one saying that everything from Chautauqua and Sunset to the village was gone.
Our home was gone, too.
We prayed my sister’s home might still be okay. Some reports were that it was still there. Some of the homes on the block were still there. But the winds were still blowing. By Wednesday morning, the fire had caught up to them. My sister’s home had been destroyed, too.
I keep trying to feel everything and I cannot. If I had only lost my home, all my journals, and my grandmother’s photo albums that cannot be replaced, her pieces of jewelry I loved to put on just to feel her wearing them, I might be able to feel more sorrow for myself. If I had only lost my home, I would have been able to find physical respite in my parents’ or sister’s homes, and emotional respite knowing that they are not going through the same devastation. That they hold some of the physical memories I have lost — the meticulously kept photo albums of my parents’ childhoods, with photos of their parents and grandparents.
And yet, hoping did not hold back catastrophe. All our homes are gone: My best friends from middle and high school, who were also drawn back to this community. My neighbors. My kids’ peditrician. My rabbis. My Torah study friends. My yoga friends. My writing friends. The Playgroup.
The Playgroup: When in 1968, my parents found this sleepy town and moved there because it was the most affordable (yes) place they could find close to the clean ocean air they prized, they found community with the young families of the Palisades Democratic Club. From that group, they formed a babysitting collective, taking turns watching five or six toddlers. To this day, though we are in our fifties, we are always and forever known as The Playgroup. The Playgroup parents were like aunts and uncles to me, and their kids like cousins. Even if we didn’t have the same friend groups at school, I knew they belonged to me like family.
Many of those kids found a way back to this community and watched our children follow us to the same elementary schools and high schools, play in the Palisades Rec Center sandbox and basketball courts together, and baseball in the PPBA. My son Aaron, now a sportswriter, wrote his first piece in the Paul Revere Middle School newspaper about my Playgroup friend’s daughter Alyssa on the Paul Revere soccer team. Most of the Playgroup kids, and all of our parents who remained, lost their homes, too.
The people I would call to lean on, to ask for advice, we are all trying so hard to keep our own families going, and we are still texting one another — how are you today? where are you today? I love you.We are strong.
What still exists is the will to keep going. What still exists are friends — and strangers — from all over outside the Palisades, offering places to stay, sending financial help to replace necessities — like this laptop I am writing on right now, ordering my dog’s food for me because it was beyond my capacity, and knowing we are loved and held.
What still exists is the memory of the necklace I wore almost every day, a gift from my grandparents, a heart-shaped necklace that hung above my own heart and which I touched for comfort in the year she was dying. I did not wear it last Tuesday, it is physically gone, too, but I close my eyes and touch my chest where it should be, and feel it there.
This is all the bandwith I have for today. I have hidden out pretending that I am getting sleep for as long as I can. I have more to say on what remains, because so much does, but this is all for now. forgive typos and incoherence.
Laura …”
❣️❣️❣️❣️❣️
…
‘Laura Nicole Diamond is the author of the bestselling novel SHELTER US(winner of the 2016 National Indie Excellence Award for Literary Fiction), DANCE WITH ME: a love letter, and editor of DELIVER ME: True Confessions of Motherhood,a collection of stories by 20 writers, whose proceeds benefit non-profits that help homeless families.’
“I didn’t start as a writer (though I was always a journal keeper). My first career was raising a ruckus as a civil rights lawyer. Then I had my two sons, and the real ruckus began.
Motherhood jump-started my muse, and writing became my professional focus. But I am an advocate at heart, so after a hiatus from lawI returned to practicing asylum law, which informs my writing.
My books deal with topics that motivate (and often confound) me: motherhood, homelessness, immigrant youth, and how we imperfect humans respond to the ethical call to make the world a better place.
I am always delighted to be invited to speak with book groups, author panels, and especially to support charitable groups …”
“As we Christians approach Christmas this Advent, may we remember all the ways Jesus could have come into the world, but didn’t:
Jesus could have come as an emperor with legions of angel armies and instantly wiped Rome off the map and created a “Christian nation” in its place to rule the world, but he instead came as a helpless baby.
Jesus could have been born to a wealthy and politically powerful family, but was instead born to a poor refugee family.
Jesus could have come born intentionally for religious, political, and ethnic exclusivity, but his birth includes wise astrologists of other faiths (the magi), and foreign kings.
Angels could have been sent to announce Jesus birth to the generals of the world’s empires, but they announced their tidings of great joy to shepherds.
Jesus could have come any way Jesus desired. He had all cosmic power after all. Yet Jesus intentionally came in a way the world still defines as too weak, too poor, too inclusive, too marginalized, and too ineffectual.
The way Jesus chose to come into our world shows us that we so often do not define power the way he does and he refuses to define power the way we do.
The radically humble and loving way Jesus came to be God-with-us is the way we are called to strive to be us-with-God.
Imagine if this was the way we Christians kept Christ in Christmas.
May Advent prepare us to approach God and one another the same way this Christmas.
“Adopt the attitude that was in Christ Jesus: Though he was in the form of God, he did not consider being equal with God something to exploit. But he emptied himself by taking the form of a servant and by becoming a human being. When he found himself in the form of a human, he humbled himself by becoming obedient to the point of death, even death on a cross.” -Philippians 2:5-8
I have written a daily devotional for the season of Advent. It is available as an “ebook” here:
“Arrival: Daily Reflections For The Season of Advent
Crafted to begin on December 1st and end on Christmas Day, each of these 25 daily readings will focus on a passage from scripture and invite us to reflect on what Jesus’ arrival at Christmas means for us and our world today. You can download the full “ebook” to read on your favorite device through the link below. My hope with these reflections is that they stoke greater faith, hope, peace, and love in your heart as you journey from Advent to Christmas.”
Writing while grieving deeply is like drunk-tweeting: it’s likely not going to come out well or effectively convey anything helpful. I don’t feel like I have real encouragement to offer you and I don’t want to bullshit you or myself by trying to pretend that I do.
But maybe reaching out to you right now, in the middle of the disorienting hurricane inside my head and with this massive stone sitting upon my chest is the best time: because some days the beautiful mess is a whole lot more mess than it is beautiful, and this is one of those days.
Seriously, what the hell just happened?
There is no spinning this into something it isn’t.
We can name it: this. f–king. sucks.
It is the worst-case scenario, nightmare fuel, sh*t-meet-fan moment—a sky is falling, bottom-dropping-out disaster on a Biblical scale, and it hasn’t even really begun yet.
We are witnessing in real-time, a spectacular failure of the collective humanity of this nation: a defiant refusal to welcome in our better angels, a passionate embrace of the darkest recesses of our shadow sides.
And with that, what felt a few hours ago like a long-delayed but suddenly-within-reach dream for this nation and so many women and people of color particularly, evaporated into the ether, sWallowed-up by white supremacy and misogyny.
Most of us didn’t sleep last night, and if we did, we soon regretted it because we had to wake up and realize and feel it all over again: we are strangers in this land, we are orphans now without a homeland.
For a long time, we have been fighting a battle for the narrative in our heads about America. Despite so much evidence around us to the contrary over the past ten years, we strained to believe that this is not who we are: his unapologetic racism, his contempt for the different, his vile disregard for women, his unrepentant hatred.
We hoped that if there was just a younger, more hopeful candidate who would offer a clear alternative; someone who calls us to unity and purpose, that this person would awaken the dormant goodness hidden within so many people.
And there she was: qualified, prepared, ready. She wore her fierce heart for this nation and all of its people on her sleeve. She declared her love for our Constitution and her belief in our shared humanity—and they simply said, “no thanks.”
Her gender and her pigmentation were apparently greater sins in their eyes than the litany of those her opponent wore like badges of honor.
And that is why this hurts like hell.
We all believed over the past four months that our friends, family members, and neighbors were coming out of the cultic haze that has aligned them with something so grotesque; that they were finally ready to emancipate themselves from it.
Instead, they declared with searing clarity that they have gone all-in with his rotten, putrid movement of phobia and grievance and dehumanization and we can’t avoid it any longer.
The reality, unmistakable to us right now, declared by the people, is that the majority of Americans have chosen this, three times. It was not a fluke or an aberration or a temporary leave of their senses—it was the desire of their poisoned hearts all along.
Over the past few years, we’ve often found ourselves saying, “This isn’t who were are! We’re better than this!”
But once again, they have told us that he is who they are, and this place is not better because of it.
And these people, those we find ourselves surrounded by here are celebrating democracy’s demise as if they’ve won something.
(I told you this was a bad idea.)
What has happened here is a national disaster and a relational catastrophe.
Tens of millions of families and friendships have been irrevocably fractured. That will never show up in the data as the media postmortem on America is completed and history records our swift leap into the abyss, but it will be where some of the greatest damage is felt.
Yes, the legislation will be grisly and the human rights atrocities will recall Germany one hundred years ago, and the America we grew up in will soon become unrecognizable.
But perhaps worse than all of that, is that the people who we called home are not anywhere we feel comfortable anymore.
Having to try and explain to your children how a majority of the people in the place they home chose a rapist over a woman of color, is something no parent should have to experience, and yet that’s where I’ve found myself today.
To hell with those who’ve made this necessary.
None of us really can fathom what lies ahead, how we will alter our lives, where we might go from here, but we know that we will likely never mend the wounds inflicted in these hours.
Listen, friends, I know your steadfast goodness, your boundless compassion, your persistent spirits, and as devastated as you are right now I know that you will keep doing all you can do to be light and decency and love, even when it is most difficult (which would be where we find ourselves). I believe in your capacity to persevere and to keep fighting and I will be joining you in that work, which will be more necessary now than ever moving forward.
But right now, all you’re required to do is sit with this second, this breath, and fully mourn what you’ve lost, what we’ve all lost.
And speaking of loss, the story will be told that Kamala Harris lost but she didn’t lose, America did.
As a nation, we collectively failed her, and in doing so we failed girls and women, the LGBTQ community, people of color, Muslims, Jewish people, immigrants, the sick, the poor, the elderly, the people of Ukraine, and Gaza, and the planet.
It’s unthinkable, that instead of being able to celebrate a glorious, hopeful new chapter in the story of this nation with a leader who appealed to the best of our natures—we will instead be holding an autopsy for democracy as we enter our 250th year, stewarded by a malevolent sociopath who despises empathy and shuns the law.
This nation is broken, perhaps beyond repair, that much I know.
Whether I want to spend the rest of my life in such a place is something my mind isn’t prepared to consider.
Right now, I just know that I’m seeing the nation with my eyes fully open and there is no mistaking what so many people I Ioved and once respected, actually value.
As heartbreaking as that is, I now know where they stand, and I know it’s nowhere I want to be.
Racists, misogynists, and homophobes will be celebrating today.
Many former friends, family members, and neighbors will be, too.
For a long time, I tried to convince myself that those were two separate groups of people.
Today, I had to finally admit they are one.
Going forward, that’s what I will grieve the most.”