Saturday, June 6, 2026

Now is later.

 We have not been to a protest for three weeks due to all the comings and goings, and a reception and family time. Tim said last night that we must go today. I agree. 

A funny thing happened this week. Tim had a serious craving for a banana split so we stopped at an ice cream place, pulling into a parking place next to a minivan with a VOTE! sticker on the window. The driver was waiting on her order, texting as she sat sideways in the driver seat, her feet sticking out the open car door. 

My initial impression was that she was a kindred soul, so I said, 'Not just 'vote' but vote blue!' and headed to the ice cream place. 

She shot out after me so fast that I initially thought I had misjudged. She wanted me to repeat myself. I did. The look on her face, people! She could not believe her ears, that I would just come out and say it. She is afraid to. 

I told her that she needed to find a group, that she wasn't the only one seeing it...more and more people are seeing it everyday. 'You can't see this as hopeless!' I said.

She agreed that it was changing, but was discouraged at how slowly it was happening. 

"Come protest with us! Find a group! You will be encouraged."

When her number was called, she got her food and passed by us. "Keep the faith, sister!" She smiled.

And I guess that is why we need to 'find our tribe'. That little exchange. It is too easy to fall into the hopeless thinking that we are the only ones who see what is happening as wrong. That the vast majority see nothing unusual about this at all. 

This is not true: It IS wrong. Most people DO see it. What we do with that knowledge is what separates us.

I am re-reading Elie Wiesel's 'Night'. What has struck me happens at the beginning of those terrible years. The Jews themselves tried to justify it, to normalize what was happening.

When the foreign Jews were loaded into trains to be deported, the Jews not taken comforted themselves: "It is not that bad. They were sent back to where they belonged." 

When Moishe Beadle escaped and came back to tell the story that all those people were forced to dig their own graves,  lined up at the edge of their grave and shot to death, his stories were dismissed as the stories of a crazy man.

As the government was replaced by pro Nazi officials, the same people told themselves that the Red Army was defeating Germany and that their authoritarian government would not last. 

When the Germans did march into town, they lodged with local families, even Jewish families. 'It is not that bad. They are behaving with courtesy.

When the synagogues were closed, they said 'It is okay...our Rabbis hold the services in their home'.

It went on and on. Jews could not own valuables. They buried them in their basement. 'We can survive this'. 

After all, the yellow stars did not kill them to wear.

Even the ghettos: 'We are together. We don't have to deal with the insults and cruelty of outsiders.'

And it went on and on, that normalization, the comforting. 'It's not that bad', except that it eventually did get 'that bad'.

Like Moishe Beadle, many of us are sounding the alarm. We are surrounded by people who dismiss all of it as 'it's not that bad. These people are crazy.'

In the end, I suppose, it comes down to this: we are all seeing the events of these days. Each one of us, even MAGA, sees things that should not be happening. The question becomes simple. What are we going to do with that knowledge? 

You are free 'to do you'. As for me and my house, we will 'do us'. That includes being vocal enough that if a doubter stands on the sidelines, they know who we are. Easier to find us.

It has been a quiet week. I have been earnestly weedwhacking, trying to bring this wildness to some semblance of order. Weeding flower beds, which to be fair, are two chaotic spaces where I tossed distressed plants bought on clearance last year. I figured that if they grew, I could sort them out and replant them later. Now is the 'later', I guess.

Monday, we head for our Canadian vacation. 

you know, I cannot post pictures right now. I have many things to show you. Right now, though, I need to get ready to protest.

21 comments:

  1. You probably gave that woman a huge boost by speaking up! I agree there is tremendous value in knowing we're not alone and that lots of people see the danger in everything that's happening. I only hope it translates into showing up at the polls.

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    1. I know that I did. What I find so very interesting is that after a lifetime of keeping his opinions to himself, Tim has spoken. Remember the old Pearl Jam song Jeremy Spoke in Class Today'? Tim speaks. He will walk right into gas station and tell them he wants Trump's gas prices. He wears his Zelensky shirt everywhere. He doesn't care. When the quiet people speak, s**t's getting real.

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  2. This comment has been removed by the author.

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    1. Oh Doug. You didn't need to remove your comment! It is okay. I was trying to figure out the right words to respond. You are a quiet person. I get it. Please don't ever feel embarrassed to be you.

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  3. Yes. When we don't know what to DO, we can at least SPEAK.
    I plan to post the link (to your post today) onto my blog. You've said it well. I was recently asked for a book recommendation, you've reminded me of 'Night' and if there's anyone who's never read it, now is the time. -Kate

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    1. It was powerful the first time I read it. All these years later, it hits even more powerfully.

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  4. Thanks so much for sharing this, with the details from Weisel's book. So glad you connected with that woman. I'm also going to do what Blondi said above, and share your bog link. Have fun in Canada...I hope the weather and the politics are good!

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    1. They will certainly be preferable to our own politics.

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  5. good for finding a fellow traveller.
    Some people still don't believe USA or European history of those times
    Enjoy Canada! xx

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    1. They sure don't. Some American school districts have banned teaching it. That is bullshit.

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  6. I hope that all those frightened to speak up make their feelings known by voting.

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    1. Not everyone is bold enough to protest. That is okay. The people who I will not forget are the people who plainly see the wrong, but still criticize those who are willing to take that public stand, acting as if preserving the illusion is more important than confronting the wrongs.

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  7. Oh goodness, your weekend to catch breath (and then breathe it out in protest, eh?!) Sounds like a very worthy read.
    Its 3.8 celcius (38.4 f) feels like 0.9 (33.6) which is quite cool enough for this frog - and am at the parents who aren't up yet so enjoying my cuppa and catching up on blogs in the quiet pre-dawn light. So glad that you had a good visit from your daughter and the celebrations for the other went off smoothly

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    1. It was nice, Jeanie. I have always been a bit envious of your family, the closeness. This past couple weeks I felt like I had my own piece of that beauty.

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  8. For another perspective on how Hitler got away with the things he did for so long, I recommend Kate Atkinson's "Life After Life." It reminds me that much of the world did not know what Hitler was doing to/with the Jews. The horror was hidden. And this is why detainment facilities here MUST be open to inspection and oversight.
    Just one part of the picture but a real one.

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    1. For another perspective on that very topic, read 'Remember This' by Goldblum and Young. Incredibly powerful story of Jan Karski. A movie was made in 2023.

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  9. That's another reason I like to go to protests. It's great to be surrounded by people that think like I think and are hoping for an end to this criminal and cruel administration. The crowds have grown with every protest and so more people are joining the Blue wave we need...

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    1. Next Sunday is his birthday. We must all come together to mark that big day.

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I'm glad you're here!

Now is later.

 We have not been to a protest for three weeks due to all the comings and goings, and a reception and family time. Tim said last night that ...