Multiple people in the family are sad this morning that Akira Toriyama, the creator of Dragon Ball comics, has died at age 68. My older boys especially were obsessed with Dragon Ball when they were younger. It’s frightening how often creative lives run short.
I’m trying to settle in for a day of rain. Normally, that means extra pain meds to try and keep the arthritis at bay. This morning, oddly enough, it is only the end knuckles on three fingers on my right hand that are giving me fits. I’ve no idea why I’m getting this particular segmentation.
Reading through the reviews of last night’s State of the Union address, I’m convinced that the people in Georgia who elected Marjorie Taylor Greene must be as equally disgusting as she is. Otherwise, they would have had her out of office by now. She’s an embarrassment to a political system that does a good enough job of embarrassing itself.
How the hell do tires fall off an airplane? It happened to a United Airlines flight leaving San Francisco shortly after 11:30 yesterday. The tire fell into an employee parking lot, damaging several cars. This absolutely blows my mind. Why the fuck do we still fly when it’s increasingly obvious no one’s maintaining the damn planes?
My brain is not working well this morning. The number of corrections I have to make to my typing is disappointing. Maybe I’ll write more later.
But It’s Good For You!
I think we are becoming increasingly like our pets. We’ve slept all morning. Again. In fact, it’s been me, both dogs and, at times, six cats all snuggled up together as if our lives depended upon the joint body heat. If I don’t have something specific to occupy my time, such as joining someone for coffee, I will sleep. If I complain about all the sleeping, I’m told, “Your job right now is to get rest.” In other words, sleeping all this time is supposed to be good for me. Chemo is hard on the body. Get rest.
I’m noticing, however, that not everything that’s supposed to be good for you actually is. The US, Jordan, Egypt, France, the Netherlands, and Belgium engaged in a joint aid drop over Gaza earlier today. The packages contained much-needed food and basic medical supplies. This is a good thing, it would seem, given the inability to get aid to the people starving in Gaza.
What happened? One of the parachutes on a “parcel” failed to fully deploy causing it to crash to the ground killing five and wounding eleven. Obviously, this wasn’t the size parcel UPS typically carries. The package was supposed to help. It did exactly the opposite.
Aid groups also criticized the drop as being “wholly insufficient” to meet the growing humanitarian need in Gaza. A UN aid coordinator said that the airdrops were a “last resort.” Israel and Hamas have made any other means of supplying aid impossible. Wanting to do good and being able to do good are rarely unified when dealing with matters of this scale.
What’s next? In his State of the Union address last night, President Biden said, “I’m directing the US military to lean an emergency mission to establish a temporary pier in the Mediterranean on the Gaza coast that can receive large ships carrying food, water, medicine, and temporary shelters.” The mission will take weeks to plan and develop before any aid flows through the pier, but it sounds like something good to do, doesn’t it?
Maybe. What happens if Israel decides that somehow Hamas is using the pier? Are they going to bomb US military personnel, aid personnel, and Palestinian aid workers? Can Hamas be trusted to let the aid come in and get to the places where it is most desperately needed or will the shipments be hijacked? There is the distinct possibility that’s what meant to help could make things much worse in the region.
Funny how there are so many people who don’t want things to go well, who don’t want people to be helped, unless they are the ones doing it. Stupid-fund baby Elon Musk is a prime example. Recently, he’s been trolling MacKenzie Scott, Jeff Bezos’ ex, for her no-strings-attached generosity. There she is out there trying to do good by not attaching a bunch of stupid rules to her donations, and for some absolutely ridiculous reason, Musk feels threatened.
Really? How the fuck is Musk concerned? How do Ms. Scott’s donations affect him in the slightest? Oh, he’s afraid she’s using charities as a front for PAC donations.
Let’s break this down: Billionaires are never self-made. Billionaires are hoarders. Billionaire wealth comes from the hard work and creativity of thousands of people who are paid too little for their labor. Billionaires don’t earn shit.
They sure do care a lot about their image, though. They’ll spend millions of dollars employing staff to do deep dives on the charities they might help fund. They apply a lot of rules as to what the recipients can and cannot do with the money. Reporting is critical. Why? The billionaires don’t want anything to go sideways and tarnish their image. They don’t want to be left looking foolish or like bad guys. They want applause. They want to give the appearance of caring about the organizations they fund.
Is anyone buying this bullshit?
Along comes Ms. Scott with the novel approach of no-strings-attached funding. No carefully negotiated contracts. No limits on how the funds are used. No penalties. Only straightforward generosity. Suddenly, all the boys in the club are scared. That should teach us something about the true motives of those who are complaining about Ms. Scott’s donations.
And accelerate the argument that billionaires need to be heavily taxed. They owe every country where they have operations. They have because others starve.
I think I need to lie back down.
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