Yesterday’s News 2025 08 21

curated citations to news sources


Early on first day of crab season, Nov. 6, 2021, Ocean Beach California. (You don't catch anything if you don't cast a line. If you dont' stay with it. If you don't show up. I don't eat crabs but I do fish for metaphors.)

Rebecca Solnit: On Not Surrendering in Advance, or During, or At Any Point Thereafter

A friend of mine reminded me that the word encourage literally means to instill courage; we can do that or its opposite with how we speak, with what we say, with how we show up. It’s not the only work we can do during this emergency, but it’s an important part of it. It’s a big part of how we express a spirit of defiance, of resoluteness, how we act with the knowledge that emotions and attitudes are contagious, be they fear or courage, strength or weakness, kindness or cruelty.

Which is why it makes my head explode – picture this head as a volcano and these words as lava – when people surrender in advance verbally, which they do all the time about politics. There’s a lot of “I believe that we will lose” on social media and in the news. One way it shows up is when journalists report on some of the rubbish spewing from the mouth of the geriatric clown/felon we have to call president as though his every utterance had the weight of law, as though words will become actions, as though the actions will succeed, as though they will not be met with opposition, as though they believe he will win.

The current case in point is: a few days ago, after the latest installment of his periodic ritual submission to Vladimir Putin, Trump said Putin told him to go after mail-in ballots. Now first of all, if one of the world’s most dictatorial dictators gave a president of the United States advice on attacking democracy, that should have generated a lot of heated headlines and screaming politicians urging outrage in ways that have the power to put him on the spot and maybe make him walk it back.

(Rebecca Solnit more…)

Lisa Needham: Russia, Trump is listening

His attack on mail voting is inspired by Putin.

Steve Vladeck: The Election of 1864

At the lowest moment of his presidency (if not the Civil War), Abraham Lincoln was committed to protecting the people’s right to vote him out in favor of a negotiated end to the war—and the Union.