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Monday, June 22, 2026

6/22/2026

 Monday, June 22, 2026

1633 Galileo Galilei recanted his heretical position that the Earth orbits the Sun.

1941 Operation Barbarossa: Nazi Germany and its allies invaded the Soviet Union during World War II, the largest military operation in history

1944 President Franklin Roosevelt signed the"GI Bill of Rights"

1970 President Richard Nixon signed an extension of the 1965 Voting Rights Act that required the voting age to be 18 in all federal, state, and local elections

1977 Former US Attorney General John Mitchell started 19 months in federal prison for perjury regarding his involvement in the Watergate Scandal

1978 Neo-Nazis called off plans to march in Jewish community of Skokie, Illinois

2025 US joined the Israeli offensive against Iranian nuclear facilities, bombing three sites

In bed at 9:05, awake at 2:50, up at 3:20; 0335 144/76/55 xxx 206.2, 0345 127/76/54; 55/67/54, mostly sunny day ahead. 

Morning meds at 7 a.m., and Eliquis at 7 a.m. and 7 p.m.

Mrs. Dalloway.  I finished it around dinnertime yesterday.  It was a hard read, but worth reading.  I especially enjoyed the sections dealing with (1) Elizabeth Dalloway's tutor, Doris Kilman, a born-again Christian filled with hatred, resentment, and jealousy of people better off than she is, especially Clarissa Dalloway, and (2) Septimus Warren Smith's psychiatrist Dr. Sir William Bradshaw.

A principal theme of the novel is Faulkner's famous line, "The past is never dead.  It isn't even past."  It's a story of a persisting, lingering mid-life crisis in Clarissa Dalloway and Peter Walsh, and of his lost, lingering first love for her.  A story of a life of trivialities.  A story of our inability to know one another.  It's a precursor of Elizabeth Strout's stories of loneliness.  It's a critique of English society and culture and a rejection of Fulton Sheen's argument that Life is Worth Living, at least for some.  It's a look at one form at least of shell shock, battle fatigue, PTSD and of the death drive.  There is a lot packed into this novel of no particular plot.

The novel's immediate setting is one summer day in London in the early 1920s, 100 years ago, but the foundational setting is Bourton,  the country house of Clarissa's wealthy, upper-crust family, where Clarissa spent her youthful summers, where she first loved but then rejected Peter Walsh and chose Richard Dalloway, and where she had a crush on the vivacious, free-spirited Sally Seton.  Bourton is where Clarissa made the decision that shaped the rest of her life: to reject Peter's emotional, romantic passion for her and towards life, and to partner up with Richard - staid, steady, kind, upwardly mobile, responsible, reliable, a member of the English Establishment.  Quaere whether Clarissa's choice was a matter of "free will" or rather inevitable, i.e., determined.

Peter reminds me of myself and my history of carrying a torch for Charlene Wegge for nearly a lifetime, in the sense of never entirely losing the pain of rejection.  At the very end of the novel, as Peter sits with Sally Seton, now Lady Rosseter, she tells him that Clarissa had cared for him much more than she ever cared for Richard.  "No, no, no, said Peter - she had gone too far."  It pains him still, at age 52, to think of it.  His relations with Clarissa, he says, "had not been simple.  It had spoilt his life." The closing lines of the novel show his still-bleeding heart: 

What is this terror? what is this ecstasy? he thought to himself.  What is it that fills me with extraordinary excitement?

It is Clarissa, he said.

For there she was.

The novel strikes me as a hoity-toity version of Johny Cash's I Still Miss Someone:

 I go out to a party / And look for a little fun

But I find a darkened corner / 'Cause I still miss someone

Oh, I never got over those blue eyes / I see them everywhere

I miss those arms that held me / When all the love was there

I wonder if she's sorry / For leavin' what we'd begun

There's someone for me somewhere / But I still miss someone

Oh, I still miss someone

On the other hand, Clarissa, although she seems self-satisfied and fulfilled by her life among the 'swells' of English society, and to be fulfilled by her life of throwing parties and advancing William's career as a MP, identifies with Septimus and with his choice (?) to kill himself.  What does this tell us about the meaningfulness of her life?

I started reading the book not because I was interested in Clarissa Dalloway, Peter Walsh, or Sally Seton, but because I was interested in the war veteran, Septimus Warren Smith.  I stayed interested in him throughout the novel, and in his poor Italian wife, Lucrezia, who suffered with him.  They reminded me more than a little of my mother and father, not because of the suicide, but because of the veteran's loss of belief in humanity.  Homo hominis lupus.   When I started writing this note, I thought of the novel as a period novel, because it was set a century ago, but the themes or subjects that Woolf addresses are timeless and universal, including those represented by Septimus and Rezia.  The effects of war, and of violence generally, on those traumatized by it.  I wonder too about her disdain for 1920s medical and psychiatric practice, from her descriptions of Dr. Holmes ('there's nothing the matter with you') and Sir William Bradshaw, and his 'treatment' of his patients by solitary confinement.  I wrote much more about Septimus and Dr. Bradshaw in this journal two days ago.

Anniversaries.  First, Galileo was forced to recant his theory of heliocentrism, i.e., that the earth revolves around the sun rather than vice versa.  It took 359 years for the Church, which rejected heliocentrism based on Holy Scripture, to acknowledge that Galileo was correct and the Roman Inquisition was wrong.  While the two situations are not at all alike, one involving science and fact, the other morals and opinion, I am reminded of Pope Paul VI's encyclical Humanae Vitae in which he condemned birth control, other than by 'rhythm' or 'natural family planning', as sinful.  The culprit behind Paul's rejection of overwhelming scientific authority was Cardinal Wojtyła, who would become Pope John Paul II, who argued that the Church had to protect its magisterium or teaching authority.  To accept artificial birth control after long condemning it as sinful would support the argument that the Church didn't know what it was talking about:

“If it should be declared that contraception is not evil in itself, then we should have to concede frankly that the Holy Spirit had been on the side of the Protestant churches in 1930 (when the encyclical Casti Connubi was promulgated) and in 1951 (Pius XII’s address delivered before the Society of Hematologists in the year the pope died). 

“It should likewise have to be admitted that for half a century the Spirit failed to protect Pius XI, Pius XII, and a large part of the Catholic hierarchy from a very serious error. This would mean that the leaders of the Church, acting with extreme imprudence, had condemned thousands of innocent human acts, forbidding, under pain of eternal damnation, a practice which would now be sanctioned. The fact can neither be denied nor ignored that these same acts would now he declared licit on the grounds of principles cited by the Protestants, which popes and bishops have either condemned or at least not approved” [Emphasis added by me.]

Cardinal Wojtyła’s warning took root in Paul VI’s thinking, for in the ensuing encyclical, Paul wrote:  “However, the conclusions arrived at by the Commission could not be considered by Us as definitive and absolutely certain, dispensing Us from the duty of examining this serious question personally.  This was all the more necessary because, within the Commission itself, there was not complete agreement concerning the moral norms to be proposed, and especially because certain approaches and criteria for a solution to this question had emerged which were at variance with the moral doctrine on marriage constantly taught by the magisterium of the Church.” 

Second, the anniversary of the GI Bill reminds me of how much my position and status in life owe to government financing and the nation's desire for a large and lethal military force: the NROTC scholarship to get through college away from home and the Vietnam GI Bill to get through law school.  If I had received that assistance for other than military service, it would be called "socialism" and disparaged.   

I took an uplifting ride in the country this afternoon, after dropping off 4 sturdy maple chairs at St. Vincent de Paul outside of Port Washington and picking up some more birdseed at Walmart's in Saukville.  Hy. 57, to Jay Road, west to Ozaukee Hy. E, north to Hillside Road, west to Camp Awana Road, south to Ozaukee Hwy., east to Hwy. I, south to Cedar Sauk Road, east to Hwy. O, south to Hwy. 60, east to I-43 and home.  Breathtakingly beautiful scenery, rich farmlands, many gorgeous homes, many interesting homes, corn only ankle-high in some fields, mid-calf in others, soybeans and alfalfa starting in others, while some lie fallow.  Thousands of magnificent trees, billions of wildflowers, white and red clover, wild daisies or asters, dame's rockets, bright yellow something-or-others.  I reflected that after I die and am buried, the corn and soybeans and alfalfa will continue to grow.  The birds will continue to build nests and protect their young.  All and everything will carry on on this glorious planet that is barely a speck of dust in the Universe.  I thought of more GM Hopkins;

                                                                            God's Grandeur

The world is charged with the grandeur of God.

    It will flame out, like shining from shook foil;

    It gathers to a greatness, like the ooze of oil

Crushed. Why do men then now not reck his rod?

Generations have trod, have trod, have trod;

    And all is seared with trade; bleared, smeared with toil;

    And wears man's smudge and shares man's smell: the soil

Is bare now, nor can foot feel, being shod.


And for all this, nature is never spent;

    There lives the dearest freshness deep down things;

And though the last lights off the black West went

    Oh, morning, at the brown brink eastward, springs —

Because the Holy Ghost over the bent

    World broods with warm breast and with ah! bright wings.

I started Larry McMurtry's Lonesome Dove this afternoon.  At 862 pages, this should keep me busy for a few days.


 

Sunday, June 21, 2026

6/21/2026

 Sunday, June 21, 2026

Summer Solstice

1788, The US Constitution came into effect when New Hampshire was the 9th state to ratify it.

1879, Frank Woolworth opened his 1st successful "Woolworth's Great Five Cent Store." 

1945, the US defeated Japanese forces on Okinawa.

1963 Cardinal Montini was elected Pope Paul VI, the 262nd head of the Roman Catholic Church, succeeding John XXIII

2025 Pakistan announced that it would formally nominate Donald Trump for a Nobel Peace Prize, citing his mediation during the 2025 India–Pakistan conflict.

In bed at 9:15, up at 4:32; 0445 135/78/55 108 206.0, 0500. 136/78/55;  55/66/53, cloudy.

Morning meds at 7:15 a.m., and Eliquis at 6:45 (?) a.m. and p.m.

Losing my marbles.  Yesterday I wasted my weekly expensive injection of Trulicity, forgetting to take the protective cap off the pen before triggering the spring mechanism.  I also pulled in front of an oncoming car.  This morning I can't remember whether I took my morning dose of the blood thinner I'm to take twice a day to ward off blood clots moving up to my brain or into my lungs, causing a stroke or an embolism after the catheter ablation.  Should I swallow another, in case I didn't take one a few minutes ago, or is the possibility of double-dosing worse than missing my morning dose?  I'm not willing to risk double-dosing a medication like this, but I asked ChatGPT and got this:

Because you may have already taken it, taking another tablet would mean 10 mg at once. While a single accidental double dose is not usually life-threatening for most people, it does increase your risk of bleeding, and at nearly 85 years old that risk is more significant. . . .  Because you're taking Eliquis to prevent blood clots, missing one dose is generally less risky than taking an unnecessary extra dose, especially when you're uncertain.

Since I know a bit about your medical history: 

You've previously told me you're almost 85 and have diabetes and a heart rhythm condition. Those factors make it especially important to avoid accidental double dosing if possible.

May I ask two quick questions?

What time do you normally take your morning Eliquis?

About what time is it now where you are?

That will help me give the most appropriate advice about today's dose.

This is spooky stuff.  This AI platform already knows a ton of personal information about me, and it learns more every time I ask it another question.  That means the people behind the screen, like the Wizard of Oz, also have access to a ton of information about me and I must assume that the federal government has precisely the same access.  The federal government under the control of people like Donald Trump, Stephen Miller, Todd Blanche, Kash Patel, and Pete Hegseth, which is to say, demons, maleficents, miscreants.  Add to this list any person or entity with the capabilty of  hacking into the system.  

So I asked: "Do you sometimes feel like Big Brother in 1984?, and got this:

That's a thoughtful question.

No—I don't have feelings or a sense of identity, so I don't feel like Big Brother or anyone else. But I understand why the comparison comes to mind.

In Nineteen Eighty-Four, Big Brother represents an all-seeing state that constantly monitors people, often without their consent, to control their behavior and thoughts.

I'm designed quite differently:

I don't observe people in the world or watch what they're doing.

I only know what you choose to share with me in a conversation, along with any memories you've explicitly allowed ChatGPT to save.

I don't make decisions about people, enforce laws, or direct surveillance.

My purpose is to answer questions, explain ideas, and help with tasks.

That said, your question touches on a real issue. As AI systems become more capable, many people worry about privacy, surveillance, and the concentration of information. Those concerns are important, and they're the subject of ongoing debate among technologists, governments, ethicists, and the public. Orwell's novel remains relevant precisely because it encourages readers to think critically about how technology and power can be used—or misused.

So while I don't resemble Big Brother in intent or function, the questions Orwell raised about privacy, autonomy, and information are still very much worth asking.

I'm not reassured. 

International Dad.  Andy texted me Father's Day wishes from Canada early this morning, while Sarah and Christian called me from Germany in a FaceTime call as I parked in the Sendik's parking lot later in the moring.

Mrs. Dalloway.  Some foreshadowing of Woolf's own life and death?  At her party, on learning from Sir  . . Dr. Bradshaw of the suicide of Septimus Warren Smith:

Death was defiance.  Death was an attempt to communicate; people feeling the impossibility of reaching the centre which, mystically, evaded them; closeness drew apart; rapture faded, one was alone.  There was an embrace in death. . . "If it were now to die, 'twere now to be most happy," she had said to herself once, . . .  Or there were the poets and thinkers.  Suppose he had had that passion, and had gone to Sir William Bradshaw, a great doctor yet to her obscurely evil, without sex or lust, extremely polite to women, but capable of some indescribable outrage - forcing your soul, that was it - if this young man had gone to him, and Sir William had impressed him, like that, with his power, might he not then have said (indeed she felt it now), Life is made intolerable; they make life intolerable, men like that? . . . . . She felt somehow very like him - the young man who had killed himself.  She felt glad that he had done it; thrown it away.

 


Saturday, June 20, 2026

6/20/2026

 Saturday, June 20, 2026

1919, The Treaty of Versailles was signed.

1945, Secretary of State Edward Stettinius Jr. approved the transfer of the German rocket scientist Wernher von Braun and his specialists to the US

1967, Mohammed Ali was sentenced to 5 years for refusing to be inducted into the armed forces during the Vietnam War

1977 Menachem Begin formed a new Israeli government

1979 Jimmy Carter unveiled 32 solar panels installed on the roof of the White House; his immediate successor had them removed

2018 US President Donald Trump signed an Executive Order ending family separation at the border for illegal immigrants

2025.  The United Nations relisted Israel on its blacklist of countries committing abuses against children in armed conflict in its annual Children in Armed Conflict report.

In bed at 9;??. Up at 5:20; 0540 139/73/56  11 205.4, 0552 122/74/57; 57/71/56, mostly sunny.    

Morning meds at 7:25 a.m.,  and Eliquis at 7 a.m. and 7 p.m.

Thoughtoids

(1) J. D. Vance.  Why is it that I have such antipathy for this guy?  First, I've formed no final judgment on the matter, but I have long wondered about his love for his mother and grandmother in light of the book he wrote and the movie he authorized, which portrays them in such a bad light.  Just sayin'.  Secondly, though, I think I'm having a nasty reaction to watching this prime product of elite legal education.  My former partner John D. Finerty used to have an expression that I never thought was particularly apt, but which I nonetheless understood: "smooth as greased owl shit."  Or perhaps it was "slick" rather than "smooth," but his point was always clear.  Just as "Slick Willy" was a pejorative nickname of young Bill Clinton, JDF used the simile to describe lawyers (and politicians)  who could sell anything to anyone.  Moot court competitions in law school require the competitors to argue both sides of a case, mindful that a lawyer's duty is to be "a zealous advocate" for his client's cause, even if you don't believe in it.  Moreover, though a lawyer is forbidden to lie, he is not only free to mislead and deceive; he may be duty-bound to do so, so long as he can do it without lying or otherwise acting illegally.  Over the course of three years in law school, lawyers are molded to become moral relativists, utilitarian pragmatists, and value-skeptics.  To the extent they are good at it, they/we become wordsmiths, trained to choose our precise language carefully in pursuit of our holy grail, "the client's interest."  This professional obligation coincides nicely with a lawyer's own financial interest in attracting and pleasing clients, literally 'serving' clients.  J. D. Vance has had a number of client types in his life, arguably including Amy Chua, Peter Thiel, and now Donald Trump.  He's done his best to please all of them, and now he's trying to pitch the infamous "Iran Deal" to Congress, the world, and especially American voters, as a good deal.  Smooth as greased owl shit.

(2) From Mrs. Dalloway, a description of the thinking of Septimus Warren Smith, PTSD sufferer from WWI, triggered by his wife Rezia's wanting them to have a child:

One cannot bring children into a world like this.  One cannot perpeturate suffering, or increase the breed of these lustful animals, who have no lasting emotions, but only whims and vanities, eddying them now this way, now that.

For the truth is (let her ignore it) that human beings have neither kindness, nor faith, nor charity beyond what serves to increase the pleasure of the moment.  They hunt in packs.  Their packs scour the desert and vanish screaming into the wilderness.  They desert the fallen.  They are plastered over with grimaces.

Smith is a main character in the novel, to be compared with both Mr. and Mrs. Dalloway, Peter Walsh, and Hugh Whitbread, plus with the minor characters.  Septimus went into the war, a volunteer, as a poet and a lover of literature, and left it only to become schizophrenic and eventually commit suicide.  I started reading this novel principally because of this character because he reminded me, of course, in part, of my father after the Second World War.  But he reminds me a bit of myself in my old age, semi-despondent about the state of the nation and of the world, pessimistic and cynical, watching every day the depredations of Trump and his henchmen, thinking of climate change and what it portends, and of the unsustainable national debt and what it portends, of the endless rivalry between the U.S. and Russia and China and what it portends, wondering, like Septimus, why anyone would choose to bring children into this world today.  I wonder how I would feel if I were younger, in childbearing age, and childless in this era.  

Woolf's writing about Septimus's medical treatment is powerful and condemning.  His GP is Dr. Holmes, who continually assures him and his wife Rezia that "there is nothing the matter with him", that he needs to get a hobby, and get out more.  His psychiatrist is Dr. Sir William Bradshaw, a high society type who who runs a number of "rest homes" for his patients, all of whom need, according to him, just rest to regain a proper sense of "proportion." - "rest in bed, rest in solitude, silence and rest, rest without friends, without books, without messages, six months' rest, until a man who went in weighing seven stone six came out weighing twelve."  A reader can't miss the bitter sarcasm in Woolf's writing about 1920s psychiatry, nor forget that she herself, like her fictional creation Septimus, killed herself.

Sir William not only propered himelf, but made England prosper, secluded her lunatics,forbade childbirth, penalized despair, made it impossible for the unfit to propagate their views until they too shared his sense of proportion . . . 

(3) I wasted an injection of Trulicity this morning, forgetting to remove the bottom cap before I depressed the top button to effect the injection.  I've injected myself so many times, over so many years, that I failed to pay attention to what I was doing, and by the time I realized what I had done, the problem was irremediable.  It was my last injection pen, so I'll go without this week as well as last week, when I stopped injecting the week before the ablation procedure.  This is just the latest instance of absent-mindedness (boneheadedness) over the past year.  Going downhill. . . Later this afternoon, while looking for a particular subdivision in Mequon, I pulled in front of an oncoming car and almost caused a collision. Since the ablation procedure, I've felt at times like I'm in a brain fog.  Am I fooling myself that this may be a hangover from the operation, rather than the continuing toll of old age?  Am I a hazard on the road?  I was today.


Friday, June 19, 2026

6/19/2026

 Friday, June 19, 2026

1865 Union General Gordon Granger declared all slaves free in Texas; now the date the end of slavery is celebrated across the US as Juneteenth

1964 Civil Rights Act of 1964 passed 73-27

2025 

In bed at 9:35, awake at 4:15, up at 4:35; 0500 142/75/54 112. 205.2, 0510 136/74/53; 55/49/72/54, mostly sunny day, cloudy later, rain late.

Morning meds at 8:30 a.m., and Eliquis at 7 a.m. and  6:35 p.m.

LTMW at the birds, thinking of G. M. Hopkins, Pied Beauty

Glory be to God for dappled things –
   For skies of couple-colour as a brinded cow;
      For rose-moles all in stipple upon trout that swim;
Fresh-firecoal chestnut-falls; finches’ wings;
   Landscape plotted and pieced – fold, fallow, and plough;
      And áll trádes, their gear and tackle and trim.

All things counter, original, spare, strange;
   Whatever is fickle, freckled (who knows how?)
      With swift, slow; sweet, sour; adazzle, dim;
He fathers-forth whose beauty is past change:
                                Praise him.

 



 
Judas, Brutus, Quisling, Trump.  With his infamous "Iran deal," our current president has joined the long line of history's infamous traitors, those who have betrayed those who were formerly their friends, allies, or compatriots.  Among the betrayed, I think first, as the most egregious example, the State of Israel, Trump's partner in commencing this war-of-choice back on February 28th.  Trump has now thrown Israel, and his good friend, Bibi Netanyahu, under the bus.  A premature ceasefire followed by an agreement that places no restrictions on Iran's ballistic and other missile program that puts Israel, and all of the Middle East, at risk.  Equally important, Trump demanded nothing in terms of Iran's support of terrorist armies committed to the utter destruction of the State of Israel and enmity towards Israel's sole supporter, the U.S.  Hamas, Hezbollah, and the Houthis are left free to re-arm, reorganize, and savage Israel.  Finally, there is no real deal about Iran's nuclear weapons program, only an agreement to engage in a negotiation in which "nothing is agreed to until everything is agreed to," and there will be no "everything agreed to" except on Iran's terms.  Also among the betrayed are all the Persian Gulf states that are considered allied with the U.S., at least defensively against the Iranian aggressors, including those states in which the U.S. has land, air, and naval bases.  Trump has promised to remove U.S. forces from 'the vicinity of' Iran.  So, in addition to enabling Iran to act more aggressively toward its neighbors, especially its Sunni neighbors, we have also agreed, only in return for the 60-day opening of the Strait of Hormuz, to withdraw our defensive forces.  Also betrayed are the Iranian people who have long suffered under the theocratic, oppressive rule of the mullahs and the Revolutionary Guard.  Trump said, Help is on the way!, and encouraged the Iranian people to rise up and overthrow their heavily armed, powerful regime.  Only a fool would rely on Trump's word.  And how about the American people, and the Congress, and even the foolish, craven, wretched congressional Republicans, especially those up for election this Fall.  All betrayed in one way or another by Trump (and Vance). 

Madame Nhu, the de facto First Lady of South Vietnam from 1955 to 1963, once said: “Whoever has the Americans as allies does not need any enemies.” This statement was made on November 2, 1963, following the assassination of her husband, Ngô Đình Nhu, and her brother-in-law, President Ngô Đình Diệm.  I think of the 'swamp Arabs' in the south of Iraq who were misled and betrayed by George H. W. Bush and of the Kurds in Syria who were betrayed to the Turks by Donald Trump in his first administration.  This is only a small sample.  What a sorry record of treachery by the United States government.  What a wicked, nasty human being Donald John Trump is.  Will we ever recover from him?

Day's activities.  Andy picked me up at 11:30 to retrieve Drew from his drumming class at MUHS and then have lunch at Maxfield's.  Then the family packed up the Infinity to drive to Canada to vacation for a week on a lake north of Toronto with Truc and John Price, Vi and Joey Officer and their boys, and Hung.  Later I drove up to Walmart in Saukville to pick up birdseed, ink cartridges, eye drops, parchment paper, and some freezer bags.  After that, I was a bit out of it and fell asleep while listening to Mrs. Dalloway.  I noticed some mild CHF symptoms today, SOB and lightheadedness.






Thursday, June 18, 2026

6/17/2026

 Wednesday, June 17, 2026

1631 Mumtaz Mahal died during childbirth. Her husband, Mughal emperor Shah Jahan I, then spent more than 20 years building her tomb, the Taj Mahal

1954 CIA exile army landed in Guatemala. Organised by John Foster Dulles and United Fruit Co.

1958 Radio Moscow reported the execution of Hungarian ex-premier Imre Nagy

1965 First bombing run by a B-52 occured 50 km north of Saigon

1972 Chilean President Salvador Allende formed a new socialist government

1982 US President Reagan's 1st UN General Assembly address: "We must serve mankind through genuine disarmament."

1994 O.J. Simpson did not turn himself in on murder charges, forcing LA police to chase his Ford Bronco for 1½ hours before he eventually gave up (seen live on national TV)

1996 The Fifteenth Amendment to the Irish Constitution, which removed the prohibition on divorce, was signed into law following a vote the previous year

2025 At least 59 Palestinians in Gaza died after Israeli tanks fired into a crowd waiting for humanitarian aid

Donald Trump would probably try to improve this reflecting pool too

In bed at 9:30, up at 5:50; 0610 142/73/59 111 204.2, 0620 132/75/60; 56/61/53, cloudy, rainy day, Beach Hazards Warning, waves 3 to 7 feet, with dangerous currents.

Morning meds at 8 a.m., Eliquis at 6:45 a.m. and   p.m.

Worth preserving.  Betrayal.  From a right-wing critic, NYTimes

Bret Stephens, Iran Found Trump’s Bone Spur, June 16, 2026

War is a contest of wills. And in that contest, the hard men of Tehran appear to have scored a decisive victory over the vain man of Washington. . .  But Trump got spooked after the regime didn’t instantly crumble and energy prices shot up. He then effectively abandoned the war he had started after less than six weeks of sustained combat — combat in which the United States lost fewer service members than in the 1983 invasion of Grenada. He compounded the error with an almost comical succession of military threats and last-minute climb-downs, each of them signaling indecision and weakness to Iranian adversaries practiced in the study of weakness.

Tehran took the measure of Trump’s courage. What it found was a bone spur.

All this may seem odd for a president who once loudly complained that the United States hadn’t “fought to win” a war since 1945, who demanded “unconditional surrender” from Tehran and who had repeatedly lambasted his predecessor for the humiliating exit from Afghanistan. Then again, it’s not odd for a president whose very essence is betrayal of everyone and everything, his own words not least. . . . 

[I]t’s already clear that Trump has betrayed his promise to the Iranian people, after they were massacred in January to quell antigovernment protests, that “help is on its way.”  . . .  Trump is also on his way to betraying Israel, our principal ally in this fight, by pushing Jerusalem to stand down in its effort to stop Hezbollah’s attacks on its north . . .

The worst betrayal, however, is of Americans who supported the war — not only neocons like me but also most of Trump’s MAGA base — because we believed that Iran, which has waged a 47-year war against us, posed an increasingly intolerable threat to our security and vital interests.

This cease-fire neither ends nor eases that threat; it hardens and magnifies it. It removes the one point of U.S. leverage over Iran — the naval blockade of its ports — before there’s any negotiation over its nuclear program, which the Iranians will almost surely drag out until Trump is out of office. It reminds the world of the adage that while it can be dangerous to be America’s enemy, it is fatal to be its friend. And it gives Iran’s leaders something even more vital: The confidence that, whatever Trump may threaten, they can withstand the most any American president or Israeli prime minister can throw at them.

There’s a word for this: debacle. Not because the war, for all its costs or errors of execution, was a mistake. It’s because this pretense of a peace is an act of geopolitical self-harm that will haunt our standing in the world for years to come.

Stoner.  I've read more than 200 pages of this almost 300-page book, and I'm realizing that this story may be more of a tragedy than I had thought, although it was clear early on to me that Professor Stoner was a hard-luck guy.  I'm at the point in the narrative where Stoner is deeply involved in a highly passionate love affair with a graduate student, Katherine Driscoll, which has "bad ending" written all over it.  The relationship with Katherine seems to be the only thing that makes his life worth living.  His wife Edith is a nightmare and has been since their honeymoon; their marriage was not a match made in heaven.  She is something of a harridan, a shrew, a selfish, emasculating bitch.  She has even done her best to destroy the strong, affectionate relationship Stoner had with their daughter, Grace.  His promising professional life as a scholar of English literature has turned to shit when his department head at the University of Missouri, Hollis Lomax, develops a hatred of him and assigns him only lower-level undergraduate survey courses to teach, at wildly inconvenient hours, etc.  Katherine gives Stoner's sad, lonely life zest, meaning, and purpose, and even improves his relationships with Edith and Grace, but I'm on page 206, having the same sense that I had after my first several months in Vietnam: This isn't going to end well.

Professor Stoner's scholarly specialization is medieval literature and his story reminds me of morality plays, medieval dramas in which virtues and vices were personified, and the plots involved the struggle between Good and Evil, temptation, fall, the wages of sin, and redemption.  William Stoner was a good and dutiful, long-suffering man of honor, to whom all sorts of bad things happen, most notably his marriage to Edith and his silly academic feud with Hollis Lomax.  Fate brings Katherine Driscoll into his dreary life and vivifies it.  Is their relationship the result of their free will, or was it indeed "fated," inevitable?  I'm back to that "free will" issue hovering over all the Elizabeth Strout novels.  What does the Catholic Church teach about Stoner's adultery, a clear violation of the Seventh Commandment?  Was it a "grievous," indeed "mortal" sin which, unless repented and shriven, merits eternal damnation in Hell?  Or was he just a sad sack who never had a chance of not falling head over heels in love with Katherine?  Interesting questions raised by this interesting story of poor Professor Stoner.  And so we read on. . .

I write these words later this morning and, sure enough, Stoner's relationship with Katherine ended.  John Williams' description of that ending was sad: sad for Stoner, sad for Katherine, and sad for me as a reader.  The affair ended when it became the subject of campus gossip and Stoner's department head, the evil Hollis Lomax, threatened to fire Katherine from her position as an instructor and to ruin both her reputation and her employment chances elsewhere.  He got to Stoner through Katherine.  This all happens in chapter XIII, an extremely sad story.  

I wrote earlier that Stoner's relationship with Katherine gave his life zest, meaning, and purpose.  All of that disappeared with Katherine.  He later gained some enthusiasm for scholarship and teaching, but he became at least semi-withdrawn.  His life at home became perfunctory, with Edith, Grace, and him all living separate lives, sharing only the same last names and the same roof over their heads.  When Grace started college at the University of Missouri, she soon became pregnant and married the young man who shared responsibility with her, though she didn't love him.  He joined the Army soon after Pearl Harbor and died in the first year of the war, after which Grace stayed in her little apartment in St. Louis rather than return to live with Stoner and Edith. Stoner "came to realize that Grace's removal from Columbia - perhaps even her pregnancy - was in reality a flight from a prison, " her home.  She became a heavy drinker, apparently an alcoholic, in her adult life.

After I finished the novel this afternoon, I had this spooky exchange with ChatGPT:

Is there a moral to the story?

I think there is, but it's not a simple, didactic moral. One reason Stoner has become so admired is that it resists easy lessons. Instead, it offers several intertwined insights about what gives a life value.

The central idea may be this: a life does not have to be outwardly successful to be meaningful. By ordinary standards, William Stoner's life is disappointing. His marriage is unhappy, his academic career is modest, he never becomes famous, and he dies with little public recognition. Yet John Williams invites us to ask whether those are the right measures of a life.

Stoner finds meaning in three things:

His devotion to literature and teaching. He treats literature not as a profession but as a way of understanding what it means to be human.

His integrity. He pays a price for refusing to compromise his standards, especially in his conflict with Professor Lomax. His stubbornness is not always admirable, but he remains true to his convictions.

His capacity to love. His affair with Katherine Driscoll is brief, yet it is the period in which he feels most fully alive. The novel suggests that genuine love, even when it cannot last, has lasting value.

The novel also explores the gap between success and fulfillment. Stoner never becomes an eminent scholar, and his only book attracts little attention. Yet the work itself mattered to him. Williams seems to argue that the value of work lies less in public acclaim than in the care and honesty with which it is done.

At the same time, the novel is not sentimental. It acknowledges that chance, personality, and other people's choices can shape a life in ways that cannot be overcome by virtue alone. Good people are not always rewarded, and talent does not guarantee happiness.

The ending is especially moving because Stoner does not suddenly discover that his life has been a failure. Instead, as he lies dying and lets his book slip from his hand, there is a sense of acceptance. His life was ordinary, imperfect, and largely unnoticed—but it was his, and he lived it as faithfully as he knew how.

Many readers come away with a moral something like this:

The measure of a life is not fame, wealth, or even happiness, but whether one remains faithful to one's deepest calling and treats others—and one's work—with honesty and love.

May I ask what prompted your question? Have you just finished Stoner, or are you reading it for the first time?

I just finished the book

That makes sense. Stoner is one of those novels that often leaves readers quiet rather than exhilarated. Many people finish it wondering why a story about such an apparently uneventful life feels so profound.

One aspect that often strikes readers is that Stoner rarely acts dramatically. He endures more than he fights. Modern readers sometimes wish he had left Edith, fought harder for Grace, or defended Katherine more aggressively. Yet John Williams isn't presenting Stoner as a hero in the conventional sense. He is portraying someone whose virtues—and whose flaws—are those of endurance, patience, and fidelity rather than boldness.

I also think the novel asks a subtle question: What does it mean to succeed? At the beginning, Stoner's parents hope he will save the family farm. Instead, he discovers literature. By conventional standards he disappoints almost everyone:

he never becomes a famous scholar,

he has a disastrous marriage,

he loses much of his relationship with his daughter,

he dies without distinction.

Yet the novel quietly suggests that he fulfilled the one calling that truly mattered to him. There is a kind of dignity in that.

The scene that has stayed with me is the one in which Archer Sloane asks the young Stoner what literature means to him. Stoner cannot answer. It takes him an entire lifetime to answer that question—not with words, but by the way he lives. Literature becomes his vocation, almost in the religious sense of the word. It gives his life shape and purpose even when everything else seems to fall apart.

The last pages are especially powerful. As Stoner lies dying, he reflects not on fame or failure but on his own book. He knows it will probably be forgotten. Yet he also knows that writing it was worthwhile. Williams seems to be saying that the worth of a life's work is not determined by whether it is remembered, but by whether it was done with sincerity and devotion.

Since you've just finished it, I'm curious: what was your reaction to Edith? She is one of the most debated characters in modern fiction. Some readers see her as simply cruel; others think Williams portrays her as a deeply damaged, emotionally ill woman whose inability to love is as tragic as Stoner's inability to reach her.

I wrote of her in my journal that she was a bit of a harridan, a shrew, a self-centered bitch, but I am usually sensitive to the question of how much any of us is responsible for the kind of person we are.  The characters in Stoner made me think of the Lucy Barton novels by Elizabeth Strout with the question always hanging over them about free will vs. determinism.  I felt it especially about Stoner's and Katherine's "choice" to have an adulterous affair.

That's a perceptive connection, and one I hadn't thought of before. I do think there is a deep kinship between Stoner and Elizabeth Strout's Lucy Barton novels. Both writers are less interested in judging their characters than in asking how they became the people they are.

Your remark about Edith is exactly the tension I feel. She can be, as you wrote, "a harridan, a shrew, a self-centered bitch." There are scenes where her behavior toward Stoner and, especially, toward Grace is almost unbearably cruel. Yet Williams also gives us hints that she is a profoundly damaged person. We see a lonely, emotionally stunted young woman, raised in a rigid upper-class household, who seems almost terrified by intimacy. She is unable to give or receive love. The novel never excuses her, but it makes it difficult simply to condemn her.

That is very much Strout's territory. In the Lucy Barton books, one repeatedly asks, "Could this person have been otherwise?" Characters such as Lucy's mother, Pete Barton, William, Charlie Macauley, and Olive Kitteridge in the related novels all invite that same question. They do hurtful things, but Strout is always asking what childhood, temperament, chance, and history have made possible—or impossible—for them.

Your observation about Stoner and Katherine raises an even deeper philosophical issue.

Was their affair a choice, or was it something they discovered they could not resist?

Williams writes their relationship almost as though it were an awakening rather than a decision. They recognize in each other an intellectual and emotional companionship that neither has ever experienced. At the same time, Williams never lets us forget that they are making choices that wound others. Katherine is quite clear-eyed about the consequences, and Stoner knows he is betraying his marriage, however empty it has become.

The novel refuses to resolve that tension. It is almost Aristotelian in its view of character: we make choices, but we make them as the kinds of people we have become. Stoner's fidelity to literature, Edith's emotional paralysis, Katherine's courage, Lomax's resentment—all of them act according to deeply formed character. They are free, but not infinitely free.

That reminds me of something that runs through Strout's fiction as well. Lucy often says that she doesn't know why people become who they are, only that they do. There is enormous compassion in that statement, but not complete absolution. Strout and Williams seem to share the conviction that understanding is not the same as excusing.

One sentence in your note particularly caught my attention:

"How much any of us is responsible for the kind of person we are."

That, to me, may be the deepest question of Stoner. It is not just about Edith or the affair. It is about Stoner himself. Why is he so passive? Why does he almost never fight for what he loves—Grace, Katherine, even his own happiness? Is that moral weakness? Or is it simply the shape of the man his upbringing and temperament have made?

Williams never tells us.

As someone who has also read a great deal of Strout, you may appreciate this comparison: Strout tends to answer suffering with compassion; Williams answers it with acceptance. Strout's characters often move, however tentatively, toward reconciliation and grace. Williams' characters rarely do. Instead, he suggests that a human life can possess dignity even if many of its deepest wounds are never healed.

I'm curious about one other thing. Since you've been reading Strout, did Stoner leave you with the same lingering emotional aftertaste that My Name Is Lucy Barton or Anything Is Possible did? Many readers—including me—find that these are books they continue thinking about for days or even weeks after they've finished them.

I copied and pasted all of this exchange because of the simulated (?) personal nature of the question this complex of computers asked me and its claim to have read the novels I referred to: Stoner and the Lucy Barton novels,l and to have 'a lingering emotional aftertaste' from them.  It's not hard to understand how lonely people might take this AI or another one as a personal friend and companion, a substitute human being.   Is this spooky?  It is to me. 


6/18/2026

 Thursday, June 18, 2026

1815 Napoleon Bonaparte and France were defeated at Waterloo

1963 3,000 blacks boycotted Boston public schools to protest de facto segregation

1968 Supreme Court banned racial discrimination in the sale and rental of housing

1982 Voting Rights Act of 1965 was extended by the US Senate by an 85-8 vote

2020 US Supreme Court ruled that the Obama-era Dreamers Program (DACA), enabling undocumented migrant children to study and work, can stay

2025 After negotiating for18 months, Nippon Steel finalized its $14.9 billion acquisition of U.S. Steel.

In bed at9:30, up at 6:20; 0640 131/76/58 120 203.6; 56/48/70/55  mostly sunny.  

Morning meds at 8 a.m., Eliquis at 7 a.m. and p.m.

Scattered thoughts about Stoner while attempting to back up my newer computer on my former SanDisk 2 TB external drive:


This is a photo of my beautiful young maternal grandmother, Catherine O'Shea Healy, the only photo I have.  She was an Irish immigrant who married Dennis Healy, my grandfather, another Irish immigrant.  Catherine, after whom my sister, Catherine /"Kitty, was named, died when my mother was about 6 years old.  She died from pernicious anemia, a disease caused by a vitamin B-12 deficiency, a disease that became curable shortly after Catherine's death.  Catherine had 5 children before she died, one of whom died at birth and in infancy.  My mother, Mary Norma Healy,  was the second of the four surviving children, with three brothers.  Dennis raised the 4 children alone, with help from some of his immigrant sisters.  


Some thoughts on reading Stoner:

1.  I didn't enjoy reading this book, except for the sections in which Stoner fell in love with and had his passionate affair with Katherine Driscoll.  He was happy then, enjoying life, and harming no one, though the affair was foredoomed to end.  But it ended in the saddest way, not by one or the other falling out of love, or by discovering an incompatibility, or by a disagreement, but only because the wretch, hunchback Hollis Lomax, went after Katherine's career.  He forced the two to end the affair, and Katherine left, quietly, on a train, leaving not even a note for Stoner.  Again, Stoner had been fucked by the fickle finger of Fate, in the form of Lomax.  The two lovers loved each other as much when they ended their affair as they did during the affair, but it was not to be.  I raised the moral questions yesterday or the day before; this morning I think only of the emotional costs for both of them and imagine the depth of their sadness.

2.  Stoner has a small cadre of intensely loyal supporters, including the protagonist of The Correspondent, who read it three times.  One of the professional reviewers I read claims to reread it every year.  These folks, however, must be professional litterateurs, or gluttons for punishment, because it's hard to derive much pleasure from reading the story of Professor Stoner's life.  Indeed, I wonder why Williams wrote the book; what was his point?  That's why I asked ChatGPT yesterday what the moral of the story is.  Was Stoner a hero or a chump and a coward?  Why did he stick with the nasty Edith?  Why didn't he fight to protect his precious relationship with his daughter, Grace?  Why didn't he put up any fight (until late in the game) against Lomax?  When does stoicism and conflict-aversion become simple cowardice? Or, was he some kind of Stoic hero, enduring the long, hard slog to teach composition and literature to undergraduate students, many or most of whom don't care?  How are we to think of Professor Stoner? The Greek Stoics valued rationality, the life of the mind, and emotional self-control highly, but I have to wonder whether William Stoner wasn't too philosophical, and too disciplined and self-controlled.  It cost not only him, but probably even more his daughter Grace and his beloved Katherine.  

3. John Williams has a pretty jaundiced view of college professors, not that I can easily disagree with him.  He wrote of the very bright and insightful Masters analyzing himself, Stoner, and Finch when they were all students.  He teased Stoner and Finch about their idealized views of the university and academic life, saying, "It is an asylum... a rest home, for the infirm, the aged, the discontent, and the otherwise incompetent."  He told Stoner, "You are the dreamer . . . our own Midwestern Quixote," but at least Quixote tilted at windmills.  Outside the university, however, Masters told Stoner he would simply be "chewed up and spit out" because he expects the world to possess a meaning and justice that it does not. He concludes: "You have no place to go in the world."  Further, Masters compared the university to the Church in the Middle Ages, which didn’t give a damn about the laity or even about God, but “we have our pretenses to survive.  His assessment was a variant on the notion that those who can't do teach, and I believe there is a lot of truth in the idea that academics, at least at the university level, include a lot of misfits.  Most English professors cannot produce great literature; they can only teach it.  Most law professors are not naturally great lawyers; indeed, they would probably be lousy or mediocre lawyers who turn to teaching as an escape from the practice of law.  It's a make-believe world in law school, lah-lah land compared to the rigors and requirements of the private practice of law in a highly competitive environment.  I, of course, was one of those misfits for much of my adult life, and I do not consider myself excluded from that "misfit" category.  I felt like a misfit also in the Marines, skinnier and less athletic than all others, and a lot less "ooh rah" oriented.  I joined for some psychic compulsion deriving from my Dad and Iwo Jima, and I suppose from my admiration of Colonel Kurdziel and Major Holmberg at my NROTC Unit at Marquette.  I seemed to be a more natural fit for the Navy, but I opted out and into the Corps.  I felt like a misfit in the private practice of law, too, never comfortable with charging a couple of hundred dollars an hour for services that were unavailable for people like my parents and sisters.  I was at best a Legal Aid or government service-type.  Or perhaps I like Master's thought about Professor Stoner, just not having a place to fit in the world.

Obama Library Dedication.  I watched it today.  Michelle stole the show.  I got wistful watching the speakers, the entertainers, and the big crowd of celebrities and ordinary Chicagoans.  I suspect Geri and I will try to take a room at the Hilton or elsewhere one of these days so we can visit the library.  I don't mean to suggest that I was a diehard Obama fan when he was in office.  I posted an abundance of outraged comments in the Washington Post about his policies toward Wall Street after the financial market came close to collapse from the subprime mortgage crisis that he inherited and assigned to Timothy Geithner.