Rainbows of Contemplation

Grand Canyon National Park North Rim, Arizona

You can be certain that we were nearly the first at breakfast as we were uncertain at which point they’d run out of food. Should you wonder why we didn’t head somewhere else for dinner or breakfast, well, “somewhere else” is Jacob Lake, about 45 miles away, which requires an easy hour to drive in each direction.

Grand Canyon National Park North Rim, Arizona

It’s a rare day in a national park that we pull up to the best seats in a lodge to just sit back and watch the weather pass, but that’s what we are embarking on right now. From a still-dark canyon when we first peeked into this fog-filled void prior to our visit to the dining room, the rain comes and goes. Also on the move have been some whisps of clouds forming off the edges of cliffs and nearby outcroppings.

Grand Canyon National Park North Rim, Arizona

In between, the sun pops out and brings golden light to small corners of the vast landscape sprawled before us, while at other fleeting moments, rainbows spring into their ephemeral existence and just as quickly fade away. The canopy floats by or is it hovering over the canyon? Whatever it’s doing or how it might be characterized, it’s beautiful.

Grand Canyon National Park North Rim, Arizona

Sitting here, I think about how, previously, we’ve seen others passing their time at this picture window and thought they were wasting an opportunity when they could have been on the go and capturing so much more outside on the trails. Maybe that was a testament to how much more contemplative those people were as compared to us at the time because here we are today, just like those people, monopolizing the comfy leather couch facing the panorama window.

Rainbow at the Grand Canyon National Park North Rim, Arizona

Just one of the many rainbows we watched come and go.

Grand Canyon National Park North Rim, Arizona

There won’t be a lot of variation in these photos aside from shifting weather and light as our plan to hit the North Kaibab Trail for a few miles of hiking today has been scratched due to the rain and our general satisfaction that not only had we hiked a considerable amount yesterday (about 12 miles), but we have these great seats that seem to be encouraging us to keep them warm (and get some sock knitting done).

Grand Canyon National Park North Rim, Arizona

A funny aside, when people want to step in front of the window we are camping at, they often excuse themselves as though the view was all ours.

Peggy Walker and Caroline Wise at the Grand Canyon National Park North Rim, Arizona

Funnier yet was meeting Larry and Peggy Walker, World Travelers. Larry first tried passing his wife off on me; well, he threatened that she might sit in my lap if I objected to sharing the view. This was followed up by him moving slyly into my spot next to Caroline when I had stood up to snap a photo or two. His smiling face of “Gotcha” was certainly worth a good laugh. It turned out that these two were celebrating their 50th anniversary this week while also accompanying some friends who were renewing their vows in Vegas. Larry and Peggy are just an awesome happy couple and an inspiration to both of us. Hopefully, we, too see our 50th anniversary someday.

Grand Canyon National Park North Rim, Arizona

We sat a bit longer and started to learn that many people want to stop and talk, so contemplative moments are not all that easy to have. With this realization, we consider that it’s time to get moving again, but just then, another weather front is coming in from the east, and I’m curious to watch the canyon disappear again. As we got up after sitting there for close to three hours, we saw that all around us, the trappings that make the lodge a comfy place had been disappearing as the crew, anxious to be finished for the season, had been busy clearing the place out.

Vermilion Cliffs seen from Marble Canyon, Arizona

This must be a record year regarding how many times we’ve passed through the Vermilion Cliffs area, and each encounter is as worthy as any of the other travels through here.

Over the Colorado River on the Navajo Bridge in Marble Canyon, Arizona

I’ve taken countless photos over the years of the Colorado River from the Navajo Bridge but I’m not sure I’ve ever taken one in this kind of light. I took this thought not as yet another iteration of this scene but as an establishing shot of what comes next. First, though, there’s a tiny detail at the top of the cliffside on the right, and while you can’t see it right now, it’ll all become clear in the next photo. Oh, and consider that the bridge we are on is 467 feet (142 meters) over the river below, which should give you some idea about the scale.

Condors at Navajo Bridge in Marble Canyon, Arizona

On the lower right sits an incredibly rare bird, rarer than its parents, above it to the left. That black spot is a fledgling condor born in the wild, one of a small handful. These are just three of the approximately 115 condors that are hopefully still alive in Arizona, and if I had to guess, I’d say that Caroline and I have seen no less than 15 of these giants of the scavenger world or more than 10% of all condors in our state; that’s simultaneously cool and tragic. Think about it: we are barely holding on to the 500 or so California Condors that still exist, although that’s from a low point of just 27 birds left in existence back in 1987. If we are having this difficulty keeping a species of bird with a 10-foot wide wingspan alive, what would make us believe we can keep ourselves going into the future? And if you believe it’s natural selection, the demise of condors was due to humans using lead ammunition for hunting and leaving animals and entrails in the wild where the birds would naturally finish them off. The resulting lead poisoning nearly brought them to extinction.

Rainbow seen over Highway 89 north of Flagstaff, Arizona

Since leaving the remarkable sight of the fledgling, we’ve been hitting intermittent rain, sometimes heavy. Just south of Flagstaff, the intensity of this rainbow demanded we stop. Sadly, the photo does it no justice.

Flagstaff, Arizona

From a distance, we thought we were looking at sun rays shining through the clouds onto the forest that sits on the flank of San Francisco Mountain below Humphry’s Peak, that’s well out of sight. Nope, it wasn’t until we pulled over that we saw the thousands of Aspen trees changing color with the change of season.

Rainbow seen over Highway 17 south of Flagstaff, Arizona

Hmmm, maybe Sedona is the magic place so many believe it is, as here we are at Highway 179, which is the exit for Sedona, and it was double-rainbows all the way.

Arizona Canyons

Caroline Wise at Lees Ferry between Vermilion Cliffs National Monument and the Grand Canyon in Arizona

This is not where our day began, as a breakfast of rocks wouldn’t have been on our menu, but this is where today’s adventure got underway. We are on the Honey Moon Trail on our way to Lees Ferry, not that we are on our honeymoon, but then again, I believe Caroline would chime in with enthusiastic agreement; we seem to be on a forever honeymoon that’s never-ending. Not neverending like Die Unendliche Geschichte (The NeverEnding Story by Michael Ende) but more like we just keep celebrating almost every day as though we got married 10 minutes ago. Well then, if we are so in love and happy, why is Caroline standing alone under that massive, precariously balanced boulder? One of two answers comes to mind: I don’t have 30-foot-long arms, or I don’t have a tripod with me; you choose the answer that works for you.

Lees Ferry between Vermilion Cliffs National Monument and the Grand Canyon in Arizona

This is the Lees Ferry area and the site of not only a bunch of history but also the beginning of the Grand Canyon National Park. As for the history, this is where the Honey Moon Trail comes in, which I think should be the Honeymoon Trail, but I’m not one to argue the naming of roads. I can share that the reason behind the name has to do with Mormons and their wagon roads reaching the Colorado River here on their way to St. George, Utah, to get their marriages sealed in the Temple. Lees Ferry is named such because it was John Doyle Lee who operated the ferry here in order for the newlyweds to reach St. George. Caroline and my history here is most notably recognized by a book I wrote titled Stay In The Magic: A Voyage Into The Beauty Of The Grand Canyon, which describes how we embarked on our first whitewater adventure from these very shores a dozen years ago.

Fossil near Lees Ferry on the Colorado River near the Grand Canyon, Arizona

It’s only natural that fossils should easily be seen in the area since we are in some small way descended in the bowels of the earth, in an open-air version of that. Now approaching my 60th year of life, I wonder how much longer it will be until the jokes begin that I’m the living fossil in the places I’ll be finding myself on this continuing journey.

Near Lees Ferry on the Colorado River above the Grand Canyon, Arizona

On one hand, this view is new to us; on the other hand, we’ve traveled down those calm waters of the Colorado River that flow 15 miles from the Glen Canyon Dam here to Lees Ferry. Then, downstream from Lees Ferry, you’ll encounter countless roaring rapids punctuating miles of tranquil river heading to the sea, actually to farms, pools, golf courses, and some drinking water outlets, as almost nothing reaches the sea anymore.

Caroline Wise near Lees Ferry on the Colorado River above the Grand Canyon, Arizona

The first leg of our hiking today was the Sampson Trail Lookout, and I intentionally put that in the past tense as we didn’t get very far before a narrow part of the trail with a precarious dropoff stopped me in my tracks; such is life living with acrophobia.

Near Lees Ferry on the Colorado River above the Grand Canyon, Arizona

Leaving the Sampson Trail and rejoining the Colorado River via Lees Ferry Trail, which runs along the shoreline, we spotted an old section of cable used for guiding ferries across the river back in the day.

Near Lees Ferry on the Colorado River above the Grand Canyon, Arizona

Lees Ferry Fort is one of the few remaining buildings from those early days of the crossing; this one was built in the 1870s.

Orchard at Lonely Dell Ranch part of the Glen Canyon National Recreation Area in Arizona

The Lonely Dell Ranch orchard was a part of the Lee family homestead. Seeing our hike up the Sampson Trail was cut short, we decided we’d walk up the Paria Canyon Trail awhile. This ranch, which included numerous buildings also for people working the land, sustained the ferry operators starting with the Lees and subsequent families. The many varieties of fruit trees that remain from this big farm are taken care of by Park Service employees and the fruit is freely available for pickers when in season.

Lonely Dell Ranch part of the Glen Canyon National Recreation Area in Arizona

Other than this being identified by others as a 1930s Chevrolet truck, I can’t share anything else about it. In the background on the right is the old cemetery that saw too many children from the Johnson family who took over operations after the law caught up with John Doyle Lee. So here’s the rest of the story: Mr. Lee was actually hiding out at the ferry, trying to have a normal life, but someone needed to be the fall guy for the Mountain Meadows Massacre in which at least 120 members of the Baker–Fancher emigrant wagon train out of Arkansas where shot by adherents of the LDS church. The mass killing by the Nauvoo Legion happened due to hysteria among church leaders, likely including Brigham Young, though that connection was never proven.

Near the Paria Canyon-Vermilion Cliffs Wilderness Area in Arizona

This bend in the Paria River was also the site of a pumping station that watered the ranch downriver after the failure of a few dams that had been built previously for that purpose. Our trail hugs the disappearing wall on the left and while I thought this might be the end of our walk upriver, I found the wherewithal to not give up too early.

Near the Paria Canyon-Vermilion Cliffs Wilderness Area in Arizona

There was a time we’d considered hiking the length of Paria Canyon, a multi-day trek that covers about 38 miles, but after getting to a narrow cliff shelf we would have had to traverse up in the curve on the left, I can only stand in awe, and simultaneous horror that worse could lay ahead. Of course, we could have also taken our chances and crossed over the river that, in places, didn’t look all that deep, but we weren’t prepared for wet feet or yanking ourselves out of knee-deep mud, so this is about as far as we got on this hike.

Vermilion Cliffs National Monument in Arizona

Nothing left to do here now but get to our next destination, which will require a long lens for the camera and our binoculars, except I won’t divulge that activity quite yet. I will share that it, too, is situated in Vermilion Cliffs National Monument, which is what you are looking at here.

Vermilion Cliffs National Monument in Arizona

And this? More Vermilion Cliffs from about the same spot as the previous photo, but instead of looking southwest, I’m looking northwest. While it might be difficult to tease out of this lower resolution web-friendly image, there’s a lower bit of mesa on the right of the photo at the foot of the massive towering cliffs looming over it; look closely, and you might see a diagonal line where you can see lighter and darker soil. At that spot is a narrow single-lane dirt road that has been carved leading up to the mesa, and from what I can see on Google Earth is that there are at least five dwellings up there. You could give me one of the properties, and the only way I’d get home is to walk up the road, and it’s undrivable as far as I’m concerned.

Caroline Wise at the Soap Creek Trail gate between Vermilion Cliffs National Monument and the Grand Canyon in Arizona

Oh, you want to turn around and stop there? Okay, we can do that. Caroline is holding the gate open as we are about to visit the Soap Creek Trail that heads right down to the Colorado River. That spot was the first place where we camped back in 2010 when we found ourselves on that whitewater trip I frequently reference.

Soap Creek Trail between Vermilion Cliffs National Monument and the Grand Canyon in Arizona

This looks promising as we head right down the dry wash; it’s a bit sandy in places, but no mud.

Soap Creek Trail between Vermilion Cliffs National Monument and the Grand Canyon in Arizona

At about one mile in or about 3 miles from the river, we reach what at times is obviously a waterfall, but today could only act as a humanfall if we dared navigate our way down the non-existent trail. Later, we learned that there are places where hikers would benefit from having rappelling ropes or webbing with them to get in and out of the trickier parts of the trail, though others report that they found the canyon easily navigable and found ways down the dry waterfalls and over heavy boulder fields. We took off on this hike in part because Alltrails ranks it as moderate, like the South Kaibab Trail to Cedar Ridge in the Grand Canyon that we hiked with my 74-year-old (at the time) mother-in-law. This type of hike should be rated as hard; maybe with a guide, it would have been easier, but like Michelle Dobyne once said, “Not Today….and we bounced out.”

Spider on the Soap Creek Trail between Vermilion Cliffs National Monument and the Grand Canyon in Arizona

There we were bouncing out when Mrs. Spider spoke up and said, “Would you two enjoy a crispy-wrapped grasshopper on your travels?” Of course, we are down with your brand of websushi and so we gobbled down our gift and found ourselves 41% less disappointed that we had to turn around and not reach the Colorado River at Soap Creek Canyon.

Caroline Wise on the Soap Creek Trail between Vermilion Cliffs National Monument and the Grand Canyon in Arizona

Do not think for a moment that we were really disappointed, nor believe that we accepted that grasshopper offering. If you just look at the environment in which we added two more miles to our accumulating miles of trails hiked, you can easily deduce that we were as happy as clams.

Vermilion Cliffs National Monument in Arizona

Way up this road near Utah is the Wave, a world-famous geological feature that’s a part of the Coyote Buttes. Well before that, near the end of the visible road in this photo, is a small parking lot, a toilet, a covered picnic table, a really poor viewing scope, and all of that is there because over on the cliffs to the right are the homes of incredibly rare condors. A few weeks ago, as we were crossing the Navajo Bridge, we learned about a condor release that was happening the next day, but our plans had us up at the Great Basin National Park. So, knowing that there were five new condors that had been recently released here, we were sure to bring the binoculars and my long lens with the hope we might catch sight of them.

Condor release area at the Vermilion Cliffs National Monument in Arizona

Well, if it isn’t our luckiest day ever? We encountered three people from the Peregrine Fund representing the Condor Cliffs program set up with chairs and scopes. We figured they were monitoring the birds that had been released back on September 24th. Wrong, they were here not only monitoring them but also looking at the clifftop release pen holding more condors for an upcoming unannounced release. With the naked eye, there was nothing to see, so the lady volunteer from Montana invited us to peer through her scope, and BLAM, there was the cage and a bunch of condors.

Vermilion Cliffs National Monument in Arizona

Out there on the eastern cliffs are those condors, and nearby, hidden in a blind, is at least one biologist camping out in 4-day shifts to closely monitor the birds in conjunction with the folks we met next to the road. The cabin-like structure behind the release pen is a mobile lab in which they can examine birds, repair radio trackers, and do other condor-related stuff to support the birds’ adaptation to living in the wild.

Aspen in fall at the Grand Canyon National Park North Rim, Arizona

While down in Phoenix, we’ve still been flirting with temperatures close to 100 degrees, it’s obvious up here that fall is in full force. I probably shot more than a dozen images of yellow, orange, and reddish aspen, but contrast and a wildfire-scarred landscape at other locations made it difficult to snag a decent photo. Combine the desire to photograph the vibrancy with the hope we’d reach the north rim of the Grand Canyon, and I probably didn’t give my effort enough time to find the right scene. As it turned out, we started running into heavy cloud cover before we ever reached even the park entrance.

A deer at the Grand Canyon National Park North Rim, Arizona

Oh, deer, I almost forgot to share the stats for today. At the time of seeing this dear deer, Caroline and I already exchanged verbal expressions of love about 114 times which is kind of weak for us because it works out to just over five times per hour per person. This rather pathetic statistic of once per 11 and 1/2 minutes doesn’t reflect favorably, but please try to understand that we’ve been distracted by the multitude of sights and sounds that captured our attention, effectively leading to us nearly ignoring each other. Hug stats were also off as our hug-o-meters registered less than one per hour and, if truth be known, it was closer to a hug per two hours. If all that wasn’t bad enough, the snuggle factor as measured during our waking moments today would appear sad and tragic due to the excitement of getting out under the rising sun and overwhelming the obligatory routine of indulgent snugglage. Come Monday, we’ll be working hard to repair all that.

Grand Canyon National Park North Rim, Arizona

While there is no sunset illuminating the sky with vibrant oranges, reds, and purples at the North Rim of the Grand Canyon, at least there’s no rain. There are also no dining options as the restaurant is booked solid, and the saloon is out of food, as is the deli, aside from some macaroni salad and potato chips. Today is the last full day of business on this side of the canyon before things shut down until next year. Apparently, Aramark has been working hard to ruin the experience of visitors who spend $185 a night minimum to be here by not only not having a place for us to eat, but they also didn’t have staff to make beds and simply put our bedding, neatly folded at least, on the beds for us to make them ourselves. Of course, the executive staff could easily blame local management and staff (or rather, lack of staff), but anyone with half a brain should easily surmise that the conditions that affect these kinds of situations are budgetary in nature and that is dictated by a corporate office, not the workers in the field. As a matter of fact, the staff we dealt with have been tremendous and as accommodating as they could be, especially Anna at the deli, who found me a bowl of chili that allowed me to take my meds on a full stomach like I’m supposed to.

Grand Canyon National Park North Rim, Arizona

Fortunately, the Grand Canyon cannot disappoint nor can the weather conditions, as whatever the situation, we are being offered yet another unique opportunity to view this spectacle in a way that seems new to these eyes that have gazed into this abyss countless times by now.

Marble Canyon, Arizona – Trip 17

Homemade dehydrated granola in Ute pottery

Finished with a 5-day fast, appointments set for Caroline’s next bunionectomy, the calcium test on my heart was done yesterday, new batches of homemade granola and Burmese pickled ginger done, and some important changes to our Oregon trip next month means we can get out of Phoenix for the weekend and feel accomplished as we take off. Where to this time? North, with hopes that the weather remains pleasant where we’re going because the Sunday morning forecast suggests it could get down to the upper 30s or about 3c with a chance for light rain until mid-day. Good thing we have warm clothes, ponchos, and some plans for enjoying ourselves. Where exactly are we going? A small place on the map called Marble Canyon.

Regarding this being “Trip 17,” late last year, I put together an itinerary that planned for us to take 26 excursions out of Phoenix this year, but we won’t make it. We’ve already missed 5 of those trips for one reason or another. Two of them were from August while Caroline was recovering from her foot surgery, and that will happen again in December. We know we have at least one more trip that is a certainty, the 12 days up on the Oregon coast, and hopefully, we can squeeze two more in, maybe even a third. So, we’ll complete the year, having taken between 18 and 21 trips, equaling about 85 days out and about, which is not bad from my view.

And what about today’s lead photo? That’s 6 pounds of homemade granola that just came out of the dehydrator after two and a half days in one of our favorite pieces of Ute pottery. We picked it up about 15 years ago, somewhere near Towaoc, Colorado, from Ute Mountain Pottery. Any other specifics are lost to time. What we do know is that the shop on the side of the road no longer exists so we won’t be adding to the collection any time soon.

At the entrance of Wupatki National Monument north of Flagstaff, Arizona

As fall descends upon the Northern Hemisphere, the sun dips below the horizon even earlier, and sometimes, we forget to take that into account as we head out on the road. Had I considered that I probably should have made a point of stopping before reaching Flagstaff because after enjoying our dinner there (a good Mexican meal at Martanne’s), we were chasing the last glimmer of the sun still up in the sky, but nothing down upon the earth. The light was fading fast, and the early evening could be seen low in the sky. [I would like to add that since we drove north on the I-17, there really was no chance to pull over for a photo before Flag anyway, although the views are always spectacular. This time, we even saw a herd of antelopes in the distance. – Caroline]

Stars seen from the Navajo Bridge in Marble Canyon, Arizona

It was dark, really dark, when we reached the Navajo Bridge in Marble Canyon. While it can’t be seen in this photo, the Milky Way sits above the low bright spot left of center.

Marble Canyon Lodge in Marble Canyon, Arizona

And this is our destination for the evening out in the middle of nowhere, Arizona. Just one night we’ll stay here at the Marble Canyon Lodge. Behind us is the road that leads to Lees Ferry and Mile Marker Zero, a.k.a. the beginning of the Grand Canyon National Monument that we’ll be visiting, along with a couple of other places starting tomorrow morning.

You Must Leave

Publication_54_Tax_Guide_for_US_Citizens_Living_Abroad,_1965

I’ve had a good share of thoughts about how plague and war displace people and alter the course of culture, but I’d never considered the unintended consequences that accompanied World War II when so many artists and writers fled Europe. I am well aware of the scientists brought to the U.S. after the war and the ones that left Germany prior to avoid being caught up with the anti-intellectualism that was occurring and subsequent persecution.

Here we are today. America is on the cusp of redefining itself in ways no one can quite predict yet, but the old America will never again be what comes next. Tragically, those who take advantage of becoming ex-pats typically do so for lifestyle and economic reasons, hardly for the intellectual conditions they are leaving behind, though they may voice their disdain for the gross stupidity they perceive.

When particular intellectual classes of people had to escape Europe or perish, they left privilege and were forced to adapt to circumstances where they were now the outsiders without much merit, though they were likely respected even if somewhat suspect.

While I should certainly leave, the countries in which I could consider living don’t have more intellectual curiosity either. There is only economic interest in what might create jobs. In any case, I would not arrive with the credentialed papers recognizing my contribution to any school of thought; I am merely the average person without a grand formula of how a people, country, or planet could escape the trajectory into the stupid that we are barreling towards.

Should I ever discover an answer to even a small question regarding anything at all, it might arrive in something written here or maybe an attempt at a thing more ambitious than a simple blog post, but that rubicon is yet to be crossed.

There is No Left

Black Bloc from Wikipedia

There is no left, leftism, or radical left. The Zapatistas, Occupy Wall Street, and WTO protestors are all dead movements. The socialism scare is the orchestrated fear-mongering of a genius campaign to shift the world to the right. Wanna-be dictators might spew rhetoric about Deep State cabals, but the truly nefarious nature of our reality leaning into the far-right hate politics of the 21st century is happening right before our faces. The corporate, big money-backed television, radio, and social media personalities who extol a vitriolic diet of inflaming and bating angry, disenfranchised people afraid of the accelerated changes that have arrived with new communication media are happening right in front of our faces.

I am the left, some guy who wants to go with the flow as I adapt to the evolving circumstances of time going forward. I’m not afraid of young people, people of color, those who are exploring gender fluidity, or a land and culture that is transitioning into tomorrow. I am afraid of conformity, gross stupidity, those who don’t read, anger aimed at nebulous, non-existent boogymen who are creations of political jingoists, and those who feel an entitlement to anything at all.

The left is something America is so afraid of; there’s no chance of allowing anything other than a tiny fringe minority of leftists to even exist in this country. Not that they would be actively sought out and eliminated, but their fingerprints and traces are so easily monitored that their presence is always known and their influence mapped. Just how many people do you know who’ve read left-leaning anything? Aside from Marx and Engels, I’ll wager I could ask the next 1000 people I meet to name one left-leaning author, just one.

Tell me the title of one book from Michael Foucault, Alain Badiou, Edward Said, or Mark Fisher. How about the notorious Howard Zinn? Maybe you could tell me just a little something regarding anything they’ve written about? Didn’t Baudrillard, Deleuze, Derrida, and maybe even Nietzsche, for that matter, go on about socialist ideology? You wouldn’t know because leftist anything is a chimera dressed in the black clothes of someone protesting anti-fascism called Antifa.

There are no less than 11 million Americans who identify with Alt-Right ideologies, and right-wing hate groups have murdered nearly 400 people in 25 years; how many Antifa are there, and how many Americans have they killed?

If you believe there’s a woke ultra-left thing happening in America, it’s because you are afraid of things you’ve been taught to fear, such as being woke (alert to injustice in society, especially racism) or Critical Race Theory (“The Frankfurt School was a group of scholars known for developing critical theory and popularizing the dialectical method of learning by interrogating society’s contradictions.” – Nicki Lisa Cole, Ph.D.) I’m referencing critical theory here as, in my view, thinkers about racism have used this method to look at racism and inequality with the idea of learning more about society and improving our lives, but for the far-right, any look and criticism that might lead to cultural change are forbidden, so being “woke” or teaching “CRT” and the idea that addressing anything that deals with the white/black divide, gay/straight chasm, gender identity, or injuries that arise from various types of violence, any conversations that might be critical of the status quo puts at risk what it means to be American.

Don’t worry, people of the United States, all the important leftists in America that you’ve never heard of because there are no living, famous, important leftists here, would all fit on one Space-X rocket and could easily be blasted into orbit. The thing is, whoever might be on that very, very short list just wants everyone to get along and let others find a solid path to a fulfilling life.

The funny thing about the system moving even a hair to the left to what, in reality, is at best the center, one must first admit to being a fully-fledged socialist as though being thus credentialed is essential to claiming to be a lefty.

Being on the left, the real left is certainly an incredibly dangerous place to see a population heading to as it would imply a move towards freedom as defined by the individual and not by a state that tells its subjects which laws will work against them in order to contain them from thinking or acting on their own behalf.

So why is there even a left and a right? Because in the effort to maintain a state of dependence predicated on mass stupidity, reducing all things to either/or, with us/against us, winner/loser, gay/straight, and left/right, we are able to draw up quick sides of isolation, marginalization, and polarization. Nuances cannot be a part of the program as that injects too many options and demands self-responsibility, and that requires an education that eclipses everything we’ve done to diminish the importance of learning. We may pay cursory lip service to “learning,” but knowledge and wisdom are not areas we are striving to reach.

Image: Black bloc. (2022, September 12). In Wikipedia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_bloc

Decapitation

Q_Anon

Back in October of 2021, I read a story on DailyBeast titled, “Oath Keepers Panicked That The Left Would ‘Decapitate’ Them After Failed Capitol Putsch,” and saw something I’d failed to recognize before. First of all, the story followed the devolving world of Yale Law School graduate Stuart Rhodes, the founder of Oath Keepers, a far-right paramilitary group. According to the article, following the January 6th, 2021 insurrection attempt on the Capitol, “Elmer” (Stuart Rhodes’s legal first name) told his followers that “the Biden White House was about to “conduct a ‘night of the long knives’ decapitation strike” on Oath Keepers under the guise of a massive power outage.”

So, who are the followers of the Oath Keepers, and what role has QAnon played in this? Beyond those two entities, what is the mindset that pulls adherents into the conspiracies that fuel groups that feed on this stuff and sustain the engine of producing more conspiracies? A blog post on Stanford University Press (SUP) by Sophia Moskalenko about the book “Pastels and Pedophiles” by Mia Bloom and Sophia Moskalenko shares the following:

Research on radicalization has consistently found that the subjective matters more than the objective when predicting violent trajectories. Relative deprivation is more predictive of anger and resentment than objective deprivation. Their bank accounts may not have been in distress, but that didn’t help the psychological distress of changing culture and eroding social norms. Highly subjective “life meaning” is a better predictor of overall well-being than objective economic measures.

One of the predictors of meaning in life is awe, the experience of “perceptually vast stimuli that transcend one’s ordinary reference frame”––like the “Whoa” moment QAnon followers experience when, escaping their relative deprivation, they connect the dots into a pattern. Their pain and anger transcend ordinary reference frames, filling their lives with meaning.

To those searching for meaning in the devastated sociocultural landscape, QAnon promises to make everything better. Personally discovering “the Truth,” followers experience awe, and their lives become more fulfilling as a result.

This brings me to what I failed to recognize prior to today, and that is the similarities between groups such as the Oath Keepers and the 1970s People’s Temple cult that ended in a mass suicide at Jonestown in Guyana.

When life has little meaning, and we are unable to find that thing that inspires us, isolation, loneliness, self-medication, various pharmaceuticals, and a society that doesn’t care how crazy the individual creates an environment ripe for the likes of a Reverend Jim Jones who feed the imaginations of those who need greater meaning and end up finding it in the rant of madness. In 1978, we learned that the majority of the 911 people who ended up dead were persuaded to voluntarily end their children’s and their own lives in a grueling poisoning that unfolded among nearly a thousand people driven into mass hysteria.

Today, the internet delivers voices such as QAnon in the role of Jim Jones to drive a disenfranchised large segment of our population into the madness of a conspiracy that offers them a truth of perception that alleviates the pain of uncertainty and loss. On television and in movies, there’s always a resolution to the unknowns, and the bad or evil side that is causing pain for others is clearly defined, but in real life, we ourselves are most often the culprits causing our own pain and suffering. The need to find that external cause is of greater concern than looking within to learn what we are harboring or lacking.

Someone whom a plurality of people considers potentially bad or evil can become an easy victim upon which to pin nonsensical stories. Take black Americans: throughout history, they have been lynched or imprisoned because the common bias against black men created “probable cause” and pronounced them guilty, if not for the charge at hand, then something in their past, so they “had it coming.” A large part of our population hated President Barack Obama, but our culture made it sine qua non to not voice racism in absolute terms else you would suffer ostracisation. When Obama’s last term in office neared its end, the pent-up rage from “suffering” a black president unleashed the propagandistic dogs of war, making Hillary Clinton the scapegoat while that segment of our population foisted a populist into power who held the promise of turning back the clock.

Returning to a “greater time” in the past is a contrivance of folly as only the circumstances leading into an age produce the conditions experienced as culture; we cannot manifest this by desire or any amount of hard work. This would be akin to the 30-year-old willing themselves back to being the 10-year-old, not just mentally but physically too.

The cult leader (or now the “Cult of Internet Conspiracy”) promises those anguished by being “born in the wrong decade” that the life they desire is just over the horizon. This megalomaniac offers definitive proof of who is at fault for why they feel out of sorts and lost in a society that has apparently abandoned them. Someone other than yourself is to blame, and only I can see and relate to your pain; follow me.

This devil’s bargain is a path to ruin and always has been. What good has come from following the likes of Hitler, Manson, Stalin, Koresh, Jim Jones, or Donald Trump? The most devout always sacrifice their freedom and often their lives, too. If you claim that Donald Trump improved the economic situation of Americans, the exact same was said of Adolf Hitler from 1933 to 1939, the six years before Germany invaded Poland, leading to over 50 million deaths during the following six years. All of these leaders promise to bring their adherents to some mythical promised land which apparently is code for the graveyard.

The point of this post, though, is not to argue about my biases held against those that bring ruin to their followers or if any of those named were really ever as I perceive them but to notice how the internet has brought about the power of a deranged cult leader in the form of clues, hints, videos, and forum posts that allow the congregation to meet up behind the scenes and to anonymously foment their personal revolution among the like-minded. Dispersed and unable to be contained in a neighborhood, city, or country, they are cancer living among the healthy cells, spreading their disease by reinforcing bad mental health. How can anything be orchestrated to contain madness unless it’s imposed by something operating outside of its operating field?

Just as a segment of society worries about the rule over their body and mind by a malignant artificial intelligence, disinformation, and conspiracy will be the first digital disease arising out of fear to cause widespread damage to the body of society, requiring drastic remediation to purge the illness from our population. I mention those afraid of AI as though they abhor the idea of being obedient to a nefarious AI, yet they are busy infecting themselves with a disease that has only previously been fought by means of armed conflict, either from policing or actual war.