Comic Strip of the Day Editorial cartooning

CSotD: They are who we thought they were

Dennis Green is gone, but his rant lives on, not because it applied to a football game, but because it continues to apply to people who look a threat straight in the eye and decide not to see it.

Green said what he should have said, but that’s what nobody ever says because we’d rather be polite and analytical and logical and not admit how badly we misjudged a critical situation.

It’s nice and safe and kind of funny when it’s applied to a football game, but not so amusing when the stakes are higher.

Now here we are facing a situation in which he is who we thought he was, and we’ve let him off the hook. Dennis Green demanded to know why you’d bother to even play if you weren’t going to take things seriously, and Olivia Troye demands to know the same thing, but on a much larger, more important scale.

Troye knows as much about national intelligence as Dennis Green knew about football, and her essay is headlined “I’ve Sat in the Rooms Where These Are Written. This One Stunned Me,” as America shifts its attitude towards the world away from the understanding that has prevailed at least since World War II.

As Rowe puts it, we’ve shut down the symbol of welcome that was once our public image, and have retreated not just into isolationism but into active hostility towards the rest of the world. The most absurd, insulting evidence of this shift is a proposal to make all tourists submit five years of their social media postings for approval before they can enter the country.

Jennings calls it a level of inquisition that Santa Claus himself couldn’t pass, given that the obvious intent is not to screen people but to find reasons to exclude them, which may not be firmly stated in the proposal itself but is made clear by remarks confirming Trump’s disdain for people from “shithole countries” and his preference for those from Scandinavian nations, and cultures.

Which is a nice way to avoid using the term “Aryan,” but, as Dennis Green would say, they are who we thought they were.

Turner points out that, if you apply the proposal with the milquetoast innocence of its surface, half of Trump’s cabinet would be denied entrance. To put an innocent spin on the concept, and on the fundamental attitude behind it, goes well beyond naive and deep into intentional ignorance.

It’s important to read Olivia Troye’s well-reasoned, well-experienced explanation of our shift in national priorities. To ignore the situation means letting them off the hook.

If you want to crown them, that’s your choice, but letting them off the hook appears to have been ours.

Le Lievre is one of several cartoonists and commentators to observe that seizing ships on the high seas is piracy. Obviously, in a state of war, such seizures are normal, but we’re not in a state of war, nor has Congress passed any legal statement imposing sanctions that would justify our seizing an oil tanker in international waters.

The problem I have with Le Lievre’s imagery is that it seems humorous, and could be viewed as dismissive, as a chuckle and a pat on the shoulder of “Naughty boy!”

By contrast, Bennett offers a suggestion of “Hey, wait a minute …”

One of his trademark touches is the puzzled expression on an authority figure suddenly flummoxed by a reality he hadn’t anticipated, and he employs it here with precision. The argument, of course, is that there’s no excuse for surprise, that any reasonable level of experience would have made things clear before now.

They are who we thought they were, or, at least, they are who we should have thought they were.

Deering doesn’t play around: He hoists the Jolly Roger over the White House, but then, in case you don’t take it seriously, adds a piratical motto that combines the seizure of the tanker with the earlier killing of purported smugglers without any effort at proving their guilt or following international law.

And for those who see stranded sailors as blips on a screen or concepts in a theoretical discussion, Darkow offers a less analytical view of shipwrecked individuals whom we have been taught to see as real people with real lives. Granted, Jack and Rose are fictional characters, but they’re a great deal more genuine than the disembodied “narcoterrorists” imagined, but not proven, and so who remain real individuals deliberately executed by our administration.

Each piece of art should stand by itself, but Varvel has made his Christian beliefs such a constant element in his work that it is both difficult and dubious not to question his declaration that war crimes are not wrong if they are committed against people we dislike.

Christ specifically condemned religious people who would leave a wounded man to suffer in a ditch, listing two such pious hypocrites before praising the non-believer who demonstrated an instinctive commitment to God’s will.

And now show me the part of the New Testament in which he said people suspected of bad acts should be murdered, rather than the part where he said none of us have the moral standing to cast that first stone.

He who has ears, let him hear.

Why do you not understand what I am saying? It is because you are unable to accept My message. You belong to your father, the devil, and you want to carry out his desires. He was a murderer from the beginning, refusing to uphold the truth, because there is no truth in him. When he lies, he speaks his native language, because he is a liar and the father of lies. But because I speak the truth, you do not believe Me!John 8, 43-45

Perhaps the best approach is to skip the clever metaphors and go straight to the point, and Brown describes the so-called “Trump Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine” with a knife in Venezuela and a fork in Brazil and a future worth contemplating in depth.

It starts with recognizing that they are who we thought they were.

And that we are who they thought we were.

Mike Peterson has posted his "Comic Strip of the Day" column every day since 2010. His opinions are his own, but we welcome comments either agreeing or in opposition.

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Comments 15

  1. So glad to see the British cartoonists here for whom I usually rely on the Guardian. Only missing Martin Rowson’s grisly cartoons. Still no paywall there, by the way.
    Thanks. For everything.

  2. I wonder if there will be any charges for “war” crimes (” ” because we aren’t at war) at some point for the killers of purported smugglers or the seizing of oil tankers on the open sea. Somehow I doubt it.

  3. Found this meme yesterday, it says it ALL about where we are today (expletives redacted):

    “We’re officially in The Upside Down, folks.

    Weird Al Yankovic is on stage singing Rage Against the Machine’s “Killing in the Name.”

    Not in a jovial manner.

    Not a whimsical take on it.

    He’s singing the song as it’s meant to be sung.

    2025 has officially pushed Weird Al too far.

    This is real and I will enthusiastically follow Darth Alfred into battle.”

    Enjoy your weekend, kiddos.

  4. I understand your point that we can’t ignore all this, but given the fact most of us have the power to bear witness but not the power to change it, when does this become “blaming the victim”?

    1. Don’t claim a universal weakness the rest of us don’t feel. We’ve got the right to assemble in the streets and we’ve got elections coming up and we’ve still got honest courts and decent (if temporarily outnumbered) Congressional representation.

      If you’re giving up, that’s your deal, but I wish you’d stand with the rest of us. Numbers matter, and, yes, it’s better to live on your feet than to die on your knees.

      1. The real reason for sending ICE into our cities is to normalize the process so that they can be prepared to send them into the major cities to disrupt the mid-ter elections, and if necessary in January ’29 to prevent an election certification. Although, of course, whoever is VP at that point could probably manage that.

      2. So be it, Mike. If I’m gonna go out, it’s not gonna be like a candle. It’s gonna be a 50 megaton blast of sheer rage.

  5. The George W Bush administration lied us into a war with Iraq over WMDs that did not exist. A war that lasted eight years and cost over two trillion dollars. Yet, the American people re-elected Bush in 2004.

    Donald Trump was elected the first time, tried to overthrow the government when he lost re-election, was convicted of 34 felony counts, was convicted of sexual assault, had numerous charges dismissed because the conservative on the SCOTUS gave him virtual immunity, and through all of that, the American people re-elected Trump in 2024.

    This is who we are as a country and all the ugliness that goes with it.

    This is who we are as a country as long as good people are not involved, too cynical, or too precious about their opposition candidates who don’t pass their individual sniff test or don’t excite them to near orgasmic splendor. Grow the ‘F’ up. This is about survival now.

  6. I was watching an excellent video the other day on how in American Christianity, identity is more important than action. It is essentially ‘sola fide’ mixed with good ol’ tribalism: it doesn’t matter how big a POS you are as long as you’re on the winning team. Such a mindset has been used throughout history to justify all manner of atrocities, including slavery and genocide.

    But what else can you expect from a religion and a culture that now claims that cruelty is good and empathy is bad? We have officially entered Bizarro World. A truly Orwellian landscape where hate is love, slavery is freedom, war is peace, ignorance is strength.

    In Donald Trump’s America, every church is Westboro Baptist Church.

    1. There are many churches standing up to hate and fascism. You may need to widen your news diet. The fact that some Somali was involved in fraud doesn’t make them all guilty, and the same applies to religious groups.

  7. Religion is used by man to justify all manner of perfidy.

  8. Gary Varvel is far more hypocritical than you depict him. About three months ago, on his substack page, Varvel attacked people who celebrated the killing of Charlie Kirk, quoting a verse from Proverbs which condemns eveyone who “rejoices at calamity,” but which begins “He who mocks the poor taunts his Maker.” I commented that Varvel had failed to object to the Fox News host who had recently called for Mass euthanization of mentally ill homeless people. Varvel responded “For the record, I reject any suggestion of ‘killing people’.” Given his support of Trump’s,attacks of Venezuelan boats, it seems that he believes that to suggest killing people is wrong, but killing people is right and admirable. (He also has turned comments off on nearly all of his Substack posts.)

    1. He could try sticking his fingers in his ears, closing his eyes, and loudly saying “la-la-la-la…”

    2. For all his flinging around Bible verses, it’s nothing but Monday Night Football to him and his ilk. Right or wrong only depends on what team you’re on.

    3. Turned off the comments due to all the “persecution” he receives, no doubt.

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