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CSotD: Things Said And Left Unsaid

There are a lot of Rob Reiner/Pearly Gates cartoons out there, but you won’t see them here. I’m sorry he and his wife are dead, but the best I can do is refer back to John Donne yet again: Each man’s death diminishes me.

But Donne also challenged Death, and warned it not to be so proud, since Death comes to everyone. Donne believed in an afterlife that made Death even less frightening, but I’m open to whatever happens next, even if it’s nothing, and I’ve reached an age where most of my childhood heroes are gone along with more than a few of my childhood friends.

Instead of Pearly Gates, I endorse Anderson’s commentary, because we’ve put a toxic narcissist in charge of our country, and this isn’t the first time he’s made someone else’s problem all about himself.

Anderson takes off the gloves. There’s no value in showing Reiner (with or without his wife) at the Gates of Heaven. For one thing, he was Jewish, and for another, he had become an atheist, a combination that makes his connection to Pearly Gates a little dubious.

More to the point, however, is that Anderson doesn’t just illustrate Trump responding like a psychotic pig, but details how his twisted mind processes the world. Anderson isn’t just name-calling. This is diagnostic, and could move the needle for someone who can be moved.

Trump’s inability to empathize with others has always been part of his personality, along with his apparent inability to tell what really happened from what he wishes had happened.

If anything positive comes of his latest ghastly, tasteless declaration, perhaps it is that people who thought it was funny when he tossed paper towels to hurricane victims will recognize the cruelty at the heart of his sociopathic detachment.

I noted yesterday that Aussies were slow out of the gate with Bondi Beach cartoons, and said I hoped it meant they were searching for something more than acknowledging that it was sad. We all knew it was sad.

There have been cartoons honoring Ahmed al-Ahmed, who stepped up to tackle one of the shooters, but Harwood has stepped back from the incident itself and focuses, instead, on the diversity of united responses in a diverse community.

She borrows candles from the menorah, a choice that also reflects the notion first advanced by William Watkinson in 1907, in a sermon in which he noted that calling out evil is less effective than promoting the good:

(D)enunciatory rhetoric is so much easier and cheaper than good works, and proves a popular temptation. Yet it is far better to light a candle than to curse the darkness.

De Adder mocks Trump’s egocentric ability to blame everything on Joe Biden, but he also touches on a common thread this time of year, which is the matter of Mary and Joseph finding no space in the inns of Bethlehem.

It doesn’t take much scholarship to recognize that the Nativity Story is folkloric. There was no census, shepherds wouldn’t have been out with their flocks in winter and it’s a charming story that has no historic basis. To be fair, I also doubt that Constantine saw a cross in the sky and heard a voice cry “In this sign you shall conquer” and I’ve got some reservations about Ulysses and that wooden horse.

But Constantine did win the battle, and Troy did fall, and there’s no reason not to believe that Jesus was a real person, however much the folklore may have exaggerated the details.

It’s a nice touch to have him born in a manger as one of the common people, but at the moment, the more interesting part of the legend for Americans comes when Herod decides to kill all male babies and so Joseph, Mary and the child seek asylum in Egypt.

I’ll bet they didn’t have green cards, and, even if they had, masked Egyptian secret police might have wrestled them to the ground, bound them and forced them to return to Israel where the child would have been seized and killed.

That’s this year’s Christmas story.

I cannot tell you how many editors have had to explain to furious readers that “freedom of the press” doesn’t mean the newspaper has to publish any cockamamie letter sent to it, and German is also correct that free speech doesn’t mean social media companies are forbidden to moderate their content.

Not that they aren’t the first to argue that they don’t want to spend money on quality control freedom of expression is a precious gift. And it’s a gift they are eager to share with bots, sock puppets and foreign-based trolls, because even non-people have a right to pretend to be real.

The flood of lies, errors and misinformation has become so unrelenting that Politifact has given up on declaring a “Lie of the Year” and has, instead, declared 2025 “The Year of the Lies.” They’re doing a series of the most outrageous falsehoods advanced in the past 12 months because picking just one seemed futile.

As covered here, Australia has instituted a ban on young people accessing social media, in an attempt to let them grow up before they are inundated with lies and hostility, but other countries don’t want to interfere with that process. Or something.

When my kids were young, we had “the Archie Bunker Rule” (sorry, Rob), which stated that nobody who would not be welcome through the front door was welcome through the TV. It didn’t last forever, and I didn’t expect it to be bullet-proof. I could keep them from watching violent, anti-social, misogynist garbage at home, but, the next morning, they’d be in a classroom full of kids who’d seen it all.

Like Grandpa, I accepted the limits of possibility and embraced the occasional victory.

But when you see an infant placidly sucking on a baby bottle full of Coca-Cola, you know you can’t be your children’s only influence, try as you might.

The Swiss Family Robinson led a quiet, placid life on a desert island, but when Disney got there, he brought Japanese pirates and coconut-shell hand grenades, because placidity is boring and nobody wants boring.

Or so I hear.

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Comments 22

  1. Freedom of speech and of the press does not apply to private entities, but there is a push to privatize everything. And for there to be fewer and fewer (and larger and larger) private entities. If everything is privatized, Freedom of Speech ceases to exist.

    1. ‘Freedom of the press is limited to those who own one.”. A. J. Liebling

  2. Have you noticed on GoComics.com that Nancy hasn’t been updated for the past 2 days and the recent one is December 14, 2025 (An Olivia Jaimes Sunday rerun). Maybe the daily is ceased and the strip may be Sundays only with Caroline Cash taking over in January 2026. Can anyone check with GoComics/Andrews McMeel about this situation of not updating Nancy on GoComics.com the last 2 days (December 15-16, 2025)?

    1. GoComics has been experiencing feed issues with multiple strips ever since they introduced their new “imporved” website (and replacing their single most useful feature — dialog search — with a mercenary paywall). Multiple inquiries made by numerous users have produced (at most) a reply to the effect of “the content feed is the responsibility of the feature’s owner, GoComics has no control over these delays.

      1. “Enshittification is an informal word used to criticize the degradation in the quality and experience of online platforms over time.”

    2. In print, the reruns are still going.

      1. How did you know Nancy reruns are in print? What’s the newspaper source for proof?

  3. While the Christmas Nativity Story is no doubt folklore, Biblical Archaelology Review (now celebreating 50 years of publication) would like to have a few words with you on “no historical basis.”

    1. No vague-posting, please. Provide a link wherein they prove (by more than faith) that there was a census, that Herod ordered the murder of all male babies under a certain age, that three magi visited a manger in Bethlehem and that shepherds had their flocks out at night in winter. As said, I already accept the existence of Jesus, the war at Troy and Constantine’s victory at the Milvian Bridge.

    2. Mike, you’ve twice mentioned the impossibility of shepherds being out in winter. But Dec. 25 isn’t Biblical; “true believers” will say that he was born in spring, when the shepherds would be out for lambing.

      Now let me just wish you “Felix dies Natalis Solis invicti!” a little over a week early.

      1. That, I will grant, is folklore not contained in the Bible. Pinning down a date is difficult, given that, to start with, there are a couple of calendars involved and there was a lot of uncertainty in the Roman one. So the non-Biblical folklore is more transparently such, while the Biblical folklore requires a little thought, bearing in mind that much which is quoted of Confucius and Mohammed were (likely) added by later sources.

        In reading those texts, you have to judge the preponderance of consistent philosophy and not get too hung up on trying to pin down specific facts. Rejecting the Infancy Gospels and Thomas is pretty easy, but you need a microtome to work on the canon itself, while the Gnostic works are an entire scholarship area of their own.

    3. A correct Nativity Story is ONLY found in the Bible’s New Testament in Luke chapter 2. The ONLY outsiders who saw Jesus, the baby, in the manger were some shepherds. The Magi (King James Bible’s “Wise Men'”) didn’t even show up in Bethlehem until Jesus was already two years old and that is in Matthew chapter 2. And they, number unknown, saw Jesus, Joseph and Mary in a house.

      1. You need to take some courses in how history has been recorded over the years, and how to verify claims. Saying it’s in the Bible amounts to “begging the question” by making your claim also your source.

  4. Funny how all those political folks that previously bowed to Trump now realize that he can’t help them get reelected…in fact, he’s an anchor around their chances…so they suddenly see that he’s a horrible excuse for a human being. I give them no credit. Actually, I give them negative credit. They owe me.

    1. Welcome to why this voter, who prided himself on having never voted a straight ticket, ever, from 1971-2015, now has “If there’s an ‘R’ after his/her name, automatically vote against.” as the basic rule upon stepping into the voting booth. It’s going to take us years to clean out all those who gave us Trump.

      1. I have no plans to let them regain my trust. They collectively burned it, it’s up to them to prove to me they deserve it again. I’m 50, and I’m not sure I’ll be around long enough for it to happen.

        I also voted my first straight D ticket in 2020. I’m pissed the R’s made me do it. I’m also absolutely livid that the GQP made me agree with Romney and Cheney.

  5. Last May, Reps Davidson (R OH) and Moore (R AL) introduced H.R. 3432, the “Trump Derangement Syndrome Research Act of 2025,” directing the Director of the National Institutes of Health to conduct or support research to advance the understanding of Trump Derangement Syndrome. Yes, really. See https://www.congress.gov/bill/119th-congress/house-bill/3432/text.

    It was referred to the Committee on Energy and Commerce and I doubt very much that it will ever be seen again.

    Our tax dollars at work!

    1. Although with most now being rescinded by this administrations HHS, you can bet this is an instance where they are diligently researching a vaccine for TDS. Sadly for them it can’t & never will be curable….

  6. The video is astoundingly beautiful. Thanks for the selection.

  7. The current Bible is a mashup of Bronze Age mythology from different sources with a Classical Neoplatonic influenced Jewish apocolyptic cult with egalitarian emphasis. But that’s just my opinion.

    1. “apocolyptic”, nice word. I will try to use it more often.

  8. Loved this! 🎨 The insight and humour behind the “Things Said and Left Unsaid” comic really made me smile — great blend of wit and observation. Thanks for sharing! 😊✨

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