Comic Strip of the Day Editorial cartooning

CSotD: Unfortunate Complexities

There’s not much to add to or analyze in Jennings’ cartoon. Children are living as grotesque skeletons and dying in unconscionable numbers. The obvious, simple solution would be to give them food, but instead they have to die. It’s all rather complicated.

The whole world is watching, and, as Pope says, putting together their sternest words, but what they’re sending over is weaponry. As an Australian, he cites airplane parts. An American cartoonist could add more fearsome armaments, but either way, it surely offsets the thoughts and prayers that may go with it.

The US had been sending food, but, as de Adder notes, we couldn’t afford to feed starving people and also give tax cuts to our most wealthy. As it is, we had to add several trillion dollars to our deficit just to take care of our upper crust.

You’d have to be a forensic accountant to understand the need to cut back on foreign aid, but, after all, it was 1.2% of our federal budget in 2023, and you can’t let that kind of wasteful spending go on forever, because we have a deficit to think of.

And you can’t distribute the food we already paid for and shipped to the region, though why that needed to be wasted while children are dying is one of those complicated things we can’t expect anyone to understand.

Anyway, the whole world is watching, and our inability to feed the starving, provide medical care, help them get clean water or, for both poor and more developed countries, to offer trade without massive tariffs is all rather complicated.

But it has a lot to do with the deficit, and you’d think other countries would understand our policies.

Perhaps they do.

It could be worse, after all. At least it’s not genocide, because, if it were anything at all like what the Hutu had done to the Tutsi in Rwanda, or what the Serbs did to the Bosnians, we’d condemn it right away.

But although Amnesty International has called it genocide, and hundreds of groups and individuals have signed letters saying it is, and members of the Knesset have called for the total destruction of Gaza and the expulsion of its population, it’s not.

It is all rather complicated.

Far too complicated to discuss.

And, anyway, calls for an end to the war have a lot less impact than bullets and bombs, so what’s the point?

As Sen. Joni Ernst (R-IA) said in a discussion of cuts to Medicaid, “we all are going to die.” The details of how and when are hardly relevant.

Are We Done With These Yet?

I like Zapiro’s Coldplay cartoon because he brings in the factor of how the couple was mocked from the stage, though by the time it ran in South Africa earlier this week, Musk’s revelation was a bit stale.

This variation is problematic because anybody who recognizes Karl Marx knows he wrote Das Kapital and likely knows the differences between socialism and communism. And it’s wasted on anyone who doesn’t recognize him.

Socialism is, in Marx’s phrase, “From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs,” and while Marx advocated communism, the phrase applies to sharing in general. Conservatives have complained about “Socialism!” ever since the New Deal brought in Social Security and the minimum wage.

Communism, by contrast, consists of the central government controlling the means of production, such as if the federal government were to take a “golden share” giving it control of a major steel company.

Which could never happen here, because we hate communism.

Juxtaposition of Its Ownself

It happens, though a good way to keep it from happening is not to jump on the cliché of the day. Obviously, there’s a substantial tradition in political cartooning of trading on popular themes, but, for instance, you can draw Ozzie Osbourne at the Pearly Gates without referring to the bat incident.

In this case, the Coldplay kiss-cam reference is somewhat worn out, but the real problematic element is using Dear Leader’s own term, “hoax,” to declare the truth of something unproven.

We know that the final reports — even the Mueller Report — said the Russians had attempted to influence the election, that they were unable to hack into voting machines, and that there was no proven communication between Trump and the Russians. The reports all agreed, as well, that the attempted interference did not change the results, in which Trump defeated Clinton.

I’d chalk up the duplication as a routine matter of chance, and the labeling as a case of Obama Derangement Syndrome.

But that’s enough Coldplay cartoons. Arwa Mahdawi has an excellent opinion piece on why we should all be ashamed of ourselves for laughing at it in the first place, writing that “we should all work a little harder at minding our own business” and reminds us that “We clicked ‘accept’ on 90,000-word privacy agreements that we didn’t read, signing away all our data in exchange for convenience and dopamine hits,” while the billionaires we sold our privacy to solidly protect their own.

I’m not only picky when it comes to conservative viewpoints, and, while I generally agree wholeheartedly with Murphy, I’m surprised he fell for this common misinterpretation of the 3/5’s compromise.

If slaves could vote, it would indeed be true that counting them at a rate of 3/5 would be racist and unfair.

But what was racist and unfair was counting them at all. The Southern States wanted to count them entirely, in order to increase Southern seats in Congress, so the Northern States came up with the compromise in order to preserve the union.

However, like sovereign native tribes, who remained uncounted, slaves had no voice in government, and even counting 60% of them gave the South an advantage in Congress.

It was, as they say, all rather complicated.

Without it, however, the South might have rejected the new Constitution and formed its own nation, which would make a really good alternative history novel: There’d have been no Civil War and no resulting emancipation.

Though they were whole people and I doubt they’d have let things stand.

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Comments 13

  1. I did a Coldplay kiss-cam cartoon, but like most, I didn’t wait over a week to do it. You’re right. After all the news this week, it’s outdated.
    As for the Varvel and Allie versions, which are the same: There’s nothing in the “report” that implicates President Obama of “manipulating” intelligence. These guys can’t tell you what’s in the report any more than they can tell you what evidence is on Hunter’s laptop.

    And what does Hillary Clinton have to do with investigating Russia’s meddling? She wasn’t in the government at the time. I know talking points are easier than facts, but these guys could at least do a little research.

    Also, what was wrong with cartoons referring to Ozzy’s bat incident? That was my most popular cartoon of the week. Speaking of research, it’s “Ozzy,” NOT “Ozzie.”

    1. The thing is, Clay, that they haven’t a clue how to do any research of any kind. Anything that might not fit their mindset (such as it is) is discarded essentially unread. That shouldn’t surprise anyone who has seen the number of research branches in the various federal closed. The last bit that really got to me is that the Trumpistas think they should be re-evaluating already scientifically approved NIH grants committees decisions. We in the science community sit on those committees and do a lot of work as volunteers.

  2. I recall reading Jill Lepore’s book ‘These Truths’ that Germany instituted national healthcare in the early 1900s. In turn, American Republicans decried it as being ‘socialism’ thus predating the New Deal. Hey if scaring people with the word ‘socialism’ works for almost 125 years, why stop now?

    This is why we can’t have nice things.

  3. Ah yes, the standard antisemitic cartoons “It’s complicated.” It’s not complicated at all. Hamas wants Israel to kill as many Palestinians as possible. That’s what it’s all about: propaganda.

    Yet, as you see, the media wants to hold Hamas and Islamic Jihad in Palestine harmless and innocent as newborn babies.

    1. Nothing “standard” about the cartoons and nothing in them that mentions religion. What I see is criticism of a nation that hasn’t the slightest idea of how to deal with asymettric war, and that has declared its intentions of displacing an ethnic group from their homeland. As said, not really different from the Hutis or the Serbs, both of whom were condemned for their actions, neither of whom were Jewish.

      Which reinforces Jennings’ sarcasm: There’s nothing in the least complicated about it.

      1. Dr. MacLeod promotes the genocide libel, Pascal Gros does too (it says Gaza, and implies that the Palestinian leadership was harmless.) So does Rod Emmerson, who uses the “pleas of 25 mostly antisemitic tyrannies as if they had moral weight.

      2. This is utter, paranoid nonsense. Not a single thing you say is true. You’re seeing antisemitism where it doesn’t exist because you want to see it there.

        I’ve met several Russians, both ex-pats and residents, and found them to be smart, fun, good people. When I criticize Putin for his actions in Ukraine, Syria, Georgia or Chechnya, it would be ludicrous for someone to say it’s because I hate Russians. It’s equally nonsensical to say that criticism of Netanyahu and his government is based on hatred of Jews.

  4. Varvel and Allie are preaching to their common choir, so it’s no surprise that they’d independently settle for the same depiction of the falsehoods spewed by their orange muse.

  5. Odd, but not surprising, how the media ignores piles of declassified evidence concerning the Russia Collusion hoax and lacks zero curiosity when it comes to reporting on Democrat corruption. As for Obama, Brennan, Clapper or Susan Rice…”Nobody’s above the law.”

    1. They ignore things that have been absolutely disproven and they don’t give free promotion to paranoid, illusional nincompoops who try to advance idiotic theories that are clearly false, ridiculous and utterly fictional.

    2. Except Orange Julius Caesar and anyone who works for him. Pardons! Law doesn’t exist at the moment. And if you doubt that look at the list of pardons and commutations from Caesar’s first term. There’s a complete list on Wikipedia. The list doesn’t break them down by categories. But if you took the time to read it, you would see that it was,
      A) Cronies
      B) People accused and convicted of major fraud, including a number of doctors, largely in Florida who bilked Medicare out of hundreds of millions of dollars, and people who performed huge frauds (again in the hundreds of millions of dollars) preying on people who were suddenly broke and losing their homes in the recession of 2008.
      C) Republican congressmen who followed in his footsteps by abandoning any pretense of ethical behavior.
      D) People wealthy enough to pay his PERSONAL LAWYER, John Dowd, to lobby for them
      E) War criminals
      F) “Celebrities”, or people vouched for by celebrities
      G) A surprising number of cocaine traffickers.
      But, of course, since he probably himself fits in half those categories, it was only natural that though convicted of real crimes numerous times, he hasn’t so far as I know, paid any of his fines or spent a moment in jail, while recently, “declaring in the Oval Office that former President Obama and other ex-officials must be prosecuted: “Whether it’s right or wrong, it’s time to go after people.” The key words there are “Whether it’s right or wrong”.
      But, as a “jailer” of course, your job is made easier by releasing criminals. Have you considered applying for one of the many vacant positions at Fox “News” created by their mass induction into the current administration? Republican propaganda seems to be your forte.

    3. There was no declassified evidence proving anything. The report merely said that the voting machines were safe and untampered with.

      Trump hired a Russian agent as his campaign manager. Paul Manifort, remember? The FSB (former KGB) stole thousands of emails from the DNC, and there was communication between the Trump campaign (Trump’s people were too smart to have direct communications between Trump himself and the Russians) and the Russians.

      IT was Comey who got Trump elected.

  6. I was accused of being anti-american because I said that the Orange Menace was a vile, vindictive hateful man. Then the Magaman threatened my job. There was a poster (male) ahead of me who trashed the Orange Menace way nastier then I did. He assumed that since I was a female I was easy prey. He found out that I was not.

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