Sunday, August 31, 2025

New Truths

 

So now Trump is saying windmills cause cancer, (not to mention a bird Holocaust), solar energy is bad and coal is clean and oil and gas are the way to the future. 

Also, vaccines cause more death and disease than the diseases they are designed to prevent (beginning with polio, which, don't you know, is merely a sign of bad diet and sedentary lifestyle.)



COVID was a Chinese plot. It was hatched to scare the world into depression in that Wuhan lab, but then the mRNA COVID vaccine contained it because Trump was up on that research, but COVID vaccine now is bad, so forget that Operation Warp Speed triumph, and let's not do any more harm with vaccines.

Ebola is and always will be confined to "shithole countries."



Confederate generals were fighting for a genteel way of life and slavery was actually good for those backward slaves from shithole countries. 

January 6 rioters who were pardoned by Trump are victims of the deep swamp, and they were actually heroes, trying to save the country, disguised as ordinary tourists but they  simply could not find any bathrooms in the Capitol building, so they, you know, just defecated on the walls and they should be compensated for all the embarrassment, which was in large part because Congress was too cheap to fund public bathrooms. 





Our economy is going gangbusters but is in such a crisis that Mr. President needs emergency powers to seize control of the purse strings of government and impose tariffs.


A thriving economy, you see, is an emergency.

Also Jeffrey Epstein was actually rehabilitating all those fourteen years old girls who came from shithole homes, and the Donald was always a father figure to them, but he hardly knew Epstein and never visit any of his islands. And Donald never got the credit he deserved for what he did for those girls, some of whom got needed attention in his beauty pageants. 

FEMA and the CDC and the NIH and most universities are worse than useless. Ditto for medical research. Air traffic controllers should not be of the female persuasion, and certainly never pilots, because, you know, it was a female helicopter pilot that ran into that airplane at Washington National airport, which just proves the point, because, you know, a case like that says it all.

Also, the best way to stop street crime in blue cities is to send National Guard troops from Red states to stomp it out, because those boys from Louisiana, South Carolina and Mississippi, really know how to keep those gang members (whose families all come from shithole countries) down and under control, just like Randy Newman said in that song, "Rednecks."



In fact, the murder rates in those three states (Louisiana, South Carolina and Mississippi) make the murder rates in New York City look like minor league play, so those Guard units are very experienced in murder.

The further away you get from Washington, D.C., in fact the better Mr. Trump and Stephen Miller look.

And with our new Supreme Court, well, they can just retire, because, after all, they've said anything Trump does is just fine and he has the right to do it, so why should they bother hearing cases, unless it's to certify he's right about everything, which we already know, so we could save their salaries and close that vestigial branch down.

And Congress, well, once we get the Gerrymander done in Texas and Ohio and Pennsylvania we really won't need to ask much from Congress. That's 435 salaries we might just dump into the Potomac and go home. 



Why, just the other day there was a three hour cabinet meeting, which, if you watched it, you'll know, was just a lovefest for Mr. Trump, as one cabinet officer after another said how wonderful Trump had made everything from Commerce to Agriculture to Health to Homeland Security, which is really important since all those areas are scary bad in America right now and would be a lot worse if it weren't for that steady hand on the tiller in Washington, DC at the White House, which, by the way, is looking worlds better now that it's been turned into a ballroom with a concrete rose garden and gilt up with gold everywhere, but especially in the Oval Office, which really needed an upgrade, because, you know, all those losers like Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Obama and whoever had stunk the place up. 

And there's no more war in Ukraine--that's just fake news from the failing New York Times and NPR. That war is over. And if Donald Trump does not get the Nobel Peace prize for ending it, then the Nobel Peace prize is history, just like Twitter and there will be a new Peace Prize: The TRUTH PEACE PRIZE and it's first and ultimately only winner, year after year will be Donald J. Trump, as it should be. Because, that's the TRUTH.



So, that's the Truth. All said.

And done.

The swamp is drained.


Thursday, August 28, 2025

The Man Who Would Be King

 


May 4, 1970, the day which still lives in infamy, when the National Guard arrived on campus at Kent State and inexplicably shot dead unarmed students.

Mary Ann Vecchio with dead Jeffrey Miller, Kent State


"We should not be afraid. THEY should be afraid," Trump has told his fans. 



And this is the way you do that. 



Send in the National Guard and shoot a few people as an example to the others.



Nixon called the Kent State students "Bums."



The folks in Kent, Ohio, as James Mitchener documented in his book, "Kent State," thought the university students were worse than that. They thought those students deserved it.


What was incomprehensible to us on that day, that those guard soldiers would hate students enough to shoot them in cold blood, became more comprehensible, as you read through Mitchener's pages: There was deep seeded resentment among the blue collar folk of that town, and their sons, who were in uniform with guns exercised that resentment toward the rich, privileged, pampered students. 

Those who would today be called leftist, elitist DEI advocates at universities Trump is trying to transform at best, and destroy at worst.

And so they shot them down.

It was very American, as My Lai attested.



Lyndon Johnson called out the Guard to DC after Martin Luther King was assassinated in 1968, when city blocks were actually set on fire. 

Washington, DC 1968: Real Emergency


Then the Guard appeared with fixed bayonets in dangerous, burning parts of town, during an actual true serious emergency.

Guard in DC 1968: Actual Emergency


Not like now, when they are just strutting around the monuments and the Mall with nothing to do. There is no actual emergency in DC, at least not where the Guard is.

Guard in Trump's DC Now


The Guard is running away from the nasties. They are just there for show.



And now, Mr. Trump sends National Guard to blue cities with the same intent, maybe. 

Does he really want to provoke another Kent State?

Thus far, he has behaved only comically. 

Friends from DC tell me the Guard patrols only the safest parts of town. They are nowhere to be seen in the actual dangerous parts of DC. 

Georgie Porgie

Puddin and pie.

Kissed the girls.

And made them cry.

But when the boys came out to play.

Georgie Porgie ran away.



Wednesday, August 27, 2025

Children Pay the Price in Minneapolis

 



Just last week, Mad Dog happened to visit the Twin Cities, staying in St. Paul, just across the street from the Children's Hospital, and St. Paul's Cathedral, which is on a hill above the hospital.


Cathedral on a Hill


Today, that hospital, and its sister hospital in Minneapolis, are trying to save children who were shot at their church school.

Mad Dog climbed up that steep hill to the cathedral and sent these photos home to his co conspirator back in Hampton, who remarked, "A simple church to minister to the poor, as Jesus did." 

Well, okay, but it is a beautiful Cathedral, and in a city which is not known to be fabulously wealthy, it surprised Mad Dog--just as those cathedrals in small European cities did.

Actually, Mad Dog had to inquire if it was Catholic, as he has always associated Minnesota with the Lutherans, as anyone who listened to Garrison Keillor would. 

So now,  the report of yet another slaughter of children by a male gunman, as they attended opening ceremonies at their Catholic school.

As so many have noted, school shootings, and mass shootings in America are now so common we have lost track of when the last one was, or where. They are not common events, statistically, but they have a special currency.

Depending on how such shootings are defined and reported, the most common number on Google is 1,300 school shootings over the past 25 years, or 52 a year, or one a week, in a country of 330 million occupying an entire continent. On the other hand, googling, there have been only 14 deaths on commercial airplane flights over that same 25 year period, which might suggest it is safer flying from Boston to San Francisco, statistically, than going to school.

Crime statistics are endlessly arguable, although it's pretty clear from virtually every source, violent crime in American cities has declined precipitately, the reasons being variously ascribed to an aging population, the advent of abortion on demand, which resulted in fewer unwanted, unloved and unattended males. But, of course, now we hear from Stephen Miller that violent crime is on a rampage, which, of course, only Donald Trump and the might of the U.S. military can constrain. One wonders whether Trump will dispatch the Marines to Minneapolis. Mad Dog doubts that, as the population there is of Scandinavian origin, predominantly, so in Trumps eyes, it could not be all that bad and in need of tanks and bludgeons, George Floyd notwithstanding.


St. Paul's, St. Paul, MN


There are two problems Mad Dog is pretty sure he has no easy answer for: 

1. Homelessness  and 

2. Mass shootings.

In both cases, the role of insanity, mental instability, whatever you want to call it, plays at least some role.  

In the case of the homeless, there are clearly some homeless who are homeless by choice, intractably homeless, because their own mental makeup makes them unable and/or unwilling to live indoors near or with or in close proximity to other people. Some homeless, clearly would love to live in shelters with a roof and four walls, but do not have access to that. But some, likely a small percentage, really do not want to live in a fixed address indoors. Some are simply wedded to a life of addiction which makes rent, rules, social stability simply impossible. Others are simply victims of a quasi capitalist economy with too few safety nets. Those who study homelessness seem to indicate it is a problem which might be solved by government intervention. Certainly, big corporations have shown no inclination to solve this problem as there is no profit to be made, unlike with prisoners, who can be cash cows in private prisons.





Some cities in Texas have reduced homelessness with what appears to be simple solutions: changing zoning codes so inexpensive housing can be built.

Other solutions, most notably the infamous "housing projects" for the poor in cities like Baltimore became dens of iniquity and were actually razed out of frustration, when government and citizens decided they were worse than the original problem. "The Wire" documents this story in great detail. In other cities, New York City, housing projects have been significantly more successful. There are more roofs on housing projects in NYC (>700,000) than there are roofs in all of the city of Boston. 


St. Paul's, St. Paul, MN


As for school shootings, the reduction in access to guns and, more likely, to bullets may be something which at least reduces the likelihood of such anathemas. There are experiments in Australia, and even in America, where efforts at gun control seemed to coincide with reductions in overall shooting deaths, but school shootings, mass shootings in general, may not follow form, inasmuch as they seem to be special cases.

Even defining what constitutes a mass shooting is controversial, but nobody has any trouble defining what constitutes a school shooting from Columbine to Sandy Hook at  Newtown, Connecticut is not in doubt. (Unless of course, you are Alex Jones, who claimed Sandy Hook never happened, and whose lawyer said, on national TV, unless you were at the morgue yourself, to see the bodies of the children, personally, you could not be sure the whole thing was any more real than the moon landing.)

Mad Dog tried to visit the Portsmouth High School not long ago, and it felt like he was entering a high security prison, with walls of bullet proof glass in panels arrayed in such a way nobody could progress rapidly through them.

Trying to ride his bicycle through the parking lot of Marston [elementary] School in Hampton, as a short cut to the beach, Mad Dog was stopped by a police officer stationed there and questioned about whether he had a child in the school and he replied, no, he was just taking a short cut to the beach. He was sent packing. 

We will likely never know what motivated the Minneapolis shooter: He ended his own life before he could be questioned.

Chris Rock has a riff about "Black crimes" and "White Crimes" and he says that when you hear someone has shot kids in a school playground, you know it's a young White male. 

Christopher Hitchens once observed that people who do unimaginably horrific things, like blowing up a bomb in a crowded market, or blowing up a school, or shooting children, are either motivated by religious fervor, which is the only thing which can justify such vile behavior in otherwise ostensibly sane people, or they are psychotic.  

Even though this most recent shooting was at a Catholic school, one suspects it was not because the kids and their teachers were Catholics, although, as has been noted, we'll never know.

All we'll know is this is primarily an American phenomenon. 

At least we perceive it as such.

Occasionally, you hear about school killings and mass kidnapping in Africa. And who knows what is happening in Asia? 

But, Mad Dog's impression is "This America, man."




Sunday, August 24, 2025

From Anti-Woke to Bizarre: To Mock a Killing Bird

 "Like a tunnel that you follow

To a tunnel of its own

Down a hollow to a cavern

Where the sun has never shown."

--The Windmills of Your Mind

Alan and Marilyn Bergman


"They kill all the birds. You want to see a bird graveyard? Go to a windmill someday. You'll see more birds than you've ever seen in your life."

--Trump, 2019, Florida



"If you love birds, you'd never walk under a windmill, because its a very sad, sad sight. It's like a cemetery."

--Trump 2019



"A windmill will kill many bald eagles. It's true...why is it OK for these windmills to destroy the bird population?"

--Trump 2019

-M. McCarthy


"There're made in China and they kill birds and they're horrible."

--Trump 2020

"Acting director of the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Matthew Giacona, issued a letter Friday to Orsted [the windmill project] ordering it to 'halt all ongoing activities.' In particular, BOEM is seeking to address concerns related to the protection of national security interests of the United States," Giacona wrote without specifying any issues or detailing the concerns."

--The Boston Globe

"With the significant investments made in this project already and its obvious benefit to our economy and climate, the Trump Administration's attempt to halt it can only be characterized as bizarre."

--R.I. attorney general Peter Neronha

Giacona: Security Risk



Mad Dog has flown over the North Sea many times and he has always, with each new viewing, been impressed by the sea of windmills in those waters, and also he has seen the same along the coasts of northern Scotland. 

Europe gets 20% of its energy from wind. Denmark alone gets 60% of its energy from wind. China gets 11%.

In the dark north, wind is better than sun.

In California, sun is better--Kern County has a sea of solar panels.

In Texas and on the Great Plains both sources are plentiful and booming.

But Donald Trump hates windmills.

His stated reason for hating windmills is his love for birds.

But, like so much of what he says, we cannot take him literally, which is to say, we cannot believe a word he says.

Birds are killed by windows, predators (cats and predatory birds) and hunters in about that order. Windmills kill a small number of birds.

And what possible security risk could windmills pose? They do not melt down and cause Three Mile Island type risks. They do not explode. But perhaps they vibrate and scare whales. Or maybe submarines crash into them. Or maybe they threaten Shell Oil. 

"Bald Eagles must be protected to the fullest extent of the law from dangerous wind turbines," President Trump's Secretary of the Interior tells us. But the good Secretary does not mention that Mr. Trump's affection for bald eagles does not seem last much longer than his affection for his wives: 

 "President Trump called for gutting the very law that applies,  the Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act, calling it a burden to oil and gas producers."

--The New York Times

Of course, like most of Trump's grand insights and deep affections, this one derives from a desire for revenge. 

"When Trump bought the Menie estate, about eight miles north of Aberdeen, in 2006, he promised to create the 'world's greatest' golf course. But he soon became infuriated at plans to construct an offshore wind farm nearby, arguing that the windmills--as he prefers to call the structures would ruin the view...They generate enough electricity to supply up to 80,000 homes...Trump battled the plans through the Scottish courts then appealed to the UK's Supreme Court--but he was unable to stop the "monsters" from going ahead."

--The New York Times

The Orsted windmills, 15 miles south of Rhode Island (a very blue state) are "key to Rhode Islands economic development, energy security and long-term affordability for our residents," Rhode Island governor Daniel McKee said. 

So, this is Trump's chance to stick it to a blue state, to stick it to windmills and to suck up to  fossil fuel interests. It's a trifecta for Trump.

Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI), a withering critic of Trump in the US Senate said,

"As payback to Trump's fossil fuel backers, the Trump administration is seeking to weaponize federal bureaucracy to try and kill clean energy projects that will save Americans money and reduce the carbon pollution that is driving the climate crisis."

And, of course, we all know this is true. 

Trump knows we all understand his tariffs on Canada have nothing to do with Fentanyl.

Trump knows we all understand his strangulation of hard-earned medical research funds to Harvard has nothing to do with antisemitism at that university with its Jewish president. (More likely it has something to do with Harvard rejecting his son's application.)

It's all about revenge and a new kind of Woke-ism--we are awakened to the idea that Mr. Trump has no scruples, and no law matters. Don't tell him about the law, tell him about how long the other side can last in court, and how he can get his pound of flesh. (And that phrase, in Mr. Trump's case, should be used advisedly.)

For Trump, it's all about pay back. 

First, Kill All the Lawyers

"In its campaign of 'uprooting the foot soldiers,' the Trump Justice Department has fired or demoted more than two dozen Jan. 6 prosecutors, even as those they sent to prison walk free."

--The New York Times



So, if you break into the Capitol, smear feces on the marbled walls, swing into the chair of the speaker of the House and put your feet up on her desk, engage in what 99% of Americans would call a riot, you are pardoned and considered just an ordinary tourist.

A Day of Love and Joy


But if you do your job as a lawyer at the Department of Justice to enforce the law, you are fired.





Which means, at the very least, Trump's war is not limited to a war on science, but it is also a war on law.

Trump Warrior 

An American Patriot At Work


Thursday, August 21, 2025

Trump Stamps Out Crime in DC: Big Parade with Tanks to Follow

“I’ve straightened out crime in four days in D.C., and all they do is say ‘he’s a dictator,’” Mr. Trump complained on Mr. Starnes’s show.

“People were getting mugged all over the place,” he said, adding: “People are so happy, they’re going out to restaurants again.”


The true mark of a transcendent leader is his ability o see a problem before anyone else and to take decisive action to solve it.



Of course, there has always been crime in Washington, D.C., right down to the auction blocks for slavery, but then that crime was actually legal, so, technically, it wasn't really a crime.

And you know, those museums on the Mall where National Guardsmen from Red States now patrol--Mississippi, Louisiana and South Carolina--those museums all say slavery was really bad, and that's just so misleading. They are missing all the good things that happened when those slaves were busy picking cotton.

But, beyond that, there have been murders, rapes, muggings, although statistically, less often than in Mississippi, Louisiana and South Carolina.

But statistics are just numbers and like science, all that stuff is no longer of any moment. We don't talk about science any more.

We are just into theater. So Mr. Trump tells us he is going on a ride with D.C. police and with National Guard troopers from Mississippi, Louisiana and South Carolina to be sure crime is suppressed in Georgetown and Dupont Circle, and on the Mall around the museums and monuments, where the major risk to citizens is getting run over by bicycles and joggers and the major risk to police is getting hit in the face by a sandwich.



Mad Dog used to work in a part of DC called Bladensberg, and in those days, the road was lined with hourly motels and prostitutes tending their children in the parking lots outside the motels, and it was the sort of strip you did not want to blow a tire and have your car breakdown, because it would be stripped to spare parts in an hour.  So that was a tough part of town, but that's not where the Guardsmen from Mississippi, Louisiana and South Carolina are patrolling. They are walking down the mean streets of the West End, Foggy Bottom, where the ice cream parlors and expensive boutiques live.

No reason to expose those Southern gentlemen to any real risk--like mobilizing them in their own home states. Those guardsmen from Mississippi, Louisiana and South Carolina are probably tickled to get out of their home States, to Washington, D.C., where it's really pretty damn safe. 

So, once again, we have a joke fantasy play from the imagination of a mind trapped in  arrested development, which never quite got by the nine year old boy's stage of just saying the world is so, and voila`, it is.



We can say we have stopped wars in Africa, and all over the world, and any moment now, in Ukraine, and we can say we don't need IVF because we now have "restorative fertility"  diets, and we can say there is no problem with job losses or an economy slapped silly by tariffs, or we can say all universities are dens of antisemitism, or at least the elite ones are, and so we should defund their cancer research funds, and we can blackmail big money law firms into making them work for the President and we can believe in Tinkerbell and Peter Pan and the crocodile with the ticking clock.

And the best part of it, is it's just such a happy feeling.

Just don't go round any of the children's hospitals, where kids are dying of infectious diseases they could have been protected from, and don't go near the cancer wards where research grants have been cut, and don't worry about the climate or the environment. 



We can make America Great again, like it was in the 1950's, when you could not dip your toe into the polluted Potomac without risking life and limb--before the industrial giants upstream were forced by the government to clean up their dumping acts--but that's when government was good ,and did a lot of science.


Wednesday, August 13, 2025

Hampton Select Board: Gods on Mt. Olympus

 


Select Board meetings have been hearing every week from citizens who are somewhere between concerned and outraged about the prospect of Hampton police operating in tandem with ICE agents to kidnap people around town. 

There are also those speaking out in favor of ICE deployment in Hampton, those who assert Hampton is threatened by dangerous immigrants who will steal from Hampton homes and citizens, may rape, murder or (though it hasn't yet been mentioned--you know its coming) pose a lethal threat to Hampton's pet cats and dogs.

This happens during the "Public Comment" time which begins each Select Board meeting. Members of the public are allowed to comment, are cut off at 3 minutes and under no circumstances are they allowed to ask questions of the members of the Select Board or attempt to exchange in a "back and forth" with the Board members.



Through all this, the Select Board sits silently, like carvings on Mt. Rushmore, or gods on Mt. Olympus, listening but not interacting--beyond Mr. Rusty Bridle, who has interrupted speakers who look as if they will speak for more than the 3 minutes the Board allows for each individual to comment.

The Select Board is not alone in forbidding "back and forth" between citizens who have come to speak at meetings and members of the Board. The School Board does this. The School Board also cleaves to the 3 minute rule.

The reasons for limiting speakers to 3 minutes have been variously stated as, "Well, we could be there all night. We have to place some limits," to, "Well, we don't want one guy hogging the podium so nobody else gets a chance to voice an opinion."



But, of course, at the Deliberative Sessions which are held in February for discussion of proposed warrant articles, there is no time limit per speaker and there is a Moderator, who can intervene if someone gets off topic or obstreperous enough to derail civil discussion, but somehow that does not seem to work for either Board.

And, of course, you could solve the logistics problem by simply asking for a show of hands about who wants to speak that night, and if you've allowed 60 minutes for public discussion, and 12 people raise their hands, then everyone gets 5 minutes or if there are only 6 people, then each gets 10 minutes. There are simple solutions, if you really want to address the problem.

If you really wanted to allow people to express their opinions you could change the rules and put in safeguards, like a moderator. But more important even than hearing what citizens are thinking, we need a mechanism to hear what the elected representatives of Hampton citizens are thinking

We elect candidate in every election from Select Board to the Presidency, without knowing much about them. The one way we get a real insight into who these people are, what they are thinking, is at press conferences, where they have to answer (or more often evade) questions. Nothing like that happens in this small town in New Hampshire. There are no press conferences for either the Select Board or the School Board. Of course, there really is no local press in the Seacoast worthy of the name "free press."

State Rep Chris Muns


 Allowing citizens to question their government raises the prospect of anger. We've all seen raucous town meetings on TV where audiences shout down their representatives and shout at each other, so the strict limits on time and the wall between the speakers and those to whom they speak is said to be justified as a way to keep things under control.

But isn't there always the tension between free expression and order? We can have a very civil town and town government if we simply have no meetings at all, or meetings where only the Board members are present and they may or may not choose to speak about town issues. For that matter, if we had a king, things could be very civil. Supplicants before the king, kneel and beg for indulgence. Citizens of a Republic can demand a redress of grievances.



We have seen on TV those meetings of the Chinese and North Korean governments, where "representatives" of the people simply sit silently and applaud their leaders at the podium. There is no anger and no disorder and everything is very much in control.

Hampton is more like that than it is like any raucous town hall in Ohio.

There are instances of Hampton representatives speaking out publicly at the Select Board meetings--but these are not members of the Select Board. Three members of the state House of Representatives have spoken as citizens during the Public Comment session: Chris Muns, who asked the Select Board to vote a resolution of defiance against ICE cooperation; Erica DeVries who decried the violation of habeas corpus and the imposition of unfunded mandates to spend town taxpayer dollars on funding required for the protection of Hampton police should they join ICE; and Linda McGrath who Mad Dog found difficult to follow until she summarized by warning of impending invasion by tattooed gangs of illegal aliens from their home bases in Maine. 

State Rep McGrath


Here in Hampton, Mad Dog would like to see a meeting where a citizen stands up and addresses the Select Board Directly, beginning with the Chairman, Rusty Bridle: 

 "Mr. Bridle: Do you think immigrants are enough of a threat to Hampton to involve Hampton police in their arrests? What do you think of immigrants here in Hampton and beyond, Mr. Bridle? Do you think immigrants are a risk or a benefit to Hampton?"

State Representative Erica Rachel DeVries


And then, to Amy Hansen:

"Ms. Hansen: We have heard from folks who say the law is the law and the new state law says we here in Hampton have to pay for our police to cooperate with ICE.  Do you believe it's as simple as 'The law is the law?'  Are we bound to obey every law, even if we think its unconstitutional or immoral?"

And then, to Chuck Rage:

"Mr. Rage: Would you approve of Hampton police and ICE agents breaking down doors in Hampton? How about raids on work sites where landscapers, tree trimmers or construction workers are removed without arrest warrants?"

Not A Representative Government


And then, to Carleigh Beriont:

"Ms. Beriont: Do you believe Ms. McGrath, when she says there are row houses across the Piscataqua filled with murderous illegal immigrant gang members poised to invade the New Hampshire seacoast? Do you think this fear justifies masked ICE agents throwing human beings into unmarked vans at Hampton Beach and disappearing them?"



Immigrant: Can I come in? Uncle Sam: I guess you can--there's no law to keep you out


And, to Jeff Grip:

"Mr. Grip: Do you believe that Governor Ayotte and the state legislature can legally force Hampton to participate in extra judicial violation of habeas corpus and if you do not, would you be willing to have Hampton join a coalition of New Hampshire towns in resisting this law and fighting it in court and at the local town level?"

Now, if we had that sort of exchange, we may not change anything, but at least people watching on Channel 22 would have some idea of what their representatives are doing or not doing to represent them.

But until we can actually hear what our representatives think on this issue and related issues, we can do nothing to really affect the behavior of the board, or its composition.

Until then, they reside behind a veil of silence, imperious, silent, hearing prayers and admonitions but never deigning to reply.