If they can do this, why not do that?

Maybe you’ve uttered this expression of frustration yourself over the years … and it goes something like this: If they can land a man on the moon, why can’t they solve this problem here on Earth?

I’ll admit to expressing such a thought myself in the past 24 hours in the wake of Donald Trump’s brokering of a deal that well could lead to an end of centuries of bloodshed in the Middle East.

If the president of the United States can clunk the heads of Israeli and terrorist leaders together to get them to stop killing each other, why can’t he do the same with Republicans and Democrats who are digging in while the federal government remains shut down?

House Speaker Mike Johnson is keeping the House off the clock until Senate Democrats agree to a stopgap spending plan to reopen the government. No can do, say Democrats, who contend the GOP plan will gut insurance benefits for many thousands of Americans.

Meanwhile, Trump is basking in the deserved glow of success in the Middle East. The government he has been tasked to running, though, remains dark with no solution in sight.

What the hell? Let’s get busy and fix this matter … shall we?

Congrats to Trump, but wait …

High Plains Blogger readers know of my intense dislike of Donald J. Trump, his policies and the very idea that he is sitting in the Oval Office. Yet I have stated my intention to offer him praise when he has earned it … and I did so with the announcement of a ceasefire in Gaza that well could end the bloodshed between Hamas and the Israeli Defense Force.

Why, though, does Trump insist on stepping on his own applause lines by saying the winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, a Venezuelan political dissenter, said that he had earned the prize over her efforts? My question is: Did she do so or is Trump making this up to cast himself in some pseudo-heroic light?

I saw a video of then-President Barack Obama declaring that he had won the Peace Prize in 2009, about two weeks into his presidency. He acknowledged freely that he felt uncomfortable having his name posted alongside “transformative figures” who had won it previously. He mentioned Albert Schweitzer, Nelson Mandela, Martin Luther King Jr., Elie Wiesel as historic giants who had earned the prize. Obama saw his award as a testament to the expectation that he could deliver on his promise to bring a new world order.

Trump lobbied aggressively for the Peace Prize. I won’t begrudge him that effort. He isn’t the first to do so. He won’t be the last. He is just so damn awkward as he seeks to put words in other people’s mouths. I want to hear from the 2025 Peace Prize winner herself what she told Trump. I mean, the POTUS’s penchant for prevarication overtakes every single word that flies out of his mouth.

Irony runs thick

You want irony? I’ve got a huge dose of it for you to ponder. It comes via testimony from a sitting U.S. senator from Rhode Island.

Sheldon Whitehouse, a Democrat, reminded his Senate Judiciary Committee colleagues the other day of the irony committed by AG Pam Bondi in testimony before the panel.

She had just secured an indictment of former FBI Director Jim Comey on a specious charge that he lied before the committee, committing an act of perjury. The indictment is so flimsy it likely won’t be tried. It was handed over on a total of two pages. That’s it! Comey allegedly lied about who told him what about a pending hearing. It’s pure crap.

Oh, but wait. Bondi then told the same Senate panel that Whitehouse accepted a favor from a donor, a charge that Whitehouse says is “demonstrably false.” He said a first-year law student could have looked up the facts and determined that the favor didn’t occur.

Therefore, Whitehouse said, Bondi committed the very same crime for which Comey has been indicted.

Do we indict the attorney general? If she isn’t above the law … then why not?

Trump steals ridicule from jaws of praise

Donald J. Trump did the virtually impossible this week when faced with a seeming foreign policy success he managed to restore the ridiculousness of his vengeance campaign.

Trump has appeared to have helped broker a peace deal between Hamas and Israel, ending a two-year war that has killed more than 60,000 Palestinians. What does he do, just as word gets out about the ceasefire in Gaza? The Justice Department indicts New York Attorney General Letitia James on a seeminly specious charge of real estate fraud.

The POTUS then shifted the talk away from a landmark peace deal in the Middle East to yet another example of the ghastly retribution he is seeking against political opponents. James is a foe of Trump. Her office obtained a conviction on 34 felony counts a year ago against Trump, making him the first felon ever elected president of the United States.

Trump directed U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi to secure an indictment against James, just as he did when a grand jury indicted former FBI Director Jim Comey on a phony charge of perjury before a Senate committee.

Thursday should have been Donald Trump’s day of triumph. I am one American who is delighted at the prospect that peace might finally be on tap for the Gaza Strip. Hamas threw the region into a bloody cauldron when on Oct. 7, 2023 it launched a hideous missile attack against Israeli civilians, killing more than 1,000 victims. Israel’s response was to invade Gaza with armor, artillery, infantry and air power. The result has been carnage not seen since, oh, the Vietnam War.

Trump’s team was able to persuade Israel and Hamas to stop the killing. There appears to be a deal in the works to make this deal possible. Trump stepped on his own applause lines by indicting the New York AG who was doing her job as a prosecutor.

The guy has multiple loose screws rattling around in his over-coiffed noggin.

Trump earns affirmation

Donald J. Trump is continually searching for affirmation of deeds he has accomplished … and even deeds with which he had zero involvement.

Well, ladies and gents, if it turns out to be true that Trump brokered a deal that could end the Gaza war started two years ago when Hamas bombarded the territory in a hideous missile attack, then he will have earned all the acclaim he has sought.

I am willing to give it to him.

Trump announced that Hamas and the Israeli government have agreed on a ceasefire that will lead to the release of all Israelis held hostage by Hamas and the release of Palestinians held by Israelis. Then will come the immediate rebuilding of Gaza City, destroyed by Israeli troops, artillery and armor in retaliation for the Hamas attack on Oct. 7, 2023.

Israel had vowed to destroy Hamas, the terrorists who govern Gaza. By all accounts, Israel has inflicted heavy damage to Hamas’s command structure. The price in civilian casualties has been ghastly, with more than 60,000 Palestinians killed in the war that erupted. Israel reportedly bombed hospitals, schools and countless civilian neighborhoods in its ongoing offensive.

Yes, it is time for the carnage to end. And if Donald Trump wants to take a bow for helping bring it an end, then I will be among the first to salute him. Please, though, just accept the applause with a modicum of class and decorum.

Landmark birthday … for the ages

I think of landmark birthdays when they arrive on the calendar and I miss the people who would celebrate them were they still around.

One such person’s birthday comes up on Oct. 9. That’s today. He would be 85 years of age. He’s no longer around to mark the event. He was gunned down at 40. Far too young. He was John Lennon.

Of all the assassinations we have endured over the years, this one made the least sense of all of them. John Lennon’s killer earlier in evening of Dec. 8, 1980, had gotten the ex-Beatle’s autograph. Then he waited for John and his wife to return home to their apartment in New York City. He pulled out his pistol and then … well, you know the rest of it.

The shooter is serving a life sentence for the senseless murder of a man who preached the cause of world peace. He had taken a five-year sabbatical from the limelight to raise his young son. John had returned to the studio to make music again.

John Lennon’s work already is the stuff of legend. He was one-half of the most successful songwriting team in music history. Only God knows what he would have produced had he been given the chance.

John Lennon and his Beatle band mates helped raise me. I miss him every day.

War Department … my ass

Pete Hegseth’s continual references recently to the agency he leads as the “Department of War” made me want to puke all over myself.

His audience that day happened to be all the flag officers summoned to Quantico, Va., for some sort of pep talk from the Secretary of Defense and his boss, Donald Trump. I was struck by frozen reaction among the flag officers to the “war” reference that Hegseth kept repeating. They didn’t cheer. They didn’t even clap politely.

Why? I believe I know why. It is because every one of the men and women who heard the fraudulent defense boss have actually seen war. Whether they flew combat missions in jet aircraft, commanded ships at sea in the midst of armed conflict, carried weapons onto battlefields or served in command positions during wartime … they all have seen war up close.

I recall a statement from Army Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf, who said that the last thing a combatant ever wants is to go to war against an enemy. The hero of Desert Storm did so during the Vietnam War, as did his boss during Desert Storm, Joint Chiefs Chairman Army Gen. Colin Powell.

Donald Trump plucked Hegseth off a “Fox and Friends Sunday” set to command the most lethal fighting force in human history. Then Trump said he wanted to change the Defense Department’s name to the War Department. It is a ridiculously provocative term, that Hegseth swallowed.

What’s more, he managed to offend many of the flag officers who heard him reference an activity about which he knows nothing.

Sickening.

Portland is not ‘at war’

A letter to the Dallas Morning News editorial page published this past weekend confirms what I have been saying all along about the beautiful city where I came iinto this world nearly 76 years ago.

It’s not “at war” and crime is not running “rampant” through the city. Yet the faker masquerading as POTUS would have us believe the city is being torn asunder by gangs, drug peddlers, killers, sex traffickers and assorted nasty individuals who find “sanctuary” in the City of Roses.

Nothing like is happening.

A couple from Dallas made their first trip to Portland recently and found it to be a most pleasant place to visit, to hang out, to enjoy a good meal and a smashing cup of coffee. Donald Trump wants to send in the troops to quell a population that needs no quelling.

I’ll just say this up front: Trump is a rotten son of a bitch. He is politicizing this issue beyond all that is reasonable. He is targeting so-called “blue cities” run by Democrats.

Portland isn’t crime free. Name me a city that is and I’ll consider you to be as big a liar as Trump himself. It is not splitting at the seams.

Let’s cool the overheated rhetoric, shall we? Oh, and how about getting Trump to work on getting government back on the job doing the deeds for which we spend our hard-earned tax money.

So much to learn …

One of the rules of thumb I have followed during my nearly 37 years writing for newspapers was to learn beyond the obvious about the communities I covered on my professional journey.

My career ended a dozen years ago, but my quest for knowledge about communities hasn’t let up. For example, I am freelancing for a group of weekly newspapers in Collin County, Texas. I have learned that one of the communities I cover, Sachse, is going to come to grips with whether to regulate “donation bins.” I won’t get ahead of myself here.

I am a bit baffled to learn that many communities do not have any ordinances on the books to regulate these bins. You know what I’m talking about, yes. These are bins set up for people to toss clothing, shoes and assorted soft goods to be picked up. Some communities have ordinances to govern them. They limit them at various locales, require certain distances between them, ban them from property next to schools.

Sachse doesn’t have an ordinance regulating donation bins. I don’t know if the city council will adopt such an ordinance. I will find out Monday when I attend a council meeting; the issue is on the agenda.

What have I learned about some of these North Texas communities? Many of them haven’t yet enacted municipal rules governing placement and use of these donation bins. They can become serious eyesores.

The stricter the rules, and stricter consequences for failing to obey them, the better.

Signs portend driving misery

Driving south along Beauchamp Boulevard in Princeton, Texas, a day or so ago, a couple of orange signs jumped out at me as I entered the intersection with US Highway 380.

One sign had an arrow pointing west along 380 that said, “Road Work 2 miles.” The other sign had an arrow pointed east on 380 that said, “Road Work 6 miles.”

That’s when it hit me. The fun I have known would come to those of us who live in the nation’s fastest-growing city is about to commence. Actually, it won’t be fun. It’s going to be a headache, more than likely.

The Texas Department of Transportation is going to widen 380 from four lanes to six lanes. However, to do that I was told by a former Princeton city manager that TxDOT had to narrow the right-of-way from four lanes to two lanes … one lane in each direction. Thus, the “fun” begins for anyone needing to get anywhere along 380.

All of this appears to be the prelim to work on a freeway bypass around Princeton that TxDOT has been pondering since before my bride and I moved here six years ago.

This is the price of progress. I am able to pay it. Not with any great enthusiasm. But I’ll get through it. The alternative? There isn’t any!

To which I only could mutter: Aaaack!

This is one of the costs I am paying by living in a community that is undergoing a growth explosion. It’s no “spurt.” Or any other term that suggests a smallish growth pattern.