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  • One in 350
  • No, ICE isn’t ‘retreating’, Judge orders end to slavery, Dems pay $6.5-million kickback to Kamala Harris…
  • An acceptable variant
  • Weekly Dead — 2/17
  • Eye on AI 👁️2/17
  • One in 350

    Trump’s second term is still in its early days, and it’ll get far, far worse, but already it’s so awful it makes Trump’s first term feel like the good old days. Back then, he was mean but stupid, and surrounded himself with people not quite so mean and stupid, who to some extent reined him in. This time, Trump is under the more direct control of the Heritage Foundation, and they’ve surrounded him with people meaner, younger, stupider, and more ruthless than the pedophile president.

    Today, though, Trump and the end of America is only incidental to what I’m writing about. Today’s topic is the resistance, and my tiny part in it.

    It’s not a judgment against anyone who’s not a protest-attender, but for me, not standing up against the hugest evil in my lifetime is not an option. Silence is acquiescence, and I will not be silent, politically, so I’ve attended about two dozen protests in the past year.

    By nature, though, I’m a quiet man. None of my very few friends are go-to-protest people, so I attend alone, and it’s difficult. I’m so introverted it might be classified as a mental illness, and a crowd is where I’m at my worst.

    Small talk is kryptonite — even the briefest exposure leaves me weakened, and extended exposure can feel fatal, though it hasn’t killed me yet.

    There’s no logic to my anti-sociability, and the crowd at a protest is bearable, when everyone’s standing and listening to a speaker, or marching or singing “We shall Overcome.” Being the quiet guy doesn’t make me feel too terribly awkward, until the speakers stop speaking or the march gets where we’re going and someone says to me, “Hi, I’m Chet.” I’m supposed to reply, “Hi, I’m Doug,” and talk with Chet for ten minutes, but Arrrrgh!

    That’s the backstory of me and my raging discomfort in crowds. All the anti-Trump events I’ve attended have been outdoor rallies, but I know what to expect and it’s never been so awful I’ve needed to write about it. On Sunday, though, I went to my first indoor meeting, and Arrrrgh!

    It was in a church, and lord help me, I’m an atheist, but the church wasn’t the problem. The entrance was up twenty steps from the sidewalk, and the meeting was up another flight of stairs, so I was short of breath upon reaching the top. Then I opened the door, and holy crap — I’d expected a few dozen people, but there were several hundred.

    Briefly, I considered turning around and hurrying down the stairs, out of the building, back to the bus stop, but — damn it, no. I’d come because someone would be speaking about their road trip to Minneapolis, the city that’s suffered the worst occupation by government fascists (so far). I wanted to hear about it from someone who’d seen it, so I walked through the door, into the dreaded crowd.

    Spent several minutes waiting to sign in at the first table, which was thankfully accomplished without conversation. Waited a few more minutes hoping for access to the second table, where political pins were available, but the people ahead of me were as old and slow as I am, so I gave up and went for a seat before all the seats might be taken.

    Being a big fat man, I looked for a chair that was accidentally a bit farther from its neighbor chairs, so I wouldn’t belly-bump whatever unlucky soul sat next to me. And then I sat, waiting wordlessly and uncomfortably for the program to begin.

    Overall, the meeting was spectacular, and if you don’t suffer my crippling introversion, or even if you do, I’d recommend being there. I would’ve gone even if I’d known there’d be hundreds of people crowded into a space too small.

    When the lady who’d gone to Minneapolis spoke, of people’s resilience in the face of an invasion, of children and old folks standing through tear gas, of people bludgeoned and bloodied but still standing, I had to wipe back tears.

    I wanted to take notes and write about it, but security was a recurring theme in the lady’s comments. In everything she’d been privy to in Minnesota, local activists needed to verify who she, and the people who’d traveled with her, were. After they’d been accepted behind the scenes, the locals were always wary of possible infiltration.

    She told us about being inside a food distribution point, where necessities are taken to be delivered to people who fear leaving their homes. The drivers had been instructed to eat the list of delivery addresses, if they were pulled over by ICE. That isn’t paranoia, it’s practical — the people at the addresses on that list are in serious danger.

    Somehow, whipping out my notepad and starting to scribble into it seemed the wrong thing to do at that moment, so this report is powered only by an old man’s memory, brief and light on details.

    That woman’s powerful half-hour talk about Minneapolis was given, so far as I could tell, without any notes. It was fascinating, even heroic, and I’ve rarely been so impressed.

    Several local activist groups were present, and each gave a brief pitch for more involvement. Without exception all of them seemed to be good people doing good works, and the best was the hyperlocal group that already has me on their mailing list.

    Same as at protests, nearly everyone at the meeting was old like me, or almost as old. In a crowd of about 350, almost everyone had matching gray hair, and the median age must’ve been 55. There weren’t two dozen people under the age of 30.

    Often I wonder, where are the young people? But the answer is, they’re young — someone who’s 25 would’ve been in high school during Trump’s first term, so they simply don’t know how scary crazy here and now is. To the young, the current cruelty and insanity must seem like politics as usual.

    The worst moment of the meeting, for me, was early on. Someone had given a few introductory remarks, and said what’s expected — we’re in this together, the importance of community, and blah blah. And that’s true, but then the speaker said, “Let’s take a few minutes to get to know our neighbors. Please, introduce yourselves to the people sitting or standing near you.”

    And Arrrrgh! Community is the beginning of everything in politics, yeah, but I’m the mega-mondo-shy guy, the hermit, the recluse. Oh, the agony, as I said hello and traded a sentence with a 50-something woman beside me, and a 40-something woman in front of me, and a 70-something man behind me. It was horrendous, it was hell, it was worse than that, and I was silently thankful I’d sat at the end of a row, so there was one less person to mumble hello to.

    The meet-and-greet lasted about three minutes, but seemed like an hour. And again I must stress, the extreme inner panic is entirely my problem — everyone was kind and polite, and probably every last person in the room was a potential friend, but I can’t be at ease in a crowd like that. It’s a phobia, and has been, all my life.

    When the meeting ended, everyone was invited to stay for further hobnobbing and a bake sale, but I needed to exit the premises ASAP, so I didn’t even linger long enough to support the cause by buying a dozen muffins. I beelined for the door, and on the way found myself face-to-face with the lady who’d given that wonderful talk about going to Minneapolis.

    She said something to me — I don’t remember what, but it was a friendly conversation-starter, for normals, anyway. I wanted to say Thanks for the talk, and for going to Minnesota, but I only said, “Uh, hi,” and continued my direct trajectory toward the exit.

    Once out of the room and away from the crowd, I stood alone at the top of the stairwell, and inhaled the sacred solitude. If I was a chanter I’d have said ‘Ohhm’ to start soothing my chakra or whatever. But then—

    “Are you going down?” said a woman’s voice, and I turned and saw an old lady waiting at the elevator. Oh, an elevator! Waiting and riding down, she & I had a short chat about hating the stairs and hating the president, and it wasn’t a problem. I actually enjoyed it.

    Out of the building, I walked to the bus stop, where an old gent stood, wearing a ‘Dump Trump’ pin. I complimented him on it, and he said something nice about the several subversive pins on my hat, and that was another nice conversation.

    Despite my social disability, I do OK one-on-one, or even in a very small group, maybe three or five people — but not 350.

    This morning, Wednesday, I had a short walk, something I try to do daily, but it was the first time I’d left the house since the meeting on Sunday afternoon. I’d needed Monday and Tuesday to decompress, and I’ll need a few more days to fully recover.

    Seriously, what is my mental malfunction, that it’s such severe trauma saying “Hello, I’m Doug” to strangers, even strangers who’d come together to unanimously hate Trump & the Republicans, same as I do?

    1/18/2026

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  • No, ICE isn’t ‘retreating’, Judge orders end to slavery, Dems pay $6.5-million kickback to Kamala Harris…

    Judge rules forced prison labor unconstitutional, under Colorado’s constitution

    Excerpt: It goes back to the 13th Amendment which has a clause that states, “Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States.”

    That clause has previously allowed forced labor in prisons, but in 2018, Colorado voters amended the state’s constitution making slavery, or forced labor, illegal with no exceptions.

    When Colorado passed Amendment A, it became the first state in modern history to end the 13th Amendment’s exception clause. Rhode Island banned slavery without exception in 1842. At least five other states have made the same ban including Utah, Nebraska, Alabama, Oregon and Vermont.

    Me again: American prisons should embarrass and infuriate every American. The first of 10,000 desperately needed reforms is, prisons should not be slavery.

    Me, looking grumpy, reading the news

    AND NOW THE NEWS

    #584
    FEBRUARY 17, 2026

    Homeland Security watchdogs forced out by Trump warn of “alarming” rush to have local police enforce federal immigration law

    No, ICE isn’t ‘retreating.’ It’s loading up to invade your town.

    Protesters hit with indiscriminate charges, held months without bail, isolated from lawyers and the public, to frighten them into guilty pleas that would set a precedent criminalizing dissent

    ICE Director Todd Lyons lied in Congressional testimony

    Sightings ∙ California ∙ Colorado ∙ Florida ∙ Minnesota ∙ Oregon ∙ Oregon

    Georgia teacher killed in crash by man fleeing from ICE

    California: 5 months ahead of World Cup, big questions about human rights and ICE presence in LA

    Texas: Trump administration is sending pregnant migrant girls to South Texas shelter flagged as medically inadequate

    US Citizenship and Immigration Services used to be basically the good guys — helping legal immigrants with paperwork, visas, benefits. Now their job is ratting people out to ICE & CBP.

    9-1-1 calls as immigration agents sweeping through America [This American Life]

    FBI refuses to cooperate with Minnesota investigators of Alex Pretti murder

    Tom Homan: Minnesota should say “thank you” for DHS operation

    Idaho teacher sues over banned ‘everyone is welcome’ poster

    Excerpt: Attorney General Raúl Labrador later issued guidance stating the “Everyone Is Welcome Here” poster violated the law. In an opinion published on the attorney general’s website and in an op-ed for Fox News, Labrador described the poster as “DEI messaging disguised as inclusion” that “mask[s] a comprehensive worldview that undermines parental authority over children’s moral development.

    “CEO said a thing!” journalism is now utterly pervasive, and includes parroting billionaire and CEO claims with a total disregard for whether or not anything being said is actually true

    CBS won’t let Stephen Colbert interview Senate candidate James Talarico

    Stephen Colbert interviews Senate candidate James Talarico

    In the interview, Talarico doesn’t say anything more ‘radical’ than Try being a Christian.

    CBS News is the only big-time media where the above isn’t newsworthy

    Repercussions of federal anti-vax policies: Vaccine makers curtail research and cut jobs

    How Walmart and Pepsico rigged prices and supercharged food inflation

    In Los Angeles, rampant post-fire price gouging went unpunished, report alleges

    After staff cuts, IRS employees who don’t know bupkis will handle customer service

    Trump: “I have nothing to hide. I’ve been exonerated. I have nothing to do with Jeffrey Epstein…I’ve been totally exonerated.”

    Bondi lies that all Trump-Epstein files have been released

    Excerpt: Millions of new files relating to the late sex offender Epstein were released by the DoJ earlier this month. At the time, the deputy attorney general said three million pages were not released.

    Redactions in Trump-Epstein files can be and are “in the interest of national defense or foreign policy”

    The sports media is ignoring the story, but wealthy sports figures are all over the Trump-Epstein files

    Democratic National Committee pays $6.5M to buy Kamala Harris’s email list

    This is what you’re paying for, if you donate to the Democratic Party.

    In San Francisco power blackout, Mayor asked PG&E to get electricity first for Opera House, where his daughter was scheduled to perform

    White nationalism is the agenda Elon Musk & other MAGA leaders are pushing

    Diversity is Our Strength

    Yeah, it’s corny, but also it’s true, so let’s explain America to dumbshits like Elon Musk, and dumbshits who admire Elon Musk.

    Turning Point USA announces alternative Puerto Rico

    Trump’s private company files trademark for ‘President Donald J. Trump International Airport’

    Trump donor who criticized offshoring to close Ohio plant and move work to China

    Vandals accuratize Republican Party of Eau Claire County headquarters

    Waste piles up in Cuba as US-imposed fuel blockade halts collection trucks

    Cuba is struggling to keep lights on amid Trump’s oil blockade

    US blows up boats on both sides of the Panama Canal on the same day; 11 dead

    US sent a rescue plane for boat strike survivors. It took 45 hours to arrive.

    After destruction of US AID, ‘Biblical diseases’ could resurge in Africa, health officials fear

    Macron urges calm after far-right activist fatally beaten

    I’m calm, thanks.

    US plans to review up to five years of the social media history of foreign travelers

    Belgian Foreign Minister calls US Ambassador to account

    We have so many anti-competent Trumpers in American government, it’s easy to forget that American diplomacy is run by anti-competent Trumpers, too.

    Mamdani hires groundbreaking computer scientist as Chief Tech Officer

    AMERICAN POLICE ARE OUT OF CONTROL

    ANYTHING GOES

    EYE ON AI

    IGNORING THE CLIMATE EMERGENCY

    THE LORD WORKS IN MYSTERIOUS WAYS

    MY BROWSER HISTORY, MINUS THE PORN

    NEVERENDING FILM FESTIVAL

    WEEKLY DEAD

    Nothing will meaningfully improve
    until billionaires fear for their lives.

    2/17/2026

    Logo illustration by Jeff Meyer. Tip ‘o the hat to the Anderson Valley Advertiser, Daily Grail, Fat Magic, Jemin Na CPA, Joe My God, Jamie Zawinski, Republican Crimes Tracker, Voenix Rising, What Not’s, and anywhere else I’ve stolen links, illustrations, or inspiration.

    Special thanks to Linden Arden, Becky Jo, Joey Jo Jo & John the Basket emeritus, Jeff Meyer, Dave S, Name Withheld, and always extra special thanks to my lovely late Stephanie, who gave me 21 years and proved that the world isn’t always shitty.

    News always and only from reliable sources, and I decide what’s reliable — no right-wing bullshit, no Substack because fuck Nazis, and no RawStory, Newsweek, or other clickbait sites. Written news is preferred; video links will be rare, and never to videos where a camera is pointed at a reporter or podcaster — that’s show biz, not news. When necessary, links lead to secondary sites that strip away paywalls, aggressive ads, or the original site’s dumbass design.

    And Now the News

    itsdougholland.com
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  • An acceptable variant

    I haven’t seen Brenda for a while and I like her, so I set up my fish stand next to her art stand, on Telegraph Ave. First thing she said after “Good morning,” was, “So you write Pathetic Life, eh?”

    PATHETIC LIFE logo

    From Pathetic Life #21
    Sunday, Feb. 18, 1996 

    And I do, but I never talk about it on the Avenue. Tried to bluff, but Brenda didn’t need to be Mrs Columbo to assemble the clues.

    ① She reads zines, and wants to write one, and had mentioned a while back that she was looking for a cheap maildrop. I’d suggested the one that I use. ② A few days ago she was reading a zine, and saw a review of something called Pathetic Life. The review mentioned blasphemous fish and Telegraph Ave, and listed my maildrop address. So my cover has been blown.

    She offered to buy a copy, but I said I’d bring her one for free, if she’d promise not to mention the zine to anyone else on the Avenue.

    “Is it a secret?” she asked. “Are you shy?”

    “Sure, I’m shy,” and I tried to explain. “It’s my diary. If you’re publishing your diary you gotta keep it a secret, or everyone will start complaining about what you write about ’em. There are vendors on the Ave that I hate, and I need to be able to write that I hate ’em, without having them in my face a month later, angry at what I wrote about them.”

    “Gee,” she said. “I wonder what you’ve written about me.”

    “Yeah, that ‘wondering’ — that’s why the zine is a secret.”

    Sending my diary to strangers is one thing, but I don’t want to hear questions and comments from other vendors, from customers, from homeless people, from the guy at the sandwich shop, etc, about my every rectal itch or erectile dysfunction. I require that minimal modicum of privacy.

    Brenda said she understood, and pledged to keep my secrets secret, so she gets a copy of the zine next time I see her. But I’m a little nervous about it.

    ♦ ♦ ♦  

    After work, I dragged the cart to Jay’s house, then bused to Andrea’s apartment to babysit her daughter again.

    Taking care of Shannon was OK. We played Scrabble and she won, and not because I let her win (I’m not that nice) but because she’s good with words.

    Like, I played ‘kaftan’, even though I was pretty sure it’s supposed to be ‘caftan’. Thought I could get away with it, but she said, “You wear it, right?”

    “Well, I don’t have one, but yeah, I think you wear it.”

    “It’s usually spelled with a c,” she said, “but k is an acceptable variant.” This, from a 9-year-old kid.

    In addition to being bright, she’s also blunt. As I boiled some noodles for macaroni & cheese, she stood beside me, watching the master chef, and she said, “You know, your breath stinks.”

    “Yup,” I said. “My teeth are rotting. It’s what happens if you go twenty years without brushing.”

    “Yuck.”

    “Well, the good part is, I hardly ever catch a whiff of it myself.”

    She thought that was funny, and maybe it is funny when bad breath grosses out a little kid. It’s more of a problem if I’m grossing out her mother, so after dinner I asked Shannon if there was a “guest toothbrush” I could use.

    “Nope,” she said, “but you can use my mom’s.”

    “That’s disgusting,” I said.

    “So’s your breath,” she said and smiled.

    I didn’t brush. We played another game of Scrabble (this time I won), and then she suggested turning out the lights to tell scary stories. After a few nightmare-inducers it was bedtime, and she gave me a hug I hadn’t earned and went to her room.

    Then I sat on the couch and read zines, and long after I was pretty sure Shannon would be asleep, about twenty minutes before Andrea had said she’d be home, I went into the bathroom and brushed my teeth. It was an hour later when I heard a car door slam.

    The idea, at least my idea, was that Andrea and I might talk for a while when she’s come in. Like the other times I’ve been the babysitter, though, she wasn’t much in a mood for talking. She paid me, and I walked to the bus stop. Being the babysitter isn’t working out quite the way I’d hoped. Nothing much does.

    ♦ ♦ ♦  

    Typing this up before turning in, I just looked up ‘kaftan’, and Shannon was right. It’s an acceptable variation on ‘caftan’.

    This is an entry retyped from an on-paper zine I wrote many years ago, called Pathetic Life. The opinions stated were my opinions then, but might not be my opinions now. Also, I said and did some disgusting things, so parental guidance is advised.

    Pathetic Life
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