The Punkwat twins!
Brentwood is the world’s smallest giant, while his brother, Elwood, is
the largest midget in the world. They baffle science.
--W.C. Fields as circus-master Larson E. Whipsnade, introducing two men of average size, in You Can’t Cheat an Honest Man (1939)
--W.C. Fields as circus-master Larson E. Whipsnade, introducing two men of average size, in You Can’t Cheat an Honest Man (1939)
Fellows who, whether in stocks, politics, bread-stuffs,
morals, metaphysics, religion – be it what it may – trump up their black panics in the
naturally-quiet brightness, solely with a view to some sort of covert
advantage.
-- Herman Melville, The Confidence-Man:
His Masquerade, 1857
He [Donald Trump] does not have a circle of friends but an
entourage. Where are the historians,
philosophers, or poets he admires or who admire him? Whose are the minds that
expand, challenge or refresh his own? He
reads nothing…. He knows and talks about little but his own excellence. He cannot learn from peers, since he thinks
that he has none. Why consult others
when they are, compared with him, losers?
-- Garry Wills, New York Review of Books, Nov. 10, 2016
-- Garry Wills, New York Review of Books, Nov. 10, 2016
A man of extraordinary energy, warmth and vitality, Ronnie
[Cornwell] exuded optimism. From an
early age he lived far beyond his means, confident that something would turn up
to avert disaster. He smoked large
cigars, drank brandy and whisky by the quart, ate at the best restaurants,
stayed at the finest hotels, entertained generously and dispensed extravagant
presents. He seldom settled an account
unless pressed to do so, and often not even then. All debts, he considered, were
negotiable. To women he radiated an
unstinting and inexhaustible virility, with unfailing results. Yet menace lurked beneath the charm. There was a glint of violence in his
eye. His hugs were a demonstration of
ownership as much as of affection…. He aspired to be a tycoon, with interests
spanning the globe, though in reality his business empire consisted of little
more than short-term fixes and one-off deals, many of them shady in character.
–Adam Sisman, John le Carre: The Biography, writing about le Carre’s father.
–Adam Sisman, John le Carre: The Biography, writing about le Carre’s father.
The latest Presidential debate followed something of a
familiar pattern, with Trump dissembling about some things and claiming that
others, such as his groping of women, have been “debunked,” for which he cited
no evidence, nor did he have any evidence for his claims that the election was
rigged because, he claimed, there were millions of people registered to vote who were not
legitimate voters. Everything Trump
likes is wonderful and what he doesn’t like is “a disaster,” such as Obamacare,
which he says he will replace with “something much, much better,” though he
doesn’t say what that is, except it won’t be a single-payer system because that
would be “much, much worse.” Clinton
plans to improve Obamacare and offer tuition-free college, college costs and
debts something that Trump has not even bothered to mention. Trump continues to act like a tinpot
dictator, threatening to throw Clinton in jail and blaming her, a single
Senator, for not changing the laws that allow Trump not to pay any income tax.
And not only is Trump opposed to a woman’s right to choose, he actually has
said that women who have abortions should be punished in some (unspecified)
way. Whatever one may think about career
politician Clinton, at least she wants to bring people together and not pit
them against each other.