Ten years ago I earned my Uncertified Life Coaching
credentials. As such, I was given the opportunity (and privilege) of helping
folks from countless places live their lives to the mediumest. For an entire
decade I have helped pretend people - just like you! - navigate modern
dilemmas, from online squabbles to pet mishaps to unsatisfactory election
results. Through it all, though, one message has stayed the same: I am not a
real life coach.
It says that in the name.
And just last month I turned fifty,
which means my non-credentials have been rounded up to “Copper.” This upgrade
gives me even more gravitas. This upgrade gives me access to an entire new
decade of life experience, and so, with that in mind, let’s begin an exciting
new season of answering pretend questions!
Question One: “Help! I think my
country is lurching toward civil war and also the regular kind of war. At the
same time! Is this normal?”
Answer:
While it’s certainly not recommended to simultaneously flex your territorial
ambitions while fermenting domestic unrest, you’d be surprised at just how
often that does happen. Just as a rude neighbor might want to“borrow” your
mineral rights while also forgetting to put the toilet seat up in his own
bathroom, those same thuggish impulses can manifest themselves on the world
stage. In other words, it’s not at all surprising that your country is courting
both a literal civil war and potential international conflicts. Good luck!
Question: “Wait...WHAT?! Uh, hold on. So, like, what am I supposed to do, though? I’m not a lawmaker, I’m not a big-time donor, I’m not even an internet celebrity. I’m just a person. I’ve never lived in a country slouching toward self-destructive authoritarianism. I thought this stuff just happened in different countries. How should I respond?”
Answer: Puh-lease. Lots of people
live through authoritarian regimes and do just fine, especially if they “vote”
the right way. Even if your country doesn’t pretend to have real elections,
anymore, though, you can still do all right for yourself if you just parrot
whatever the party wants you to say. And if that doesn't jive with your moral
compass, there are ways to casually resist and avoid prison.
For a while.
Here is a list of things you can do
to “fight-the-fight,” so to speak, and also help you sleep at night:
(The following list has been
redacted)
Question Three: “I think the
ice-maker in my fridge is on the fritz, but I would rather ignore it. Any
advice?”
Answer: You should probably get that
fixed. Physics reminds us that everything - eventually - falls apart. Whatever
appliance you have in your home, left to its own devices it will eventually
break and flood your kitchen. I know this from experience, and so the sooner
you take care of this the better.
Speaking of “broken appliances,”
this actually reminds me of something I should have mentioned earlier. For the
gentleman whining about the corrosion of the entire world order from earlier in
this column, I now have some questions for you:
Did the country you’re referencing
allow special interests to hijack its lawmaking body?
Did the same country allow states to gerrymander
districts so grotesquely that only the loudest (and often dumbest) and most
extreme candidates get elected?
And did this country (considering the
previously two mentioned realities), give its lawmakers almost guaranteed job
security by not requiring term-limits?
If you can say “yes” to those three
“broken appliances,” then you shouldn’t be surprised your kitchen is flooded.
You basically left the water running yourself.
Mixing metaphors now, we should
consider that dictators usually don’t kick open our front door and start
rearranging the furniture. Dictators are usually invited in by someone in the
house who is so disgusted with the way the house is functioning that they
believe it when he says he’s just an interior designer. Sycophants will
continue to believe it when he says he’s only burning the furniture to keep
warm, and many of them will even hand him the matches.
In closing, I’m going to break a
rule of column writing and segue abruptly from flippant analogy
and move closer to something less vague.
In his quest to “get” Greenland, our leader is about to undo an alliance that has kept the world relatively stable for over 75 years. It could be argued that everyone alive today is alive because NATO functioned as a deterrent to Soviet aggression and potential nuclear conflict.
Yes, we do need to bolster our
military presence in the region to act as a new deterrent against Russia and
China, but we don’t need to act like gangsters to do it.
These are our allies. After the
Soviet threat collapsed, these are nations who joined us in our wars against
terrorism, and these are nations who continue to stand against the return of
Russian aggression. Threatening these nations with even more tariffs, whining about "getting snubbed" for the Nobel Peace Prize, should not be permissible. If we break this alliance now, it will take decades to heal,
and by then it will likely be too late.
This is not a partisan issue, and no amount of protesting is going
to help. Only those who bought this appliance - twice - can fix it. Only
they can tell their leaders, “Look, we didn’t vote for this part. Not this.
Stop this.”
For the sake of America first
and every other nation on earth, tell your leaders to stop this before it’s too
late.
