Wednesday, March 4, 2026

From the Sleep of Reason, Life Is Born

I imagine I've come across stories and features on this topic, or a variant, a thousand or so times over the years, but this time around, Seven Fresh Facts About Babies

I have an interest of a more pressing personal nature in sharing.

Welcome, Tiny Tot Trinkley. Your Opa cannot wait to meet you.
-bill kenny

Tuesday, March 3, 2026

Finally!

I've lived in Norwich for a skosh over thirty-four years. We Norwicheans have a terrible self-esteem problem, possibly because Eeyore seems to be our spirit animal. We spend enormous amounts of time waiting for something simply awful to happen and are always relieved that it does. 

(Even) long(er) time residents than I are fond of reminding the rest of us, "Norwich isn't Mystic." 

It's hard not to be impressed by our command of geography, in all candor.

But now, finally, we have something we can brag about.  

First person who says, "I'll drink to that," gets punched in the nose.
-bill kenny

Monday, March 2, 2026

Meanwhile, Back at the Epstein Files

Regime changes, illegal wars, and confused BS to explain it all are all fine and dandy, but no matter how brightly that shiny object in the Persian Gulf is gleaming, I'm still waiting for something a B-2 bomber can't drop. 

Looking at you, FBI and Department of Justice.

I thought that fighting with meant fighting for. I was terribly wrong.
-bill kenny


Sunday, March 1, 2026

World Serves Its Own Needs

So, are we living in the End Times, or "I wish it would end times?"


Left of West and coming in a hurry. With the Furies breathing down your neck.


I suspect FIFA will want its peace prize back now for sure.
-bill kenny 



 

Saturday, February 28, 2026

Already?

Some of us still have hangovers from those New Year's Eve parties. And today is the LAST day of the Second month of the year. 

How is that possible?

I'd like to talk to the supervisor, please.
-bill kenny

 

Friday, February 27, 2026

Junk Food Junkies

Who hasn't heard the expression, 'you are what you eat'? (Hears snickers and tittering coming from the back of the room) No more of that, please, and thank you for your attention to this matter (has a ring of familiarity to it, doesn't it?).  

Our diets, wherever we live, are very different from those of our parents and, in turn, from those of our grandparents. For the latter, fast food didn't exist, and for the former, it mostly meant fast and cheap. No one ever accused it of being good.

When we look at studies on American obesity, you can guess the primary culprit, but we all helped get us here. But how? How about if you spend in excess of fourteen billion dollars a year on advertising for fast food?

"Fast Food Tattoo Guy"

Suspect that would add a few inches to the old waistline. Guten Appetit!
-bill kenny 

Thursday, February 26, 2026

It All Seemed to Make So Much Sense

I was born the same year Dwight David Eisenhower was elected President, though I had no knowledge or any memory of my life with him as the Chief Executive. I remember being in the third grade at Pine Grove Manor School when Nixon and Kennedy ran for the White House. 

Politically astute even then, I recall a very wise fourth-grader telling me that if Nixon were elected, kids would have to go to school on Saturday. That's when I decided to back Jack. There you have it, for all those who've suspected I am a Democratic left-leaning pinko liberal loser, that may have been the moment the road to perdition was paved.

Too many years later, I'm not sure I understand what has happened to the country I grew up in, returned to, and have grown old in. We had so much go so well for so long, we don't seem to have any stomach for hard work or truth anymore. Our institutions, which have always buttressed our way of life, from finances through relationships, are pretty much bankrupt, and we don't seem to have the will or wallet to repair or replace them.

We've spent most of the last score of years in free fall, and when I say "we," I mean what was once considered the middle class. For the better part of a decade, we watched billionaire oligarchs trade blue skies for BMWs, wash their cigar boats with bottled water, and elevate day-trading to an Olympic event. 

Meanwhile, for tens of millions of Americans, the promise of prosperity remained a rumor, so while we lament what happened, some of our neighbors never had even the sniff of that in the first place, and now look at us as if we've lost our minds, and maybe we have.

Pick a place and space. Be it micro or macro, it's almost always the same movie, just with a different cast. We have trouble, not with leaning forward and looking ahead, with my apologies to Alvin Toffler's Future Shock, but with accepting where we are and why we will be here for the rest of our days if we don't change the way we are. What I call Present Shock.

At both the national and local levels, it seems there are two ways to manage Present Shock. One is to do nothing but say no and insist that those in power are to blame for whatever we now see as a failure. The other response is to just keep pressing the same button even though the pellets stopped dropping a long time ago. 

We're working very hard here to break the cycle and seize the day and the momentum, but there's still a longing for what was. If it could only be yesterday tomorrow, then today would be wonderful. 

We've failed to realize that (too) often the only difference between a rut and a grave is the depth (of the habit) and that sound of footsteps we hear belongs to ourselves as we calculate the distance we'd need to outrun our own shadow. But after a while you realize time flies
-bill kenny

From the Sleep of Reason, Life Is Born

I imagine I've come across stories and features on this topic, or a variant, a thousand or so times over the years, but this time around...