Hello and good morning.
Yes, yes, I know—I got your hopes all up yesterday by letting you think that I might not be writing a blog post today, and yet, here I am writing a blog post. And I’m doing it today.
I’m sorry. It seems my compulsive behavior patterns are stronger than my depression, at least in this regard. I suppose that could be considered a strength in some cases, though as someone said somewhere, obsessions and compulsions are good servants but bad masters. I take that to mean that it’s good to use them to get things done that you want or need to get done, but if they take control, they can become an apparent end in themselves and get in the way of things that would be more beneficial.
You probably know this. Maybe you’ve not thought of it consciously, deliberately, but it’s probably pretty clear and obvious once you think about it. I’m not really good at delivering deep and life-changing secrets; if I knew such things, surely my life would be in far better shape.
Anyway, I don’t really have a subject about which to write today—though there is much in the world that is worthy of commentary, let there be no doubt about that—so I’ll just meander a bit.
I’m in a slightly better mood than I was in yesterday. I suspect that’s partly because I made it a point not to curtail or suppress my caffeine intake. It’s not that I had abstained from caffeine the day before; Batman forbid. But I kind of pushed it yesterday, and didn’t stop even in the afternoon.
Weirdly enough, that tends to improve if not the duration of my sleep, then the quality of it. Perhaps it has to do with enhancing the muscle tone in my nasopharynx and oropharynx, making them less prone to flop about and cause possible apneic episodes. It’s well known that caffeine increases cyclic AMP inside cells, and in particular muscle cells, and that improves their activity and tone.
This is part of why, for instance, a quick and dirty, temporizing measure in the case of someone having an asthma attack without their usual medicine available, can be a strong cup of coffee (not too hot, because it’s good to get it in quickly). It’s not ideal, and cannot replace albuterol and other similar bronchodilators, but it can buy some time.
All that aside—and it is an aside—I wouldn’t say that I’m feeling upbeat today, but I am at least a bit energetic. Caffeine is the most popular drug in the world (by far) for strong reasons, after all. Even most strict religions that ban alcohol and other euphoriants rarely ban caffeine (though I’m led to understand that Mormonism is an exception).
Even many anti-drug fanatics tend to take in caffeine in one form or another; some of them should probably cut back, actually. But the joke is certainly on them a bit, especially if they are among the benighted masses who see drug use (and abuse) in pseudo-moralizing terms, for they are often quite dependent on their drug of choice, as are so many of the rest of us.
Oh, well. Most people are clueless most of the time, which is why it can be so heartbreakingly easy for con artists to fool so many into stupid things like avoiding vaccines or thinking that someone who has only ever engaged in self-service and self-aggrandizement is going to look out for them once such a person gains real political power.
This is all strictly hypothetical, of course.
On to other matters. Today is Independence Eve, if you will, and tomorrow is Independence Day (in the United States of America). Some people here don’t want even to celebrate the occasion because they are so frustrated with the situation in America, and I can understand their sentiments, but I think they are mistaken.
I think, more than ever, it’s important to review and renew the ideas and ideals on which the USA was founded, to go back to the startup and the operating system—to try to reboot, perhaps, with some bugs patched if possible, and with some malware removed. The notions are straightforward in many cases, such as that governments are instituted, in principle, to protect and preserve the rights of the people of the country. They are not the source of such rights; they are merely charged with their protection. It is a duty, not a privilege, and they are certainly not an “authority”.
The Declaration of Independence is not a long document. It’s only about 1400 words long, including signatures. I’ve written blog posts longer than that. And even the Constitution, with amendments, is only about 7000 words long. That’s shorter than every short story I’ve ever written—even Solitaire is twice that long—and it’s not particularly difficult language. The ideas aren’t all that difficult, either, though they are probably deeper than many people realize at first glance.
So, for tomorrow’s pre-programmed post, I have prepared to share the text of the Declaration of Independence. Of course, one can go and read it at the government archives site, but I don’t feel as confident that it will remain available there indefinitely as I felt in the past. So, I’m putting it up here, on the 4th of July, Independence Day. I encourage you to copy and download it, and if you want, to share it. Let’s make sure it’s out there in the world as much as possible.
Even the section that relates the grievances that led to the declaration are pertinent, though they can seem tedious, because some of them are being recapitulated (and worsened) by the present government. And it doesn’t make things any better that our own government is the one acting in ways prone to “reduce them under absolute Despotism”; it makes it even more important to remember the point of founding the US in the first place.
No, we have never quite lived up to the ideals expressed in the Declaration—never fully, never as deeply or as rigorously as we ought to have done—but that is a failure in our attempts, not in the ideals themselves. So, please, do read the post tomorrow, share it, make it go viral if you can (the Declaration, not my blog, though I guess I wouldn’t complain about the blog doing so).
Later on, I can start sharing the US Constitution, perhaps, and the Bill of Rights and other Amendments. It’s important that we pay renewed attention to such things, for so many seem to have forgotten them (or more likely never to have learned them).
I hope those of you in the US have a good holiday tomorrow and a good holiday weekend. Enjoy time with your families if you can. But do try to remember what you’re celebrating, and why.
TTFN
