Goodbye 2023
Here in Altadena we are a little more than 9 hours from the New Year. It would be too easy to lament all the problems we faced in 2023 and they will follow us as 2024 dawns. But I thought that some perspective was in order and in her last column of 2023, Jennifer Rubin gives us that perspective. I gifted the column on my Facebook and Twitter pages and the link is here . Here is her first paragraph: “Nostalgia is a powerful political tool. Wielding nostalgia for a bygone era — one that is invariably mischaracterized — is a favorite weapon for fascist movements (Make America Great Again ), harking back to a time before their nation was “polluted” by malign forces. In the United States, such nostalgia none-too-subtlety appeals to white Christian nationalism. Even in a more benign form (e.g., “ Politics didn’t used to be so mean ,” “ Remember the days of bipartisanship?” ) plays on faulty memories. If you really go back to study U.S. history, you would find two things: The past was worse