All posts by Eric Robert Nolan

Eric Robert Nolan graduated from Mary Washington College in 1994 with a Bachelor of Science in Psychology. He spent several years a news reporter and editorial writer for the Culpeper Star Exponent in Culpeper, Virginia. His work has also appeared on the front pages of numerous newspapers in Virginia, including The Free Lance – Star and The Daily Progress. Eric entered the field of philanthropy in 1996, as a grant writer for nonprofit healthcare organizations. Eric’s poetry has been featured by Dead Beats Literary Blog, Dagda Publishing, The International War Veterans’ Poetry Archive, and elsewhere. His poetry will also be published by Illumen Magazine in its Spring 2014 issue.

“Trump’s secret police”

I feel like we’ve turned a frightening corner here. Last night was the first time I’ve read the words “Trump’s secret police” — it was a user on Twitter.

Today it appeared in a headline at The Nation.

Republican Steve Schmidt went on Twitter a little while ago and called upon the Governor of Oregon to order the State Police and the National Guard to arrest the unidentified federal forces in unmarked vans who are snatching people off the streets.

Update: Now people are saying it was The Department of Homeland Security. Also: the people were apparently all detained because they were suspected of graffiti offenses?

 

 

Catch you later.

You know what would be interesting? If technology advanced to the point where if you contracted a contagious illness, you could trace it to EXACTLY who gave it to you.

So if you faced a lifetime of lung problems from coronavirus — or maybe if you unknowingly passed it to your parents, and it killed them — you would know which neighbor’s barbecue or bar crawl directly caused that.

You could ask them if it was worth it.  It would make for some interesting conversations.

It would actually make a hell of a science fiction story.

 

*****

Oh!  One more thing!

Quick word of thanks to all the dudebros who work at Denny’s who are breaking down the finer points of the incidence, transmission, and long term effects of a new and potentially fatal respiratory disease.

I’m glad you’re here to explain this stuff. I hate getting all of my information from the CDC.

 

 

Cover to “Carnage, U.S.A.” #2, Clayton Crain, 2012

Marvel Comics.

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Throwback Thursday: Lincoln Logs!

Believe it or not, I had Lincoln Logs as a first grader in 1978 or so … they might have even come in a bucket like this one; I can’t quite remember.  (I think there was a weird merchandising trend in the 1970’s in which toy sets and puzzles came packaged in tubes.)

The Lincoln Logs were made of wood!  (God, the idea that I once owned wooden toys makes me feel as old as … Lincoln, I guess.)  Here’s some weird trivia for you, if you remember these — they were invented in 1916 by John Lloyd Wright, who was the son of famed architect Frank Loyd Wright.

I’d moved on to fancier things than Lincoln Logs fairly quickly — my parents had started me on Sears’ Brix Blox by 1980 or so.  (They were basically budget Legos, but they suited me just fine.)

Lincoln Logs never really went away during my early childhood, though … they would turn up in bits and pieces for years at the bottom of my toybox, my closet, my box of army men, whatever.  If you gave an absent-minded kid like me anything that included dozens of small parts, then they were destined to haunt the house in perpetuity.  There was sort of a permanent intermittent presence of Tinker Toys at my house too — you could sort of think of those as Legos’ surreal, cubist, crazy cousin.

Actually. let me qualify my admission above.  I might have scattered my small toys a lot as a little boy, but I pretty assiduously kept my G.I. Joes and their guns together.  That was a serious matter.  And I’d like to think I had a fairly good track record.

 

 

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Photo credit: By Jesse Weinstein (JesseW) – Own work. (ID# 4b-2f), CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=803043

Painting by Jules Abel Faivre, 1913

I cannot find a title for this piece; I suspect that the artist left it untitled.

Abel_Faibre,_1913_-_91067039

Guys, things are bad.

The virus, the government and cultural response, pretty much everything — save for some encouraging news about vaccine development.

People are dividing politically over things that ought to be pretty straightforward. There isn’t any grand plan or overall strategy — we’re all arguing about components of what should be the overall strategy: masks, social distancing, reopenings, etc. No matter where you stand on the political spectrum, you’ve gotta agree that that kind of division is kinda not good.

The news just gets steadily worse. I’m worried about exactly how bad things will get before they get better again.

The last time I was this worried about the nation was 19 years ago.

 

 

(With apologies to T. S. Eliot)

This is the way the world ends
This is the way the world ends
This is the way the world ends
Not with a bang but with a “winner.”

 

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Advertisement for State and Dearborn “Flu Masks,” 1918

Boston, Massachusetts.

State_and_Dearborn_flu_mask_ad

Check out Jav. D’s “Peregrination” on Soundcloud!

So it turns out that another friend of mine is a talented musician — check out Jav. D’s new single, “Peregrination.”   It’s actually a really damned good track.

The song will soon be available on iTunes, but you can listen to it right now here on Soundcloud.