‘Who Have We Become’ — #Lyrics To A Country Pop Ballad

Just in mood to write lyrics. That’s it. I see this as a Kacey Musgraves’ type country pop ballad.

Who Have We Become
lyrics by Shelton Bumgarner
@bumgarls
please give credit if you produce or perform

watch my TV with dismay
flip the channels every which way
but it seems these times are here to stay

who have we become
who have we become
how did this happen
something has to change
to end this pain
who have we become

we’re all on the run it seems
at least that’s what I can glean
makes me want to sing something sad
not even the diamonds I wear
can ease this despair

who have we become
who have we become
how did this happen
something has to change
to end this pain
who have we become

[bridge]
when this is all done
we can stop being on the run
we’ll have it all again
peace will come to land
at least that’s the plan

but I’m not too hopefull
things seem kind of in doubt
when the end finally comes
I’ll know where I stood
will you?

who have we become
whohave we become
who have we become

‘We’re Better Than This’ — #Lyrics To A Pop Ballad

Just in the mood to write lyrics. These are self-evident as to what they’re about.

We’re Better Than This
lyrics by Shelton Bumgarner
@bumgarls
please give credit if you produce or perform

we’re better than this my friend
we have to be I beg and beg
when will it end I struggle to understand
we’re better than this my friend

children alone
torn from their parents
how can this be condoned
but there it is on my tv
to be shown to all
who has the gall

we’re better than this my friend
we have to be I beg and beg
when will it end I struggle to understand
we’re better than this my friend

how did this come to be
children torn from their parents
as they run from danger
just begging to be free
who have we become

we’re better than this my friend
we have to be I beg and beg
when will it end I struggle to understand
we’re better than this my friend

[bridge]
soon this will end
at last that’s my cry
we can’t keep this up
this is not alright
need some respite

we’re better than this my friend
we have to be I beg and beg
when will it end I struggle to understand
we’re better than this my friend

‘I Do Care (Don’t You?)’ — #Lyrics To A Pop Ballad

These lyrics are pretty self-evident. They’re about the children torn from their parents at the border by the government and make an allusion to Melania Trump’s “I don’t really care,  do you u?” coat.

I Do Care (Don’t You?)
Lyrics by Shelton Bumgarner
@bumgarls
please give credit if you produce or perform

I see their faces so far away
feel their cries in my soul
don’t know how this happened
ask the man above what’s the rub
this has to change

I do care
(don’t you?)
I do care
(don’t you?)
I do care
(don’t you?)

how did we get here I exclaim
while we’re fighting over who’s to blame
children wail in pain
we are so much better than this
wish we could end this right away

I do care
(don’t you?)
I do care
(don’t you?)
I do care
(don’t you?)

[bridge]
when this is over
we’ll still be sad
but we’ll be glad
it’s done
the children have been reunited
at last

I do care
(don’t you?)
I do care
(don’t you?)
I do care
(don’t you?)

2,800 Immigrant Children Are Lost In The System…Now What? #Resist

by Shelton Bumgarner
@bumgarls

Don’t be fooled by the supposed good news that all the children with Border Patrol are now reunited with their parents. It will be way too easy for the Trump Administration to spin this as the resolution of the problem.

The facts are far more distressing than the above might suggest. There are, in fact, apparently about 2,800 children who have been turned over to the Department of Health & Human Services who are….missing. We don’t know where they are and it’s going to be excruciatingly difficult to bring them back together with their parents.

This is a national shame and it appears as though it’s going to drag on and on and on for sometime simply because the system isn’t prepared to solve this problem anytime soon. So this crisis is much more of a marathon than a sprint. It could take months for all of this to get straightened out and unfortunately it’s going to be difficult to maintain the public pressure on the Trump Administration needed to convey the urgency this problem requires.

So, honestly, I’m at a loss. I don’t know how this all gets wrapped up. It’s a pretty perplexing conundrum. Either this gains traction enough that Trump feels finally forced to be a lot more proactive about this, or the fate of about 2,800 children will simply fade into oblivion down the memory hole along with all the other scandals Trump has managed to stir up.

I wish I knew the answer to all of this. I really do.

The Inherent Racism & Bigotry Of Magaism. #Resist

by Shelton Bumgarner
@bumgarls

It’s sad, but true: fascism has come to the United States. It’s a particularly insidious, creeping version of it, but it’s here nonetheless. And there is no respite to be seen in the foreseeable future. This is it, folks, and it’s only going to get worse — far worse.

There’s just no scenario I can think of where this doesn’t get a lot worse before it gets better. Trump is a master at media manipulation and because of Constitutional rot, its pretty clear that at best we can expect a draw in the 2018 Congressional mid-terms and there’s just not going to be what we hope anytime soon: some sort of end to all of this.

This is a marathon, not a sprint, in other words.

What I mean by that is we have to triage the different urgent problems the Trump Administration has concocted. Right now, I would suggest the fate of the roughly 2,000 immigrant children taken from their families is of utmost importance. But that’s simply because of the young lives at stake. There are so many other horrible things taking place, that we need to focus on. We need to accept that the American Republic is in grave danger that that Magaism is to blame.

It goes without saying that Magaism, which I’ve begun to equate with Nazism, is misogyny, racism and bigotry. But let’s address, for the moment, the parts that are directly connected to the “Prosecution Imitative” that lead to the forcible separation of undocumented children from their families.

I speak, of course, of the racism and bigotry. The reason why this is so significant is it’s the only way to explain why Magaists are so ardent in their determination to essentially discredit the very idea that removing children from their parents at the border is an issue at all.

The frightening thing about all of this is Magaist honestly are so wrapped up in “securing the border” or the fact that the imagine of the child on the cover of Time Magazine wasn’t exactly what it purported to be that they can’t take time to feel any basic human empathy or compassion for the children involved.

It’s a chilling thing all around. If that doesn’t evoke some mental connection to Nazi Germany, I don’t honestly know what will. I find it difficult to wrap my mind around the thought processes of someone who hears the cries for help of young children on the border and isn’t moved. That they rhetorically bob and weave, and would rather quibble about the broader border problem or this or that thing Obama may have done in the past.

How we got to this point is rather curious. That on an ideological level Magaists and their collaborators would simply see brown people coming across the border as an issue of “securing borders” as opposed to something you would try to find as compassionate a way as possible to solve is a real perplexing issue for me on the face of it.

Throw into the mix systemic Constitutional rot caused by perfect storm of economics, politics, demographics and general fucked-up-ed-ness and it’s clear all of this could have been predicted. And, as I understand it, it was by at least one sociologist. Trump and Maga was inevitable, it’s just we’re stuck with the specific quirks of Trump’s own-the-moment style. Trump doesn’t have any ideology to speak of, which leads me to worry that it won’t be Trump that’s our final jump into the boiling waters of American fascism, but his immediate successor.

Trump is just to unfocused and incompetent, I feel, to get the job done. But someone smarter and younger but equally charismatic, could definitely get the job done. Really, the only thing stopping this nightmare scenario from happening is whatever American spirit that might exist that makes my nation unique among those of the world. I used to believe in American exceptionalism, but that faith is being sorely tested.

I would like to believe that the darkest timeline won’t be fully realized and we’ll finally pull out of our decent into actual fascism, but I’m not so sure anymore. There’s a good chance this time the bad guys really will win and there’s not much we can do about it.

We might scream at the top of our lungs every chance we get, but because of reverse polarization, the case could be made that that only helps the opposition. All of this is difficult for me to process without getting really, really angry. But anyway, all I can say at this point is, like, keep the faith or something.

We’ll need it.

V-Log: ‘The Picture’ — I’m Furious About Trump’s Dumb Attack On Time Magazine

by Shelton Bumgarner
@bumgarls

I know no one ever watched v-logs, but this one is worth your time. It’s not even really a v-log, more of a live stream rant.

It Has Happened Here: MAGA As America’s Fascism #KeepFamiliesTogether #Resist

by Shelton Bumgarner
@bumgarls

Fascism has come to America. There was a novel in the 1930s entitled, “It Can’t Happen Here.” It was about the rise of a fascist state in the America. Given the Right’s to the recent “Prosecution Initiative” it is clear that MAGA has is, in fact, America’s version of fascism.

As I understand it, fascism is, as a concept, rather nebulous. Each state where it takes hold puts it’s own spin on the concept while there are some general overlapping beliefs associated with them. But talking to people who are MAGAists or sympathetic to it’s aims has left me shaken.

These people are completely devoid of simple, basic human empathy. They are devoid of that deep, visceral kick in the gut you get when you hear a baby’s cries for its parents. When I talk to them about changing Trump’s policy, they are either so busy scoring political points or talking about the need to for immigration reform, that they completely refuse to simply say, “This is enough. Change the policy back to what it was before April 2018.”

They simply can’t, or won’t, do it.

In all honesty, there’s no difference between that and being in Germany in 1939 debating with a Good German the need to finally solve the “Jewish Problem.” The difference — at least for now — is only a matter of degree. With the recent reports that Trump wants to place as many as 20,000 unattended minors on American M=military bases across the country. One you establish a system that can do that, it’s extremely difficult not to assume that such a system of mass detainment couldn’t be used for other “undesirables.”

MAGAist collaborators I’ve spoken to tell me I’m “grasping at straws” to suggest such a thing. But am I? Once you make the cognitive leap to ignore the cries of a child simply because of their lack of documentation or skin tone and lack of documentation, the pot is officially boiling. We’ve officially reached the point where we’re in a fascist state. As I keep sayings, what’s to stop MAGAists at the behest of Der Fuhrer to demand the mentally ill join undocumented people in the camps in an effort to address the gun issue once and for all. I’m not saying it’s going to happen over night and I’m not saying it won’t be difficult to implement.

But it’s officially within the realm of possibility, if nothing else. It’s not off the table.

The American Constitutional system has rotted to such an extent that literally the only thing standing between America and a Russian-style “managed democracy” is the pure, unadulterated rage of people who do, in fact, have common human compassion and empathy. People who don’t care about the finer points of immigration reform, or who quibble about the details of what’s going on at the border.

I mean, there are roughly 2,000 children missing within the system who we may never be able to be reunited with their families. But because the images aren’t there to help engage the American populace to rage against their plight, it appears as though this will fall into the typical partisan debate and nothing, really, will happen.

MAGAists simply lack basic human empathy and compassion. They are completely devoid of it. They just don’t care. And so, that, if noting else, is why MAGAists are modern day fascists. That’s what we’re up against. They completely control the government at this point for various reasons and there honestly isn’t anything we can do.

Things are going to get worse, much worse, before they get better and the only thing that may save us — and I hate to mention this at all — is simple civil disobedience. The pot is officially boiling and if we don’t hop out, if we don’t take a stand now, then the frog is cooked. I have suggested in the past that maybe someone might design an app to facilitate mass protests across the country.

Only through massive, regular protests across the country will there be anything close to an end to this. The electoral system is so completely broken that I just don’t see there being a “Blue Wave.” We have to see this as a marathon, not a sprint and we have to do some serious triage of the enormous number of problems the Trump Administration is throwing at us. I want to have hope, I really do. If I have hope, then I stay angry.

But honestly, I don’t have hope anymore. It’s just a matter of degree now. Either MAGAists push this as far as they can, or we come to some sort of stalemate. The decision, I guess, is ours at this point.

Shelton Bumgarner is a writer and photographer living in Richmond, Va. He may be reached at migukin (at) gmail (dot) com.

What About the 2,000 Children Lost In The System? #KeepFamiliesTogether

by Shelton Bumgarner
@bumgarls

The cruelty of the Trump Administration’s April change in immigration policy and subsequent tactical retreat through an Executive Order seems now to be quickly fading in the minds of the populace. Unfortunately, at last count there are about 2,000 children still in the system who have been torn from their families.

A real chance exists that the complete clusterfuck that is the Trump Administration, the fate of these children will be overtaken by events and they will, simply, fade away. Now that Congressional Republicans feel significantly more at ease. They now can go back to being complicit at best and collaborators at worse.

The stain on our nation’s honor caused by the roughly 2,000 children left in limbo and out of the arms of their families will be just another blotch on America’s good name and the Trump Administrator will grind on. There doesn’t seem to be anything that is going to change this. This is, to say the least, troubling.

But as of right now, that seems to be the fate of these hapless children. Under anything akin to normal circumstances, there would be hearings and even, perhaps, a non-partisan commission establish to fix this problem as quickly as possible. But I don’t have much hope. It seems as though outside of the usual center-Left suspects, there is such systemic rot that in the existing American Constitutional system that effectively nothing will be done by the greater body politic.

It’s very disturbing and unsettling that the fate of basically 2,000 children will effectively fade so much from the public conscious that they will fall into an Orwellian memory hole. Is this who we are now? Is this the United States of America? Have we been so thrown out of sorts by the constant gaslighting on the part of the Trump Administration that we’ll simply move on from all of this in a few days and assume it’s been fixed?

As of this moment I’m afraid that is, in fact, the case. It doesn’t seem as though what should happen — that the fate of these children be seen as an imminent threat to the moral leadership of the United States is going to occur. We’re just going to forget about these kids, re-elect the Vichy Republicans in Congress and eight years from now President James Woods will be talking about the need to expand our Trump branded gulag archipelago.

I hope I’m wrong. I really do.

We’re Better Than This #Resist #TenderAge

by Shelton Bumgarner
@bumgarls

As I write this, it’s the morning after we learned that the United States government is holding extremely young immigrant children in “tender age” facilities. I spend some time last night talking to my evangelical sister, trying to convince her that while, yes, the nation’s immigration policy is in dire need of fixing, we needed to fix the specific policy problem causing such children to be put in harms way.

Alas, she didn’t really get around to agreeing with me the way I hoped she would.

So while I have liberal fever dreams that this, at last, would be the thing to leave a significant welt on Trump’s administration, if I can’t get someone like my sister to have enough empathy and compassion for these children to focus on repealing the specific policy that got us into the situation in the first place, that’s just not going to happen.

The United States is just too divided at this point. The economy is doing too well and “securing borders” is too important to Trump’s base for that to happen. Whatever solution there happens to come about on this issue won’t happen any time soon. It could be a week or more before Congress finally gets its head out of its ass long enough to come to some sort of fix that Trump could very well then promptly veto because it doesn’t give him is damn wall.

So we’re likely to have a pitched political battle for the foreseeable future and either Trump manages to distract us with an even larger outrage or he doesn’t. Either he makes yet another cold, hard political calculation and buckles down for a long hard fight or when he does that calculation he decides to give in and blame the Democrats for whatever reason he can pull out of his ass.

Therefore, while I still believe we’re better than this, there probably won’t be any cut-and-dried solution to this problem. Trump will survive, if not prosper after a few bumps and we’ll move on to the next shitstorm. I wish I was wrong, but, alas, it does not appear that I am.

But if you do want to get a more clear-cut result, you’re going to have to raise some hell. Raise hell in a way that gets people’s attention. It may be our only hope.

Trump’s ‘Prosecution Initiative’ Crisis Update For June 19th, 2018

by Shelton Bumgarner
@bumgarls

For no other reason than to simply establish where thing are in my own mind, here is an overview of where things stand in this entirely self-concocted immigrant family separation policy crisis on the part of Donald J. Trump. I hope this gets wrapped up pretty quick and I don’t have to a lot of these, but as of right now, things aren’t looking good.

A little background. This crisis began when, at the behest of tin-pot Hitler Stephen Miller, Trump through Attorney General Jeff Sessions enacted a “zero tolerance” policy when it came to people coming across the American Southwest border illegally. Remember, this is a “policy” not a law and Trump, if he had an ounce of human decency, could fix this problem quite quickly. The memo that established this policy is below.

This set off a chain of events that we are now dealing with. As a result of this zero tolerance policy, hundreds, if not thousands of children have been ripped from their families, some of them, allegedly, out of their mother’s arms after having been told they would be given a bath.

Anyway, the news has been coming hard and fast today when it comes to this story. The president tweeted this morning that immigrants were going to “infest” the nation.

The rest of the day was a whirlwind of news whipping the nation’s attention this way and that. It was difficult to grasp what was gong on at times the news popped up so quickly. Some 600 members of the United Methodist Church condemned member Jeff Sessons’ involvement in this clusterfuck. This joined a whole host of religious leaders and groups who echoed a similar sentiment over the course of the last few days.

Things continued to get crazier and crazier as celebrity attorney Michael Avenatti of all people has jumped into the fray, representing about 20 immigrants who have been torn from their families.

It was was one of those news days that didn’t seem like it was going to end, with news breaking left and right during the course of it. A growing chorus of politicians jumped into the mess all demanding one thing — either a law be passed that fixed this issue, or that Trump would show some compassion and fix the damn thing himself. Ted Cruz came up with some bait and switch legislation that purports to fix the problem at hand, but in reality actually makes matters worse. A group of 12 Republican Senators sent a letter to their former colleague Sessions to put a pause on the “prosecution initiative” policy until Congress could pull its head out of its ass long enough to fix the problem. The letter is below.

There was, in general, a flurry of pretty meaningless jabber by an array of Congressmen and Senators angling to appease an angry electorate. But the simple fact remains that this “prosecution imitative” continues to be in place and there doesn’t seem to be any fix for it in the near future. Trump refuses to accept what he’s done is wrong and Congress is so divided and slow moving that it could be a week or more before anything finally gets done about it.

So, we wait. I hope this gets wrapped up in the next day or so, but it’s not looking good. God only knows how bad things are going to get if Trump sticks to his guns.

Shelton Bumgarner is a writer and photographer livings in Richmond, Va. He may be reached at migukin (at) gmail (dot) com.