Author: Vic Socotra

Arrian: The Electoral College, Jenga and Tyranny of the Majority

Jenga should be a required discipline of political scientists; the game teaches, among other things, the consequences of haste. A game of wooden blocks and balance, it teaches the “simple” reality of balance and center of gravity; it also teaches the danger of haste; if a player acts too quickly, either in removing a block […]

Dinner With Family

Editor’s Note: This piece fits in the back of the book; not the end, though the dinner it describes certainly was a real ending. It is sort of in keeping with my mood this morning. The dinner was an affirmation of a grand life lived in perilous times, and with honor and courage. I have […]

Running AMOC

Editor’s Note: I stirred around 0200 and saw an alert on the tablet computer. I fumbled for my glasses and turned on the bedside light. The New York Times informed me that Uncle Fidel was gone at the age of ninety. I read the obit in the NY Times, which was extensive and ad obviously […]

Written Approval

29 July 2010 Editor’s Note: Turkey Day passed without untoward incident. Jon-without and I camped out at the bar of The Front Page, waiting for the precise moment to swoop down on the lavish buffet that featured all the classic holiday meals. Neither one of us was in a particularly festive mood for a variety […]

Helsinki Calling

23 November 2016 Editor’s Note: 2011 was a good year to hang with Mac. Willow was at the zenith of its culinary achievement about to win back-to-back Washington-area Burger cook-offs, and it did not seem that there was a thing wrong with the world. I was still employed, Mac was active and engaged, and the […]

Frozen in Amber

Editors Note: This was the beginning of the great decline. It is still amazing to me that Mac was still so vital and engaged even as the end was beginning. It is particularly poignant as the holidays come crashing down around us. Gobble gobble! – Vic Frozen in Amber It was the beginning of fall- […]

Life and Island Times: Lesson of the Rain

Heavy Rain My parents were well past the halfway mark to heaven during their life’s last stage four years ago, when the morning sky over the Caloosa River went from gray to almost black and a thunder clap accompanied the first few raindrops that fell. They were heavy, warm, big drops that would have soaked […]

Arrian: Donald Trump: Grand Strategist

Since early 1953 (in Korea), the United States hasn’t lost a battalion sized force (or larger) in combat operations. In Vietnam, Grenada, Panama, Desert Storm, Afghanistan, Iraq, etc., the US has outfought every enemy. Since Desert Storm, including Somalia, the US hasn’t lost any engagement larger than a platoon. In Operation Iraqi Freedom the US […]

Purple Dragon

20 November 2016 Editor’s Note: I was pleased. I managed to pry myself out of bed right around noon. I slept most of the hours after Michigan pried a victory out of the Hoosiers, and the somnolence seemed to have gone a long way to knitting up the raveled sleeves of care, or the flu. […]

Life and Island Times: Supermoon

Fall was full on and the night cool. Waiting for the supermoon show at the beach at low tide ebb was like lying in quickly cooling syrup accompanied by the steady whine of sand gnats. The still air was perfumed with electrified sea salt smell. During this latest supermoon’s rising on Monday November 14th, we […]