Posted in Political

Politicians’ Dilemma

Modern politics increasingly resembles a Prisoner’s Dilemma: two rival factions, acting rationally to protect their own power, make choices that make sense individually but lead to a collectively worse outcome for everyone.

The two parties aren’t comprised of idiots. They’re made of people—smart in places, blind in others. They are diverse in their views but often closer in basic hopes than their daily theater suggests. The dilemma begins when winning becomes the only measure. In that world, cooperation is treason, nuance is betrayal, and restraint is surrender.

So each side chooses self-protection by aggression. Outrage captures attention. Certainty outperforms honesty. Press the extremes, harden the language, question motives, bend facts at the edges, and know fiction spreads faster than fact. Each faction believes it can gain a media advantage, juice turnout, and bully the narrative. And for a moment, it works.

Policy becomes performance rather than craft. Trust collapses and voters disengage—because the system feels like a rigged conversation where the loudest liar gets the microphone. Apathy and mistrust become a kind of soft sabotage: not ballot tampering, but something more corrosive—citizens deciding the whole thing isn’t worth their Soul.

This isn’t an accident; it’s an incentivized plan. Our elected officials increasingly represent the party brand, the donor ecosystem, and themselves. Power is a narcotic. It convinces people they’re necessary, even when they’re merely loud. It rewards those who protect the throne, not those who repair the house.

We aren’t alone. Across many democracies (and some autocracies), politics is slipping into the same trap: rivals optimize for short-term advantage, and the rational move for each becomes the destructive one for all. Wars begin with no end imagined, or even desired. Peace becomes transactional, renegotiated ad nauseam. Recognizing this shared challenge can inspire us to work together for change.

There is a way out, but it requires clarity about the real game. Change the payoffs. Reward cooperation and punish performative defection. Refuse to be governed by outrage. Stop sharing the sensationalism. Demand reforms that dilute zero-sum incentives. Encourage open primaries, ranked-choice voting, anti-gerrymandering rules, and debate formats that penalize lying rather than reward it. And when leaders choose the spiral, don’t romanticize it as “strategy.” Name it. Reject it. Replace it. Ending the collective destruction of the Politician’s Dilemma is our responsibility because they have proven incapable.  NeverFearTheDream    simplebender.com

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Lap Around the Sun: Daily Steps Forward
by WCBarron

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Joy in Alzheimer’s: My Mom’s Brave Walk into Dementia’s Abyss
by WCBarron

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Posted in Communication

Patriotic Treason

True Patriots Can Not be Silenced…No Silence, No Fear

In this 250th-anniversary year, the FCC, through its “Pledge America Campaign,” is encouraging broadcasters to air more “patriotic, pro-America,” “positive,” “uplifting” non-critical programming celebrating our national story. On its face, it sounds harmless, even unifying. No one says criticism is forbidden in this campaign. Still, when a regulatory agency that controls broadcast licenses asks for “pro-American” and “uplifting” messaging, the subtext seems clear—celebrate, don’t scrutinize. But it raises an uncomfortable question: isn’t one of America’s greatest strengths the freedom to question our myths, challenge our institutions, and resist messaging that feels more like image management than truth-telling?

A healthy nation should not fear scrutiny; it should welcome it. We do not grow weaker by examining our history from multiple angles. We grow wiser. We stand taller when we are willing to look not only at the victors’ triumphs, but also at the suffering of the defeated, the excluded, and the conveniently forgotten.

Patriotism that cannot tolerate criticism is not confidence; it is insecurity dressed up as ceremony.

We should be honest about what troubles many Americans today. When institutions redact, conceal, and protect the powerful while exposing the vulnerable, we should call it what it is: a cover-up. When the history of slavery is sanitized, minimized, or rewritten, that is not a nation maturing—it is a nation lying to itself. And when a country suppresses the weak and demeans others for gain, it is not ascending. It is declining.

When citizens see voting access narrowed in some places, districts drawn to protect power rather than represent people, and public narratives shaped to flatter rather than inform, they do not feel united. They feel managed—manipulated. They begin to doubt the message’s legitimacy, no matter how many flags are wrapped around it.

Still, this is not a voice against patriotism. It is a voice for a broader form of it.

We should be proud that many people in this country still protest peacefully, speak openly, and challenge policies they believe are unjust. That tradition is not a flaw in America; it is one of the few things that has consistently made America worth admiring. Our best moments have not come from silence or obedience. They have come when ordinary people insisted that the country live up to its own promises and that power be held legally accountable.

That is not treason. That is citizenship. That is patriotism.

Treason is not dissent. Treason is the quiet surrender of conscience—the nodding along to cover-ups, cruelty, and convenient historical rewriting because it feels safer or easier. Patriotism is not taking your hat off on cue, reciting the Pledge by rote, or consuming approved “pro-American” programming and songs. Patriotism is telling the truth about who we are and who we have been. Real patriotism is hard. It asks us to love the country enough to tell it the truth.

And truth includes this: we have made mistakes, some of them grave. We are not diminished by admitting it. We are diminished by pretending otherwise. A nation grows stronger when it knows its history fully, speaks honestly about its failures, and chooses, again and again, to do better. We become stronger still when we can say, without fear or excuse, that we’ve been wrong, but we’ll be better.         NeverFearTheDream   simplebender.com

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Federal Communications Commission. “Chairman Carr Announces Pledge America Campaign.” Federal Communications Commission, 20 Feb. 2026, docs.fcc.gov/public/attachments/DOC-418890A1.pdf


Lap Around the Sun: Daily Steps Forward
by WCBarron

Buy at Amazon Buy at Barnes & Noble Buy at Books2Read

Joy in Alzheimer’s: My Mom’s Brave Walk into Dementia’s Abyss
by WCBarron

Buy at Amazon Buy at Barnes & Noble Buy at Books2Read

A form of this article was first published on 3/10/26 in the Bend Bulletin