SATURDAY: David Brooks talks the talk!

SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 2026

The gentleman gets it right: It reminded us of one of our favorite passages from literaturealthough, in fairness, there are surely many excellent passages we have never read.

(It reminded us of Willa Cather's treasured words in My Antonia. "I always knew I should live long enough to see my country girls come into their own," Cather's narrator says. For reasons we'll try to explain, we'll post the fuller passage below.)

For now, we're referring to what David Brooks said and did on last night's PBS NewsHour. The background here is simple:

The Supreme Court, in a 6-3 vote, had struck down a substantial portion of President Trump's treasured tariffs. In response, the president had call them (almost) every name in the book. 

There he went again! The president said he was "ashamed of certain members of the Court, absolutely ashamed for not having the courage to do what's right for our country." 

He said they were "a disgrace to our nation, those justices." He said they were "just being fools and lapdogs for the RINOs and the radical left Democrats."

"They're very unpatriotic," the president said, "and disloyal to our Constitution.  It's my opinion that the Court has been swayed by foreign interests," he said, with les Chinois specifically mentioned at one point. 

Before he was done, he even said that the six disloyal jurists were "an embarrassment to their families." Little was left unsaid. 

Last evening, on the NewsHour, Geoff Bennett mentioned this reaction. When he did, David Brooks said this:

BENNETT (2/20/26): "Disloyal to our Constitution." Is there a point at which the president's rhetoricmaybe we're already therebecomes corrosive to the institution itself?

BROOKS: Well, Donald Trump has never had an honest disagreement with somebody. And where you say, "Oh, I disagree with you," and without him going ad hominem.

And that is just his nature. It is the nature of somebody with a narcissistic personality disorder to think, "I am the center, and everything that's an assault on me cannot be anything but a shameful attack on all that is right and good."

Brooks went on from therebut he had used some technical medical language. We're hoping that's a badly needed first step down a long and winding road.

Is the sitting president caught in the grip of a narcissistic personality disorder?" And if so, what exactly does some such assessment actually mean?

Brooks was using technical diagnostic languagelanguage from the prevailing DSM-5. Assuming he meant what he said, he was saying that the president is afflicted with what is still often described as a "mental illness"but what does some medical diagnosis actually mean? 

Obviously, David Brooks is not a doctorate-holding clinical therapist. The president's niece, Mary L. Trump, actually is.

In her best-selling 2020 book, Too Much and Never Enough, she had offered a diagnosis which Brooks was now advancingbut she'd also moved beyond that one assessment. "A case could be made that he also meets the criteria for antisocial personality disorder, which in its most severe form is generally considered sociopathy," she had also said.

Dating back to the 1960s, the mainstream press has agreed that medical assessments of that type must never be a part of this nation's political discourse. In our view, that was always an excellent ruleuntil the time came when it suddenly wasn't.

In our view, Brooks did the right thing last night. He did the right thing when he walked away from that long-standing prohibition. Having said that, we'll also say this:

If we as a people ever move on to a productive discussion of such medical topics, we must learn to offer such diagnoses in sorrow rather than anger. Such provisional assessments must be offered as statements of concern, not as apparent insults.

Cather's narrator "always knew" that the disregarded immigrant girls he admired so deeply would go on to preside over the finest farms in the state of Nebraska. We ourselves had perhaps always suspected that David Brooks might be the person who would start to walk across a border line which was keeping the American nation, such as it is, from a mature discussion of the sitting president's impulses and behaviors.

We admire Brooks for apparently choosing to take that first step last night. That saidborrowing (in translation) from Chekhov's widely admired story, The Lady With the Lapdog, we'll also suggest this:

 "The end is still a long way away and the most complicated and difficult part [of this undertaking] is only just beginning."

What does it actually mean when some such medical diagnosis is advanced? What is actually being said about the person in question? Brooks broke through a barrier last night. He dropped the familiar colloquial turns of phrase and employed the specific medical language. 

Had we always suspected that he might be the one to go first? Last night, the analysts stared slack-jawed at their TV screens as they saw him actually do it. 

We were thunderstruck, as they were. Also, we thought of that treasured passage from Cather, whose narrator knew all along.

We'll return to this general topic next week. Last night, for all to see as he took a first step, David Brooks got it right.

Starting Monday: What do medical diagnoses of that type actually mean? How should they be advanced?

Cather (and her narrator) speak: For whatever reason, we thought of one of our favorite passages when we saw Brooks cross that line. 

At present, we Americans are confronted with a highly unusual political situation. We should perhaps find our frameworks of understanding off somewhere in the realm of high literature, thereby escaping our debilitating fixation on whatever it is that President Trump said ten seconds ago.

With respect to Cather's book, has anyone else ever advocated with such ardor? 

The situation Cather described had little to do with our current difficult state of affairs. But Cather's protagonist, Jim Burden, had always known that the immigrant girls he so deeply admired were going to prevail in the end. 

Had we ourselves perhaps suspected that David Brooks would one day walk across a prevailing line?

We love the ardor Cather's narrator expresses in support of the "immigrant girls." This is not our struggling nation's specific situation today, but it's a wonderful form of escape from the latest fusillade of insults from that one usual source:

My Antonia: Book Two, Chapter IX

There was a curious social situation in Black Hawk. All the young men felt the attraction of the fine, well-set-up country girls who had come to town to earn a living, and, in nearly every case, to help the father struggle out of debt, or to make it possible for the younger children of the family to go to school.

Those girls had grown up in the first bitter-hard times, and had got little schooling themselves. But the younger brothers and sisters, for whom they made such sacrifices and who have had ‘advantages,’ never seem to me, when I meet them now, half as interesting or as well educated. The older girls, who helped to break up the wild sod, learned so much from life, from poverty, from their mothers and grandmothers; they had all, like Ántonia, been early awakened and made observant by coming at a tender age from an old country to a new.

I can remember a score of these country girls who were in service in Black Hawk during the few years I lived there, and I can remember something unusual and engaging about each of them. Physically they were almost a race apart, and out-of-door work had given them a vigor which, when they got over their first shyness on coming to town, developed into a positive carriage and freedom of movement, and made them conspicuous among Black Hawk women.

[...]

The Bohemian and Scandinavian girls could not get positions as teachers, because they had had no opportunity to learn the language. Determined to help in the struggle to clear the homestead from debt, they had no alternative but to go into service....but every one of them did what she had set out to do, and sent home those hard-earned dollars. The girls I knew were always helping to pay for ploughs and reapers, brood-sows, or steers to fatten.

One result of this family solidarity was that the foreign farmers in our county were the first to become prosperous. After the fathers were out of debt, the daughters married the sons of neighbors—usually of like nationality—and the girls who once worked in Black Hawk kitchens are to-day managing big farms and fine families of their own; their children are better off than the children of the town women they used to serve.

I thought the attitude of the town people toward these girls very stupid. If I told my schoolmates that Lena Lingard’s grandfather was a clergyman, and much respected in Norway, they looked at me blankly. What did it matter? All foreigners were ignorant people who couldn’t speak English. There was not a man in Black Hawk who had the intelligence or cultivation, much less the personal distinction, of Ántonia’s father. Yet people saw no difference between her and the three Marys; they were all Bohemians, all ‘hired girls.’

I always knew I should live long enough to see my country girls come into their own, and I have. To-day the best that a harassed Black Hawk merchant can hope for is to sell provisions and farm machinery and automobiles to the rich farms where that first crop of stalwart Bohemian and Scandinavian girls are now the mistresses...

Cather's narrator goes on from there to a much more striking (and tragic) assessment of the social lives of the young people in this Nebraska town. We love the ardor of his advocacy on behalf of these hard-working "country girls"Spoiler alert!whose physical beauty and physical vibrancy "shone out too boldly against a conventional background."

We love the ardor Jim Burden displays. He says he "always knew."

The situation we're facing is different. We hope Brooks took a first step.


KAFKA'S DESCENDANTS: A little small mutt went on the air...

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 2026

...and evoked Kafka's hoof: For us, it has never quite reached the level you might call Kafkaesque.

That said, the phenomenon one might call The Amazement began in 2011. It had never occurred to us that some such act of misdirection could persuade so many.

That phenomenon was driven by Citizen Trump. Last night, fifteen years later, a little small mutt, with millions watching, continued to toy with the structure of the known world.

As usual, he opened his show with two to three minutes of jokes. Believe it or burn forever in Hell, this was the first joke he told:

Good evening, everyone. 

A new report claims that video compiled by the Obama Foundation shows that the former president wept in front of staffers after Donald Trump won the presidency. 

Sources say Obama was worried about the future of his country. 

You knowKenya!

Halfwits in the audience laughed. For the report on which this sally was based, you can just click here.

Friend, did President Obama weep that night? We don't have the slightest idea!

We'd score that report "a bit inconclusive." In the larger sense, though, there you have it:

Fifteen years later, the little small mutt of our failed "cable news" was still pimping the Kenya theme! (As he repeatedly does!)

On this particular evening, the Fox News Channel's Martha MacCallum was one of the flyweights surrounding this child. In our view, someone should ask MacCallum this:

Given the Catholicism you find so important, why are you willing to associate yourself with ongoing conduct like this? 

(From AI Overview: "Fox News anchor Martha MacCallum is a practicing Catholic who frequently discusses her faith, upbringing, and, as of 2025, participated in a pilgrimage to Rome with the Archdiocese of New York." For the record, and stating the obvious, there's no reason why she shouldn't do such things as that.)

MacCallum is 62 years old at this point. (The nut-ball is 61!) She still isn't willing to walk away from behavior like that, or from the giant salary her compliance continues to bring her.

Fifteen years later, this small little mutt is still out there, pimping this brain cell-killing theme. At 5 o'clock, he overtalks Tarlov. At 10, the nutcase does that!

(In fairness, someone has apparently told him to stop comparing liberal women to horses, cattle, pigs and whales, dogs and unspecified "livestock." This happens much less frequently now. He may have been told he must stop.)

On the downside, he keeps putting pictures in people's heads with undermine the possibility of the American project, such as it has been. As he does this, Blue American orgs stare off into space:

Nothing to look atmove right along, Blue America's top stars have all said.

(Full disclosure: There's always been something wrong with this guy, dating back to his famous hiring of the several dwarfs. His current bosses have found a way to make money off his unusual condition.)

At any rate, like Jesus before him, Obama wept! He wept for his countryfor Kenya! The little guy opened with that last night. The theme dates back to 2011, when Citizen Trump, caddied by Rachel's drinking pal, began his four- to five-year reign as the king of American birthers.

Today, we admit it again. As of 2010, we didn't know that a person could get so many people to believe something as stupid as that.

In fairness, many people are born in Kenya; it happens every day! For example, Lupita Nyong'o wasn't born in Kenyabut she almost could have been.

That said, Barack Obama wasn't born in Kenya. He was actually born in Hawaii. 

As we eventually noted, no other American president was ever born that far from Kenya! No matter! Citizen Trump, capably caddied by Rachel's pal, kept going on the Fox News Channel and making his ludicrous claims. 

(He'd even sent people to Hawaii to check the whole thing out!)

Before too long, surveys began to arrive. They seemed to show that an amazing percentage of voters had come to believe this baldly unfounded claim. 

At first, we assumed those surveys had to be wrong in some way. We didn't know that you could get that many people to believe some such stupid, inaccurate claim.

(The New York Times was the hometown paper of record. The editorial board endlessly dragged its heels beforestirred by our own award-winning jibesthe board finally agreed to complain.)

Back then, Citizen Trump pimped it out. Last night, fifteen years later, so did the little small mutt, with MacCallum chuckling him on. 

(This is the way the world ends, this one guy once wrote. Not with a bang but a whimper.)

All last week, we watched other stalwarts pretend to discuss the terrible crime which has occurred out in Tucson. They kept pretending to discuss this crime all day and also all night.

For CNN, we'll assume this provided a ratings boost. At the Fox News Channel, this full investment helped get President Trump out of the news at a time when his ape-invested Truth Social postalong with fatal shootings in Minnesotawere dragging his ratings down.

For us, the dumbness of those pseudo-discussions was a very tough pill to choke down. Was our species built for this line of work? Very early, this Monday morning, we flashed on Kafka's hoof.

What in the world is Kafka's hoof? In a related bit of behavior, a second cousin, three times removed, was mutting it up last night. We're thinking of Kafka's ability to dream up Gregory Samsa, perhaps his most famous protagonist, a salesman "who wakes to find himself inexplicably transformed into a huge insect."

Had Kafka once glanced down at his foot as he lay on his bed and suddenly seen something quite different? Did an instant flicker of vision place him in line with Darwin, and then with (the admittedly fallible) Freud, and perhaps with the later Wittgenstein?

Man [sic] is the rational animal, the western world has long said and been told. We were made in God's image, we've also long been told. 

We're just like the critters, it's been said and implied, except breathed into us was a soul, or perhaps just this force called pure reason. It's even been said that we humans are conscious, and perhaps that the others are not.

Man [sic] is the rational animal! Except, as we all know, we aren't!

The little guy with the giant salary opened with Kenya last night. MacCallum just sat there and took it. So did the other three analysts.

On Monday morning, we flashed on Kafka and Samsa. Did Kafka once see, in the briefest of moments, that, for all our admirable traits, we aren't what has always been said?

For the record, the Fox News Channel will roll right along. Nothing to look at! Just move along, The Voices have unwisely said!


THURSDAY: The Times reports what Banfield said!

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 2026

Things go downhill from there: The New York Times has finally reported what Ashleigh Banfield said. 

We refer to what Banfield said, two weeks ago, about Nancy Guthrie's disappearance.

Should the New York Times have done that? We can't say that the answer is obvious. We can tell you this:

Over the course of the past few weeks, much of the foolishness in the "cable news" pseudo-discussion has involved an obvious fact. We refer to the fact that anchors and their endless streams of useless experts weren't allowed to go anywhere near this awkward topic. 

For whatever reason, the Times has finally broken the wall of silence. It did so yesterday, in this report about "rampant speculation" concerning this unsolved crime

In Guthrie Mystery, Rampant Speculation Is Like ‘Salt on the Open Wound’

[...]

The spotlight on the case has led to tens of thousands of tips, the authorities have said. But the accompanying conjecture has complicated an already difficult investigation and has stung Ms. Guthrie’s grieving family.

The assertion that Ms. Guthrie’s son-in-law was, or could be, the “prime suspect,” as the news anchor and podcast host Ashleigh Banfield put it, risked endangering law enforcement officials’ delicate relationship with the Guthrie family, a key source of information, Sheriff Nanos said. Ms. Banfield has defended her report and maintained that the son-in-law was the focus of investigators at the time.

Such speculation has also inspired a flood of baseless tips, the sheriff added, which has distracted officers from more credible clues.

Say what? Nancy Guthrie’s son-in-law was, or could be, the “prime suspect?" 

In fact, Banfield said that early on. Yesterday, for better or worse, the Times chose to report that fact.

Having said that, is it true? Was Nancy Guthrie's son-in-law ever the "prime suspect" in this matter? Was he ever any kind of a "suspect" at all? Should he have been a "suspect," or perhaps some sort of "person of interest?" 

We can't answer those questions! We can perhaps tell you this:

Once the Times finally decided, for whatever reason, to report what Banfield said, it probably shouldn't have doctored other facts to convey the impression that her claim has been abandoned.

In fact, as you can see in this report, Banfield reaffirmed her claim, just last Thursday, in a podcast interview with Dan Abrams. Her claim may be right or her claim may be wrongbut, whether rightly or wrongly, her claim has not been abandoned

Abrams is perfectly sane. He decided to give Banfield a fairly high-end platform. She told him that her unnamed law enforcement source says his assertion stands.

Her source may be completely wrong; we have no way of knowing. There may not even be any such source! How are we supposed to know?

That said, law enforcement did conduct at least one three-hour, night-time search of the home of the person in question, and they apparently did return, a few days later, to search the woods around that house:

As we noted last week, much of the inanity of the round-the-clock cable discussions of this crime has involved the refusal of CNN and the Fox News Channel to come to terms with those superficially puzzling facts. 

In fact, an in-law's house had been extensively searched, as was the surrounding area. Last week, cable hosts kept noting those facts, then throwing to their expert guests for comment. 

The expert guests would then filibuster on some unrelated topic, after which the cable hosts would pretend that they hadn't heard the expert guest performing an obvious dodge.

Why did they search the in-law's house? Again and again, night after night, our "journalists" kept refusing to speculate or say or admit that the question existed. They speculated about everything else, but they performed an endless series of obvious dives concerning that obvious question. 

Is "true crime" reporting extremely good for cable news ratings and profits? CNN and Fox went all in on round the clock pseudo coverage, but both channels had plainly decreed that the search of the in-law's environs should be reported but could not be explained, not even provisionally.

That made for an endless series of ridiculous non-exchange exchanges. Yesterday, along came the New York Times, and when it finally reported what Banfield has said, it incorrectly made it sound like her claim has been discarded.

Journalistically, this has been a clownish cable performance pretty much all the way down. 

For starters, the round the clock cable coverage never made journalistic sense. That said, cable news is largely entertainment and agitprop under current arrangements, a fact which has become that much clearer as this journalistic charade has unfolded.

We feel sorry for all involved in this horrible unsolved crime. The "journalism" has largely been an extended charade about a tragic event.

To be clear, we don't know if Banfield's report was correct; we don't have the slightest idea. That said, cable news truly seems to love to yammer, to burn the long hours away.


KAFKA'S DESCENDANTS: "I didn't expect the killings," she said!

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 2026

A hint of the Kafkaesque: For one person with whom the New York Times spoke, her experience of the past year may have become Kafkaesque. 

It's as we noted in yesterday's report. The Times spoke with thirteen Democratic or Dem-leaning voters for an "America in Focus" report. Concerning the current state of the nation, one of those voters said this:

CANDY, 46: I would say it’s exactly what I imagined it was going to be like. I called out a lot of the things that are currently happening, and I keep calling out things that I feel are going to happen that haven’t happened. Maybe I didn’t think citizens were going to get killed. But my thoughts and my feelings about what was going to happen are close enough.

On balance, this womanage 46, a Nevada residentsays she hasn't been surprised by the past year's flood of events. On the other hand, she says she "maybe" didn't think that two people were going to be shot and killed in the streets of Minneapolis as part of the overall deal. 

(Earlier, in Chicago, how did Marimar Martinez manage to avoid being killed? She was shot five times by federal agents, but somehow managed to survive. It's fairly clear that those federal agents proceeded to lie about what Martinez had supposedly done before one opened fire. We'll guess that Candy, a good decent person, also may not have foreseen conduct like that.)

For Candy, a Nevada resident, did those killings start to make the state of play perhaps feel a bit Kafkaesque? We can't necessarily say that they did, Yesterday, though, we cited these statements by two other people with whom the New York Times spoke. 

KATIE, 36: I wake up in the morning and I look at my phone, and it’s another headline. I saw something on Facebook the other day that was from The Onion. And I had to double-check to make sure that that’s where it was from because, the reality that we’re living in right now, it’s hard to tell the difference between real life and satire, which is not a good place to be in.

[...]

JOHN, 43: If you asked me this 12 years ago, it was something no one really talked about. And now it’s a daily conversation...It’s like, daily, you could have three or four things that you would never even think 10, 15 years ago would happen. 

For that 36-year-old Virginia resident, "the reality that we’re living in" may no longer exactly feel like "real life." Meanwhile, John, a resident of New Jersey, says things are happening every daythings you never could have imagined not that long ago.

Does this rise to the level of Kafkaesque? Not necessarily, nothough the ghost of Rod Serling may be around and about as Blue Americans occasionally flirt with hints of The Twilight Zone.

Below, we'll offer the strangest example of shattered presumptions of which we ourselves are aware. First, though, we turn to something Wes Moore said on CBS this past Sunday night. 

Governor Moore (D-Md.) was interviewed by Norah O'Donnell. The gentleman is unmistakably sharp. At one point, he even said this:

Gov. Wes Moore argues Biden "needed to do more" on immigration but blasts Trump's crackdown

Maryland Gov. Wes Moore told CBS News immigration is an issue the country has "punted on for a very long time" amid the nation's heated debate over federal enforcement.

While he has publicly condemned the Trump administration's immigration policies as a "cruel and reckless political agenda," he told CBS News senior correspondent Norah O'Donnell that former President Joe Biden "did not have this right."

"We needed to do more. That, I don't think anyone can argue that we had the system worked out under President Bidenthat immigration was worked out," he said during a town hall that aired Sunday. 

Say what? Under President Biden, the southern border was handled so poorly that "I don't think anyone can argue that we had the system worked out?" 

Is a fellow like Governor Moore really permitted to say that? Apparently, yes, he is. Just last weekend, over in Munich, Hillary Clinton may have said a somewhat similar thingor then again, she may not have.

For us Blues, the world has gone borderline Kafka during this second Trump term. For Reds, is it possible that some such dislocation occurred during the Biden years? Did some such dislocation occur as they watched footage of unauthorized immigrants streaming across the southern borderfootage we Blues were neither asked nor allowed to see on our own cable channels?

Fellow citizens, we're just asking! Experts say that we the humans, being heavily tribal, aren't wired for such ruminations. 

For our money, we think that Moore is on the right track when he inexplicably decides to state the obvious. For ourselves, the world hasn't exactly gone Kafkaesque during this second Trump term. 

At times, the world has gone full Witnesshas made us long for the type of internal exile the Harrison Ford character undertakes during that Oscar-nominated 1985 film.

In that film, Ford's charactera Philadelphia police officerflees to Pennsylvania's Amish country in an echo of what Plato said in The Seventh Letter:

"When I saw all this, and other things as bad, I grew disgusted and withdrew from the wickedness of the times."

Ford's character flees from the wickedness of the times, partly in hopes of saving his own life. Eventually, like Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca, he sees that he has to "return to the fight."

(Like Bogey, he leaves the love of his life behind in the person of Kelly McGillis. "We'll always have Amish country," he might as well have said as he heads back to Philadelphia at the end of the film.)

We ourselves have felt that longing for withdrawal as the flooding of the zone has rolled on and on and on. We agree with John, age 43it's reached the point where there are so many bizarre events each day that it has become almost impossible to even pretend to keep up.

Still, as we Blues watch the Trump agenda unfold, has the world gone full Kafkaesque? In fairness, Kafka's protagonist, Gregory Samsa, had to adjust to the fact that he had somehow turned into an insect. 

Has the epistemic dislocation been that extreme for us? For most people, the answer is presumably no.

(Then too, there are all those people in Red America. As we Blues have sometimes proposed and done weird things, had the world gone Kafkaesque for them before the return of President Trump?)

For Blues, flickers of Kafkaesque have possibly come into view as the society's normal procedures have been upended again and again. For ourselves we flashed on Kafka this Monday morning as we struggled with two fell weeks of pseudo-coverage of the disappearance of Nancy Guthrie, age 84, from her Tucson home.

Two "cable news" channels had gone all in on the pseudo-coverage. Around the clock, all day and all night, the channels had presented repetitive pseudo-discussions, in which observers who had nothing to say were sent on the air to say it.

When the very occasional factlets popped up, the channels persistently bungled them. As we grew disgusted by the incompetence of the times, we found ourselves thinking of Kafka's hoof.

We suddenly flashed on Kafka's hoof? Tomorrow, right here, we'll explain.

On the whole, we're looking for ways to understand the very unusual world within which we're currently being floodedinto which we've all been thrown. Last week, Jamelle Bouie, who's very sharp, said it's racism, complete full stop.

The columnist said that's what it is. We think it goes beyond that.

Tomorrow: Fleetingly, Kafka's hoof