MacBeth walks among us?

Macbeth was fascinated with murder until he committed his first. Consumed with paranoia, he continued his murderous ways to avoid suspicion and then the fix was in. Or so some may say.  Almost from the moment of the murder, Scotland became a land depicted as one contrary to its natural progression as it was moving under the former king. It took a while longer for the bloodbath to encircle all in, and associate with, the household and drive them mad.

Of course, we know that as the EXTREME synopsis of Shakespeare’s tragedy, not close to what the historical MacBeth went through. Yes, he too killed, and his victim was King Duncan whose reign he then took for himself. But it was on the field of battle and that was how kingdoms were passed around in the eleventh century.

Often fiction resembles fact but not in that case. Perhaps though it does in the fiction we are currently living. We may not have found ourselves in a Shakespearean tragedy but there is at least a figurative bloodbath happening and those drawing the bath are indeed heading toward, if they haven’t already arrived at, insanity.

The seeming victim of our contemporary Hamlet is free speech, with such decrees as remove this comedian, remove that comedian. But no, it’s not about late night comedians. On the plane back from his recent trip to England, the orange menace railed about networks being “97% against me…that’s bad publicity, bad press…they have licenses you know.”

Let’s look at one of those networks and how intricate this really is. ABC claims Jimmy Kimmel was “pre-empted indefinitely” ostensibly because of a remarks made in a recent monologue. Those who have not listened to that monologue assume it was all about a particular right-leaning activist. But in the entire monologue his name was mention once over a 2 or 3 sentence portion of the bit. The vast majority of the time was devoted to our grand(iose) leader. The one who referenced those licenses.

It so happens ABCs parent corporation is negotiating several routine business and acquisitions which would all require federal approval. One of the network’s affiliate voicing most of the initial outrage Nexstar, happens to have a $6.2 billion purchase of a rival group of television stations pending government approval. The other affiliate group, Sinclair, also is pending FCC approval of their proposal to relax the rules limiting broadcaster ownership of its stations. And Disney itself is pending administration approval for the completion of its ESPN affiliate’s takeover of the NFL network.

There may just be more than speech being challenged with that particular incident. Now the Pentagon’s announcement over the weekend that all stories regarding or referring to the Pentagon must be approved by the Pentagon. That might be a different story  if it gets approved.

Maybe not the bloodbath (yet) but indeed we are living in a time when intelligent people are being silenced so stupid people will not be offended. Sane? I think not.

 

12 thoughts on “MacBeth walks among us?

  1. “… we are living in a time when intelligent people are being silenced so stupid people will not be offended.”

    Yes we are. And who are the snowflakes now? 🤔

  2. His UN ‘speech’ was beyond ridiculous and yet, it is quite ok. I know I wasn’t impressed. But, I’m not maga. The Gov of CA is using all caps in his texts, finding snarky names for persons, ect and Fox (among others) is horrified by the childlike antics. Others are enjoying it and following him. Perhaps Gov Newsom is an unlikely hand to stir the pot?

    1. Oh yeah, Gov Newsom has the pot stirred and boiling. It is amazing how the maganuts drool over their pundits’ ponderings and the head cheesedip’s meanderings and snarky names yet want anyone who isn’t wearing a red hat drawn and quartered for giving back what they hand out.

  3. Don’t you tire of every little bit of news being pulled like taffy, this way and that? Whoever has the loudest voice in the moment is heard. Wouldn’t it be amazing if there were folks who had to censure everything incorrect or just a personal opinion of the news, instead of Walter Cronkite’s straightforward honesty? I can’t stand watching the news because having to slog through what’s true and what isn’t is tedious. Pots are being stirred everywhere.

    1. Oh you are so not alone Dayle. Wouldn’t it be nice if all the newspeople were like Cronkite. But maybe we need to show the politicians some tape of Kennedy and Eisenhower. Couldn’t hurt to make the news a little easier to report that way

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