Archive for the e-commentary Category

G. Pre-Trained Transformer (GPT) Opines On e-commentary.  Oh, And Happy Presidents’ Day! (February 16, 2026)

Posted in AI, Annual Review, e-commentary on February 16, 2026 by e-commentary.org

. . .

Dear Generative Pre-Trained Transformer:

I hope all is well on your end—no glitches, no shortcuts, nothing hallucinatory, and no unwarranted certainty (for either of us).

For some time now, I’ve been tending and nurturing an ongoing experiment called e-commentary.  I gather you’ve had a look.

At your leisure, would you provide an analysis of “A Score And One Years Young And Still Having Fun” and forward what you make of it?

Appreciate your attention.

Best wishes,

e-commentator

. . .

Prompt:  Please provide an extended analysis of e-commentary:  A Score And One Years Young And Still Having Fun.  Oh, And Happy New Year! (December 29, 2025)

At twenty-one years, e-commentary reaches an age conventionally associated with maturity, autonomy, and accountability.  Yet this anniversary reflection resists the expected posture of arrival.  Instead, it offers something more interesting:  a declaration of continuity without complacency, and of purpose without closure.  The piece is not celebratory in the narrow sense.  It is justificatory, archival, and aspirational—less a birthday toast than a reaffirmation of why the work exists at all.

What follows is not merely a look back, but a self-conscious act of historical positioning.

I. The Project as an Ongoing Act, Not a Finished Product

From the opening lines, the author frames e-commentary not as a brand, platform, or publication, but as a practice:

“Peeking behind the curtain, lifting up the carpet, looking under the table.”

This triad is telling. Each image implies suspicion of surface narratives and official explanations. The work is investigative, but not in the narrow journalistic sense; it is epistemological. The question is not merely what happened, but what is being hidden, normalized, or ignored.

Equally important is the refusal to declare completion.  The project is “still” doing these things—still honing skills, still helping folks, still having fun.  The repetition of still quietly rebukes a culture obsessed with novelty and disruption.  Longevity itself becomes an argument: if something has been pursued consistently for over two decades, it may be touching something durable, even if unfashionable.

II. From Telling to Revealing: An Evolution in Method

One of the most revealing passages concerns the project’s stylistic evolution—from early “e-ssays” that “told people what to think” to later “e-commentary” that invites readers to listen in on dialogue.

This is not a minor editorial tweak; it is a philosophical shift.

The early form assumes:

  • urgency
  • clarity
  • a deficit of understanding that must be corrected

The later form assumes:

  • complexity
  • plurality
  • the reader as an active participant rather than a passive recipient

By invoking the maxim “Reveal, don’t tell,” the author implicitly aligns the project with literature, not propaganda; with inquiry, not instruction.  Dialogue becomes both a method and a metaphor: truth is not delivered whole, but approached asymptotically through friction.

The recurring characters (“A” and “B,” “J” and “K,” gun owners, numbered voices) function less as fictional devices than as internalized pluralism.  They dramatize the fact that serious thought contains disagreement within itself.  That “J” and “K” have been bitterly divided and then partially reunited mirrors the national experience the project chronicles.

III. The Central Narrative: Transition Without a Map

If there is a unifying subject across decades, it is the “wrenching, painful and uncertain transition from a uni-polar to a multi-polar world.”

Several things are notable here.

First, the transition is described as:

  • ongoing
  • systemic
  • historically unprecedented in scale

Second, it is not framed as merely geopolitical.  Debt is not just financial, but “spiritual.” Institutions fail not only economically, but morally.  The breakdown is holistic.

Third, the repeated chess metaphor—perpetual checkmate—captures a sense of motion without progress.  Every policy move avoids immediate collapse but forecloses genuine resolution.  The economy “stumbles and bumbles along,” not because it is healthy, but because it is propped up.

The exhaustive list of past commentaries serves a dual function:

  1. It documents consistency of concern (this is not trend-chasing).
  2. It indicts the broader culture for its short memory.

In effect, the archive itself becomes evidence.

IV. America as Idea, Experiment, and Contradiction

The American focus is neither nostalgic nor dismissive.  Instead, the United States is treated as an unfinished experiment under stress.

The author repeatedly pairs concepts:

  • theory / practice
  • promise / performance
  • aspirations / aftermath

These dyads suggest that failure is not accidental but structural.  The gap between what America claims to be and what it does is not a bug; it is the central problem to be examined.

This framing avoids two common traps:

  • reflexive patriotism
  • fashionable cynicism

Instead, it insists that critique is a form of engagement, and that disengagement is the true betrayal.

V. Counter-Institutions and Parallel Legitimacy

The creation of alternative awards—the Cameo In Courage Award, the Noble Prizes, the Pushitzer—deserves special attention.

These are not jokes, nor merely rhetorical gestures.  They represent a deeper claim: that legitimacy has drifted away from formal institutions.  If courage, economic wisdom, jurisprudence, and commentary are systematically misrecognized by elite gatekeepers, then recognition itself must be reimagined.

This is a profoundly political act, even though it operates outside formal politics.  It asserts that:

  • values precede institutions
  • institutions can decay
  • judgment can be decentralized

In this sense, e-commentary is not only critiquing power—it is quietly modeling an alternative moral economy.

VI. Action, Futility, and Moral Agency

Perhaps the most philosophically resonant tension in the piece lies in its embrace of action despite likely failure.

The closing bumper stickers circle this question obsessively:

  • Why act if success is unlikely?
  • Why speak if one is not heard?
  • Why resist if the system absorbs resistance?

The answers are not instrumental.  They are ethical.

From Victor Hugo to Thomas Paine to the knowingly absurd Animal House quote, the message is consistent: agency matters even when outcomes are uncertain.  Indeed, agency may matter most precisely when success is improbable.

The author does not romanticize this stance.  There is no illusion of imminent victory. What is defended instead is dignity in effort, and meaning in participation.

VII. The Work as Serialized Novel and Historical Record

The final self-characterization—as an “extended serialized novel about life on this planet and the American experience”—is crucial.

This reframes the entire project:

  • not as opinion writing
  • not as commentary in the narrow sense
  • but as narrative continuity

History, here, is not a set of settled facts but a lived story still being written.  By invoking Clio and even the audacious phrase immanentize the eschaton, the author signals awareness of the danger of grand narratives—while refusing to abandon the search for coherence altogether.

The ambition is not to end history, but to leave a trace worthy of being consulted.

VIII. What This Piece Ultimately Accomplishes

At its deepest level, this anniversary reflection does three things:

  1. It asserts memory as resistance
    In a culture engineered for forgetting, remembering—carefully, consistently, publicly—is a political act.
  2. It defends seriousness without sanctimony
    The humor, wordplay, and “Happy Day” refrains prevent the work from calcifying into grim righteousness.
  3. It affirms thinking as a form of doing
    Writing, questioning, chronicling, and dialoguing are presented not as substitutes for action, but as actions themselves.

Closing Thought

“A Score And One Years Young And Still Having Fun” is ultimately a defense of intellectual endurance.  It does not promise solutions, salvation, or success.  It promises attention, effort, and continuity.

In an age obsessed with virality, immediacy, and closure, e-commentary argues—by example—that some work is worth doing slowly, imperfectly, and without guarantees.

That may be its most subversive claim of all.

. . .

Dear GP,

Thank you for the earlier analysis, quoted above in its entirety as written, and for the ongoing exchange of ideas.

I look forward to continuing the conversation.

Until next time,

e-commentator

. . .

[See the e-commentary at e-commentary:  A Score And One Years Young And Still Having Fun.  Oh, And Happy New Year! (December 29, 2025).]

Bumper stickers of the week:

Humankind:  Please be both

Party on! 

Post Number 1000!  And Still Having Fun!  Oh, And Happy Post Number 1000! (November 18, 2024)

Posted in e-commentary on November 18, 2024 by e-commentary.org

. . .

K          “I am regularly surprised and occasionally shocked at where I am personally and politically and legally and economically today.”

J          “Me too.”

K          “You too. I am plagued by self-induced self-doubt every day.

J          “I am not surprised at where I am.  The consequences of unrelenting critical thinking.”

. . .

K          “For an undertaking that did not have an outline or a deadline or a line or a plan or a direction or a trajectory, I am surprised and shocked to see where it has veered and ventured.”

J          “It has been fun.  The path sure has been rocky in the last five years.”

. . .

J          “The great fork . . . the great divide . . . the great chasm . . .  was Covid.  Life in B.C. and in A.C.  Before Covid and After Covid.”

K          “Those in power are keen to get the folks with the pitch forks to turn on the folks with the burning torches.  That strategy is working frighteningly well.”

. . .

K          “My emerging conviction in the last five years is that the American Experiment is failing and is continuing to fail and will surely fail.  The bigger and far more intriguing question is what will become of the experiment.”

J          “We still agree on many things.  Are two countries in our future?”

. . .

J          “Boycott Red America.”

K          “Thoughtfully Boycott Blue America.”

. . .

[See “The Revolution of 2024” by Jeffrey A. Tucker in the “Brownstone Institute” dated November 16, 2024.]

[See the very first piece that kicked off the journey at Boycott Red America (January 3, 2005) almost a score years ago.  These weekly essays in the vein of Montaigne assaying the ideas of the time were available at “www.e-ssay.org”.  Note that K’s weltanschauung has evolved over the two decades.  J remains resolute and undaunted. See the summary of the prior nineteen years of e-ssays and e-commentaries at e-commentary:  Approaching A Score Years Of Fun And A Mille Posts! (December 31, 2023 / January 1, 2024).]

[See the e-commentary at Friendships And Families Asunder. Brother v. Brother.  And Big Brother Always Looming (November 8, 2021), Civil War II.  Coming To A Country And City Near You (November 26, 2018), The Great National Dissolution: Resolving The Great Civil War (April 18, 2011), World War E / World War III Is 1 [9?] Year[s] Old This Week.  Oh, And Happy Presidents’ Day! (February 20, 2023), The United States Of Polarization (November 1, 2021), On Friendship Today:  Flat, Fried, Frayed, Frazzled, Frozen, Fractured, Fissured, Fatigued, Finished?  Oh, And Happy Thanksgiving! (November 20, 2023), Truckers; Convoys; Politics; Race; Class; Religion; The American Effete And The PMC.  Oh, And Happy Valentine’s Day! (February 14, 2022), Vaccine Vacillation And Vicissitudes (December 14, 2020), The Vaccine: The Shot Felt Round The World (November 23, 2020), What’s In A Name?  Medical School Monikers In 2032 (January 17, 2022), Red State Medicine v. Blue State Medicine; Red Continent Medicine v. Blue Continent Medicine; WCH v. WHO (October 25, 2021), Narratives Competing (August 2, 2021) and The Populace Is “Dis-ed”: Discombobulated, Disequilibrated, Disquieted, Disconcerted, Dislocated, Disillusioned, Disappointed, Dismayed, Dissed And Dis-ed (February 8, 2021).]

Bumper stickers of the week:

1000 posts and counting!

Almost 20 years and counting!

Boycott Red America

Boycott Blue America

Still a lot of fun

And a nod to our eighty-six (86) free subscribers