Hail and farewell, 2025!
Before that year is entirely forgotten, I want to say that it was one of the worst years in my life.
I learned in college that a sample of 1 is not useful for science, but it means plenty to me.
A year ago, a monstrous, lying braggart was sworn into office. A grifter and conman returned to fill his pockets and those of his family and friends, to double his net worth and to accept emoluments from foreign countries, send armed men to inflict brutality on blue cities, disregarding the Constitution.
In only one year, he has shredded our nation’s standing in the world, inflicted terror on our cities, alienated our allies, abandoned efforts to improve the environment, attacked our schools and universities, gloried in bigotry, and devastated the federal civil service.
He sends federal agents or the National Guard into urban districts, to terrorize the residents. People are snatched from their cars, their workplaces, the streets, even as they protest that they are citizens, that they have rights, that they want a lawyer. Their protests are ignored as a pack of masked men grab them, handcuff them, throw them to the ground, punch and kick them in their heads and bodies. Some are detained and disappeared into a network of prisons, then deported without due process. Some are imprisoned for days or weeks, then released.
Is this America? Never in my life have I been stopped by military officers and asked for my papers,
The cold-blooded murder of Renee Good was followed not by an investigation or apology but by smearing her and her wife as terrorists who were somehow responsible for her fate and deserved to die.
Who are these masked men? Why are they so violent? Are they Proud Boys? KKK? J6 insurrectionists?
Every day, I wonder if this is how decent Germans felt as Hitler took power and destroyed civil society.
What is happening to my country? To our Constitution? To the rule of law?
As I watch our values and rights degraded by power-mad politicians, I fight to preserve my body.
In the spring, I learned after my annual mammogram that I had breast cancer. I learned that I had invasive ductal cancer in my right breast, which required surgery. The post-surgery analysis revealed that not all the cancer was removed. The “margins” were not clear. So back I went for another surgery on the same site.
Radiation–five straight days of it–followed. it left me tired, but otherwise apparently successful.
I was reluctant to take a daily pill of anti-cancer medicine because of the numerous side effects. But I did and I suffered the predicted side effects. I had pain in my hips and joints. That was November.
Meanwhile I had a new mammogram. It showed that I had a new cancer, this time in my left breast. The surgeon recommended another surgery, and this time she got it all out. It was a tiny tumor, different from the first one. But a cancer nonetheless.
Radiation begins today, January 20, the first anniversary of Trump’s return to office. What a coincidence, cancer in my body, cancer in our nation.
It has been a nightmare year, for the country and for me personally. To make matters worse, our beloved dog Mitzi died. Through all of the personal trauma, my wife Mary stood by me steadfastly, through thick and thin, demonstrating her determination and love.
In a few weeks, we expect to get another dog. We will survive.
It remains to be seen whether our country will survive a second Trump term, another round of brutality inflicted on our norms, our values, our fellow citizens and our neighbors, our faith in our electoral system and our laws.

Dogs are good. It is clear that our purpose, why we are here, is to make dogs and cats happy. I am surprised that no religion has picked up on this. Hang in there DR, we need you!
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It is horrific.
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Sending lots of love and healing your way. It is amazing how you have kept up with your blog through all your problems. Thank you for that.
I keep reading that it will get worse before it gets better but it WILL get better. I wonder how much worse it can get. I never thought my old age would be dominated first by a pandemic and then the loss of democracy and horrors in America and threats to the world. Only things that help are knowing that we are in it together and dogs
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Sorry to hear about the breast cancer, hopefully you won’t have a recurrence. It was a pleasure to hear you speak in my class at LP2-CUNY. Thanks, Arlyne LeSchack
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Sorry to hear about your health issues. Thank goodness for Medicare and competent physicians! Equally sad is losing a pet, who is a part of the family. Let’s hope the future is brighter than the past dismal year with positive results on all fronts including personal and political. Let’s hope that where we are is rock bottom, and we will starting going in a better direction. Sending positive, healing vibes!
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I am sending you love. Ellen
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I’m so sorry to hear about your suffering with cancer, Diane. I recently heard that nearly 50 percent of people will face it in their lifetime. A close friend of mine is undergoing chemotherapy right now, and the side effects are brutal.
One small silver lining of the Trump presidency is that the left seems more united than it has been in years. As Alan Watts once observed, struggling against an opponent can sometimes be more enlivening than winning.
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Corraggio! It sounds like a year from Hell. Or as a now deceased friend used to call it: “A Horror Story”.
Your medical issues remind me that the massive blood clot discovered in my right lung in Nov. is nothing by comparison. Starting in April with a series of 4 increasingly sophisticated tests, the last one finally found the problem and landed me in the ER the next day.
I spent 5 days in St Francis Hospital (“The Heart Hospital”) under the excellent care of my cardiologist, internist, and a new dr. for me – a hematologist. While I was there, they tested my blood every 6 hours. I think I did not have an available vein left which had not been punctured 2 or 3 times.
Since I’ve been home, I have had 6 blood tests in Dec. and tomorrow I’ll have the 3rd in Jan.
So back to your health issues, I will pray for your continued improvement. And may we both be able to continue fighting for our public schools.
In Solidarity, Roberta M. Eisenberg Retired hs math teacher and Committee Leader UFT Math Teachers Committee
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Glad to hear of your recovery from a difficult ordeal, Diane. Now that you’re past it, wishing you continued good health.
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I do not agree that you had a horrible year, although filled with horrors, because you and your fighting spirit are still intact. All along you managed to send out your many blogs despite all of it.
Bobbi Eisenberg
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Diane, it’s a tribute to your courage, grit and stamina that you survived all your medical emergencies and yet still maintained your precious and necessary blog. I don’t know how you do it but I am glad that you persist and continue the good fight not only for education but also for the health of our country. Blessings to you and your family and thanks for all that you do, your blog helps to keep me sane and hopeful for education and the USA.
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Oh Diane, what a year, what a year. What a horrible, no good, very bad year. I am so sorry to hear about your cancer diagnosis, but grateful it was caught and you recovered! From the left coast, I am sending you good wishes for health this year. And get a dog. We went 3 months without and our house was empty. Having our sweet Clover (so named because we got her on St Paddy’s Day) join our family lifed our spirits and made us feel whole.
One good thing that happened that we can all be thankful for is your book! Having read it, listened to your interview, and now having shared your writing, I can say it is a success.
We have to keep our chins and our hopes up that someone will do something to rid our country of the orange cancer that is sickening our country.
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Much, much love to you and yours, Diane, in this troubling time. May you outlive us all!
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Devastated to hear of your diagnosis. Really happy that you are getting proper treatment. Much love, Bob S.
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F Trump and F cancer!!! Sending love and light to you and your family.
Josh
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I say we trade in 2025 for a better year. Less cancer in our bodies and less in the body politic would make a much better year.
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Diane, I’m sorry to hear about your health issues. Sending my love and best wishes. You’ve been kind to me over the last 12-15 years here (I can’t keep track).
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Good to have you back here, Flerp! Warm wishes to you and yours!
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Dear Diane,
I have sincere compassion for what you are experiencing in your battle with cancer. My wife fought the battle and I know what you are going through.
You ask “Is this America?” and “I wonder if this is how decent Germans felt as Hitler took power and destroyed civil society?”
Hitler’s taking power in Germany was actually the result of World War I, and World War I was the result of the Weltpolitik (literally “world policy” but actually militaristic imperialism) of Kaiser Wilhelm II.
Kaiser Wilhelm II was the Donald Trump of Germany, and he was Hitler’s role model.
Although pre-WWI Germany was ostensibly a republic with a representative parliament, in reality the government was controlled by the autocratic Kaiser and his chancellor, Bismark.
Kaiser Wilhelm was hell-bent on making Germany the dominant world power (is this beginning to sound familiar?).
To bring the German people in line with his personal goals, Wilhelm created a non-military armed “law enforcement” agency, much like what Hitler later did with the “Brown Shirts”, and like what Trump is doing today in the form of ICE.
As internal tensions grew between the pro-republic general populace and Wilhelm’s supporters (equivalent of today’s MAGA minions), Wilhelm declared that his opponents were “terrorists” and “enemies of the Reich”.
Among those who were labeled as “enemies of the Reich” were trade unionists, socialists, certain ethnic groups — especially people of Polish descent and people who were Polish immigrants — and certain religious groups, particularly Catholics.
My German family were Catholics, living in Heiligkreuz (Holy Cross) a suburb of Trier, “the City of Cathedrals”.
My family saw the handwriting on the wall — literally written on the walls of the city: “Katholischen Raus!” (“Catholics get out!”) — and they emigrated to the United States.
So, to answer your question “I wonder if this is how decent Germans felt as Hitler took power and destroyed civil society?”, the answer is “yes”, and they had experienced that earlier, too, during the autocratic rule of Kaiser Wilhelm II.
How you feel, how I feel, and how tens of millions of Americans feel right now is how my family in Germany felt in pre-WWI Germany, how my family members who didn’t flee pre-WWI felt in pre-WWII Germany, and how people have felt in every republic that ever succumbed to a militaristic, ego-driven dictator have felt.
And the pattern is always the same: First, a charismatic person who appeals to patriotism arises to political power; the person creates scapegoats whom he claims undermine the nation’s greatness; an internal quasi-military organization is created, ostensibly to round up the internal “enemies of the nation”; the turmoil generated by the internal roundups of alleged state enemies leads to a suspension of civil authority and civil rights and the occupation and subjugation of cities by the autocrat’s personal army…and then the republic effectively becomes a dictatorship with a parliament or congress that functions for appearance only, rubber-stamping the dictator’s invasions of whatever nations he targets…ultimately resulting in world war.
We are in the late stage of this familiar progression: Congress has become a rubber stamp; ICE has been unleashed to first intimidate and deport non-Whites, but then to subsequently go after anyone whom the dictator decrees is an “enemy of the Reich”; meanwhile, the dictator begins his “Weltpolitik” military ventures of taking over coveted territories and even nations….and ultimately the world careens into another world war…this time a nuclear war.
“This is the way the world ends…this is the way the world ends…”
Not if I can do anything to prevent this pattern from being completed.
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I so greatly appreciate your thoughtful analyses, Quikwrit! Yeah, we are Germany in 1933. It’s frightening. Things could get very dark indeed soon.
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Already have for some segments of our population, such as the folks who pick our crops, make the beds in our hotels, and construct our homes and businesses.
Trump’s people are evil. They are Goering and Hess and Himmler and Mengele and Goebbels-level evil. And they are led by a madman.
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Dear Diane, here’s a big hug for all your trials! jf
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So sorry about your cancer & the death of your beloved Mitzi (o.b.m.) Despite all of that, you continue to inform & inspire us almost daily (often STILL posting on the weekends…because this horrendous news cycle is neverending). Hoping the worst days are behind you with better/the best (healthwise) to come, + the arrival of a new dog.
Wishing you all the best, which is what you give us.
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All we can do is give each other all the love we can and join together to fight back as hard as we can and never give up!
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I am so sorry, Diane, about your “terrible, horrible, no good, very bad” 365 days. Unfortunately, when misfortune goes on for that long, it cannot be described the same way that Alexander’s mom did when trying to assure him that tomorrow would likely be different, since waking up to more days does not mean health problems and the tragic loss of a loved one will all instantly go away. It means that stamina is absolutely necessary though –and I’m very glad you’ve got that, so please keep hanging in there, and enjoy your new pup when you get it! (As you can see here, you are very much needed, appreciated and loved by many people!)
Wishing you all the best –and only wondrous, delightful, very good years to come!
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