| |   |  This is for you RAT, and all the other Chardonnay Jacobins here... 
  "Something  strange is happening in America’s most affluent zip codes. In suburban  living rooms once filled with optimism and The West Wing reruns, a  certain demographic—well-heeled, college-educated white boomer women—is  staging what they seem to think is the final battle for the Republic.
  These  women, dubbed Resistance Grandmas, aren’t fringe radicals. They’re PTA  presidents emeritus, NPR tote-bag collectors, and retired therapists.  But now, in the twilight of their years, they’ve taken up the cause of  Saving Democracy™ with the same zeal they once reserved for banning  plastic straws and praising Obama’s tan suit.
  Their political  worldview is a curious patchwork—part To Kill a Mockingbird, part The  Handmaid’s Tale, with a dash of MSNBC-induced paranoia. Their grievances  are abundant, though loosely connected: Trump is a fascist, climate  change is an extinction-level event, bathroom policy is civil rights  2.0, and Elon Musk is probably the Antichrist.
  None of this is  deeply thought through, of course. It doesn’t need to be. The slogans  are enough. Democracy is at stake. Nazis are back. Orange Man bad.
  But  what’s actually driving this hysteria is more psychological than  political. Deep down, many of these women sense something slipping  away—not just political control, but the very narrative of their lives.
  They  were promised progress, justice, utopia. The Great Society. Roe  forever. A society where everyone listens to NPR and agrees on the  science. Instead, they see the country rejecting their values, their  party flailing, and their own children rolling their eyes at their  activism.
  And so, without the flexibility to adapt or accept that  the world has changed, they cling to per-fabricated evils—fascism,  racism, Christian nationalism—as explanations. Not because those terms  mean anything coherent, but because they provide moral clarity in a  moment that no longer makes sense to them.
  It’s a reaction not  unlike that of the old Party die-hards at the end of the Soviet Union:  the project has clearly failed, but the faithful still believe, still  chant, still blame external enemies. If only but for capitalism… becomes  If only but for Trump.
  So they take to the streets with signs  and slogans and fury. They join book clubs that double as war councils.  They tattle on their old friends to the FBI, convinced they are doing  their part to fight the Fourth Reich.
  One 74-year-old proudly  told a focus group that she reported a lifelong friend to the  authorities after she learned she'd entered the Capitol on Jan. 6. Not  to vandalize, not to riot—just to look around. “It wasn’t an open  house!” she snapped, drawing cheers from the other Chardonnay Jacobins.
  This is not politics. This is late-life existential panic dressed up as moral crusade.
  Their  children are voting Trump. Their grandsons are quoting Joe Rogan. The  country is drifting, in their view, toward madness—not because it is,  but because it's no longer revolving around them.
  And so they  rage. Loudly. Self-importantly. With bumper stickers, protest signs, and  a self-satisfaction that only comes from knowing you are on the right  side of history, even as history packs up and moves on.
  There’s  something tragic about it, really. These Resistance Grandmas arrived in  the 1960s marching for peace and love. They’ll leave this world in the  2020s muttering about white supremacy, hunting down Trump voters like  Cold War informants, and trying to find a moral compass in the op-ed  section of The Atlantic.
  The truth is, the postwar liberal  consensus is dying. Slowly. Loudly. Sometimes with a hand-knitted pink  hat on. And deep down, these women know it.
  Their protests aren’t signs of power—they're eulogies. Their moral absolutism isn’t strength—it’s fear. Their obsession with Trump isn’t resistance—it’s grief.
  And  while their determination is, in a way, admirable, their political  derangement is increasingly unhealthy and, yes, undignified.
  All things pass. Even boomers with graduate degrees and Facebook accounts." |  
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