Don’t Call It Incompetence: More Like A Diabolical Plot

BREAK IT DOWN!

It is tempting, in moments of chaos, to dismiss an administration as merely incompetent. That interpretation can feel comforting because incompetence suggests limits: mistakes can be corrected, confusion can be clarified, and disorder can eventually give way to normalcy. 

But there is a more unsettling possibility. What looks like ineptitude may in fact be strategy. When leaders consistently undermine institutions, inflame division, exhaust the public, and weaken long-standing norms, it becomes harder to call the outcome accidental. At some point, the pattern is too coherent to ignore. 

The better description is not failure but success on its own terms. To say an administration is incompetent assumes it is trying and failing to preserve stability, fairness, and democratic order. Yet if its real objective is to break those things—if it aims to disorient the public, discredit expertise, erode trust, and replace shared rules with raw power—then the apparent disorder is evidence not of weakness but of achievement. 

The disruption is the point. Every norm shattered, every agency hollowed out, every conflict manufactured becomes proof that the project is proceeding as intended. This is why the language of incompetence can be so misleading. It frames the damage as unintended side effects rather than as central goals. A common to describe this state of affairs is, “It’s a feature, not a bug.”

The incompetence theory encourages observers to keep waiting for a correction, for adults in the room, for a return to ordinary governance. Meanwhile, the administration continues reshaping public life through attrition. People grow numb. Outrage becomes routine. Standards fall seemingly sequentially at first, then suddenly, all at once. 

We have devolved into an environment in which success is measured not by effective administration in the traditional sense but by the ability to make the unacceptable seem inevitable. None of this means every action is coordinated with perfect discipline. Political movements are often messy, contradictory, and driven by ego as much as ideology. That’s how the metaphor of government as sausage-making came into common parlance. 

Messiness does not cancel intent. In fact, confusion itself can be politically useful. Prior to the 2024 Election, the detractors frequently and forcefully warned of the impending Project 2025. The GOP nominee for President repeated denied having even read it, and further claimed to have no knowledge of it, whatsoever. That he had not read it…sounds plausible. Reading may be fundamental, but if one doesn’t read daily briefs…Conversely, it seems likely he was aware of the document and its intent.

It is fair to say it is incomprehensible that a regime could be both incompetent, and simultaneously capable of so swiftly and with such precision, undoing affirmative action, DEI, and the Voting Rights Act. All that has happened, literally, in a matter of months; less than 16. 

When reality feels unstable, accountability becomes harder to enforce. When citizens are constantly reacting to the latest outrage, they have less energy to defend the deeper principles being dismantled underneath. Calling this dynamic incompetence therefore understates both the intelligence and the danger we face.

It mistakes destruction for clumsiness. If we want to understand what is happening, we need to judge it by outcomes, not excuses. And if the outcome is a weaker civic culture, a more cynical public, and a more fragile democratic system, then we should stop assuming the architects have failed. Rather, they are succeeding exactly as planned.

You can call them a lot of things, but by all means, scratch incompetent from the list. I shudder to contemplate our collective circumstance, by the end of this hellscape of an administration term has ended. “Don’t Call It Incompetence: More Like A Diabolical Plot!”

I’m done; holla back!

Read my blog anytime by clicking the linkhttp://thesphinxofcharlotte.comFind a new post each Wednesday.

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This post was augmented by the use of AI.

Mother’s Day: A Celebration of Everyday Love

BREAK IT DOWN!

Mother’s Day is more than merely a date on the calendar—it is a reminder to pause and recognize the steady, often quiet work that mothers and mother figures do every day. While gifts, flowers, and cards are common traditions, the heart of the holiday is gratitude.

As I reflected on the coming weekend, it occurred to me that though I’ve shared the story of losing my mother to the abdominal disease called cancer when I was 8 years old, in 19 years, I’ve never written a Mother’s Day post. A close examination of my psyche would probably reveal there are some deep-seated reasons for that omission. Not to worry, this post is not that assessment.

No, today’s conversation is an invitation to reflect, however briefly, on the people who have cared for us, guided us, and helped shape who we are, even when their efforts were unnoticed or taken for granted. Despite the overarching theme that mothers are underappreciated in general, trust and believe, Sunday, May 10, 2026, will be the busiest day of the year for telephone calls. Verizon, just one network, Verizon, indicated that over 394 million calls were made on their network on Mother’s Day, 2024, totaling 28.3 million hours on the phone. And as noted, that’s just Verizon. Can you hear me now? 

A mother’s love is frequently shown through ordinary moments: waking up early to prepare breakfast, staying up late to help with homework, offering encouragement after a hard day, or listening patiently when someone needs to talk. They nurture us, teach us, protect and defend us, promote us, boast about our accomplishments, and boost our confidence when we falter.  

These actions may seem small individually, but together they form a powerful foundation of support. Mothers often carry many responsibilities at once—balancing work, family, and personal challenges—yet still find ways to make others feel safe and valued. Their strength is not always loud or dramatic; it is steady, present, and dependable.

Mother’s Day also gives us the chance to recognize that motherhood takes many forms. Not everyone is raised by a biological mother, and not every family looks the same. Some people are supported by grandmothers, aunts, older sisters, foster parents, stepmothers, guardians, or mentors who step into nurturing roles. These mother figures deserve appreciation too, because they provide the same essential gifts: care, guidance, and love. Celebrating Mother’s Day can be inclusive, honoring anyone who has offered patient encouragement and protective kindness.

The holiday is meaningful not only because it celebrates mothers, but because it encourages us to express appreciation out loud. Many people assume their mothers already know how loved they are, but words matter. A sincere “thank you” can be more valuable than an expensive present. Writing a note, making time for a conversation, helping with chores, or simply being attentive can communicate respect and gratitude. Most importantly, Mother’s Day reminds us that appreciation should not be saved for once a year. The best way to honor a mother is to show kindness and recognition consistently.

In summary, Mother’s Day is about connection. It is a celebration of sacrifice, patience, and unconditional support, but it is also a call to reflect on how love is expressed through everyday actions. By taking time to acknowledge the mothers and mother figures in our lives, we honor the people who help us grow. Whether through a heartfelt message, time spent together, or a simple act of service, Mother’s Day is a moment to recognize a love that deserves to be celebrated—today and every day. You may be one of the nearly 400 million people who call her, you may share a meal…that she doesn’t have to prepare, or you may bring gifts and glad tidings. In the event your mother has shuffled off this mortal coil, reach out to a mother figure and share a heartfelt greeting. It might make their day…and yours too. ”Mother’s Day: A Celebration of Everyday Love!”

I’m done; holla back!

Read my blog anytime by clicking the linkhttp://thesphinxofcharlotte.comFind a new post each Wednesday.

To subscribeclick on Follow in the bottom right-hand corner of my Home Page at http://thesphinxofcharlotte.com; enter your e-mail address in the designated space, and click on “Sign me up.”

Subsequent editions of “Break It Down” will be mailed to your in-boxFor more detailed information on a variety of aspects related to this post, consult search engines for more information on the subject.

This post was augmented by the use of AI.

Relentlessly Assailing, Denouncing, & Disassembling DEI: A Primer on Turning Back the Clock

It’s time to Break It Down! 

Nope. Nobody asked me. I just needed to speak on this for a minute. Attacking, rolling back, or otherwise eliminating Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) initiatives is becoming a favorite current-day White empowerment strategy; a proverbial go-to move of choice, for those determined to cast White people as the preeminent victims of race-based discrimination in America. While this faux issue is flatly ridiculous on its face, the segment of the populace that has popularized such pithy, but absurd catchphrases as, “Jews will not replace us,” and “There are good people on both sides,” has effectively embedded this narrative into the psyche of countless self-identifying Republicans and conservatives. The practice has become, sort of a starter kit, if you will, for launching a broadscale initiative to turn back the clock on racial progress. Such measures comprise the bulwark action item for the contemporary zealous opposition to CRT.

It’s utterly amazing how much the majority, or in some cases, the plurality now, wants to institutionalize a variety of methodologies to prevent the transfer of knowledge about ways in which Black people, and other People of Color, have been historically marginalized, discriminated against, and in too many instances, straight up murdered, under the color and/or, protection of the law. We know such measures were codified in legal and legislative actions from the nascent days of the Republic. But if one believes in the premise of an on-going effort to perfect the Union, it seems taking on the truth in a direct manner, rather than resorting to deflecting, dissembling, denying, and ultimately, destroying mechanisms that would enlighten the masses, would be the prudent, if not the only course of action for our great American Experiment.

This List of States Trying to Stop DEI is Terrifying:

Ohio, Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Utah, Arizona, Kansas, Arkansas, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, and West Virginia, two dozen, or nearly half of the 50 states have all adopted, or have pending legislation, to put the brakes on racial uplift.

It is well-documented that the history of enslaved people in America extended literally, for centuries. How can one sensibly, reasonably, or effectively argue that in a span of 60 years or less (the civil rights act was passed in 1965/the voting rights act was passed in 1965), the playing field has been leveled, and all the legal and extra-legal methods used to stymie Black progress have been excised, repudiated, or rectified? Moreover, even if they were, and they certainly aren’t, where are the reparations, the recompense, the payment for the blood, sweat, and tears, for the lives needlessly and ruthlessly taken, for the men and women who built the very foundations of this country from the ground up…and, for free?

What is the current GOP/conservative design to deal with this heinous treatment? Eliminate affirmative action, discontinue minority scholarships, forbid teaching the true history of this country in minute and painful detail (in the name of anti-CRT), and abrogate voting rights, especially in minority voting districts. In other words, “Relentlessly Assailing, Denouncing, & Disassembling DEI: A Primer on Turning Back the Clock!”

I’m done; holla back!

Read my blog anytime by clicking the linkhttp://thesphinxofcharlotte.comFind a new post each Wednesday.

To subscribeclick on Follow in the bottom right-hand corner of my Home Page at http://thesphinxofcharlotte.com; enter your e-mail address in the designated space, and click on “Sign me up.” Subsequent editions of “Break It Down” will be mailed to your in-box.

For more detailed information on a variety of aspects related to this post, consult the links below:     

https://www.theroot.com/a-list-of-states-that-have-banned-limited-and-attacked-1851360019