In praise of our own Pulitzer Prize-winner, Steve Sack, the June 19 political cartoon took creativity to the next level. He composed the perfect metaphor for what ails us.
On a table in the darkness, the lava lamp is glowing, and its slow undulations reveal an amorphous being, rising. In Sack's words, it is "oddly mesmerizing," but ultimately, "blobs of incoherent goo."
It takes a few moments, but the flowing liquid actually has formed an abstraction of that much-publicized face, the contorted image of Donald Trump. With this graphic metaphor, Sack captures the form and essence of Trump in the lamp: the hypnotist and the hypocrite.
From my vantage point, this is a complete picture of the false prophet of our day — the teller of untruths, the fomenter of fear — as explained through the vision and wisdom of the artist.
Into the political maelstrom, with his critical eye, Steve Sack has clarified with artistic brilliance.
Steve Watson, Minneapolis
BREXIT
Half of the voters will get what they deserve, but all will suffer
It has been said that in a democracy, voters get the government that they deserve. The recent, deeply divided Brexit vote in the U.K shows us that, in a deeply divided nation, this notion that voters get the government that they deserve is only half true.
The vote in the U.K is a precursor to our own upcoming election in November. Central to both the Brexit vote and our own election is the same basic fundamental question. Should we as a nation, and we as individuals, be in this world as self-centered entities in competition with others for our own gain, at the expense of others? Or should we all work together for the common good as competitive friends who are concerned about the well-being of everyone?
The U.K has made its choice. As we move forward, we will all be able to see how its citizens' answer to this fundamental question is working out for them. We will all be able to see what happens when opinions trump facts and reason.