red white blue bar

It is Time for a Convention of National Reconstruction

Such an open-ended national effort would be a welcome breeze of fresh air to help clear out what our stale discourse presently allows.

The nation seems ready to lend support to a formal effort to rebuild traditions, norms and institutions that have been weakened by the Trump administration. It is time for individuals representing the nation’s cities, blue states, federal workers, unions and universities to start the necessary and arduous process of imagining and preparing priorities for quick action when the Congress and Presidency are able to restore civil values that have been honored over the decades. A smarter set of constitutional amendments would have already put us on this path. As it is, we must stand by idly to gain formal political leverage to act in defiance of the sabotage undertaken by this administration.

Obviously, a national convention of patriots to rebuild the nation would admittedly not have formal powers. But as The Guardian’s Thomas Geoghegan notes in his similar call for a convention of blue states, the first continental congress held in Philadelphia had “no apparent legitimacy or precedent,” but still had big consequences.1 The founders had to make a similar decision to act beyond what was possible within the political status quo.

My guess is that there would also be many Republicans who are anxious to reset the nation by considering new, productive, and suitably conservative ideas. Enlisting moderate Republican governors would be a good start. Many have clearly been inhibited by the hyperpartisanship of the Trump wing of the party.

2000px Vertical United States Flag.svg

We could assume that conservative and liberal sides would be willing to come together to make something better. Geoghegan notes that the result may be more theater than specifically deliberative, but such an organized national effort would be a welcome breeze of fresh air beyond what our fetid discourse from our entrenched politicians presently allows.

Initial concerns might include:

*whether the Presidency has the kinds of prerogatives and safeguards that the nation needs,

*whether Congress is too big or small to carry out legislative functions,

*whether money in campaigns should be limited, and

*if more federal functions supported by block grants should be taken over by the states.

Published recommendations receiving the most support could be distributed by receptive media.  Topics like these would benefit by having fresh and younger voices more clearly heard.

Organizations that could convene an ongoing conference of national reconstruction might include good government organizations like Common Cause, The National Conference of State Legislators, The United States Chamber of Commerce, The Brennan Center for Justice, and the Pew Research Center. All have traditionally presented credible work that cuts across rigid partisan lines. All would also have to propose some of the attendees, and sign on to the idea that the nation needs an extraordinary Convention of National Reconstruction.

There is also a tradition of calling on the services of respected former cabinet, state or Senate officials who could use their experience and wisdom to guide such an effort. We had such “wise old men (and women)” who helped the nation through the tough final years of the Nixon administration. We could find and enlist their contemporary counterparts again. Think of individuals like former New Jersey Governor Christine Todd Whitman or former CIA Director Leon Panetta. There are many former state and federal office holders who would answer the call to help. And there would be more agreement on ways forward than we might think. The current broken norms, like the politicization of the Department of Justice, go unchecked largely because of the current suppression of open dissent by a vindictive President.

Members could forward high-consensus recommendations to the political parties, the media, and interested trade and professional groups. Many would welcome a “third way” to reinvigorate our national politics.

__________

1https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/oct/05/blue-states-democrats-trump

red concave bar 1

Seeing Is . . . Well, Just Seeing

Lately, I have seen too many cats smoking cigars and dogs playing poker.

Pardon me for saying the obvious. But it is no longer possible to trust photos we routinely see on many internet platforms. Perhaps I am the last to notice, but a combination of photo-shopping and animation has begun to make it a challenge to tell the difference between the real and the fake. Lately, I have seen too many cats smoking cigars, dogs playing poker, and a preschooler performing Shostakovich. A.I.-produced photos and videos have gotten that good. A few days ago I saw an image of the President playing golf, but looking mighty wide from the back. The photo suggested that seat belt extenders would definitely be a required item on Air Force One. That picture was probably photoshopped, much like what his own team does when he shows up in a meme that would be an eight-year-old’s idea of an action figure.

Fast Food Worker From the Feline Community
byu/ZashManson inaivideo

As in the above example, some images are too cute. But it must be getting harder for photo editors in various news organizations to verify less playful images that come their way. That’s one advantage to keep photojournalists on staff. By contrast, social media represents the equivalent of the wild west. Too many people are willing to ignore the courtesy of sincere veracity that would have been honored even a generation ago.

If we already live in a world where fantasies are mistaken as fact, what are we to do with the age-old axiom that “seeing is believing?” We all recognize the obvious giveaways in classic animation and set-ups like the above example of a feline fast food worker. It is quite another thing to conceal artificial creations about subjects that matter in photorealistic material. Apparently, our non-literate President has already been deceived by “news” videos of indeterminate origin passed on by others; Trump gorges on his preferred medium of images.

There are folks on YouTube who have tried to show how a fake can be recognized. I appreciate their efforts. But short of seeing a third arm on a person, I often miss the ostensible giveaway in a fabricated piece. And there appears to be no uniform or emerging norms for labeling a counterfeit picture or a video.

Of course the larger context here is that hand-wringing over hybrid kinds of media is not new. Critics and theorists have debated for some years about the authenticity of all sorts of arts that are easily reproduced. A classic is Walter Benjamin’s 1935 essay, The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction. And there is the conductor and composer John Phillip Sousa, who claimed that the “canned music” of a recording debased the real thing. Add in the complexity that an estimated half of all social media content now is created by various forms of A.I. and we have a problem.

Many who have made a systematic study of the internet generally note that there has been a steady decline in authentic human-generated content. Again, this applies most directly to platforms like X, Facebook, and the like. A more recent transformation is video, where producers can add facsimiles of live action in convincing photographic detail.

Film and video have always been used to spin out fantasies that speak to our fears and desires. But it is a newer twist to mask the fake in reproductions that are plausibly real. Will newer generations have the skills to detect plausible but fanaticized reproductions? Can a culture function when source authenticity is always in doubt? More than ever need the solid anchor of conversing with people in real time and space.