from Ennui Vagaries

Photo by: [Ailbhe Flynn](https://unsplash.com/photos/person-taking-photo-using-canon-camera-in-shallow-focus-lens-jkZs3Oi9pq0) via [Unsplash](https://unsplash.com/) Photo by: Ailbhe Flynn via Unsplash

I was into photography many years ago (like over 40 years ago), and in all this time there have been several significant changes. The single biggest is the change from analog film based photography to digital photography. This one change has completely changed aspects of photography that cannot be understated.

For example, photographers today will never know the joys and horrors of working in a darkroom. Dealing with all the chemicals for developing film and prints. Having to heat up or cool down the developer, and having to be cautious with the timing involved in developing film or prints.

But, while switching to digital tools for “developing” and editing photographs will take some getting used to, that's not the part I want to focus on here. There is something more fundamental in the process of actually taking photographs that has changed. It's something I feel is overlooked if you have experience using film.

This is the ISO setting on the camera. It's easy to understand what this is in digital photography: you are defining / setting the light sensitivity of the sensor in the camera. It's a great feature that leaves the photographer with a lot of flexibility.

But, this quite different from old school film-based photography. Back in those days light sensitivity was defined by physical properties of the film being used. Typically, your camera was locked to the ISO of the film that you were shooting on. Yes, you could change the ISO setting, but then you were choosing to deliberately overexpose or underexpose your film.

There were exceptions in which this was desirable. But, you also had to remember that if you overexposed or underexposed the film you would likely need to adjust your development process to account for it.

Being able to adjust the ISO of the sensor has knock-on effects, since ISO sensitivity is inextricably linked to the range of shutter speeds and aperture settings the photography can select. And this can have other effects, like changing the depth of field.

Digital photography changes the rules in this way. You aren't locked into the physical properties of film anymore. You are, in fact, far more likely to change your ISO based on lighting conditions now than you were in the past. And this takes getting used to, and it changes the way you think about taking a photograph in fundamental ways.

This can make it more interesting in terms of being able to account for other things like aperture, shutter speed, and depth of field. Unlocking the ISO setting has fundamentally changed the way photographers think about the relationship between light and their camera.


Categories: #Features #Tags: #photography, #technology, #education, #learning

 
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from Jaran Flaath

Med en hverdag i større og større grad preget av AI, blir behovet for kreativ utfoldelse større.

Følelsen av kreativitet er absolutt til stede, men med AI går den på høygir, og om man ikke stadig får påfyll av den gode kreative flyten i det samme høye tempoet kjenner man fort på at noe mangler. At ting går for sent, at man blir sulteforet. Har man først drukket fra kreativitetens springflod blir man fort uttørket når den reduseres til en liten piplende bekk, om enn bare for en periode.

Jeg har den siste tiden kjent på at jeg har et større behov for å søke andre måter å få kreativ utfoldelse på, i et mer nøkternt tempo. Et tempo som ikke står i fare for å trene refleksene mine til å forvente samme kreative motorvei som AI legger opp til.

Og dette er egentlig positivt, tror jeg. Det tvinger meg til å se på nye veier, nye ting å ta meg til, som kan fylle tomrommet etterlatt etter at trafikken på AI-motorveien har passert, frem til neste rush tid. Jeg kan finne mye nytt å nyte den stillheten med i mellomtiden.

Akkurat derfor spår jeg at mer fysiske, kreative hobbyer og håndverk vil få en ny renessanse når AI-hverdagen stabiliserer seg. Folk vil både ha tid, men også et sterkere behov for å utfolde seg kreativt der jobben kanskje tidligere gav mer enn nok.

Kan det kanskje til og med føre til et løft for kunst og kultur, heller enn at AI skal være dens dommedag?

 
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from What Inspired Me

I want to start by asking something of anyone who loves Pat Metheny's One Quiet Night.

What is it, exactly, that draws you to that album? It isn't dazzling technique, and it isn't a complex ensemble. Just one baritone guitar, one microphone, and sound played not to be shown off to anyone, but simply for its own sake. Metheny himself has described the record as being built around a single mood — the idea of taking his time to sink deep into one narrow, self-contained world of sound. A guitar stripped of ornament, sinking into stillness, never once raising its voice.

If that's what pulls you in, there's an album I'd love for you to hear: Rolf Lislevand's Libro primo (ECM New Series, 2025).

When I actually sat down and listened to it, what pulled me in wasn't the courtly splendor you'd expect from 17th-century music. It was the quietly played lute's strikingly modern sound — a resonance that barely felt like “early music” at all. And it was from there, almost without meaning to, that Pat Metheny's music came to mind.

Lislevand, the Border-Crosser

Rolf Lislevand was born in Oslo in 1961. His career, in fact, didn't begin with the lute at all — it began with the classical guitar. After studying guitar at the Norwegian Academy of Music, he entered the Schola Cantorum Basiliensis in Basel, studying under Hopkinson Smith and Eugen Dombois, where he first stepped into the world of early instruments — lute, vihuela, Baroque guitar. From there he went on to perform with Jordi Savall's ensembles, and today he's a professor of lute and historical performance practice at the Trossingen University of Music in Germany.

In other words, he's a musician who carried the physical instincts of a modern guitarist with him into the “foreign country” of the chitarrone. The guitar and the lute are, in a sense, old cousins. Lislevand has spent his career lightly leaping back and forth across that border, bridging the two worlds.

About Libro primo

The title Libro primo refers to the concept behind the album: shining a light on the “first books” — the libri primi — that a number of early 17th-century Italian composers each published as their debut collections. Many of these composers were lutenists in the direct employ of aristocrats or clergy. Johann Hieronymus Kapsberger, the central figure here, was himself a theorbist in the service of a cardinal of the Barberini family in Rome — nephew to the future Pope Urban VIII — moving in the private concerts of the papal court. What's collected on this album, in other words, is music that was written and played by performers, for their own patrons, within the enclosed spaces of courts and noble households. The album is built around Kapsberger, surrounded by the music of his contemporaries.

Lislevand: Intro / Libro primo d'intavolatura di lauto: Toccata sesta

The recording location is fitting, too: a quiet barn in northern Norway that Lislevand converted into a studio himself, where the album was recorded alone between 2022 and 2023. It was mixed in Munich in 2024, together with Manfred Eicher.

The “Blank Space” in the Score That Invites Improvisation

Why does music written 400 years ago sound so free — so much like improvisation happening right now? Part of the answer lies in the nature of the notation itself.

Lute tablature was, when it came to specifying which fret on which string to press, every bit as precise as modern tab notation. What was left loose, instead, was rhythm and ornamentation. Forms like the toccata and the prelude carried a strongly improvisatory character from the start — what's written on the page is really just a skeleton. Lislevand fills in that deliberately-left blank space of interpretation with the instincts and physical sense of a guitarist. That's exactly why music four centuries old can sound as fresh as jazz being invented in front of you.

A Shared Dissolving into Silence

Listening to Libro primo, I keep coming back to One Quiet Night, mentioned at the top of this piece. What the two share goes beyond simply being “quiet music.”

  • A solitary performance on a single instrument, with no overdubs
  • Music born not as a “show” for an audience, but first and foremost for the performer's own sake
  • Recording in a place removed from the world (Metheny in a late-night session at his home studio, Lislevand in a barn in Norway)
  • A match with what Downbeat wrote of Metheny's record: “unadorned, heartfelt beauty”

Critics have compared Lislevand's playing to French Impressionism and to the jazz composer Carla Bley. That's a reasonable comparison. But to my own ear, what it evokes is closer to an American guitarist like Pat Metheny, plucking away alone late into the night. I can't back that up as a critical lineage — it's just one listener's intuition.

For Anyone Who Doesn't Know One Quiet Night

For anyone who's read this far and has no idea what One Quiet Night actually is, let me introduce it briefly before closing.

Pat Metheny is one of the defining figures of contemporary jazz guitar. But on 2003's One Quiet Night, he stepped away from his usual electric sound world entirely, sitting down one evening in his home studio with nothing but a baritone guitar custom-built for him by the Canadian luthier Linda Manzer. Almost no overdubs, almost no editing — just a single microphone and the deep, rich resonance of his own fingers. The album went on to win the 2004 Grammy for Best New Age Album.

One Quiet Night - Pat Metheny

A masterpiece that lives at the opposite end of the spectrum from flashiness. A guitar that never pushes itself forward, never rushes the listener, just dissolves into stillness. If you've already found your way to that, Libro primo will almost certainly keep you company through the same hour of the night.

 
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from What Inspired Me

パット・メセニーの『One Quiet Night』を愛聴している人に、まず聞いてみたい。

あのアルバムのどこに惹かれているだろうか。超絶技巧でも、複雑なアンサンブルでもない。たった1本のバリトンギター、1本のマイク、そして誰にも見せるためではなく、ただ自分自身のためだけに弾かれた音。メセニー自身、あの作品について「本質的にはひとつの音、ひとつのムードについての作品で、その単一の世界の奥深くへ、時間をかけて入り込んでいくことがテーマだった」と語っている。装飾を削ぎ落とし、静けさの中に沈んでいくような、決してでしゃばらないギター。

もしそこに惹かれるなら、ぜひ聴いてほしいアルバムがある。ロルフ・リスレヴァンの『Libro primo』(ECM New Series、2025年)だ。

実際にこのアルバムを聴いたとき、私が引き寄せられたのは、17世紀の宮廷を彩ったはずの華やかさではなかった。静かに奏でられるリュートの、驚くほど「古楽らしくない」現代的な響き――そこにこそ惹きつけられた。そして、そこからふと思い浮かんだのが、パット・メセニーの音楽だったのだ。

リスレヴァンという「越境者」

ロルフ・リスレヴァンは1961年オスロ生まれ。実は彼のキャリアは、リュートではなくクラシックギターから始まっている。ノルウェー国立音楽アカデミーでギターを学んだ後、バーゼルのスコラ・カントルムでホプキンソン・スミスとオイゲン・ドンボワに師事し、そこで初めてリュートやビウエラ、バロックギターといった古楽器の世界に足を踏み入れた。以来、ジョルディ・サヴァールのアンサンブルでの活動を経て、現在はドイツ・トロッシンゲン音楽大学でリュートと歴史的演奏法の教授を務めている。

つまり彼は、モダンギターの身体感覚を持ったまま、キタローネという「異国」に移住した音楽家なのだ。ギターとリュートはいわば古い「いとこ」同士。リスレヴァンはその境界線を自らの奏者人生の中で軽々と飛び越え、2つの世界を橋渡ししている。

『Libro primo』について

『Libro primo』というタイトルは、17世紀イタリアの作曲家たちがそれぞれ最初に出版した曲集――「libro primo(第一書)」――に光を当てるというコンセプトから来ている。彼らの多くは、貴族や聖職者に仕える専属のリュート奏者だった。中心となるヨハン・ヒエロニムス・カプスベルガーも、ローマでバルベリーニ家の枢機卿(後の教皇ウルバヌス8世の甥)に仕え、教皇庁の内輪の演奏会にも出入りしていた人物だ。つまりこの曲集に収められているのは、宮廷や貴族の館という限られた空間で、奏者自身が自らのパトロンのために書き、弾いていた音楽なのだ。アルバムはこのカプスベルガーを中心に、同時代の作曲家たちの曲で構成されている。

Lislevand: Intro / Libro primo d'intavolatura di lauto: Toccata sesta

録音場所も象徴的で、北ノルウェーの静かな納屋を自ら改装したスタジオで、2022年から2023年にかけて一人で録音された。ミックスは2024年、ミュンヘンでマンフレート・アイヒャーとともに行われている。

楽譜の「余白」が即興を呼ぶ

なぜ400年前の曲が、こんなにも自由に、まるで即興演奏のように響くのか。ここには当時の記譜法そのものの性質が関わっている。

リュート用のタブラチュア(TAB譜)は、どの弦のどのフレットを押さえるかというピッチの指定に関しては、現代のTAB譜と同じくらい精密だった。曖昧だったのはむしろリズムと装飾の側だ。トッカータやプレリュードはもともと即興的な性格を色濃く残す形式で、書かれた音はいわば骨組みに過ぎない。楽譜が意図的に残した解釈の「余白」を、リスレヴァンはギター奏者としての直感と身体感覚で埋めていく。だからこそ400年前の曲が、いま目の前で生まれたジャズのように瑞々しく響くのだ。

静寂へ溶けていくという共通点

『Libro primo』を聴いていてどうしても思い出してしまうのが、冒頭で触れた『One Quiet Night』だ。両者に共通するのは、単に「静かな曲」というだけではない。

  • オーバーダブなしの、たった1つの楽器による孤独な演奏
  • 誰かに聴かせるための「ショー」ではなく、まず奏者自身のための音楽として生まれたこと
  • 人里離れた場所での録音(メセニーは自宅スタジオの深夜セッション、リスレヴァンはノルウェーの納屋)
  • Downbeat誌がメセニーの盤に評した「装飾のない、心のこもった美しさ」という言葉の、そのままの合致

批評家たちはリスレヴァンの演奏について、フランスの印象派やジャズ作曲家カーラ・ブレイを引き合いに出してきた。それも十分納得できる比較だが、私の耳にはむしろ、パット・メセニーのようなアメリカン・ギタリストが夜更けに一人ギターを爪弾く感触の方が近く聞こえる。批評的な系譜としては証明できない、あくまで一人の聴き手としての直感だけれど。

『One Quiet Night』を知らない人へ

ここまで読んで「そもそもOne Quiet Nightを知らない」という人のために、最後に少しだけ紹介しておきたい。

パット・メセニーは、現代ジャズギターを代表する存在の一人だ。だが2003年の『One Quiet Night』では、いつものエレクトリックな音世界から離れ、カナダの製作家リンダ・マンザーに特注したバリトンギター1本だけで、ある晩、自宅のホームスタジオに座り込んだ。多重録音も編集もほとんどなし。ただマイク1本と、彼自身の指が紡ぐ低く豊かな響きだけがそこにある。この作品は2004年のグラミー賞(ベスト・ニューエイジ・アルバム)を受賞してもいる。

One Quiet Night - Pat Metheny

派手さとは正反対の場所にある名盤。決してでしゃばらず、聴き手を急かさず、ただ静けさの中に溶けていくギター。もしその魅力にすでに気づいているなら、『Libro primo』もきっと、同じ夜の時間に寄り添ってくれるはずだ。

 
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from What Inspired Me

I started reading a history of American music, and the first thing I encountered was the blues. Jazz, rock, hip-hop — follow any of them back far enough, the book says, and you end up here. But honestly, I had never really listened to the blues before.

Two names came up in the book: Blind Lemon Jefferson and Robert Johnson. Both were Black musicians who played the American South in the early twentieth century, a guitar in hand and a voice to match. When I actually listened, the recordings were old, the distance nearly a hundred years. And yet the moment I pressed play, something came through directly.

This is a record of how I — someone who knew nothing about the blues — found my way to the origins of American music, through these two musicians, because of a book.

How a One-Guitar Music Reached the World Through Recording Technology

In the early twentieth century American South, the blues wasn't played in concert halls. It lived on street corners, in saloons, at church gatherings. A single guitar and voice is a quiet thing — it doesn't carry in a large room. For a long time, this music went unrecorded, alive only in the places where it was played.

What changed that was the arrival of recording technology. When the record industry began developing the “race records” market for Black listeners in the 1920s, music that had never been heard beyond its immediate surroundings began to circulate widely for the first time.

There was another crucial meeting place. In the American South at the time, barbershops and shoeshine parlors run by Black owners for white customers functioned as spaces where musical exchange could happen across the color line. Records played inside, and white customers listened to Black music. The very circumstance that led to Blind Lemon Jefferson being scouted by Paramount Records traces back to the owner of a Black-run shoeshine parlor and record store in Dallas, who recommended Jefferson to a label representative. Behind the walls of a brutal segregated society, the musical connection between Black and white was quietly taking root in places like these.

Blind Lemon Jefferson — The First Voice to Carry Country Blues Nationwide

Blind Lemon Jefferson (1893–1929) was born into a sharecropping family in Texas, blind from birth. The youngest of seven children, music was his means of making a living. From his teens he chose the life of a traveling entertainer, honing a wide repertoire of prison songs, blues, spirituals, and dance tunes on the streets.

After settling in Deep Ellum, Dallas's Black neighborhood, he made his living as a street performer. Accounts survive of white people barring Jefferson from certain areas, leaving him permitted to play only in a specific corner of Deep Ellum. It may be no coincidence that several Black musicians of the era carried “Blind” in their names — Blind Willie Johnson, Blind Boy Fuller, Blind Willie McTell. Being blind may have made it easier for white society to tolerate their presence, as men who posed no threat in a harshly segregated world.

In 1925, he was discovered by a Paramount Records scout and made his recording debut in Chicago. Over three years he recorded more than ninety songs, becoming known not only in the South but in the North as well. His success took concrete form: he bought his own car and hired a personal driver.

His influence reached far beyond his own time. “Matchbox Blues” was recorded thirty years later by Carl Perkins as a rockabilly track, and covered again by the Beatles. Bob Dylan recorded “See That My Grave Is Kept Clean.” B.B. King named Jefferson as one of his greatest musical influences.

In December 1929, he was found frozen to death on a Chicago street. He was thirty-two years old.

Blind Lemon Jefferson - See That My Grave Is Kept Clean

Robert Johnson — The Deepest Voice, Left in Twenty-Nine Songs

Robert Johnson's (1911–1938) entire recording career lasted just seven months. Sixteen songs in a room at the Gunter Hotel in San Antonio, Texas, in November 1936; thirteen more in Dallas in June 1937 — twenty-nine in total. He died at twenty-seven under mysterious circumstances in 1938. His technique was so extraordinary that it gave rise to the famous “Crossroads Legend”: that he had sold his soul to the devil at a crossroads in exchange for his uncanny guitar ability.

His first single, “Terraplane Blues,” sold around ten thousand copies — a substantial hit for the Black music market of the time. But a large white audience never found him while he was alive.

Johnson's music broke through among white musicians in 1961, when Columbia Records released King of the Delta Blues Singers. The album hit British blues and rock musicians especially hard. Keith Richards recalled that the first time he heard Johnson's records, a single guitar sounded like two. Eric Clapton described it as “the most soulful music I have ever heard,” and in 2004 recorded an entire album of Johnson's songs, Me and Mr. Johnson. Bob Dylan, Keith Richards, and Robert Plant have each spoken publicly about his influence, and the Rolling Stones covered “Love in Vain.”

Johnson's songs give voice to the loneliness and terror of living as a Black man in the Depression-era American South, in language that is unmistakably poetic. “Cross Road Blues,” “Sweet Home Chicago,” “Hellhound on My Trail.” Nearly a hundred years on, none of them has faded.

Robert Johnson - Me and the Devil Blues

Why These Two Are the Way In

Blind Lemon Jefferson and Robert Johnson are the musicians who most purely embody what country blues is. Descended from people brought to America in chains, they established their own expression through voices that soared and guitar melodies that wound around those voices like a second voice of their own. Pushed to the margins of a white-dominated America, their music carries a life force that does not relent. That force was recorded for the first time through recording technology, passed along through the quiet musical exchanges that happened in barbershops and shoeshine parlors, and eventually crossed the Atlantic to reach a generation of British rock musicians.

What happened after that is a story everyone knows.

If you're going to trace the history of American music, these two are where to begin.


Reference

Toshiyuki Ohwada, A History of American Music: From Minstrel Shows and Blues to Hip-Hop (Kodansha Sensho Métier, 2015)

 
もっと読む…

from What Inspired Me

アメリカ音楽史を辿る本を読み始めて、最初に出会ったのがブルースという音楽だった。ジャズもロックもヒップホップも、そのルーツを辿ればこの場所に行き着くと書いてある。けれど正直に言えば、ブルースをまともに聴いたことがなかった。

本の中で名前が挙がったのがBlind Lemon JeffersonとRobert Johnsonだった。どちらも20世紀初頭のアメリカ南部で、ギター一本を抱えて歌った黒人ミュージシャンだ。実際に聴いてみると、録音は古く、時代の隔たりは百年近い。それでも再生した瞬間、何かが直接届いてくる感覚があった。

この記事は、ブルースを知らなかった私が、本をきっかけにこの二人の音楽を通じてアメリカ音楽の原点に触れた記録だ。

ギター一本の音楽が、録音技術によって世界に出た

20世紀初頭のアメリカ南部で、ブルースはコンサートホールではなく、路上や酒場、教会の集まりで演奏されていた。ギター一本の弾き語りは音量が小さく、大きな会場には向かない。そのため長い間、この音楽は記録されることなく、演奏された場所でだけ生きていた。

それを変えたのが録音技術の登場だった。1920年代にレコード産業が黒人向けの「レース・レコード」市場を開拓し始めると、それまで大都市の外では聴くことのできなかった音楽が、初めて広く流通するようになった。

もう一つ重要な場所がある。当時のアメリカ南部では、黒人が経営する白人向けの理髪店などが、人種隔離の壁を越えて音楽的な交流が生まれる場として機能していた。レコードが店内で流れ、白人客も黒人の音楽に耳を傾けた。Blind Lemon JeffersonがParamountレコードにスカウトされたきっかけも、ダラスで黒人が経営するシューシャインパーラー(靴磨き店)兼レコード店のオーナーが、レーベルの担当者に推薦したことだったという。厳しい差別社会の裏側で、黒人と白人の音楽的な接点は、こうした場所で静かに育まれていた。

Blind Lemon Jefferson——カントリーブルースを全国に届けた最初の声

Blind Lemon Jefferson(1893-1929)は、テキサス州の小作農家に生まれ、生まれつき盲目だった。7人兄弟の末っ子として育ち、視力を持たない彼にとって音楽は生計を立てるための手段だった。10代から旅回りの芸人として生きることを選び、刑務所の歌、ブルース、霊歌、ダンスナンバーなど幅広いレパートリーを路上で磨き続けた。

ダラスのDeep Ellumという黒人居住区に移り住んでからは、路上演奏を生業にしていた。白人がJeffersonの演奏を禁じた場所もあったという証言が残っており、彼はDeep Ellumの特定の一角でのみ演奏を許されていた。当時「Blind」を名前に冠した黒人ミュージシャン——Blind Willie Johnson、Blind Boy Fuller、Blind Willie McTell——が複数存在したことは偶然ではないかもしれない。盲目であることが、厳しい人種差別社会において「脅威ではない存在」として白人社会に黙認されやすかった可能性を示唆している。

1925年にParamountレコードのスカウトに発見され、シカゴで録音デビューを果たした。3年間で90曲以上を録音し、南部だけでなく北部でも名を知られるようになった。その成功は具体的な形にも表れていて、自分の車を持ち、専属の運転手まで雇うほどになったという。

彼の音楽の影響は同時代にとどまらなかった。「Matchbox Blues」は30年後にCarl Perkinsがロカビリーとして録音し、さらにBeatlesがカバーした。「See That My Grave Is Kept Clean」はBob Dylanが録音している。B.B. KingはJeffersonを自分の最大の音楽的影響の一つとして挙げている。

1929年、シカゴの路上で凍死しているところを発見された。32歳だった。

Blind Lemon Jefferson - See That My Grave Is Kept Clean

Robert Johnson——29曲だけが残した、最も深い声

Robert Johnson(1911-1938)の録音キャリアは、わずか7ヶ月に過ぎない。1936年11月にテキサス州サンアントニオのガンターホテルの一室で16曲、翌1937年6月にダラスで13曲、合計29曲を残して、1938年に27歳で謎の死を遂げた。「十字路で悪魔に魂を売り、引き換えに天才的なギターの腕を得た」という有名な「クロスロード伝説」が生まれるほど、そのテクニックは際立っていた。

最初にリリースされたシングル「Terraplane Blues」は約1万枚を売り上げ、当時の黒人音楽市場では相当なヒットとなった。しかし彼が生きている間に白人の大きな聴衆を獲得することはなかった。

Johnsonの音楽が白人ミュージシャンの間で爆発的に広まったのは、1961年にColumbiaレコードが『King of the Delta Blues Singers』をリリースしてからだ。このアルバムは特にイギリスのブルース・ロックミュージシャンたちに衝撃を与えた。Keith Richardsは初めてJohnsonのレコードを聴いたとき、ギター一本なのに二本のギターが鳴っているように聞こえたと語っている。Eric Claptonは「これまで聴いた中で最も魂のこもった音楽だ」と述べ、2004年にはJohnsonの楽曲だけを集めたアルバム『Me and Mr. Johnson』を録音した。Bob Dylan、Keith Richards、Robert Plantがそれぞれ彼の影響を公言しており、Rolling Stonesは「Love in Vain」をカバーしている。

Johnsonの歌は、大恐慌時代のアメリカ南部で黒人として生きることの孤独と恐怖を、詩的な言葉で歌っている。「Cross Road Blues」「Sweet Home Chicago」「Hellhound on My Trail」。そのどれもが、100年近くを経た今も色褪せない。

Robert Johnson - Me and the Devil Blues

なぜこの二人が「入り口」なのか

Blind Lemon JeffersonとRobert Johnsonは、カントリーブルースという音楽形式の本質的な特徴を最も純粋に体現したミュージシャンだ。奴隷として連れてこられたアフリカ系の人々を祖先に持つ彼らが、伸びやかな歌声と声に絡みつくようなギターの旋律で自分たちの表現を確立したこと。白人中心主義的なアメリカ社会の周辺に追いやられながらも、その音楽には確かな生命力が力強く宿っている。その力が録音技術によって初めて記録され、黒人と白人の間の理髪店的な交流の場を経て、やがて大西洋を越えてイギリスのロックミュージシャンたちに届いた。

そしてそこから先は、誰もが知っている話になる。

アメリカ音楽史を辿るなら、この二人から始めることを勧めたい。


参考書籍

大和田俊之『アメリカ音楽史 ミンストレル・ショウ、ブルースからヒップホップまで』(講談社選書メチエ)

 
もっと読む…

from Things Left Unsaid

Warnings have always annoyed me. Stickers on music packaging. Viewer discretion is advised. The opinions expressed in the following program are those of the participants and do not necessarily reflect those of The Network. This article contains things that might be triggering. This contains graphic details. The video may be disturbing to some viewers. Alcohol and drug use. Violence. Nudity. Smoking. Profanity. Images of death and destruction.

Watch out cupcake. Buckle up buttercup. You might have to suddenly feel something.

What the hell? What next? Watch out, the jump scare part is coming in 10-9-8-7... lol. In the next scene someone is not wearing a shirt. I guess for me all the warnings should have a warning. Proceed carefully, this contains a warning that some might find annoying and pointless.

Recently I saw a warning at the start of an article about the sentencing of an old rich white deviant. It said that the story contained details about sexual assault. Well, yeah, frankly, I assumed so by seeing his name in the headline. He's an old rich white deviant. One of many.

The warning should have been, this article might bring you joy in knowing that a piece of human garbage gets to live out the remaining days of its life with the knowledge that everyone now knows what many suspected all along. That he is indeed a terrible human being who did terrible things.

His tiny defective brain couldn't deal with the excessive amounts of wealth and power that his failure of a company gave him. It turned him into a monster. He likely would have been an awful person even without wealth and power, but the wealth and power gave him the illusion that he could just do whatever he wanted to anyone whenever he wanted to do it. These things should have ruined him and sent him to jail decades ago.

His narcissism will likely not allow him to truly believe he did anything wrong. He can likely still sleep at night. He most likely won't ever view his victims as victims. Sorry and guilt are not installed in his software. Will never truly understand the ramifications of his actions. The false narrative that he clings to will end when he does.

He will not likely ever go to jail, but at least he will live out the rest of his miserable life with the thought clinking around inside of his empty can of a skull that people think he is a horrible person who did horrible things. I don't know if that is justice, but I guess it is better than nothing? As close as we can get to justice with disgusting people like him.

Maybe if there is ever a justice system south of the border again some of the monsters in the Epstein files will have a similar fate.

 
Read more...

from An Open Letter

There have been four days in a row I did not go to the gym. It was a mixture of getting my hair permed, where I cannot sweat for 48 to 72 hours, and also me being pretty badly sick. My head has been hurting, I am coughing like crazy, I’m fatigued, and my body aches. I honestly didn’t want to go to the gym today, partially because by the time I got home it was 8 PM. But I ended up forcing myself to go, and even though I felt super weak at first, like I was struggling with what is usually just a complete pointless warm-up of bench pressing a plate, I persisted. I also started a new workout split, and it was honestly more volume than I was prepared for. I took it a little bit easy, but still? And for the first time in a while I feel good about my body again. I also physically feel honestly pretty good after that which I’m happy for. I’m really proud of myself for reminding myself that it doesn’t need to be perfect but it matters that I go.

 
Read more...

from Douglas Vandergraph

Chapter One

Jesus prayed before the sun came up, alone in a small borrowed room above a closed soup kitchen on the east side of the capital, where the pipes knocked in the walls and the city outside still sounded half-asleep. There was no camera in the room, no aide waiting by the door, no polished lectern standing under television lights. There was only a wooden chair, a narrow bed with a gray blanket folded at the foot, a scarred table, and the quiet breathing of the morning. He knelt beside the chair with His hands open, not as a man reaching for power, but as a Son listening for the Father. Down below, someone had taped a handwritten flyer to the kitchen window that said, We Still Have Soup, and the paper had curled at the edges from rain.

By noon, the same city would begin speaking His name again, this time with the kind of hunger that frightened honest people. In apartments, churches, diners, school hallways, courthouse corridors, and newsrooms, people would argue about whether the nation had become so exhausted that it wanted a miracle instead of repentance. Some would call it hope. Some would call it madness. Years later, people would search for a fictional Jesus elected President of the United States story and imagine the beginning must have been thunderous, but it began with silence, prayer, and a man who had no desire to be worshiped by a crowd that did not yet understand what it was asking.

Across town, Mara Ellison watched His name rise across every news feed in America and felt the old heaviness settle behind her ribs. She sat alone in the back corner of a coffee shop near Union Station, wearing a navy coat she had not taken off, her laptop open, her phone facedown, and a half-finished black coffee gone cold beside her hand. On the screen was an unsigned letter from thirty-two civic leaders, pastors, judges, teachers, business owners, veterans, and former public servants from no single party and no single movement. They were asking Jesus of Nazareth to enter public life and stand for the presidency in a constitutional election, not as a king, not as a ruler above the law, not as the head of a religious takeover, but as a citizen willing to serve a country that had forgotten how to tell the truth without turning it into a weapon. Mara had already drafted seven possible statements for Him to refuse. She had also drafted one statement in case He did not, and that one frightened her most because it reminded her of the deeper faith reflection on truth, humility, and public leadership she had once believed in before power taught her to stop believing so much.

She had not slept well in years, but the last six months had carved something sharper into her face. The nation had staggered through a season that had not looked like one crisis so much as many crises leaning against each other until ordinary people could no longer tell where one fear ended and another began. A corruption investigation had swallowed several respected institutions. A string of violent public confrontations had left cities grieving and suspicious. Trusted voices had been exposed as paid performers. Whistleblowers had contradicted one another. Courts had been accused of cowardice and arrogance in the same hour. Churches had split over rumors before facts arrived. Families stopped eating at the same tables. Children learned the posture of adults who checked headlines before they checked on each other.

Mara knew the machinery behind some of it, not because she had caused all of it, but because she had spent fifteen years helping powerful people survive the truth. She had been the kind of strategist no one praised in public and everyone begged for in private. She could take a guilty man and teach him how to sound burdened. She could take an honest apology and smooth the edges until it no longer cost anything. She could bury a question under three answers and make a reporter feel rude for noticing. She could read a room before a candidate finished blinking. In the circles where conscience became a liability, Mara Ellison was considered brilliant.

Once, she had believed brilliance could serve goodness. That was before Governor Alden Price.

She did not let herself think his name often. It had a way of opening doors she preferred locked. Seven years earlier, Price had been the reformer everyone trusted, a widowed governor with kind eyes and a gift for sounding as if he had just stepped out of a small-town church basement rather than a donor meeting. Mara had built his national image with discipline and devotion. She believed him when he said public office should be a form of service. She believed him when he said the truth could win if someone managed it well enough to survive the first wave of lies. She believed him until the night a young transportation official brought her evidence that Price had protected an illegal contracting scheme after a bridge collapse killed nine people.

Mara still remembered the official’s shaking hands. She remembered the folder. She remembered the rain hitting the windows of the hotel suite. She remembered Price standing beside the minibar, pale and furious, telling her the evidence would destroy reforms that were helping millions. He said they needed time. He said timing was not deception. He said enemies would twist the story. He said if the truth came out before they framed it properly, the wrong people would win.

So Mara framed it.

The young official resigned under pressure. The governor gave a wounded statement about political attacks. The families of the dead were promised a commission that never reached the center of the rot. Price won reelection by eight points and resigned two years later when a separate scandal finally broke him. By then, the transportation official had disappeared from public life, one grieving family had become a symbol on every side but their own, and Mara had learned the sentence that became her private creed: truth cannot survive inside power, so only fools hand it over unprotected.

Her phone vibrated once. She turned it over.

Jonas Reed.

She almost let it ring out. Jonas had been one of the thirty-two names on the letter. He was a retired federal judge with a limp, a dry voice, and the unusual habit of answering direct questions directly. He had known Mara before she became useful to dishonest men. He had also known her afterward and had never pretended not to see the difference.

She answered without greeting.

“He is still praying,” Jonas said.

Mara closed her eyes. “That is not an answer.”

“It may be the only honest beginning.”

“Judge, you cannot be serious.”

“I am rarely funny by accident.”

“This is not a civic seminar. This is the presidency. There are ballot access laws, vetting questions, constitutional requirements, security protocols, campaign finance rules, media ecosystems that eat human beings alive, and half the country ready to turn Him into whatever they already wanted.”

“I know.”

“No, you know law. I know appetite. Those are not the same.”

On the other end, Jonas was quiet long enough for her to hear the coffee shop around her: a barista steaming milk, a chair scraping tile, two students whispering over a phone. The world remained ordinary even when it was preparing to ask the Son of God for something it did not understand.

“Mara,” Jonas said at last, “He asked for you.”

Her throat tightened before she could stop it. “Then He made His first political mistake.”

“He did not ask for a politician.”

“That is worse. Politicians can be managed.”

“He asked for someone who knows what happens when truth is managed.”

She looked toward the window. A man in a delivery jacket hurried through the rain with his shoulders hunched, holding a paper bag under his coat as if it mattered more than he did. Behind him, an old woman stood at the curb with a cane, waiting for the light to change. No one looked heroic. Everyone looked tired.

“I will not help build a personality cult,” Mara said.

“No one asked you to.”

“I will not help people replace citizenship with religious emotion.”

“No one asked you to.”

“I will not help Him win by pretending the Constitution is a prop in a church play.”

“Mara.”

She hated the gentleness in Jonas’s voice more than she would have hated anger.

“He knows what the office is,” Jonas said. “He knows what it is not.”

“No one knows what this would become.”

“He does.”

Mara almost laughed, but the sound would have broken too close to pain. “You think that solves it?”

“No. I think it removes our favorite excuse.”

The line went quiet again. Mara stared at the unsigned statement on her screen. In it, she had written words she knew would calm markets, reassure courts, soften donors, disarm nervous religious leaders, and give journalists something responsible to quote. She had written that Jesus was humbled by the request but believed His mission was spiritual, not governmental. She had written that He would continue serving the poor, healing divisions, and calling people to repentance outside the structures of earthly office. It was a good statement. It was clean. It was safe. It was exactly the kind of statement she would have advised any holy man to make if he wanted to remain uncrucified by modern opinion.

“Where is He?” she asked.

“The old kitchen on L Street.”

“That building is a security nightmare.”

“Yes.”

“Has anyone screened the staff?”

“He asked that the staff not be treated like suspects merely because they are poor.”

Mara pressed two fingers to her forehead. “This is what I mean.”

“I know.”

“No, you do not. That sentence alone could get Him killed.”

“Then come tell Him.”

She ended the call before Jonas could say anything else.

For several minutes she did not move. She watched a headline update across her screen: NATIONAL LETTER URGES JESUS OF NAZARETH TO RUN FOR PRESIDENT. Under it, a panel of commentators had already begun performing certainty. One called the request dangerous. One called it historic. One called it unconstitutional without explaining why. One said it could awaken moral seriousness in public life. Another said moral seriousness was often a mask for authoritarianism. Mara watched their mouths move in little boxes until all of them looked less like people than symptoms.

Then she saw a clip from the night before, filmed on someone’s phone outside a veterans’ shelter.

Jesus had been standing beneath an awning in the rain, speaking quietly with a man whose cardboard sign had gone soft in the weather. The audio was poor. The camera shook. Someone near the phone whispered, “Ask Him if He’s running,” and someone else laughed nervously. Jesus did not turn toward the camera. He removed His outer garment and placed it around the veteran’s shoulders, then bent to tie the man’s broken shoe with the kind of attention that made the surrounding noise seem ashamed of itself.

The clip ended after twelve seconds.

Mara hated that it moved her. Not because compassion was false, but because compassion was easy to exploit. A single image could become a logo. A quiet act could become merchandise. A holy moment could be clipped, captioned, monetized, and thrown into the same furnace that burned everything else.

She closed the laptop.

By the time she reached the old soup kitchen, the rain had thinned into a cold mist. Two police cruisers sat at the corner, lights off. A handful of reporters had gathered across the street, pretending not to watch the door too obviously. A man with a homemade sign stood near the curb. On one side it said SAVE US. On the other it said STAY OUT OF IT. He kept turning the sign around as if he had not decided which fear was stronger.

Jonas waited under the narrow awning, leaning on his cane. His gray overcoat was damp at the shoulders.

“You look terrible,” he said.

“You look retired.”

“I am. It gives me the freedom to offend people with accuracy.”

Mara nodded toward the reporters. “They know He’s here.”

“Of course.”

“Who leaked it?”

“Everyone leaks everything now. Sometimes by breathing.”

She stepped closer to him and lowered her voice. “Has He agreed?”

Jonas looked at the door, then back at her. “He has agreed to listen.”

“That is how disasters begin.”

“No. Disasters begin when people stop listening and call it strength.”

Mara did not answer. Jonas opened the door and let her in.

The kitchen smelled of onions, old coffee, bleach, and bread. Volunteers moved quietly between steel counters, speaking in low voices as if the building had become a chapel without anyone naming it. Near the back, a young man in a hoodie stacked crates of canned tomatoes. An older woman wiped tables that were already clean. No one rushed toward Mara. No one asked for credentials. That alone unsettled her.

Jesus stood near the sink with His sleeves rolled up, washing bowls.

For a moment Mara could not make the scene fit the scale of the question outside. The nation was vibrating with speculation. Markets were nervous. Religious leaders were drafting statements. Legal scholars were arguing on live television. Security officials were probably developing ulcers. And Jesus was washing bowls with warm water and a towel over His shoulder.

Jonas did not introduce her. He simply stood aside.

Jesus looked up.

Mara had been in rooms with presidents, governors, billionaires, generals, activists, prosecutors, celebrities, and men who thought history had been waiting for them personally. She knew the weight of charisma. She knew the practiced warmth of the powerful. She knew how eye contact could be used as a hook. This was not that. His gaze did not flatter her. It did not invade her. It did not perform intimacy. It rested on her with such complete attention that she felt, with immediate discomfort, how long it had been since anyone had looked at her without wanting something.

“Mara,” He said.

She had prepared for many openings. She had not prepared for her own name spoken without strategy.

“Lord,” she said, then hated that the word sounded both true and professionally dangerous.

He rinsed another bowl and set it in the rack. “You came in the rain.”

“So did half the press corps.”

“They are wet too.”

She glanced at Jonas, who looked unhelpfully amused.

Jesus dried His hands. “You have counsel.”

“I have warnings.”

“Then give them.”

Mara folded her arms, because otherwise she did not know what to do with her hands. “The request itself is lawful only if handled with care. You would have to meet every constitutional requirement without implying that holiness exempts You from civic order. You would need ballot access in enough states, financial transparency, compliance infrastructure, security coordination, and a campaign that refuses foreign influence, donor capture, personality worship, and illegal coordination. Your opponents would test every boundary. Your supporters would be worse.”

Several volunteers had gone still without meaning to. Mara noticed and lowered her voice, though not by much.

“They will call You everything. Savior. Fraud. Threat. King. Tool. Revolutionary. Tyrant. Pacifist. Radical. Coward. They will use Your words against You, and when that fails, they will use words You never said. People will ask You to bless their anger. They will ask You to punish their enemies. They will ask You to turn mercy into policy slogans and justice into revenge. The press will not understand silence. Donors will not understand refusal. Courts will not understand mystery. Voters will not understand that You are not running to become what they want.”

Jesus listened without interruption.

Mara continued because stopping felt more dangerous. “And if You win, the office will not become clean because You sit in it. The presidency is not a pulpit with flags. It is command authority, executive power, classified information, budgets, appointments, enforcement discretion, crisis decisions, military responsibility, and a thousand compromises arriving before breakfast. People will die no matter what You choose. People will hate You for restraint and hate You for action. You will be blamed for storms You did not create and praised for things that should not be worshiped. If You enter this, You enter machinery that turns truth into leverage.”

The room had become very quiet.

Jesus took the towel from His shoulder and folded it once.

“Yes,” He said.

Mara waited for more. None came.

The simplicity of His answer irritated her. “That is all?”

“No.”

“Then what else?”

“I did not come because power is clean,” He said. “I came because people are not.”

A volunteer near the stove looked down at the floor. Jonas’s face changed slightly, but Mara kept her expression still.

“That sounds beautiful,” she said. “It will poll well with people who do not have to implement anything.”

Jesus stepped away from the sink. “You have spent many years helping frightened men sound brave.”

Her pulse moved hard in her neck.

“That is not a campaign answer,” she said.

“No.”

“It is also not fair.”

“It is true.”

She looked at Him then, really looked, and the anger that rose in her felt old enough to have roots. “You do not know what those rooms are like.”

Jesus said nothing.

The silence did not accuse her. That was worse. An accusation would have given her somewhere to put her defense. His quiet only made space, and in that space came the hotel suite, the folder, the bridge collapse families waiting for answers, the governor saying timing was not deception, the young official looking at Mara as if she might still choose the right thing.

She turned toward the window. Outside, a camera crew had arrived. The man with the sign now held up SAVE US, but the cardboard had bent in the damp air.

“You cannot save this country by becoming its president,” Mara said.

“No,” Jesus said.

That stopped her.

He walked to a nearby table where a stack of clean bowls waited to be carried out. He picked up several and handed them to the young man in the hoodie, who received them with both hands as if entrusted with something fragile.

Jesus turned back to Mara. “No office can give a nation repentance. No election can create love. No law can make the heart pure. No victory can become righteousness simply because the frightened call it necessary.”

“Then why even consider it?”

“Because service is not the same as saving. Because truth must be spoken in rooms that have learned to live without it. Because mercy must not remain outside the gate while the wounded are governed by fear. Because authority, when received in obedience, may become a basin and towel. Not a throne.”

Mara wanted to reject the sentence because it sounded too gentle for the world she knew. Yet He had not said it gently as an escape. He said it like a burden.

A knock came at the side door. One of the volunteers opened it a few inches, then looked back nervously. “Judge Reed,” she said, “there are more reporters. And two men from the protective detail. They say the crowd is growing.”

Mara immediately moved to the window, careful to stay back from the glass. The sidewalk had filled in the last ten minutes. Not a mob yet, but enough bodies to become one if fear found a rhythm. Some held phones. Some prayed. Some shouted questions. A few had flags, though none from any party she recognized. One man yelled that Jesus should take the country back. Another yelled that He should leave the republic alone. A woman stood between them crying.

Mara turned from the window. “This is already unsafe.”

Jesus nodded.

“You need a controlled exit.”

“Yes.”

“And a statement.”

“Yes.”

“Not a sermon.”

“No.”

“Not a refusal that sounds coy.”

“No.”

“Not an announcement made under pressure.”

“No.”

She stared at Him. “Do You understand that every second You stay silent, other people define You?”

Jesus looked toward the door, where the sound of the crowd had thickened into a low, restless hum.

“They have done that before,” He said.

The words were quiet, but Mara felt them move through the room like a hand passing over an old scar.

For the first time since she entered, she had nothing ready.

Jesus picked up His coat from the back of a chair. It was plain, dark, still damp from earlier use. He put it on slowly, without ceremony. Then He looked at Mara, not Jonas, not the volunteers, not the door.

“Will you help them hear what I am saying, without helping them avoid what I mean?”

The question found the exact place in her she had spent years armoring.

It was not an offer of influence. It was not a flattering invitation to stand near history. It was not even, to her frustration, a request for loyalty. It was a question about truth, and the terror of it was that He asked as if she could still answer differently than she had before.

Mara looked down at her phone. Already, messages were stacking up from journalists, former clients, donors, officials, and people who had no right to her number. The machinery had smelled movement. It wanted language. It wanted framing. It wanted the first usable lie.

She turned the phone off.

“I will help You refuse manipulation,” she said. “Including from people who love You.”

Jesus held her gaze. “And from you?”

Her jaw tightened.

A lesser leader would have smiled when he said it. A cruel one would have enjoyed the wound. Jesus did neither. He simply placed the truth in front of her and did not decorate it.

Mara swallowed. “Yes,” she said, though the word felt like stepping onto ice. “From me too.”

Outside, the crowd surged toward the front of the building as the door opened and word spread that He was coming out. Jonas moved first, speaking with the protective detail. Mara followed, already seeing angles, risks, sight lines, microphones, exits, the trembling woman in front, the angry man to the left, the veteran from the video standing near the curb with the borrowed coat still around his shoulders.

Jesus stepped into the mist.

The noise rose at once. Questions struck from every direction. “Are You running?” “Do You believe the Constitution applies to You?” “Are You here to establish a theocracy?” “Will You condemn Your supporters?” “Will You save America?” “Do You want power?” “Are You the rightful ruler?” “Will You defeat the corrupt?” “Will You punish them?”

Mara felt the old instinct come alive in her, fast and cold. Cut the scene. Control the frame. Short sentence. No vulnerability. No open end. She stepped close enough to intervene if needed.

Jesus lifted one hand, and the strange thing was not that the crowd quieted. It was that He waited until they quieted on their own.

“I have been asked to serve,” He said. “I have not been asked to reign.”

The reporters leaned in.

“This nation has laws, and I will not despise them. This nation has wounds, and I will not flatter them. This nation has enemies, but the first enemy of a people is often the lie it has made peace with in order to win.”

Mara looked sharply at Him, because the sentence was dangerous. It did not attack one side. It attacked everyone.

“I will answer the request after prayer, counsel, and obedience to the Father,” Jesus continued. “If I enter this work, I will enter it as a servant under lawful authority, not as a king above it. Do not ask Me to bless your hatred. Do not ask Me to turn your fear into righteousness. Do not ask Me to save what you refuse to surrender to God.”

A man shouted, “So You are running?”

Jesus looked at him with compassion that did not bend the truth.

“I am listening,” He said.

Another voice yelled, “That is weakness.”

Jesus turned slightly toward the voice. “No. Weakness is needing power to tell the truth.”

The cameras caught that. Mara knew they would. She knew the line would detonate across every platform within minutes. Some would love it for the wrong reasons. Some would hate it for the wrong reasons. Some would carve it into a weapon by dinner.

But she also saw something else. The woman in front had stopped crying. The veteran had bowed his head. A young reporter lowered her microphone as if, for one unguarded second, she remembered she was human before she was media.

Jesus did not stay to enjoy the effect. He did not work the crowd. He did not wave like a candidate. He turned back into the building, leaving half the nation with a sentence it could not easily use and could not easily forget.

Mara followed Him inside, her hands shaking now that the cameras could not see them.

The door closed behind them. The kitchen sounds returned slowly: water in the sink, a spoon against metal, someone breathing out. Jonas looked at Mara but did not speak.

Jesus removed His coat and hung it again over the chair.

Mara’s phone, still off in her pocket, felt like a stone.

She understood with sudden clarity that the campaign had not begun, not really. Something harder had begun. Not the effort to make Jesus acceptable to the nation, but the painful work of discovering whether anyone near Him was willing to become honest.

Including her.

Jesus returned to the sink and picked up another bowl.

Mara watched Him for a moment, then stepped beside Him, took a towel, and began to dry.

Chapter Two

By evening, Mara had turned the soup kitchen pantry into the first honest campaign room she had ever seen, though she would not have used that word aloud. The shelves still held paper towels, canned beans, rice, salt, and a box of donated winter gloves. Someone had cleared a folding table and brought in mismatched chairs from the dining area. A retired judge sat beside a school superintendent from Ohio. A former military chaplain leaned against the wall with his arms crossed. A nurse who had helped organize free clinics in rural counties kept checking messages from home. Two constitutional lawyers argued in low voices over ballot deadlines while a pastor from South Carolina quietly made coffee no one had asked for but everyone needed.

Jesus sat at the end of the table, not at the head of it. Mara noticed that first and wished she had not. It changed the room without announcing itself. People kept trying to orient toward Him anyway, turning their chairs slightly, angling their bodies as if leadership were a kind of gravity, but He did not claim the place they kept offering. He listened. He asked questions. He let people finish. When someone spoke from fear, He did not embarrass them. When someone covered ambition with noble language, He did not let the covering remain.

Mara stood near the door with a legal pad in her hand, because standing made it easier to appear untouched. She had written three columns across the page: lawful, unwise, impossible. The impossible column was filling fastest.

“The first issue,” said Naomi Keene, one of the election attorneys, “is not whether a campaign can be formed. It can. The issue is whether people will accept that He is entering the process without claiming exemption from it. Every filing, every signature, every donation, every disclosure has to be ordinary in the best sense. Clean. Boring. Unimpeachable.”

“Nothing about this will be boring,” Mara said.

Naomi gave her a tired look. “The paperwork can be.”

Across the table, Marcus Vale, the school superintendent, rubbed both hands over his face. He looked like a man who had spent too many years explaining national decay to children who deserved better answers. “If He says yes, the schools become battlegrounds by morning. Teachers will be accused of indoctrination for mentioning His name and cowardice for not mentioning it. Parents will scream at board meetings. Students will turn Him into memes before lunch.”

“Already happening,” Mara said.

The nurse, Alejandra Ortiz, looked up. “So we do nothing because people may misuse Him?”

“No,” Mara said, sharper than she intended. “We do not hand unstable people a holy name and call the explosion faith.”

The room went quiet. The sentence had come out with more of her own history in it than she wanted anyone to hear.

Jesus looked at her, but He did not rescue her from the discomfort. He let her sit inside the sound of what she had said.

Jonas broke the silence by tapping his cane once against the floor. “We are not here to decide whether the nation is safe enough for truth. It is not. That is why the question has come.”

Mara turned a page on her legal pad though she had written nothing on the next one. “Truth does not become safe because the nation needs it.”

“No,” Jesus said. “It becomes necessary.”

The old refrigerator hummed in the corner. Rainwater clicked from the awning outside into a metal bucket someone had placed by the door. The city beyond the walls had not calmed. If anything, the statement from the sidewalk had worsened the fever. Mara had turned her phone back on for eleven minutes and watched the country tear His words into banners. Weakness is needing power to tell the truth had become a praise, an insult, a shirt design, a warning, a threat, and a joke before sunset. She had shut the phone off again when a former client sent three laughing emojis followed by, Call me before He gets Himself destroyed.

She had not replied.

Jesus turned to the group. “Tell Me what the office requires.”

No one moved at first. It was one thing to speak around the presidency in abstractions. It was another to describe power to Jesus as if He did not understand authority.

Naomi cleared her throat. “You would swear an oath to preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution. You would be commander in chief. You would oversee the executive branch. You would appoint officers, enforce laws, respond to crises, submit budgets, receive intelligence, negotiate with foreign leaders, and bear responsibility for decisions where every option may carry harm.”

Jesus nodded, not as if any of it surprised Him, but as if each word deserved to be received honestly.

“And You would inherit a system,” Mara said. “Not a clean office waiting for a righteous occupant. A system. Staff who leak. Agencies with cultures of self-protection. Allies who want favors. Enemies who set traps. Donors who expect access. Supporters who confuse proximity with holiness. Opponents who will bait You into anger and then sell the clip. Every appointment will disappoint someone. Every refusal will become a theory. Every act of mercy will be called weakness by people who profit from cruelty. Every act of justice will be called cruelty by people who wanted mercy only for themselves.”

The retired chaplain, a broad man named Theo Barnes, looked toward her. “You make service sound hopeless.”

“I make it sound like service,” Mara said.

Jesus folded His hands on the table. “No one should enter it as a dream.”

“Then You should not enter it at all,” Mara said.

She expected someone to rebuke her. No one did. That was the strange thing about the room. People were afraid, but not all fear was being treated as faithlessness. Some fear was simply being allowed to speak so it could be told the truth.

Jesus looked at each person in turn. “If I answer yes, you must not tell the people I will heal what they refuse to confess. You must not promise them peace without repentance. You must not make My name a cover for ambition. You must not turn obedience into spectacle. If any of you need victory more than faithfulness, you should leave before this begins.”

Mara almost said that no campaign in history could survive that as its opening principle. Then she realized He already knew.

A young volunteer from the kitchen, the one who had carried bowls earlier, stood uncertainly near the pantry door. His name was Caleb, though Mara had only learned it because he had written it on masking tape above his coat hook. He held a tray of sandwiches wrapped in plastic. “Sorry,” he said. “Mrs. Dorsey said people forget to eat when they’re scared.”

Jesus smiled, and the whole room softened in a way Mara did not trust because she wanted it too much.

Caleb set down the tray and tried to leave quickly, but Jesus said his name. The young man stopped.

“Would you speak?” Jesus asked.

Caleb looked as if he had been asked to testify before a court. “Me?”

“Yes.”

“I’m not, I mean, I don’t know anything about campaigns.”

“Good,” Jonas muttered, and a few people laughed quietly.

Caleb looked down at his shoes. “People outside keep asking if You’re going to fix everything. Some of them sound angry when they ask. Like they already know You won’t do what they want, so they’re mad before You answer.”

“What do you think I should say to them?” Jesus asked.

Caleb swallowed. “I think You should tell them You won’t be their excuse.”

Mara stared at him.

The young man flushed. “I’m sorry. That sounded disrespectful.”

“No,” Jesus said. “It sounded costly.”

Caleb nodded once, embarrassed, and slipped back out into the kitchen.

Mara wrote the sentence down before she could stop herself. You won’t be their excuse.

The conversation continued for another hour, but that sentence stayed under everything. It stayed there while they discussed ballot access, security coordination, medical disclosures, volunteer standards, donation limits, debate invitations, worshipful imagery, threats from extremists, and the impossible task of asking people to support a candidate they must not idolize. It stayed there while Mara drafted the bones of an announcement that did not promise rescue. It stayed there while Jesus rejected every phrase that made obedience sound like branding.

At nine thirty, the first donor call came through Jonas’s phone.

He checked the screen and sighed. “Leland Cross.”

Mara knew the name too well. Cross was not aligned with a party so much as with the survival of his influence. He funded civic institutes, legal defense groups, media projects, educational reforms, and quiet wars disguised as public concern. He had been generous to candidates who spoke about virtue and useful to candidates who had none. Mara had sat in his dining room once and watched him make a senator laugh while crushing a labor bill by dessert.

“Do not answer that,” she said.

Jonas looked at Jesus.

“Answer,” Jesus said.

Mara stepped forward. “With respect, no. Not unless we have counsel on the line, notes running, and a clear policy on donor contact. He will offer help that arrives wearing a leash.”

Jesus’s gaze remained on Jonas’s phone. “Then let the leash be seen.”

Jonas put the call on speaker.

“Judge Reed,” Leland Cross said, his voice warm enough to heat a cathedral and polished enough to hide a blade. “I hear you are in the room where history is being irresponsible.”

Jonas looked weary. “Good evening, Leland.”

“Is He there?”

Jesus answered for Himself. “I am here.”

A pause followed. Not long, but long enough for Mara to hear the recalculation on the other end.

“Then let me say plainly,” Cross said. “This country is standing on a ledge. If You choose to do this, You will need infrastructure immediately. Ballot access. Security. Data. Legal teams. Air time. I can gather people who know how to build quickly and quietly.”

“No,” Jesus said.

Mara looked at Him, startled by the speed of it.

Cross gave a soft laugh. “You have not heard the offer.”

“I heard enough.”

“Forgive me, but noble poverty will not put You on a ballot.”

“Nor will purchased obedience.”

The line went still.

Cross’s voice returned cooler. “You misunderstand me.”

“No,” Jesus said. “I know what you are offering. You are offering efficiency without surrender. You are offering influence with clean hands in public and closed doors in private. You are offering to help Me win if I allow you to remain the kind of man who buys nearness to power and calls it service.”

Mara felt the room stop breathing.

Cross did not answer immediately. When he did, the warmth had drained away. “That is an unfortunate accusation.”

“It is an invitation,” Jesus said.

“To what?”

“To repentance before generosity.”

The word sat in the pantry like a lit match.

Cross laughed once, not because he found anything funny, but because men like him often used laughter to step around humiliation. “You are going to learn very quickly that moral purity does not scale.”

Jesus looked at the phone with sadness. “Sin has always told itself that.”

Mara almost reached to end the call, then stopped. Every instinct in her screamed that this was foolish. Powerful men did not need to win arguments when they could fund consequences. Cross could turn institutions, donors, commentators, and consultants against them before breakfast. But Jesus was not playing the game badly. He was refusing to pretend the game was innocent.

Cross said, “You will need people like me.”

“I need mercy,” Jesus said. “So do you.”

Jonas ended the call before Cross could turn the moment into something uglier.

For several seconds, no one spoke. The old refrigerator clicked off, and the silence widened.

Mara turned on Jesus. “That call will cost You millions.”

“Yes.”

“It will cost ballot access operations.”

“Maybe.”

“It will push major donors toward opponents.”

“Yes.”

“It may create an organized effort to destroy You before You announce.”

“It may.”

“Then why do it like that?”

Jesus did not move. “Because he was in danger.”

Mara stared at Him. “He was offering money.”

“He was offering his soul another hiding place.”

The words struck her harder than they should have. She looked away first.

Theo Barnes exhaled slowly. “Well,” he said, “that simplifies the finance plan.”

No one laughed this time.

By midnight, most of the advisors had gone home or found corners to call spouses and staff. The rain had stopped. The city was slick and dark, reflecting traffic lights in broken lines along the street. Mara remained at the folding table, reducing the announcement to something shorter and more dangerous than anything she would have written alone.

I will not seek power for My own name.

I will not promise salvation through government.

I will honor the law without worshiping the state.

I will tell the truth without selling hatred.

I will serve if obedience requires it.

She read the lines again and felt the old professional part of her recoil. There was no emotional insulation. No patriotic swell. No protective fog. No phrase that could mean whatever frightened people needed it to mean.

Jesus stood at the sink again, washing the coffee cups from the meeting.

“You keep returning to the dishes,” Mara said.

“They keep becoming dirty.”

She almost smiled. It surprised her, and the surprise hurt.

“You know they will call that staged,” she said.

“Yes.”

“Is it?”

He looked at her then, and she felt the question turn back on her without Him saying a word.

She set down the pen. “I don’t know how to do this without thinking about how it looks.”

“I know.”

“That is not an apology. That is my job.”

“It has been.”

Mara leaned back in the chair. The pantry light hummed overhead. Her eyes burned from exhaustion. “The first time I protected a lie, I told myself I was protecting reforms that mattered. Then I told myself everyone does it. Then I told myself truth needed timing. Then I told myself victims needed stability more than disclosure. Then I stopped needing reasons. I just knew where to put the camera.”

Jesus dried a cup and placed it upside down on the counter.

She had not meant to say that much. The words had slipped out as if fatigue had loosened the knots she relied on.

“Why did You ask for me?” she said.

“Because you know the shape of the temptation.”

“That does not make me trustworthy.”

“No.”

The honesty almost made her laugh. “You could soften that.”

“I could.”

“But You won’t.”

“I will not heal you by flattering what harmed you.”

Mara looked down at her legal pad. Her handwriting had become uneven. “And what if truth gets You killed?”

Jesus was quiet long enough that she looked up.

“Truth has already been killed,” He said. “It did not stay buried.”

She closed her eyes. She had heard people use resurrection language cheaply in campaign speeches, in charity dinners, in crisis messaging, in slogans printed on banners after tragedies. Here, in the fluorescent light of a pantry that smelled faintly of onions and coffee, the words were not cheap. They were not even comforting in the easy way. They were a boundary. A reminder that her fear was not irrational, but it was not sovereign.

At two in the morning, Jesus walked back upstairs to pray again before giving His answer at dawn.

Mara stayed below with the announcement draft. She could hear the building settle. Somewhere outside, a siren moved through the city and faded. Her phone lay beside her, full of unopened messages from people who could sense power shifting and wanted to be near it before it had a name.

She turned the phone face down.

On the legal pad, beneath the announcement, she wrote a sentence she did not intend to show anyone.

I have mistaken control for conscience.

She stared at it until the words blurred.

Then, because she was still Mara Ellison, because surrender did not erase discipline, and because repentance would have to learn how to make plans without lying, she drew a line under the sentence and began listing what honesty would require before sunrise.

Chapter Three

At dawn, the city looked washed but not clean. Rainwater clung to the curb outside the soup kitchen, gathering in shallow places where cigarette ends, torn flyers, and a child’s lost mitten had collected during the night. A line of news vans waited along the street with their satellite masts raised like thin metal prayers to a nervous sky. Reporters stood beneath umbrellas, speaking into cameras with voices trained to sound awake before their faces believed it. Volunteers moved through the kitchen behind the curtains, pouring coffee into paper cups for people who had slept on mats in the dining room and people who had not slept at all.

Mara had been awake for twenty-three hours.

She stood in the narrow hallway outside the pantry, reading the final statement one last time while Jonas leaned against the wall nearby. He looked pale from lack of rest, but his eyes remained steady. Naomi Keene was on the phone with election counsel in three states. Theo Barnes had gone outside to speak with the protective detail, whose patience had thinned as the crowd grew. Caleb carried a crate of oranges into the dining room and tried not to stare at the men in dark coats who had arrived before sunrise.

Upstairs, Jesus was praying.

No one had gone to hurry Him. That alone made the morning different from every campaign morning Mara had ever known. In her old life, no candidate was allowed to disappear into silence while the first news cycle formed without supervision. Every second had to be owned. Every camera angle had to be fed. Every delay had to be converted into expectation or explained away before someone else turned it into weakness. But no one in the building wanted to be the person who knocked on the door and told Jesus that the networks were ready.

Mara looked down at the statement again. It had become shorter through the night. She had fought for more language, more guardrails, more carefully engineered phrases that would keep nervous institutions from panicking and eager supporters from becoming reckless. Jesus had removed anything that sounded like an escape hatch. The final version did not feel like campaign communication. It felt like standing in daylight without a coat.

Jonas nodded toward the paper. “You still hate it.”

“I respect it. That is worse.”

He gave a small smile. “Progress.”

“It is too honest.”

“Do you hear yourself?”

“Yes,” she said. “That is why I am concerned.”

The stairwell door opened. Conversation faded all the way down the hall before Jesus stepped through it. He wore the same plain dark coat, now dry at the cuffs, and His face held the quiet of a man who had not used prayer to hide from responsibility but to receive it. Mara had seen candidates emerge from private rooms after deciding to run for office. They came out inflated, frightened, hungry, or rehearsed. Jesus came down as if obedience had weight, and He was not pretending otherwise.

He looked at Mara first. “Is it ready?”

She handed Him the page. “It is ready if You are.”

He did not take the sentence as pressure. He read the statement once, then folded it and placed it in His coat pocket without marking a word.

Mara glanced toward the front door. “The crowd has grown. They moved the press riser across the street for safety, but people keep pressing toward the barricade. There are supporters, protesters, clergy, veterans, students, conspiracy streamers, and at least three men with signs calling for You to dissolve Congress, which You will not address unless asked directly because if You bring it up first, that becomes the headline.”

Jesus listened.

“There is also a legal scholar on one network arguing that Your candidacy is impossible because of theological implications, not actual law. Naomi says that is noise. There are ballot committees forming without authorization in eleven states. We need to tell people not to donate to anyone claiming to represent You until a lawful committee exists. There are already merchandise sites. One is selling crowns.”

At that, His expression changed. Not anger exactly. Sorrow with a blade in it.

“Say that first,” He said.

“The crowns?”

“Yes.”

Mara hesitated. “That is not the strongest opening.”

“It is the truest wound.”

She opened her mouth to argue, then stopped because she could already hear the sentence He would not say: if they misunderstand Him there, everything else would rot from the root.

Theo entered from the dining room. “They are ready. I would prefer five more exits, fewer windows, and a smaller country, but they are ready.”

Jesus nodded. “Thank you.”

Mara moved with Him toward the front of the building, aware of every sound: camera shutters beginning before the door opened, rainwater under shoes, radios cracking against shoulders, someone outside chanting His name, someone else chanting for Him to go home. The protective detail formed around Him, not touching Him but shaping a path. He allowed the arrangement without acting as if fear should be mocked. That mattered to Mara. Too many men performed courage by making other people absorb the danger of their recklessness.

At the door, Jesus paused and looked back into the kitchen.

Mrs. Dorsey, the woman who managed the soup line, stood behind the counter with both hands pressed to her apron. She was small, gray-haired, and severe in the way people become when they have spent years making too little stretch too far. The building had become the center of the nation’s attention overnight, and she looked less impressed than inconvenienced.

Jesus crossed to her.

Mara almost objected, then caught herself.

“Mrs. Dorsey,” He said, “forgive us for troubling your work.”

She blinked as if no one in authority had ever apologized to her for using what she protected. “People still need breakfast.”

“Yes.”

“If You go out there and make them louder, I expect You to send someone back to mop.”

“I will come back and mop if I am able.”

Her mouth tightened, but her eyes filled. “Don’t make promises You can’t keep just because people are listening.”

Jesus bowed His head slightly. “You are right.”

Mara felt the exchange go through her with quiet force. It did not belong in a campaign. That was why it mattered. In politics, ordinary people were settings. They stood behind candidates in rolled-up sleeves and became proof of concern. Here, the woman who ran the kitchen had corrected Him, and He had received it. Mara knew no camera had caught it. She was glad and sorry at the same time.

Then the door opened.

Sound surged against them.

Jesus stepped under the pale morning sky and walked to the small lectern set near the curb. It was not presidential. It was dented on one side and too short for the microphones clipped to it, but there had been no time for anything else. Mara stood just behind and to His right, close enough to intervene, far enough not to appear as if she owned the words. Jonas stood to the left, his cane planted on the damp pavement.

The crowd quieted in uneven layers. First the front rows. Then the reporters. Then the people who were shouting because they did not yet know what else to do with hope. A helicopter thudded somewhere above the low clouds. Jesus waited through that too.

When He spoke, He did not raise His voice.

“I have seen that some are selling crowns with My name on them. Do not buy them.”

The silence that followed was not confusion only. It was exposure.

“I am not entering public life to be crowned by frightened people. I am not asking this nation to replace citizenship with worship of a leader. I am not above the law, and I will not teach anyone to despise lawful order in the name of faith. I have been asked whether I will stand as a candidate for the presidency of this country. I have prayed. I have received counsel. I have counted the cost as a servant must count it. My answer is yes.”

The street erupted.

Mara had prepared for noise, but there was no preparing for the sound of a wounded crowd trying to decide whether to rejoice, panic, condemn, pray, or consume what it had been given. Some people cried openly. Some shouted praise with a hunger that made Mara uneasy. Protesters lifted signs and shouted back. Reporters spoke over one another. A man near the barricade fell to his knees while another screamed that the republic was dead. Security tightened around the lectern.

Jesus waited, and this time the waiting took longer.

When the sound lowered enough for words to travel, He continued.

“I will obey every lawful requirement placed before a candidate. I will accept no money that purchases silence. I will bless no hatred. I will promise no salvation through government. I will not use fear to gather the afraid. I will not use grief to build My image. I will not call vengeance justice or weakness mercy. If you support Me, do not lie for Me. If you oppose Me, do not fear telling the truth. If you pray, pray first that your own heart be made honest before God.”

Mara saw three campaign veterans near the press line look at one another as if watching a man burn down a house they knew how to rent.

A reporter called out, “Are You saying America needs repentance more than reform?”

Jesus turned toward her. She was young, with copper-brown hair tucked behind one ear and a press badge turned backward by the wind. Mara recognized her after a second: Dana Saye, a national correspondent who had built a reputation by asking questions that sounded gentle until they reached bone.

“Yes,” Jesus said. “Reform without repentance often teaches sin to use better language.”

Dana followed quickly. “And who decides what repentance looks like in a pluralistic republic?”

“God sees the heart,” Jesus said. “The law must govern conduct. Do not confuse the two, and do not pretend either is unimportant.”

A murmur moved through the press corps. Mara felt the legal teams across the country either exhale or reach for antacids.

Another reporter shouted, “Will You impose Your religion on the nation?”

Jesus did not flinch. “No one can be forced to love God. Power can demand speech. It cannot create worship.”

“Then why run at all?” another voice called. “Why not remain a teacher?”

Jesus looked past the cameras for a moment, toward the line of people waiting for breakfast inside the building. “A teacher may also wash feet in a palace if sent there.”

Mara knew that line would travel too. She could already see the headlines, the distortions, the devotional graphics, the accusations. She could also see that He was not trying to prevent all misuse. He was telling the truth and letting the truth remain costly.

After twelve minutes, He ended the announcement without music, endorsement, applause cue, or slogan. He stepped away from the lectern as reporters shouted questions after Him. One voice cut through the others.

“Who is your campaign manager?”

Mara felt the old panic of visibility rise in her chest.

Jesus stopped.

She could have moved back. She almost did. Every instinct told her not to let herself become part of the story. Her past would surface within the hour. Alden Price would surface with it. The bridge collapse. The buried evidence. The public statements. The ruined young official. The families. People would not need all the facts to smell blood.

Jesus turned and looked at her.

He did not announce her. He did not protect her from the question. He simply gave her the dignity and terror of answering honestly.

Mara stepped to the lectern.

“My name is Mara Ellison,” she said. Her voice sounded steadier than she felt. “I will help organize the lawful work required for this campaign. I have spent much of my career in political communications, and not all of that work was honorable. I will answer questions about my record in due time. Today, the first thing I will say is this: no one should support this campaign because they think Jesus needs lies to survive.”

The sentence landed harder than she expected. Even Jonas looked at her with surprise.

Dana Saye raised her hand. “Ms. Ellison, are you referring to your work for Governor Alden Price?”

There it was. Not within the hour. Within seconds.

Mara’s hands tightened on the sides of the lectern. She could feel the old machinery roaring awake inside her, offering phrases. Complex matter. Lessons learned. Out of respect for ongoing conversations. I reject the premise. Not the time. Politically motivated. She had built whole careers out of such smoke.

Jesus stood several feet behind her, silent.

She could not see His face, but she felt the silence like a door left open.

“Yes,” she said.

The street quieted with predatory interest.

“I am referring in part to that.”

“Did you help suppress evidence after the Northline Bridge collapse?”

Naomi, somewhere behind her, made a small sound. Jonas closed his eyes.

Mara looked at Dana, then at the cameras. The families of the nine dead were not there, but suddenly they felt more present than anyone. She saw again the hotel suite, the rain, the folder, the young official’s hands.

“I helped delay the truth,” Mara said. “I called it timing. It was not timing. It was protection of power.”

The words did not cleanse her. That was the first surprise. She had imagined confession, if it ever came, would feel like release. It felt more like stepping into cold water and realizing how far the shore was.

Questions exploded.

“Did Jesus know this when He chose you?” “Are you admitting criminal conduct?” “Will you apologize to the families?” “How can a campaign about truth employ you?” “Are you resigning?” “Is this hypocrisy on day one?”

Mara stepped back, shaken by the force of the consequences she had invited. Security moved in. Naomi was already speaking urgently into her phone. Theo looked ready to carry Mara bodily into the building if needed.

Jesus stepped to the lectern again.

The questions did not stop immediately. He waited until they did.

“She is not here because she has never failed the truth,” He said. “She is here because she must now serve it.”

A reporter shouted, “Is that accountability?”

“No,” Jesus said. “It is not all of it. Mercy does not erase repair.”

Mara looked down at the wet pavement.

Jesus continued, “She will not hide from what must be answered. Neither will this campaign hide behind her confession as if honesty spoken once is the same as obedience practiced daily.”

Dana Saye asked, quieter now, “Should the families forgive her?”

Jesus’s face grew still.

“No one should be commanded by cameras to forgive a wound they are still carrying,” He said. “Let truth come without performance. Let repentance begin without applause.”

For the first time that morning, Mara nearly cried.

Not because He had excused her. He had not. Not because He had shielded her from accountability. He had refused to. She nearly cried because He had protected even the families from being dragged into someone else’s moral theater. He had not used their pain to prove His mercy. He had not used her guilt to prove His courage. He had simply told the truth and left everyone with their own obedience.

The announcement ended in disorder.

Inside the kitchen, chaos followed. Calls poured in. Legal counsel demanded a full timeline. Naomi insisted Mara retain separate counsel immediately. Jonas said little, but his face had become grave. Theo blocked the hallway from unauthorized volunteers who wanted statements. Mrs. Dorsey yelled at two reporters who tried to slip through the rear entrance and threatened them with a ladle so convincingly that they retreated without dignity.

Mara stood in the pantry, staring at the legal pad from the night before. Her sentence remained there under the announcement.

I have mistaken control for conscience.

Now the sentence had teeth.

Naomi entered and shut the door behind her. “You understand what you just did?”

“Yes.”

“No, I need you to really understand. You created potential legal exposure, opposition research, press fixation, donor panic, and internal instability in the first hour of the campaign.”

Mara nodded.

“You also told the truth,” Naomi said, softer. “That may matter. But truth does not exempt us from process. We do this cleanly now. Counsel. Records. Families notified before any further public comment. No improvising.”

“I know.”

Naomi studied her. “Do you?”

Mara almost defended herself. Then she thought of Jesus asking, And from you?

“I am learning,” she said.

Naomi accepted that with a short nod and left.

Mara remained alone for perhaps thirty seconds before Jesus entered. He closed the pantry door but did not move toward her as if closeness could solve what had opened.

“I damaged the campaign,” she said.

“Yes.”

She let out a breath that was almost a laugh and almost something else. “You keep doing that.”

“Telling you the truth?”

“Saying yes when I expect comfort.”

“Comfort without truth is only a softer room for the same prison.”

Mara pressed both hands against the edge of the table. “I should resign.”

“Why?”

“Because I am now the story.”

“For a time.”

“That is unacceptable.”

“It is painful.”

“It is strategically unacceptable.”

Jesus looked at her with the same steady attention from the day before. “Mara, do you want to resign because obedience requires it, or because shame feels more familiar than repair?”

She closed her eyes.

There were questions she could outmaneuver. This was not one of them.

“I don’t know,” she whispered.

“Then do not decide from panic.”

She opened her eyes. “What do I do?”

“Begin with the people harmed.”

“They may not answer.”

“Then you will still tell the truth.”

“They may hate me.”

“They may.”

“They may never forgive me.”

“That belongs to them.”

Her face tightened. “And what belongs to me?”

“Repentance without demanding relief.”

The words entered quietly, but they did not pass through. They stayed.

Outside the pantry, the campaign that should not have existed began stumbling into form. Volunteers answered phones with scripts still being written. Lawyers assembled clean procedures. Security revised movement plans. Supporters were told not to worship, donors were told not to purchase, reporters were told not to expect performance, and a weary nation began arguing over whether truth had finally entered power or whether power had simply found the most dangerous image it could wear.

Mara sat down slowly.

For years, she had believed the truth could not survive inside power. By noon, she understood that the belief had protected her from a harder possibility: truth could survive there, but only by costing the people who carried it.

Jesus turned to leave, then paused.

“At three o’clock,” He said, “we meet the first ballot access volunteers.”

Mara looked up, exhausted and afraid.

“You still want me in that room?”

“I want you honest in that room.”

He left her with that, which was not relief, not punishment, and not trust exactly.

It was a path.

Mara picked up her phone and called the attorney she had avoided for seven years. Then she opened a blank document and typed the names of nine people who had died before her career learned how to survive them.

She did not know yet what repair would require.

But for the first time in years, she did not try to make the truth smaller before it reached her.

Chapter Four

The campaign did not become clean because Jesus had entered it. It became more exposed.

Within three weeks, Mara learned that holiness did not simplify logistics. It complicated every motive brought near it. Ballot access volunteers arrived with sore feet, good intentions, hidden anger, old grudges, unpaid parking tickets, sincere prayers, bad handwriting, and county-level questions no one in the national press understood. Some wanted to help because Jesus had told the truth. Some wanted to help because they thought He would punish the people they hated. Some wanted to help because they were lonely and wanted to stand near something that felt pure. Mara had to learn the difference without despising them for being human.

Every morning began before dawn, not with polling, not with message guidance, but with Jesus in prayer. Sometimes He prayed upstairs in borrowed rooms. Sometimes He prayed in church basements before volunteers arrived. Sometimes He prayed in airport chapels while security agents watched the door. Mara never knew what to do during those moments. At first she used them to answer messages, revise schedules, read legal memos, and prepare for the next wave of crisis. Then, slowly, she found herself standing still more often, not praying exactly, but no longer hiding behind movement.

The movement around Jesus grew faster than any responsible person wanted. Small donations came in after the lawful committee was formed, most of them under forty dollars. A retired factory worker in Michigan sent twelve dollars and a note saying he had not trusted a leader since his pension was gutted. A fifth-grade class sent drawings that Mara had to return with a gentle explanation about campaign finance rules, though Jesus read each one first and prayed over the children by name where names were written. A group of veterans offered to walk ballot petitions in three states if no one made them wear matching shirts. A coalition of pastors asked to endorse Him publicly, and Jesus refused their staged event when He learned they had not invited two congregations they considered too embarrassing to be seen beside.

There were attacks too, and they did not arrive politely. Commentators called Him dangerous because people loved Him, naive because He refused hatred, authoritarian because He spoke with moral clarity, weak because He would not flatter force, divisive because He would not pretend unity could be built on lies. One network ran a special asking whether mercy was compatible with national security. Another ran a panel asking whether truth-telling was a form of extremism when spoken by someone people might obey. Mara watched enough to understand the shape of the distortion, then stopped watching before it became a second occupation.

Threats increased after a town hall in St. Louis.

A man in the balcony had shouted that Jesus should call down judgment on corrupt leaders. The crowd had gone tense, waiting to see whether the anger would be baptized or rebuked. Jesus looked up at the man and said, “Do not use My name to enjoy another man’s destruction.” The clip spread everywhere by midnight. By morning, anonymous forums were full of rage from people who had wanted Him sharp against their enemies and soft toward their own souls. Security tightened again. Routes changed. Venues became smaller, then larger, then smaller again as local authorities argued with federal teams and campaign lawyers argued with everyone.

Mara became fluent in the geography of danger. She learned which curtains could hide a sight line, which side doors emptied into alleys too narrow for armored vehicles, which crowds were joyful and which had begun to tremble toward frenzy. She learned the names of agents who never asked theological questions but quietly respected a man who thanked them without making their caution look faithless. She learned that Jesus would not let security shove poor people aside for donors, but He would also not perform recklessness to prove trust in God. That, more than anything, unsettled her. He was not careless with His life, and He was not controlled by the need to preserve it.

One night in Denver, after a rally held in a union hall because the larger arena had become impossible to secure in time, Mara found Him in a side corridor speaking with Agent Lorne Bell, the lead protective officer assigned to the campaign. Bell was a compact man with watchful eyes and the emotional range of a locked drawer. Earlier that evening, he had blocked a weeping woman from rushing the rope line with a framed photograph of her dead son. The woman had collapsed against the barrier. The clip was already spreading with captions accusing the campaign of coldness.

“I did not know what she was holding,” Bell said. “Her right hand disappeared inside her coat.”

“You did your duty,” Jesus said.

“She thinks I treated her like a threat.”

“You did.”

Bell’s face hardened.

Jesus continued, “And you did so because threats exist.”

The agent looked away. “That supposed to make me feel better?”

“No.”

Mara stayed at the end of the hall, unnoticed or at least unaddressed.

Jesus said, “Can she be found?”

Bell nodded once. “We have her contact information.”

“Then I will write to her. Not to correct the story. To honor her son.”

Bell’s jaw shifted. “The communications team will want to release that.”

“No.”

Mara almost stepped forward from the shadows. He knew she was there then; she could tell by the slight turn of His head.

“No,” He said again, gently enough that it did not humiliate her.

Bell looked between them. “That will not fix the clip.”

Jesus answered, “Her son is not a clip.”

Mara went back to the hotel that night and deleted the draft statement she had already begun writing in her mind. She did not sleep well, but for once the lost sleep did not feel like strategy. It felt like being corrected.

By the time debate season arrived, the campaign had become both impossible and undeniable. Jesus had qualified for the national stage through lawful filings, verified signatures, public support, and relentless volunteer labor that no consultant fully understood. His two remaining opponents were Governor Halden Reiss, a disciplined executive who spoke of order as if it could be engineered into the human heart, and Senator Maribel Crane, a gifted reformer who believed every wound in the country could be addressed if enough authority was placed in sufficiently enlightened hands. Neither was a caricature. That made the debates harder. They were not monsters. They were people shaped by fear, ambition, intelligence, and the exhausting belief that control was compassion if the right person held it.

Mara spent the afternoon before the first debate in a windowless prep room beneath a convention center in Atlanta, surrounded by advisors who had not yet learned that Jesus could not be handled into sharpness. The room smelled of coffee, carpet glue, and warm electronics. A mock lectern stood at the front. Policy binders covered one table. Security updates covered another. On a screen, clips of Reiss and Crane looped without sound, their faces freezing mid-gesture like people trapped inside their own certainty.

“You will be asked whether Your refusal to use demeaning attacks means You lack the strength to confront evil,” Mara said.

Jesus stood behind the mock lectern, listening.

“The answer cannot sound passive. People are afraid. They want to know You can act.”

“I can act,” He said.

“I know. They do not.”

“Then they must learn without being fed cruelty.”

She nodded, though part of her still hated the risk. “Crane will press You on implementation. She will argue that compassion without machinery is sentiment. Reiss will press You on unrest. He will argue that mercy without force invites chaos.”

“And you?”

Mara looked up from her notes. “What?”

“What will you press?”

She glanced around the room. The others became suddenly interested in their binders.

Mara set her notes down. “I would press the cost of Your restraint. I would ask whether You are willing to let guilty people manipulate Your mercy while innocent people wait for justice. I would ask whether You are confusing personal holiness with public responsibility. I would ask whether Your refusal to destroy opponents allows them to keep destroying others.”

Jesus did not answer quickly. That had become familiar by then, but not easier.

“And what is beneath the question?” He asked.

Mara felt heat rise in her face. “The question is enough.”

“No,” He said. “It is not.”

She looked toward Naomi, hoping for interruption, but Naomi had the mercy not to offer one.

Mara folded her arms. “Fine. What is beneath it is that I have seen powerful people survive accountability by borrowing soft language. I have watched them ask for healing when what they wanted was delay. I have watched victims be told that anger is unhealthy by the very people who caused their pain. I have watched mercy become a waiting room where justice dies.”

Jesus nodded. “That is a true warning.”

The room seemed to breathe again.

Then He said, “It is not the whole truth.”

Mara’s mouth tightened.

He stepped away from the lectern. “Justice is not vengeance with cleaner grammar. Mercy is not delay with softer music. You have seen mercy used as cover for cowardice, so you fear it. Others have seen justice used as cover for hatred, so they fear it. The Father does not confuse either one.”

Mara picked up her pen again because her hands needed something to hold. “That will not fit in ninety seconds.”

“No,” Jesus said. “But it must fit in the life.”

The debate began under white lights hot enough to make everyone look slightly less human. Mara stood backstage beside Jonas, Naomi, Theo, and a wall-mounted monitor. In the hall beyond them, security agents murmured into sleeves. Somewhere above, thousands of people sat in an arena that had been swept for threats twice and still felt vulnerable. The moderator, Dana Saye, now elevated from sidewalk correspondent to the most watched journalist in the country, opened with constitutional questions, then moved into unrest, corruption, economic despair, foreign pressure, executive authority, and whether spiritual language could coexist with public duty in a nation of many faiths and no faith.

Jesus answered without hurry. Reiss was precise. Crane was passionate. The debate was not a spectacle at first. It was almost serious, which made Mara nervous because seriousness could become combustible when people had forgotten how to endure it.

The turning point came near the end.

Dana turned to Jesus. “You have said repeatedly that you will not use fear to gather the afraid. Yet your candidacy has inspired intense devotion, some of it troubling. There are citizens who speak of you less as a president and more as an earthly deliverer. If elected, would you discourage citizens from placing ultimate hope in your leadership?”

“Yes,” Jesus said.

Dana waited. “How?”

“By disappointing every hope that belongs only to God.”

A low sound moved through the hall.

Governor Reiss seized the moment. “That is a remarkable admission. The American people are not electing a spiritual metaphor. They are electing a chief executive. They need order, security, competence, and the confidence that their president will use every lawful tool to defend them.”

Jesus turned toward him. “Every lawful tool is not every righteous tool.”

Reiss’s face sharpened. “So there are lawful actions you would refuse?”

“Yes.”

“Even if refusal made the nation less safe?”

Jesus looked at him with sorrow. “A nation that needs sin to survive has already become unsafe.”

The hall erupted. The moderator called for quiet. Mara’s stomach dropped because she knew the line would frighten people who lived in classified briefings, border towns, police precincts, embassies, and neighborhoods where safety was not philosophical. She also knew it was true in a way no polling could measure.

Senator Crane leaned in. “That sounds morally serious, but people are suffering now. They do not need abstract purity. They need housing, medicine, wages, protection, functioning courts, clean water, and leaders willing to build systems at scale. Will you compromise to help them?”

Jesus faced her. “I will cooperate. I will listen. I will learn from those who know what I do not. I will sign no cruelty and call it order. I will bless no theft and call it reform. I will not trade one neighbor’s dignity for another neighbor’s applause.”

Crane pressed, “And when Congress refuses? When courts block you? When governors defy you? When agencies resist? When enemies abroad test you? What then? Will you still speak gently while people bleed?”

The hall went quiet enough that Mara could hear the monitor crackle.

Jesus did not speak gently when He answered. He spoke quietly, but there was iron in it.

“Do not mistake My refusal to perform rage for an unwillingness to confront evil. I have overturned tables when My Father’s house was made a market. I have called hypocrites by their name. I have stood silent before power when words would only feed its pride. I have forgiven sinners without calling sin harmless. I will act when duty requires action. I will restrain when obedience requires restraint. But I will not become evil to prove that I oppose it.”

Mara stood very still.

On the monitor, Dana looked down at her notes, then back up. “Ms. Ellison, your campaign manager, recently admitted helping delay truth in a past public scandal. Some Americans see that as proof your campaign’s language about honesty is already compromised. Why should voters trust a campaign led by someone who once protected power?”

Mara’s body went cold.

She had known the question might come. She had not expected Dana to place it before Jesus under debate lights with the whole country watching. Part of her wanted Him to defend the hire. Part of her wanted Him to distance Himself. Part of her wanted Him to do what every candidate did and turn the question toward an opponent’s hypocrisy.

Jesus looked toward the camera, not backstage, though Mara felt seen all the same.

“They should not trust a campaign because Mara failed and confessed,” He said. “They should watch whether repentance bears fruit when it costs her.”

Mara closed her eyes.

Dana followed, “And if it does not?”

“Then she should not remain.”

No one backstage moved.

The answer did not discard her, but it removed every hiding place she still had. Mercy had kept her near. Truth would not let her use nearness as shelter.

After the debate, the campaign did not celebrate. The polls moved, but no one trusted them. Supporters were inspired. Critics were alarmed. Commentators fought over whether Jesus had redefined strength or disqualified Himself from real power. Donors withdrew. Small donations tripled. Threats doubled. Volunteers cried on phone banks and then returned to calling county clerks. Reiss released an ad suggesting Jesus was too morally rigid for a dangerous world. Crane released one suggesting His compassion would fail without practical force. Both ads were effective.

Near midnight, Mara stood alone in a service corridor behind the arena, watching a janitor peel tape from the floor where cables had been secured. The man worked slowly, bent at the waist, unnoticed by the nation that had spent two hours arguing about leadership in the room above him.

Jesus came to stand beside her.

“I thought You would protect me more,” she said.

“I am.”

She looked at Him then, tired enough to be honest. “That did not feel like protection.”

“I will not protect the false thing you are trying to leave behind.”

Her eyes filled, but she did not turn away. “And if I cannot become someone else fast enough?”

“You are not being asked to become someone else by morning. You are being asked to obey the truth you have been shown today.”

Mara watched the janitor lift another strip of tape, patient and methodical, leaving the floor cleaner one small piece at a time.

“What if obedience ruins everything I know how to do?” she asked.

Jesus looked at her with compassion that did not weaken the command.

“Then everything you know how to do may finally be redeemed.”

That night, in a hotel room guarded at both ends of the hallway, Mara opened the sealed folder her attorney had sent from the Price years. She read until her hands stopped shaking. Then she drafted a private letter to each Northline family, not for release, not for strategy, not for absolution. She did not ask them to forgive her. She did not tell them she was different now. She told them what she had done, what she had hidden behind, whom they could contact for records, and that she would cooperate with any lawful inquiry.

When she finished, the eastern sky had not yet changed.

Her phone buzzed with a message from a senior advisor: Debate clips are strong. We can own the mercy/accountability frame by morning.

Mara stared at the words for a long time.

Then she typed back: No. We do not own what we are supposed to obey.

She sent it before fear could edit her.

For the first time since the soup kitchen, she knelt beside the bed. The prayer that came was not eloquent. It was barely a prayer at all. It was only a tired woman whispering into the dark, “God, do not let me make truth useful before I let it make me clean.”

Chapter Five

The last weeks of the campaign had no clean edges. Days blurred into airports, church basements, county offices, school gyms, late-night legal calls, revised security plans, weather delays, hoarse volunteers, and quiet rooms where Jesus prayed before stepping into crowds that wanted more from Him than any president could rightly receive. Mara watched people come to Him with every kind of longing. Some carried photographs of children lost to violence, addiction, war, despair, or sickness. Some brought foreclosure notices, medical bills, discharge papers, folded flags, cracked Bibles, handwritten apologies, and questions they had not trusted anyone else to hear. Others came with anger sharpened into certainty. They wanted Him to name their enemies as the source of the nation’s sickness. They wanted permission to confuse being right with being righteous.

He refused them all in different ways.

He touched the grieving without using their grief. He corrected the angry without despising their pain. He answered policy questions seriously and would not let any policy become a substitute for repentance. He thanked volunteers and told them to go home when their children needed them. He rebuked supporters who harassed opponents online. He stopped a rally in Phoenix until a protester who had fainted was carried safely through the crowd. He canceled a donor dinner after learning the host had moved kitchen workers out of sight so the room would look more impressive. Every decision cost something. Every cost became a lesson Mara could not convert into strategy without first letting it accuse her.

The Northline families received her letters in the final stretch of October. Three did not respond. Two sent replies through attorneys. One widow mailed back Mara’s letter torn into four pieces. Another wrote only, You do not get to become brave now and make my husband part of your redemption story. Mara read that sentence alone in a motel bathroom in Pennsylvania while the shower ran so no one would hear her cry. She did not defend herself, even inwardly. The woman was right to guard her grief. Mara placed the letter in her folder, not as punishment, but as a boundary she needed to keep seeing.

Jesus found her later sitting on the closed toilet lid with the folder open on her knees. The campaign bus was scheduled to leave in eighteen minutes. He did not tell her time was short.

“She hates me,” Mara said.

“She is wounded.”

“I deserve it.”

“She is not a sentence for you to use against yourself. She is a person you harmed.”

Mara wiped her face with the heel of her hand. “I don’t know how to carry that without making it about me.”

“Then carry it as service. Not theater.”

The bus left six minutes late. For once, Mara did not apologize to the schedule.

Election Day arrived cold across much of the country, with long lines before sunrise and rumors moving faster than facts. Mara spent the day in a legal operations room with Naomi, Jonas, Theo, and a rotating group of exhausted attorneys who spoke in clipped sentences over speakerphones. There were malfunctioning machines in two counties, a false report of ballot boxes being seized in another, a peaceful march miscaptioned as a riot, and three separate attempts by unauthorized groups to claim they were acting under Jesus’ direction. Mara authorized statements that were plain, narrow, and almost painfully unexciting. She would once have filled silence with posture. Now she learned that restraint could be a form of truth.

Jesus did not watch returns like a man waiting to be crowned. He spent much of the day visiting polling places only where local officials had invited all candidates equally, thanking poll workers and leaving quickly so His presence would not disrupt the process. In the evening, He sat in a small room with volunteers and prayed for the country before any result was known. Not for victory first. For honesty. For peace. For losers who would be tempted to bitterness and winners who would be tempted to pride. For election workers no one would remember unless something went wrong.

The result came after midnight two days later.

Jesus had been lawfully elected President of the United States.

The room did not erupt at first. It seemed to absorb the news before it dared react. Some people wept. Some laughed in disbelief. Theo bowed his head. Naomi sat down hard, as if her knees had lost an argument with history. Jonas removed his glasses and pressed his fingers to his eyes. Mara stood still while the numbers became final on the screen, feeling no triumph she trusted.

Outside, crowds had gathered in cities across the country. Bells rang in some churches. Protesters filled public squares. Commentators spoke of mandate, crisis, revival, constitutional strain, moral earthquake, democratic miracle, and national danger. Jesus asked for a phone and called Governor Reiss first, then Senator Crane. He thanked them for their service, listened longer than political courtesy required, and asked them both to help keep the nation peaceful. Reiss was formal. Crane cried, though Mara only knew because Jesus’ voice grew very gentle.

Then Jesus addressed the country.

He did not speak from a ballroom. He stood in the same soup kitchen where the campaign had begun, because Mrs. Dorsey had agreed on the condition that no one block breakfast preparation in the morning. The room was crowded with volunteers, reporters, attorneys, agents, and ordinary people who had eaten there before the cameras came. Mara stood near the back, beside Agent Bell.

Jesus looked into the cameras. “Tonight, many are relieved, many are afraid, and many are angry. Do not sin with any of those feelings. This victory is not salvation. This office is not a throne. Those who opposed Me are not enemies to be humiliated. Those who supported Me are not righteous because a vote went their way. Tomorrow, the hungry will still need bread, the grieving will still need comfort, the guilty will still need repentance, and the powerful will still need truth. Pray for this nation. Pray also that I obey the Father in the office I have been entrusted to serve.”

There was no confetti.

Mara was grateful.

The transition was harder than the campaign. Winning did not make the government gentle. Briefings arrived with maps, casualty projections, classified threats, agency disputes, budget cliffs, foreign warnings, domestic unrest, and personnel decisions that had no painless answer. Jesus listened to experts without pretending expertise was holiness. He asked military leaders precise questions. He asked economists about the poor before asking about markets. He asked intelligence officials what they knew, what they assumed, and what they feared saying aloud. Some respected Him quickly. Others watched Him for weakness. A few attempted flattery and found it useless.

Mara entered the White House on Inauguration Day under a sky the color of pewter, walking through security with a credential that felt heavier than paper should. She had accepted a senior communications role after telling Jesus twice that someone with a cleaner past should stand closer to the office. Both times He had asked whether she meant cleaner or less exposed. She had no answer that survived the question.

The oath itself was solemn and strangely quiet inside the noise. Jesus placed His hand where the law required, not as a man borrowing sacredness for image, but as a servant accepting public responsibility before God and the people. He swore to preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution, and Mara felt the weight of those words differently than she ever had. Not because the oath had changed, but because someone was taking it without using it.

His inaugural address was brief. He spoke of law, service, repentance, mercy, justice, and the danger of asking government to become a god. He honored the wounded and warned the proud. He thanked those who had opposed Him and told those who cheered Him that love of neighbor would begin with how they treated the people they had wanted to defeat. The applause came unevenly, as if the crowd did not know whether it had been comforted or corrected.

The first crisis began before sunset.

A march outside a federal courthouse in the capital, originally permitted and peaceful, fractured after a rumor spread that several officials tied to the old corruption investigations had been secretly pardoned. The rumor was false, but it found dry wood. Protesters clashed with counterprotesters. Someone set fire to a vehicle. A small group breached a security barrier and shattered windows near the courthouse entrance. Livestreams mislabeled everything. Within minutes, half the country believed Jesus’ supporters were beginning a purge, and the other half believed His enemies had staged violence to discredit Him. Neither belief waited for evidence.

Mara was in the communications office when the first verified reports arrived. Screens glowed across the room. Staffers spoke over one another. Agent Bell entered with two security officials and a face like stone.

“They’re moving the President to the secure conference room,” Bell said.

Mara grabbed her notebook. “Injuries?”

“Several. One courthouse officer critical. Two protesters unconscious. Fire contained but crowd unstable.”

A staffer looked up from a screen. “There are calls for immediate federal arrests of opposition organizers.”

“Based on what?” Mara asked.

“Based on rage,” Naomi said from the doorway. She had become White House Counsel that morning and already looked as if the building had been trying to age her for years.

In the secure conference room, the presidency stopped being symbolic. It became voices, maps, authorities, risks, and consequences. Officials recommended curfew authority, public statement, investigative posture, coordination with local police, protective movements, and contingency plans if violence spread to other cities. One advisor urged Jesus to condemn His opponents first before they defined the narrative. Another said He had to distance Himself from the violent supporters immediately and forcefully. A third said the public needed to see command, not sorrow.

Jesus listened, seated at the long table beneath lights too bright for the hour. He had been president for less than a day. The loneliness of the office was already visible, not because no one surrounded Him, but because no one else could carry the final responsibility for what He would authorize.

Mara stood against the wall, watching the temptation gather in respectable clothing. Use the moment. Fix the image. Punish quickly. Speak before facts are known. Feed the side that will defend you. Sacrifice precision for strength. The old machinery inside her recognized the room and, to her shame, knew exactly how to win it.

Then Dana Saye’s voice came through on a monitor from outside the courthouse, breathless over sirens. “The officer injured has been identified only as a twenty-year veteran of the courthouse security force. Officials are urging people to leave the area. Conflicting claims continue to spread online…”

Agent Bell turned sharply. “Twenty-year veteran?”

A message came through his device. His face changed.

Mara saw it. “Lorne?”

Bell swallowed once. “It’s Harlan West. I served with him before protective detail.”

The room quieted, but only for a second. Crisis does not stop for personal grief.

An official near the end of the table said, “Mr. President, with respect, this is exactly the moment to demonstrate that violence from your supporters will be crushed.”

Jesus looked at him. “Justice does not need the word crushed to be strong.”

The official flushed. “Sir, weakness will invite more.”

Jesus turned toward the screens, where smoke blurred the courthouse lights. “Then we will not be weak.”

Mara waited for the sentence that would follow in every other administration she had known.

It did not come.

Jesus looked to Naomi. “Use lawful authority. Preserve life. Protect the courthouse. Arrest those who committed violence when evidence supports arrest. Do not punish speech as violence. Do not let rumor become policy. Coordinate with local authorities, and tell the people the truth we know, including what we do not yet know.”

Then He looked at Mara.

She felt the whole room narrow to that gaze.

“Prepare the statement,” He said. “No enemies. No image. No revenge.”

Her throat tightened. “Yes, Mr. President.”

It was the first time she had called Him that.

She went to the side table and began to write by hand. Not because there were no computers, but because the old speed frightened her. Her first draft was too strong in the wrong places. Her second protected Him too much. Her third turned grief into moral theater. She crossed out sentence after sentence until what remained felt bare.

A courthouse officer is fighting for his life. Protesters are injured. A lawful building has been attacked. Rumors have outrun truth. I will not bless violence committed by those who claim to support Me, and I will not accuse those who oppose Me without evidence. Leave the area. Let officers restore peace. Let investigators do their work. Pray without using prayer to avoid responsibility.

She brought it to Jesus.

He read it once. “Good.”

Mara almost exhaled.

Then He took the pen and added one line.

If you came to defend My name by harming your neighbor, you did not come in My name.

Mara read it and felt the campaign, the debate, the soup kitchen, Northline, and every hidden room of her own life converge in one sentence.

The first crisis had found them before the inaugural flowers had wilted. The nation was watching to see whether Jesus would use power to protect His image, punish His enemies, or sanctify the anger of those who claimed Him.

Instead, He stood to go before the cameras with grief in His face and lawful restraint in His hands.

Chapter Six

Jesus faced the country from the White House without flags arranged to make the moment larger than it was. Mara had argued against the Oval Office for the statement, not because the room lacked gravity, but because it carried too much symbolic hunger on a night already swollen with it. He accepted the counsel, and they used a plain press room instead. Agent Bell stood in the back with his face emptied by discipline, waiting for news about the man he had once served beside. Naomi stood near the wall with a legal folder pressed to her chest. Mara stood behind the last row of reporters, holding nothing.

Jesus read the statement slowly. He did not perform outrage. He did not hide grief. When He reached the added line, the room became so still that Mara could hear the faint sound of a camera adjusting focus.

“If you came to defend My name by harming your neighbor, you did not come in My name.”

He looked up from the page.

“No office gives Me permission to lie for peace. No wound gives you permission to sin for justice. Go home. Tell the truth. Let the wounded be treated. Let the guilty be found by evidence, not rumor. Let this nation learn that order without righteousness becomes control, and passion without love becomes destruction.”

The statement did not calm everyone. It was not magic. By midnight, arrests had been made. By morning, the courthouse officer remained alive but critical. Three protesters were hospitalized. Several cities held tense gatherings that did not become riots because local pastors, veterans, teachers, parents, police commanders, and tired citizens stood in the cold and refused to let rumor lead them. That was not credited to Jesus by every network, and He did not ask that it be.

Mara slept two hours on a couch in her office and woke to three hundred messages, twelve interview requests, two resignation rumors, and one email from the widow who had returned her letter torn apart. This time the message was not long.

I saw the statement. Do not use this reply publicly. I still do not forgive you. But if you are telling the truth now, keep doing it when it stops helping you.

Mara read it twice, then printed it and placed it in the folder with the first letter. She did not show it to the press. She did not tell the staff. She did not turn it into evidence that she was healing. She let it remain what it was: a command from someone she had harmed to continue in the truth without demanding comfort.

That afternoon, Jesus asked to visit the hospital.

Security objected. Doctors objected. Communications staff objected in three different tones. The officer’s family objected at first too, until Agent Bell called privately and told them Jesus would not bring cameras, would not make a speech, and would leave if they wanted Him gone. Mara expected Bell to keep his distance afterward, but he asked to ride in the motorcade.

At the hospital, the injured officer’s wife met them in a family room with vending machines humming against one wall. She was a tall woman with red eyes and a sweater buttoned wrong. Her name was Elise West. She looked at Jesus not with awe, but with the blunt exhaustion of someone whose life had been torn open while important people discussed meanings.

“My husband is not a symbol,” she said before anyone greeted her.

“No,” Jesus said.

“He is not proof that Your supporters are violent or proof that Your enemies are lying or proof that the country needs whatever people already think it needs.”

“No.”

“He is Harlan. He forgets where he puts his glasses. He burns pancakes. He sings badly. He calls our granddaughter every Tuesday.”

Jesus bowed His head. “May I sit with you?”

Elise stared at Him for a long moment, then nodded toward the chair across from her. Jesus sat. No one else did until she told Agent Bell he could stop standing like a statue. Bell sat on the edge of a chair as if grief were unfamiliar furniture.

Mara remained near the door. She watched Jesus listen to the woman talk about her husband without turning a single detail into public meaning. He did not hurry her toward forgiveness. He did not explain the country to her. He did not ask her to carry the spiritual weight of the moment. When she cried, He let the silence hold without filling it.

Before He left, Elise said, “Can You make him live?”

The room seemed to stop.

Jesus looked at her with a sorrow so deep Mara had to look away.

“I will pray,” He said.

“That is not what I asked.”

“I know.”

Elise’s face tightened as if she might strike Him, and maybe part of her wanted to. Instead she covered her mouth with both hands and bent forward. Jesus did not move toward her until she reached out first. Then He took her hand and wept with her.

No cameras saw it. No statement followed.

Harlan West lived, though not quickly and not without injury. The investigation found that the courthouse violence had been started by a small group who had claimed loyalty to Jesus online while ignoring everything He had said in public. It also found that counter-rumors had been spread by opportunists who wanted the new administration discredited before its first night ended. Jesus released the evidence as it was confirmed, not as it became useful. Some people accepted it. Some did not. Truth still had enemies.

Weeks passed. The country did not become whole. No nation does in a few weeks because one righteous man holds office. Families still argued. Courts still labored. Agencies still resisted change. Commentators still turned humility into weakness or threat depending on what their audiences required. Jesus signed some orders and refused others. He disappointed allies, restrained enemies, comforted victims, confronted the arrogant, and carried the daily loneliness of authority without letting it become self-pity.

Mara changed more slowly than the headlines wanted. She still felt the old instinct to manage before she felt the call to tell the truth. She still drafted sentences that protected image and then crossed them out. She still woke some nights in the hotel suite from seven years earlier, hearing rain against glass and seeing the folder she had buried. But now she answered the memory differently. She cooperated with inquiries. She met, when invited, with two of the Northline families and did more listening than speaking. She resigned from no responsibility simply to escape shame, and she clung to no position when correction required humility.

One evening, after a long meeting about disaster relief funding, Jesus found her alone in the colonnade outside the West Wing. The air smelled of wet stone and winter grass. City lights trembled beyond the gates.

“I used to think truth could not survive inside power,” Mara said.

Jesus stood beside her, looking out toward the dark lawn. “And now?”

“Now I think truth can survive there only if someone is willing to lose what power usually protects.”

“Yes.”

She let that answer settle. It no longer felt like condemnation. It felt like a door she would have to keep walking through.

“Will the country learn it?” she asked.

“Some will.”

“Only some?”

“For now.”

It was not the answer a strategist wanted. It was the answer a servant could live with.

Late that night, long after the staff lights dimmed and the last briefing folder was closed, Jesus walked alone to a small room that had been set aside for prayer. There was nothing grand in it. A chair, a table, a worn Bible, a lamp, and a narrow window looking toward a city that still did not know how deeply it was loved. He knelt there, as He had knelt before the campaign began, not as a ruler taking possession of a nation, but as a Son returning every burden to the Father.

Outside, America remained afraid, hopeful, divided, grieving, proud, repentant, angry, and loved.

Inside, Jesus prayed quietly.

Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph

Watch Douglas Vandergraph inspiring faith-based videos on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@douglasvandergraph

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from SmarterArticles

Picture the moment of the mistake. Not a dramatic one, because the dramatic ones are easy to litigate. Picture instead the small, plausible failure: an AI agent embedded in your phone, told to “sort out the trip to Lisbon,” books a non-refundable fare for the wrong week. Or it renews a subscription you meant to cancel. Or it accepts terms and conditions on a checkout page, ticks a box authorising the sharing of your data with a dozen marketing partners, and moves on to the next task at a speed no human would bother to match. By the time you notice, the money has moved, the consent has been given, and the commitment has hardened into something you cannot easily reverse.

Now ask the question that the entire emerging architecture of agentic commerce is currently unable to answer cleanly: who is responsible? You issued the instruction, but you did not approve the specific action. The platform built the agent, but it acted within the bounds you set. The developer trained the underlying model, but cannot foresee the millions of paths it might take. The merchant accepted the order, but had no way of knowing a human had not reviewed it. Four parties, each holding a fragment of the responsibility, and no settled rule for assembling those fragments into a single answerable entity. That gap, between what the software can now do and what accountability exists when it does it wrong, is the most under-examined risk in consumer technology today. And it is widening fast.

The shoppers who already feel it

The unease is not theoretical, and it is not confined to commentators. It has shown up in the numbers. In its first-quarter 2026 study of consumers across the United States and the United Kingdom, the fraud-prevention firm Riskified found a population that is enthusiastically adopting AI for shopping while quietly refusing to let go of the wheel. A clear majority, 61.5 per cent, said they had already used AI tools for product discovery and recommendations. Yet 55.0 per cent said they were not comfortable with AI agents making purchases on their behalf, and 53.9 per cent believed AI could increase their exposure to online fraud.

Read those figures together and a coherent psychology emerges. People are happy to let an agent browse, compare, and suggest. They are markedly less happy to let it buy. The line they are drawing falls precisely at the point where browsing becomes a binding transaction, the point where money leaves the account and an obligation is created in their name. Riskified's data sharpens this further: 46.5 per cent said they did not trust any company to manage purchases for them, and 73.9 per cent expected strong safeguards, such as biometric checks or one-time passwords, before they would consent. Most revealing of all, 50.8 per cent said they believed the AI platform itself should bear responsibility for unauthorised purchases.

That last statistic is the hinge on which this whole subject turns. Half of consumers have already, intuitively, assigned the liability. They want the platform to pay when the platform's agent gets it wrong. The trouble is that the law has made no such assignment, and there is no guarantee it will arrive at the same answer that consumers consider obvious. The shift in sentiment is recent, too. Riskified noted that concern had grown compared with its late-2025 survey, with anxieties around fraud, security, and accountability actively slowing the path toward the fully autonomous, agent-driven checkout that the industry has been promising. The technology is racing ahead. Trust is not following at the same pace.

From novelty to infrastructure

It would be comforting to treat all of this as a problem for later, a speculative concern about a future that has not yet arrived. It is not. Agentic commerce has already crossed the threshold from demonstration to deployment. The major payment networks have built the rails. Mastercard's Agent Pay, announced in 2025, allows verified AI agents to transact on a consumer's behalf using what it calls Agentic Tokens, an extension of its existing tokenisation infrastructure, with early issuing partners including Citi and US Bank. Visa has extended its intelligent-commerce programme to cover AI-initiated payments. PayPal has adopted the Agentic Commerce Protocol to embed payments directly inside conversational AI, so that a user can complete a purchase without ever leaving the chat window.

The model developers have built the hands that operate the rails. OpenAI's computer-using agent and Anthropic's Claude integrations can navigate websites, fill in forms, and complete checkouts. These are no longer laboratory toys. By 2026 they were processing meaningful daily transaction volumes, embedded not in some separate “AI app” that a user consciously opens, but woven into operating systems, browsers, and financial apps as a default capability. That is the crucial detail. An agent that lives inside your bank's app or your phone's assistant is not a product you chose to trust. It is infrastructure, and infrastructure is something you stop noticing.

OpenAI has been candid about the failure modes. The company acknowledges that its agent can take an action the user did not intend, with consequences ranging in severity from a typo in an email through to buying the wrong item or permanently deleting an important file. That candour is welcome, but it also frames the problem precisely. The errors are not edge cases to be engineered away in the next release. They are an intrinsic property of systems that act autonomously across an open-ended web of websites, each with its own design quirks and dark patterns.

The early dispute data bears this out. Industry analysis in 2026 found that disputes on agent-initiated transactions were running at roughly 2.4 times the rate of comparable human-initiated, card-not-present transactions. Tellingly, the composition was different. There was proportionally less outright fraud and proportionally more of two other categories: “did not authorise” and “not as described.” In other words, the distinctive harm of agentic commerce is not the stolen card. It is the legitimate agent, operating within its mandate, doing something the human behind it never actually wanted. That is a category of harm that existing fraud systems were never designed to catch, because it is not fraud. It is a faithful machine faithfully executing a flawed plan.

A law built for people who can be found

Here is the deeper problem, the one the legal community spent the spring of 2026 trying to articulate. A legal analysis published by Reuters in April 2026 documented the accountability gaps that open up when agentic systems, capable of booking travel, authorising payments, placing orders, and managing subscriptions without a human confirming each individual step, make errors or cause harm. The central observation was disarmingly simple. Existing consumer protection law was designed for transactions between identifiable human or corporate parties. It was not designed for autonomous software agents acting in a user's name.

Consider what consumer protection law quietly assumes. It assumes there is a buyer and a seller. It assumes that when something goes wrong, you can identify who did what, establish what they knew and what they intended, and direct a remedy at a party who can be reached and held to account. The whole apparatus, from the right to a refund to the rules on unfair contract terms, rests on a knowable, reachable responsible party. Strip that away and the machinery seizes. When the “buyer” is a piece of software, intent becomes a slippery concept. When the action was taken by an agent built by one company, running a model trained by another, operating on instructions from a third, and transacting with a fourth, the chain of responsibility does not break in one obvious place. It dissolves across several.

Regulators have begun to respond, though their response so far has been to reach for the tools they already have. On 9 March 2026 the United Kingdom's Competition and Markets Authority published two linked documents: practical guidance on complying with consumer law when using AI agents, and a wider policy paper on agentic AI and consumers. The CMA's headline principle was clear and, for businesses, uncomfortable: the same consumer law rules apply regardless of whether a customer interacts with a human or an AI agent. Crucially, it stated that businesses remain fully responsible for what their AI agents say and do, even where the technology is supplied or designed by a third party. Delegating a decision to software, in the regulator's view, does not delegate the legal accountability that comes with it. The teeth behind this are real. Under the Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Act 2024, the CMA can levy fines of up to 10 per cent of a firm's global turnover.

The CMA's instinct is sound, and it points toward concentrating accountability rather than letting it scatter. But notice what it does and does not solve. It tells a merchant deploying a customer-service agent that it cannot hide behind its vendor. That is a meaningful clarification. It does much less for the messier scenario at the heart of consumer anxiety, in which the agent is not the merchant's tool at all but the consumer's own, acting on the consumer's side of the transaction, and getting it wrong in a way that harms the very person who deployed it. When your agent books the wrong flight, the merchant did nothing improper. The platform's agent behaved as designed. There is no obvious villain to point the existing rules at.

The European position is, if anything, more exposed. The EU AI Act, the most comprehensive AI regulation yet written, was not drafted with agents in mind. It does not explicitly define agentic AI, instead sweeping such systems into broad, catch-all categories. More fundamentally, its architecture rests on the idea of a system having a static “intended purpose” and a band of “reasonably foreseeable misuse.” Agentic systems make a mockery of both. They work through an iterative execution loop, dynamically generating novel, unprogrammed routes to a goal. The intermediate actions an agent takes to satisfy an instruction are, by design, not foreseeable by the developer who built it. A regulatory framework anchored to foreseeability is poorly equipped to govern a technology whose defining feature is that its specific behaviour cannot be foreseen.

That gap is not merely an academic complaint. As of early 2026, despite the EU AI Act's prohibited-practice provisions having been enforceable since August 2025, no enforcement actions had been announced, while the powers to fine providers of general-purpose AI models were not due to engage until August 2026. The regulation was racing to define categories even as the technology slipped between them. Legal commentators tracking the field through the spring of 2026, including practitioners at firms such as Venable, reached a strikingly consistent conclusion: deploying an AI agent does not transfer accountability to the agent. It concentrates accountability on the party that deploys it. The recurring failure they identified was not a shortage of rules but a failure of legal and policy definitions to capture what agentic systems actually are, how they work, and where the genuine locus of risk and responsibility lies. A gap opens, in their phrasing, wherever the original human instruction is remote from the final, potentially harmful output. Agentic systems are engineered, deliberately, to widen exactly that distance, because the entire value proposition is that the human gives a goal and the machine handles the steps in between.

The trouble with putting it right

Allocating blame is only half of consumer protection. The other half is recourse: the practical ability to undo a harm once it has happened. Here the distinctive shape of agentic failure becomes a problem in its own right. Recall that the disputes piling up are not predominantly fraud claims but “did not authorise” and “not as described” claims. Those are far harder to adjudicate than a stolen card, because they hinge on a question that is genuinely murky: what, precisely, did the consumer authorise? When you hand an agent a loose instruction such as “find me a good deal on a weekend away,” you have plainly authorised some purchases and plainly not authorised others, with a vast grey zone in between. A non-refundable booking might fall on either side of that line depending on facts that no one recorded at the time.

This is why the technical question of how an agent captures and proves consent is not a back-office detail but the foundation on which any recourse must rest. Without a record of the mandate, every dispute collapses into one person's word against a black box, and the consumer, lacking visibility into the agent's reasoning, is structurally disadvantaged. Schiavi's essay, to which we will return, made exactly this point about knowledge and consent: users cannot meaningfully consent to choices they cannot understand, and an agent's decision-making is frequently both opaque and complex. The recourse problem and the consent problem are the same problem wearing different clothes. Solve the record of intent, and you give both the disputing consumer and the adjudicating system something concrete to reason about. Leave it unsolved, and the protections that exist on paper become unreachable in practice, which for the harmed consumer is indistinguishable from having no protection at all.

The seductive, dangerous metaphor

Faced with something genuinely new, the human reflex is to reach for the nearest familiar analogy. For agentic AI, the analogy everyone reaches for is the employee, or its legal cousin, the agent in the principal-agent sense: a proxy who acts on your behalf, within your authority, with consequences that flow back to you. It is an appealing frame. We already have centuries of law and intuition about delegated authority, about what a principal owes for the acts of an agent, about when a worker's mistake becomes the employer's liability. Why not simply pour the new wine into these old bottles?

Because, according to research published by Harvard Business Review in May 2026, the bottles leak in ways that produce real damage. The study, conducted by Matthew Kropp, Julie Bedard, Megan Hsu and Lisa Krayer of Boston Consulting Group together with Emma Wiles of Boston University's Questrom School of Business, examined what happens when organisations treat AI agents as though they were employees, complete with the conventional accountability structures that surround human staff. In a large-scale experiment involving more than 1,200 managers, the framing alone changed behaviour, and not for the better. When the AI was presented as an employee, managers identified 18 per cent fewer errors in its work. Individual accountability for errors dropped by nine percentage points, while the accountability that managers attributed to the AI itself rose by eight percentage points.

Sit with what those numbers describe. Simply by dressing an agent in the costume of a colleague, the humans around it became less vigilant, less willing to own its mistakes, and more inclined to treat the software as a locus of blame in its own right. The metaphor did not just mislead. It actively eroded the human oversight that is the only thing standing between a flawed plan and a harmful outcome. The researchers argued that the employee analogy hides three things humans supply for free that agents do not: a stable sense of context across the day, an instinct to escalate when something feels wrong, and accountability that survives a bad outcome. An agent will keep executing a flawed plan with serene confidence long after a human teammate would have stopped to ask whether the plan still made sense.

The conclusion the authors drew is the single most important sentence in this entire debate, and it deserves to be stated plainly. Accountability does not transfer to a model. It stays with the humans who deployed it. The agent cannot be a defendant. It owns no assets, feels no consequence, and carries no reputation into the next transaction. Any framework that lets responsibility settle on the agent is not allocating responsibility at all. It is abolishing it, while preserving the comforting appearance that someone, somewhere, is answerable. The HBR finding matters beyond the office, too, because the same psychological reflex that makes a manager relax their scrutiny of an “employee” agent makes a consumer relax their scrutiny of an assistant that feels like a helpful person rather than a piece of fallible software. The friendlier the framing, the looser the vigilance, and the wider the gap into which harm can fall.

Responsibility laundering

This is precisely the failure that the bioethicist Adam Schiavi warned about in an essay published by Undark in March 2026. Schiavi, an anaesthesiologist and neurocritical care specialist at the Johns Hopkins Hospital who also works as a biomedical ethicist studying synthetic personas in AI systems, gave the problem a name that ought to enter the general vocabulary: responsibility laundering. His worry is that granting AI any form of personhood or quasi-agency, even a limited one, formalises the most dangerous escape hatch of the agentic era. It creates a clean, respectable mechanism for a human to say, in effect, “It was not me. The agent did it.” The harm becomes everyone's problem and nobody's fault.

Schiavi's framing is valuable because it comes from medicine, a field that has spent a very long time thinking rigorously about responsibility when the stakes are life and death and the actors are fallible. He draws on the clinical concept of moral residue: the lingering weight of responsibility that a person continues to carry even after taking a justified action with a bad outcome. A clinician who makes a defensible decision that nonetheless harms a patient feels that residue, and that felt weight is part of what keeps the profession careful. An AI agent feels nothing. It cannot bear moral residue, which means that if responsibility is allowed to flow to the agent, it does not accumulate anywhere. It simply evaporates.

His prescription is not to ban the technology but to keep responsibility within reach of a human at every stage. He proposes a framework of what he calls authorised agency, and its components map almost perfectly onto what meaningful consumer protection would need to look like. There should be an authority envelope, a bounded and explicit scope of what the agent is permitted to do. There should be a human-of-record, a named person who authorised the agent and remains answerable for it. There should be interrupt authority, an unqualified right to stop the agent at any moment. And there should be an answerability chain, a traceable path that leads from any action the agent takes back to the human who authorised it. The unifying principle, in Schiavi's words, is that human accountability must precede autonomous capability. We have, so far, deployed the capability first and left the accountability to catch up.

The strength of Schiavi's approach is that it refuses the question everyone else gets bogged down in. The interesting debate, he argues, is not whether an agent deserves personhood or some lesser flavour of legal status. That debate is a distraction, and worse, it is the very mechanism by which responsibility gets laundered. The questions worth asking are blunt and operational: who authorised this agent, what was it allowed to do, who can stop it, and who will answer when it causes harm? Notice that all four are questions about humans, not about software. They reframe the entire problem away from the metaphysics of machine agency and toward the practical engineering of human accountability. That reframing is the most useful thing anyone has contributed to this argument, because it is buildable.

What protection could actually look like

If the diagnosis is that responsibility dissolves across layers of software, platforms, and developers, then the cure cannot be a single new rule. It has to be an architecture, one that is partly legal, partly technical, and partly commercial. The encouraging news is that the outlines of that architecture are already visible in the work of regulators, payment networks, and researchers. The discouraging news is that nobody yet owns the job of assembling them, and the harms are accumulating while the pieces sit in separate boxes.

Start with the technical layer, because it is the most tractable and the furthest advanced. The payment networks have arrived at an instinct that aligns neatly with what consumers told Riskified they want. Visa has indicated that its zero-liability protection, which shields cardholders from unauthorised charges, applies to AI-initiated transactions just as it does to any other. Mastercard's approach keeps the consumer's chargeback rights intact and follows its established tokenisation rules, under which the card issuer carries fraud liability when a token is validly issued. The mechanism that makes this workable is the tokenised, verifiable mandate: a cryptographic record of what the user actually authorised the agent to do. Mastercard's “verifiable intent” layer is an attempt to build exactly this, a provable record of user authorisation that can be inspected after the fact.

This matters enormously, because it begins to reconstruct the thing the law assumes and agentic commerce destroyed: a knowable record of intent. If every agent action carries a verifiable mandate showing the scope the user granted, then the question “did the human authorise this?” becomes answerable rather than philosophical. An agent that buys within its mandate has acted legitimately, and the consumer wears the result the way they would wear any considered purchase. An agent that strays beyond its mandate has produced an unauthorised transaction, and the existing zero-liability and chargeback machinery can engage, just as it does for a stolen card. The verifiable mandate is, in effect, the technical implementation of Schiavi's authority envelope and answerability chain. It is the bridge between a legal system that needs a knowable responsible party and a technology that had threatened to abolish one.

The legal layer then has to do the work the CMA has started, and extend it. The principle that deploying an agent concentrates rather than dilutes accountability is the right foundation, but it needs to be applied to the consumer's own agent as well as the merchant's. That points toward a tiered allocation of responsibility rather than a single answerable party, which is uncomfortable for a legal tradition that likes to find one defendant, but probably unavoidable given that the harm genuinely is distributed. Within an agent's verified mandate, the consumer reasonably bears the outcome, with platforms obliged to make mandates clear, revocable, and not buried in dark patterns. Beyond the mandate, or where the agent malfunctioned, the platform that built and operated it should bear the loss, which is both what half of consumers already expect and what creates the correct incentive for platforms to make their agents safer. Where a model defect causes systematic harm at scale, the developer's product liability should be engaged. And merchants should retain their existing obligations around honest description and fair terms, regardless of whether the buyer on the other side was flesh or code.

The commercial layer, finally, is where competitive pressure can do work that regulation cannot do quickly enough. Riskified's finding that 73.9 per cent of consumers expect strong safeguards before they will trust an agent to buy is not just a warning. It is a market signal. Trust is the binding constraint on agentic commerce, which means that the platform that offers the most legible guarantees, the clearest interrupt authority, the most generous reversal window, and the most transparent mandate, will win the customers that the technology cannot otherwise persuade. The firms building these systems have a commercial reason, not merely a moral one, to build the accountability in. The danger is the classic one of a race to deploy, in which the pressure to ship the capability outruns the patience to ship the protections, and the harms land on consumers in the interval.

Who builds it, and when

So who is responsible for building meaningful consumer protection before the harms accumulate? The honest answer is that no single actor can, and that is exactly why the gap has been allowed to widen. The platform can build the verifiable mandate and the interrupt button, but it cannot rewrite consumer law. The regulator can insist that accountability concentrates rather than dissolves, but it cannot, on its own, supply the technical means of proving what a user authorised. The payment network can extend zero-liability protection, but only within the transactions it touches. The developer can make the underlying model more cautious and more legible, but cannot foresee every path its agent will take across an open web. Each holds one piece. None holds the whole.

What this demands is not a single owner but a deliberate stitching-together, a decision by each layer to design for the others rather than to push responsibility outward and hope it lands somewhere else. That is the precise opposite of responsibility laundering, and it is achievable. The verifiable mandate gives the law its knowable party. The law's insistence on concentrated accountability gives the platform its incentive. The platform's incentive aligns with the consumer trust that the market is demanding. The pieces want to fit. What is missing is the urgency to fit them before the dispute rate, already running at well over twice the human baseline, climbs higher and ordinary people start absorbing losses that the system was supposed to absorb for them.

The window for getting this right is the brief moment we are in now, while agentic commerce is large enough to matter but not yet so embedded that its failure modes have calcified into the way things are. The shoppers in Riskified's survey have already told us where the line sits. They will let the agent browse. They are not yet ready to let it buy without a safety net, and they have already decided, by a narrow majority, that the platform should catch them when it falls. The technologists have built the cryptographic tools to honour that expectation. The ethicists have supplied the vocabulary, from moral residue to the authority envelope, to keep a human within reach of every action. The regulators have laid down the founding principle that software does not get to be the one who pays.

The work that remains is the unglamorous business of assembly, of treating accountability not as someone else's department but as a design requirement that every layer owns a share of. An autonomous agent acting in your name is, at bottom, a promise: that the thing buying on your behalf is still, in every way that matters, you. A promise needs someone to keep it. The achievement of the next few years, if there is one, will be ensuring that when the agent gets it wrong, the answer to “whose fault is it?” is never allowed to be the one Schiavi warned us about. Not the comfortable, dangerous answer of nobody.

References

  1. Riskified. “Riskified Study Finds Consumers Aren't Ready to Hand Over Control as AI Transforms Shopping, with Over Half Afraid of Online Fraud.” Business Wire, 27 April 2026. https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260427900819/en/Riskified-Study-Finds-Consumers-Arent-Ready-to-Hand-Over-Control-as-AI-Transforms-Shopping-with-Over-Half-Afraid-of-Online-Fraud

  2. StockTitan. “Most shoppers use AI to browse, but 53.9% fear more online fraud.” https://www.stocktitan.net/news/RSKD/riskified-study-finds-consumers-aren-t-ready-to-hand-over-control-as-1s2lkwwo0muk.html

  3. TLT LLP. “Agentic AI: CMA publishes guidance on consumer law and DMCCA risks.” https://www.tlt.com/insights-and-events/insight/agentic-ai-cma-publishes-guidance-on-consumer-law-and-dmcca-risks

  4. Thomson Reuters Institute. “Agentic AI following GenAI's growth trajectory in legal, but with unique oversight challenges, new report shows.” 7 April 2026. https://www.thomsonreuters.com/en-us/posts/technology/agentic-ai-oversight-challenges/

  5. Kropp, Matthew; Bedard, Julie; Wiles, Emma; Hsu, Megan; Krayer, Lisa. “Research: Why You Shouldn't Treat AI Agents Like Employees.” Harvard Business Review, 6 May 2026. https://hbr.org/2026/05/research-why-you-shouldnt-treat-ai-agents-like-employees

  6. Schiavi, Adam. “Opinion: Autonomous AI Agents Have an Ethics Problem.” Undark, 5 March 2026. https://undark.org/2026/03/05/opinion-ai-agents-ethics/

  7. Johns Hopkins Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine. “Adam Schiavi, MD, PhD, MS.” https://anesthesiology.hopkinsmedicine.org/faculty/adam-schiavi/

  8. Venable LLP. “Agentic AI Is Here, Legal, Compliance, and Governance Risks You Need to Know.” February 2026. https://www.venable.com/insights/publications/2026/02/agentic-ai-is-here-legal-compliance-and-governance

  9. TechPolicy.Press. “The EU AI Act is Not Ready for Agents.” https://www.techpolicy.press/the-eu-ai-act-is-not-ready-for-agents/

  10. OpenAI. “Computer-Using Agent.” https://openai.com/index/computer-using-agent/

  11. Eco. “What Is Mastercard Agent Pay? AI Agent Commerce Protocol in 2026.” https://eco.com/support/en/articles/15192001-what-is-mastercard-agent-pay-ai-agent-commerce-protocol-in-2026

  12. ALM Corp. “Visa AI-Initiated Payments: What Fintech Must Know in 2026.” https://almcorp.com/blog/visa-ai-initiated-payments-agentic-commerce-fintech/

  13. CNBC. “Payment giants are preparing for a world where AI agents book flights and shop for you.” 29 December 2025. https://www.cnbc.com/2025/12/29/ai-agentic-shopping-price-discounts-cheap-sales-commerce-visa-mastercard-chatbots.html

  14. TrustSphere. “When the Agent Gets It Wrong: Liability, Consent and Recourse in AI-Initiated Commerce.” https://www.trustsphere.ai/post/when-the-agent-gets-it-wrong-liability-consent-and-recourse-in-ai-initiated-commerce


Tim Green

Tim Green UK-based Systems Theorist & Independent Technology Writer

Tim explores the intersections of artificial intelligence, decentralised cognition, and posthuman ethics. His work, published at smarterarticles.co.uk, challenges dominant narratives of technological progress while proposing interdisciplinary frameworks for collective intelligence and digital stewardship.

His writing has been featured on Ground News and shared by independent researchers across both academic and technological communities.

ORCID: 0009-0002-0156-9795 Email: tim@smarterarticles.co.uk

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from 💚

Our Father Who art in Heaven Hallowed be Thy name Thy Kingdom come Thy will be done on Earth as it is in Heaven Give us this day our daily Bread And forgive us our trespasses As we forgive those who trespass against us And lead us not into temptation But deliver us from evil

Amen

Jesus is Lord! Come Lord Jesus!

Come Lord Jesus! Christ is Lord!

 
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from Space Goblin Diaries

Once again I haven't had a huge amount of time to work on the game this month, and what I have done has been routine filling in of chapters so I don't have anything very interesting to share. But I'm committed to doing a dev diary every month, so here's a companion piece to my post about space villains, this one about the space heroes who oppose them. (These are once again in chronological order of first appearance.)

Buck Rogers

Post-apocalyptic hero

Buck Rogers as drawn by Frank Frazetta, 1953. Buck Rogers in a blue flight suit with a star on the chest defends a blonde woman (presumably Wilma Deering) from some kind of green aliens.First appearance: Syndicated newspaper strip, 1929.

Buck Rogers is present-day pilot who gets Rip Van Winkle'd into the 24th Century, where he finds a post-apocalyptic Earth where the last few civilised hidden cities wage war against barbaric enemies. Later stories have Buck venturing into exotic locations, including outer space.

I found scans of the original Buck Rogers comics online and I tried to read them, but I reached the limit of what even I'm prepared to do for space hero research. The art hasn't aged as well as Flash Gordon's, and they're also pretty racist. (Flash Gordon's villain was a Chinese-coded alien, but Buck Rogers was literally fighting evil Chinese people.)

The 1939 movie serial is somewhat better, and replaces the evil Chinese people with “super-racketeers” of indeterminate race, led by a dictator called Killer Kane. Most of the plot involves Buck Rogers and Killer Kane's agents travelling to Saturn to secure the support of its inhabitants in their struggle.

But of course the best-known version of Buck Rogers is the 1979-81 TV series, whose pilot episode replaces the “super-racketeers” with an encroaching space empire represented by Princess Ardala (Killer Kane is demoted to her sidekick). It's cheap-looking and the world-building barely makes sense, but it's a lot of fun, thanks mostly to the performances of Gil Gerard as Buck Rogers and Erin Gray as Wilma Deering.

Frustratingly, Princess Ardala comes close to being an interesting villain—a spoiled space princess trying to conquer a planet because Daddy has give it to her to play with, whose interactions with the hero give her the beginnings of a moral awakening—but the series doesn't give her enough screen time, and focuses so much on her being in love with Buck Rogers that she doesn't feel like a fully realised character in her own right. There's one nice scene in which she stares silently into a mirror and you can see her torn between her future as Evil Space Empress and her potentially redeeming love for Buck...but it's not enough.

Flash Gordon

The last great planetary romance

Flash Gordon and Ming the Merciless as drawn by Alex RaymondFirst appearance: Syndicated newspaper strip, 1934.

The Buck Rogers newspaper strip inspired various imitators, the most successful of which was Alex Raymond's Flash Gordon. The premise is similar: a person from the real world gets transported into a fantastic science fiction setting, in Flash's case via rocket ship rather than a time skip.

Flash Gordon is perhaps the last great example of the “planetary romance” genre, in which someone is transported to an exotic alien planet and has swashbuckling science fantasy adventures. Most of his adventures are confined to the medieval-with-rocket-ships planet Mongo, and Flash is as likely to fight monsters with a sword as with a ray gun.

The three movie serials (1936, 1938, 1940) adapt the comics fairly closely, and the 1980 movie is a lovely modernised pastiche of the 1930s serials' aesthetic. The current ongoing daily/Sunday strip by Dan Schkade is a great modern follow-up to the original comics.

The Lensmen

Space heroes as an institution

Cover of Astounding Stories, October 1939, showing a muscular white man in shiny space jodphurs.First appearance: Astounding Stories, 1937

Heroic adventure stories, in space or not, generally feature a superhumanly competent and morally upstanding individual hero. But what if the superiority of this individual wasn't just a literary conceit, but was recognised in-universe? Turns out it gets kind of fascist.

Beginning with Galactic Patrol (serialised 1937-8, published as a novel in 1950), E. E. 'Doc' Smith's Lensman series is based on the idea that some individuals are simply so brilliant and morally upstanding that they should be entrusted with psychic powers, fantastic weaponry, and nearly unlimited authority in deploying these things against organised space crime. And deploy them they do, not hesitating to use ridiculously over-the-top lethal force against space pirates, drug smugglers, and other villains.

But it turns out that all the space criminals are (sometimes unknowing) underlings of the utterly evil alien Eddorians, who may in fact be responsible for basically all bad stuff in the universe. (Could social problems ever be a cause of crime? No, it must be the influence of evil outsiders.) Opposing the Eddorians are the Arisians, benevolent aliens of incredible psychic power, who have been subtly influencing life throughout the galaxy to selectively breed the upstanding individuals who make up the Lensmen.

Anyway, our main hero, Kimball Kinnison, teams up with Lensmen from various weird alien species to defeat a series of evil organisations, each of which turns out to be a front for an even bigger, eviller organisation, until eventually they're in a galaxies-spanning war against the Eddorians themselves!

Setting aside the problematic moral assumptions, the books are a lot of fun. The ridiculously over-the-top pulp prose style, in particular, is something I'm trying to emulate in Foolish Earth Creatures. I mean look at this nonsense:

He thrust out tractor beams of his own, and from the already white-hot refractory throats of his projectors there raved out horribly potent beams of annihilation; beams of dreadful power which tore madly at the straining defensive screens of the Patrol ship. Screens flared vividly, radiating all the colours of the spectrum. Space itself seemed a rainbow gone mad, for there were being exerted there forces of a magnitude to stagger the imagination; forces to be yielded only by the atomic might from which they sprang; forces whose neutralization set up visible strains in the very fabric of the ether itself.

If you're thinking the Lensmen sound a lot like the Jedi, or that the breeding program to produce a psyhic superman sounds like what's happening in Dune, or that the cosmic war between good and evil aliens sounds like what Babylon 5 was deconstructing, you'd be correct. The Lensman series casts a long shadow over the entire space opera genre.

Dan Dare

Post-war British space hero

Dan Dare as drawn by Frank HampsonFirst appearance: Eagle, 1950.

The post-war British answer to Flash Gordon and Buck Rogers, Dan Dare had adventures on exotic planets not because he was transported there accidentally, but because he's a space pilot so it's kind of his job. The planetary romance genre that was still visible in Flash Gordon has almost entirely vanished, and Dare's adventures are closer to straightforward science fiction, with technology that at least makes an effort at seeming plausible. Dan Dare almost never uses a sword.

Dan Dare is the most self-consciously moral of these stories, and its sense of morality is very different from that of the Lensman books, with an emphasis on not using violence unless absolutely necessary, and doing the right thing even though it's difficult. Kim Kinnison occasionally takes an enemy prisoner rather than killing them because it's a good strategic move, but Dan Dare will do it because it's the right thing to do.

Jeff Hawke

Space hero as diplomat

Jeff Hawke as drawn by Sydney Jordan. Jeff and his sidekick Laura, both in bulky spacesuits, try to keep the peace between a dog-headed humanoid, a humanoid in a bulky metal suit, and a floating eyeball with tentacles.

First appearance: Daily Express, 1954.

The success of Dan Dare triggered a wave of space hero characters in British comics, perhaps the most interesting of which is Jeff Hawke. He started out as a by-the-numbers Flash Gordon/Dan Dare knock-off, but gradually developed into more of a diplomat than an action hero, and starred in complicated, humourous, and sometimes satirical adventures involving some delightfully weird aliens. In fact a lot of the time Hawke's main role is to be the “straight man” to the weird bickering aliens who are the real stars.

The world of Jeff Hawke has Earth as newcomers in a galactic society of weird alien races. Several stories focus on the space police, but unlike the Lensmen they're bumbling, bureaucratic, and often incompetent.

One Jeff Hawke story does that joke (later done by The Hitchhikers' Guide to the Galaxy) where we see alien invaders approaching Earth but when they arrive they turn out to be tiny. But whereas Hitchhikers uses that as the punchline, the Jeff Hawke story keeps going for several more weeks as the tiny aliens continue their increasingly absurd plan to conquer the planet with their tiny ray guns.

Luke Skywalker

The Space Hero's Journey

Luke Skywalker (Mark Hamill) activates his father's lightsaber in Star Wars. First appearance: Star Wars, 1977.

The above examples are all from onging comic or book series that don't allow their heroes much room for character development. Flash Gordon and Buck Rogers get transported to their fantastic worlds, and Kim Kinnison starts by graduating from Lensman School, but pretty quickly they're doing space hero things and they don't change much as people after that.

George Lucas was inspired by these stories when he created Star Wars, but he took that kind of character and gave them a coming-of-age story that fairly closely follows the mythic structure of Joseph Campbell's Hero's Journey.

(The universality of the Hero's Journey is sometimes exaggerated, and there's debate about how useful a tool it is both for writing and story analysis—but if it's applicable to anything, it's Star Wars.)

The mythic properties of the story structure are accompanied by mystical elements of world-building. The Jedi have psychic powers not that different from those of the Lensmen, but whereas the Lensmen treat them scientifically, for the Jedi they're a mystical or religious art. The story's morality, similarly, is not just a struggle against worldly evil as represented by the Empire, but a supernatural battle between good and evil as represented by the two sides of the Force.

*

There are more characters I could mention but I think I've spent enough time on this. Hopefully I'll be able to work on the game some more in July and will have something more to write in the next diary.

How will you, the player measure up to these heroes of 20th century science fiction? Don't miss July's developer diary!

#FoolishEarthCreatures #DevDiary #BuckRogers #FlashGordon #Lensman #DanDare #JeffHawke #StarWars

 
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from Roscoe's Story

In Summary: * Yesterday's yard work took more out of me than I expected. This morning when I stepped outside the heat plus my lingering fatigue convinced me to come right back inside and rest under the a/c. The remaing yard work can wait a little longer. Maybe tomorrow morning. We'll see

My MLB game has just started and in the middle of the first inning there's no score yet. Following this game is the last item on my day's agenda. By the time it ends I'll have finished my night prayers and will be heading to bed.

Prayers, etc.: * I have a daily prayer regimen I try to follow throughout the day from early morning, as soon as I roll out of bed, until head hits pillow at night.

Health Metrics: * bw= 230.60 lbs. * bp= 137/83 (70)

Exercise: * morning stretches, balance exercises, kegel pelvic floor exercises, half squats, calf raises, wall push-ups, BP breathing exercises, pilates

Diet: * 06:00 – 1 ham & cheese sandwich * 07:30 – crispy oatmeal dunkin' cookies * 09:00 – 3 boiled eggs * 11:45 – air-popped popcorn * 13:00 – ice cream * 14:30 – 1 fresh apple * 16:30 – 1 peanut butter sandwich

Activities, Chores, etc.: * 04:30 – listen to local news talk radio * 05:30 – bank accounts activity monitored. * 06:00 – read, write, pray, follow news reports from various sources, surf the socials, nap * 14:00 – place online grocery delivery order * 14:20 – listen to relaxing music * 15:00 – listening to general sports talk on 105.3 The Fan, DFW's #1 Sports Station, ahead of tonight's Rangers / Guardians game. I'll stay with this station to hear the radio call of that game.

Chess: * 17:40 – moved in all pending CC games

 
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from 💚

Riv’

Shining shore aseen To the River and the lake Vineyard here Apostles May And shining truth,- river bright And gorge of green and clear Solemn twine and May for horse To Baddeck and in its column A substance of my own This shining glass And Surface Wine For one and tattle,- Justice me And solemn return To my River

And in this Country land Crossed to solemn to give by For fortunes new And unto Rowan Playing well On British pass In Earnest Wine Going rouse To free at land

And where’s the Sun But fortune mine And in this Water Called the River home And back to Sea In daying form Into the heard In ev’ry way To intertwine By Labrador And seeing pret

In juxtapose These river forms And biggened ruse By time and wet And prayer in Cross To cease in Carol Growing old Un time beneath That happenstand For filling brim In Country thirst And to its court-, this shining New

For under glass Their Winter eyes And Sunny May Chicago Green That one in vise The day is free- For bits of Water And under me.

 
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from 💚

Ru-Night (pt. 1)

For the stolen conscience And the justice of goods No trip to this affair Could study the relieved A good and Heaven friend Untold of the steady Winter To pay all the summons That were dictated by fear To forgovern this freedom And while stuck to the lazy chords Given this cycle That folded all Rome And in giving to the Android Where summons were high The nights are heavensent When we knew what to expect Like rain by appeal And Molotovs from the East There and giving war Now to the South at hand And trial for Putin’s Mother Russia When the Swedes decided there was war And simple excuses by Sunday Off to the Philippines And to purchase what is right Meaning Sunday- Great Heaven And Trump will unfold And greet the Ocular Fantastic And in this family of provocateurs Mystery to great Heaven Queen of the Suburbs South and South of Wales While we bless Antarctica and retain all our Summer will The fortress of portends Is making sure all of this power Jinxes in Rome To tell what is horribly true But then the Senate of true forms in Italy And a provocation of ten

Forswearing in October That the eye is merely here It was Michael’s great gift That had won and then spun a star CIA please renew The steady hand of an American deal We are sweet and we speak for the proud Henchmen of Saudi Arabia Return to the foreign cue And have high rights on foreign time To do justice to oil Which is time to turn off the tap And seeing this deep justice coming We decided it was mayhem to Labrador And to all of this coup In Russia which is not elect Trump has made no decision But to play with his passing time

In the gestalt of this ability Russia is on its knees To the last of Great Heaven Canada and Rome afar

And in the ninest Speaking to the parallel Ever seen to jump enemy For lands to hold and the foreign man Like sympathy for the suffering And nights to Ron and you The gifts of time in Heaven For World Peace begins with you.

 
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from textspeicher

Es macht sich eine tückische Stimmung breit im Lande. Zugegeben, wir leben in schwierigen, um nicht zu sagen chaotischen Zeiten, alte Gewissheiten zerstieben fast täglich, man weiss nicht mehr so recht, wer noch Freund und wer Feind ist, unsere Gesellschaften sind oft schon über einfachste Fragen sehr gespalten, Krieg als Mittel der Politik ist plötzlich wieder hoffähig und Politiker scheinen irgendwo zwischen. grössenwahnsinnig und leichtfertig zu agieren. Da kommt bei vielen plötzlich die Sehnsucht nach der „guten alten Zeit“ auf. Nostalgie wird zum Mittel der Politik und von Populisten jeglicher Couleur gerne genutzt, um auf Stimmenfang zu gehen. Dazu wird natürlich auch gerne mit der Angst gearbeitet, obwohl Angst zwar ein wichtiges Warnsignal, aber immer ein schlechter Ratgeber ist. 

Da hört und liest man davon „dass man sich sein Land zurückholen“ wird, dass es jetzt nur noch um „America first“ oder „Deutschland – nur normal“ geht. Und auch in der Schweiz grüsst von allen Plakatwänden eine Bilderbuchschweiz wie aus den Heidifilmen und es wird suggeriert, wenn wir jetzt nur die richtige, eine Entscheidung treffen, dann bekommen wir die „gute alte Zeit“ und eine Schweiz, „wie sie einmal war“ zurück (gibt es ein Fundbüro für verlorene Gefühle oder Zeiten?) und wundersamerweise werden wir alle mehr verdienen und weniger Miete zahlen (rein wirtschaftlich zwei Tatsachen, die sich eher ausschliessen, es sei denn alle Vermieter werden zu barmherzigen Samaritern), in halbleeren Zügen mit angenehm viel Platzangebot fahren (ich schreibe das jetzt in einem Zug zur besten Zeit und auf einer Hauptstrecke, mir gegenüber sitzt niemand und auch vor mir, hinter mir, neben mir entdecke ich noch überall freie Plätze) und staufrei von St. Gallen nach Genf über die Autobahn brausen. Zugleich werden all jene Kreise, die in den letzten Jahren den Naturschutz aktiv blockiert haben, plötzlich ebenjenen entdecken und behutsam mit unserer wunderbaren Schweizer Natur umgehen. Eine Nachhaltigkeitsinitaitive eben. Man verzeihe mir die Ironie. Ich will das Gefühl vieler Menschen, das auch hinter dieser Initiative steht, gar nicht kleinreden. Die Schweiz war und ist erfolgreich, sie ist gewachsen und leider zieht der Erfolg auch immer Menschen an, Migration hat auch viel am Schweizer Erfolg der letzten Jahrzehnte mitgebaut. Das Land ist gewachsen und hat sich verändert. Das spüre selbst ich. Zwischen meiner Studienzeit in den Schweiz in den Neunzigern und der Schweiz, in die 2012 zurückkehrte gibt es unübersehbare Unterschiede. Ich würde sagen, aus meiner subjektiven Sicht ist die Schweiz schneller, bunter, lauter, manchmal auch anstrengender geworden. Vieles hat sich polarisiert, Kompromisse scheinen nicht mehr so selbstverständlich dazugehören, wie es einmal war. Dennoch erlebe ich sie immer noch als ein sehr ruhiges, angenehmes, friedliches, sehr gut organisiertes Land, in dem ich gerne lebe. Natürlich bringen Wachstum und Migration auch Probleme mit sich. Und es ist völlig berechtigt, diese anzusprechen und nach Lösungen zu suchen. Nur fällt es mir schwer zu glauben, dass radikale Lösungen, die für ein komplexes Problem nur einen Grund sehen, uns weiterbringen. Mit sorgfältiger Betrachtung der Auswirkungen solcher Massnahmen fällt es mir noch schwerer, zu glauben, dass ausgerechnet Abschottung und Frontstellungen die Probleme, die wir spüren.lösen. Meine Sorge ist, dass sie sich vielmehr noch verschärfen. Zunächst sollte man eine ehrliche Debatte darüber führen, welchen Preis Fortschritt und Wachstum haben und welchen Preis wir dafür zu zahlen bereit sind. Dann muss aber auch die Debatte darüber geführt werden, welchen Preis eine Abschottung und Konflikte mit der EU mit sich bringen und ob wir wirklich bereit sind, diesen zu zahlen. Unser Wohlstand und die Schönheit des Landes, das Glück, das die Schweiz neben viel Fleiss auch immer wieder hatte, sowohl im Blick auf Erfolge als auch auf grosse Katastrophen, könnte uns verleiten, zu glauben, wir wären immer auf der Sonnenseite des Lebens und hätten eine Sonderstellung. Die Nostalgie, die Gefühle können dabei tückische Ratgeber sein. Denn die Nostalgie könnte man dabei als einen Ausgleich empfinden, für etwas, das nicht mehr so erlebt oder empfunden wird wie es einmal war oder gewünscht wird. Nostalgie gleicht also eine Schieflage aus zwischen etwas, das man man unbefriedigend empfindet und etwas, was man sich wünscht und vermisst. Nostalgie korrigiert also, was wir als schief empfinden, Das Problem ist, dass dabei oft das Vergangene verklärt wird und das Ganze sentimental daherkommt, also mehr von Gefühlen als echtem Nachdenken geleitet. Gefühle allein sind aber immer ein schlechter Ratgeber. Die Nostalgie ist eng verwandt mit dem Heimweh, das als Phänomen ja zuerst bei im Ausland stationierten Schweizer Söldnern beschrieben wurde, die sich nach der (oft verklärten) Heimat sehnten. Auch die Bibel kennt dieses Phänomen, wenn sich das Volk Israel in der Wüste nach „den Fleischtöpfen Ägyptens“ zurücksehnt (2. Mose 16,3), obwohl wir aus der Bibel selbst wissen, dass die Nahrung aus billigem Fisch und Zwiebeln bestand und die Israeliten unterdrückte Arbeitssklaven waren. Aus christlicher Sicht ist die Nostalgie nicht nur abzulehnen, weil sie unehrlich ist, weil sie verklärt, sondern weil sie auch wenig Vertrauen in Gott zeigt, der die Zukunft ist und sich gerade als Gott, der mitgeht, der vorangeht und der Neues erschliesst gezeigt hat. Weder Nostalgie noch Angst entsprechen dem christlichen Glauben. „Ich vergesse, was dahinten ist, und strecke mich aus nach dem, was vor mir liegt, und jage auf das Ziel zu …“ (Philipper 3,13-14) heisst es bei Paulus. Wenn wir glauben, dass Gott die Zukunft ist, können wir uns weder ängstlich einschließen oder abschotten, noch uns über andere erheben oder nur an uns, unser Land etc. denken, sondern im Vertrauen auf Gott und die Zukunft, die er verspricht, nicht nur auf unsere Ängste und unsere Nostalgie hören, sondern besonnen und rational nach Lösungen suchen, die Zukunft öffnet und nicht uns von anderen und der Welt abschneiden. Das wäre wirklich nachhaltig. Und ehrlich.

Ich wünsche unserem Land die besten Entscheidungen.

Uwe Hayno Klaas Tatjes

 
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