Sunday, June 28, 2026

As We Approach Our 250th

 


This week, the United States will celebrate the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, “when our country claimed its place among the family of nations,” an occasion for giving thanks “for what has been achieved” and asking divine help “for the work that still remains.” [Collect for Independence Day, U.S. Roman Missal].

 

On Independence Day, we honor the great legacy left for us, often at great sacrifice, by generations past, most of them immigrants to this new land, to whom we remain linked in a great social compact, bounded to one another, both past and present, for the sake of the future. We celebrate our past history as a nation, our present life together, and our hope for our common future.

 

As Americans, we share in the benefits bequeathed us by our country’s founders, whose legacy we receive with respect and celebrate with gratitude. We are the heirs of immigrants who came to this country in response to its promises of economic opportunity and political freedom. For generations, Catholic immigrants have brought our faith to this land and enriched this society with a strong network of Catholic institutions, which have served Americans of all backgrounds, contributing a distinctly Catholic sensibility to the American experiment.

 

Jesus’ words in today’s Gospel [Matthew 10:37-42] reflect the high value in which hospitality and welcoming were held in his society, something also illustrated in our reading from the Book of Kings [2 Kings 4:8-11, 14-16a]. The Shunamite woman did more than just give Elisha a cup of cold water. She gave him dinner and furnished a room for him! In this, she foreshadowed the generous women in the Gospels, like Martha and Mary of Bethany, who offered hospitality to Jesus and his disciples, welcoming them into their home, serving ever since as models for the Church and the high spiritual value the Church has placed on hospitality and welcoming down through the centuries right up to our own time.

Having himself as a child been a political refugee from Herod’s terror, Jesus knew from personal experience the stress of leaving one’s homeland and facing an uncertain welcome in another land.

 

Inspired by Jesus’ own words in his parable about the Last Judgment, “I was a stranger and your welcomed me,” Saint Benedict’s Rule for monks famously prescribed that all guests who present themselves be welcomed as if they were Christ himself. Nor have hospitality and welcoming been confined to monasteries. When 17-year old Annie Moore crossed the threshold of the New World as the first immigrant to pass through the new Ellis Island immigration Facility on January 1, 1892, she was welcomed by, among others, Father Callahan of the Mission of Our Lady of the Holy Rosary, who blessed her and gave her a silver coin, an expression of the historic role of the American Catholic community – itself throughout its history a community of immigrants – in providing hospitality and welcome  to generation after generation of new arrivals, in this land and nation of immigrants.

 

Annie Moore’s story – along with the stories of so many others, among them my own grandparents and the parents and grandparents of so many of us assembled here today – ought especially to impress themselves on our consciousness, both as Catholics and as Americans, as we prepare to celebrate our country’s 250th anniversary. For we have always been a Church of migrants and strangers, in this land and nation of immigrants, who have always been the face of our Church in this country – in our parishes and in our schools and in our other social ministries.

But, as we assemble today, as we do every Sunday, to profess our faith as migrants passing through this world en route to our final homeland, this week’s national holiday ought to remind us of our country’s complicated history: of our admirable civic and religious traditions of hospitality and welcome, worthy of comparison with the Shunamite woman and Elisha, but also of our past – and present - failures to live up to that challenge,

 

As this special anniversary approaches, we are all aware of the many difficult and divisive issues facing our country, along with the contentious arguments that command the news and dominate social media. In response to the pervasive political polarization of his own time, the founding pastor of this parish, Servant of God, Isaac Hecker (1819-1888) hoped that, as he said to Blessed Pope Pius IX, Catholicism could “act like oil on troubled waters” and so “sustain our institutions and enable our young country to realize its great destiny” [Letter, December 22, 1857, The Paulist Vocation, p. 46]. Today our faith challenges us to make Hecker’s hope a reality in response to the multiple challenges of our time.

 

Those challenges are many and do not admit easy or one-dimensional solutions. Disagreements are to be expected. As Catholics and as citizens, we are called to address our disagreements in a morally serious way that transcends simplistic sloganeering, emotional appeals to narrowly defined secular or religious identities, and the vilification of political opponents. As our American bishops reminded us over a decade ago: “Catholics may choose different ways to respond to compelling social problems, but we cannot differ on our moral obligation to help build a more just and peaceful world through morally acceptable means, so that the weak and vulnerable are protected and human rights and dignity are defended.” [USCCB, Forming Consciences for Faithful Citizenship (1915), 20].

 

The impending celebration of our 250th anniversary challenges us to a renewed pursuit of solidarity and mutual trust. As a society, we will always inevitably fall short of our own inclusive ideals and heroic ambitions, as just as certainly we will fall short of Jesus’ challenge of mutual hospitality to one another and to all we encounter. But by baptism into Christ, we are no longer permitted to be strangers to one another, for we have been brought beyond the ordinary human limitations of family, state, and society, and raised instead with Christ to live in newness of life [Romans 6:4], responding to one another and welcoming one another as we would never otherwise have known how to do or dared to have tried.


Homily for the 13th Sunday in Ordinary Time, Saint Paul the Apostle Church, NY, June 28, 2026.

Photo: Advertisement for the July 1 Semiquincentennial "Pilgrimage in Support of Immigrants" to Liberty Island.

Friday, June 26, 2026

Trump 2, Year 1 - The Latest Trump Book


 

The latest in the unending genre of Trump books, covering primarily the first year of Trump's second term, is Regime Change: Inside the Imperial Presidency of Donald Trump (Simon & Schuster), by two New York Times journalists, Maggie Haberman and Jonathan Swan. (Haberman, author of an earlier 2022 book on Trump, Confidence Man, has followed Trump since his New York real estate days.) The two veteran journalists conducted over a thousand interviews, including an hour-long Oval Office interview with the President himself in March 2026.

Much of what the authors report is already familiar from current news, but this book is filled with detailed reporting about the personalities and practices of this unique administration, that reflect their ability to access consequential information from their sources. Above all, the book captures the administration's atmospherics - the feel of a quasi-imperial court, presided over by an apparently mercurial and vengeful would-be autocrat, who brags about being more powerful than "Napoleon, Hitler, Mao, Stalin," among other historical luminaries. It is an interesting and engaging account, that is at the same time tedious and depressing.

First and foremost, this is a chronicle about a second term that is radically different in many respects even from Trump's first term, which was much more cautious and more wedded through its personnel to traditional institutional mechanisms. "In his second term," the authors write, "President Trump has bent and even broken institutions. No modern President has so quickly reduced his party in Congress to such thorough compliance as Trump did in 2025. And no President in modern memory has so openly used the powers of the office to pressure into alignment the major pillars of civil society and the private sector, from the largest tech companies to the most venerable news organizations to Big Law and the Ivy League universities."

It is also an account of the performative theatricality of it all, a cocktail of fact and fiction thrown together to produce a good show, with the President as the star and the Vice President, cabinet members, other public officials, and even foreign leaders as supporting players with their assigned subordinate parts. The anti-"wokeness" cultural takeover gave Trump "the kind of theatrical opportunities stymied since he was a young man," who "had wanted to attend film school," and " had tried producing a Broadway show in 1970."

The local cast of subordinate supporting characters includes J.D. Vance, of "Have you [Zelensky] said thank you once, this entire meeting," fame. There is Marco Rubio, for whom the Oval Office, not Foggy Bottom, became "now his de facto workspace," and who"had long wanted to force regime change in Cuba, and he had unfinished business in Venezuela." There is Stephen Miller, "known as the keeper of grievances," who "had an impulse for autocracy that matched Trump's." And then there is Elon Musk, the "self-styled demolition man," of whom Trump lamented, "They always leave me," after Musk opposed the Big Beautiful Bill. "They always do this. This is why I can't have friends."

When it comes to foreign leaders, the cast of characters is familiar enough. One foreign leader whose story has since acquired enlarged significance in the light of recent international events is Benjamin Netanyahu. Perhaps one of the most remarked upon passages in the book is the authors' amazing account of the meeting in the Situation Room in February 2026 at which the Israeli Prime Minister made the case for war with Iran. His arguments were largely rebutted later by intelligence officials, but - as we all now know - the President made his own disastrous decision, swayed somewhat by his earlier successful attack on Venezuela.The case for war also "benefited from the fact that Trump's information loop in his second term was much tighter than in the first. Trump rarely heard from skeptics. He had largely tuned out his critics and was surrounded by flatterers."

The debate before the short-term June 2025 attack on Iran's nuclear facilities anticipated the same concerns that would surface later with the more disastrous 2026 war ("Operation Epic Fury"). In Washington in 2025, there was worry that the Israelis "were unwilling to entertain any option other than a military campaign against Iran, and that they were steadily working to dislodge the White House from its diplomatic solution." Meanwhile, the Iranians worried "that Trump was so eager to get a deal that he would sign on to something that they couldn't live with."

Besides JD Vance, Tucker Carlson also argued with the President prior to the 2026 war. Carlson "had come to the Oval office several times over the previous year to warn Trump that a war with Iran would destroy his presidency. ... 'I know you're worried about it, but it's going to be okay.' Trump said. Carlson asked how he knew. 'Because it always is,' Trump replied."

The authors conclude that Trump is "an American President willing to deploy the full range of the nation's economic and military power without the inhibition that had characterized many of his predecessors, eradicating whatever systematic checks he could and often ignoring the ones that remained." They agree with him "that if he had served a consecutive second term beginning in January 2021, he would never have accumulated the power he now wielded." How has this happened? "The indictments, the conviction, the assassination attempts, the four years of exile that allowed him to shed the restraining forces of his first term, to assemble a team of true loyalists who had spent years studying the levers of government and plotting how to seize them - all of it had, paradoxically, made Trump stronger, more ruthless, and more commanding than he could have been otherwise: the most powerful President of our lifetimes."


Thursday, June 18, 2026

JD Vance's Religious Journey

 


JD Vance first became a household name with his 2016 bestseller, Hillbilly Elegy: A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis (Harper), a somewhat disparaging account of his background, which was widely hailed at that time all across the political spectrum, casting Vance as a sort of interpreter of the disaffected to elites. Of course, that was before its author transformed himself into a major, polarizing player in our present political divide (a contentious, divisive role he continues to play). In that early aftermath of his first book, however, as he recalls even now in his latest account, he was part of a group that met with outgoing President Barack Obama in early 2017 for an off-the record conversation "about what was going on in the United States of America."

Meanwhile, in 2019, Vance was received into the Catholic Church after private instructions from Dominican Friars in Cincinnati. That means that he did not enter the Catholic Church the way most converts now do, through the prescribed Order of Christian Initiation of Adults (OCIA), a process that highlights the communal character of the Church and immediately exposes the aspiring Catholic to multiple dimensions of ordinary Catholic experience, practice, and devotion. There is wisdom in the Church's rituals, from which this author - like all other members of the Church - could have benefited.

Potential presidential candidates predictably prepare for their campaigns by publishing a book. This latest iteration of that genre, Communion: Finding My Way Back to Faith (Harper), is Vance's 286-page memoir, chronicling his journey from nominal Appalachian Evangelical Protestantism - “Our family attended church very rarely,” he writes. “Our faith was amorphous, tied to family and oral traditions and not to institutional orthodoxy” - followed by the predictable atheism of religion's elite cultural despisers (and Ayn Rand, whom he specifically references), finally to the Catholicism which he now enthusiastically embraces.

Converts make up only some 8% of U.S. Catholics, but for various complex historical and cultural reasons they seem to be playing an outsized role in our contemporary national discourse, both religious and political. For that reason alone, the conversion story of so prominent a person as the Vice President of the United States would seem to be worth reading. Inevitably, however, this will be a controversial book, given the pernicious politicization of religion in our country at this time. After all, the MAGA political movement in which Vance is such a very important player sometimes seems to resemble a religion of its own - although perhaps not so much conventional Christianity, but something more like the cult of  King Nebuchadnezzar's golden statue. 

Controversy clings easily to Vance. It surrounds even the cover, let alone the contents, of this book. One might have expected the cover to feature Saint Peter's Basilica or perhaps Vance's own parish church. Instead, it portrays Mount Zion Church, a rural Methodist church in Virginia, which clearly has no connection with Roman Catholicism nor apparently with Vance's personal history. Is this perhaps a subtle hint that at least some of what we will read in this book might resonate better in a politicized American Evangelical environment than at Saint Peter's Basilica or at a standard American Catholic parish? One cannot help but wonder what is going on here, even before one opens the book itself and starts grappling with the intersection of Vance's personal spiritual journey and his confrontational public politics. 

On the other hand, the great Saint Ignatius of Loyola famously admonished us to be more eager to put a favorable interpretation on one's neighbor's words than to condemn them (Spiritual Exercises, Annotation 22). It is in that irenic spirit that one should try to approach this book, always mindful that religious conversion is a work of divine grace and that God's grace may be active and effective even in spite of political polarization.

Indeed, at various points in his account, Vance makes observations I can easily resonate with - for example, his critique of workism. Vance (referencing Derek Thompson) looks back on his law school and professional experience, which caused him to recognize "that work, for many elites, is not just about surviving or providing for your family. It is also a source of identity and passion, the thing that provides both community and purpose for a growing segment of American elites. It's a quasi-religion." For Vance, already at that early stage, "even if it works out for a few elites, it is not a healthy way to run a society." On this, he is certainly quite right. This theme, along with his extended critique of the reigning economic model of human nature and society, represent serious arguments against what modernity has wrought, arguments religion reinforces.

All that said, this book inevitably raises unavoidable questions and concerns.

He writes with apparently genuine feeling about his grandmother, already familiar to us from his previous book, and describes an apparent spiritual experience while he was still a Marine, when his car stopped short of a guardrail on a slippery wet road. He describes his growth into a “self-professed atheist and meritocrat,” when “I didn’t care about God’s will. I cared about my own.” He then recounts his gradual subsequent softening, some of which he ascribes to the influence of his wife Usha, to whom he appears obviously and genuinely very devoted.

His mentor and political patron Peter Thiel also figured in the process, challenging "the simple social template I had constructed, that dumb people were religious and smart people were atheists.” Thiel also led him to Rene Girard, whose "theory of mimetic rivalry - that we tend to compete over the things other people want - spoke directly to some of the competitive pressures I had experienced at Yale." Girard's theory of the "scapegoat" also made him "think about the Christian faith in a new light."

What this account ignores, of course, is Thiel's own expressed hostility to Catholicism and to the Pope in particular! And, whatever Thiel's personal posture towards Catholicism and the Pope, anyone who picks up this book will likely already be well aware of Vance's own very public problems with the papal magisterium. In his short time as a public Catholic intellectual (and even shorter time as U.S. Vice President), Vance has managed to appear to be publicly corrected by two Popes, first Francis, and then the first U.S. born Pope, Leo XIV. Unsurprisingly, he has also been publicly at odds with the U.S. Catholic Bishops, whom he has brazenly accused of caring about immigrants for the federal funds the USCCB received to help resettle refugees.

Of course, there is a lot of diversity in American Catholicism, and lots of Catholics can be found who are less than fully faithful to all the teachings of the magisterium. So some liberal Catholic pearl-clutching about Vance's apparent dissent from important magisterial teachings may perhaps seem somewhat hypocritical. On the other hand, Vance is not just any American Catholic. He is the Vice President of the United States, and it is he himself who has elevated his adherence to Catholicism as at least partly constitutive of his public persona.

Catholicism, however, has not been Vance's only conversion experience. The post-Hillbilly Elegy Vance had also been initially anti-Trump, whom he famously once called "cultural heroin." His personal political conversion to Trumpism seems to have paralleled his personal spiritual journey into Catholicism. By the time he ran for the Senate in 2022, he fully identified with Trump, whose essential endorsement he received. (The "Catholic vote" usually reflects larger national trends, and a majority of Catholic voters clearly embraced Trump in 2024. So, whatever Vance's differences with the Pope and the American Bishops, at least when it came to U.S. Catholics' voting behavior, he was arguably somewhat in step politically with many of his American co-religionists.)

Vance the spiritual seeker seemed to be drawn to intellectual arguments about faith. Thus, he describes how he encountered and was much influenced by Saint Augustine's writings. "I began to see the world of the Christian faith as richer and more interesting than I realized. There was nothing new under the sun after two thousand years of debate. That didn't make Christianity true. but it did make it more complicated than the twenty-first century atheists admitted."

Another important influence was Pope Leo XIII's famous encyclical Rerum Novarum, which "lays out a vision of society where the state protects the vulnerable, guarantees a just wage for laborers, and ensures that working people have sufficient 'rest from labor' - not for 'vicious indulgence,' but so they can focus on higher matters such as their religious and familial obligations." His section on Rerum Novarum sounds almost as if he were identifying as a Catholic Social Democrat, rather than a MAGA populist! All of which sadly highlights the untapped potential of populism, which in a different, healthier political context could possibly have taken our country in a better, more communitarian direction than the MAGA version has!

"Catholic teachings," Vance came to believe, "touched the part of my heart and mind that demanded I focus on the things that actually matter." He realized he "needed to pray more, to participate in the sacramental life of the Church, to live more fully within the obligations of a community of believers, to confess and repent publicly." He needed "to live as a Christian," and he realized that "Catholicism was the right home in which to do that."

Meanwhile, however, his political journey that led to his becoming Trump's running mate was also going on. For many readers, it is how he purports to reconcile the two very different journeys, the two contrasting conversions, that is what is so fundamentally problematic about this account. 

Some episodes are just jarring. For example, less than a year after his reception into the Church, in early 2020 when early reports of a new virus (covid-19) were emerging, he "drove to a sporting goods store and bought one thousand rounds of ammunition." 

More to the point, in terms of the overt intersection of Vance's two journeys - the one explicitly religious, the other political and ideological, was his trip to Rome in 2025, where he met with Pope Francis the day before he died. He found his conversation with Vatican diplomats "unsettling." On the contested issue of immigration, "the Vatican seemed unwilling to move its moral guidance past the point of trite platitudes." Overall, he seems to want to present a surprisingly measured and balanced view of the Church's stances on various issues - certainly much more measured and balanced than the comments about the present Pope famously expressed by his boss! Perhaps, Vance's most significant observation in this area is "that any application of moral principles in the real world requires a constant evaluation of trade-offs. Undoubtedly, that's what the Christian faith demands of us." 

The first of those two sentences can plausibly be read as an expression of the classical and Christian cardinal virtue of prudence and its necessary application to political judgments. The second sentence, however, may fail to balance the admitted value and appropriateness of prudential judgment with the simultaneously radical character of Christian faith's demands. It is the perennial tension between the two that makes politics such a challenge for Christianity, that for any political actor causes the two commitments to collide as much as to cooperate.

That tension highlights the problem inherent in any effort to revive or recreate some kind of Christendom. In its non-libertarian manifestations, what has traditionally passed for "conservatism" in America has often highlighted the valued inheritance of Christian civilization, which we have sadly been in the process of losing. In his partisan political persona, Vance is sometimes hard to peg ideologically, but here in this book he clearly identifies with the cause of salvaging some sort of Christian civilization. "I'm proposing that we have now run an experiment of replacing a Christian culture with something else for decades. And the fruit of that experiment includes rising racial strife, a gender gap among our young people, falling rates of love and partnership, and a society with a declining population." Contrary to his partisan culture warrior posture, however, he recognizes that there is plenty of blame to go around. "Each of us, in our own weird way, is guilty of casting aside the Christian inheritance of our civilization. Republicans are far too wiling to worship the market and assume that free commercial transactions inevitably lead to good. Democrats are far too willing to idolize the self and assume that everything done in the name of self-discovery is good."

Would that Vance's new-found religious faith had also formed him to talk this way on the political campaign trail as well as in this memoir! This is, after all, the same person who just went on TV this week and said that Democrats "are just terrible people, so many of them."

There is much in Vance's newly acquired Catholic sensibility that can resonate with Catholics and others of varied political persuasions and partisan commitments. As I observed above however, Vance's book inevitably raises unavoidable questions and concerns. Commenting favorably on his political ally and personal friend Charlie Kirk's memorial service, Vance writes that it "felt as much like an old-fashioned American revival as it did a funeral." Really? Indeed, Erika Kirk spoke movingly the Christian language of faith and forgiveness. But much of what transpired there barely reflected anything remotely resembling the Jesus of the Gospels and the Christianity of the New Testament. In fact, the public political movement with which Vance has identified himself, up to and including media appearances in the very same week as his book tour, seems to be more like its own version of "casting aside the Christian inheritance of our civilization" - replacing the Beatitudes, the Virtues, and the Gifts and Fruits of the Holy Spirit with a post-religious, anger-oriented and resentment-based cult of cruelty, constructed on the shifting secular sands of the pursuit of power, domination, and control. 

The Vice President has written a memoir about his two conversion stories that run on parallel, and apparently non-converging tracks - one (as the book's title suggests) to true communion, the other (tragically for America) to its opposite. 









Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Ragtime

 


It seems shameful to admit it, but, although I live in midtown Manhattan I seldom go to live theater. Last fall, when my sister visited New York, it tried to get us seats for the revival of Ragtime, but it was (unsurprisingly) all sold out. As the show's run is sadly drawing to its close, however, I unexpectedly was gifted tickets as a belated birthday present from a very generous friend.

Ragtime is an almost three-hour musical based on a 1975 novel by E. L. DoctorowSet in the early twentieth century, Ragtime tells the story of three different American groups: African Americans, represented by Coalhouse Walker Jr., a Harlem musician; upper-class suburbanites, represented by Mother, the matriarch of a white upper-class New Rochelle family; and recent immigrants from Eastern Europe, represented by Tateh, a Latvian Jewish immigrant. The three groups' stories intersect in surprising - and tragic - ways. The show also features historical figures from the era, such as Harry Houdini, Evelyn Nesbit, Booker T. Washington, and Emma Goldman, with briefer appearances by J. P. Morgan, Henry Ford, Stanford White, and Admiral Perry,. The production was nominated for eleven Tony Awards, winning four including Best Revival of a MusicalThis revival is scheduled to run through August. So this was my rare chance to see it!

As I acknowledged above, despite living in this great city I seldom take advantage of its theatrical and musical opportunities. I cannot compare Ragtime with other musicals I have not seen, nor can I compare this revival with other previous productions. I can, however, testify that it is a great show, music is fantastic, and anyone who can should try to see it too!

Ragtime offers a certain snapshot of Pre-World War I America, a time of tremendous social change, America as a land of opportunity, which is also dominated by inequality and injustice. The story takes a truly tragic turn, but - like the story of America itself - it ends on a powerful note of hope and the potential for inter-racial, inter-ethnic national unity. Our present national predicament on the eve of our country's 250th birthday makes Ragtime, if anything, even more timely.




Monday, June 15, 2026

The Knicks in 5


The New York Knicks, created originally in 1946, won the NBA championship Saturday night, defeating the San Antonio Spurs four-games-to-one, ending a 53-year championship drought since their last NBA championship in 1973 - before the majority of today's New Yorkers were even born. When teams win almost all the time (like the New York Yankees in the 1950s) a championship is still something to be celebrated but it is also somewhat routine. When it has never happened before (like the New York Mets in 1969) or not in a very long time (like the Knicks this year), it becomes something to be celebrated with even extra enthusiasm and joy, not just for fanatical fans but for the New York community at large. There are, it seems, fewer and fewer occasions for festivity and communal joy these days. So, when one arises, it makes sense to enjoy it.

Sports Team fandom is something very special, something somewhat unique in a world where all sorts of communal identities and associations are in decline.  American professional sports are about any number of things (including most admirably the artistry and athleticism of very talented players who deserve the praise and adulation their excellence receives), but the thing that American professional sports are most about is money. American sports have become immensely profitable. According to Vivid Seats, the cheapest price for a single ticket for last Monday's Game 3 at Madison Square Garden was $3,940. The average price for a ticket was $7,683. Meanwhile, the most expensive ticket sold for approximately $65,000.

Obviously, a lot of ordinary fans are willing to splurge on sports tickets, but it is equally obvious that sports are ultimately all about profits for some and significant expense or just being priced out for the many, thus in a sense replicating the inequities at the heart of American society. In their obsession with profits and their indifference to their local fans' loyalty (remember the Brooklyn Dodges!), American sports readily replicate the deranged values of contemporary American late-capitalist society.

Yet as late-stage capitalism continues to destroy what little remains of authentic communities, somehow sports fandom survives as a vehicle for linking local communities with one another in an almost atavistic expression of pre-modern loyalty - loyalty itself being a barely surviving pre-modern virtue in today's post-modern moral desert.

Even so, the desire for community and for identification with a community bigger than one's individual self and its narrow desires. The collapse of non-self-regarding aspiration is perhaps most magically reflected in the collapse of marriage and the decline in national fertility. Superficial fandom cannot compensate for that calamitous long-term social loss, but it remains a vivid illustration of the human desire for connection.  Cheering for the Knicks solves none of the inegalitarianism and deprivation Americans are experiencing and the multiple crises of our time, but it does offer at least a temporary feeling of connection (however limited and even illusory). And that experience of connection and apparent validation of local identity and loyalty serves as an oasis of festivity and joy in the oligarchic desert our 250-year old American experiment appears to have become.

So let us celebrate together, New Yorkers!