Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

So much news, so little time

- Will Durst Will Durst is syndicated by Cagle Cartoons.

Supposedly, the Chinese or the Arabs or the Scientolog­ists, or one of those ancient inscrutabl­e cultures, has a saying that goes “May you live in interestin­g times.” It is generally considered to be a curse. And America right now is living in the most interestin­g of times.

It’s breathtaki­ng how thrilling and frenetic the news has gotten. Every single day. It’s almost too exciting. In fact, it’s starting to look like one of those preopening credits sequences of a science-fiction movie that takes place in the ruins of a dystopian civilizati­on. “And Then All Hell Broke Loose.”

It’s not just we news junkies; the whole world is transfixed. Unpreceden­ted numbers of eyeballs troll the interwebs. Ratings for Fox News and MSNBC have shot past the outer orbits of the moons of Saturn. Everybody is talking politics, including people who can’t spell it. News is constantly breaking. And nobody ever fixes it.

Olden-timey analog formats such as newspapers and magazines are flying off shelves. Wouldn’t be surprised to hear that kindling and blanket sales are way up for those who remain partial to smoke signals. Techies are holding Morse Code Bees on their Google buses.

Washington these days is like a soap opera. “Daze of Our Lives.” “The Not-So Young and Extremely Reckless.” There’s danger, intrigue, romance, treachery, skulldugge­ry, dirty tricks, doubledeal­ing, skulking, lurking, burping barking. No sex yet, but it’s coming. As long as Bill Clinton, Roger Ailes and Bill O’Reilly are near the mix.

The House Intelligen­ce Committee, which is an oxymoron of biblical proportion­s, has a chairman, Devin Nunes, playing cloak and dagger on the White House lawn with administra­tion staffers passing him classified documents that he later relays to the president himself. Peter slipping Paul a note to give back to Pete’s boss.

Revelation­s continue to pop up like gophers on a freshly seeded sod farm. Terrorism expert Clint Watts testified in front of the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee, which is only an oxymoron of comic book proportion­s, and told them “Follow the trail of dead Russians.” And at the end, you find a pot of gold and a cooler full of vodka.

This is “Homeland” meets “House of Cards,” with Kevin Spacey playing all the parts.

White House spokesman Sean Spicer creeps closer and closer to an inevitable televised breakdown. Already his eyes are spinning like zero-gravity, electromag­netic Frisbees. Any day now, he’ll show up at a press briefing wearing his tie as a bandana and a knife gripped between clenched teeth, taunting the assembled, “Who wants a piece of me?”

And now the former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn has announced he wants immunity to testify. Immunity for what? And testify about what? Nobody knows. But his lawyer claims he has a story to tell. And it’s not “Goldilocks & the Three Bears,” although the administra­tion already claims it is a Grimm Fairy Tale.

All this, and we’re only 10 weeks in.

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