One way
to assess the year just past is to see how it looked when its sun was still
under the horizon. The last posts of 2015—one of which was “Slouching Toward
2016”—suggested that ‘16 might turn out to be a mess as seen from late December
‘15. Among the events noted in ‘15 was the “victory” of Ramadi in Iraq. Now
Ramadi is 79 miles west of Baghdad; the infamous Fallujah is halfway in
between. Fallujah was then still held by ISIS (and as of December 11 of this year, bombings were still reported
as ISIS remnants were being swept up.) Ramadi was “taken,” but what did the Iraqi
army capture? Rubble. That was then, a year ago. 2016 turned out to be a year
of such victories in Syria and elsewhere. Weeks of bombing; rubble turned into smaller
rubble; and a stream of refugees coming out at last as if, when you squeeze
rubble hard enough, a bit of darkly-colored life flows out like near-congealed
blood. Today, as I gaze at 2017 ahead, the battle of Ramadi has moved on to
Mosul. That battle has been going on for a long time but still isn’t over. It
takes time to make once populous cities entirely unlivable. 2017 will doubtlessly
unveil the “victory” of Mosul too. But that word will be quite meaningless.
My 2015
farewell posts failed to note that 2016 would be an election year. Had that
occurred to me, I’d have avoided the word “slouching” and written about about “digging
a deep hole.” Election years are like that in this seemingly endless cultural
sunset. Well, 2017 is not an election year. So we approach it with faint hope.
Or is the future preparing even more amazingly rude surprises? Just wondering.
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