Thursday, July 16, 2026

ITCHING AND SCRATCHING

The Great Itch of Growing Older

There are few things in life as maddening as an itch you simply can't reach.

When we were younger, scratching an itch required little more than bending, twisting, or contorting ourselves into positions that would now require a team of orthopedic surgeons afterward. Today, however, we first have to locate the itch, determine whether it's on the left or right, above or below, and then begin the expedition to reach it.

Somewhere between age twenty-five and eighty-five, our arms mysteriously became two inches shorter.

Fortunately, human ingenuity has come to the rescue. There are back scratchers made of bamboo, plastic, metal, and wood. Some telescope like a radio antenna. Some resemble tiny bear claws. One probably has Bluetooth capability by now.

Most of us have one hidden in a drawer, another beside the recliner, and perhaps a spare in case the first one isn't long enough.

Then there is the universal senior solution: "Could you scratch my back?"

It's one of the few requests that can instantly turn a dignified adult into a five-year-old.

"No...a little higher...no, lower...left...other left...right there!... Oh, don't stop!"

The poor volunteer usually gives up long before the itch does.

As we grow older, however, I've begun to think that the back isn't the only place we itch.

Many of us develop an itch for companionship.

An itch for conversation.

An itch to tell stories we've told before.

An itch to feel useful.

An itch to laugh until our sides hurt.

An itch to know that someone notices when we don't show up for dinner.

Those are harder to scratch.

The funny thing is that many of us insist we're perfectly happy being alone—and often we are. Solitude has its pleasures. We can watch whatever we like on television, eat dessert first if we choose, and nobody complains if we fall asleep halfway through a movie.

But every now and then, another kind of itch appears.

A knock on the door.

A friendly face at breakfast.

Someone who remembers your favorite joke.

A neighbor who asks, "How are you doing today?", and actually waits for the answer.

Those little moments don't cure every loneliness, but they certainly relieve the itch.

That's one of the quiet blessings of living at Merrill Gardens. Around every corner is someone carrying an invisible back scratcher. Sometimes it's a smile. Sometimes it's a shared meal, a choir rehearsal, a card game, or simply sitting together while saying very little at all.

Perhaps that's what friendship really is: a way of scratching the places in life we can't quite reach by ourselves.

So if you see someone sitting alone, stop for a minute. Share a story. Tell a joke. Offer a smile. You never know what invisible itch they may be trying to reach.

And if all else fails...

Keep a good back scratcher handy.

You'll probably need it tomorrow.

William Jame Spriggs

BOOK SIX DRAFT OUTLINE

 

Proposed Title

The Second American Reconstruction

A Twenty-Year Strategy for National Renewal

or

America 2050

A Blueprint for National Renewal

or

Rebuilding America

A Twenty-Year Strategy for the American Century Ahead


Thesis

The central argument would be simple.

America's greatest danger is not China.

It is not Russia.

It is not terrorism.

It is ourselves.

Our problem is strategic drift.

Every election changes direction.

Every administration reverses the previous administration.

No civilization can compete that way.

The United States needs something almost every successful corporation and many successful nations possess—

a long-term strategic plan.


Part I

The End of an Era

How America became the hegemon

Why hegemony always ends

The myths Americans tell themselves

Why decline is not inevitable


Part II

Diagnosing the Crisis

Debt

Political dysfunction

Education

Infrastructure

Manufacturing

Immigration

Healthcare

Energy

Artificial intelligence

Demographic change

Trust


Part III

Rethinking America's Role

This chapter will probably generate the most discussion.

You can argue that America should gradually shift from being

the world's policeman

to

the world's greatest democracy.

Military strength remains.

Military intervention becomes exceptional.

Diplomacy becomes primary.

Economic leadership replaces military dominance.


Part IV

The New American Economy

Manufacturing

AI

Robotics

Semiconductors

Energy

Education

Scientific research

Worker ownership

Competition

Industrial policy


Part V

Repairing Democracy

Perhaps your most original chapter.

Multi-party democracy

Ranked-choice voting

Campaign finance

Constitutional reform

Term limits

Independent redistricting

National strategic planning

Long-term budgeting


Part VI

America's Moral Reconstruction

This chapter would tie together many themes from your earlier books.

Empathy

Reason

Science

Education

Citizenship

Duty

Shared purpose

Without returning to organized religion, you could argue that every civilization requires a shared civic ethic grounded in human dignity, evidence, responsibility, and mutual obligation.


Final Chapter

The Second Reconstruction

The first reconstruction preserved the Union.

The second must preserve the Republic.

The challenge is not merely political.

It is civilizational.

The question is no longer

"Can America remain number one?"

The real question is

"Can America remain America?"

Wednesday, July 15, 2026

RECONSTRUCTION OF AMERICA

The Second American Reconstruction

Every great nation eventually reaches a moment when it must decide whether it will continue to drift or deliberately reinvent itself. America has reached that moment.

For nearly eighty years, since the end of the Second World War, the United States has occupied an extraordinary position in world affairs. Our economic strength, military power, scientific leadership, and democratic ideals made us the world's preeminent nation. We became accustomed to thinking that American leadership was permanent.

History teaches otherwise.

No nation retains supremacy forever. Britain did not. Spain did not. Rome did not. Great powers decline not because they are defeated by stronger enemies alone, but because they lose the discipline to govern themselves wisely.

America now stands at precisely such a crossroads.

Our national debt has reached unprecedented levels. Political tribalism has replaced thoughtful debate. Public confidence in institutions continues to erode. Infrastructure ages. Educational performance slips. Scientific investment fluctuates with each election. We have become a nation that thinks in election cycles while our principal competitors think in generations.

China does not plan four years ahead.

Japan does not.

Singapore does not.

Many successful nations establish long-term national objectives that survive changes in political leadership. America, by contrast, often reverses course every four or eight years. We start, stop, reverse, and repeat. The result is uncertainty, wasted resources, and declining confidence.

No great corporation would survive under such management. No military organization would wage a campaign in such a manner. Yet this is how we govern a nation of more than 340 million people.

That must change.

The United States needs something it has rarely attempted: a twenty-year national strategy adopted through broad public consensus rather than partisan victory.

Such a strategy should ask fundamental questions.

Who are we?

What kind of nation do we want to become?

What industries will define our future?

How do we educate our children for a technological century?

How do we compete economically with Asia?

How do we restore fiscal responsibility?

How do we strengthen democracy itself?

Most importantly, how do we ensure that America remains prosperous even if it is no longer the world's unchallenged hegemon?

Perhaps we have misunderstood the objective.

The purpose of the United States should not be to dominate the world. The purpose should be to build the healthiest, most educated, most innovative, most prosperous constitutional democracy on Earth.

That objective is within our reach.

To accomplish it, we must rethink our role in international affairs.

For decades the United States has maintained military commitments across much of the globe. These commitments emerged from the unique circumstances of the Cold War and later conflicts. Whether all of those commitments remain necessary deserves serious national examination.

Military strength remains essential for national defense, deterrence, and honoring our treaty obligations. But military intervention should become genuinely exceptional rather than routine. Diplomacy, trade, scientific cooperation, economic partnerships, intelligence sharing, and alliances should increasingly become our preferred instruments of influence.

Our greatest national investments should be made not in rebuilding other nations, but in rebuilding our own.

Every dollar spent modernizing schools, ports, transportation systems, energy infrastructure, semiconductor manufacturing, artificial intelligence, biomedical research, and advanced education strengthens America's future far more permanently than another foreign intervention.

This is not isolationism.

America cannot withdraw from the world. Trade, diplomacy, scientific exchange, humanitarian leadership, and international cooperation remain essential. But engagement need not always mean military involvement.

The twenty-first century will be won through innovation, productivity, education, and institutional excellence, not simply through military superiority.

Our political system also requires reconstruction.

The two-party system increasingly rewards polarization instead of problem-solving. Many democratic nations operate successfully with multiple competitive political parties that encourage coalition-building and compromise. America should seriously examine reforms, including ranked-choice voting and other electoral innovations, that could broaden political representation and reduce zero-sum politics.

Democracy should encourage thoughtful deliberation, not permanent warfare between two entrenched camps.

Finally, we must recover something deeper than economic strength.

We must recover national purpose.

Americans once believed they were building something larger than themselves. We built railroads across a continent, defeated fascism, landed on the Moon, eradicated diseases, and created institutions admired throughout the world. Those accomplishments were possible because Americans believed the future could be better than the present.

Today we often behave as though managing decline is the best we can hope for.

It is not.

America possesses extraordinary advantages: abundant natural resources, world-class universities, entrepreneurial energy, scientific creativity, constitutional freedoms, and a diverse population whose talents remain unmatched when united by common purpose.

What has been missing is not capacity.

It is direction.

The next twenty years should become America's Second Reconstruction—not merely rebuilding roads and bridges, but rebuilding our civic culture, our educational excellence, our fiscal discipline, our democratic institutions, and our confidence.

History rarely announces when a civilization enters its decisive chapter.

Only later do people recognize the turning point.

This may be ours.

Future generations will not ask whether America remained the world's only superpower. They will ask whether, when confronted with undeniable challenges, we possessed the wisdom to change course.

Great nations are not defined by never declining.

They are defined by recognizing decline before it becomes irreversible, and by having the courage to rebuild.

The time for America's Second Reconstruction has arrived.

William James Spriggs

Tuesday, July 14, 2026

MR. PRESIDENT, END THE WAR

Mr. President: End the War Before It Becomes America's Defining Mistake

There is no better time than now to end America's military involvement in the conflict with Iran. In fact, it is already overdue.

History will judge wars not by the speeches that justified them, but by whether they made the nation safer, stronger, and more prosperous. This conflict has done none of those things. It has diverted attention, resources, and political capital from the crises confronting Americans at home while increasing instability abroad.

The United States once had a diplomatic framework designed to limit Iran's nuclear ambitions. Whatever its imperfections, that agreement demonstrated that negotiation was possible. Abandoning diplomacy in favor of confrontation has brought the region closer to conflict rather than closer to peace.

America today faces enormous domestic challenges: rising debt, economic uncertainty, aging infrastructure, affordable housing shortages, health care costs, education, and the growing need to strengthen democratic institutions. These problems cannot be solved by another open-ended military commitment overseas. Every dollar, every hour, and every decision devoted to war is a dollar, hour, and decision not devoted to rebuilding the nation.

Supporters of continued military engagement argue that American credibility requires persistence. But credibility is not measured by refusing to change course. It is measured by recognizing when a policy is no longer serving the national interest and having the courage to pursue a better one.

Leadership is not demonstrated by escalating conflict simply because withdrawal may be politically difficult. Leadership is demonstrated by placing the welfare of one's own citizens and the broader interests of humanity, ahead of pride, politics, or pressure from allies and interest groups.

Ending American military involvement would not mean abandoning diplomacy or regional security. On the contrary, it would create an opportunity to return to negotiations, reduce the risk of a wider regional war, stabilize energy markets, and lessen the humanitarian suffering that inevitably accompanies prolonged conflict.

The United States should also undertake a broader reassessment of its global military posture. For decades, America has maintained an extensive network of overseas deployments intended to deter aggression and protect its interests. While alliances remain important, every deployment should be evaluated against today's strategic realities and the pressing needs at home. National strength begins with a healthy economy, resilient institutions, and a secure, prosperous population.

Presidents are remembered not only for the wars they begin or inherit, but for the wisdom they show in bringing them to an end. Choosing diplomacy over escalation is not weakness. It is often the strongest decision a leader can make.

If the goal is a lasting legacy, it should not be one defined by another prolonged conflict in the Middle East. It should be one defined by restoring America's economic strength, reducing unnecessary military commitments, and investing in the well-being of its own people while pursuing peace through diplomacy whenever possible.

The opportunity to change course still exists. The longer it is delayed, the greater the costs, in lives, in treasure, and in America's future.

William James Spriggs

Wednesday, July 8, 2026

TOOLBOXES TO TOEHAILS

TOOLBOXES TO TOENAILS

You gave a lifetime to sharpening tools and shaping lives; now a simple, small kindness — trimming a toenail feels like a favor withheld. There is an irony so large it could eclipse the sun: those whose hands built schools, ran businesses, taught children, and repaired the world can no longer reach their own feet. We are here at Merrill Gardens with stories folded in our pockets, diplomas and blueprints boxed away, reputations earned and sometimes squandered, and yet all of that accomplishment reduces, in the eyes of the world, to an unmet domestic chore.

Think about what it costs to grow old in a society that applauds achievement and then fails to stoop. We sacrificed comfort and leisure to forge communities and careers; we learned patience and grit, negotiated compromises, and handed down traditions. We managed complex machinery of organizations and families; we balanced budgets, calibrated engines, calmed crises. And now our most urgent petition is not for more honors, more technology, or more fame; it is for someone willing to stoop, to take a small knife and a steady hand and do the decent thing. The scale is grotesquely disproportionate: a life of constructing nations reduced to the inability to clip a toenail.

There’s another cruelty in this irony: the “helpers” are often the very people we trained, mentored, and inspired. We taught them how to be careful and how to care. We taught them how to reach high. And yet they find it difficult to reach down. Pride, discomfort, haste, and an economy that commodifies time conspire to keep hands from bending. There is a stubborn cultural failure here,  a failure to see that dignity is not only celebrated in ceremonies but also maintained in the small, mundane acts that say, “You matter.”

We are not asking for charity. The language of owing is not dramatic sentiment but a ledger of moral accounting. You owe us,  not because we demand repayment of wages or favors, but because reciprocity is the glue of a humane society. A scraped knuckle in youth earned help; an aching back in age deserves the same. To ignore this is to falsify the contract between generations: we invested in your future, and you invested in promises that now look thin under the weight of convenience.

There is an exquisite irony in entitlement and shame: those who taught respectability now must swallow humiliation to request help; those who were once served by our hands hesitate to perform that service. This is not merely about clipping nails. It is about recognizing that the test of a community is not how it rewards the successful, but how it tends to the vulnerable. The true architecture of civilization is built in tiny acts of mercy and attention, trimming a nail, tying a shoe, listening late into the night.

So come closer. Bend a little. Offer your hands where our reach falters. There is honor in doing what is small and necessary. It will cost you minutes and perhaps some awkwardness, but it will repay you with the restoration of a covenant older than institutions: we care for one another. We paid our dues. Now clip the nails, and in that small betrayal of vanity, restore the dignity you inherit.

William Jame Spriggs

Top of Form

Bottom of Form

 

 

TOOLBOXES AND TOENAILS

Toenails and Toolboxes

From toolbox to toenails, a life measured in hands, Worn brass and softened leather, calluses earned by plans. We sharpened our talents on benches and blacktops,

Built schools, planted gardens, threaded years like clocks.

We prospered, we stumbled, we laughed, and we cried, 

Packed triumphs and lessons and set them aside. Now at Merrill Gardens we gather each day, Not idle, not finished,  just resting our way.

Our laurels sit folded, their ribbons unfrayed, 

But a small, stubborn task leaves us oddly afraid: The reach of a lifetime has shortened with time, And those tiny chores now feel like a mountain climb.

Where are the helpers for the simplest of needs? Who will trim edges of long-lived deeds? We call for a hand, not pity, not scorn,  Just someone to care for the soles we have worn.

We were builders and teachers, bakers and friends; Our stories still hum where the sunlight extends. Listen: a whisper, a laugh, a request “I’m not ready to go, I just need a rest.”

So bring us your patience, your steady, kind grace, A manicure of kindness, a careful, safe place. Honor the toolbox with gloves and a smile. Share time, share skill; stay with us a while.

For dignity lives in the small, tender acts: A trimmed nail, a chat, a moment intact. From toolbox to toenails, the arc is the same, 

We gave of our lives; now answer our name.

Wednesday, July 1, 2026

PAY ATTENTION

It's Time to Start Paying Attention Again

Many Americans have simply tuned out.

After years of relentless political drama, scandal, outrage, and partisan warfare, millions have reached the same conclusion: "I've had enough." They stopped watching the evening news. They canceled newspaper subscriptions. They ignored headlines. Politics became exhausting, and exhaustion became apathy.

That reaction is understandable.

But it is no longer acceptable.

A democracy cannot survive if its citizens stop paying attention.

The first line of defense against corruption, incompetence, waste, and abuse of power is not Congress. It is not the courts. It is not political parties.

It is an informed public.

That is why investigative journalism matters so much.

Real investigative reporters are detectives. They spend weeks or months examining public records, interviewing witnesses, checking financial disclosures, filing freedom-of-information requests, comparing documents, and verifying facts before publishing their findings. Good reporting is slow, disciplined, and evidence-based.

Today there are encouraging signs that investigative journalism is experiencing a resurgence. Major newspapers, regional publications, nonprofit news organizations, independent journalists, and long-form podcasts are investing significant effort into uncovering facts that might otherwise remain hidden. Whether the story concerns government spending, corporate misconduct, ethical lapses, or failures in public policy, their work gives citizens the information they need to evaluate those in power.

Not every report will be perfect. Reputable news organizations sometimes make mistakes and correct them. Independent voices vary in quality. That is why the responsibility also falls on us to read critically, compare sources, distinguish verified reporting from opinion, and avoid treating social media rumors as established fact.

The answer to misinformation is not to stop paying attention.

The answer is to pay closer attention.

Democracy demands more than casting a ballot every few years. It requires informed citizens who understand the issues, ask difficult questions, and insist upon honesty and accountability from those who seek public office.

Throughout American history, investigative reporting has exposed political corruption, corporate fraud, unsafe products, environmental disasters, civil rights abuses, and countless other injustices. Those reforms happened because reporters uncovered the facts and citizens demanded change.

That responsibility now belongs to us.

Turn the television back on, not for entertainment, but for information.

Subscribe to a newspaper.

Read investigative articles rather than just headlines.

Listen to thoughtful podcasts that emphasize evidence over outrage.

Support journalists who do the difficult work of uncovering facts, regardless of whom those facts help or hurt.

Most importantly, refuse to surrender your curiosity.

Democracy is not self-executing. It depends upon citizens who are willing to stay informed, think critically, and participate. Corruption flourishes in darkness. Accountability begins with knowledge.

The health of our republic depends not only on honest leaders but also on attentive citizens.

It is time to stop looking away.

It is time to start paying attention again.

William James Spriggs