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Culture War Roundup for the week of July 6, 2026

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Our (US) politicians are literally brain dead

Ok, technically we don't know Mitch McConnel is dead, but he's not been seen for 4 weeks since being hospitalized. Especially with what's (not) happening in Congress, I honestly don't see any significant difference whatsoever. And he's still getting paid ($174,000/yr).

This isn't the first time. Kay Granger disappeared for months (still getting paid) until someone discovered she was in a memory care home. It's bipartisan: Diane Feinstein died in office, 90 years young, shortly after she kept missing votes for health issues. The two most recent presidents are over 80 and seem to be having memory issues in office, and 1/3 of Senators are over 70.

And maybe you disagree, but I think it reflects how out-of-touch the US government is. I feel that most of today's politicians aren't qualified to serve in a retirement home committee, yet they're serving in the grand Retirement Home that's in charge of a country with about 350 million people and $32 trillion GDP.

What's actually happening

Allegedly the people in charge of McConnel won't declare him dead because that would trigger a special election, where he could be replaced by Democrat Charles Booker. Except Thomas Massie, a Republican-turned-independent, would almost certainly win if the party endorsed him. My admittedly poor understanding is that the party doesn't like Massie because he doesn't always support Trump and has principles; this is definitely a weakman, but does anyone have a steelman for why a brain-dead (or at best, long-term hospitalized) man is better? I mean, it's not like Congress is doing anything anyways.

Why Congress looking utterly incompetent matters

The United States government is at least supposed to appear to the median idiot to run the United States. What are children supposed to think when they see their 90 year old "representatives" literally die in office? Gen Z is not optimistic (even about their own party, and these are the Gen Z who still respond to polls).

I believe that ordinary citizens consciously and subconsciously look at their leaders for how to act, so leaders' shamelessness trickles down and causes low-level institutions to decay. This isn't a new theory. Why work hard when your politician gets paid more to, let alone adequately represent you, not even show up (or show up last Thursday for 30 seconds)?

And old politicians in general can't really understand young people concerns like AI, social fragmentation, and the HR-ificiation of jobs. I'm not asking for every politician to be young, but for example, more than 2% of the senate to be under 40 and more than 0(%) under 30.

How to fix?

Elect younger politicians.

I don't know what we can do beyond passive, mostly ineffective support. But even party insiders, I don't understand why they don't back younger candidates. They obviously must eventually back newer generations.

Is every potential young candidate as problematic as Graham Platner? 26-year old Davig Hogg could've been the DNC vice chair but was replaced, unofficially for criticizing established (older) candidates for being "asleep at the wheel" (sound familiar?), officially (not a Republican cariature, this was the actual reason) to maintain a diversity quota.

Other countries

Although political disillusionnment seems to be nearly global, other countries have less old politicians. Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin are a youthful 73, EU leader Ursula Von Der Leyen 67, Argentina's Javier Milei 55, and the 9 youngest current leaders are under 40 (the 10 youngest since 1795 are...too young).

I'm not sure why the US is so overtly dysfunctional in this area, or if other countries are more visibly dysfunctional in other areas. I'm curious if there have been very young politicians anywhere, and whether or not they've been popular or successful.

My favorite comment about this after McConnell was rumored to be brain dead, at least this doesn't disqualify him from the Senate.