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It’s been a sci-fi-strange week in a sci-fi-strange time. We’ve actually seen a president of the United States muse during a televised press conference about the effectiveness of using disinfectants internally to kill the COVID 19 virus, and many thousands of grown-ups rushing to dissuade his more intellectually-challenged followers from trying it. Who would have guessed even ten years ago that the world would be living out a Simpson’s episode in real-time? But this one has had all the jokes removed.

If you’re not familiar with the Dunning-Kruger effect, look it up. In short, it is a reasonably rare, extreme cognitive bias in which a person of very low ability thinks they are an expert at everything. The “very low ability” part is of paramount importance here because a normal person of almost any ability will quickly realize how much they have yet to learn. A true genius at anything will almost always report that the more they learn, the more they realize they don’t know. Only a fool thinks they know everything.

Enter Donald J. Trump, who has for his entire not-very-successful life thought he was an expert at everything. And it’s not just a political ploy because he knows there are plenty of rubes who will believe him—he actually believes it. This is why he eschews the company of experts; they only serve to remind him of how inept he actually is. This is why he muses aloud about various magical cures for the current pandemic; he actually thinks he’s so special he can accidentally come up with a cure for a complex epidemiological conundrum without passing a single class in biology. “I have a knack for science,” he has said, as though that makes him an equal colleague to people who’ve actually read and studied things. 

Imagine a person with “a knack for music” being handed a violin for the first time. Would they be ready to play alongside Yo-Yo Ma? Now imagine this person has been handed a baton and placed in front of the Boston Symphony Orchestra. He waves his hands around like a maniac (but his hair doesn’t move!) and thinks he is conducting highly-trained professionals to play beautiful music. In fact, he’s making a fool of himself and the musicians are confused and scrambling, using every ounce of their skill and talent to not make a mess of the symphony they thought they were supposed to be playing. In an attempt to save face and their job, they cover for the delusional conductor. To the sort of person who would drink bleach if the president said to, the orchestra sounds pretty good. But to anyone who knows anything about music or the dangers of ingesting household cleaners, it’s a cacophony. 

This is our Dunning-Kruger presidency.

You might suddenly be reminded of another fool with a baton who thinks all you have to do to create beautiful music is wave a stick in the air. If you’re thinking of Jared Kushner, give yourself a 15-point bonus. I said previously that actual sufferers of the Dunning-Kruger effect are fairly rare, so how is it that we are unfortunate enough to have two such people sitting atop the heap they and the GOP have created? 

I’d guess the answer is sexual imprinting. Ivanka imprinted on her father, an untalented boob with supreme confidence in his superiority to all other humans despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary, and married a guy just like him. Would it be the first time a curse of this sort has played out within a family?

And so the “genius” son-in-law of the “very stable genius” thinks he can wave a baton at the Middle East and solve a centuries-old conflict. He is so used to failing upwards, however, that he doesn’t seem to even notice his failures anymore. Now he’s in charge of the COVID-19 task force and on his first day said that federal United States stockpiles of medical equipment are not for the people who live in those same united states. Who are they for then, maestro? These are the sort of people for whom the adage "born on third base and thinks he hit a triple” was created. 

Where will we go next? Has America learned that reality-show carnival barkers aren’t fit to lead a nation of 330 million souls? Or will America’s future include a President Joe Exotic with tigers all over the White House lawn? 

Enough of (what passes for) reality, let’s have a look at some cartoons from last week by my partner, Wayno, who is appropriately humble about his abilities to conduct an orchestra. He plays a mean ukulele, however!

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By the way, the gentleman above is wearing virus-spotting goggles, which I recently advertised online and got an order from Jared Kushner for six pairs.

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Over on Wayno’s weekly cartoon blog post, he notes that he has missed his haircut appointment for the second month in a row. I’ve been thinking that by the time the country is fully open again, most of America will look like they’re on their way to a Jefferson Airplane concert. Check out Wayno’s post but come back for the rest of this one!

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I can’t decide if we should call this product a Super Stinker or a Stinker Soaker.

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Instead of wiping the blood away with a cloth, I suppose a vampire tattoo artist would lick your arm every few seconds. Not a good image during the current pandemic. Unless you’re in Georgia where their governor opened businesses like tattoo parlors again. Just call him Governor Dunning-Kruger.

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I love this gag so much. But looking at our Instagram account, I see that a lot of readers had no idea what this cartoon means. Several surmised it to be a visual representation of “Firestone” or “HotWheels.” That’s actually very clever, but that’s not it. It’s simply about how certain dudes always want to paint flames on the side of pretty much any type of transport. It is supposed to make it look faster, but I’ve always thought a car on fire looked more like it had a faulty electrical system.

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I grew up in a Catholic family and was required to spend a certain amount of time in these weird boxes with somebody behind a small, curtained window that I was supposed to tell my worst secrets to. As an elementary school kid, I was ashamed to admit I hadn’t committed any act I considered to be a “sin” so I used to make stuff up. Accordingly, I’ve now been officially forgiven for things I’ve not even done yet, including pushing my little sister down a flight of stairs. Score!

That’s the end of today’s cartoon laundry chute, Jazz Pickles. Thanks for sliding along with us to the basement. If you like what we do and that we do it for free, without ads or a paywall, please consider supporting us via one of the links below. Our stores are still donating 50% of profits to a charity that supports local small restaurants and frontline healthcare workers during the pandemic. (The other half of profits are helping out my daughters who are both out of work during the Plague.)

Until next time, be smart, be happy, be nice, and resist the Dunning-Kruger Party.

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