Nature doesn’t care who wins the U.S. presidential election Tuesday.
No matter who wins, the sun will rise in the east Wednesday morning. It will sink gloriously to the west that evening.
The earth will keep spinning. Trees will keep growing. Leaves will keep changing in the autumn and returning in the spring. Torrents of water will keep falling from the sky and forming great rivers to rush toward the sea.
Animals will keep reproducing and living the lives they’re designed for. They’ll keep growing and changing and evolving. They’ll continue to roam the earth, sometimes competing and sometimes cooperating.
Humanity will continue, too. The billions of people on this planet are the descendants of people who lived through far worse than what most of us will ever face — or can even imagine. The worst scenarios we can conceive would have been unimaginable fantasies of luxury to them.
Two people are competing Tuesday for a terrifying degree of control over this earth. They are both horribly flawed human beings — far worse than even the average among us. You can make arguments, if you’d like, about which of these terrible people is worse for the immediate future and why.
But it doesn’t matter.

I fear nobody will come with me as I start down a difficult path
When you make your life choices, you also pick the consequences
It’s hard to shut off our internal chatterboxes to listen to silence
Children’s affection can turn a lousy day into a reason to smile
Fly your freak flag: You’re not going to ruin your kids with ‘crazy’ genes
Being treated with respect changed black teen’s racial beliefs in 1974
Why keep playing a game that’s impossible for you to win?
Tribal hatreds around me mean detour on road to personal peace