May 022023
 

Yesterday, it being May Day, my mind filled up with associations, such as the fact that May 1 is the big labor holiday internationally (and once was here as well.) That led me to think of Odgen Nash’s poem about the man who hated spring – a psychological illness which had begum when someone told him to “Come down to Union Square, it’s Mayday,” and he had misheard it as “Come down to Union Square, it’s payday,” and the disappointment was more than he could handle (it ends with his wife shooting him, and his last words are “Thank you, honey, it was thoughtful of you to use the autumn-atic.” Which leads right in to the second short take.) Then my mind turned to Walpurgis – actually, I think, Mayday Eve – one of the four great pagan festivals which Christans, of course, associated with witchcraft. And then they associted witchcraft with people, especially but not exclusively women, who wanted to harm children. And that seques naturally into the first short take and comes right back the the Labor Day thought I started with.. I swear I did not plan any of that. It just happened. Coincidence actually is a thing.  Also – I’m sorry to report that Gordon Lightfoot has died.

Cartoon –

Short Takes –

Letters from an American – April 28, 2023
Quote – Those in favor of the new policies argue that fewer restrictions on child labor will protect parents’ rights, but in fact the new labor measures have been written by the Foundation for Government Accountability (FGA), a Florida-based right-wing think tank. FGA is working to dismantle the federal government to get rid of business regulations. It has focused on advancing its ideology through the states for a while now, but the argument that its legislation protects parental rights has recently enabled them to wedge open a door to attack regulations more broadly. FGA is part of a larger story about Republicans’ attempt to undermine federal power in order to enact a radical agenda through their control of the states.
Click through for full article (you may have to click on “Keep Reading.”). This a few days old, but any time is the time to address this (so close to Mothers’ Day, too.)

Colorado Public Radio News – Here’s why voters are unlikely to have a direct say in an assault weapons ban
Quote – In theory, a group can work to place a ballot initiative on the statewide ballot. That process involves taking a proposed initiative to the Secretary of State, agreeing on the language that would be on the ballot and gathering valid signatures as a sign of support. Then, and only then, will voters have a chance to have a say on a possible assault weapons ban. Non-fiscal ballot measures like gun control rules can only be considered in even-year elections.
Click through for details, including the difficulty of defining an “assault weapon,” which is a huge problem no matter who is pushng the legislation. Legislators and activist really need to drop the term and think in terms of characteristices which make some weapons so deadly and legislate those, without ever giving any weapon a name. Also , this is Colorado, but most if not all states have some kind of process which is analogous.

Food For Thought

Share
Apr 052023
 

Glenn Kirschner – Will judge impose gag order to stop defendant Trump’s lies, threats & inciting imminent lawlessness?

MSNBC – SCOTUS under new ethics rule thanks to Sen. Whitehouse

Ring of Fire – Elise Stefanik Promised Trump That House GOP Would Handle Alvin Bragg (I’m with Farron)

Six13 – The Prince of Egypt (for Passover CE 2023)

Pittie Is Obsessed With Her New Cinderella Carriage

Beau – Let’s talk about Trump, political reactions, and personal opinions….

Share
Mar 182023
 

Yesterday, I woke up to find that there had been a power failure while I was asleep. I don’t mind resetting the clock and the microwave, but I also had to reset the radio in the computer room, and that is a real pain. Both speakers fell; they weren’t damaged, but the first one knocked a full glass of water off the desk, drenching the desktop, the floor, and one of my sleeves. The one positive consequence was that it stretched me just right so that I didn’t need to use the TENS. Nevertheless, it is NOT something I want to do every day. The luck of the Irish was not with me (not surprising, since I have no Irish DNA – I have one redneck grandparent, but she was English/Scottish.) I did figure out how to send everyone a greeting card directly through the blog, and since TomCat did a two-day Saint Patrick’s Day cartoon sequence, here is your card to go with day two.

Cartoon –

Short Takes –

PolitiZoom – Jimmy Carter Asks President Biden to Deliver His Eulogy: Will Trump Show Up?
Quote – Some people go very quickly after pulling all the meds that had kept them alive. Others? Well, they’re tougher, for all we know, Carter could live another six months. But he is preparing now and he asked President Biden, two of the finest men to ever live, to give his eulogy…. These two go back a long time. “When Jimmy Carter ran for president the first US Senator to endorse him was Joe Biden.”
Click through for details and speculation. You may have seen the headline, but, even if you’re as old as I am, you may not realize quite how far back the relarionsship goes. As for TFG, can we hope that some court will take that out of his tiny hands?

Robert Reich – How to stop playing whack-a-mole with the banks [Spoiler: Bring back Glass-Steagall]
Quote – It’s time to admit that banks that take in deposits are public institutions that shouldn’t gamble with those deposits. Regardless of size, no bank has the capital on hand to manage a sudden full-blown bank run. This is why, ever since the bank bailouts of 2008, the biggest banks have been “too big to fail.” And it’s why last weekend the government decided to backstop smaller banks, too…. The Glass-Steagall Act was the law of the land until 1999. It prohibited banks from making profits off of the deposits entrusted to them. I say, bring it back!
Click through for article – He doesn’t mention something I read elsewhere this week – that Glass-Steagall was repealed because “It worked so well, we don’t need it any more.” I wanted something to beat my head against.

 

The best analysis I have seen about the arrest warrant out on Putin (and one of his ministers) is that of Heather Cox Richardson.  In order to get it up fast, I’ll just share the link.

Food For Thought
This is old – about 2 years old – but it seemed like a good time to remember it

Share
Mar 172023
 

Yesterday, I got an email from Move On, who have an insidious plot. They did not post the contents of the letter so I can’t provide a link, and will summarize. They want to put up three billboards with quotes on the route which Trump** must use to get to the airport, since his Mar-a-Lago heliport is gone. They want each one to highlight a different Tucker Carson text from the trove in which he admittied he does not care for Trump** This, they believe, will cause Trump** to post – let’s say shade – at Carlson every time he takes that road. This will cause Tucker’s viewers to leave him. That’s far more than they say even at the donation site. I think they don’t want the right to get even a hint of it unless and until it’s a done deal. That’s a pity, because it’s quite amusing, but it’s a good strategy. If and when they get the billboards up, we can share the details. Also, I got The New Yorker’s Name Drop answer from the first clue – and actually, any of the clues alone would have given me the correct answer. In this case it was just someone I know so much about that it would have been difficult to wrtie a clue whivh wouldn’t have given me the answer immediately.

Cartoon –

Short Takes –

CPR News – As gun deaths rise, Colorado is trying something new — a public health approach to gun violence prevention
Quote – In a first-of-its-kind partnership, the Office of Gun Violence Prevention within the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment is teaming up with researchers from the Injury and Violence Prevention Center in the Colorado School of Public Health. They’ll create and maintain a resource bank of regularly updated and accurate materials regarding gun violence in Colorado. In addition to the resource bank, officials at the new office also developed a grant program to fund evidence-and-community-based gun violence prevention initiatives.
Click through for details. I really thought it was more widely known than apparently it is that guns are a public health problem. It’s too early to say what this iniriative will accomplish, but we can hope

The Conversation – The retention problem: Women are going into tech but are also being driven out
Quote – So, questions arise: Why does the technology industry have a retention problem? Why are women who are employed by the technology industry quitting in such high volumes? What factors contribute to this low retention of women in the technology industry, and what kind of support do women need to stay and succeed in it?… Mainstream media often reports on open-source software’s toxic “tech bro” culture. In recent years, high-profile leaders in open-source software have been exposed for their abusive behavior.
Click through for full article. Back in the day, women who went into male dominated professions knew we had to be tough and we prepared for it. Is it a drawback of greater societal acceptance in general that we don’t sufficiently prepare kids to cross invisible lines?

Food For Thought
Now, this is what I call trolling!

Share
Feb 142023
 

Yesterday, looking at the weather forecast (which I automatically do on my way to get the times of sunrise and sunset, but normally don’t pay a lot of attention), I had the thought that this could be am – intersting – week weatherwise. Fristly, they are taking about snow for tomorrow, starting tonight (we could possibly have a couple of inches by 7 pm.) It’s a bit clumsy to describe the graph, but it’s a broad strip covering ten days from left to right, with temperatiure aand sunlight at the top and precipitation at the bottom and everything else you can think of in between – pressure, wind speed, even wind direction, and more. You can move your cursor across it, and wherever you put it, you’ll see a top-to-bottom line of everything. If you want to know what the wind direction will be next Tuesday at noon, you can set a line at that day and time and it will tell you. In fact, it tells me way more than I want to know. The reason I bother with it is that it has thousands, mabe tens of thousands, of weaher stations, and you can select, not just the zip code, but the exact weather station you want to track. And in Colorado Springs, where uou can go through three seasons just driving from 80911 in the south to 80921 in the north, that is important to me. The weather station I use is maybe four blocks from my house. And while even with that kind of pin point data, though still not perfect, it’s amazing how close to reality it can be. But I digress – I was going to say that, after tomorow, we an expect several days of sun, and a weekend with highs in the 50’s, before getting hammered again a week from today. Not unusual. But it does feel unusual to have a good idea what to expect.

I also learned that at least soe classical musicians and commentatore, probably beginning at Juilliard, are no longer using the perk “accompanist.”  Instead, they are saying “collaborativepianist.”  Ilikethat.  I’ve often thought accompanists do not get enough credit.  I was fortunate enough to meet one once, Anne Epperson, who told me that her teachers all wanted her to become a concert pianist, but that she preferred  making music in collaboration.  If you are ever thinking of investing in a CD (or whatever format comes along) of a piece with a soloist and a pianist, and you have a choice, buy the one with Epperson.  Also, apparently the State Department just issued a warning to any Americans in Russia to leave, and any not in Russia NOT to go there. While this is just common sense, I feel that bringing it up now probably means they know something we don’t.

Cartoon – 14 Oregon_map RTL + Valentine

Short Takes –

Capitol Hill Seattle BLog – Video shows East Precinct officers back down after bystanders step in over heavy response to Capitol Hill ‘shots fired’ 911 calls
Quote – The quickly formed and instantly tense standoff is an example of how fast a police response to a 911 report involving a gun can escalate and also shows how perceptions of police in a standoff situation have shifted after repeated incidents like the killing of Tyre Nichols…. According to East Precinct radio updates, police had been dispatched to the area after a 911 caller reported a gunshot and a second caller reported two shots along with somebody yelling, “Everybody is going to die.” But people at the scene told police there was no shooting and no gun — only a young person in a yellow sweater upset and suffering a crisis.
Click through for details. This story is going on two weeks old now, but re-reading it, I am still struck at how new it is. And that it couldn’t have happened just anywhere. It needs more visibility – a LOT more visibility.

The Conversation – Diversity and moderation over tradition – why Democrats moved South Carolina to the start of the 2024 presidential campaign
Quote – As political scientists in South Carolina, we understand how important the state’s primary is to the Democratic Party. Working at the College of Charleston for over a decade, we have seen dozens of campaign visits and events by presidential hopefuls of both parties to our city and campus. Given our front-row seats, we wrote “First in South: Why South Carolina’s Presidential Primary Matters,” a book about South Carolina’s primary process. Published in 2020, it examines South Carolina’s demographic makeup, the state’s primary electorate and how it compares with each party’s typical national primary and caucus voter. What we learned was, on several key metrics, South Carolina voters are a better reflection of the demographic diversity and moderate stance on issues the party prioritizes than voters in Iowa and New Hampshire.
Click through for rationale. Some are questioning spending money here, in a state we are never going to win (as if we arent already doing that in Iowa.) But remember, this is a primary we are talking about. Democrats in South Carolina are going to be good, strong Democrats with a good sense of what the nation actually needs. If we learn those lessons, and don’t forget them, I’m thinking our money will not be ill spent.

Food For Thought

I put this into a comment on Nameless’s recent MTG srticle, but I thought it too good for anyone to miss:

Share
Jan 222023
 

Yesterday, the radio opera was L’Elisir d’Amore by Donizetti. If I remember correctly, that was included in the summer lineup, I think from China, and I think I remember it was an American Old West setting – cowboys and a snake oil salesman and recruiting for the Civil War. So there’s not much to add. I can mention that the characters are straight out of the Italian Commedia dell’Arte and that their names are part of the humor – “Nemorino” means “little nobody,” Sergeant “Belcore” means “beautiful heart” (that would be only on his own mind, as his character is the “braggart soldier,”) and Dr. “Dulcamara” means “bittersweet.” Commedia dell’Arte heroines were spared from this, so Adina is just Adina. The one thing that has always bugged me about this ooera, although it’s necessary to the plot – wouldn’t you think of a love potion as something you’d give to the object of your affections to change his or her feelings? That’s certainly how it works in “Tristan und Isolde,” and in Shakespeare’s “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” and just about everywhere else. But in this, Nemorino drinks the potion himself to make Adina fall in love with him. Somehow it works. Also (via Heather Cox Richardson), Representative Bill Foster (D-IL), an award-winning physicist with real credentials, tweeted a welcome to the Science Committee to George Santos as a “Nobel prize winner” who also received a math prize “for his groundbreaking work with “imaginary numbers.” I’m not sure that “poorly educated” MAGAts know that “imaginary numbers” are an actual thing – but even those of us who do can be sure Foster is not talking about that kind of “imaginary numbers.” And I hesitate to say the DOJ trolled Gym Jordan when all they did was explain that they cannot reveal any information on ongoing investigations, but they’ll be happy to help with crafting legislation when it’s just pure fact, but it’s going to sound like “Keep your nose out of grownup matters, little boy, and do your own job. We’ll help – you obviously need help.”

Cartoon – 22 1/22 Roe also Rabbit RTL

Short Takes –

The Daily Beast – Russia’s Shadow Army Exposed and Humiliated by Bogus ‘Recruit’

The New York Times (no paywall – The U.S. will name the Wagner mercenary group a transnational criminal organization.
Quote – The United States has decided to designate the Russian private military group Wagner as a significant transnational criminal organization, the White House said on Friday, a move that will expand the number of nations and institutions that can be prevented from doing business with the company “Our message to any company that is considering providing support to Wagner is simply this: Wagner is a criminal organization that is committing widespread human rights abuses,” John Kirby, the White House national security spokesman, told reporters at a news briefing.
Click through to one or both. The first link will demonstrate how they operate on deceit (and throw their own under the bus). The second is more about what we are trying to do about it.

Crooks & Liars – GOP Congressman Greg Steube Falls Off His Roof
Quote – You know, I’ll bet Kevin McCarthy just might start to worry about getting rid of proxy voting. Yesterday Florida congress critter Greg Steube fell off his roof and is in the hospital, which leaves Kevin with a two-vote margin. His caucus might start to get Manchin-and-Sinema-type ideas!
Click through for story. From Susie Madrak’s keyboard to God’s iPhone. We’d only need to flip two. Or, I won’t wish them injuries or death, but if we could only flip one, and one could be arrested and detained long ehough, we’d have the votes to raise the debt ceiling right there. Yeah, I know, McCarthy won’t bring it to the floor.  Except he might.  He has already shown willingness to bring a vote to the floor without having the votes – what was it, 15 times?

Food For Thought

Share
Jan 172023
 

Yesterday, I looked at my cartoon calendar, and said to myself, “Well, shoot – I really have to seriously get down to making cartoons for the rest of the month – I need nine and the first one I need tomorrow (the 18th).” Also – I know people here disdain Chuck Todd, and with good reason, but he appears to have actually stood up to Sen. Ron Johnson. Stece Schmidt was the first one to say it, and now PolitiZoom is on it too. I don’t know what could have happened to bring it aout – but it’s welcome. If Chuck Todd can grow a spine, I would think almost anyone could.

Cartoon –

Short Takes –

The Conversation – How the distortion of Martin Luther King Jr.‘s words enables more, not less, racial division within American society
Quote – Even after Reagan finally signed the King holiday into law in 1983, he would write letters of assurance to angry political allies that only a selective version of King would be commemorated. That version was free of not only the racial politics that shaped the civil rights movement but also of the vision of systemic change that King envisioned. In addition, Reagan’s version left out the views that King held against the Vietnam War. Instead, the GOP’s sanitized version only comprises King’s vision of a colorblind society – at the expense of the deep, systemic change that King believed was needed to achieve a society in which character was more important than race.
Click through for essay. Certainly this isn’t (or shouldn’t be) a sirprise. If so-called Christians with their “Prosperity Gospel” can distor the words and actions of Jesus to justify their crimes, clearly MLK would not be immune. But it’s definitely sad – and dangerous.

The Nib – Martin Luther King, Jr. Was More Radical Than You Think
Quote:
Click through for full article. Graphics, or any type of visual, can, I think, help to clarifythings that are complicated. This may not be an artice you need – but it may be handy to pass on.

Civil Discourse with Joyce Vance – The Week Ahead
Quote – The past couple of weeks have been intense and draining. It’s clear things won’t ease up as we head into this week. But it’s impossible to live at this level of intensity on an ongoing basis, so if you’re like me, you probably need to ease back off the gas pedal a little. We’ll hit the high points this week but try to have a bit of fun too. We all need the sanity break.
Click through. Despite the intro, she doesn’t let us completely off the hook. She addresses MLK Day in Alabama and also the two Special Counsels.

Food For Thought

Share
Jan 012023
 

Yesterday, the opera wasn’t an opera, but a collection of excerpts from operas previously broadcast, some more or less recently, some way, WAY back. What they had in common was that each was from the Met debut of a singer(/actor/storyteller – plus one conductor) who later became an international star. Kiri Te Kanawa was one, and another was Latonia Moore (you may remember I heard that debut – she stepped in as understudy and I was, like, “Wow!”) Not all, of course, were quite that “A Star Is Born” dramatic – some stars were pretty well established elsewhere before coming to the Met – but some were (Astrid Varnay and Te Kanama). The range was from Moore (2012), the newest, all the way back to Bidu Sayão on February 13, 1937.

Cartoon –

Short Takes –

ProPublica – They Called 911 for Help. Police and Prosecutors Used a New Junk Science to Decide They Were Liars.
Quote – Junk science in the justice system is nothing new. But unvarnished correspondence about how prosecutors wield it is hard to come by. It can be next to impossible to see how law enforcement — in league with paid, self-styled “experts” — spreads new, often unproven methods. The system is at its most opaque when prosecutors know evidence is unfit for court but choose to game the rules, hoping judges and juries will believe it and vote to convict.
Click through for details. You thought facial recognition technology was bad? Hold these p[eople’s beer (And I use the term “people” loosely. I questin their humanity.)

National Public Radio – Why scientists dug up the father of genetics, Gregor Mendel, and analyzed his DNA
Quote – Sequencing his DNA revealed genetic variants linked to diabetes, heart problems, and kidney disease. The variant that most intrigued Fairbanks was in a gene that has been associated with epilepsy and neurological issues. “He suffered throughout his life from some sort of a psychological or neurological disorder that caused him to have very severe nervous breakdowns,” says Fairbanks. “That may well have been an inherited condition – and that was a fascinating discovery that these scientists made.”
Click through for story. At first it sounds morbid – but on reflection, I think he would take it in the sirit of homage in which it was done. (He might have even gotten a chuckle out of it.)

Food For Thought

Share