Tuesday, February 22, 2022

Cats & Dogs, Numbers, Population Slump, Peace Corps, Ottawa, Latin America, USA

 Son Jonathan is an avid animal lover not allowed to have a pet himself in his apartment. Instead, he regularly feeds stray cats with cans of tuna and walks friends’ dogs that start shaking with excitement whenever they see him coming.












Most of my life, I’ve owned a dog, but am allergic to cats. But now no more pets, as I feel lucky just to be able to take care of myself.

Female bears living in the wild, raising their own young, can often be persuaded to mother an orphaned cub slipped into their den. Below, a bear cub with foster mom. 

Never have I identified with hunters nor understood what makes them want to shoot and kill an innocent animal living out its natural life in the wild, whether a bear, deer, moose, or any other creature. Bison in our country were hunted almost to extinction. Hunters now usually don’t eat their kill, at most, just display its head. I do have deer antlers hanging above one of several fireplaces in my house, given to us years ago when I was still married and never taken down. I’d like to give them away. Hunters the world over also kill elephants, hippos, leopards, lions, even giraffes, just to have their photo taken with the dead animal. Successful hunters are said to experience a boost in testosterone. And, as mentioned before on these pages, innocent shy pangolins, never having done anything to anyone, are killed simply because Chinese men falsely believe their scales have aphrodisiac properties. 

I’m glad hunting is now on the wane and that birdwatching, hiking, and nature photography are on the rise, at least in our own country.

Now, still in the dead of winter, I’m delighted to see a flower blooming among the potted plants, with more buds promising to open soon. 

Apropos of nothing, my son just sent me a photo taken of me in the Martinsburg, W Va. train station, where a line goes through connecting to DC. 


Several paintings by local artists have won awards at the local Hill Naval Center on Pa. SE. Here is one that caught my fancy, a 3rd place winner now for sale. 


Today’s date, 2/22/22, is considered to have special significance. (The future date of 2/22/2222 will have even more.) In numerology, 222 in sequence are often described as Angel Numbers. The number 2 in numerology also refers to duality, partnership, relationship, and balance. 

A recent study here in Washington, DC, has revealed that most gun violence is attributable to some 200 black men in their 20s and 30s, linked to each other and living in identifiable areas of the city. Interventions are now being targeted at them.

The two drivers for population growth are increased birth rates and immigration. In our country, both have been going down. Va. columnist Make Radoiu points out that is a risk for all of us.

The United States' population is going down, threatening our success as a nation

This notice has come in from the National Peace Corps Association: “All lights appear to be go for the first Peace Corps Volunteers to return to service overseas in March. Invitations are now out for Volunteers to return to some two dozen countries.”

My colleagues at Amnesty International USA, both staff and volunteers, have assembled a crisis response team on Ukraine. If anyone wants more information about it, contact me at the email address above.

I sometimes wonder if there is any way for the US and its Western allies to breech their divide with Russia, and also China, without actually giving up any democratic principles? What can our side accept? What can Russia/Putin accept now? Putin has made the point that he is serious about not allowing Ukraine to join NATO—that he feels his country is being threatened. The only thing that occurs to me to do right now is simply to defer that decision. Or else give Putin something else that he wants.

The current standoff between the US and Russia about Ukraine somehow puts me in mind of a 5-month hitchhiking trip I took years ago, all over Europe at age 20 in 1958 after graduating from UC, Berkeley. In Germany, the Berlin Wall had not gone up yet, but apparently informal barricades had gone up above ground, so a German friend took me over to Berlin’s eastern side via an underground train. The buildings on the other side appeared square and grim and few people were out on the street. We watched a movie in a theater there, preceded by a newsreel of Secretary Walter Ulbricht speaking angrily and gesturing to an outdoor audience, though I didn’t understand most of what he said. The instant his image first appeared on the screen, the theater audience started hissing, continuing throughout the newsreel.

Probably the last straw for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, impelling him to seek emergency powers, was when police stood by as protesters bathed in a hot tub and partied into the night directly in front of parliament and below the prime minister's office. When police were accused of being too friendly with the protesters, the police commissioner resigned. But the truckers stood their ground, confident that their big trucks could not be easily towed away, though they were largely cut off from the outside world. It gets really frigid in Ottawa at this time of year, as I can attest having been there in winter. And the truckers do need to eat, sleep, and use the bathroom, after all, so now what? [photo] Finally, giant tow trucks were brought out to actually tow their rigs away and arrest the ringleaders.

AP, Police ticketing, warning truckers to leave Ottawa



AS IT HAPPENED, Canada trucker protest: 100 arrests, 21 towed as police break windows in bid to clear Ottawa trucks

More than 3 weeks after the Ottawa truckers began their anti-vaccine protest, truckers who remained were being removed by force. At least 70 were arrested. The truckers’ protest had spread to other provinces, including Alberta, Manitoba, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and Ontario, also to 34 other countries in the Americas and Europe, even as far away as Finland. Canadians’ peace-loving image took a hit from the actions of a minority of its citizens, buoyed and financed by help from US rightwing groups. Now American truckers are contemplating similar action.

Donald Trump can always claim that he left his finances to his accountants, so really was not in charge and, in this case, he may not actually be lying. Do we still have to worry about having him back again in office in 2024? Yes, we probably should worry, since he still has a rock-solid core of faithful followers and Republican-led states have been drastically pruning voter rolls. 

Olympics are over now, so Paralymics are next.

National Review, Transgender Swimmers Cap Dominant Performances at Ivy League Women’s Championships

Is this surprising?

 

Reuters, Cubans protest in Havana as Costa Rica tightens visa requirements

 

Dr. Paul Farmer, who did heroic work in Haiti, has died at age 62.

Reuters, Dominican Republic begins building border wall with Haiti

This is from a report from Mexico, 5 journalists murdered in Mexico in just 6 weeks in 2022: Cinco periodistas asesinados en un periodo de seis semanas en el 2022 y una impunidad que no cesa. 

 

AP, A stunning fall for ex-Honduran president wanted in US

If Juan Orlando Hernández is now in US detention, then probably the jig is up for the former president. While he was still in office, the American government held off. Let's see in a US court whether he can credibly claim distance from his brother. Otherwise, he'll share prison time with him. I don’t know anyone in Honduras who actually voted for JOH, as he was known, but he served 2 presidential terms, so some Hondurans must have actually done so. He may be hoping now for a Trump return. 


Bitcoin in El Salvador, where most people are impoverished and few even have personal internet access, is a joke. 


Last time, I mentioned Cuban medical missions, a major moneymaker for the Cuban government which lends out medical practitioners to other countries, but directly collects the payment for their services, while giving medical professionals only a small living allowance. As a result, countries where they serve, such as Honduras, have ended up with many Cuban doctors and therapists who have abandoned families back home to remain working there, as well as in other host countries in Latin America, where they are highly regarded and already speak Spanish. 


Many have also stayed on in Brazil, where they’ve had to learn Portuguese. 

Meanwhile back home in Cuba, patients often complain about lack of medical attention, also about having to buy their own medications and bring their own sheets to the hospital. 

A bit of trivia now about bull fighting in Cuba in the 19th century when bull rings were built in several cities, though the sport was never very popular there. Bull fighting was then outlawed when the US intervened in Cuba around the turn of the century and not very much mourned. However, Cockfighting remains still alive there today, as I have witnessed. 


That’s another brutal/fatal sport for the animals, though a wounded chicken may arouse less sympathy than a bull. Cockfighting with illegal betting still goes on in Cuba while the government looks the other way. Having been invited to observe both bull fighting (in Spain) and cockfighting (in Cuba and Puerto Rico), I’ve always left the scene when blood began flowing. I don’t plan to ever witness either again.

Nor am I happy realizing that beef and chicken come from slaughtered animals. I do avoid red meat, but sometimes eat chicken and will eat shrimp and oysters, reasoning that they experience little or no pain. I’ve also tried fried insects in Latin America, rather crunchy, no qualms about eating them. Vegans have lived with or visited me at times, sticking always to a strictly plant-based diet, something they find easier now than ever before. My younger daughter was once vegan, along with practically her whole college, Evergreen, in Olympia, Washington, where vegan fare was routinely offered in the college dining room. But then she married a carnivore who likes to cook, so abandoned veganism.

USA Today, 'You are seen': A record 7.1% of US adults now identify as LGBTQ, new poll shows

Are more Americans identifying with a sexual orientation beyond traditional male/female roles just to explore non-traditional modes of sexual expression or because of preferences previously suppressed that are now out in the open? My guess is that it’s some of both. Gen Z seems the cohort doing the most sexual identity exploring. I do know some women who once considered themselves gay or bi, but ended up in conventional marriages to men. I don’t know the details of their current sex lives.

Indiana parents recently arrested for routinely beating their children with belts and rods, cited the Bible as justification. “Spare the rod, spoil the child,” was once in vogue. I recall my own mother whopping me on the bare bottom with a hairbrush, bristles down. Such methods of discipline are no longer in vogue. “Gentle parenting” is now a common trend, probably easier to carry out with today’s smaller families. I tried using it myself with my 4 children and foster son long before it was popular, often a proving challenge, especially as I was a single working mother. Matters could get out-of-hand with so many actors and with the pressures I was under, as our finances were tight and I never got enough sleep. I did not hit or spank my kids, except once when I snapped and slapped one of my unruly boys on the cheek, feeling immediate remorse. That is the only time I can recall hitting any of them. Earlier, when I was still married, my husband and I had distinctly different parenting styles, though I spent much more time with the kids. Time will tell whether today’s gentle parenting trend helps most kids grow up with fewer hang ups, or will they blame their parents for being too lax? There is also “good enough parenting,” which is probably what most of us have actually done.

Another change over my lifetime has been the diminishing use of capital punishment. Sometimes on a Sunday evening, since I don’t have TV, I listen to old-time radio on NPR, including the supposedly true-life LA crime stories from the 1940s and ‘50s aired on Dragnet (“only the names have been changed to protect the innocent”) back when executions were common in California. The death penalty was eliminated there in 2016.

Having just visited a friend in his last days, dying a slow death from cancer, I cannot help contrasting what he and his family are going through with the swift death of another friend only days ago, who fell over and died instantly from a heart attack. He may really have been the most fortunate of the two, not that we usually have much agency over how and when we each will die.

Pensacola News Journal, Abortion debate comes down to one fundamental question | Guestview

urging us to try to understand all points of view. Is that possible and where does that leave us? Sincere and fair-minded people will differ. Now Colombia has approved abortions up to 24 weeks, the current point of viability and a later point than in other Latin American countries that allow abortions.

Finally, like most of us, I don’t recall dreams much after waking. But this morning, I woke up after a dream of diving into a swimming pool and losing the top of my 2-piece bathing suit. In fact, I’ve never worn a 2-piece bathing suit, so where did that come from?

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¡es momento de escupir por la ciencia!

Caligrafía


Wednesday, February 16, 2022

Black History, Valentine’s Day, Wildlife, Women’s March, Trump or Pence?, Truckers, Covid, Latin America, Group vs. Solo Living

Yes, February is Black History Month. I have not forgotten, though family members who identify as black do seem to have forgotten.

Hope everyone had a happy Valentine’s Day, connecting with family and friends if not with a significant other. 

On the neighborhood website, someone is selling “ripped jeans.” Is that still a style?

Another website neighbor has warned owners of small pets about hawks flying low.



Finally got rid of raccoons running around on the roof and pressing up against windows by cutting down their mulberry tree ladder. They also used to gorge themselves when mulberries were in season.




A neighbor just saw a raccoon down by the Potomac River, but they are no longer pressing to get inside nor scurrying around on my roof.

Some neighbors have observed possums recently, but I haven’t seen any lately myself. In any case, possums are gentle, shy creatures, not bold and aggressive like raccoons. 


While on the subject of wildlife, check out Wildlife photographer of the year 2021 winners, including this photo of Golden Pheasants in China circling each other amid falling snow. 


A winter bird sits on branch closer to home below. 



Before going any further, I must confess that I moved around parts of this posting and may have gotten some aspects out of order, so hope it still more or less flows along. I may have left some items out, but better that than repeating them. 

In Alberta, Canada, where my late father was born, my relatives there may be mourning the halting of the XL oil pipeline, which would have transported crude to the US. 

The world’s major oil producers are the US, Saudi Arabia, and Russia. All need to be preparing for a post-petroleum world.

Business Insider, Ontario declares state of emergency over trucker protests, calling the demonstrations an 'illegal occupation'

AP, Canada border blockade clearing peacefully as police move in


Wash. Post, Paris and Brussels to ban ‘Freedom Convoy’ inspired by Canadian protest 

The protests have reverberated outside the country, with similarly inspired convoys in France, New Zealand and the Netherlands, and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security warned that truck protests may be in the works in the United States.  

Half of Olympic athletes playing for China were not born there, including many born in the US. Did they give up their American citizenship as China apparently requires? The answer seems murky.

Real snow fell in Beijing, causing temporary suspension of the winter games, which had been relying on artificial snow.

Right now, Vladimir Putin may have been playing “chicken” on Ukraine, engaging in saber-rattling to show what he would do if Ukraine actually tried to join NATO. Any such aspirations by Ukraine’s president are probably quelled for the time being. Putin has made his point, showing what he could do, as he actually did do not so long ago in Crimea.

We might take solace in knowing that troublesome leaders, like all of us, have finite lives, though they could always be replaced by someone as bad or even worse. Xi Jinping is now 68 and Vladimir Putin is 69 and neither ever plans to retire. Nor does Daniel Ortega, age 76, currently in his second presidential round, whose wife, age 70, could always succeed him. So far, Ortega has jailed 46 possible opponents to make sure he never loses another election, as happened to him in 1990, when I was there as an election observer. Donald Trump, who also aspires to a second round, is 75 and overweight, though looking somewhat slimmed down these days. It’s really scary to imagine he might take office once again.

Is it just my wishful thinking, or is Donald Trump’s star actually starting to sputter out now? Fissures seem to be appearing in his once rock-solid Republican support. We’ll find out at the midterms just how much clout with voters he still retains, learning eventually whether legal charges against him will actually stick. It’s important to him that Republicans who might protect him are victorious this time. Did he really try to flush incriminating evidence down the toilet? Is that why he complained about toilets being so hard to flush?

The man seems to have been Teflon so far. His common facial expressions and terse declarations seem almost like a deliberate parody of a crazy politician, but maybe they are in fact genuine. One of his favorite chants first aimed at Hillary, “Lock her up,” has now turned into “Lock him up.” He seems to lack any self-control or filter on his emotions, much like a 2-year-old in a grown man’s body. Mike Pence is now even being touted as a presidential candidate for 2024 in some Republican circles. 

While Republicans may accuse President Biden and the Democratic Party of “socialism,” that is not a dirty word. The kind of social safety net envisioned and encouraged by Biden is not Stalinism or Maoism, nor Cuban socialism, but more like the very functional systems now operating in Scandinavia and other parts of Europe, combining considerable economic liberty with support for older or disabled people, new mothers, and the temporarily unemployed. Those countries have shown it’s possible to have the best of both worlds.

“Affirmative action” to create a more level playing field in jobs or education will arouse more push-back when supply is limited, since a minority candidate may be chosen for a rare opening that a straight white man also seeks. But if vacancies are plentiful in either realm, which now seems to be the case, affirmative action may go forward more easily.

Wash. Post, Marjorie Taylor Greene says Nancy Pelosi leads ‘gazpacho police,’ 

To her followers, that may sound just fine.

Sun News, ‘Mama bear’ owner of Myrtle Beach cafe dies of COVID: ‘She just didn’t get better’ She was 51 and unvaccinated. She leaves behind 3 children, including one only 11 years old.


NY Times, A Rising Death Toll

There is another health scourge in the US besides Covid, namely over 100,000 yearly drug overdose deaths, mostly among young people. Fentanyl is the main culprit, as it easily leads to overdosing.

 

NBC News, She created a new Covid vaccine — and now she's up for the Nobel Peace Prize Honduran-born microbiologist María Elena Bottazzi, together with her physician colleague, created the Corbevax vaccine for Covid-19, a patent-free drug that last month received emergency authorization for use in India. Rep. Lizzie Fletcher, D-Texas, has nominated Bottazzi and her colleague for the Nobel Peace Prize. Just think what the world and the US would lose if people like Bottazzi were not allowed to enter and work in our country? And when might such a vaccine be available here?

Former Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernández might have thought he got an out-of-jail-free card by joining the Central American Parliament on the same day he left office, but the US was still on his tail. Will the Parliament position afford him immunity or not? That remains to be seen, as the matter is now under dispute.

AP, A stunning fall for ex-Honduran president wanted in US

https://thehill.com/policy/international/594249-us-requests-arrest-and-extradition-of-former-honduras-president The United States this week formally requested the arrest extradition of former Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernández over reported drug trafficking charges... Hernández’s brother... last year was sentenced to life in prison due to trafficking charges...On Monday night, Orlando Hernández’s neighborhood was surrounded by security officials and the Supreme Court of Justice planned a meeting for Tuesday to decide on a judge to carry out the extradition request

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/feb/11/honduras-environmentalists-mining-protesters-court-ruling Honduran supreme court orders release of anti-mining protesters Amnesty International described the original verdict as “outrageous” and said the Guapinol activists in Honduras were prisoners of conscience. But in a dramatic move, the supreme court has accepted an appeal filed months earlier. The court found that the case should never have gone to trial because the judge who sanctioned the indictment against the defenders – and later ordered pre-trial detention – was not authorized to do so. The charges must be annulled and the men freed, as the judge violated due process by presiding on cases outside her jurisdiction. The eight men, from a poor, semi-rural community called Guapinol, had been held in an overcrowded prison throughout the pandemic as a result of bail being denied – yet the conditions requiring pre-trial detention were never met, according to the supreme court decision.

In Cuba, slavery, threats, violence, harassment and separation of families are some of the lesser-known features of Cuban missions abroad, according to a recent virtual meeting held at the request of the Spanish NGO Prisoners Defenders, and due to complaints filed with the UN in Geneva and the International Criminal Court. I’ve met a number of Cuban doctors and other health practitioners in Honduras myself, some of whom have stayed on there and others who returned to their families in Cuba. 


  

A women’s march in DC is scheduled for March 6. If focused heavily on “abortion rights,” I won’t be joining. I didn’t consider Virginia’s proposed 20-week abortion ban, which allowed exceptions, so draconian, but Democrats there roundly defeated it. Abortion, like many other issues, has become highly polarized and bitterly partisan, so is not subject to reasoned debate. I’ve already expressed my feelings on that topic, based both on my experience as a mother and as an interpreter for families raising adorable, lively preemie babies full of personality born close to 20 weeks—not the 28 weeks envisioned in Roe 50 years ago. Time now for an update! The number of abortions in the US has shrunk dramatically since Roe and now coat hangers are definitely out. Around the world, more countries seem to be moving toward permitting some abortions, but stopping them at much earlier stages than allowed in the US, at about the same stage as most early miscarriages. In some cultures, age is measured from the estimated time of conception.

Bucks Co. Courier Times, Guest Opinion: The fact of human life is Roe v Wade's biggest threat

Another article questioning Roe has appeared, again in a small home-town newspaper, not a major outlet, this time by a PhD instructor in medical ethics. His main point in that a fetus is both human and alive.

 

NH Union Leader, Moms with tragic pregnancies split on late-term abortion ban Women testifying about their own unexpected pregnancies appeared before the House Judiciary Committee. A witness testified that she gave up her first child, who was then adopted, a girl who later married and is now the mother of 3 herself. That same witness told the committee that another of her children had died soon after being born with birth defects, but she was glad to have gotten to hold him. She also had four other healthy children whom she raised successfully. Of course, most abortions are not being performed for “tragic pregnancies,” if defined as tragic for the future life of the unborn.


People, Italian Woman, 70, Found Sitting at a Table in Her Home 2 Years After Her Death

Is this the likely fate of an older person living alone? We could actually do worse than die sitting at a table, maybe simply getting ready to eat lunch. Or maybe after going to sleep one night, then never waking up? My friend who took me to the airport 2 years ago, when I was completely overloaded going to Honduras, has just died suddenly of a heart attack. I am in shock. It would be best to gather our loved ones around us for a final goodbye, but dying while carrying on with ordinary life doesn’t seem too terrible either. The future is always uncertain. Any of us could die today, tomorrow, or even the day after.

 

Lately, both online and in the mail, I’ve been bombarded by ads for collaborative, cooperative, or communal living, also for “independent” living, including senior housing and assisted living. Am I being targeted because of my age? I’ve lived my whole life with sharing, first with my birth family, then with husband and kids (I married at 21), then with foreign visitors, also with local housemates, so would like to try really independent living.

I tried vegan “chicken” tenders by accident, as the “vegan” part was in small print on the label, while “chicken” appeared more prominently. The product provided a good facsimile, but still tasted and felt “a little off,” though I do think I could get used to it. We all need to move toward a more plant-based diet, so this is a good start.

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¿Listo para empezar?

Como decorar tu patio con plantas y algo más

Decoración de Casas Bonitas

Aprende Jardinería

 Cocina fácil y sana

 


 







 


 


 


 



 


 

Wednesday, February 9, 2022

Bugs, Butterflies, Peacocks, Peace Corps, Virus Fatigue, Trump Still Around, Winter Olympics, China, Israel, Trans Athletes, Havana Syndrome, Cuba

Waking up early one dark winter morning and turning on my bedside lamp, I found an odd-looking bug crawling on my pillow. I flushed the creature down the toilet, then searched for its likeness on the internet. It was a stink bug, a native of Asia, belonging to a species reportedly accidentally introduced to North America in Allentown, Pa. in 1998. From that small beginning, stink bugs soon proliferated, spreading rapidly throughout the US and Canada. Their name comes from an odor they emit when threatened. Most are plant-feeders, eating grasses, berries, and fruit. Wasps, birds, bats, and spiders like to eat them. When the weather turns cold, they sometimes come inside, often attracted by light. So now I know and you do too.

The Week, South Texas butterfly sanctuary closes indefinitely due to QAnon conspiracies, escalating threats

This sanctuary near the border has been accused by extremists of hiding unauthorized migrants and of sex trafficking and also allowing children to be “raped and murdered” after it blocked Trump’s border wall from going through the property.  

AP, Miami agrees to do something about its peacock problem

Peacocks are beautiful, especially the males, but can become a problem when clustering in parks, blocking streets, or just leaving their droppings around anywhere and everywhere.


On the subject of non-humans, I just like the photo of these 2 matching pets. For years, I had a dog but never a cat, because I’m allergic to cat fur. Now at my current age and with hopes to be able to resume travels to Honduras, a pet is not on my radar.


The Peace Corps is now cautiously returning volunteers to overseas service, including to South Africa.

There and elsewhere, experienced volunteers who have served successfully before are now going abroad for a second time, though not yet returning to Ukraine, except virtually. I’d like to do virtual service in a Spanish-speaking country, but am not sure I’m ready to make the time commitment or have the computer connections and skills to pull it off from my home in Washington, DC.

 

Opportunities for Virtual Engagement with HC Partners
Express Interest by February 16

Over 200 RPCVs have participated in virtual service since October 2020 in all six Peace Corps’ sectors. Virtual service is a rewarding opportunity where RPCVs collaborate with host country partners abroad for 12-27 weeks. There are currently over 100 virtual service opportunities in 31 countries on the Peace Corps website and RPCVs can express interest in any country!

Virus fatigue has definitely set in here in the US where vaccine resistance has prolonged the pandemic. With already 900,000 American Covid deaths, we have now far surpassed the US total of 657,000 deaths from the 1918 flu epidemic that stretched into 1920. While Europe is recovering and folks there are going out again, the pandemic continues to take lives and prevent return to normal life here because so many remain stubbornly unvaccinated and those already vaccinated have not gotten all their shots, as has now happened in Europe, especially in western Europe. Anti-vaxxers are letting the virus spread and mutate in our country while our pandemic death toll over the last 2 years now approaches a world record of one million—more than twice the number of Americans killed in World War II, when less than half a million died during 4+ years of US involvement in that war.

https://www.thedailybeast.co

m/joe-biden-renews-donald-trumps-title-42-immigrant-expulsion-order-citing-omicron-and-ongoing-pandemic

Because of my empathy with migrants, I have mixed feelings about expelling them, while also realizing that as practical matter, limits are necessary. 

I agree with President Biden that no constitutional amendment is absolute, certainly in terms of its interpretation. If anything is absolute, it is that everything is subject to change.

 

One thing that may be subject to change is US abortion policy, though resistance will be strong. Roe may have been the law of the land on abortion for half a century, but information on fetus development has advanced and the point of viability has moved back. Dred Scott and Plessy v. Ferguson are examples of Supreme Court decisions that were later overturned.

 

Donald Trump’s twitter finger has been stilled and he may have ripped up incriminating White House documents in his day, but he nonetheless maintains outsized influence over Republican voters and therefore over Republican lawmakers, most of whom still not dare go against him. He now blames Nancy Pelosi for what happened on Jan. 6. Yet a few cracks have begun appearing in his solid bastion of support with even the Wall Street Journal saying it’s time to move on. And a stalwart backer like SC Senator Lindsey Graham recently ran afoul of Trump by suggesting that the 2020 election is over, though it’s not over for most Republican voters, who still believe Trump that he actually won. A Republican office-holder like Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-Colo.) remains in good standing with The Donald, even though she declared quite seriously that “The constitution is not evolving.” Reps. Louie Gohmert of Texas, Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, Matt Gaetz of Florida, and Paul Gosar of Arizona are some other Trumpians in the extremist Republican camp whom voters have thoughtlessly put in office. Trump acolyte Steve Bannon called former VP Mike Pence a “a stone-cold coward” for saying he could not have overturned Biden’s election. Trump himself has described both Cheney and Kinzinger as “horrible RINOs,” so lots of name calling without any substance or specifics. Meanwhile, Mr. Trump is raking in sizeable donations which may be applied to his future legal defense. Some within the Republican Party fear that Trump-endorsed primary winners will go on to lack appeal in the general election. (Some of us feel embarrassed about even acknowledging Trump’s folks as our fellow citizens.)

 

At this point, the 2024 Republican presidential candidate will be Donald Trump if he chooses to run again. Some Republican legislators would prefer someone else, but dare not oppose Trump openly because of his still firm hold over party voters. Mitch McConnell, again incurring Trump’s wrath, was called an “old crow” by the former president. McConnell, a long-time fixture in the Senate, was just reelected

once again in 2020, so remains unfazed by Trump’s name calling.  

North of the border, the Canadian trucker anti-vaccine protest, with apparent support from US truckers and some Republican lawmakers, reveals a rebellious segment among usually peace-loving Canadians, a group now unwilling to accept government virus control mandates. The protest has spread beyond major cities and even disrupted travel to Detroit. Political support for the truckers seems to have come mostly from Conservatives, a minority in the Canadian government. Covid fatigue has definitely set in everywhere. Liberal Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, in quarantine with the virus, has refused to meet with the truckers. Gas prices are considerably higher in Canada than in the US, another cause for complaint. 


Wash. Post, Ottawa braces for 'increasingly dangerous' covid mandate protests as 'Freedom Convoy' blockades leave city on edge

 

Insider, Ottawa officials say towing companies are refusing to move the Canadian truckers protesting vaccine mandates in the city's streets


Business Insider, Canadian truckers protesting vaccines turned to a Christian fundraising site after GoFundMe blocked donations. They've already raised $4 million.

Far from our own shores, China has been holding a carefully choreographed and hermetically sealed Winter Olympics, making sure that athletes who might become virus-positive don’t exit the Olympic bubble to infect the general population. Both Chinese citizens and those from around the world can only observe events virtually. Inside the bubble, robots are being commandeered to deliver food, mix drinks, and transport luggage to minimize human contact. Human workers must wear hazmat suits inside. Artificial snow has been created since not enough occurs naturally.

These winter Olympics, awarded to China more than 6 years ago, have become controversial now because of China’s poor human rights record. So, while American athletes are still participating, government officials from the US and other democracies have stayed home.

One of the many aspects of Chinese government policy being criticized in the west concerns organ transplants. A study “Bloody Harvest,” authored by former Canadian government minister David Kilgour and other experts, concludes that “The source for most of [China’s] massive volume of organs for transplants is the killing of innocents: Uyghurs, Tibetans, House Christians and primarily, practitioners of the spiritually based set of exercises Falun Gong.” Evidence that Falun Gong practitioners are not only a source for an involuntary organ-harvesting industry but likely its main victims over the past two decades was found in two assessments in 2020, one by Matthew Robertson, and the other by an independent panel led by Sir Geoffrey Nice.

China’s hospitals reportedly schedule transplants on demand, within days or weeks, while the median wait for a kidney in the United States is four years. An archived version from 2004 of a private, China-based transplant website promised living donors to foreign patients: “In China we carry out living donor kidney transplants. It is completely different from the deceased body [corpse] kidney transplants.”

Israel’s human rights record, once considered untouchable, is now being scrutinized as well.

The Guardian, ‘Apartheid state’: Israel’s fears over image in US are coming to pass

As indicated before in these pages, it is meritorious and perfectly understandable that Jews would want to have their own protected state in a world that has marginalized them for centuries and even exterminated Jews en masse within the lifetime of many of us. But it’s been hard to square that with a pledge by Israel to be a democracy, fair to all its citizens, some of them non-Jews, and to Palestinians as well. No longer is Israel now celebrated as the brave new country of its heroic founders depicted in the film Exodus nor are many Israelis still living in a kibbutz, one of the iconic collective farms established in the area even before Israel became a nation. In a recent survey, some 25% of American Jews reportedly agreed that “Israel is an apartheid state.” Of course, several of Israel’s neighbors are de facto Muslim states but not even making a pretense of being “fair” or “democratic.

 

On the other side of the world, renown Buddhist monk and peace activist, Nhất Hạnh, known as the “father of mindfulness,” died on January 22, something I failed to mention last time. After a 39-year exile, he was permitted to visit Vietnam in 2005 and in November 2018, he returned there to his "root temple," where he lived until his recent death at the age of 95.


Over in the UK, Queen Elizabeth, age 95, has now marked 70 years on the throne, the longest reign of any British monarch. Her son Charles, Prince of Wales, 73, may be quietly wondering when she will ever retire to give him a chance? If Charles doesn’t feel up to serving when his time actually comes, he can always abdicate and pass the crown on to his oldest son, William, now 39. The Queen may decide to retire after her jubilee celebrations conclude in June, as she must be getting tired. 

 

In Europe, when Putin amasses 100,000 troops at the Ukraine border, Biden responds modestly, sending 3,000 troops to neighboring Poland and Romania.

 

In our own backyard in Latin America:

 

Wash. Post, Nicaragua strips universities’ legal status in new attack on dissent

After his 4th election as president this round, Ortega has continued to tighten his grip. He has arrested all his political rivals, sentencing them to long prison terms or incentivized them to go into exile to make sure that he will never be beaten again, as happened in 1990, when I was an election observer in Nicaragua.

Wash. Post, External energy source may explain ‘Havana syndrome,’ report finds

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10471011/U-S-Intelligence-officials-say-device-weapon-kind-Havana-Syndrome.html Only plausible explanation for mysterious Havana Syndrome that has afflicted dozens of US diplomats around the world is a weapon, CIA report finds

 

Havana Syndrome, a series of debilitating symptoms including dizziness, tinnitus, brain fog, and vertigo, is thought to be due to targeted sonic booms and pulsed electromagnetic energy emitted through walls. (In Havana, it also has afflicted Canadian diplomats.) From Cuba, it spread to US embassies in communist countries around the world and also to some other sites in Europe.

Cuba Archive <info@cubaarchive.org, 2021: At least 83 deaths and disappearances attributed to the Cuban state

Miami Herald, 10 migrants arrive in a Florida Keys neighborhood on a boat that looks like a bed

AP, 10 Cuban migrants rescued from sinking vessel off Florida

They just keep on coming, even though many drown en route, and

nearly all of them are sent back.

Cuba runs out of milk, breaking Castro's promise…https://clarion.causeaction.com/2022/02/04/cuba-runs-out-of-milk-breaking-castros-promise/ 

In the early days of communism in Cuba, Fidel Castro had pledged that every child under seven would have a liter of subsidized milk every day.

Yahoo News and the Drudge Report are not giving the whole picture in this article by implying that the US embargo is responsible for a shortage of powdered milk in Cuba, requiring Cuba to import milk from distant sources. The US embargo is misunderstood. It only means that Cuba must pay for food supplies, the largest portion actually now imported from the US, in cash, not with credit, as Cuba rarely pays its debts and especially would never pay US farmers or other US sources. The Cuban government apparently chose not to buy powdered milk from the US; perhaps it was cheaper elsewhere or maybe there’s an anticipation that New Zealand won't insist on payment, though Uruguay would certainly be paid as a fellow Latin American country. If Cuba would loosen up on its economic control of citizens, since so much fertile unused land is available, there is no reason that Cuban farmers would be unable to raise milk cows and produce enough milk for the whole country and to grow much food that is now imported. Before Fidel Castro, Cuba was largely self-sufficient in food production. However, after more than 60 years of strict government controls, farmers and other workers just don't feel like working hard any more for an oppressive state that gives them little autonomy and paltry compensation, so they only do the bare minimum. If the Cuban government followed the example of China and Vietnam in allowing more economic freedom, even while controlling political freedom, the country would become more productive.   

On the subject of potential agricultural development in Cuba, I wrote several articles for the Huffington Post few years ago, including one called “Peace Corps in Cuba? You Heard It Here First”

 Before anyone starts bombarding Peace Corps headquarters with inquiries about Cuba service, it's only an embryonic idea right now, but one that I've been advocating for a while.

By 

Barbara E. Joe, Contributor

author, human rights activist, Spanish interpreter

01/30/2015 01:45pm EST | Updated April 1, 2015

Actually, I just found 7 titles about Cuba still under my name in Huffington Post virtual archives. All had been rigorously fact-checked by staff before on-line publication, but after that, the website, which changed its name to HuffPost, switched over to staff-written articles. So my stint as an on-line journalist ended abruptly.

Most countries around the world do not hold jury trials and the same holds true in Latin America, including in many countries that I have lived in or visited. Jurors would be at risk there and I saw law enforcement officers in Mexico and Honduras wearing facemasks to protect their identity long before the pandemic. A major exception is Brazil, which has a longstanding jury system, though very different from our own, with only 7 jurors voting by secret ballot and the verdict being decided by the majority (4 or more votes).

In my experience in Latin America over the years, I’ve found that for many young people, going to the USA is a universal rite of passage and a demonstration of personal independence, making it hard for even very concrete and practical programs to convince them to stay home. After a few hard years in the US trying to survive, sending money to their family and evading arrest, many are ready to go home and settle down, so they may either leave on their own or wait to be deported. When taking a taxi in Latin America, I usually ask the driver if he (rarely she) has ever been to the US and nearly always, the answer is “yes, when I was younger.”

Here in the US, back in the 1970s, tennis player Renee Richards was one of the first male-to-female athletes to make headlines, after having started playing tennis competitively as a man. More recently, New Zealand weight-lifter Laurel Hubbard who “transitioned” at age 35 also raised eyebrows by staying in the same sport as before. Now transgender swimmer Lia Thomas is besting female competitors after having transitioned from male to female, again after puberty and after already being involved in competitive swimming.

 

Now I find myself in rare agreement with Republican lawmakers that such athletes should not be allowed to compete in women’s sports. Male-to-female athletes transitioning after puberty and continuing in the same sport have been shown to enjoy unfair advantages in terms of bone density, height, and muscle mass even 3 years after starting hormone therapy. Conversely, such sports advantages don’t apply to athletes who transition as adults from female to male. If male-to-female athletes transitioning after puberty should be barred from sports competitions, I predict that we will be seeing fewer of them making a gender switch.

 

Yahoo Sports, 16 Penn swimmers say transgender teammate Lia Thomas shouldn't be allowed to compete

A letter was signed and made public by 1984 Olympic gold medalist Nancy Hogshead-Makar, chief executive of a women’s sports advocacy organization and a critic of Thomas' presence in the pool as a female competitor, while 16 Penn swimmers also supported the letter.

“We fully support Lia Thomas in her decision to affirm her gender identity and to transition from a man to a woman," the letter reads. "Lia has every right to live her life authentically. However, we also recognize that when it comes to sports competition, that the biology of sex is a separate issue from someone’s gender identity.

"Biologically, Lia holds an unfair advantage over competition in the women’s category, as evidenced by her rankings that have bounced from #462 as a male to #1 as a female. If she were to be eligible to compete against us, she could now break Penn, Ivy, and NCAA Women’s Swimming records; feats she could never have done as a male athlete.”

Just now, cleaning up a table in my home office piled high with papers accumulated over the years, I ran across items from my time working at the occupational therapy association on a magazine called OT Week, where I often used photos of my own family members as illustrations. 

My late father

                                                            My late mother, above


                      Granddaughter at age 8, now the mother of a 14-year-old boy

                                                    Granddaughter again 


                                   Granddaughter with her aunt, my younger daughter

Meanwhile, Virtual meetings and events have been a boon during the pandemic, keeping us all connected while still physically distant, something made possible only via the internet. Such meetings save time and travel and are more accessible to people with disabilities. I delight in hearing from friends around the world and seeing images of them and their families. But, admittedly, something is lost when we are no longer meeting in person.

No internet for criminals who are locked up and cut off from the rest of the world, both as punishment and to protect society. However, members of contemplative religious orders voluntarily cut themselves off in a very similar fashion, the difference being that they can always walk away.

Again, I've posted everything in the same font, but it doesn't always come out that way. Thanks for your understanding.

The following on-line notice that popped up is eerie, as I have lost both my son and foster son:

   

Facebook: Join groups to connect with people who share your interests. Mothers who have lost their Child

 

[Only one Spanish-language ad came up this time.]

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