Sunday, May 15, 2022

Mother’s Day Again, Another Friend Lost, Ukraine, Abortion, & More

Though Mother’s Day has come and gone, I’ve received a belated handmade card with “Mom” spelled out in cutout letters festooned with lovely paper flowers from daughter Steph in Hawaii. Unless mail from there is sent Priority, it can take its sweet time to actually arrive. Here is the Mother’s Day card and also the other cut-out card she made for my birthday, which also arrived about a week late.


Again, many apologies for quirks in this posting. It never comes out as I post it, why? Why indeed? But "blind" efforts to try correct anomalies simply make matters worse.

Call it coincidence, spooky, a premonition, or whatever you want, but I woke up on yesterday morning, Sat., at about 6 am, feeling a sudden urge to call Roland, but it was still way too early to call him out in California. I knew he was 88 and had throat cancer, so he didn't have very long to live, but no one knew just how long. He told me he’d had a good life and was ready to call it quits whenever death might come. I'd last talked with him just before my recent phone and internet outage, when his voice sounded raspy, but he was still at home and it didn't seem like his death was imminent. So I then called yesterday about 1 pm our time and a man answered. When I asked for Roland, he told me he was his son-in-law and that Roland had died at about 3 am that very morning, California time, about the same time that I'd awakened here in DC at 6 am and felt the urge to call him. 


I'd first met Roland when I was hitchhiking around Europe in 1958, when I was 20, after graduating from UC, Berkeley. He was in the US army in Germany, drafted after college. Here we were then, paddling together down a German river. 

When he was discharged from the army, maybe in late 1959, he found me in Berkeley, having already married Tom, my late former husband—“Too late,” Roland said. Finding other people was pretty hard back then, no internet. It took time and considerable sleuthing. Years later, after I was divorced, I located Roland again in Washington state and we planned to speak by phone, but then his wife put her foot down and absolutely forbade us to have any more contact. She was probably right. 

Then, 4 or 5 years ago, I located Roland once more, this time in California and found out his wife had died years earlier, reportedly just keeling over as they were planning to celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary. After that, we made periodic contact via email, phone, and occasional letters. Roland told me about a rafting trip he had taken in the Grand Canyon with a nudist group who wore clothing to avoid sunburn. It reminded him of our river trip in Germany.

We all face our own death from the day we are born, it’s just a matter of time. The average life-span has continued to rise, but with a hiccup right now due to Covid.

Some folks still aspire to eternal life, not in Heaven, but right here on earth. Cryonics is an expensive and controversial process of freezing a human body after death in hopes of reviving it at a future date. According to Merriam-Webster cryonics is the practice of freezing a person who has died of a disease in hopes of restoring life at some future time when a cure for the disease has been developed.” However, the whole idea runs into many problems, both practical and ethical, too numerous to mention here.

A man named Jake narrated his radio story about his own living death. He had been in an apparent vegetative state without any discernable movement or apparent awareness, “locked-in,” unable signal that he was conscious, hearing speculations about his condition going on around him without being able to respond. How do you tell the world you are still there? Persons in such a condition rarely come out of it, but Jake finally did so and was able to tell his own story.
https://www.npr.org › podcasts › snap-judgment

I’ve mentioned before that a distant member of my own family has been in such an inert condition for over a year now, with a feeding tube in her stomach. She is still breathing, but what is she aware of, if anything? No one really knows.

Times change, a cliché that is the backdrop for my life. Back in 1969, when I moved with my family to my current home, some 53 years ago, Washington, DC, was still known as “Chocolate City,” with a majority black population including in our own Capitol Hill neighborhood. My kids, of mixed Caucasian/Asian heritage, were a minority in mostly black public schools. That demographic trend had begun back in 1957, when African Americans had become the city’s majority. Home prices rose and African Americans moved out of our city and of our neighborhood, so by 2015, total black and white DC populations had pulled about even, both at 48%. Now each stands at 46%. But the legacy of African American office holders persists, as most candidates for municipal offices still identify as black. The Democratic primary on June 21 will be a de facto election, whose winners will almost certainly be elected in November, as 76% of Washingtonians are registered Democrats (including me) and only 6% are Republicans, with a smattering with smaller parties or non-affiliated.

 

Last time, I mentioned that my home phone and internet had both gone out completely—yes, for 3 very frustrating days! I’ve actually gone without any such connections in rural Honduras in the Peace Corps and on subsequent volunteer visits there, really no big deal there because it’s simply a permanent state of affairs. But here, my family got worried when I failed to respond to calls and internet messages. As the repairman who fixed the problem was leaving my house, I’d asked about payment, but he just shook his head. Now the charge has actually come in, over $100 for ”Equipment trouble identification,” just FYI, in case you ever have a similar problem. The remedy was not free after all! Of course, since I had become so desperate, it’s an amount that I’m certainly willing to pay.

While being without internet and phone was no fun for me, for a college or even a country, such interference can turn into a real calamity. Ransomware attackers, mostly thought to be allied with Russia, recently disrupted Ireland’s entire health care system. It’s usually considered unwise to actually pay a ransom, as that just acts as an incentive for further attacks.

engadget A US college is shutting down for good following a ransomware attack This majority black college in rural Illinois was unable to recover financially after a massive ransomware attack, so has now shut its doors for good.

NBC News, Costa Rica declares state of emergency over ransomware attack Costa Rica’s new president, Rodrigo Chaves, had just taken office when this nationwide attack occurred. The US is now trying to help the country remedy the problem without paying a ransom. This incursion has been attributed to a Russia-based group called Conti.

 

Peace Corps recently announced that volunteers went back again into the field in person in March, to the Dominican Republic and Zambia, with more countries and assignments to come.


NY Times, As the World Tries to Move Beyond Covid, China May Stand in the Way Xi Jinping has redoubled his country’s efforts to control the coronavirus even as a growing number of leaders call on Beijing to change course.

NY Times, Coronavirus updates: North Korea said that six people had died as the virus spread “explosively” in the country 

Until now, North Korea had kept the virus at bay through isolation. The hermit kingdom probably has no capacity for treatment or plans for vaccination. The last count put the Covid death toll there at 42 and growing, as North Koreans are unvaccinated and not taking any special precautions. The virus could wipe out a substantial portion of the population.

When US Covid deaths topped one million, President Biden ordered flags flown at half-mast. But now, after more than 2 years of Covid, the public is getting restless and impatient with observing precautions. Meanwhile, a new Covid variant has flared-up, reportedly even more contagious than previous forms, but also perhaps less virulent. Vaccination seems to provide little protection. Is Covid becoming more like the seasonal flu with variants appearing periodically? That would be preferable to the development of more dangerous Covid strains, though those could always reappear. Covid is an unusual sort of illness, showing rapid mutations and fluctuations in transmission and severity, unlike other pandemics. Life is always full of surprises, some welcome and others not so much, such as is the worldwide advent of Covid and its continuing scourge.


While the pandemic remains, I still feel uneasy about going out, as Im at a vulnerable age and hope to stick around a few more years. Ive completely given up using public transportation, the way Id always traveled locally before. I still have some old farecards, probably no longer valid.


Houseplants have been a bright spot since Ive been spending more time at home.

Most people have begun going out again despite the risks of circulating in public, jettisoning precautions, whether or not that’s wise. After more than 2 years, many are just tired of isolating, especially now in springtime. Inflation is the natural result of a surge in demand for everything as the pandemic lockdown eases. So, not surprisingly, rising costs keep spiraling upward when wages rise to compensate. Then measures must be taken to dampen down demand by raising interest rates, but only very cautiously, as too much cooling can plunge the economy into recession. Meanwhile, a labor shortage due to stalled population growth and immigration curbs is making matters worse.

Another “pandemic” affecting the US now is the overdose death rate, already totaling more than 100,000 so far this year. Some Republican are blaming Democrats for fostering drug use.

Another horrific mass shooting has occurred, this time in Buffalo, NY, carried out by an apparent white nationalist incentivized by the internet and also using the internet to advertise his crime. The “right to bear arms” is not protective, putting us all at risk.

Reuters, U.S. gun deaths surged 35% in 2020, higher for Black people - CDC

Most of the time, women—and more rarely men--murdered at home are actually killed by a spouse, not by some mysterious intruder, as the tearful partner initially insists to police. When a woman is murdered at home, apparently out-of-the-blue, police will probably first suspect the husband, and the same about a wife with a husband found suddenly slain. Many of these homicidal spouses have “fallen in love” with someone else and their alibi simply does not hang together over the long haul.

 Wash. Post, Biden hosts Asian leaders at White House as Russia demands his focus  Posing together with Biden outside the White House, all 10 of those leaders were revealed to be male.

 

The Hill, Esper recalls ‘outlandish’ Trump foreign policy proposals in new memoir

Mark Esper, the former secretary of Defense under President Trump, says that the former president proposed a number of “outlandish” foreign policy proposals while he was in the White House, including pulling troops out of South Korea and shutting down embassies in Africa, according to an excerpt from Esper’s upcoming

memoir.  Trump has responded by calling Esper a RINO and a “lightweight.”

Texas Governor Greg Abbott has boasted about sending over 900 migrants to Washington, DC, in a direction where many were headed already. https://www.foxnews.com/us/texas-gov-greg-abbott-migrants-dc-border


MarketWatch,
Poll finds one-third of adults say they think an effort is afoot to replace native-born Americans with new immigrants for electoral purposes

Wash. Post, Nearly half of Republicans agree with ‘great replacement theory’ Namely that Democrats are welcoming immigrants who will then become citizens voting for their party.

Business Insider, Decreased immigration is contributing to rising prices and heightened inflation as businesses struggle to find necessary staff amid labor crunch

The only option now to keep the economy going in light of the current baby bust and to support childless folks in their old age is to welcome more immigrants, who not only provide essential labor but also tend to have more kids themselves. President Biden also wants to relieve the burden of childcare for parents through subsidized daycare, but he has yet to increase immigration after immigration almost came to a halt during the pandemic. Of course, there also is strong anti-immigrant sentiment in many parts of the country, so Biden may hesitate to authorize allowing more immigrants before the midterms.

Biden has even been accused of stockpiling baby formula for undocumented immigrants. Rest assured, the relatively small number of undocumented babies is not the reason for the formula shortage.

While on that topic, I’ve noticed that online ads for baby formula and for disposable diapers always feature a dad, not a mom, perhaps trying to inspire fathers to do more? While fathers may have become more engaged with their children than when I was growing up or later raising kids myself, mothers still bear the primary responsibility. A current ad for disposable diapers shows a father with a baby in a front carrier accompanying a toddler in the park. He deftly pulls a disposable diaper out of his pocket and changes the baby right on a park bench. How many dads do you see actually taking small kids to a park? I’ve witnessed a group of chatting mothers with toddlers suddenly fall silent and give the side-eye to a rare father with a child who joins them at the park.

Yahoo/News, Finland to apply to NATO 'without delay' as Russia threatens 'retaliatory steps'  

Putin may threaten retaliation, but has his hands full right now in Ukraine, where resistance has been fiercer than expected. Some 76% of Finns currently favor joining NATO, while only 20-30% previously supported such a move. And Sweden is not far behind. Ukraine has asked to join as well, but its membership is unlikely to be approved under present circumstances.

Russia, mired down right now in Ukraine, is not in a position to attack Finland or Sweden militarily, though it can launch cyberattacks and cut off energy exports, as it has done now against Finland in retaliation.

Of course, joining NATO not only triggers protection, but also implies obligations to the whole alliance. Meanwhile, internet rumors circulating now that Putin is seriously ill may be just hype, but no one really knows.

 

Biden has been quite strategic in not directly confronting Putin with US forces. And Putin does need a face-saving way to exit the Ukraine conflict before it escalates any further. He reportedly has internal enemies trying to replace him, so it’s not just a matter of winning the war against Ukraine, but of his own political and personal survival. Still, Putin must not be made to feel so desperate that he brings out nuclear weapons. It’s a delicate balance and one that Biden is trying to maintain. Most Americans do not know about or appreciate the careful effort that Biden is undertaking.

 

AP, Paraguay's organized crime prosecutor is slain while honeymooning on a Colombia beach  The surprise attackers apparently arrived across a lake on jet-skis.

ash. Post, Cartel shuts down much of Colombia over leader’s extradition to U.S. The Clan del Golfo terrorized cities across more than 100 municipalities in 10 departments, confining residents in their homes, blocking roads and paralyzing businesses.

NYTimes, At Least 11 Die as Migrant Boat Capsizes Near Puerto Rico The Coast Guard said at least 38 people were rescued. Most of the people on the boat were from Haiti.                                                                                         

 

Wash. Post, Hong Kong churches no longer off-limits as Beijing tightens grip on dissent

[The following further comment on this issue was authored by a friend, Nina Shea, who works to support religious rights worldwide.]

Cardinal Zen’s Arrest Is an Inflection Point https://www.nationalreview.com/2022/05/cardinal-zens-arrest-is-an-inflection-point/ It signifies the end of religious freedom in Hong Kong, the last of the fundamental freedoms to be extinguished there. Cardinal Joseph Zen, bishop emeritus of Hong Kong, was arrested yesterday evening under the vaguely worded National Security Law, formally charged, and released on bail several hours later. He likely faces a three-year prison term, according to a Hong Kong lawyer I spoke with, raising the prospect that the 90-year-old cleric would spend his last years behind bars. The arrest of this world-renowned champion of religious freedom, human rights, and democracy goes beyond the personal. It signifies the end of religious freedom in Hong Kong, the last of the fundamental freedoms to be extinguished there. It is a moment of truth for both Pope Francis and President Biden.

Britain may have considered stalling further on surrendering Hong Kong, though then Deng threated to take over the territory by force. At that time, China gave its solemn word on future guarantees for Hong Kong but when the more aggressive Xi took office, he moved relentlessly to finish eradicating what little remained of the territory’s democracy.

Back in Britain, Prince Charles, wearing a tight military uniform heavily festooned with medals, looked uncomfortable sitting on a gilded throne while giving his mother’s prepared speech at the opening of Parliament, as she was indisposed. Is that a harbinger of how uneasy he will feel during his future reign? The contrast between the ornate setting and the prince’s canned, banal remarks about the cost-of-living was not lost on viewers who were quick to comment negatively on social media.

Adoption and surrogacy from Ukraine have been suspended for now, while in the US, the culture wars continue unbated over abortion. There was a big abortion rights demonstration on Saturday, May 14, that ended up outside the Supreme Court near my home. The American public may be getting weary of the abortion debate, but with so much news and speculation swirling around the Supreme Court’s pending decision on Roe vs. Wade, it’s a topic impossible to avoid. Supporters of the procedure cite precedence after almost half a century, while opponents have been crafting their own strategy for just as long. And public opinion has never been as solidly behind “abortion rights” as advocates contend.

Birthing a child is a special privilege that only women possess, essential for the continuance and survival of humankind. But an individual pregnancy can also be regarded as a calamity, especially since a fetus is an unseen entity without a known personhood and personality. The ability to give birth to a brand new human being has been a universal attribute of women everywhere and at all times, often welcomed, sometimes totally rejected, and also often bitterly lamented when it doesn’t actually happen as expected.

 

Now either giving birth or preventing a birth has become mired in bitter controversy and name-calling. Instead of being described as “pro-life” or “anti-abortion,” those cheering on the possible demise of Roe are being described as opponents of “abortion care,” also as being “anti-choice,” and, more awkwardly, as “anti-pro-choice.” Abortion advocates emphasize female “choice” and bodily autonomy, while those opposed seem less well organized, offering less cogent arguments, and not providing unexpectedly pregnant women with much tangible help either. And since there is now such an emphasis on “choice,” what about a woman’s choice, assuming that she had a choice, about having sexual intercourse with a male partner to begin with, and perhaps engaging in unprotected sex, knowing that a pregnancy might result? Isn’t that also a “choice”?

 

Both public figures and private citizens are coming forward now with their own personal abortion stories. One wonders if perhaps a female member of the Supreme Court, past or present, might also have actually had an abortion herself, though probably not Barrett. A protester outside Barrett’s home in suburban Virginia accused her not knowing what’s like to give birth. (Barrett has 5 biological children and 2 adopted from Haiti.) Protesters have also appeared outside the homes of other Supreme Court justices.

 

Women, especially single women, with unexpected pregnancies who may have considered abortion, but who then decided instead to give birth, have yet to catch up by telling their own personal stories. Pregnancy crisis centers trying to dissuade women from seeking abortions now actually offer them little in the way of practical assistance, usually just pregnancy tests, diapers, and baby clothes. These centers don’t really have the resources to offer more assistance for the long haul. That would have to come from public funds. Are red states now planning to curtail abortions actually expanding meaningful help for overburdened pregnant women? So far, there are no signs of that.

The birth of a live baby is only the beginning of a long-haul commitment to provide care and support through sickness and health until that child reaches adulthood and even beyond. An abortion may be over in minutes, but the birth of an infant, a brand-new human being, has lifelong implications for both mother and offspring. Some pro-lifers who recognize this advocate for and actually do provide some basic practical help and support, especially to low income and single pregnant mothers already struggling, but it's hardly enough. As the saying goes: “It takes a village to raise a child.”

A pro-life advocate makes the following points: The pro-life movement’s political allies have gutted social safety net programs that would make it easier for women to carry pregnancies to term, with the pro-life movement offering no effective counter-pressure. Any number of proposed policy options, such as guaranteed parental leave or the continuation of the enhanced child tax credits adopted in Covid relief packages, would go a long way toward reducing economic insecurity as an incentive for abortion. Often, these measures, as well as other major elements of the social safety net, are met with intense Republican .opposition, which the pro-life movement has not generally made it a priority to counter. While many in the pro-life movement provide private charitable support to crisis pregnancy centers and other similar efforts, the availability of a patchwork of private options cannot stand in for more reliable policies in support of economic security for parents and children.” America, I support overturning Roe. But pro-lifers need to understand why so many Americans fear this decision.

 

Here’s another article explaining the “pro-life” side. Daily Beast, You Need to Understand Why Many People Oppose Abortion 



 

TIME, We Asked Hundreds of Americans About Abortion. Their Feelings Were Complicated


Human fetal development proceeds along a continuum, so any cutoff point might seem arbitrary. Americans are quite protective of children, but some would protect only those actually born. And children do not stay children forever, moving on to become adults whom we may love and admire, while others have grown up to become Donald Trump, or even more nefarious figures.

It does seem counterintuitive to me to characterize abortion as “a human right” when a (potential) life has been snuffed out. But that’s what Amnesty International is saying. 


 
Like other human rights organizations, Amnesty opposes the death penalty.

Those still ambivalent about supporting “abortion rights” are being warned that contraception bans may soon be next, though that’s not a given, and also that gay marriage may be in peril. However, gay marriage is quite different, because 2 consenting adults are involved, whereas a fetus has no say about whether to go on living. I would support gay marriage but still have misgivings about abortion, especially after the first 3 months. In fact, I really would oppose it completely after 3 months unless there were a grave threat to the mother’s health or a fetal defect incompatible with life. That’s actually the position of most Americans. Most Americans would agree on the 3-month limit, according to polls, including among most of those considering themselves “pro-choice.” Even after that, an abortion for valid reasons should be carried out with sufficient pain relief for the fetus and respectful treatment of the remains. Of course, some contend that a fetus is not yet human until actually being born. That seems to be President Biden’s current position (though that was not always his position). Of course, the developmental stage at birth can vary, so that doesn’t seem like the right marker either. If not human, what species does the unborn belong to? So support of Roe as it now stands is ambiguous at best. But the rhetoric on both sides has heated up to the boiling point, making agreement now nearly impossible.

The “seamless garment” position advocates for protecting most pre-born life until natural death and no death penalty, even for someone convicted of taking one or more lives. The phrase "seamless garment" is a Bible reference in John 19:23 to the seamless robe of Jesus that his executioners left whole rather than dividing it up at his execution.

Support for abortion is partly motivated by a push for gender equality, for making the consequences of sex more equal between men and women. However, unwed parenthood no longer carries the same stigma as before. When Roe was enacted, many unmarried pregnant teens were sent away to give birth in secret. I had a friend my age, now deceased, who “gave up” her child after being sent away as a pregnant teen.

The Jackson Sun [Tenn.] No expected backlash from overturning Roe | Opinion Polls show that most believe abortion should be legal but restricted in various ways, especially as the pregnancy progresses. Yet, neither party is pursuing a middle ground that appeals to most Americans. Democrats would ban most abortion restrictions while Republican support for a total ban provides voters with two unpopular choices that are unlikely to favor one party. It seems strange to write that overturning Roe will have a minor political impact considering how abortion has convulsed our politics since 1973. Yet, the people who care about the issue have made up their minds. The debate will now likely shift from courts to state legislatures and Congress where it belongs. The hard job now, especially for pro-life groups who hold the minority position, is to persuade other Americans of the correctness of their views. [Author] Sean Evans is the chair of the political science department at Union University.

We can all think back to our own childhood when our own parents cared for and impacted us in both positive and negative ways. None of us had perfect parents nor an unblemished childhood, nor have we been perfect parents ourselves, though hopefully most kids grow up with “good enough” parents. Throughout history, parenthood was for the most part not an option, but simply an inevitability for most partnered, sexually active people, and most women were partnered in the past, perhaps even more so than now. Having children was long highly valued, so being unable to conceive was considered a real calamity and the woman was blamed. That’s still true in some countries today. Children used to work alongside their parents according to their gender roles, like the 12 children of my great-grandparents in Alberta, with the boys going out daily to help their father with tending livestock and crops, while the girls stayed inside with their mother, engaged in cooking, sewing, and washing clothes.

Now parenthood is not so highly valued, even sometimes being considered a chore and a liability with children being kept in day care or school during the day, away from parents. The current tendency among young parents seems to be to stop procreating after producing only one or, at most, 2 children, and being able to actually stop having kids due to contraception or sterilization, options not available in the past. Among some young American couples whom I know, either the husband or wife has undergone sterilization after the birth of a second child. In Honduras, among my friends there, it’s always been the wife who has opted for sterilization, as Honduran men rarely consider it for themselves, fearing emasculation. In this country, too, women more often undergo sterilization than do men, for whom the procedure is actually easier. In the distant past, some couples stopped having children by living celibately while the husband might visit prostitutes or carry on an affair.

The Conversation, Have children? Here's how kids ruin your romantic relationship Matthew D. Johnson, Professor of Psychology

[Excerpts] The percent of childless American women (ages 15-44) increased a staggering amount in just two generations: from 35 percent in 1976 to 47 percent in 2010. [What might it be today?]

Despite the dismal picture of motherhood painted by researchers like me (sorry Mom), most mothers (and fathers) rate parenting as their greatest joy. Much like childbirth, where nearly all mothers believe the pain and suffering was worth it, most mothers believe the rewards of watching their children grow up is worth the cost to their romantic relationships. 









Looking back, no doubt having 4 kids was a factor in the breakup of my marriage after 24 years, as my husband was very work oriented and especially dependent on me because of his blindness. I could no longer give my husband my full attention, as I had complete responsibility for the children and all household chores, as well as my own part-time job. When a young single woman came to work with him at his office, it was a relief for me. When she insisted that they get married, he soon agreed. No doubt, there was mutual attraction between them, but sometime after they had married, when she wanted to have a child, he refused until she reportedly threatened to leave him. (This was told to me later by my kids.) Of course, they only had one daughter and my ex died while she was still quite small.

I can definitely empathize with women raising kids on their own. But for me, being out of my marriage freed me to follow my own completely independent trajectory after our split, which included work in occupational therapy, though I had been employed mostly in social work before that back in California, volunteering in Central and South America and Cuba, writing books, and later working as a Spanish interpreter. I also was able to take on responsibility for a Cuban foster son, an unaccompanied minor who had arrived with the 1980 boatlift. While it was rough even putting food on the table at first, especially since my ex initially cut me off from all our joint bank accounts and refused any child support or visitation by the children, I soon found myself able to muster up sufficient strength to overcome everything he could throw at me. Only after my son’s death, followed by my foster son’s death, was I finally laid low.

Obviously, not everyone shares my own commitment to parenthood, though I certainly did not have it easy as a single mother with very little child support and a father and his new wife who did not offer overnight visitation and rarely communicated with me. It was very tough, as I was also working full-time, but the challenges made me even stronger, and even more committed to our family’s wellbeing and survival. From the time of my own childhood, I’d always aspired to become a mother, so I’ve been both a birth and an adoptive mother, as well as a foster mother, grateful to birthmothers who’ve entrusted their children to me. (I actually did seek out my foster son’s mother in rural Cuba after his death—he was the youngest of her 12 children.)

It must also be acknowledged that childlessness is growing everywhere, as already indicated. In Europe and Japan, the low birth rate is becoming even more worrisome than it is here, having serious economic and social consequences. China is only belatedly tackling its shortfall in population growth, hampered now by the pandemic in trying to reverse the one-child policy and the consequent favoring of male births, leading to a considerable gender balance there. Belatedly, national leaders are realizing that population is not just a matter of sheer numbers, but also of equitable age and gender distribution.

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Online groups are proliferating, inviting us to join without even leaving our homes.

Get genuine ED meds! [Hey, do I really need these??]

The Far Side [Facebook group suggestion]

Afterlife Conversations & More  [Another Facebook group suggestion. Thanks anyway, this life conversations are more than enough.]

Soup Lovers [A Facebook group chatting regularly about making soup?]

Jamaica Jamaica [For folks who love Jamaica. I’ve visited Jamaica regarding human rights concerns.]

"El deterioro económico de la prensa ha afectado mucho la libertad de expresión"  [De acuerdo, I do agree. This is not from Facebook.]

¿Cuántos planes necesitas? [¡Ninguno!]

 

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