Thursday, September 29, 2022

Around the neighborhood, around the world

Fall arrived on schedule, no more high temps approaching 90 F. It began right on the first official day of fall, Sept. 22. By Sept. 23, it had started getting downright chilly overnight and also in the early morning. But today, Sept. 29, is a beautiful day with clear blue sky and no bugs while I was outside.

While I've tried to make corrections, after various efforts, I give up and beg your indulgence. 

Hurricane Ian bore down on Florida’s west coast, where my older daughter, granddaughter, and great-grandson live. My daughter, though vaccinated, also came down with Omicron without any sick leave on her job, a common situation in Florida. She was hunkering down alone in her apartment, feeling lousy and bracing for Ian’s hit. Her daughter left some food outside her door on last Tues. and called to let her know it was out there. But after the worst of the hurricane had passed today and their electricity was still out (including electric stoves), my granddaughter came by to pick up her mother, now basically recovered from Covid, to try to find something to eat. They dared not open refrigerators, hoping they would stay cool.

Petition to Cuban hotels to give shelter to hurricane victims. Petición a cadenas hoteleras extranjeras en Cuba para que acojan a familias afectadas por el huracán https://www.cubanet.org/noticias/piden-a-cadenas-hoteleras-que-alberguen-a-cubanos-que-queden-sin-hogar/

Cats are beautiful, but unfortunately for me, I’m quite allergic to them. Though they have nice soft fur, I scarcely dare to even pet one. A local cat was lost, then found through the neighborhood website.  


Here is another cat that’s been hanging around the neighborhood. Is it lost or feral?
 

I’m more of a dog person, having had both Border Collies and black Labs. But I if I were ever to get a dog again, unlikely as I’m lucky to be able to care for myself, I’ve now become fascinated by Dalmatian mixes. 






                                            Above is actually a terrier/poodle mix. 

An unfamiliar tortoise-shell cat has been hanging out in my backyard which is good for warding off mice and rats, but which also may be scaring off birds. It doesn’t belong to my new neighbors, whom I’ve just met, a retired couple from Mass. They’ve moved in next door to be near their daughter and her family. Their 3-year-old granddaughter will be staying with them for a week while her parents are away. It’s wonderful that they are able to help out that way and to forge a stronger family connection. I could have really used such assistance back when I was a single working parent.

‘It’s a miracle’: Gran Abuelo in Chile could be world’s oldest living tree

100ft alerce has estimated age of 5,484, more than 600 years older than Methuselah in California

California’s Methuselah tree has been mentioned before on these pages. Now this even more venerable Chilean tree’s age was estimated with a sample taken from the core, a seemingly risky maneuver. “Old Granddad” would be its name in Spanish.


The Conversation, The 'fathers of the church' died around 1,500 years ago, but these ancient leaders still influence Christianity today
  

Another foray into history has been afforded by the discovery of a 3000-year-old wooden canoe buried in the sand by a Wisconsin lake. It is 14 ½ feet long and carved from a single piece of white oak, showing that humans were fishing out on the lake and living on our continent that long ago. How did this boat become abandoned on the shore? Had people lived in the area for generations or migrated from elsewhere? Did they also tend crops and harvest wild fruits and berries? Did they hunt and wear animal skins? What was their language? We’ll probably never know.

Britain’s royal saga in the wake of Queen Elizabeth’s death continues.
Cosmopolitan, Kate Middleton Will Get "Lion's Share" of Queen's Jewelry, But Camilla Will Have "First Choice"

                                                 Yes, but who will get her hats? 


Wash. Post, Judge lets Jan. 6 defendant have guns to hunt so he can save on groceries 

A ridiculous decision, Recall that judge! 

The British pound fell, at least temporarily, to a level almost on a par with the dollar. In a tweet, Larry the Cat says:Forget the dollar, the pound is tanking against the ruble.”

Yahoo Finance, Jamie Dimon calls crypto tokens 'decentralized Ponzi schemes'

Isn’t any type of currency, whether coins, bills, or bank balances, actually some sort of Ponzi scheme? Though not relying strictly on a continuing inflow of new investments, as Ponzi does, all money has value only because people ascribe value to it. It has no intrinsic worth. If ordinary people lose faith in a currency, its value plummets. US currency has value because folks all around the world trust the dollar and trust our economy, so the dollar’s value becomes a self-fulfilling prophesy. Still, right now, because that trust is eroding, the dollar is losing value. People are losing faith in money and the world seems headed toward a recession. Only the barter of physical goods, as engaged in by our ancient ancestors, assures exact value, at least in the eyes of those actually making a trade.

California will BAN all new gas-fueled furnaces and heaters by 2030 to cut ozone levels | Daily Mail Online
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-11252345/California-BAN-new-gas-fueled-furnaces-heaters-2030-cut-ozone-levels.html

I no longer live in California, where home heating is not as crucial as here in DC. And gas heating was already installed here when we moved into our DC home back in 1969.  I’ve been in a dispute for 3 years now with the gas company, which keeps threatening to cut off my gas supply. But bravo to California, and also to DC, which already requires heating in new buildings to be gas-free by 2026.

A Brazilian-born friend, who came to this country originally to play soccer, just sent me a photo of himself at his long-ago US citizenship ceremony.

Back then, he had let me know that he’d been awarded citizenship by leaving a phone message singing the Stars Spangled Banner.

            Here’s a guy inspired by American school shooters.

https://www.reuters.com/world/americas/cubans-head-polls-vote-govt-sponsored-code-legalize-gay-marriage-adoption-2022-09-25/. This is the initiative of Mariela Castro, a long-time gay rights’ advocate. She is Raúl Castro's daughter, apparently not gay herself but a gay rights supporter within the Cuban communist hierarchy. (Dad Raúl has been rumored to be gay or at least bisexual.) This is the first time since 1959 that Cubans have been allowed a nationwide vote. Now will their appetite be whet for more voting? Gay marriage was approved in the vote.  

It still rather amazes me to have so many friends and former housemates living all over the world, folks with whom I’m still able to connect at will, thanks to the magic of the internet (except for those in Cuba). Most have spent time in my home. Anyone who has ever stayed with me over these past few years has come only by word-of-mouth; I’ve never looked for any of them and most have proved most welcome, with a few notable exceptions. I still enjoy communicating with them, hearing about and seeing photos of their lives back home. Several folks used to come via the GAO fellows’ program, which was shut down by the pandemic.

Others have been visiting scholars at the Museum of African Art. How did that ever get started? I’d once gotten into a conversation with a museum employee, who, when learning that I lived nearby, asked me whether I could host short-term visitors who otherwise have trouble finding housing? I recall once helping a Zambian artist in that program to fill out and submit a successful Canadian immigration application, requiring fees submitted in Canadian dollars, which presented a challenge, but she was accepted and now lives in Toronto. Most of my local friends and neighbors and even my own kids do not enjoy such worldwide connections. I feel very fortunate in that regard.

Yet thanks or no thanks to the internet, we all also learn about all the terrible schemes, about the deliberate harm and death that human beings can and do inflict on each other. Some perpetrators seem to escape punishment scot-free, living out their lives unnoticed among us, their crimes revealed only after death. But others, having spent most of their life living quietly as normal citizens, perhaps trying even to forget their crime or to make amends, then, in their later years, thanks to new investigative techniques, must finally face justice after all. That’s happened after a young woman was brutally killed in California in 1982, leading to the recent arrest in Hawaii of a 75-year-old man, Gary Ramirez, now charged with her murder. He’s been at liberty for 40 years. Is justice delayed actually justice denied?

One also has to wonder if Ramirez has come off as just a regular guy to his family and friends in Hawaii? Has he tried to live honorably and generously during the decades since the murder? Does he even remember what he did? It would be interesting to know more, so I’ll try to follow up.

There are apparently folks able to move through this world without ever displaying basic empathy, resulting in a loss to their families and associates as well as to themselves. I don’t know if Gary Ramirez is one of those individuals.

And human cruelty extends even to the treatment of animals.

Huff Post, Abducted Orphan Chimps Held For Ransom In Horrifying Scene

This has happened in the Democratic Republic of Congo. I don’t know the final outcome. Chimps, baby chimps specifically, are not so far from human infants and thus evoke our protective instincts. We'd hope the young chimps are still OK. 
       

And people are no longer bound by strict geographic loyalties, as Britons and Americans are among the prisoners exchanged with Russia in a recent prisoner swap, showing that many foreign volunteers have joined Ukrainians in their fight.

In Iran, the death of a young woman for wearing her hijab too loosely has aroused much of the population’s pent-up frustrations with excessive government controls. When people see that they are not alone in expressing their anger, they feel empowered and prove willing to take risks.


An Amnesty International member originally from Iran makes this plea:

Please spread the word! On social media please use the following hashtags: #mahsa_amini #MahsaAmini #IranProtests2022 #IranProtests #WomenOfIran

Also, you may use the following Farsi hashtags:
Mahsa Amini's name in Farsi

#مهسا_امینی #مهساامینی 

Woman_Life_Freedom in Farsi:

#زن_زندگی_آزادی 

Cardinal Zen faces trial in China https://www.nationalreview.com/2022/09/the-stakes-of-cardinal-zens-trial/

Insider, The special master Trump requested is calling for extra help to review the seized Mar-a-Lago documents — and will be billing Trump $500 an hour for it

NBC News, Liz Cheney says she would campaign for Democrats

She has said she will do this when 2020 election deniers are the candidates.


ABC News, Biden struggles, as does his party, as most Democrats look elsewhere for 2024: POLL

According to current polls, a repeat Biden-Trump matchup, if conducted now, would be much closer this time, too close for comfort, given the quirks of the Electoral College. The nation, the world, certainly cannot endure another Trump presidency. One was already too much. What is the secret of Trump’s enduring appeal to so many voters?

 

Cory Booker has just made an urgent online appeal. Donald Trump has over $100 million stashed in campaign funds — and he just announced the formation of a new Super PAC dubbed “MAGA Inc.” to tip the scales toward Republican Senate candidates in the final days of this election:

“Trump to unleash millions in the midterms in possible prelude to 2024” — POLITICO

The message has gotten through to those living in communist countries that if they can somehow make it across the US border, perhaps with the help of US-based relatives, their chances of being allowed to stay are pretty good. Granted that some still remain in detention, but many others have been released and are allowed to work. So now more refugees from those countries are crowding the southern border, as this may seem like their only chance. It’s difficult for Republicans to complain about welcoming those fleeing communism. “This is a totally different circumstance," Biden has said. "What’s on my watch now is Venezuela, Cuba, and Nicaragua. And the ability to send them back to those states is not rational.” 

ABC News, Search underway after vessel carrying dozens of migrants sinks amid Hurricane Ian

This article and subsequent reports indicate that the migrants were from Cuba. Only a few were rescued or managed to make it to shore.

Incidentally, my recent Costa Rican visitor, Alex, told me that the last time he came back to Miami after a visit with his family, he was detained for several hours in a separate room along with other seemingly suspect arrivals from Latin America. When he was finally released, having missed his connecting flight, he was told by an Immigration agent that it was because he carried no luggage, just a small backpack, which apparently was a red flag.

After seeing ads for contributions to UFW, United Farm Workers, I was reminded of my long-ago close encounters with that organization, when my late former husband and I joined marches with founder Cesar Chavez, since deceased. His sidekick, Dolores Huerta, now age 92, had received the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President Barack Obama. Years ago, a usually pregnant Dolores slept on our living room couch when lobbying at the state capital in Sacramento. She had 11 children by 3 different fathers, kids usually cared for by other farmer worker women while she was busy with political advocacy.

With the midterms looming, abortion is still a contentious issue. Many American women see abortion restrictions as a big setback in achieving full equality with men. Men can have sex without evident consequences, so now women too want the pleasure without the risk, with abortion helping to level the playing field. Yahoo Life, How the repeal of Roe v. Wade affects college students in states like Texas, Pa.: 'I felt like women everywhere were back at square one' A female student is quoted in the article as saying, “We already had so much work left to be done on the road to equality.”

Another view is that women have the unique privilege of bearing children, how we humans have ever come into being, the way humankind has always continued to exist since time immemorial. While some women will go to great lengths not to give birth, others will endure all sorts of treatments to help them do so. Don’t transgender women wish they also could give birth? 



Metro, Mother ignored doctor’s advice to terminate pregnancy and now her baby is thriving

 

National Review, Pro-Life Activist Arrested After SWAT Team Raids Home with Guns Drawn in Front of ‘Screaming’ Children

Mark Houck, a Pa. pro-life activist and father of seven, was taken into custody after an alleged incident at an abortion clinic where he was apparently accused of interfering with a “patient escort.” Details are unknown, with conflicting descriptions of what actually happened.

 

Fox News, Elderly pro-life volunteer in Michigan shot after 'heated conversation,' pro-life group says


 AP, Judge: Indiana can't enforce abortion burial, cremation law

In what may seem like a petty argument, pro-lifers want to emphasize the humanity of aborted fetuses by burying them, while abortion supporters are saying a burial makes a woman who has had an abortion feel responsible for a human death. (Isn’t that precisely the point?) Although the Supreme Court has upheld the fetal burial practice, now it has been challenged anew by the ACLU and a judge has agreed. That successful challenge, in turn, is being appealed by the state of Indiana. The question of the humanity of a fetus is at the heart of the abortion issue.

 

Most of us are just ordinary, anonymous everyday people, not Marilyn Monroe or Bill Gates, not beautiful, rich, or famous, neither enormously talented nor greatly admired. But like the rich and famous, like crowned royalty, we all just live day-to-day, brushing our teeth in the morning, connecting with others during the day, having ups and downs, experiencing delights and disappointments with some fluctuations proving more extreme than others. But as long as we are still warm and breathing, the ups and downs will continue. Our “honeymoon” with any fresh endeavor, whether marriage, parenthood, a new job, elected office, a brand-new home, a budding friendship, a religious conversion, or winning the lottery, will last only for about 6 months to 2 1/2 years. We might fantasize otherwise, but reality will set in sooner or later. Some people admit to having affairs, not because of lack of affection for their spouse, but just to experience change, variety, surprise. Advertisers, pundits, and gurus keep trying to lure us with exciting promises, but whatever they have to offer has a limited shelf life. It’s OK to enjoy it while you can, but don’t be surprised when whatever has enticed you fades or ends.

 

Comparing my own life experiences with those of associates (without being privy to their private travails), I feel I’ve confronted more than my share of pain, not only with my late husband’s departure and his extreme and sudden rejection, but more crucially with my son’s and foster son’s untimely deaths, as well as with ongoing problems involving my remaining kids and grandkids. I’m handling everything the best I can, trying not to get overly stressed because that affects my ability to help. Occasionally, I feel like asking my late son’s advice, but, of course, I cannot.

 

Some lives may be truly harder to bear than others, involving extreme bouts of physical and mental suffering, but no one’s existence, however privileged, is ever smooth or easy. Though outsiders may never know the full details, Queen Elizabeth certainly endured serious losses and challenges during her 96 years. No one is exempt.

 

We all enjoy change and excitement, but also find comfort in familiarity, as I do, just living in my home of more than 50 years, opening up my bedroom curtains in the morning to look out at a lovely tree, then going down a familiar flight of stairs. We control as much as we can, then must adapt to the rest. That’s not a particularly earthshattering observation, but one that a surprising number of people still fail to appreciate. They keep on “chasing their dream,” looking for an elusive pot of gold at the end of the rainbow, that magic something to deliver them from all struggle and pain. I wonder if shocking suicides among successful young achievers may sometimes be due partly to their having reached a pinnacle and not knowing where to go from there?

 

NY Times, The Dazzling Life and Shocking Death of Cheslie Kryst

African American influencer Cheslie Kryst was an overachiever, a former track star, beauty queen, college success, and TV correspondent who took her own life at 30 after asking, “Why work so hard to capture the dreams I’ve been taught by society to want when I continue to find only emptiness?”

It also has been revealed that celebrity chef Anthony Bourdain, who took his own life, hated being famous. Always being in the spotlight, while perhaps proving exciting at first, probably gets old fast. Money, fame, and influence may result in a lack of privacy, peace, and relaxation. Even though I’ve hoped my books would be read, I’ve mostly shunned engaging in the personal publicity required to attract readers. The same thing with this blog, which is spread only by word-of-mouth. Privacy is more precious than fame. 

While we might want to shun fame, we’d all do well to remember that old occupational therapy adage about the human need for “purposeful activity.” Without finding ongoing challenges, we would soon die of boredom. Occupational therapists, with whom I worked for 16 years, have helped clients find meaning and a sense of achievement in even such simple activities as dressing themselves or being able to express themselves to others.

 

Sometimes, to verify my recollections, I go back to previous dates on this blog or its predecessor, with photos providing visual corroboration of my memories. It gives me a sense of nostalgia and pleasure to relive those prior experiences from the last few decades of my long and rather varied life, unusual in the sense that it seems unlike in many ways from that of neighbors and friends.

 

A blog reader notes that I’ve often seemed repetitious here, yes, admittedly so. Sorry about that, but this is a diary of sorts, not a polished narrative or commercial venture. My life mostly follows a familiar pattern these days, with a few rare bouts of excitement interspersed, as with my recent trip to Honduras. A hundred years from now, if this blog should still exist somewhere up in the Cloud, historians can review it for a picture of one woman’s life and times.

 

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Here are some recent Facebook and other notices:

Spanish/English Healthcare Interpreters and Translators

Traductores e Intérpretes Profesionales

¿Con cuánta deuda necesita ayuda?

  

Infertility TikTok (Yes, I’d certainly have trouble getting pregnant these days.)

I know Heaven is a beautiful place because they have my son. 





Friday, September 23, 2022

Ups & Downs, Rights & Wrongs, Life & Death

 It’s official, autumn has arrived, with leaves just now starting to turn. Today, is officially the second day of autumn and it's starting to feel a bit chill. 


Breaking News: US House Passes Peace Corps Reauthorization Act

Peace Corps has begun sending out volunteers once again and is having an annual conference tomorrow, both in person and virtually.

2022 Annual General Membership Meeting: Peace Corps Reengaging with a Changed World

Saturday, September 24, 2022
2 p.m. Eastern
via Zoom

Join Peace Corps at the Kennedy Center on September 24th


Donald Trump is down but not out.

Rolling Stone, Cult Vibes: Trump Ends Rally In Bizarre Fashion, Leaving Crowd Mesmerized

Donald Trump may never become president again, but he can still remain a troublemaker. He ended a recent rally in Ohio with music associated with QAnon. The rally song is only the latest development in Trump’s apparent embrace of QAnon. Earlier this week, Trump posted to Truth Social a photo of himself wearing a Q lapel pin with the words “The Storm is Coming” — another phrase used by the Q movement — superimposed on the image. The “storm,” believers say, is a reference to Trump’s return to the presidency when he will punish his enemies in the Deep State.

NYTimes, Trump Support Remains Unmoved by Investigations, Poll Finds

Overall, 44% of voters viewed Trump favorably, and 53% viewed him unfavorably. 

These percentages have remained remarkably stable over time and are not much different from when he won election in 2016 with a minority of the popular vote. And donors keep paying Trump’s legal bills. It’s scary that he might be able to occupy the presidency once again and, this time, he would be out for vengeance against enemies real and imagined.

NBC News, Cheney says GOP leaders are treating Trump like a ‘king’ by defending him in Mar-a-Lago probe

In a speech at the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative think tank, Liz Cheney said she overheard a Republican Trump supporter signing a Congressional protest of the 2020 election results say under his breath, “The things we do for the orange Jesus.


"You can't have your cake and eat it," is what the special master in the Mar-a-Lago case told Trump's lawyers, refusing to back the former president's claim that he had declassified sensitive documents found as his estate, 

In a historic fluke, due to the idiosyncrasies of the Electoral College, something unexpected in a US presidential election had occurred in 2016, namely that Donald Trump was declared the winner despite a record loss of almost 3 million in the popular vote. It was a great surprise to everyone, including to Mr. Trump himself. As stated before, I was in Chappaqua, Hillary’s hometown, to give a book talk on the morning after the election where everybody there was feeling doom and gloom. When Hillary went out for a walk with Bill, leaning heavily on his arm, I did not take a photo of them together, as it seemed too intrusive. Townspeople posted a hand-written sign at their driveway. That evening, only 8 people attended my talk at the local library about my Confessions book.


Four years later, in 2020, to make sure Trump would not triumph again, American voters gave Joe Biden a record 9 million vote plurality, although Biden himself was not a wildly popular candidate. Trump had been just an accidental president who’d enjoyed being top dog, giving orders right and left during 4 long tumultuous years. But he has done more than enough damage already. So now, for the good of our country, he should simply enjoy his retirement while continuing to play golf and get an occasional ego boost by giving a nonsensical speech to an adoring gullible crowd.

Another former president, Juan Orlando Hernández of Honduras, is in court in the US on drug charges, while his brother is already serving time in prison here on similar charges.

Wash. Post, All of Puerto Rico without power as Hurricane Fiona slams island

Vulnerable Puerto Rico has been hit again, probably propelling even more residents to move to the mainland.


Wash. Post, Biden says U.S. troops would defend Taiwan in event of attack by China

Biden has been publicly warning China.

Wash. Post, U.S. arrests along Mexico border top 2 million a year for first time The Biden administration is not “softon immigration.


New York News, After Texas sends him to Washington, an expatriate starts a new life
As a complete newcomer not speaking any English, Venezuelan migrant Lever Alejos, age 29, has found plenty of work here in Washington, DC. Since accepting a free bus ride from Texas Governor Greg Abbott, he has been able to regularly send money back to Venezuela for his son, ever since arriving here at the end of July. Because of the political and economic circumstances in their country, many Venezuelans are allowed to work in the US and are not subject to immediate deportation. Now, thanks to extensive media coverage, Mr. Alejos will have even more opportunities. 

But not everyone fleeing oppression is so lucky. I just received this appeal from Amnesty International: Teresa was forced to flee her home in Nicaragua after facing assault and threats because of her opposition to policies of the Nicaraguan government. She came to the U.S. seeking asylum... but instead, she’s been stuck in an ICE detention facility in Pennsylvania for the last five months.

Miami Herald, 3-year-old kills mother in accidental shooting: SC cops Yes, it’s happened once again.

Covid is not over. We are all more than weary of Covid and its associated precautions. With not so many years of life left, I’d like to be able to enjoy them. I do feel fortunate to have traveled to Honduras recently and not become ill. But that trip was a gamble. I’ll just have to see if I should chance ever going there again.

Scientists Warn of Spike in Long COVID Cases Across the United States
https://www.thedailybeast.com/scientists-warn-of-spike-in-long-covid-cases-across-the-united-states

Gloomy pundits are now predicting a worldwide economic recession. The war in Ukraine as well as Covid’s persistence are contributing factors, both driving inflation. Will this prediction become a self-fulfilling prophesy? 

Interest Rates In an effort to tamp down inflation, the Federal Reserve has raised the federal-funds rate to over 3%. For old timers like me who recall paying almost 8% on a home mortgage, that doesn’t seem so draconian. Interest rates reached their highest point in modern history in 1981 when the annual average was 16.63%, according to Freddie Mac data. We certainly don’t want to return to those times, but even 3 or 4% interest seems high now compared to recent almost zero rates. 


Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II has been laid to rest amid great pomp and circumstance. What was her exact cause of death? She apparently had suffered from Covid earlier in the year, but did not seem to have undergone a prolonged illness. Although she was 96, her death came as a surprise.
 
Monarchies do seem anachronistic in this day and age, but certainly the queen’s death and funeral have renewed British patriotism, as well as captured worldwide attention. Incredibly, Londoners would stand in line for hours just to pass by the queen’s closed coffin. It’s probably exciting for ordinary folks to imagine what life as a royal would be like. The British government and the Crown put on quite a show that has kept the monarchy in the public eye locally and all around the world.

The Queen's body has been buried here. 

I forwarded the following message to my friends in Bhutan:

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-11226525/King-Queen-Bhutan-paid-respects-Queen.html King and Queen of Bhutan dubbed the 'Prince William and Kate Middleton of the Himalayas' paid their respects to Her Majesty and joined world leaders for the 'reception of the century' at Buckingham Palace

                                                            Bhutan royals

Animal rights, especially of mammals, have kept gaining support and hunting is going out-of-style. There are still some avid hunters in rural America and other places around the world, but few now rely on hunting as a food source. In this country, guns are sought largely for self-defense, not for hunting. A senior living complex in suburban Virginia is called Hunter’s Woods, but probably not much actual hunting goes on around there. Some hunters donate the meat of slain wild animals to organizations that feed the hungry. Others just mount the heads to display as trophies. But since 1982, hunting in the US has been on the decline and so has fishing, thus threatening the finances of US Fish and Wildlife services that charge for licenses. Veganism and vegetarianism are growing in popularity and vegan “meat” is readily available in most grocery stores. Increasingly, its texture and taste mimic the real thing. Taco Bell is now collaborating with Beyond Meat to come up with a plant-based option there.

Animals all over the world have their special advocates. By living with chimpanzees and documenting their activities, Jane Goodall revealed much about their social life, making humans aware of chimp habits and interactions. Here are just some wild creatures that have acquired their own human fanbases, including even the bug-eyed Damsel fly.


Gorilla and baboon


Owl and Wallabies


Baby raccoons are actually pretty cute and even their parents are fun to watch, as I discovered when raccoons were climbing up my mulberry tree, feasting on mulberries and banging on windows. But they could also be scary and destructive, so now with the mulberry tree gone, I’m glad the raccoons are gone as well.  




On our local neighborhood website, an attractive pair of cat brothers is available for adoption. I’m allergic to cats, so cannot consider taking them, but a local reader might be interested. 


Abortion rights  For example, is abortion actually a universal right? Obviously not. It’s not even considered a right all over our own country. From the perspective of an unhappily pregnant woman in the US today, it may be very hard for her to have to backtrack on what she had long considered her absolute “right” to terminate a pregnancy at will. Maybe she has engaged in sex and failed to use birth control, gambling on possibly having to actually exercise that abortion right. The baby who might be conceived and who otherwise might be born has no agency whatsoever in the woman’s mind. Then, suddenly, the US Supreme Court has decided that abortion is not actually a “Constitutional right”. So that infant might be born after all. Many women consider that a serious setback and an enormous betrayal. They are feeling angry and double-crossed. Mainstream media is on their side right now. TIME magazine, like other established outlets, refers only to “anti-abortion pregnancy centers,” not to “prolife services,” and women seeking abortions routinely are said to be seeking “abortion services” or “abortion care,” not just plain old abortions.

At what point does a developing human fetus deserve protection? That is the question. Of course, nursing a baby greatly reduces or may totally block female fertility. It’s a natural form of birth control rarely used by today’s busy American mothers who are loudly decrying the formula shortage, and who may even be unaware of nursing’s effects on fertility. Years ago, I found nursing very convenient, but women may get discouraged when starting out, though not so in the developing world where it is often the only baby feeding option.

The Hill, Graham throws another wrench into GOP’s abortion messaging

With the midterms looming, Republicans wish that South Carolina’s Senator Linsey Graham would just shut up about his contentious proposal to enact a nationwide abortion policy, though it’s hardly a ban as it would allow the majority of abortions to still take place.

In a country like Honduras, where I’ve just been this summer, a woman unhappily and unexpectedly pregnant usually goes forward with the birth, not even considering abortion, which is illegal there. But she then may arrange for a tubal ligation afterward if she wants no more children. A Honduran woman who may become unhappily pregnant does not consider abortion her “right” since abortion has never been legal there, though she may still want to prevent future pregnancies. I met 2 such mothers on my recent trip, each of whom had undergone successful sterilization after giving birth to a 3rd child. Would their husbands ever have considered vasectomies? My absurd question evoked giggles from them both. 

When I was in Peace Corps service in Honduras 2000-2003, average Honduran families had been larger with no sterilization option and, even now, men often have 2 “wives” and 2 sets of children. The young maid at a home where I stayed just now in Honduras, is the youngest of 10. My own paternal great-grandmother living on a farm in Alberta never considered either abortion or birth control because those were simply not options then, nor did she apparently consider refusing her husband. As a result, my great-grandmother gave birth to 12 children.

I’ve known several unmarried Honduran women claiming to have been rape victims who have given birth to children who then became regular family members. Or, secretly, a baby born in a hospital has then been “given” to a couple who register their own names on the baby’s original birth certificate. I know of such instances but am sworn to secrecy about such transactions, justified because Honduran adoption laws are deemed too complicated. In generations gone by, direct hospital transfers at birth without formal adoptions also took place in the US, with their secrets only now coming to light through genetic testing.

In Afghanistan today, a woman there would have neither an abortion or a tubal ligation, nor would she if living in the rural highlands of Nepal. A visitor from Nepal once told me about women there who typically are married to several brothers in order to keep a piece of farmland intact within a family, a rare example of a tradition of polyandry. A woman there is never sure which brother may be the father of a given offspring. So in the world today, there are many styles of families and many where abortion is not even on the radar, much less considered a universal human right, as is alleged by advocates in the US.

Of course, not all parents are competent and not all children are loveable or easy to raise. And sometimes personalities among family members simply don’t mesh. It’s a gamble to have and raise kids. However, most parents and offspring do have a good-enough relationship and so the human race endures.

Cultural expectations are crucial aspects of life and such expectations can and do change. I predict that because of the baby bust in this country, along with increased knowledge of fetal development and greater and earlier preemie survival, abortion advocacy will cool off in the coming years. Stay tuned, though I may not live long enough to see it.

Right now, while abortion advocacy is still running strong in the US, preserving the life of an infant actually born alive is also strong. Once a living baby actually exits the womb, little effort is spared to maintain his or her survival. As an interpreter, I’ve been with couples barely able to keep a roof over their heads who must invest in and learn to operate the complex medical equipment needed to take a premature infant home from the hospital. Not everyone who becomes a parent is up to the job and while most parents would benefit from more financial and other support, sufficient support is often unavailable, though Biden is now trying to increase it. Republicans have dropped the ball, mainly advocating for babies only to the point of birth.

I’ve also previously mentioned a woman connected to my family who has been kept “alive” via a stomach feeding tube for more than a year now, though she lies inert without any signs of awareness. She is unlikely to ever regain consciousness and her quality of life is zero. Deciding who actually counts as a “person” whose life deserves protection is culturally determined. Economics is also a factor, as many locales don’t have the resources to keep an unconscious person going indefinitely.

While abortion rights advocates have warned that gay marriage is next in line for attack, that falls into a different category, involving 2 consenting adults who can speak for themselves and can also vote. Gay liaisons were definitely not permitted either legally or morally in our country until recent years. In my own life, though I was never attracted to another woman myself, early on, I knew female couples in so-called Boston marriages who lived quietly together, representing themselves as long-time but just very close friends, “like sisters,” one woman told me.

I also once knew a couple years ago with several children where the husband had a habit of walking out alone after dinner. One evening, during a police sting, he was arrested for engaging in a homosexual act with someone met on a nighttime foray. His wife immediately divorced him.

Gonorrhea and syphilis, as well as HIV, are on the rise now, although young people are deemed to be less sexually active than those in decades past. However, baby boomers may still be more so.

John Locke, the influential 17th century English philosopher, never married or had a romantic partner, nor did he ever have any children as far as is known. Perhaps he was totally absorbed with his philosophical thoughts and writings. On the other hand, maybe he had secret yearnings that were never fulfilled?

Decades ago, when I got married at age 21, female celibacy before marriage was the ideal. Gay tendencies back then were considered a serious aberration, a mental illness requiring treatment. I once attended a DSM review meeting where that was the professional consensus.

India has a long history of males called hijras who may have been castrated and who dress and comport themselves as females. In 2014, they were officially recognized as a “3rd gender.” In short, sexual expression and gender identity may be partly innate but are also strongly influenced by cultural factors.

endgadget, James Webb Space Telescope captures the best image of Neptune's rings in decades

Seeing Neptune with 7 of its known moons is amazing!


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Here’s a Facebook group suggestion for me: My Son In Heaven [It would be nice to think we have consciousness after death and will then reconnect with our deceased loved ones.]