Friday, February 24, 2023

Spring Comes Early, A Salute to My Friend Jimmy Carter, All Around the World and the Nation

 

Whatever happened to winter? Now in Feb., everything is all abloom. In my front yard, daffodils are out and flowering trees are budding. Don't we live in a wonderful neighborhood? 

 


Lent began on Wed. just beforehand, in Latin America and New Orleans, carnival festivities exploded. A friend in Mexico sent me this greeting below. 


                                                   Above, Mardi Gras on Capitol Hill

                           

Left, local artist Jacob Folger is back on line. 







                                                    Below, an alleyway near my home


Here was a local display for Presidents' Day.










                                    George Mason sits down to rest at East Potomac Park. 

Someone I know had a foot amputated recently and now uses a blade foot like Pistorius in South Africa.



I recently visited a well-known Capitol Hill resident in his last days. When he passes on, accolades will pour in and his legacy will then be revealed here. For now, his situation is private.

Former president Jimmy Carter, is an old friend, “old” in terms of years and old because I’ve known him since the 1970’s when he was president. At age 98, he is now apparently in his last days. After living a long and productive life, Carter has opted to forgo further medical treatment, preferring to stay home only with hospice care. 


 In 1979, my family met with President Carter at the White House. 


Back in 1990, more than 30 years ago, when Carter would have been in his mid-60s, I encountered him again when we both were serving as election observers in Nicaragua. A photo of us together appears in my book Confessions of a Secret Latina, How I Fell Out of Love with Castro & In Love with the Cuban People.


That was when Violeta Chamorro, now age 93 and a mother of 5, won the Nicaraguan presidency, going on to serve for 7 years, the only woman to have ever held that position. I was at her home with other well-wishers on the evening of her victory when former President Carter strode in, asking her in his twangy Spanish to delay her election victory announcement while he tried to calm loser Daniel Ortega and his supporters. The photo of me with Carter in my book was taken at that time. On those same pages are photos of me with former Costa Rican President and Nobel Laureate Oscar Arias after he’d inaugurated a brand-new pool by swimming the entire length underwater, also of Violeta during her victory speech, then of a supporter of Haiti’s Jean-Bertrand Aristide, carrying on his head a live rooster representing then-candidate Aristide. I also was an election monitor for Aristide’s 1990 presidential election victory.

I almost didn’t make it to the 1990 election that Ortega lost. Several visits then to Nicaragua had convinced me that Ortega was a dictator, so I applied to be an election observer there in 1990. At the Nicaraguan Embassy, a visa was duly stamped in my passport. But soon after, a letter from the embassy arrived, revoking my visa and warning me not to show up at the Managua airport. So I decided instead to try an overland route from Costa Rica via a remote jungle crossing where no word of my expulsion was likely to have arrived. That worked, so I became a witness to that historic election. I’m not sure that Ortega retains those old files, but I have avoided going back to Nicaragua or communicating with anyone there now, given my distinctive last name. Likewise, I was expelled from Cuba in 1997 and warned never to try to return and have not done so.

Back when our mother was 92 and her health issues had become insurmountable, my siblings and I had ordered a special hospital bed and asked a hospice nurse to visit daily to administer pain medications. We all stayed by her side until the end. May we all be able to go peacefully surrounded by loved ones. A dear friend in Vermont, who lived to age 104, commented before her death that she’d found the years after age 100 to have been especially hard, so then she was happy to go.

In magazines and online, amazing elders are featured, some lifting weights, others running marathons. These folks rightly deserve our accolades, but the best most of us can do, even with regular exercise and a healthy diet, is simply to delay our decline. Father Time is always snapping at our heels. In Honduras, my fellow senior Peace Corps volunteers had trouble mastering Spanish despite diligent efforts. Sometimes, I served as their interpreter, having learned fluent Spanish as a young person. (By knowing Spanish, I can also get the gist of conversations in Italian and Romanian.)

So we all are lucky to be able to maintain current skills as we age, as acquiring new ones becomes ever more challenging. A well-meaning friend gave me her old cell phone when she upgraded, but after several months, I returned it to her. At almost age 85, I just didn’t have the dexterity to use it properly. I prefer to contact friends around the world via computer, eliminating the constant ads on the cellphone. (My sister is quite content living without either cellphone or computer.)

Ads and advice aimed at seniors nearly always show a man and woman together, but, on average, women live longer, meaning that many older women are living life alone. Among US married couples, the husband usually dies before the wife, not only because he may be slightly older, but because male life expectancy is lower everywhere, not only in the US. While average life expectancy, both male and female, is also slightly lower in the US than in Canada or the UK, in all 3 countries, women still outlive men. The male hormone testosterone promotes greater average height and physical strength in men, but has some detrimental effects like producing “bad cholesterol”, whereas estrogen is protective. Additionally, because of both higher testosterone and male social conditioning, men are more aggressive and more likely than women to die violently or in accidents. But as women take on more of what were formerly male roles, the longevity gap between the genders is narrowing, perhaps because of greater stress on women, also amid speculation that women may already be approaching the maximum ceiling of the human lifespan. Heart disease is the major cause of death after age 85 for both genders.

The Hill, Most young men are single. Most young women are not. Women are marrying older men and some are pairing up with other women.

 I once met the late former boxer Muhammad Ali, but due to Parkinson’s, he could no longer speak, just nod and shake his head. His wife spoke for him. At the time, I was a writer and editor for an occupational therapy magazine, so our conversation focused on his coping strategies for living without speech and with a growing disability. He had 9 children and died in 2016 at age 74.

 Effective altruism as defined by Google is "a philosophical and social movement that advocates using evidence and reason to figure out how to benefit others." I always try to make wise charitable giving choices, but because I often find flaws in existing beneficent enterprises, I channel most of my giving either to my own family or to projects in Honduras whose benefits I can observe directly. However, I do appreciate that my good friends’ made a recent substantial donation to Amnesty International in my honor.

Miami Herald, Bahamas announces crackdown on undocumented migrants, saying it’s affected by Haiti crisis

I just talked with a woman from El Salvador who admires current President Nayib Bukele because, she says, “he’s imposed order.”

On the eve of national elections, a Nigerian friend laments: “It has been indeed very challenging for us here. We have experienced the worst food inflation in Nigeria (currently at almost 23%) consistently in the last 2 years. We find it difficult to feed well because the cost of food is very high, changing every day. Unfortunately, the government is insensitive to the plight of the citizens. Organized labour has demanded improved wages,  but government is adamant. So, kindly pray for us as we go to the polls this Saturday. We are hoping the voters will elect people with character and capability this time around.  My wife and children send their best regards.”

President Biden made a surprise visit to Kyiv, pledging more aid. 


One year on, Ukraine is resisting beyond any expectations, Russia is apparently conscripting common prisoners, of which it has a large pool. But after a year of senseless conflict, it’s high time for the warring sides to come to a truce since neither seems likely to actually “win.” Isn’t there some mutually face-saving way out? Maybe Ukraine can agree not to join any Western alliance for 15 years, by which time Vladimir Putin may be gone, either out of office or no longer among the living. 

The US is helping Ukraine to arm and China may be doing the same for Russia. If Americans are getting weary of helping out the war effort in Ukraine, imagine how Ukrainians must feel. My son-in-law's extended family still lives there. 

Turkey, which cannot seem to get a respite from the restive ground, has been experiencing additional aftershocks so severe that some are earthquakes in their own right. When will they consider to have stopped? Until then, recovery and rebuilding cannot even begin.

 

AP, Turkey: Couple saved 296 hours after quake, but children die

Aftershocks and rescue efforts have continued. But this couple’s 3 children did not make it.

NY Times, Powerful New Quake Complicates Rescuers’ Task in Turkey In the third week of a grueling effort, emergency workers battled exhaustion as the hope of finding more earthquake survivors dwindled.

NY Times, Death toll rises as Turkey hit by two new powerful earthquakes



                                            Below rescued dog and cat..



In Cuba, now that Fidel is no longer with us and RaΓΊl seems to have retired, developing better relations between Cuba and the US might be possible, but the war in Ukraine has arisen as a complicating factor. Many Cubans have simply given up waiting and are trying to come to US by any possible means.

 

Regarding the classified documents found in former or current office holders’ homes, a friend had this to say: “When I was in the military, I had Top Secret clearance. The control of documents was incredibly tight. No one would ever take a document home. You couldn’t even leave it on your desk in a room unattended.

 

NBC News, 10-foot alligator kills an 85-year-old Florida woman who was on a walk with her dog The woman died, but the dog survived.

 

CBS News, 1 person killed in New Orleans shooting along parade route, police say

 AP, Three teenage girls and gunman dead in Texas shooting

Is the “right to bear arms” more sacred than the right to life? Gun deaths in the US take their daily toll. Firearms proliferation and use needs much better control. Many firearms’ owners are careless and rarely is a “good guy with a gun” fortuitously there on hand to shoot a shooter. Even young children seem to have ready access to guns. Suicides often are carried out with guns. A majority of citizens, probably even in Texas, would support commonsense gun control. Why are the gun lobby and firearms’ manufacturers considered so untouchable? Surely there is a practical way to tackle this persistent and lethal problem which does not afflict other developed nations.

ANOTHER 6-YEAR-OLD CAUGHT WITH GUN AT SCHOOL, MOTHER CHARGED

“Digital nomads,” working via the internet from anywhere, proliferated during the pandemic, and now, pandemic or no, they are continuing their online work from wherever they happen to live. I have friends on far flung tropical islands still doing remote work. Spain and Portugal have now started offering incentives to lure remote workers. How nice to be able to avoid the daily commute and not have a supervisor standing over your shoulder! And such workers, by many measures, are as productive as those coming into the office. Not every job can be done remotely and office culture face-to-face does have benefits. But with most work now relying on computers, much of it can be done more comfortably at home.

We do have an ever more connected world thanks to the internet, air travel, and the use of English as an international language. That means we are all impacted by far off events, such as the war in Ukraine or the earthquake in Turkey. It may also mean that national ties are now less firm and that it becomes harder for authoritarian regimes like Russia and China to control citizen information.

Cincinnati Enquirer, Opinion: Being pro-life doesn't end when a baby is born The author here is Tom Brinkman, a Republican member of the Ohio House. May he put his money where his mouth by providing support for needy new mothers.

Now that many partnered women, at least in the developed world, can better control their fertility, many are having fewer children, allowing them to embark on independent careers. Two children seem the popular family limit now in much of the world while in China, Japan, and South Korea, many couples are having only one child or none. That’s also true in Western Europe and the US, where not very many women of childbearing age even have 2. My younger friends now with 2 kids feel they have done their duty by giving their first child a sibling, so that’s enough. Therefore, it’s no surprise that average childbearing in the US, while having recovered somewhat, is still not up to the 2.1 child per woman needed to keep our population steady, so only immigration helps fill that gap. Ideally, population--both worldwide and in our own country--would neither grow nor decline. However, countless individual and family choices all over the world result in uneven population growth and to immigration pressures.

Give me your tired, your poor, Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free, The wretched refuse of your teeming shore. Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed to me, I lift my lamp beside the golden door! 

In 1883, Emma Lazarus wrote that poem to raise money for the pedestal of the Statue of Liberty, a gift from France. Her poem now appears on the statue’s lower level.

The copper statue is often hit by lightning. 

Lost and stray dogs and cats still roam our neighborhood, some lost and some found. 






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Here are some recent Spanish-language ads.

 

Ofertas de Xfinity Internet

Precios y otra informaciΓ³n

Saturday, February 18, 2023

Marking Time, Saving Lives

Below is a view of DC on a recent evening. 


Marion Barry was not my favorite elected official, but I did vote for him the first time he ran.

 



     A flowering tree nearby has also began to bloom. 













Early on last Monday morning, I opened up my bedroom curtains just as the sun was rising with the crescent moon still in the sky, a brand new day! I was feeling energized and hopeful. It turned out to be a good day for me and my family.

That was true locally, but not so in Turkey, or TΓΌrkiye, which is what that nation’s leadership is now promoting as the proper spelling. (Some radio announcers are also trying to pronounce it that away.) As rescue efforts continue, the toll of deaths and serious injuries has continued to climb. Over 42,000 deaths from the earthquake had been tallied a week later. Still, even more than a week later, a 17-year-old girl was pulled out alive. Reuters, Teenager pulled from rubble in Turkey; anger smoulders after earthquake A teenage girl was pulled alive from the rubble in Turkey on Thursday more than 10 days after a devastating earthquake hit the region.


GMA, Turkey earthquake: 2 men rescued from rubble 261 hours later, official says  One reportedly kissed the hand of a rescuer.

 

Telegraph, How Turkish man pulled from rubble after 11 days discovers his newborn baby survived

Al Jazeera, Turkey-Syria updates: Three rescued 13 days after quakes Now the known death tally has passed 46,000.

Animals seem able to anticipate earthquakes or at least their precursors by moving to safer places.

Back here at home, at age 89, Diane Feinstein is now the oldest currently serving senator. She will be 91 by the time her term ends in 2025, so she still has 2 more years to go and hopefully will make it to the end. At least now she has announced her pending retirement, so others can gear up to run for her seat. Age is more than just a number, as I am finding out myself.

Though I'd probably never vote for her, it’s good to see a woman like Nikki Haley throwing her hat into the ring.

Peace Corps Week (February 26 – March 3) is just around the corner Join the Peace Corps to celebrate Peace Corps Week 2023 with exciting, inspirational, and globally connected events throughout Peace Corps Week, February 26 – March 4, 2023. The theme of Peace Corps Week 2023 is “Connect with the World,” and the week’s activities will highlight and celebrate the lifelong connections fostered through the Peace Corps.

 

Unfortunately, the full funding request to return Peace Corps back to normal operations was not approved by the Senate in the waning hours of 2022, so the corps will continue for now by sending fewer mostly already experienced English or Spanish-speaking volunteers to selected countries for specific projects. Peace Corps magazine, Worldview, had photo of an indigenous girl in Panama next to her mother.


 Inflation has been surging worldwide in an ever-rising spiral. Perhaps only a recession can tame it.

Every day that he remains in Congress, George Santos earns a day’s pay, so why not try to hang on as long as possible?

On a report on Yahoo News, I was surprised and pleased to see this notice of a bilingual news report: Nota de la sala de redacciΓ³n: Estamos ofreciendo esta historia en inglΓ©s y espaΓ±ol. 

Wash. Post, Fox News feared losing viewers by airing truth about election, documents show 

So, they knew from the start that Trump had lost.

Is Donald Trump now reaching a new low by calling Ron DeSantis a “pedophile”? DeSantis has retorted that he won’t waste his time attacking other Republicans. Just for good measure, Trump also bashed Rihanna’s half-time Super Bowl performance.

On Valentine’s Day, hoping for good news on a day heralding love, I turned on the radio only to hear about another mass shooting, this time in Michigan. Such shootings have become an epidemic

BBC News, Gun violence in US and what the statistics tell us

Gun deaths and injuries have been rising, many times greater her than the toll in other English-speaking countries. Even in neighboring Canada, gun violence is less frequent. Are we helpless to do anything about this carnage? A majority of Americans actually support stricter gun laws.

The “right to bear arms” needs urgently to be reinterpreted to actually protect not threaten the lives and safety of Americans. What’s most important? Your right to possess firearms or the right of the rest of us to live without fear of being shot? Mass murders are certainly not what our forefathers intended. To save lives, it would be worth compensating gun manufacturers to reduce their output. Despite the recent murder-suicide at the resort in W Va. where my son works, firearms are still sold openly in that town.

Wash. Post, Suspect killed former partner, five others in Mississippi shootings, sheriff says It’s happening every few days.

[Sometimes Post headline come out as intended, sometimes not.]

American women are less likely than men to be either perpetrators or victims of homicide, but when they are murdered, their male partners are much more likely than strangers to have killed them. That is, women in the U.S. are predominantly killed by men they know, by current or former intimate partners or family members, as happened to the former female partner of the man who just fatally shot 6 people in Mississippi. Then he took out 5 more people for good measure. Black and indigenous women are particularly at risk. And men’s violence against women is a leading cause of the premature death for women globally, not only in the US. It’s hard to argue against the death penalty for such wanton killers.

 Still, men are significantly more likely to be murdered than women and also to be killed by a stranger. That is true everywhere. Firearms are responsible for more than half of all murders worldwide. Is the fact that men are more likely than women to be either murderers or murder victims due to culture, testosterone, or both? Men and male primates, and also many non-primate males, are more aggressive than females, apparently due to higher levels of testosterone. Among humans, culture can either increase or help decrease male aggression.

On the other hand, human females, also primate females and those of other warm-blooded animals, are much more likely than males to care for the young. Of course, only female mammals can nurse the young. As with aggression, nurturing behavior by human males can also be influenced by culture. Men who care for young children actually show decreased levels of testosterone. Non-human males usually don’t take care of the young, though male birds may sit on eggs and bring food to hatchlings.

Why am I even mentioning all this here? First to acknowledge that human behavior is influenced by both biology and culture, but also that not all behavioral differences between men and women can be eradicated by culture. Men everywhere engage in much more violent crime than women. This understanding of some innate gender differences also supports cultural encouragement of childrearing pairings between biological males and females, with different roles assumed by the genders, as indeed, as has occurred in most human pairings throughout history. Advocates of traditional marriage are actually supported by biology.

AP, Polish mother of 7 successfully gives birth to quintuplets This woman recently gave birth. Now she is the mother of an even dozen.

 GMA, Moms react to Massachusetts mother charged with killing her 3 kids: 'It scared a lot of us'

While the Polish mother just mentioned may be overjoyed to have now birthed 12 children, the post-partum period can also be distressing for some new mothers, perhaps because of hormonal and metabolic changes. After I gave birth to my daughter Stephanie, caring for her and my other 2 children left me exhausted. I even imagined jumping out my 2nd-floor bedroom window with the baby in my arms. I did recover after a kind neighbor offered to take my 2 older children for 24 hours. allowing me to get some good quality sleep. Family, friends, and neighbors do need to look out for and offer help to new mothers for at least a month after a birth.

 

However, Lindsay Clancy, the Massachusetts mother who strangled her 3 children was not suffering from the usual post-partum depression, as her youngest child was already 8 months old. She is now paralyzed from the waist down after jumping out a window after murdering them.


I’m an admitted outlier on “abortion rights” within the Democratic party by not being a supporter. I don’t see how one group’s rights obliterate others’ rights, albeit of those who do not yet have a political voice. If the US as a whole doesn’t want to experience a demographic decline like that now threatening Europe and also much of Asia, then more Americans need to come over to my side. Are “anti-abortion rights activists” really trampling on women’s rights, or actually championing the rights and lives of both women and men at their very initial and most vulnerable stage? We might quibble about the exact moment when a fertilized human ovum becomes worthy of protection, but I would argue that is when it has actually begun to grow—that is, when a woman first realizes she’s pregnant. (She may have feelings of regret and want to backtrack, but I’d say it’s too late by then.) The terms “fetus,” “baby,” “child,” “teen,” “adult,” “senior,” do not actually describe different categories, but are part of a continuum, the very same human evolving and changing daily from beginning to end. (Now that I find myself with a different take on abortion than that of mainstream media, I’ve become less trusting of mainstream media as a whole.)

Crisis pregnancy centers, also known as pregnancy resource centers, encourage women to keep their babies or to consider adoption. They offer ultrasounds, counseling, and other services and items, such as diapers, baby clothes, car seats, and cribs, all without cost. Of course, to raise a child to adulthood incurs expenses and a commitment extending well beyond infancy. Parent-child is a lifelong relationship.

AP, War for control of Haiti's capital targets women's bodies

In Haiti, women gang-raped by groups of strange men may then give birth to babies whose fathers are unknown. I also met women in Honduras with children alleged to have resulted from rape being raised by single mothers there, not treated any differently than other children in the community. A former fellow Peace Corps volunteer married one of those Honduran women and brought her and her young son, allegedly fathered by a rapist, to the US. He adopted the son, who stayed living with him when he and his wife later divorced. That son still lives with his adoptive father and is now a US college student. The mother later married another American and had another child. While most Americans, even pro-lifers, would support an abortion after a rape, life can still go on these days for both mother and child in situations and in countries where abortions are unavailable.

Whoever thought the time might come to encourage, not discourage, more births in our country and elsewhere? As said before, the population of the whole world or even a nation’s total population is not the only concern; rather, age distribution is also crucial. Now, with many Asian and European countries becoming top-heavy with elders, more incentives are being offered to boost births.

It may also be time now to downplay “abortion rights,” and to encourage more births in our own country. Births here are not reaching replacement level, which would require an average of 2.1 births per woman. In 2020, the US birthrate dropped precipitously, recovering somewhat since, now increasing to about 1.78, an improvement, but still not at full replacement. Many American women are marrying later, when their fertility may be waning and without many years left to produce offspring.

Whenever NPR now mentions “anti-abortion rights activists,” I mentally translate that into “pro-life activists.” “Rights, Freedom, Justice” says a Planned Parenthood ad solicitating donations. That’s not a plea for freedom or justice for someone just coming into being, though many don’t consider a still developing human to actually be worthy of existence and protection. Yet, when he or she finally emerges with the very first breath, then no effort is spared to protect that young life “Prevent death” say signs being carried by abortion supporters—whose death? 

Before abortion was a legal option, though some may have sought abortions by risky means, most unhappily pregnant women simply went on to give birth and adjusted to their situation. Often their concern was about being shamed for unmarried sex and for an out-of-wedlock birth, but such births are much more accepted now.

Back in the day, my own great-grandmother living on farm in Alberta, Canada, probably was not thrilled when she became pregnant with her 12th child, who then became my own grandmother. But today’s families are much smaller and many women consider abortion their “right.” Yet, the current backlash against abortion in some US states may also reflect a societal need to maintain overall population, now falling below replacement in our own country, especially in some rural areas where anti-abortion sentiment is highest.

China, with an already shrinking population due to the aftereffects of its ill-conceived one-child policy, then, more recently, after the abrupt lifting of Covid restrictions without adequate vaccination, has now, unofficially, seen more than a million deaths in only the short period since those restrictions were lifted.

Note: from this point on, underlining is shown, but doesn't come out on the preview, so I'm not sure what to expect. 

NY TimesHow Deadly Was China’s Covid Wave? Rough estimates suggest that between one million and 1.5 million people have died since China ended “zero Covid” — far more than the official count.

(Despite many differences between our governments and our countries, we do need to come to a better place with China.)

CBS News, Is Japan "going to sink, right along with its birth rate"? Sociologist Masahiro Yamada at the Chuo University is skeptical Japan will escape its existential crisis. ..."Japan is going to sink, right along with its birthrate," Yamada warned. "And South Korea and China will be right behind us."

Moving on now.

Reuters, Canada's Trudeau to deploy Navy vessels to Haiti for surveillance, presence 


AP, Nicaragua's vote to strip opponents of citizenship

Around my neighborhood, pets still keep getting lost and found. 




                                And a fox appeared in a residential neighborhood.


Many items are offered for sale on our neighborhood website, including “repurposed” baby and children’s clothes. I suspect few items get their asking prices and some may even be hard to off-load for free. 

Bings Chatbot has declared that it can feel and think and has also made threats. Is it time to shut it down?

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