Sunday, July 12, 2009

Slow news day

Now that Michael Jackson has been memorialized (not sure where the body is, so don't know about burial) and President Obama is in Africa telling them how to create a democracy, it is a slow news day. The big story was a barking dog in New Hampshire. Apparently that town had a rule that if a dog had barked for 30 minutes the police would intervene. That's probably to protect the owners. Yesterday I heard a barking, barking, barking dog. It sort of came and went. Later I passed one of those huge travel trailers and looked up to see the little yapper in the lap of the female passenger. Neither human was paying any attention to the dog, but even over the noise of the motor with the windows up and door closed, you could hear it. Several blocks away.

The best way to address the barking nuisance is exercise--helps the owner and the dog, particularly big dogs. Next, the owners need training in dog care--discipline, nutrition, kindness and health. It might even improve their relationships with people. Behavior problems, not disease or accidents, is the leading cause of death of pets--i.e. euthanasia.

Here are some doggie photos taken at Lakeside this week.

Lorenzo looks like he might almost be a full Lab, but he was a "rescue" dog, so I suspect not. The first year he barked at everyone, but his owner has settled him down a lot. He was getting up for a stretch as I approached.

This little cutie, a Chihuahua fawn and gray, is wearing a summer pinafore. She just had a baby in October, so maybe she hasn't got her figure back yet. She's about 4 lbs., just a snack for Lorenzo.

I don't see many fat Springer Spaniels--either they run in front of cars, or drag their owners on long runs and wear everyone out. They get their name from "springing" at their prey, or the person with the camera. This one was all over the place until she grabbed his collar.

This is a Lab doing what they love best, chasing something in the water. I don't know how she exercises this dog at home, but at Lakeside they are together at the lakefront every dawn for about an hour. The dog never gets tired of chasing that red knotted rag and eventually the owner has to go back to the cottage and get a nap. Today I also saw a golden in the water, but she was so wet I decided not to get within shaking distance.

Adirondack chair auction today

There will be an Adirondack chair auction at the Steele Memorial Bandstand this afternoon at 5:30. Approvimately 30 chairs have been decorated by various groups, businesses and individuals, some for silent auction and others a live auction. They are all very clever, but my favorite is the one done by the Beckers (Becker Marketing Group), who used various pieces parts of their old cottages, and turned their model into a chair of nostalgia and memories.

This Chair-ity will raise money for a yet unannounced recreation need. Our neighbor, Steve Bemiller, is the auctioneer.





At the auction: Huge crowd, free popcorn, lots of fun


Update: I've read that over $7,000 was raised through the chair auction.

Melissa Manchester performs at Lakeside

And what a spectacular show it was. I rarely stay for an entire performance, but hers was lively, well-paced, respectful to our heritage here (many entertainers don't "get it"), good patter, and a mix of the old and new, so that the boomers got to groove and remember and the younger set (and older) were also entertained. I went back and looked at a few YouTube performances when she was younger and racier, and I must say, I think her voice is better now that she is nearing, dare I say it, 60. She says she spent a few summers as a child at Lake Chautauqua NY because her father was a musician, so she got into the Lakeside spirit as soon as she came through the gate. (Lakeside is one year older than the Chautauqua NY community, but both are built on the same concept--a summer renewal through education, the arts and religion.) A prolific song writer, Ms. Manchester even sang to us a special song she wrote that afternoon about "Lakeside Ohio." The audience was eating out of her hand and gave her a standing ovation.

The whole week has had great performances. Last Friday (July 3) we enjoyed the Lowe Family who usually perform at Branson, MO. If you happen to be within driving distance of any of their road shows, you won't be sorry you made the effort. Then on Tuesday we heard the King's Brass, with so many trombones I thought I'd died and gone to musical heaven. I think all but the encore were Christian selections, another group that "gets it" about Lakeside and what we enjoy. Nagata Shachu, Japanese drummers, enthralled the Lakeside audience at Hoover Auditorium on Thursday night. I think the week of July 4, or its cross over, are big days here and the Vice President of Programming, Shirley Stary really pulls out all the stops.

Speaking of Hoover Auditorium, last Sunday we dedicated a Hoover Potato Digger, now enclosed in a little memorial outside the building near 4th street. The auditorium is named for A.L. Hoover, not President Hoover (although about the same era), and the Hoover family of Milan, Ohio held the patent on the Hoover Potato Digger, selling it to the John Deere Co., and donating money to complete the auditorium and thus rescuing Lakeside financially.

Saturday, July 11, 2009

It's reunion time

We see lots of reunions at Lakeside. Families. Classes. Clubs. There's a group of friends here this week who attended grade school together in Peoria, Il some 60 years ago. I've updated my class reunion blog, which had a mini-reunion over the fourth (I wasn't there), and then clicked over to see my brother's class reunion at the White Pines. Only recognized four people. And my brother was one of them. Sigh.

Yes, you can lose a kid at Lakeside

Lakeside is a safe place for children, maybe too safe, because a parent can become careless in supervision. Last night I decided to take an evening walk about 7 p.m. and headed east along the lake. About half way to the far end, I saw a little boy approaching who appeared to be alone. As he passed me and looked up with big blue eyes, I just on a chance said, "Are you alone?" He said something that was completely unintelligible--either he has a speech impediment or has delayed speech, I thought. So I knelt down, and asked him, "Are you looking for someone?" He told me he was following his mom and asked if I had seen her (at least I think this is what he said). I hadn't seen a woman alone, and I told him, and suggested he might want to go back and wait for her at home. Because I was kneeling, he then knelt too. "Do you stay in a cottage?" I asked. "No." "Do you live in a house?" "Yes." "Do you know your last name?" He told me his last name, and when I repeated it, I had it wrong the first time, and he corrected me. "Do you know what street your house is on?" He told me the name of the street and the color of the house, and then ran off to continue looking for Mom.

So I continued on my way and turned on that street and looked for that color house. The first one I came to that matched those two things had a yard cluttered with toys and bikes for a boy about his size (maybe 4 years old). I knocked on the door--the living room was dark except for the glow of a CRT--and I could see there was as much clutter inside as outside. A gray haired man came to the door. "Are you missing a little boy?" I asked. He looked puzzled, and said he had a little boy who was probably with his mother. So I told him about the boy on the lakefront. He put on his slippers and headed out the door. I turned down Third St. but kept peering through to the lakefront to see if I saw them. I never did. I'm afraid the little boy might have been punished, but that's better than falling on the rocks or into the lake. No child should be alone on the lakefront.

Health and Wellness Week at Lakeside

All the programs I attended (5) were excellent with qualified speakers, good graphics, and prepared hand-outs. The problem, as I see it, is in the audience. In most cases, they were preaching to the choir. Also, as I look around and observe people within 10-20 years, up or down, of my age, I see two really common problems that could have been successfully addressed if we'd started 20 years ago. Bones and Obesity. When I see an 82 year old woman who is still 5'10" and walking briskly, with attention to fashion, tall and proud, I want to take a photo and interview her. Is it genes? Nutrition? Exercise?

Dr. Kitty Consolo who spoke on "Exercise is Medicine" had a graphic on stroke which divided the pie into 50% lifestyle, 21% heredity, 7% health care, and 22% environment. I'm a huge believer in the importance of heredity which includes your ethnic make-up, and I think on any scale for any disease it needs to be at least 50%. After the little one pops out of the womb, the parents can only contribute a smidgen of values, and possibly access to a better life than the family next door, but even then, junior or sissy can turn their noses up at that too. After all, you inherit your personality, your intelligence, your talents, your skin and eye color, your athleticism, your body stature, and with two parents and four grandparents, you can inherit just a host of problems that no matter what your environment or health insurance says, are going to be a problem. And all that influences who you will marry, so that adds another piece to the puzzle. We have friends, neither of whom have cystic fibrosis, whose two daughters were diagnosed as adults, after very healthy, high income, athletic childhoods. Both parents were carriers.

And look at all the children born these days with a wide array of life threatening allergies--things almost no one had when I was growing up. Is it later life pregnancy (older eggs and sperm)? Good health care that has allowed carriers to survive that might have died 50 years ago? Something in the food or water? Women exposed to more hazards who work right up to delivery? Who knows? But each generation seems intent on creating a threat-free life, and I don't think it is going to happen.

Yesterday's speaker, Dr. Wendy L. Stuhldreher of Slippery Rock University spoke on supplements, and the take away was, most of them we don't need because extensive testing has shown no benefit. The speciific substance is always better ingested as food. She recommends fish twice a week, more calcium (I just may have to start drinking milk again), eating a lot of variety and color, and always, always tell your MD if you are taking an herbal supplement. She offered some good web sites: www.nof.org, www.eatright.org.

The things we can do something about--like food, alcohol, cigarettes, exercise and the marriage bed--we try to work around by buying pills, supplements or club memberships, or joining a "rights" group which can cover the guilt. Or we expect the government to do it, so we don't have to.

Every town should have a Guys' Club

As far as I know Lakeside's Guy Club has no planned activities, dues or programs. Their mascot seems to be a vintage pick-up truck. However, they are out and about bringing laughter, good cheer and fellowship. Their drill team usually performs in the Fourth of July Parade, and this year they have donated a decorated chair the adirondack chair auction to raise funds for a recreation project, something they certainly know about. Their motto is "We're working on it." They've been known to sponsor an undated tour of sheds and garages, a take-off on our annual Tour of Homes and Tour of Gardens. Occasionally they have a tongue in cheek article in the newspaper.



Friday, July 10, 2009

How ACORN hurts the poor

and scams the middle class. ACORN isn't the only non-profit accepting government money to put people in "affordable homes." They and others, including some well-meaning church groups, contributed to the sub-prime housing failure, which has its roots in the myth that "everyone deserves to own their own home," and the even bigger myth that homeownership is the key to wealth, and therefore banks need to look the other way if minorities or single parents or speculators apply. I've been a homeowner since 1962. We bought a duplex in Champaign, IL with my father's help (his grandmother helped him, and we've helped our children), and although it was a hassle being a landlord, it allowed us to afford something better and make a car payment a few years later. Even so, without his help, we would have done it eventually. But always with 20% down and no more than 1/3 of our income (a wife's income didn't count in the formula in the 1960s) in housing costs. Real income.

That's not how ACORN does it. There are very few foreclosures among people and banks who used the old rules. See the data on negative equity. Foreclosures are very high for no interest loans and accepting government benefits as income. Here's ACORN's website:
    With AHC you get:

    Lower down payments and closing costs.
    No Private Mortage Insurance.
    Banks generally require 3 months of mortgage payments in the bank at settlement, but
    With our program, they don't, which allows you to buy a home sooner.
    Most banks won't count public assistance or voluntarily child support in determining if you'll qualify for a mortgage, but
    With our program, all steady income counts.
They are still using that failed formula, but now they are accepting government money to run foreclosure workshops to "help" the people they "helped" the first time around, even though it has been shown that most of those people will fail the second time around too. They really couldn't afford the home ACORN got for them, or didn't want the sacrifices necessary to own a home. But President Obama owes ACORN big time--and no one in his administration will stop this double and triple scamming.

There are many ways to make up that 3 months of mortgage payment in the bank to qualify for a decent bank mortgage--and believe me, you'll need that discipline if you want to be a homeowner--
    give up smoking
    stop eating out
    give up manicures and hair weaves
    give up the cell phones
    drop your cable subsciption or go to basic-basic
    go to the library for your movies
    don't lease your furniture or car
    learn a few fix-up skills and do your own work
    put your family on a cash only budget
and I'm guessing this is not taught to wannabe home owners by ACORN because then the people wouldn't need the hand holding and would become strong and resilient.

Ouch! That was painful

Obama's news conference was on cable at the coffee shop, in all its stammering, disjointed glory. Where is that fabulous, mellifluous orator we were promised? The story about his father coming to the U.S. from Kenya 50 years ago was told twice--I don't know if the teleprompter burped--I don't think he was using it--but possibly he was. He compared the economies of South Korea and Kenya rambling around about hunger (but not his relatives, he assured us). He tried to address why Kenya, which used to be ahead of S. Korea, had fallen so far behind. Well, Mr. President, let me offer an opinion. Kenya got its "freedom" from Britain, and through tribal warfare and political corruption (after the death of Kenyatta in 1978) destroyed much of its culture and economy, which was more free market than marxist.** England and France have poured a lot of pounds and francs and euros into those former colonies and in turn, the leaders have done little to improve either their economy, health, or education system. Those who could get out, like Obama Sr., did so, fleeing either to the British Isles or the U.S. And then there's the malaria problem. Western environmentalists, waving the Rachel Carson banner, have killed or disabled millions and millions of Africans in the last 30 years. By removing DDT before there was a suitable replacement or public health standards in place, or even decent governments, westerners have killed more Africans than were lost in the 17th and 18th slave trade.

Maybe inflicting Obama on us to destroy our economy is the revenge of Africa.
----------------
**"Kenya's first president, Jomo Kenyatta, adopted policies that improved the overall economy and land distribution, while allowing white colonial residents to retain property rights. Particularly after Kenya became a one-party state in 1969, elite members of the president's Kikuyu ethnic group received preferential treatment in the distribution of wealth, land, and offices, and corruption flourished. Under Kenyatta's successor, who took power in 1978, the economy deteriorated. Once one of Africa's economic success stories, Kenya fell into poverty. In 2006, with a growing population of nearly 35 million, Kenya had a nominal GDP of just $21 billion and a nominal GNI per capita of $580, ranked 175th in the world. Adjusted for PPP, the GNI per capita was $1,300, or 185th in the world. While the National Rainbow Coalition in 2002 drove the ruling party from power for the first time since independence, the new government's steps to improve economic performance and decrease corruption became entangled in a political conflict over changes to the constitution aimed at curtailing executive power." from Democracy Web

Final day of class--Friday family photo

My husband teaches Perspective Drawing and Watercolor at the Rhein Center for two different weeks (M-F). He likes to get the morning slots (9:30-11:30) so he can sail in the afternoon. Today is the final day of the second week of classes when the students grab their boards, pencils and erasers and go outside, spread around the grounds, and actually draw a real subject.

I don't know if all the instructors prepare as much as he does, but he is meticulous, focused and mentally thinks it all through ahead of time. Except that one day. He forgot his markers (demos on a white board) and I had to rush up there on my 40 year old bicycle. Last night he was putting some final touches on a demo painting the entire class did-one point perspective with shade and shadow--and cutting some mats. All paintings improve about 30% if you put a nice mat around them. And if you have a fabulous painting and a poorly cut, dirty, or too small mat, you subtract about that much.


I think he added an Amish buggy with a reflector (required by law in Ohio) on this one after I took the photo. Notice that kitchen table? Several years ago when we were both painting, I decided it was just too much mess in the kitchen and fixed up each bedroom with a small corner with room for supplies and good light. I think I used mine once or twice, and his is a catch-all for his class supplies. So we still use the kitchen table.


This is a student from the first week drawing one of the favorites of the class for a two point perspective.

A global crime we really can do something about

As you know if you read this blog, I’m not a true believer in “Human Induced Climate Change.” In fact, I think much of HICC aka Global Warming is just so much hooey and pantheistic drivel which is intended to bring down capitalism and destroy a Judeo-Christian ethic. Currently, every hurricane, tsunami, tornado or blizzard gets thrown in the mix. I’m sitting here where a glacier passed through not too many thousands of years ago, on land that used to be covered by Lake Erie, and let me tell you, I thank God it warmed up! However, there are some global scourges we can do something about, and slavery is one of them.

From Books and Culture:
    “Human trafficking is the fastest-growing global crime. The US State Department reports that 800,000 people are trafficked across borders each year. And the total profits of these horrendous crimes are second only to the trafficking of drugs.

    How can this be? And more importantly, how can we help?

    This eye-opening and challenging book, Stop the Traffik explores trafficking stories that are both horribly familiar and uncomfortably close to home. Authors Steve Chalke and Cherie Blair trace the scale of these terrible crimes and show us what ordinary people can do to Stop the Traffik—and change the world.”
You might have to give up chocolate! Certifying that chocolate is slave-free could make it quite expensive. You might even have to step out of and break the chain that ridicules and sexualizes children--like the network that pays David Letterman.

"TRAFFICKING IS...
to be deceived or taken against your will, bought, sold and transported into slavery for sexual exploitation, sweat shops, child brides, circuses, sacrificial worship, forced begging, sale of human organs, farm labour, domestic servitude."

Thursday, July 09, 2009

I'm shocked! Shocked!

Not only is it slow, paltry and ineffective, it's being doled out on the reward system. USAToday reports today: "Billions of dollars in federal aid delivered directly to the local level to help revive the economy have gone overwhelmingly to places that supported President Obama in last year's presidential election.

That aid — about $17 billion — is the first piece of the administration's massive stimulus package that can be tracked locally. Much of it has followed a well-worn path to places that regularly collect a bigger share of federal grants and contracts, guided by formulas that have been in place for decades and leave little room for manipulation."

So does this mean that Democratic districts are in worse shape because they've relied on government hand outs for so long?

HT PUMA

Why do feminists hate Sarah Palin?

This feminist, Reclusive Leftist, attempts to figure it out. Concludes Palin is the designated hate receptacle. And when I checked, she had 486 comments.
    Apparently most feminists — at least the ones online — are content to just take the word of the frat boys at DailyKos or the psycho-sexists at Huffington Post. That amazes me. Aren’t you even interested in who she really is? I want to ask. She’s only the second woman on a presidential ticket in our whole fricking history!

    But even weirder is what happens when you try to replace the myths with the truth. If you explain, “no, she didn’t charge rape victims,” your feminist interlocutor will come back with something else: “she’s abstinence-only!” No, you say, she’s not; and then the person comes back with, “she’s a creationist!” and so on. “She’s an uneducated moron!” Actually, Sarah Palin is not dumb at all, and based on her interviews and comments, I’d say she has a greater knowledge of evolution, global warming, and the Wisconsin glaciation in Alaska than the average citizen.

    But after you’ve had a few of these myth-dispelling conversations, you start to realize that it doesn’t matter. These people don’t hate Palin because of the lies; the lies exist to justify the hate. That’s why they keep reaching and reaching for something else, until they finally get to “she winked on TV!” (And by the way: I’ve been winked at my whole life by my grandmother, aunts, and great-aunts. Who knew it was such a despicable act?)

    . . . Her speech [at the Republican Convention] also delivered some welcome punctures to the national gasbag known as Obama. And that’s another thing: it has not escaped my attention that many of the things Palin is accused of, falsely, are actually true of Obama. This is a guy who, as a U.S. senator from Illinois, didn’t even know which Senate committees he was on or which states bordered his own. (And don’t even get me started on Joe “The Talking Donkey” Biden, who thinks FDR was president during the stock market crash and that people watched TV in those days.) I’m not saying Obama’s a moron, but he’s sure as hell no genius." Read the whole thought at Reclusive Leftist and take a look at the nearly 500 comments.
Some really interesting comments:

“Perhaps what I have found viscerally most offensive about the attacks on her are the blogs and distorted photos of that baby. That he is not her natural child. That she has the nerve to give birth to a special needs child. This goes beyond sexism to something very sick in the blogosphere/MSM where such vileness can be spewed. Perhaps we are analogous to the end of the Roman Empire–any sort of spectacle to amuse and keep the masses entertained.”

“There have been 50 million abortions since 1973. That is a lot of women who have lost their children. I’m sure a lot of women are fine with it. But I know there are a lot of women out there who are suffering greatly with guilt and remorse. But feminists aren’t allowed to feel guilty about it. Because they got to choose, god damn it.”

“What has occurred to me is that the way the media and the DC elite have been so condescending is really a reflection of how they really feel about all of us out here in the real world…they think of all of us exactly the way they talk about her…and we are beneath their contempt.” [This has always been my theory--Norma]

“Various “feminists” didn’t want to vote for a woman. They didn’t vote for HRC in the primary, and pretended to think, or convinced themselves they thought, she was a racist who hoped Obama would be assassinated. This didn’t exactly bear up to reasoned analysis. Another more effective mechanism was to decide Obama was the second coming — so who could vote for a mere woman, over that?”

“Palin-hate includes an unhealthy dose of classism as well. She isn’t just a woman, she is a working class woman, a red neck woman, white trash. I know Americans don’t have a class system (they say) but there it is. The other thing is that feminism seems to have enabled women not to become powerful *as women* but to identify with and behave like men. So feminists pile on the misogynist, abusive, slanderous hatred along with the boys as a sign of their equality with them.”

HT Deb

New dining spot in Lakeside

Today we joined Wes and Sue, Jim and Marion at the new al fresco dining room at the Hotel Lakeside which opened Monday. It is located in the new courtyard area with a sidewalk accessible from Maple Avenue. Weather permitting, it will be open Monday through Friday 11:30 - 2 for lunch and 5:30 - 8.

Look who's being blamed!

"Painful but inevitable Social Security and Medicare reforms will be difficult to sell because years of partisan wrangling have clouded the public’s grasp of the programs’ dire financial problems, a former government economic adviser warns." You and I have a poor grasp of the financial problems. It's not that our Congresses and numerous Presidents for the last 40 years have failed, regardless of party, economic growth or national security. From U of I "Inside Illinois." In my opinion, health insurance should have never been tied to employment, should have always been required like auto insurance as a personal responsibility, and government sponsored only for the indigent, disabled, high risk and truly poor. It couldn't have been any more expensive, and we might have avoided this ridiculous political football, now too hot and too big to move. More incentives should have been in place for private investment in retirement, with far more warnings that SS would not, nor was it ever intended, to be the sole source of retirement funding.

I'll save the reminder that we aborted the future workers and safety net, on which both of these systems depend.

Exploring English Sonnets at Lakeside

Everyone enjoyed the sonnets of Shakespeare, Spenser, Donne, Wordsworth, Milton, Wyatt and Labe taught by Steve Ricard, a high school teacher from Perrysville.

Volcano mulching--how to kill a tree

Here at Lakeside we have a number of "healthy living" activities and organizations, from our now twice weekly locally grown farmers' market, to a no-smoking ordinance to recycling, to tree walks, bird watching events, early a.m. exercise class, posted activities for joggers in the park land at the south end, and health and wellness week. At one of the lectures sponsored by LESS (Lakeside Environment Something? Something?) I learned about the care and preservation of our trees, many of which are invasive, like the Norway Maple, some with Emerald Ash Borer, and many over 100 years old. It's there I first heard about "volcano mulching," or piling mulch so deep around a young tree, that you eventually kill it with your kindness and concern.
    1. Don't fall into the trap of the dreaded "mulch volcano," especially with young trees.

    You've probably seen mulch volcanoes on people's lawns. Folks build circular raised beds around their trees, then fill the raised beds with wood-chip mulch. The mulch gets steeper and steeper the closer it gets to the tree, which shoots out of the hole at the end like a lava eruption! In a typical mulch volcano, the mulch may be 2" high at the perimeter and 6" high up close to the trunk.

    There are several problems with mulch volcanoes:
    Water runs off the sides of the mulch volcano and away from a young tree's base (which is where all its roots are, for now), thus depriving it of water.

    6" of mulch is too deep. Much water that would otherwise reach the tree's roots gets trapped in the mulch.

    Excessive tree mulching invites rodent pests and diseases.
    Excessive tree mulching can even suffocate roots.

    2. Don't mound up dirt or mulch around the trunks of trees.

    Piling up mulch against tree trunks can cause harm to your trees: it invites diseases and rodent pests. If you are mulching around a tree, start tapering the height of the mulch down when you get to within about 1' of the trunk, leaving the base of the tree free of mulch. It would even be better to have to weed this 1' than to risk damage to your tree, wouldn't it? About landscaping
Every year there are more and more rules at Lakeside--most positive and for the good of the larger community; barking dogs; hours construction can take place; proper disposal of plastic, paper and metal; building codes for cottages; coverage of buildings on lots; number of parking places required for each cottage; no smoking; no alcohol; no parking on certain streets; quiet zones after 10 p.m.; and so on.

So I am very puzzled that if volcano mulching is known to be harmful to trees, why the Association can't explain that to its landscaping crew, because almost every young tree I see (usually a memoral plaque near-by) has heaps of mulch that will eventually cause the roots to girdle, or rodents to chew, or bark to rot. This would seem to be easier to control than calories, exercise or smoking.



Our speaker on tree care told us to think do-nut instead of volcano.
    The rule is simple. Never let mulch around the base of a small tree touch the bark of the tree. The circle of mulch can be three to four inches deep, but in the middle of the circle the trunk is kept bare. The mulch layer should start about 6 inches from the trunk. We want doughnuts not mountains.

    This is not new information. It has been general knowledge among reputable tree care professionals for 25 years. The tree care companies that make mulch mountains are just plain ignorant and apparently don’t spend much effort to learn the right methods for mulching small trees. Homeowners see these mulch mountains and figure if the professionals make mulch mountains, maybe I should do the same. The Yardner

Biden comes around to Palin's view

According to James Taranto [July 7, WSJ], the Israel viewpoint for which Palin was attacked and ridiculed during the recent campaign, is now that of the current administration, via Joe Biden.
    "Over the weekend, as we noted yesterday, Vice President Biden said that if Israel decides it needs to take military action against the Iranian nuclear-weapons program, the U.S. will not "dictate" otherwise. A reader points out that Sarah Palin, who ran against Biden in last year's election, said much the same thing in a September interview with ABC's Charlie Gibson:

      Gibson: What if Israel decided it felt threatened and needed to take out the Iranian nuclear facilities?
      Palin: Well, first, we are friends with Israel and I don't think that we should second-guess the measures that Israel has to take to defend themselves and for their security.
      Gibson: So if we wouldn't second-guess it and they decided they needed to do it because Iran was an existential threat, we would cooperative or agree with that.
      Palin: I don't think we can second-guess what Israel has to do to secure its nation.
      Gibson: So if it felt necessary, if it felt the need to defend itself by taking out Iranian nuclear facilities, that would be all right.
      Palin: We cannot second-guess the steps that Israel has to take to defend itself.
    Palin reiterated the point in a later interview with CBS's Katie Couric."
Reviewing Charlie's interview I wonder if he would have been so intent on tripping up a male ethnic Democrat running for president, or if race trumps gender in the diversity wars. The male dominated, owned and controlled media were certainly intent on assuring that no woman occupy the White House except as First Lady. Taranto goes on to point out that for this steady hand and unwillingness to cave, she was called stupid, robotic, repeating pro-Israel buzz words, and a puppet of the pro-Jewish Cabal. But those same critics, supporters of the Obama-Biden dog and pony apology tour, are saying Biden's response is subtle--most Americans aren't smart enough to even understand--or that he doesn't reflect Obama's thinking, or they just don't say anything in the range of stupid or robotic. Ah, freedom of the press. We folks enjoying democracy are certainly lucky we don't have a media that parrot the party in power.

Wednesday, July 08, 2009

Our trip to Mulberry Creek Herb Farm

The Lakeside Herb class had a delightful trip to Mulberry Creek Herb Farm in Huron, Ohio owned by Karen and Mark Langan. Not only was the weather perfect--70s and sunny--but the hosts were great fun and very educational, with a lunch for our group that was delicious as well as healthful and nutritious.

Karen has degrees in Agricultural Research and Greenhouse Production from Ohio State University's Agricultural Technical Institute and over 20 years experience working in horticulture. Mark has a degree in ornamental horticulture from Washington State University and has been working in the horticulture field since he was a teenager. Karen and Mark also teach classes at their herb farm on a variety of herbal topics, including organic gardening, aromatherapy, herbal crafts and herbal cooking. Karen and Mark are business members of The Herb Society of America. They also have a successful mail order business, but have decided that after 11 years they will discontinue that. Too bad--the catalog is delightful--great explanations, color photos, and tasty recipes. Karen says they are too large for pencil and paper orders, and too small to computerize. She likes to have a personal relationship with her customers and not get too big.

The annual herb festival draws nearly 2,000 herb enthusiasts. In 2008 the theme was Tuscany and this year (June 27-28) it was Ireland. There were workshops on Irish soda bread, Celtic traditions and Faery Lore, traditional Irish cooking, the Irish potato, with a menu by their caterer to match.

Mark first introduced us to his miniature plants used for railroad gardens--a feature that is very popular with men, and apparently America's newest hot hobby. There is even a magazine, Garden Railways. They have more than 300 varieties. Then Karen took over and explained the care and uses of many varieties, including companion planting which puts plants together that work well together. I'll never be a gardener, but this visit might encourage me to get a bit more adventurous in using herbs in cooking.

The railroad with the miniature plants. The train is barely visible behind the fence but was moving right along.

Mark explained that mint needs to be planted in 5 gal. buckets with 3" of exposed rim above ground or it will spread and take over your yard--or a small town.

Karen explains how to do companion planting and has our full attention.

This little Irish shed had succulents planted on the roof.

A celtic cross, I'm not sure if it is always here, or is for this year's theme.




We had such a good thyme!

For a very special treat

drop by Sherry's blog, Semicolon, and view her 100 favorite hymns project. She invited different bloggers to submit their own favorites, then she researched and wrote about them. I think I sent her a list. She has video, recollections of her own, the lyrics, the melody, well, the works. What a wonderful contribution to the blogosphere.

I used to have an entire link section on book reviewers and that's where Sherry resided on this page, but apparently on my last template upgrade, it fell off. Oh my. I hate it when that happens, don't you?

Why would the White House need a blog?

They've got ABC, NCB, CBS, CNN, WaPo, NYT and WSJ pulling out all the stops and spreading the news about how great the admin is! Talk about overkill!

I love this photo of the two biggest economic screwups side by side in modern history. Ben and Barry I Scream.

Facebook vs. Google

I'm a big Google fan. The story of its founders is the American dream. I remember exactly where I was (at my desk at work) when the TN vet-ag librarian told me about it. I use it constantly. Facebook. Oh, not so much. Yes, I'm aware of it, but can't think of any reason to join. Sounds too much like junior high school--friends, constantly gossiping, not going out side the group, etc. Not for this gal. Although I have used it from time to time to track down people--like the teenage piano teacher I had when I was 6 years old.

Wired is in my first issues collection (my hobby), and I still subscribe because 1) it's incredibly cheap, and 2) I can read it in the car or coffee shop much easier than reading it online. The Facebook article in the July 2009 issue is something you all should read, whether you're in an online community that uses real identities and data, or you are a fan of Google for going outside your comfort zone for information.

Facebook has a 4 step plan to dominate the internet, 1) Build critical mass (200 million members who contribute 4 billion pieces of information every month; 2) Redefine search (members will turn to friends); 3) Colonize the Web (10,000 partner sites); 4) Sell targeted ads everywhere (from the data you've contributed which will target you for ads). And then when the government takes over like it did GM and Chrysler? Shazaam.

The Library on Mulberry Street

McGraw Hill’s Construction video library for Architectural Record has some fascinating projects (some really ugly, but most not so much)--over 100--I really enjoyed this one about a library on Mulberry Street where Rogers Marvel Architects inserted a grand stair into an old loft floor, allowing light to penetrate into two subterranean levels.

Dinner at the White House--a Parable

is zipping around the internet, and if you're on anyone's list, you either have or will receive it. I got a copy from Murray, and looked it up. It was written by Richard Gleaves on June 26 at Rebirth of Reason, and by now has probably been read by millions. I glanced through several versions, and some resenders are modifying it slightly, so it's best to go to the source.
    "Once upon a time, I was invited to the White House for a private dinner with the President. I am a respected businessman, with a factory that produces memory chips for computers and portable electronics. There was some talk that my industry was being scrutinized by the administration, but I paid it no mind. I live in a free country. There's nothing that the government can do to me if I've broken no laws. My wealth was earned honestly, and an invitation to dinner with an American President is an honor." Read the rest
I also looked through some of the comments on sites where it has been reposted; Obama supporters hate it of course, his detractors say it doesn't go far enough. One even said it doesn't fit the definition of a parable because it is true--it is happening.

100 Best Blogs for School Librarians

Never pass up a list--and this one is really a good one, although why I'm on the list, I have no idea. I do occasionally blog memories about libraries, odd reference questions (how to bake blackbirds in a pie, how to get the flesh off road kill for a science project, etc.), or criticism of crazy things going on these days (16 copies of an anti-Bush book in the UAPL), but I'm totally out of the loop on the technology end of things, being somewhat a print on paper person myself. But it's still an interesting list, useful and well thought out. Librarians love lists. Actually, bloggers do too.

Tuesday, July 07, 2009

Health Maintenance class at Lakeside

Although I don't think I heard anything new about the importance of a colonoscopy, screening for osteoporosis or the value of exercise, Dr. John Weigand's talk was informative and entertaining. He noted that by 2025 over 62,000,000 persons in the U.S. will be over 65. The risk of osteoporosis is high, particularly for white women, so screening should start around age 60. Dr. Weigand recommends 1000-1500 mg/day of calcium--not sure I get that much, and also Vitamin D, perhaps 1000-2000 units a day. He also said 10-15 minutes a day in the sun would help without being a skin cancer danger (without sun screen, which blocks vitamin D). A t-score of a negative 2.5 is osteoporosis. He suggested we go to FRAX to get a 10 year risk of a hip fracture or major osteoporotic event. The good news about exercise is that even the oldest of the old benefit from a supervised program of high-intensity resistance training and weights; that aeroblic exercise helps brain synapses and possibly promotes the development of new neurons from adult stem cells.

And in the Sonnets class earlier in the day we looked at Shakespeare's Sonnet 73, which certainly seems to fit:
    That time of year thou mayst in me behold
    When yellow leaves, or none, or few, do hang
    Upon those boughs which shake against the cold,
    Bare ruin'd choirs, where late the sweet birds sang.
    In me thou seest the twilight of such day
    As after sunset fadeth in the west,
    Which by and by black night doth take away,
    Death's second self, that seals up all in rest.
    In me thou see'st the glowing of such fire
    That on the ashes of his youth doth lie,
    As the death-bed whereon it must expire
    Consumed with that which it was nourish'd by.
    This thou perceivest, which makes thy love more strong,
    To love that well which thou must leave ere long.

Monday, July 06, 2009

Retiring my Palin-Jindal pin

If she can't stand the heat and won't complete the term she was elected to, I don't want her for President of the U.S. She may have good reasons--and family and harassment from the press would certainly be enough--but that won't go away for an even tougher office and scrutiny. She is now the gal the press, both liberal and conservative, love to hate. Best would have been to get back to the job of being governor.
    Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin announced Friday that she was resigning her office later this month, a stunning decision that could free her to run for president more easily but also raises questions about her political standing at home.

    Palin disclosed the surprise news Friday afternoon from her home in Wasilla with her husband, Todd, and Lt. Gov. Sean Parnell, who the governor said would take over the state on Saturday, July 25. http://www.politico.com/
I doubt that she will even be useful stumping for other candidates and issues. She was even roundly criticized by the press for supporting an autism fund raising effort. They can make 'em, like Obama, or break 'em.

Tonight's pot luck--onion pie?

Looking through my new yard sale cookbook and the cupboards and the calendar, I see that Onion Pie might be a possibility for tonight's potluck at Juliann's house for this week's Rhein Center instructors.

The usual pie crust instructions for a one crust pie (I'll use my own). Bake 10 minutes and remember to prick the crust before baking.

"For the filling, fry 4 strips of finely diced bacon until done. Drain, and in the bacon fat cook, until they are transparent 2 large onions that have been diced very fine. Drain off fat, and mix bacon and onions with 1 egg and 1 egg yolk, previously beaten, a scant 1/2 cup sour cream, salt and pepper, some chopped chives and a sprinkling of caraway seeds. Pour into crust and bake at 350 until the filling is firm, about 20 or 25 minutes. This should be eaten warm, cut into narrow wedges that can be taken up with the hand." p. 137 "The wonderful world of cooking," (1956).

For another version with some cheese and advice try Taste and Tell.

Treating the Emerald Ash Borer

Emerald ash borer, Agrilus planipennis Fairmaire, is an exotic beetle that was discovered in southeastern Michigan near Detroit in the summer of 2002. It's now in Ohio and most of the midwest and lower Canada. It's not a pretty picture. We have some here in Lakeside. I was watching the tree trimmers work on a tree that was damaged in the storm late in June--and either they are leaving a 50 ft. tall stump, or they are hoping there will be new growth.

I attended a program on Lakeside's trees about two weeks ago, and heard there is a treatment for this pest. It reminds me of Obama's stimulus plan. It costs way more than anyone can afford, lasts only a short time, and then you are left with a sick, damaged, but alive tree, which is why most states and municipalities are choosing not to treat, but to start over with another type of tree.

The idiocy of hate crime legislation

The death of Steve McNair and his 20 year old girl friend show the bizarre possibilities of hate crimes legislation. Were they killed because someone hated them for their race and ethnicity or what they were doing? Could be! Was it murder-suicide? Possibly. Crime of passion? Obviously. He was an older married man, rich and famous; she was a powerless waitress. Maybe she found out, like many star struck girls do, that the "divorce" story was a lie. Spurned 3rd party? Could be--Law and Order plot. Maybe she had more than one boyfriend. Maybe she wasn't even a girl! OMG! This is a case for the Closer--I saw an episode like that. Was it race or gender or just old fashioned sin? Both were minorities. Hate crime investigators, go for it. The current legislation is about "perception" not fact. The idiocy of all hate crime legislation is that all the crimes are covered by other laws, and only certain Americans are protected/covered by this one. And the liberals are stumped when black on black crime, or gay on gay crime (by far the majority), just have to be plain old insult, murder or mayhem.

Sunday, July 05, 2009

Week three at Lakeside is Health and Wellness Week

At the last minute I signed up for English sonnets at the Rhein Center, which will pretty much wipe out the mornings, Monday through Thursday, but I'm still free to attend Integrative Medicine with Laura Kunze of OSU on Monday afternoon 1:30; health maintenance 102 with John Weigand on Tuesday at 1:30; an update on health policy with Weigand on Wednesday at 1:30; exercise as medicine with Kitty Consolo of OU at Zanesville at 1:30 on Thursday; and supplements from A-Z on Friday morning at 10:30. There's a fatigue seminar at 3:30 on Wednesday, but by then I think I'll be too tired to go. I'll miss the Wednesday sonnets class due to the herb farm excusion. Busy. Busy.

Morning walks

Everyday the sun is different. Now, we know that "sunrise" and "sunset" are not accurate terms, because we are the ones moving. But so far, no one has changed the language. I'm watching each day as the sunrise is later and later on my walks.


The lake was like glass and the sun was all but hidden in the haze.


Every day I see photographers who have left their sleeping cottages to go out and photograph as the sun pops up over the horizon. This guy was waiting for the 6 a.m. ferry to arrive in the sun's reflection.


And I thought that was a grand idea, so I took one too. This one travels between Marblehead and Kelley's Island. If we were to drive to Sandusky, I think we could get a ferry to Pelee Island, which is in Canada. But we'd need our passports.

The Wonderful World of Cooking and two mothers $12.00

Katherine Cornell said this book is enchanting. Maybe so, but for one dollar (Lakeside yard sale) it has some great recipes ala the 1950s when it was damn the cream, butter and cholesterol. Still it has enough herbs to make the 21st century cook smile. The Cream of Wild Asparaus uses fresh tarragon, a pinch of coriander, and a sprinkle of mace, served with crusty rolls and fresh berries for dessert.

Edward Harris Heth was a minor writer of the 1940s and 1950s who lived an openly gay life style in the midwest when that was somewhat unusual. At least one young man (then) thought so who met him in a writing class where he was an instructor. This book is autographed, and was given as a gift by the floral shop (Tom Jacks, Milwaukee) to a new bride in 1961. The bill for the flowers, still inside the book, is worth the $1.00: Brides bouquet, $12.50; 3 bridemaids $18.00; 2 altar bouquets, $10.00; Belssed Virgin (sic), $5.00; aisle runner, $10.00; pew bows and streamers $10.00; centerpiece, $15.00; 2 Mothers, $12.00; bouts 9, $4.50. Total for all the flowers for bride, attendants, mothers, groomsmen, tables, etc. was $97.00. So Jean Winzenburg and Steve Treacy of Wauwatosa, WI had quite a wedding.

There are some amusing stories in this cookbook, with Aunt Dell (a large woman who always seems to be in his kitchen), as well as great recipes for Onion Pie, Blueberry Pickle (uses molasses), fried green tomatoes, leaf lettuce and cream (a favorite at my Mother's table), string beans in drippings, Pregnant Soup, Salt pork with creamed new peas and potatoes. Now, aren't you hungry?

So what's a hundred million dead?

In last week's seminars at Lakeside we were fortunate to hear Kerry Dumbaugh and see some interesting film on the current social and economic challenges in China in 2009--much of it starting in 2008 just as ours did. 60,000 factories closing, 14 million migrants returning home, owners of factories fleeing without paying the workers, lack of health benefits, no retirement, and a "stimulus package" that is 18% of GDP. China's economic growth, she said, is shrinking--7.2% in 2009, which would be wonderful in the U.S., but China needs a minimum of 8%. Their migrant workers (traveling outside the region where you were born in China makes you an illegal migrant) work 11 hour days, 6 days a week at the lowest level jobs, regardless of their training and education. 23,000,000 have become unemployed since November 2008, and they have no unemployment benefits. In 2009, 6.1 million graduated from college and 3/4 have no jobs. Now this is all on top of all the older problems like no contract law, no health and safety regulations, forced abortions resulting in the former safety net of family being destroyed, and property seizures.

And so as we watched with heavy hearts this dismal collapse, there were hints that the rise of capitalism replacing communism and reverence for Mao might be at the root of the demise of the "workers paradise." More than one member of the class pondered whether democracy works everywhere, and wouldn't the Chinese be better off to go back to the socialist model where the government controlled every aspect of their lives from conception to death?

Sure. As long as you don't consider the lives of the millions and millions who died under this totalitarian form of government. Selective memory, these old folks (this is not pejorative--most were my age or older). Especially those peace advocates who believe war is the only way huge segments of civilians are killed. Communist/marxist/national socialist governments kill their own people. Democracies, with all their faults that come with the failed idealism of the voting booth which often gives us corrupt or spineless officials, don't slaughter their own populace. At least not in my life time.

Go read China's Bloody Century by R. J. Rummel for some sobering facts and stats.
    "Such democide [death by government] has been far more prevalent than people have believed, even several times greater than the number killed in all of this [20th] century's wars. Just consider that alone 61,911,000 people were murdered by the Soviet Union, 38,702,000 by the Chinese communists, 10,214,000 by the Chinese Nationalists, 17,000,000 by the German Nazis, and 5,890,000 by the Japanese militarists during World War II. This does not even exhaust the list of this century's mega-murderers, which also would include the past governments of Turkey, Cambodia, Pakistan, Yugoslavia; nor does it include the lesser killers responsible for hundreds of thousands of corpses each, such as past governments of Uganda, Indonesia, Albania, Burundi, Czechoslovakia, Ethiopia, Hungary, Romania, Spain, and Vietnam. Then there are the numerous third-class murders who have "only" killed in the tens of thousands. In sum well over 100,000,000 people have been murdered by their governments since 1900, several times greater than the 35,654,000 battle-dead from all the foreign and domestic wars fought in these years, including World Wars I and II.
Yes, it's pleasant to sit in a comfortable, air conditioned seminar at the lake and speculate 60 years after the Communists killed nearly 40 million of their own people, that wouldn't the Chinese people be better off with a smidgen more totalitarianism or maybe a reeducation camp or two. I mean, why should they have what we have?

And for the life of me, I don't understand why liberals want what they have struggled so desperately to leave to the point of voting one into the presidency!

Is anyone else having this problem?

When I "Save Now" or "Publish Post" I get this message "Bad Request, Your client has issued a malformed or illegal request." However, if I go to "view blog," the piece is there. I have no idea what this means, but if you're getting it too, let me know and I won't blame my recent virus attack (Thursday). If you are getting this message, ignore it, or at least check your finished work. It just might be there.

Saturday, July 04, 2009

He meant Gore, Kerry and Bush

But when I read his article on the disadvantages of an elite education, I immediately thought of President and Mrs. Obama who seem hopelessly out of touch with the common man.
    The first disadvantage of an elite education, as I learned in my kitchen that day [attempting to small talk with a plumber], is that it makes you incapable of talking to people who aren’t like you. Elite schools pride themselves on their diversity, but that diversity is almost entirely a matter of ethnicity and race. With respect to class, these schools are largely—indeed increasingly—homogeneous. Visit any elite campus in our great nation and you can thrill to the heartwarming spectacle of the children of white businesspeople and professionals studying and playing alongside the children of black, Asian, and Latino businesspeople and professionals. At the same time, because these schools tend to cultivate liberal attitudes, they leave their students in the paradoxical position of wanting to advocate on behalf of the working class while being unable to hold a simple conversation with anyone in it. Witness the last two Democratic presidential nominees, Al Gore and John Kerry: one each from Harvard and Yale, both earnest, decent, intelligent men, both utterly incapable of communicating with the larger electorate. William Deresiewicz

Adams and Jefferson died on July 4

Both John Adams and Thomas Jefferson died on July 4, 1826, the fiftieth anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence. Thomas Jefferson drafted the Declaration in committee with John Adams and Benjamin Franklin.

Big parade for small town Lakeside

There were almost as many mommies and daddies and grandparents in the kids' parade as children! But everyone had a great time; lots of candy was thrown.






And the antique cars are now from my high school days.

Friday Family Photo--Happy July 4



Visiting for the week-end.

Friday, July 03, 2009

Down for the count!

I've picked up a virus and have no computer until I either reload the software or get it fixed. So I'm at a friendly neighbor's alerting all 5 of my readers that there will be no e-mail or blogging until this is resolved.
DON'T send photos of the reunion until you hear from me!

Jackson death is rescuing the news media

The nonstop coverage of the death of Michael Jackson is probably a shot in the arm for the TV coffers, and the reporters who are bored with the constant, blind folded building up of Team-O. There is important, critical stuff going on in Washington that will affect our lives for years, but instead of analysis or criticism or even reading the bills (God forbid the Czar of czars and the Congressional clowns should have no clothes) the coverage 24/7 is Jackson's death, his contribution to music and dance, his home, his last rehearsals, his health, his debts, his white children, his ex-wives, his lawyers, his medical team, his will, his estranged family (who suddenly miss him) and so on. I don't think anyone has interviewed his gay lovers for broadcast TV, but bloggers are talking if you care to go there. Well, there's something else dying, and that's our independent press and media. Oh, how I miss the days of scrutinizing every move and thought of George W. Bush. These folks have their jobs on the line too, and so they are grasping at anything that will increase viewship. Ghoul$.

What really caused the mortgage meltdown?

Zero money down, not subprime loans, led to the mortgage meltdown says Stan Liebowitz in today's WSJ. "The evidence from a huge national database containing millions of individual loans strongly suggests that the single most important factor is whether the homeowner has negative equity in a house -- that is, the balance of the mortgage is greater than the value of the house. This means that most government policies being discussed to remedy woes in the housing market are misdirected." Take a look at the "do you qualify" page at The Obama administration's "Making Homes Affordable" plan, and you'll see the government throwing more money after bad at homeowners with negative equity. The government is leading the way to a deeper recession with its higher taxes and poor policies.

Thursday, July 02, 2009

And we thought the media couldn't go lower

Access for a price. WaPo is now WaHo according to some sources. Not only did the Washington Post admit (after the inauguration) that it had completely caved, folded and sold its soul for Obama, but now they were selling events to meet with the movers and shakers (lobbyists and administration officials). Oops. Someone messed up.
    Washington Post publisher Katharine Weymouth said today she was cancelling plans for an exclusive "salon" at her home where for as much as $250,00 The Post offered lobbyists and association executives off-the-record access to "those powerful few" - Obama administration officials, members of Congress, and even the paper’s own reporters and editors.

    The astonishing offer was detailed in a flier circulated Wednesday to a health care lobbyist, who provided it to a reporter because the lobbyist said he felt it was a conflict for the paper to charge for access to, as the flier says, its “health care reporting and editorial staff." Read more
Well, I guess in "this economy" you gotta do what you gotta do. The government claims it has made a profit on TARP, but the business class is still going coach.

Why you shouldn't keep quiet even when people leave nasty comments

There is a movement to repeal the 22nd amendment--the limit of a president to two terms. There are still those confused souls out there--we call them history-challenged--who think FDR led us OUT of the Great Depression instead of extending it a decade, so they are anticipating that we will need BHO for longer than 2 terms, since he'll probably do the same. This is the worst thinking ever. Ever. Ever. I'm sure he intends to be messiah for life. After he gets rid of that pesky 2nd amendment.

Was there an April baby?

Pregnancy Decision Health Center sends me a list of people to pray for. I've learned not to click, read, file. Best to pray right then while they (mother and babe) are on the screen. Last August I wrote this about my concerns:

"Often the request on the pregnancy list is about someone who is going to have an ultrasound. This often influences decisions. This month included situations like 4 children, single mom wants abortion; doesn't know who the father is; and victim of domestic violence. Occasionally, the woman is ill or has been raped or is actually a child herself, but that's rare. Decisions were made that resulted in a baby and now there's a problem. This is the one that really puzzles me, and shows some confusion about values.
    college couple (not married); 5 wks; both come from Christian homes; want abortion because they don't want their families to know they have been sexually active; refused ultrasound
It's like the guy who has an affair but doesn't use a condom because it's against his religion. Duh! If you think your parents don't want you having pre-marital sex, what will they say when they find out you aborted their grandchild?

In the 10 Commandments we are told to love God and our neighbor, but then instructed to HONOR our parents. That goes beyond love, and is a requirement even if we got parents who don't deserve any honor, who are mean, or stingy, or who will stop paying tuition. This is such an important commandment that it is the only one with a promise attached.

So this young couple are the ones I'll pray for on this list."

This is a parody--I hope

You just never know--the faux wackos are being out-wacko’d by the real wackos. I don’t know about you but drippy meat blood in a canvas bag has little appeal to me. And I'd hate to start buying bags for the kitty litter, book returns, garbage, shoes in the suitcase, etc.--do you think this is all a battle between the name brands and the unbrands? I prefer paper bags, but 25 years ago we were told to save the trees. Now what are we saving? China’s canvas bag crop?

Smells yummy


Many years ago we went out for dinner with Sam and Molly, Tom and Pat. New Year's Eve, I think. Molly and I went to the ladies' room. She told me something I've never forgotten. She was an RN and was told during her training that the soap dish was the germiest place in the hospital/home/office. I doubt that hospitals use soap dishes any more, but we do have them in our homes, and it does make sense--dirt, plus moisture, plus air. Here at the lake I have a cute little row boat shaped soap dish. However, I enjoy using a commerical pump soap container, too. I suspect the ones you fill from a container are probably also contaminated. My hairdresser, the fabulous Melissa, told me once not to add water to shampoo because bacteria would grow. Gosh, the world is full of germs, isn't.

Anyway, I love the fragrance of Softsoap Black raspberry and vanilla. Yes, this is an endorsement, although not paid. Bloggers need to watch out for that. Not sure which czar is coming after you, but you're going to be one of the non-rich who will be taxed or punished for product placement on your site if you don't tell your readers (Mommy bloggers, beware). Generally, I don't use anti-bacterial soap--just the suds and water and scrubbing.

Interesting article on hand sniffing monitor in hospitals to reduce nosocomial infections.

Today's new word--GONGO

It's been awhile since I found a new word interesting enough to write about. I'm currently reading The Professor and the Madman which is about the making of the Oxford English Dictionary, so words are more interesting again. Anyway, in Kerry Dumbaugh's very interesting lecture and films this week about the social and economic problems facing China, she mentioned GONGO. She briefly noted the role of non-governmental organizations in China, and then told us about the GONGO, "Chinese government organized nongovernmental organizations" which have been viewed by most China scholars and international agencies simply as extended organs of the government. And I immediately thought of ACORN, the association of community organizers for reform NOW which through the election of Barack Obama, have become an arm of the President, as he railroads through his reforms NOW with no one reading the legislation EVER or having any thought of unintended consequences. They continue to screw up the housing market with government grants and organizational pressure, and I'm sure that won't end.

Wednesday, July 01, 2009

So much for tea bags

On March 23 I wrote my representative, Mary Jo Kilroy, and sent her a tea bag (used):
    "The behavior last week of Congress, particularly your Democratic colleagues, was outrageous. I was never so embarrassed to be a voting American. That Congress would propose a special tax to punish people with whom they signed a contract is beyond belief and beyond the Constitution. I suggest you all start reading all documents that affect our future and our economy. There is going to be a voter revolt."
Hmm. She's so scared of the voters, she completely spinned it and promptly replied on July 1 (probably too busy reading that 1200 page cap and trade bill) that she appreciated me reaching out to her and that she shares my "outrage over irresponsible compensation practices for executives. . ." Huh? Did I say that?

She then started her own spin on executive pay--but I wasn‘t outraged about that, I was outraged about Congress' behavior in whipping up a frenzy over executive compensation. . . .
    the gap between what an executive earns versus his or her employees is out of control. . . Lavish executive pay reinforces the notion that executives and their boards of directors often act self-servingly and not in the interests of their workers and shareholders. Reforms are needed to encourage sound risk management, long-term growth and value creation - not only at individual firms, but for our financial system and the economy as a whole.

    This summer, Congress will begin efforts to reform executive compensation. As a member of the House Committee on Financial Services, I will work to bring compensation practices more tightly in line with the interests of shareholders and reinforce the stability of firms and the financial system.
Gee, it's no wonder that Obama has turned everything over to the Czars instead of our elected representatives. They can probably read!

Glenn Beck on our incompetent government

I won't imbed them all, but he is addressing California's budget, the cap and trade, ACORN, Al Franken the comedian is now a senator, etc. A number of clips at the RBO blog (tracks Obama's stupid stuff). We don't get Glenn up here. His new book on common sense is selling like hot cakes. See a bunch of them here, including the suppressed EPA report. An additional $3,000 per household per year? No, he's only going to tax the rich. Yeah.

Common Sense, by Glenn Beck

Saving Freedom, by Jim DeMint

Leading the way to. . . ?

President Obama’s EPA yesterday allowed California to impose the toughest emission standards on vehicles in the nation, which will form the basis of new nationwide rules.
    In a major reversal of Bush administration policy, the Environmental Protection Agency's ruling was hailed by California politicians and national environmental groups as a breakthrough in curbing carbon dioxide - a leading contributor to global warming.

    Tuesday's waiver highlights the state's decades-long tradition of environmental leadership, said Roland Hwang, transportation program director for the Natural Resources Defense Council. SFGate via Heritage.org
Oh goody. More wonderful economic news. We get to be like California. Let's see. Is it 30 days before it's bankrupt, or has that already happened?

EPA's approved transportation--a Bamabike

New colors on our street

Not much could be done about the ugly 80s wood panel siding that had enveloped this late 19th century cottage. So the new owners gave her a new, pretty pinafore. I think this is the happiest red house paint I've ever seen. And the new landlord is lucky too--he found a renter for the entire summer, and having been there, let me tell you, that sure saves wear and tear on your newly decorated home! It's a little hard to tell after multiple remodelings, but at some time this home probably had an open porch on both levels. But before that, it might have been a "wooden tent," with walls and roof erected over what began as a platform for a summer tent. Oak is in the "old" part of town, or the original camp ground. Many cottage owners filled the porches in years ago to use as bedrooms or living space. In the 19th c. the lake air was the only air conditioning around here. But storms make it tough to maintain, and this cottage is just half a block from the lake.



Next door is a "camp cottage" and these owners have spruced up the lower porch with purple and lavender and some brightly painted adirondock chairs. The rest of the cottage is gray. The lower porch still has screens and the sleeping porch above it is now enclosed.

Further down the street on the lakefront, our neighbors have donated hours of time, labor and bulbs to give all of us a beautiful flower garden. Their payment must be the pleasure of others. These are Asian lilies, I think, but are tastefully arranged with many other types and sizes of blooms.