Wednesday, December 15, 2010
Donald Hall, poet laureate of the U.S. 2006
And flipping through the notebook I see I recorded a poem that really resonated with me, published in the Atlantic, April 2000, by Donald Hall. This was 5 years before he was selected as Poet Laureate for 2006--I could spot a winner.
"You think that their
dying is the worst
thing that could happen.
Then they stay dead."
His wife, Jane Kenyon, also a poet, had died of leukemia, and this was within a series called Distressed Haiku.
To hear Hall read his own works.
Tuesday, December 14, 2010
Tip for the holiday parties
Addressing Christmas Cards 1974
At least I think that's what I was doing--red envelopes Look at that lime green and yellow vinyl wall paper! I think 1974 was the year because that's when I got the "serf" haircut. I can spot at least 3 things posted next to my desk from my friend Lynne. Her mother was an artist and used to whip out adorable cards. See the cabinet and shelves behind me? Originally, that unpainted pine unit held children's toys; then all my office stuff; now it's in the basement holding light bulbs, vacuum cleaner bags, tools, nails, screws, and general junk. The desk I'm still using--that might have been the reason for the photo (a polaroid) to show off the desk. Looks like the desk lamp was from the children's nursery. The shelves above my head are still with us somewhere in the basement.
About 365 Less Things--a blog for decluttering
We declutter about every 4 years. This method wouldn't work for me (I already have 12 blogs, so I don't need another one), but I think she has interesting ideas. I found her looking for the value of a small toy plastic toaster with cardboard toast, which I unwrapped while going through a box in the basement, which contained my old toys. Also found a tiny doll house 5" x 7.5".
About 365 Less Things
My husband the architect thinks you design the storage first, then declutter. No, you always use the storage you have. Better to purge first.
Marriage and income gap inseparably linked--Joseph Perkins
I'm not familiar with the work of Joseph Perkins (hated by Democrats for leaving their plantation), a black columnist for the San Diego Union-Tribune (at that time). I don't think any person who's seen the research doubts the relationship between wealth and marriage, or crime and a father in the home. Perkins points to a "new study by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities and the Economic Policy Institute which said that "the gap between rich and poor was significantly greater in the late 1990s than during the 1980s." Don't they always say that with a moving clock? At that time our country was in the longest period of economic expansion with the economy generating more than 20 million new jobs and $2 trillion in additional economic output since WWII, but the "rich have gotten richer, while the poor have remained in place."
Perkins says it doesn't have to do with tax policy or Republicans or spending on anti-poverty programs. "The reality is that the single biggest determinant of a family's upward or downward mobility is whether the family is headed by a married couple. . . Only one out of 20 married couple families are poor. He goes on to point out that single parent families have grown during the past three decades (1970s through 1990s).
- The problem of the poor is not the availability of jobs, for the economy has generated so many new jobs during the past decade that anyone who can't find a job just doesn't want to work. And the problem isn't taxes because most poor folks don't pay taxes, and many actually receive checks from the government in the form of the earned income-tax credit.
No, to close the income distribution gap, the next president will have to have the courage to say that the path to upward mobility for the nation's least-well-off begins at the marriage altar."
Perkins apparently left his post in 2005, I found him as a columnist more recently at Examiner.com, but his e-mail bounced.
Monday, December 13, 2010
Liberals Leave The Reservation
The blame for this state of affairs will be on the left. Tax rates will go up on all Americans on Jan. 1, hitting a country beset with 10 percent unemployment and a stagnant economy. It’s baffling that, two decades after the fall of the Berlin Wall, the left has held fast to its belief that penalizing success will somehow incentivize hard work and produce wealth."
Personally, I think Obama is chuckling and rubbing his hands with glee. His far left base is too dumb to even understand what he did. And so are the Republicans. He's made the Republicans stumble and look silly on their campaign promises before they even get to take over.
Morning Bell: Liberals Leave The Reservation | The Foundry: Conservative Policy News.
Monday Memories--a visit from Lynne and Genie
Friends from Illinois came to visit on Labor Day Week-end 1972 and "Aunty Lynne" brought two handmade Raggedy Ann and Andy dolls (which I still have) for our children. We had a dinner party, according to the newspaper article, attended the Upper Arlington Art Show, an ice cream social, a band concert and the fireworks at Northam Park. Our friends had also visited in May that year and we toured German Village where we ate dinner at Schmidts, attended a Couples Circle group of First Community where we heard a presentation by the church choir director, and attended church on Sunday at First Community Church.
These little bits of history all arrived in the mail this afternoon. I think I have copies somewhere, but these are really good memories. I'm glad Lynne saved them.
Mark Madoff’--was he as dumb as a rock or in on the crime?
Mark Madoff’s Suicide | Sense on Cents
If it hurts to fail, just keep doing the same thing until it feels good
"In the past seven years, the system has absorbed shocks: recession, corporate scandals, terror attacks, global war; yet the genius of our system is that it can absorb such shocks and emerge even stronger," he said. "In a dynamic market economy, our economy will prosper and it will continue to be the marvel of the world." [He was wrong, but isn't it refreshing to see the words of a President who believes in us.]
If anything we went out and made purchases in 2008 we might have made in 2009 or 2010, making Obama's recession even worse, just like the cash for clunkers, or cash for drywall did in 2009.
By February 2008 people were starting to be cautious. So then Obama decided that the Bush stimulus wasn't big enough and he wanted even more. Was going to be for infrastructure, he said. Here a sidewalk (in Upper Arlington), there a bridge (to no where). Now that plan has really been a disaster and he makes Bush look like a piker, because very little even got to the hands of the American private sector--most went to save the unions and create more government jobs. Now he wants still another stimulus, aka extension of unemployment benefits another year, even though this will be the third beyond the usual 26 weeks people used to get and the others haven't stimulated the economy either. So how many stimuli do the economists want to try before they admit defeat?
Bush stimulus signed
The Progress Report: Obama's Stimulus Package
Sunday, December 12, 2010
Charlie Gilmour, son of Pink Floyd guitarist Dave Gilmour, arrested in London student protests
Charlie Gilmour, son of Pink Floyd guitarist Dave Gilmour, arrested in London student protests
Company Waivers to Affordable Care Act
Company Waivers to Affordable Care Act
If it truly is "affordable care" and what we had wasn't, why the need for waivers?
Update: "more waivers to one provision of the new federal health reform law, doubling the number in just the last three weeks to a new total of 222. One of the more recognizable business names included on the newly-expanded list of waivers issued by the feds is that of Waffle House, which received a waiver on November 23 for health coverage that covers 3,947 enrollees. Another familiar name was that of Universal Orlando, which runs a variety of very popular resorts in the Orlando, Florida area. Universal was given a waiver for plans that cover 668 workers."
Conservatives for Patients' Rights
Thinking about snowy Minnesota
Swedish security police: Violence was 'an act of terrorism' - CNN.com
Swedish security police: Violence was 'an act of terrorism' - CNN.com
Anna Ardin, Julian Assange Rape Accuser, May Have Ceased Pursuing Claims
Saturday, December 11, 2010
Jon Stewart agrees with Glenn Beck--finally
Maybe it's someone's birth certificate?
The Pigford President: Obama Signs Black Farmers Settlement
And the Commander in Thief said, these billions (reparations under any other name . . . ) are "the principles of fairness and equality and opportunity."
This was all brought up by then-Senator Obama in 2007, who in a hanging chad moment, decided surely 80,000 black farmers must have missed the deadline for filing, and in probably the only significant act of his senate years, decided to reopen the case.
» The Pigford President: Obama Signs Black Farmers Settlement - Big Government
Pigford: Racism Against Black Farmers or Government Fraud? | The Stir
Weigel : A Black Farmer Against Pigford
CRS: The Pigford Case
Me & Mrs. Sherrod — And The $1.25 Billion Pigford II Black Farmers’ Settlement - Big Journalism
Faux finishes--are they gone yet?
The walls used to be the color of the blue carpeting, with a comb glaze.
According to the WSJ, the new color for 2011 is sort of a hot pink; the color for 2010 was turquoise. Not sure what khaki and peanut are, but that and this very pale gold will be with us for awhile.
Democrats help Chinese firm chase stimulus dollars
- "Top Democratic fundraisers and lobbyists with links to the White House are behind a proposed wind farm in Texas that stands to get $450 million in stimulus money, even though a Chinese company would operate the farm and its turbines would be built in China.
The farm’s backers also have close ties with Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., who, at the height of his hard-fought re-election bid this fall, helped blunt congressional criticism over stimulus dollars possibly going to create jobs in China by endorsing a proposal by the Chinese company to build a factory in his home state. Although his campaign received thousands of dollars in donations from the wind farm’s backers and Reid stood on stage with them at a campaign event they hosted, his office declined to answer any questions about the wind farm’s organizers or their plans for Nevada."
The Chinese still get to use coal and petroleum, while these same Democrats stop our energy souces in the Gulf, California, Texas, the Appalachian states like southern Ohio, our life blood, and Alaska. What a piece of work!
Dems help Chinese firm chase stimulus - Business - Going Green - msnbc.com



