Friday, July 17, 2015

Lakeside’s Herb Class (Wednesday 8:30, Train station)

This week's herb group was on cinnamon. Large crowd probably because the weather eliminates anything else, and everyone knows what it is. We learned all about history and countries of origin, and difference with cassia. Donna Shoemaker submitted the recipe for Cincinnati's famous Skyline Chili which contains cinnamon. We all got a sample. It was delicious. I intend to try it. You can use it over spaghetti; or add red beans, or put it on a hot dog.

We were all big girls (plus 2 men and a boy) with probably combined 900 years in the kitchen, so no amounts were given in the recipe. Ground beef & pork, warm water, canned tomato sauce, tomato paste with water, dried yeast, fresh cinnamon, salt, fresh diced onions, fresh garlic, dash of paprika. Cook all together slowly, low heat 1-2 hours stove top or low in crock pot. If you need amounts, here’s a recipe.

On another delicious topic:

"Trail mix" sounds so healthy. I think it's from that eco-friendly 70s era. But today it means you're not burning up calories hiking in the woods, looking for grubs and berries, but sitting on the couch munching an addictive sweet/salty mix while watching unreality shows.

Democrats obsessed with race

Democrats are obsessed with Obama's race. I think it's left over from the days of Jim Crow and fighting lynch laws the Republicans proposed in Congress to protect blacks. If Obama makes a bad deal with our enemy Iran, then it's his race we don't like, not his treaty. If he destroys our health insurance system, then we are racist to complain when the system crashes, our medical records are vulnerable and rates go up. If he attacks Catholic nuns who are taking care of the elderly poor, then we must be paranoid birthers to not see the good intentions behind his destruction of our First Amendment rights.

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Christians need to be examining who buys the fetal tissue

98.9 FM The Answer's photo.

Christians, politicians and many secular pro-aborts were justly horrified by the recent video of a PP CEO discussing selling body parts of aborted babies. Well, are we showing equal horror at the research components of drug and medical companies (aka capitalists) that are buying them from supplier StemExpress? Using fetal tissue and embryos was never illegal, even during the Bush years, and Obama opened the Federal coffers to do so in 2009. That said, all major break throughs are using adult stem cells, not fetal.

http://www.christianpost.com/news/planned-parenthood-director-accused-of-selling-baby-body-parts-names-stemexpress-company-that-offers-fetal-liver-cells-for-24k-in-product-catalog-141600/

Thursday, July 16, 2015

What is so unreasonable about negotiating for four Americans? He did it for Bergdahl and released five Taliban.

98.9 FM The Answer's photo.

http://dailysignal.com/2015/07/16/obamas-annoyance-shows-major-garrett-asked-the-right-questions/

http://www.frantzradio.com/2015/07/13/obamas-iran-negotiation-worse-than-5-taliban-for-bowe-bergdahl/

Why can’t Obama take the tough questions? Bush did.

Buck Sexton writes:  “President Obama's response to Major Garrett today was snide, arrogant, and completely unbecoming of the Office of the President.

You can't ask this President a real question without being scolded.

You can't interrupt the administration's victory dance on this calamitous Iran deal without being punished.

...

It's preposterous to read the commentary from many on this who say the question was "disrespectful to Obama."

First of all, the question was completely legitimate. Not everything is about how awesome Obama needs to look all the time.

But more importantly- with 5 seconds of searching, you can find the kind of questions the press used to ask of President Bush, like this undermining, loaded question tossed at him back in 2006 that accuses him of being a liar and a warmonger:

"QUESTION [Helen Thomas]: I'd like to ask you, Mr. President -- your decision to invade Iraq has caused the deaths of thousands of Americans and Iraqis, wounds of Americans and Iraqis for a lifetime.

Every reason given, publicly at least, has turned out not to be true. My question is: Why did you really want to go to war? From the moment you stepped into the White House, your Cabinet officers, former Cabinet officers, intelligence people and so forth -- but what's your real reason? You have said it wasn't oil, the quest for oil. It hasn't been Israel or anything else. What was it?"

That's what disrespect looks like. “

http://www.cnn.com/2006/POLITICS/03/21/bush.transcript/

Garden and storage sheds of Lakeside, pt. 5

The graceful, classic gable

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I think the door is on the other side, and molding has been added to dress up the window.

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I have my suspicions that this might be a reuse of a privy.

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It’s difficult to see the colors, but this is behind the classic 19th c. cottage at 4th and Sycamore.  Nice details added.

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Handsome and roomy dressed with a nice cupola. Cottage has a gambrel roof with lovely porch.

Lakeside 2010 452

This is next to the Plymouth House as seen from parking lot.

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Some garages become sheds, but I think this is a shed made in a garage design.  It has a foundation and sits above ground.

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Somewhere there must be a pink cottage I can’t see. Very large door.

Wednesday, July 15, 2015

Garden and storage sheds of Lakeside, pt. 4

Gambrel, or barn roof, or Dutch Colonial

You’ll see a lot of gambrel roof styles because it offers the most storage space in the attic when compared to a gable or saltbox style shed roof and at Lakeside every little space counts.

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The brick drive way and flower pots dress up this gambrel shed.

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This one has extensions.

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Healthy ferns add a nice touch and color match.

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This one probably has some loft storage.

Obama and Kerry are laughing too

Greta Van Susteren's photo.

Garden and storage sheds of Lakeside, pt. 3

Basic.  What you see is what you get sheds.

This little shed is made of metal with corrugated roof and a few peek holes for windows. It’s behind Jane and Don Leach’s cottage on Lynn, but based on the property line of hostas, probably belongs to the next cottage.

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This one is concrete block, painted gray to match the cottage which is probably early 20th century farm house style.  Also on Lynn.

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Here are two off the lot sheds, decorated to match their cottage, simple and inexpensive, but they get the job done.  The one on the left is a gambrel roof (also called barn roof), or Dutch Colonial, which is really the most authentic style since it is from the 1600s.  The Victorian style which many covet for cottage architecture came much later. The owners have dressed it up with shutters and a window box.  The one on the right is a simple gable, and is nice for areas that may get a lot of snow or rain for run off. The double doors really help for limited storage.

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These two snugged together have basic shed roofs, but I suspect the one of the right may be an old garage from the old days—there’s just something about those doors.  The other is an off the lot style, and it’s been painted to match the house. The grass was wet when I took the photo, so I didn’t go closer.

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This is on South Oak and is so hidden in trees and weeds that I can’t tell if it’s being used for storage.  If it is, no one has been visiting for awhile.  But it’s possible there is an entrance I can’t see from the street. It’s large enough to have been a garage.

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Something about this one says chicken coop to me.  Possibly it was moved to this spot from another location. It seems to be much older than the cottage. But it is also possible this was a children’s play house at one time.

Lakeside 2010 454

Garden and Storage sheds of Lakeside, pt. 2

Artsy and tasteful

You can’t get much more artsy than this charmer—a standard, off the lot, barn shape with a variety of shingles and shapes to create a lake scene lighthouse with a rising (or setting) sun.

Lakeside 2010 304

And who couldn’t love this little sweetie behind a Second St.cottage. I believe the door was salvaged from the house when an upper deck was made.  In the 1800s, many cottages had a “chapel” theme to reflect the spiritual closeness to nature that church camps and chautauquas offered. This allows some protection for bikes and children’s toys as well as a shed for tools.

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This one is also off the lot common, but has been dressed up with shingles to match the house.  It faces Second St. because the house is on the corner. Notice the window box an the convenient wide doors.

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This storage shed has small chapel windows to match the 19th century cottage.

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Another angle for this little chapel/shed. Nicely shaped doors wide enough for easy access.

Lakeside 2010 451

I was so sure this lovely shed was a guest house, but a neighbor told me it has always been a shed.  It certainly is cute. It is so well hidden, you’d have to be looking for it to see it.  Next to the parking lot on Third St.

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This shed was part of a wonderful renovation of a very old nondescript cottage for Bob and Janet Heishman of Oak Park, IL in the 1990s (since sold).  The shed was really ugly and a different material than the house, but was redesigned to look really nice and has a side extension .  A deck connects it to the house.

Lakeside 2010 434

This one is so hidden in the back yard, I suspect it might have been a “guest” house in a less fussy time, but is now used for storage.  It has a gable roof, then a smaller gable perpendicular over the door for a covered entry, an flower box at the window. Windows in sheds are necessary so you can see the bugs, bats and spiders as you enter to look for tools or bikes.

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I can see four, possible five sheds in this photo, however, it’s the one with its own lean-to or car port I am focusing on. Notice the washtub on the side.  That’s truly a sign from the early 20th century.  And I love the reserved parking sign.

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Hip roofs are very popular in Lakeside, with a number of “Ross Hips” built in the early 20th century near Perry Park as rentals. This shed has a hip roof and very attractive, stylized doors.

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We seem to be a high tide on this drift

James Otto's photo.

Honor the children

In honor and memory of the babies who die daily at the hands of Planned Parenthood, particularly those whose little body parts were sold, please volunteer or make a donation at your local pregnancy center which saves the lives of the unborn, and assists pregnant women. In Columbus that is Pregnancy Decision Health Center, but you probably have some in your city.

http://www.pdhc.org/locations/

Tuesday, July 14, 2015

Salad recipe

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http://simplyhealthyhome.com/bacon-tomato-cucumber-salad/

Planned Parenthood selling body parts

It's such a disgusting business that I supposed we shouldn't be shocked. On the tape, Planned Parenthood's senior director of medical services, Dr. Deborah Nucatola, casually sips her Merlot and discusses the sale of post-abortion infant body parts. And to think there are Christians who support this slaughter through “charitable donation” and electing Democrats.

http://www.caintv.com/planned-parenthood-director-ca

Tom Cotton on the bad Iran deal

"This proposed deal is a terrible, dangerous mistake that's going to pave the path for Iran to get a nuclear weapon while also giving them tens of billions of dollars of sanctions relief, even lifting the arms embargo at a time when they're destabilizing the entire middle east," Sen. Tom Cotton (R-AK) said in an appearance on MSNBC's "Morning Joe." "The American people will repudiate this deal and I believe Congress will kill the deal."

Cotton, an Iraq War veteran and the youngest member of the Senate, has been the most vocal opponent of a nuclear deal with Iran. He sent an open letter to Iran's leaders in early March that warned Congress did not intend to honor any potential deal. Forty-seven of Cotton's fellow Republican senators signed the open letter.”

TPM

Robert Putnam speaks at Lakeside

Robert D. Putnam was our program at Lakeside last night--he’s an entertaining, engaging speaker, about my age, married 55 years, a Harvard graduate and college professor.  Even with charts and graphs that show the widening income and behavior gap between upper class (which is growing) and lower class (also growing) and middle class (shrinking) he can hold a large audience‘s attention. He clearly laid out the reasons (particularly for near-by Port Clinton, Ohio, his home town), but his solutions are what one would expect from an academic--more money for education. Twenty years ago his “Bowling alone” book showed how Americans were not pulling together in the communities, clubs, churches and fraternal societies working for the larger good as they had been in the first half of the 20th century.  And that was before the me-phone.

I was shocked to learn that in 1990 Port Clinton’s out of wedlock birth rate was 9% (below the national average) and today just 25 years later is about 40% just a little less than Columbus and above Ohio’s rate. This is not Chicago or Cleveland, but little Port Clinton (ca. 6,000 population, 93% white).  So guess which children are doing better in all measures? Which children are attending church and leaving Port Clinton to go to college?  Children living with married parents who provide economically, spiritually, and socially for them.

And yet he wants education and government to solve this. My belief is that government has contributed to the problem with 128 transfer programs taking money from the middle class to give to the poor that would make a woman think twice or thrice before marrying a guy who cares more about cars and sports than his children, causing her to lose health and housing benefits. Marriage and responsibility help young men become grown ups; the government helps them remain adolescents until they can collect Medicare.

He noted that at the turn of the 20th century Americans decided tax supported high school was important and it made a huge difference in the lives of the poor.  But for some reason I think he’s believing compulsory, government pre-schools and free college will do the same.  Well, not without marriage, and not without jobs—but it will be more jobs for academics and government bureaucracies.

http://robertdputnam.com/about-our-kids/ 

http://robertdputnam.com/about-our-kids/press-release/

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/03/08/books/review/our-kids-by-robert-d-putnam.html?_r=0

Dylann Roof wasn’t stopped by FBI, but the gun controls were there

“President Obama pushed Americans to call for stricter gun controls in the wake of the June 17 Charleston church massacre, complaining that the admitted killer, Dylann Roof, “had no trouble getting his hands on a gun.”

What the President likely didn’t know when he made those comments is this:  It wasn’t a lack of gun controls, but a bureaucratic failure, that led to Roof obtaining the gun legally, due, it turns out, on a senior FBI document examiner’s unfamiliarity with South Carolina geography.” Christian Science Monitor

However, does anyone believe he wouldn’t have found a way with an illegal gun?

Monday, July 13, 2015

What does Bernie really offer?

Bernie Sander's side has nothing of substance; he trots out socialism which is a total failure (except in all white countries), or which has resulted in the murder of millions by their own governments. So his party (which didn't support Lincoln) has to attack our past. My family has been in the U.S. since colonial times, and no one ever owned a slave. However, free blacks in the South and a few in the North did. So sort that one out, Bernie.

There are millions in slavery today, Columbus Dispatch just reported on some at chicken farms in Ohio, much of it still in Africa, much of it still in Muslim countries just as in the 17th and 18th century. Bernie's team-Democrat is supporting/advocating the deaths of the descendants of those who survived those terrible times. They are destroying their families with government transfers, tying them to the party plantation with "social justice" (just-us) programs.

Bernie's team even in my life time sent people to Congress who had been in the KKK, and who supported Jim Crow and voted against Republican civil rights efforts and anti-lynching laws. As recently as 2010, the Senate president pro tempore was former Exalted Cyclops Robert Byrd, D-W.V. If the South can't be trusted with a symbol, why trust the Democrats who are much, much closer to the problem--like the more recent 20th century? Living Democrats in glass houses had better stop lobbing rocks at dead Confederates. http://www.yourhoustonnews.com/courier/opinion/mona-charen-whitewashing-the-democratic-party-s-history/article_ae2148b7-7ce2-5c3b-abc0-0a45a57b13d7.html

U.S. Talibanners try to destroy Confederate history and memory

Wording on the Confederate Soldiers and Sailors Monument at Gettysburg (dedicated 1965). "A memorial to soldiers and sailors of the Confederacy--South Carolina, Florida, Georgia, Texas, Arkansas, North Carolina, Maryland, Missouri, Tennessee, Virginia, Louisiana, Alabama, Mississippi. Heroic defenders of their country. Their fame shall be an echo and a light unto eternity."

That is until the Democrats try to reinstate the bitterness of the post-war reconstruction era and kill their memories again.

http://www.veteranstoday.com/2011/04/14/confederate-soldiers-are-american-veterans-by-act-of-congress/

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Daughters of the Confederacy put this statue on Johnson’s Island prisoner of war cemetery.  Let’s hope the Talibanners don’t come after it.

Bob Swartwout's photo.

China hacked the OPM

Eric Odom's photo.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/morning-mix/wp/2014/07/09/report-chinese-hacked-into-the-federal-governments-personnel-office

http://computer.financialexpress.com/news/opm-hack-about-22-million-or-7-of-us-population-data-stolen/12802/

http://money.cnn.com/2015/07/10/technology/opm-hack-fingerprints/index.html