Monday, May 31

Loyalty Is Helping your Homeless Disabled Buddy

move his things from storage locker to nicer storage locker with a post-Covid-year beatdown, pre-menopausal (?) 52-year-old body.  Pay someone to help with this, I told him. He did a lot himself, but it's the last day of the month, and the dregs remain...

Imma get him to drop me on the river if things get heated, though. So there's that. You can paddle longer with a partner to pick you up at the end, without having to drive over and drop a car first.

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ADDED:  He's not really homeless. He's got that teardrop camper, paid off now too, not even the bank's. Best views in the parks and -grounds.  Everything's essential when you live like that, and you live with the weather more fully too.  Likely, it is taking years off his life, but they started moving the "qualifying" elderly (with money) into his 55+ Disabled federal housing unit during the pandemic lockdown years, and so many new men in the old place clashed.  He really didn't get a fair shake, but in the end, it was a blessing to be away from hateful neighbors.  Voting with your feet, and wheels and all...

Keep all the vulnerable families in your prayers this Memorial Day, especially if you are isolated and can't see them anymore, by circumstance or choice.

Be safe, and keep it sane on the roadways out there, if you're a party person, eh? No flinging bottles already... Safe Sane Sober. #MemorialDay21

Lynx Nation Already Loves Layshia Clarendon

 Because Everybody Loves a Winner, especially staring down a potential 0-5!  Good work, then, ladies and men!  (The contrast with Elliot Page noted.) =============

Layshia Clarendon nearly hit a buzzer-beating 3-pointer to win at the end of regulation, but, after it being ruled a make on the floor, replay revealed that they didn’t get it off in time and the Minnesota Lynx and Connecticut Sun went to overtime on Sunday night at Target Center in Minneapolis.

The deflating moment didn’t stop Clarendon from being the hero on the same day they were signed by the Lynx, just 10 days after they were waived by the New York Liberty, a team they scored 11.5 points per game for in 2020.

With 1:06 to play in overtime, Clarendon swished a perfect three from the right wing to put Minnesota up 75-72 and the Lynx went on to win 79-74 after four points from Sylvia Fowles (24 points, nine rebounds, four assists, three blocks) made it 79-72.

“K Mac (Kayla McBride) just put (the pass) right on the money and I was wide open and I knew I just had to let it fly,” Clarendon said. “I think part of me was like ‘yeah they took my game-winner away’ and it felt pretty good.”

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In Other Worlds: Provoke, Escalate, Clash, Complain... Sportsmen not.

BOSTON (CBS) – Players from both the Celtics and Nets condemned a fan who is now facing charges and a liftetime ban from TD Garden after throwing a water bottle at Brooklyn guard Kyrie Irving. It happened moments after the game after Irving seemingly stomped on the Celtics leprechaun logo at center court and grinded his sneaker on it.

Better to leave the game on the court, and not start something for others to finish. Sore losers are no fun for those in their immediate surroundings, Kyrie. What do you think will happen after you fly out? Think, man. Why provoke? And who pays, ultimately, when you do? 

Fox News Flash top headlines for May 31

What We Can Learn From Tulsa, 100 Years Past

 "Don't take the law into your own hands. You take 'em to court!"

Those words meant nothing in Oklahoma 100 years ago.  After a black man was arrested, police barricaded the upper courthouse floors where he was being charged, to protect him from a gathering who apparently wanted to lynch him.  A group of armed black citizens arrived at the courthouse, hoping to prevent a lynching.  Shots were fired... initially, two black people and 10 white people lay dead.

A white mob was enraged, and burned the black part of town to the ground -- thousands of acres of property, hundreds of businesses and homes, untold lives lost -- into the hundreds.  The black man who had been initially charged in court was later released and fled the area. Nobody -- black or white -- really believed in courthouse justice back then, it seems.  Guns and mobs held power.

Wiki:  The 1921 Tulsa massacre began during the Memorial Day weekend after 19-year-old Dick Rowland, a Black shoeshiner, was accused of assaulting Sarah Page, the 17-year-old White elevator operator of the nearby Drexel Building. He was taken into custody. After the arrest, rumors spread through the city that Rowland was to be lynched. Upon hearing reports that a mob of hundreds of White men had gathered around the jail where Rowland was being kept, a group of 75 Black men, some of whom were armed, arrived at the jail in order to ensure that Rowland would not be lynched. The sheriff persuaded the group to leave the jail, assuring them that he had the situation under control. As the group was leaving the premises, complying with the sheriff's request, a member of the mob of White men allegedly attempted to disarm one of the Black men.[citation needed] A shot was fired, and then, according to the reports of the sheriff, "all hell broke loose." At the end of the firefight, 12 people were killed: 10 White and 2 Black. As news of these deaths spread throughout the city, mob violence exploded.

One hundred years have passed, have we learned patience in trusting the Bill of Rights and U.S. Constitution?  Have we become educated enough to believe in reason and logic leading to the truth, over force and might? (ie/  'What I say is, is..." depending on the power, money and dominance of the "I"?)  What if others refuse to go along with the self-proclaimed superiority of the self-annointed powerful, and deny them the authority and legitimacy of such dominance and force?  Will it be up to "the guns" to decide?  How do they respond to unarmed innocents and vulnerable people?  God help us-- by force?

You hate to see that.  The system manipulated, the damages left by legacies in leadership roles, even temporarily -- the aughts* have taught a hard history lesson about the lasting damage a few short years of power can do, worldwide even, in reshaping populations on the globe (ie/ our current refugee-on-the-run crisis, with no end in sight, much of it due to the lasting legacy damage of the Bush-Cheney worldwide-crusade "intervention" years, where our guns and soldiers presented under cover as missionaries, building schools for girls, distributing candy and pencils to homeless girls and boys, promising that American democracy could be imported, because the Bush/Cheney supporters really wanted to imagine it that way... that guns and soldiers could gift these trinkets of democracy from the American taxpayer.

The cleanup is never so easy as the initial destruction, to the environment especially... 

People can repopulate and reach maturity so much easier than trees, say..  Who speaks for the trees?  In the next wars, the selling won't be so easy owing to the devotions of these young naturalists being raised to respect the life of the environment around them, and even... "over there".  If we would allow the killings of Somme again without blinking an eye at the human costs, I would bet my bottom dollar the children of today will not allow the landscape to be scarred -- all the living environment! -- even if they accept the costs of human life as merely the price of doing business in the 21st Century.)

The clock is running on the Joe Biden project, pre-midterms.  The push to implement legal progressive policies. (I think the courts will indeed strike the Black-preference financial programs that seemingly favor POC applicants -- peoples of color -- not only because such racial preferences are unConstitutional but because they are not politically palatable to the majority.  The old-guard lawyers and professors have learned to keep quiet about this, but I don't believe our millennial citizens, legal newcomers, workers, and other "white" people who are excluded from participation...)

Guns are out there, we all know that.  Carjackings this past winter were up, everywhere in the Midwest it seems.  And you hate to see that, because like with the street shootings, it's the vulnerables who most pay...

America, seemingly, its becoming more lawless, with more grievants encouraged that they will find justice in the streets, where it is faster and more accessible.  The courthouses have for years put up barriers to exclude, and even where they try to reach society's vulnerables to give them a fair hearing inside, unelected justice leaders too often usurp these roles too -- deciding who qualifies for assistance services to get in the door, for example, is often left to lower-educated, clerk-level hires.

What happened 100 years in Tulsa, Okla. is tragic.  Many people have the luxury in America now to live their lives looking behind.  That's costly.

The future is coming straight at us now.  Armed. And you can't tell friend from enemy on sight -- you are sorely mistaken if you think in today's America you can tell by wealth, skin color, legacy name, or even place/occupation of employment who will be America's protector and who will further the destruction.  (Look at what that Bush boy did in just eight years before Texas swallowed him back up...)

We spend a day today -- Memorial Day -- looking behind, relaxing, recounting, and re-upping our spirits to get out there again Tuesday morning in America and do our best to defend what is best about our country.  All of us.  In whatever way we have been called -- as mothers (the hand that rocks the cradle rules the nation -- don't outsource the cradle-rocking, mamas. Your children really do need your work to be valued as number one, even if society given you no further rewards beyond what you essentially nurture from seed.  Big job unto itself-- there's a reason why I listed you as the nation's number one workers:  invest your time and talents in your children; they deserve your full attention, and society needs you to get that job done, first and foremost...); the builders, who grow our homes and roads and allow the rest of us to advance, newcomers and legacies alike;  the daily workers, whose routines and reliable service keeps the rest of society alive, essentially -- like the slaves on plantations past, we need to acknowledge that even in non-pandemic, shelter-in-place times that without their services -- every damn day, that's what "essential" in essential services means -- legacy society cannot survive;  the growers, the ones who plant the seeds, the ideas, the investments, the fresh things that grow our economy.

Whether you are a mother, a builder, a worker or a grower, take some time this Memorial Day in America to appreciate the past.  The unseen grandmothers who might be excluded from the gatherings, but who are so often the unappreciated matriarchs of extended families today;  the men who left Earth much too early whose bodies tolled from working to provide for those generations alive today that the mothers helped nurture and keep alive; the single men and women who contributed their time and talents to what so many of us benefit from in this country today:  health, education, the caregiving that keeps the grandmothers alive in the nursing homes.

When we read the stories history leaves us, we need to ask how reliable the narrator is -- who is she?  Is she writing from experience, or wistfulness?  Can she be trusted to tell the truth, or has the work been revised to protect the innocent and credit those whom the author most wishes to "pump" at the moment?

The more we read, the more we can evaluate our writers this way.

The more we live, the more we can use critical facilities to detect the whiff of manure, and question ourselves what the agenda is of the author collecting the grievances and putting them down for posterity.  Too often, it's for money alone.  That too -- those costly revisions -- take from the story.

Happy Memorial Day, 2021.

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* We "aughta" not have listened to warmongers Cheney and lil Bush who led us into some of the worst foreign-policy mistakes in American history.  The media who manipulated us into those wars is slowly, ever so gently, fading from the newspages;  the professors, ministers and those in semi-leadership roles are retiring, passing on their pulpits to their own sons and daughters, who will be challenged to reconcile the history their fathers left them to the truths uncovered by the next generations of comers...

I don't think -- as in the case of Tulsa -- that it will take a century to uncover the truths about America in the Bush years, which led to the ongoing Obama wars and overthrows of foreign governments; the election of New York businessman Donald J. Trump (the locals could not corral -- or convict -- him there, and the same media took to covering his antics with glee as he captured the nation's heart); and the current administration leadership of President Biden, so far who has not activated American troops to "defend" America's national security interests abroad, and who is being pressured to secure the national borders, if only to track and test, for pandemic purposes, who is entering our country today and might need assistance.

Now that's a mouthful, but heaven knows, we've got an important year in the history books coming up.

Much like Reconstuction, will the federal programs being pushed immediatly post-national crisis hold?  Will citizens rebel and push back, making the country more unequal, in fact, than ever?  As prices rise, and housing becomes scarcer and scarcer, how will the upper classes respond as their isolated places are more and more breached in public?  By locking down, ordering in, and staying put?  For how long?

Beyond my paygrade, as they say, but I'll plan to do more reflecting in the kayak, on the water.  Breathe in, breathe out.  Take only what you need, and don't leave your trash behind for others to clean up.  God knows, if we all took responsibility for ourselves and our own minors and elders and vulnerables, the country as a whole might breathe a sigh of relief today too.


Sunday, May 30

Devo-lution? Misogyny? Progress?

 Ellen page naked pussy - Very hot photos website. Comments: 2Actor Elliot Page shows off six pack for the first time after surgery,  Entertainment News & Top Stories - The Straits Times"

He was more beautiful before... 

"I just hope you understand:  Sometimes the clothes do not make the man." ~George Michael, Listen Without Prejudice (1990).

Hey, Where Did WeGo -- DaysWhenTheRainsCame?

7 waterfalls to chase in Allegheny County, and one just outside of it |  Features | Pittsburgh | Pittsburgh City Paper

Down in the hollow
Playin' a new game...
Laughin' and a-runnin', hey, hey
Skippin' and a-jumpin'
In the misty morning fog with
Our, our hearts a-thumping and you
My brown-eyed girl
And you, my brown-eyed girl
And whatever happened
to staying so slow?
Going down the old mine with a... transistor radio
Standing in the sunlight laughing
Hiding 'hind a rainbow's wall
Slipping and sliding
All along the waterfall with you
My brown-eyed girl
You, my brown-eyed girl.
Do you remember when we used to sing?
Sha-la-la, la-la, la-la, la-la, la-la tee-da
Just like that
Sha-la-la, la-la, la-la, la-la, la-la tee-da, la-tee-da!
Cast my memory back there, Lord
Sometimes I'm overcome thinking 'bout it...
Bit by bit by bit by bit...
Sha-la-ti-dah!
 
 
Rainy Day Waterfalls – Sherrill Photography 
 

Funnyman Maher Kicks a Still-Down Al Franken

"Let me put it bluntly to you and all of these show biz candidates. You're not good enough, you're not smart enough, and, doggone it, it completely doesn't matter that people like you. They like you now because you're an entertainer and thus largely uncontroversial. Governing is the opposite. If you think you can unite the country, you're delusional."

Though Bill Maher doesn't mention former Minnesota Senator Franken by name, he rips him with his own comedic line while ranting against the "celebrities" who are choosing to trade their name recognition and political aspirations for votes and higher offices to help lead the land.

Let them run, I say...  

We elect them -- Jesse Ventura, Ronald Reagan, the extended Kennedy clan, Al Franken, Ah-nold S., Donald Trump, all the legacy sons, and wives, and daughters, the former athletes and astronauts, etc. at our own peril.  If we voters don't like the job they do, we vote them out.

I just found it interesting that Bill Maher -- during his anti-celebrity politician rant Friday night on his political-entertainment show -- would kick Al Franken so hard when calling out the group.  Al paid his price politically for his past fame, and whether or not you think there were voting shenanigans that got him elected in the first place, he's an odd choice to be quoting when calling out dumb celebs who don't represent the people who voted for them and are unqualified for office.

The legacies -- the families holding positions of power for generations based on name stock -- those are the ones we worry about containing out here in the real world.  Those are the careerist ones we are glad to finally unseat with more popular voices who can come in and clean house of the stagnation and corruption at least, before bowing out after a term or two...

Think of them as our own Andrew Jacksons, while Mahler would be an unknown heckler sitting at the end of a bar, criticizing anyone who dared to challenge the established political order and suggest a better way...

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* Maher ruined his own chances for ever running for political office in America with his comments post 9-11.  He was right of course, in the way that our funniest political humorists dare touch truth in their work, but Maher was too cowardly to stand by what he said when he said it.  He caved.  I wonder if that eats at him while he watches other political voices rise, while he knows himself to be smarter overall but less politically appealing...

"We have been the cowards, lobbing cruise missiles from 2,000 miles away. That's cowardly. Staying in the airplane when it hits the building, say what you want about it, [it's] not cowardly."


Show Me That SMILE again...!

 Don't waste another minute on your cryin'...

We're Nowhere Near the End!

The best is ready to begin...

As long as we've got each other, we've got the world spinning right in our hands. Baby, you and me! We gotta be... the luckiest Dreamers  who ever  been dreamin'!

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* Boomers will remember B.J. Thomas for "Raindrops Keep Fallin' on My Head", which was just another childish childhood song for GenXers.  Our BJ anthem came when America changed in the Reagan years:  the song above, sung by BJ Thomas, was the Growing Pains tv show theme.

ADDED:
Ooga-Chaka Ooga-Ooga Ooga-Chaka Ooga-Ooga Ooga-Chaka Ooga-Ooga Ooga-Chaka Ooga-Ooga
If you remember the fun version of Hooked on a Feeling, starting with the Ooga-Chaka's, you're likely remembering Blue Swede's 1974 cover of the song, not the one by BJ Thomas in 1969. (The Blue Swede version, of course, was better -- the group and the opening sealed it, and you don't need the fresh ears of childhood to hear it today.) Blue Swede took the song to number one, six years after BJ Thomas first charted it topping off at a number five single.

Saturday, May 29

Sunny Saturday

Kid's UA Old Glory Flag TeeMemorial Day weekend.

We remember, we celebrate, we believe...

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We Remember

We remember how you loved us to your death,
and still we celebrate, for you are with us here;
and we believe that we will see you when you come in your glory, Lord.
We remember, we celebrate, we believe.

Here, a million wounded souls are yearning just to touch you and be healed.
Gather all your people, and hold them to your heart.


We remember how you loved us to your death,
and still we celebrate, for you are with us here;
and we believe that we will see you when you come in your glory, Lord.
We remember, we celebrate, we believe.

Now we recreate your love, we bring the bread and wine to share a meal.
Sign of grace and mercy, the presence of the Lord.


We remember how you loved us to your death,
and still we celebrate, for you are with us here;
and we believe that we will see you when you come in your glory, Lord.
We remember, we celebrate, we believe.

Christ, the Father's great "Amen" to all the hopes and dreams of ev'ry heart,
Peace beyond all telling, and freedom from all fear.


We remember how you loved us to your death,
and still we celebrate, for you are with us here;
and we believe that we will see you when you come in your glory, Lord.
We remember, we celebrate, we believe.

See the face of Christ revealed in ev'ry person standing by your side,
Gift to one another, and temples of your love.

~Marty Haugen

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Hundreds of thousands of Chinese protest around a 10-meter replica of the Statue of Liberty they called the Goddess of Democracy


Friday, May 28

Rice Lake, Wisc. native Foster Friess dead at 81

A philanthropist in his home town -- he financed the ballfields and track complex where American sprinter Kenny Bednarek got his start -- Friess was a politically conservative tax avoider, who made his money through financial investments more than building afresh.  He will be remembered, like most monied men, if he is remembered at all, for what his money purchased in his lifetime (some causes more dubious than others)  more than what he achieved himself, I think.  RIP.

Saturday, May 22

Gone Paddlin'

The fishy smell of a slow river spot after days of springtime rain, just drifting through...

When one sense starts to go, you appreciate more the others. 

I found a Joyce Meyer CD in the little library hutch at the riverside park. And listened to it with the sunroof open at Willow River State Park in Hudson, Wisc. Busy place, but big enough to space out.

 

 

That last comment has nothing to do with masking or the pandemic. Just spacing.

ADDED:  No, I didn't paddle in the Hudson state park, though I have in the past.  I like the small rivers.  And I like keeping the special spots to myself.  Quieter, more peaceful.

Friday, May 21

Blood, Sweat and Tears.

Give me my freedom for as long as I be
All I ask of living is to have no chains on me
All I ask of living is to have no chains on me
And all I ask of dying is to go naturally
Oh, I want to go naturally
Here I go, hey hey
Here comes the devil right behind
Look out children
Here he comes, here he comes, hey
(Don't want to go by the devil
Don't want to go by demon
Don't want to go by Satan
Don't want to die uneasy...
Just let me go naturally.)
And when I die and when I'm dead, dead and gone

There'll be one child born in our world to carry on, to carry on...

If God is For Us, Who Can Be Against ? *

500+ Spring Flowers Pictures | Download Free Images on UnsplashFear not, this Friday, friends... God Loves You !

Refrain: 
If God is for us, who can be against? If the Spirit of God has set us free. 
If God is for us, who can be against? If the Spirit of God has set us free.
1. I know that nothing in this world /  Can ever take us from His love. 
2. Nothing can take us from His love / Poured out in Jesus the Lord. 
3. And nothing present or to come / Can ever take us from His love. 
4. I know that neither death nor life Can ever take us from His love.

~ Composer: John Foley 

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* ... if the Spirit of God has set us free / If the spirit of god has set us freee...


Thursday, May 20

Our Day... Will Come.

 Image