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Showing posts from 2014

The Rose Parade, Joan Williams and '50's Style Racism

In January of 1958 I had just turned eleven years old.   I was in sixth grade, and had already had my first lesson in racism.   We had moved to Denver , Colorado two years before and I had wanted to go to a certain amusement park.   It was, “restricted” and my mother made it clear that we would NEVER go to that amusement park until they opened it to (my mother’s word), “Negros.”   Now, the interesting thing is that my mother harbored lots of stereotypical ideas about Blacks.   She was, after all, a child of her era, just as I am a child of mine.   But to her, discrimination was, “un-American” (also her word).   I had learned my first lesson in civic morality.   There are some things that are morally wrong and a morally right person does not do those things.               One time zone to the west, in sunny southern California , some adults (who had not been raised as well as my mother) were demonstrating 1950’s style racism.   The object of their mean spirited bigotry was a ver

A Majority/Minority Nation

A family photo of my macro clan would look primarily white, Nordic and remarkably like an advertisement for an optician.   But by the time my youngest grandchild approaches 30 years old, my family won’t look at all the same.   By that year America will be a, “majority/minority” nation.   That means that while Americans of European ancestry will be a plurality, they won’t be a majority.       By 2044 White’s will make up 49.7% of the United States population.   Hispanics will account for 25%; Blacks 12.7%; Asians will make up 7.9% of the population; and that leaves 3.7% in a multi-racial catch all.    One reason for this is a decreasing birth rates among Whites.   Then, the years from 2014-2060 will see a doubling in the rate of Asian and Hispanic members of our society; most of that increase will come from Asians.   Multi-racial people will triple.   As with all new, poor and struggling minorities, birth rates will be high at first and drop as economic stability is achieved and

The Gift of the Magi

As I have frequently said, Christmas is not my favorite holiday.   I enjoy it, but from a religious aspect, Easter and Reformation Day hold a stronger message.   But, today is Christmas Eve and I am enjoying the spirit of the season despite the above disclaimers.   It is Christmas’s secular trappings that always draw me in. I love Christmas trees (pagan), Christmas cards and letters (Hallmark), Santa Claus (a Turkish monk), and all the glitter of wrapped gifts.    Oddly, I hate opening the packages.   They look so lovely, their contents a magical mystery of endless conjure.   Even as a child I would sit back and watch everyone else open their gifts and I would defer, defer, defer.   I still do.   There is an endless supply of great Christmas movies.   George C. Scott is amazing in A Christmas Carol.   Jimmy Stewart in It’s a Wonderful Life; the musical schmaltz of Bing Crosby, Danny Kaye and Rosemary Clooney in White Christmas.   And there is nothing that hits the nostalgia

Torture and the Unbroken

A prisoner was taken from the field of battle, already suffering from fractures in the right leg and both arms.    Before even getting to a cell a rifle butt was brought down on his shoulder, shattering it, but he hardly noticed that after a bayonet was sent through the ankle of his already broken leg.               The prisoner was finally thrown on the floor of a cold, filthy cell.   He was denied medical treatment.   Things changed when they discovered he was, “well connected” with the enemy leadership.   At that time he was given both medical attention—meager but life saving—and more intense interrogation.   Over a period of two years, the prisoner was kept in extended solitary confinement; he was beaten; he was kept hungry and filthy, sometimes not being allowed to bath for months on end.               Over one period of four days he was beaten every two or three hours by teams of men.   His arms were trussed up behind him so the weight of his body dislocated both should

Christmas Love, and a Little History

If, on December 25, we are celebrating the birth of Jesus of Nazareth, then we are off on both the day and the year.   The consensus of most theologians and historians is that Christ was probably born around 4 B.C.   That means this year should actually be 2018 instead of 2014.   [This means that all of the nuts who were fretting about what would happen when the Mayan calendar gets to 2012 were wasting paranoia, 2012 had come and gone long before that particular conspiracy theory scare began.]   We have a pretty good fix on the year because, while we don’t know when Jesus was born, we do know when Herod lived and died.   We also have that pesky reference to shepherds watching their flocks by night.   Usually this would be something done during lambing time, which indicates a spring birth for Jesus, not December 25.    So, we have Christmas being a rather arbitrary date, set to celebrate the birth of a poor, lowly born carpenter’s son, who became the pivotal character in the creation

Hawking, Einstein and the Theory of Everything

Has your eye ever been captured by the beauty of a pearl, the milky sheen with just a hint—almost imagined—of blush?    That blush makes pearls seem to be living things.   When I first learned what a pearl was and how it was made I thought it was a grand mystery.   I got my mother’s pearls out of the drawer where they were kept, carefully wrapped in tissue and velvet, and stared intently at the large center pearl of the strand.   I imagined myself growing very, very small and diving through the layers of nacre to the center of the pearl.   There I would live in my own tiny world.   In my mind, when I sat on the center grain of sand that was my pearly home and looked at the curved sky of solid, yet seemingly transparent white, to the curved shell of pearly heaven, my world always seemed very large to me, even though I was a spec and my universe only a pearl.               When I study astronomy, I feel like I am back inside that pearl.   Physicists understand what it is like to b

The Donner-Reed Party and Ferguson, Missouri

On April 16, 1846, nine covered wagons left Springfield , Illinois on the 2500 mile trek to California .   Almost half of the 87 men, women and children of the Donner-Reed party were doomed before the first revolution of the wheels.   The group of emigrants was led by James Fraser Reed.   He was influenced in his decisions by a book, The Emigrants’ Guide to Oregon and California, written by Landsford W. Hastings.   The book touted a new route, referred to as the, “ Hastings ’ Cutoff.”   This route was supposed to save almost 400 miles and be over easy terrain.   In fact, the route had never been traveled, by Hastings .   His book was a fraud—a moral if not a legal crime—and he misled his readers intentionally.               Certainly, some of the blame falls on Donner and Reed.   Common sense should tell us that a route 400 miles shorter and easier than the one currently being used would be the rule, rather than the exception.               When the group arrived in Ft. L

Thanksgiving is a Feminine Holiday

I'm busy cooking a turkey for the food bank Thanksgiving today, and wanted to share this, one of my favorite columns. Everyone has a favorite holiday.   Mine has always— always —been Thanksgiving.   As a child it meant the best food, unremitting talk, games and play.   As an adult it means ever so much more.             In my years of making Thanksgiving dinner I have come to believe that Thanksgiving is a feminine holiday.   I don’t mean that it isn’t enjoyed equally by both men and women.   I certainly don’t mean that the deeper meaning of Thanksgiving isn’t appreciated and revered equally by both men and women.   I just mean that the essence of the holiday is feminine.   It is a day centered on two things, the meal and the meaning.   These are feminine strengths.               Men are great cooks, but they aren’t likely to plan a meal for a week, get the baking done the day before, set the table with matching candlesticks and get up at 4:30 a.m. to get the meal sta

At Last: A Chance to Irritate Everybody.

The United States has a legal foreign born population of 42.5 million people.   God bless every one of them.    We also have slightly more than 11 million illegal aliens in this country.   Our problems are with this group, not our immigrants, so please do not talk about, “immigration” reform when you are really talking about illegal aliens.   [That is like calling a car thief a, “spontaneous entrepreneur.”   But I digress.]             Getting rid of criminals entering our country illegally should be an aggressive goal and a human rights no-brainer.   But (BUT!!!) there are all of those children.   The fact is that almost 7 of every 100 students in U.S. schools are the children of illegals.   A significant number of these children were born in the United States and are, therefore, legal Americans themselves, even though their parents are not.   I am not ready to deport these children or separate them from their parents.   It would be inhumane, and against every principle of C

Mary Landrieu Has Been Grubered

We have all been Grubered.   Some of us knew it from the beginning; others only noticed it after bending over in the shower.   We were Grubered on Obamacare; we were Grubered by Lerner and the I.R.S.; we were Grubered by Hillary on Benghazi ; by Holder and Fast and Furious.   We’ve be Grubered so many times over the last six years that I think the, “Gruber” should be added to the list of positions in the Kama Sutra.             No, the voters of America are not stupid.   We are sometimes naïve, frequently more hopeful than realistic, and usually as loyal as a golden retriever, but not stupid.   Stupid involves a consistent rejection of reality, or a failure to recognize reality, or a misinterpretation of reality.   Enter, Mary Landrieu, the honorable Senator from the great state of Louisiana .                 Landrieu joins the long line of people in this country who have been Grubered by this administration.   Mind you, I am wasting no sympathy on Sen. Landrieu.   She has a 9