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04/12/19 07:24 AM #8148    

 

Jack Mallory

For those who excuse Trump's stupid, offensive, bigoted remarks by approving his policies: today his stupid, offensive, bigoted policy discriminating against trans people in the military goes into effect. Does this make life simpler for you?

********

Brother Mark and I agree. We can’t remember ever seeing a single eagle here in NH as kids. But I heard this morning on NHPR—the winter eagle count suggests 200 adults, 300 juveniles now. 


04/12/19 08:25 AM #8149    

 

Glen Hirose

Jack,

You have the eye for framing the perfect eagle images; I hope they appreciate it. We sure do...

 

Jay, Nori,

No cheering for the Caps? Yea, so it's only the first game, but still worth a beer mug salute.

   Image result for salute with beer mugs

 

 

 

   

 

 


04/12/19 10:43 AM #8150    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Thanks Helen for the wonderful cartoons...here is another great one: Love, Joanie


https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2019/04/11/when-talking-congress-william-barr-is-all-ears/?utm_term=.4f07356b191c

04/12/19 10:44 AM #8151    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Sorry, I see the link didn't take...will try again later. Love, Joanie


04/12/19 11:10 AM #8152    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Hi again....Ihope this time the link works. I thought it was another great Tom Toles cartoon. Love, Joanie

by the way Trump now hardly knows anything about WiKi leaks that he kept screaming out that he loved so much..Love, Joanie

https://www.gocomics.com/tomtoles/2019/04/12

 


04/13/19 03:43 PM #8153    

 

Robert Hall

FDR Memorial, Martin Luther King Memorial and cherry blossoms at the Tidal Basin.


04/13/19 07:51 PM #8154    

 

Jack Mallory

Lovely shots of DC springtime, Robert. Nearly 70 here, today. Enough ice off the lake for me to try it tomorrow, especially since it's so dense with waterfowl. These pix were shot from the edge. 

o

Don't you just hate it when the kids leave chores half-finished?

And way too far away for a clear shot, but the eagle spent about 20 minutes circling the lake, then put landing gear down before disappearing into a tree. Didn't realize until I got the picture up on the computer that there was another bird in the background.


04/14/19 05:52 AM #8155    

 

Jack Mallory

Jerry, and others: today's NYT Sunday Magazine focuses on climate change. I don’t know if there's a paywall for non-subscribers, but it's well worth a look if you can access it. 

This is what Trump voters vote for—not something that might happen, or even will happen, but IS happening now. And many Trump voters call themselves Christians.

https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2019/04/11/magazine/climate-change-bangladesh-scavenging.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share


04/14/19 10:08 AM #8156    

 

Glen Hirose

Jack,

I think that 2nd bird is really an A-4 Skyhawk flying inverted with missile lock on your eagle! He/she needs to pop some flares, and go vertical with afterburners lit-up!

Jay, Nori,

Really not time to get all giddy, but 2-0?


04/14/19 12:16 PM #8157    

 

Helen Lambie (Goldstein)

Lovely shots of the cherry blossoms, Bob. This is the time of year I get most homesick. And soon all of the azaleas will be in bloom. I was lucky to be there briefly to see them last year, but not this year. If anyone remembers to, I would love to see some photos posted of their glory! Bob, did you notice root erosion at the Tidal Basin? I saw an article on TV last week about the water level in the Tidal Basin rising and creating large puddles, damage to walkways and erosion of the cherry tree roots. If something isn’t done soon they said the cherry trees might die. What a tragedy that would be!


04/14/19 01:32 PM #8158    

 

Jack Mallory

Some days it's eagles, somedays Odocoileus virginianus! These young 'uns were just as interested in me as I was in them; if they'd had cameras, they'd have been taking picures of me. Right on the edge of the lake, down for a drink of water. 

 


04/14/19 05:33 PM #8159    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Love the shot of that deer looking right at me when I see the photo. We have a big family of deer that live in a little forest in the back of our house. A fox or two reside there too. We look out this huge picture window and watch them. Thanks for the beautiful photos Jack. Love, Joanie


04/15/19 07:32 AM #8160    

 

Jack Mallory

Glen—thinking back to your pessimistic take on human data use, rational thinking. 

Having spent over 400 pages providing the evidence, these are the conclusions of Steven Pinker's Enlightenment Now: the Case for Reason, Science, Humanism and Progress. A magisterial (how often do you get to say that?) and hopeful history of human thought and accomplishment. 

“We are born into a pitiless universe, facing steep odds against life-enabling order and in constant jeopardy of falling apart. We were shaped by a force that is ruthlessly competitive. We are made from crooked timber, vulnerable to illusions, self-centeredness, and at times astounding stupidity. 

“Yet human nature has also been blessed with resources that open a space for a kind of redemption. We are endowed with the power to combine ideas recursively, to have thoughts about our thoughts. We have an instinct for language, allowing us to share the fruits of our experience and ingenuity. We are deepened with the capacity for sympathy—for pity, imagination, compassion, commiseration. 

“These endowments have found ways to magnify their own power. The scope of language has been augmented by the written, printed, and electronic word. Our circle of sympathy has been expanded by history, journalism, and the narrative arts. And our puny rational faculties have been multiplied by the norms and institutions of reason: intellectual curiosity, open debate, skepticism of authority and dogma, and the burden of proof to verify ideas by confronting them against reality.

“As the spiral of recursive improvement gathers momentum, we eke out victories against the forces that grind us down, not least the darker parts of our own nature. We penetrate the mysteries of the cosmos, including life and mind. We live longer, suffer less, learn more, get smarter, and enjoy more small pleasures and rich experiences. Fewer of us are killed, assaulted, enslaved, oppressed, or exploited by the others. 

“From a few oases, the territories with peace and prosperity are growing, and could someday encompass the globe. Much suffering remains, and tremendous peril. But ideas on how to reduce them have been voiced, and an infinite number of others are yet to be conceived. We will never have a perfect world, and it would be dangerous to seek one. But there is no limit to the betterments we can attain if we continue to apply knowledge to enhance human flourishing.

This heroic story is not just another myth. Myths are fictions, but this one is true—true to the best of our knowledge, which is the only truth we can have. We believe it because we have reasons to believe it. As we learn more, we can show which parts of the story continue to be true, and which ones false—as any of them might be, and any could become. And the story belongs not to any tribe but to all of humanity—to any sentient creature with the power of reason and the urge to persist in its being. For it requires only the convictions that life is better than death, health is better than sickness, abundance is better than want, freedom is better than coercion, happiness is better than suffering, and knowledge is better than superstition and ignorance.”


04/15/19 11:25 AM #8161    

 

Glen Hirose

 Yes Jack my inclination is towards pessimism, but at least I haven’t become a total cynic yet.  It may just be our differences are; you ended up in New Hampshire and I choose the mentally contaminated environment of DC. Where Stupidity is the new normal, the Outrageous is common place, and the Horrific has become the mundane.  

So Jack, after 73 years I see this image with a bit more clarity:

   Image result for hieronymus bosch ship of fools


04/15/19 01:39 PM #8162    

 

Jack Mallory

Read the Pinker book as an antidote to cynical doom and gloom, Glen. I'll claim as many experiences contributing to a pessimistic, cynical outlook as most folks can; but I found the book enlightening. See what I did there?

There's also this, with an emphsis on the current state of the world and its progress--like Pinker, Rosling offers plenty of evtdence that things are far better than we usually perceive.  He has great techniques for presenting data visually, and is especially interested in how/why we tend to see things in the bleakest perspective. He argues for a number of changes in perspective to make one's thinking data-based and critical. Not a best seller with the current administration or its supporters, I'm sure. 

 

Factfulness Ten Reasons We're Wrong About the World--and Why Things Are Better Than You Think.jpg

 

 


04/15/19 02:38 PM #8163    

 

Janet Lowry (Deal)

"...and knowledge is better than ignorance and superstition."
Wow. That is super inspiring to me right now! Thanks, Jack, for that post! Pinker certainly has a way with words

04/15/19 04:00 PM #8164    

 

Jack Mallory

And reflecting today on what human imagination and knowledge can produce, as we mourn the damage to Notre Dame. I’m amazed how sad this makes me. 


04/16/19 06:18 AM #8165    

 

Jack Mallory

It appears that much of the cathedral's art work has survived, along with the bell towers. No inventory, yet, of losses. I’m a big gargoyle fan—I hope there is at least a good photographic record f them. 

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-04-16/notre-dame-medieval-design-innovation-saved-gothic-cathedral/11020228

**********

Nature's art:


04/16/19 05:11 PM #8166    

 

Robert Hall

I took a walk around the B-CC neighborhood today.  Beautiful weather.

Sleaford and Kentbury facing the old stone culvert area where the C&O tracks ran left to right.  The culvert and a lot of the embankment are gone.  Construction continues on the Purple Line light rail system that will run from Bethesda to New Carrollton on the old train right-of-way.

 


04/16/19 05:18 PM #8167    

 

Robert Hall

Kathy Humphrey and Debbie Pellington's homes.

The Hoag Home.

Students leaving for the day.


04/16/19 05:24 PM #8168    

 

Robert Hall

Graffiti rock.

Where the Grand Union parking lot was (if I remember correctly)

Hot Shoppes corner.

The back fence area of Shoppes where the guys with cars parked.


04/16/19 05:38 PM #8169    

 

Robert Hall

The Bank of Bethesda main office..

Enlarged old Perpetual Building Association.

Where the home of the "Tops Sirlioner" was.

Community Paint and Hardware after its second move--north to Middleton Lane.

Large construction site opposite the Bethesda Theater where the old Medical Building and Bethesda Motor Inn once stood.  Only Tastee Diner and an adjacent building remain on the north side of this block.

Still there, but the owner is looking for a buyer.

"Starry Night" constructed from plumbing parts.

Back steps to the Bethesda Theater from old parking lot.  Now used as an emergency exit from Chevy Chase Acura (Chevrolet).

Another home on Harling Lane about to be replaced by something more in tune with the current market.

 


04/17/19 07:21 AM #8170    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Robert, the photos are great. So nice to see the neighborhood and the present shots of BCC. I really enjoyed seeing them. Thank you so much. Love, Joanie


04/17/19 09:38 AM #8171    

 

Glen Hirose

Thanks for the photos Robert,

Though I can't help but feel just a twinge of melancholy. I try to envision what used to stand on those spots in your photos, but memory is failing me these days; can’t seem to locate my cell phone most mornings. 

As for the Nationals fans a wisp of smoke (electrical short-circuit) seems to be coming from the Nats Starting Pitchers / Bullpen. I hope the season doesn’t end up just a pile of ashes... 


04/17/19 11:00 AM #8172    

 

Jay Shackford

Hey, the Democratic race is getting very interesting.  Mayor Pete has added a dynamic, multi-faceted dimension to the race for the Democratic nomination.  Granted, it’s still way too early to pick a winner but the contrast between Mayor Pete and Trump couldn’t be starker. 

Mayor Pete is young, smart and authentic and has a very interesting human story to tell – Rhodes Scholar, veteran who served in Afghanistan, mayor of mid-sized city in the industrial Midwest, and a gay man who is very comfortable with his own sexuality.  Check out his interview with Rachael Maddow on Monday night.  Regardless of how this race turns out, 20 years from now our grandkids will be looking at that interview as a historic turning point in American politics.  

In contrast, look at Trump – old, dumb, lazy and fat as well as being a narcissistic and psychotic racist, bigot, draft dodger, hush-money criminal, possible Russian agent and a tax and golf cheater …. the list of character flaws can go on and on.  Golf cheater – really?  I think I mentioned that fact in one of my posts about a year ago, when I noted (as many have noted before) that you can tell a lot about a person’s character by the way he/she plays golf.   I think we will find out a lot more about the character of Old Bone Spurs once the Mueller report is released tomorrow.  

Nori – a couple of weeks ago you asked for some insights into the Brexit crisis in Britain.  At that point, I was confused and in the dark on the Brexit crisis and I didn’t have much to contribute to that discussion.  However, on Friday, April 12, Tony Blair appeared on Morning Joe– one of your favorite news shows, right.  In a five-minute interview or so, he had a very interesting and illuminating perspective on what is going on in bloody old England.   I’m sure a clip or text of that interview is on Morning Joe’s website.  It’s worth watching.  

Robert --thanks for the photos of Bethesda.  It's comforting to know that the Tastee Diner is still alive and well. By the way, what's happening with BCC's football and other athletic fields?  

Glenn and Nori -- root for the Caps for me.  I'm out of the country for the next couple of weeks.  Hopefully, we will be well into the second round of the playoffs once I return. Bests  


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