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OLD IS NOT THE PROBLEM?

Published March 11, 2024 by Nan Mykel

What’s wrong with women that we’re so easily abused and misused? It may be because we’re physically weaker than men, pushovers, literally. Is our empathy so easy to use against us? I hear “lady like” more often than “gentleman like.” Does the role of nurturer/caretaker overshadow other areas of life? What was behind the difficulty in letting us vote? Why were white women allowed to vote before women of color? What is the source of prejudice? Surely not fear. Allah (swt) says in the Quran, “O believers treat women with kindness even if you dislike them.”!! [That doesn’t exactly put women on a par with men!] In addition/as a result, many women have bought into seeing themselves as less.

According to Wikipedia, Males on average are more assertive and have higher self-esteem. Females were on average higher than males in extroversion, anxiety, trust, and, especially, tender-mindedness (e.g., nurturance).

After reflecting for most of today and reading on this topic (suffrage, Islam’s treatment of women, abortions outlawed in much of U.S., and FGM–female genital mutilation–in other countries–I was interested to see on a post from O.U. what appeared to be a woman’s view of her Muslim life: “Thus, in the Islamic tradition, a woman has an independent identity. She is a responsible being in her own right and carries the burden of her moral and spiritual obligations. Women have as much right to education as men do.” Why do I feel like a well-behaved Muslim woman wrote that, defensively?

I sought an additional version from the International Islamic University Malaysia https://www.iium.edu.my› articles: “What is a woman’s role in Islam? Men are providers for women and in exchange for support, women should be obedient and serve their husbands. They should keep their virginity and after marriage, loyalty, chastity and complete dedication to their husbands are prerequisite for securing maintenance. Women are seen as weak and as easily overpowered by men. (“Women in the Quran and the Sunnah – IIUM”)

During this long afternoon it occurs to me that the unspoken sentiment behind the complaints that “Biden’s too old” really is that no one’s willing to say it out loud without seeming prejudiced: Being too old means that he might die in office, leaving a female of color in his place. Biden can’t say it, nor can Democrats, without being seen as racist and/or misogynist. So everyone is quiet about it–at least in the print I saw (or didn’t see), and the [imagined?] concern is not being addressed. Republicans are also avoiding the “prejudiced” label, at least in their public proclamations. It almost makes me wish she’d bow out, but don’t tell her I said that! [“Any vote not cast for Biden is a vote for Trump.”]

Google describes Kamala Harris, the current U.S. Vice President under Joe Biden, as the first woman, second bi-racial, (Charles Curtis, a member of the Caw Nation served under Hoover), and the first South Asian American vice president. (She was born in the United States!} Her mother was a Tamil Brahmin, part of a “privileged elite” in Hinduism’s ancient caste hierarchy, but moved from India to the United States and received her PhD. at Berkeley in 1964. Now deceased, her mother became a biomedical scientist. Her father is Donald Jasper Harris (born August 23, 1938), a Jamaican-American economist and professor emeritus at Stanford University. Her parents divorced in 1971, after eight years.

How to deal with this problem? P.S. I’m 88+, so Biden’s just a kid to me.

WHY JOSH PAUL QUIT

Published March 4, 2024 by Nan Mykel

Before everything goes boom and burn, I’d like to understand why Josh Paul quit his State Department position over arms to Israel:
______________________

“Today I informed my colleagues that I have resigned from the State Department, due to a policy disagreement concerning our continued lethal assistance to Israel. To further explain my rationale for doing so, I have written the attached note.”

From https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:7120512510645952512/

His letter states:

“I joined the Bureau of Political-Military Affairs (PM) over 11 years ago, and have found it a
fascinating job with engaging, and often immensely challenging – intellectually and morally –
tasks and objectives. I have been proud in my time of service to have made many differences,
both visibly and behind the scenes, from advocating for Afghan refugees, to pushing back (with
not insignificant results) on pending Administration decisions to transfer lethal weapons to
countries that abuse human rights, to sculpting policies and practices that advance human rights,
to working tirelessly to advance those policies and decisions that are good and just; from our
global humanitarian demining efforts to our support for Ukraine’s defense in the face of
murderous Russian aggression.

When I came to this Bureau, the U.S. Government entity most responsible for the transfer and
provision of arms to partners and allies, I knew it was not without its moral complexity and
moral compromises, and I made myself a promise that I would stay for as long as I felt I the
harm I might do could be outweighed by the good I could do. In my 11 years I have made more
moral compromises than I can recall, each heavily, but each with my promise to myself in mind,
and intact. I am leaving today because I believe that in our current course with regards to the
continued – indeed, expanded and expedited – provision of lethal arms to Israel – I have reached
the end of that bargain..

Yes, PM can still do an immense amount of good in the world: there is still, sadly, a great need
for American security assistance – a need for American arms and defense cooperation to defend
against the multiple military perils that democracy, democracies, and humanity itself, face on this
earth. But we cannot be both against occupation, and for it. We cannot be both for freedom, and
against it. And we cannot be for a better world, while contributing to one that is materially
worse.

Let me be clear: Hamas’ attack on Israel was not just a monstrosity; it was a monstrosity of
monstrosities. I also believe that potential escalations by Iran-linked groups such as Hezbollah,
or by Iran itself, would be a further cynical exploitation of the existing tragedy. But I believe to
the core of my soul that the response Israel is taking, and with it the American support both for
that response, and for the status quo of the occupation, will only lead to more and deeper
suffering for both the Israeli and the Palestinian people – and is not in the long term American
interest. This Administration’s response – and much of Congress’ as well – is an impulsive
reaction built on confirmation bias, political convenience, intellectual bankruptcy, and
bureaucratic inertia. That is to say, it is immensely disappointing, and entirely
unsurprising. Decades of the same approach have shown that security for peace leads to neither
security, nor to peace. The fact is, blind support for one side is destructive in the long term to the
interests of the people on both sides. I fear we are repeating the same mistakes we have made
these past decades, and I decline to be a part of it for longer.

I am not ignorant when it comes to the situation in the Middle East. I was raised surrounded by
debates about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict; my Master’s thesis was about Israeli
counterterrorism and civil rights (in researching it I met two men who have since been among
my lifelong heroes, Uri Avnery, and an Israeli Palestinian advocate I shall not name here); I
served for the U.S. Security Coordinator, living in Ramallah while advancing security sector
governance within the Palestinian Authority and liaising with the IDF; and, I have deep personal
ties to both sides of the conflict. Those who know me best know that I have opinions, and they
are strong ones. But this is what is at the core of them: that there is beauty to be found
everywhere in this world, and it deserves both protection, and the right to flourish, and that is
what I most desire for Palestinians and for Israelis. The murder of civilians is an enemy to that
desire – whether by terrorists as they dance at a rave, or by terrorists as they harvest their olive
grove. The kidnapping of children is an enemy to that desire – whether taken at gunpoint from
their kibbutz or taken at gunpoint from their village. And, collective punishment is an enemy to
that desire, whether it involves demolishing one home, or one thousand; as too is ethnic
cleansing; as too is occupation; as too is apartheid.

It is my firm belief that in such conflicts, for those of us who are third parties, the side we must
pick is not that of one of the combatants, but that of the people caught in the middle, and that of
the generations yet to come. It is our responsibility to help the warring parties build a better
world. To center human rights, not to hope to sideline or sidestep them through programs of
economic growth or diplomatic maneuvering. And, when they happen, to be able to name gross
violations of human rights no matter who carries them out, and to be able to hold the perpetrators
accountable – when they are adversaries, which is easy, but most particularly, when they are
partners.

I acknowledge and am heartened to see the efforts this Administration has made to temper
Israel’s response, including advocating for the provision of relief supplies, electricity, and water
to Gaza, and for safe passage. In my role in PM, however, my responsibilities lie solidly in the
arms transfer space. And that is why I have resigned from the U.S. Government, and from PM:
because while I can, and have, worked hard to shape better policy making in the security
assistance field, I cannot work in support of a set of major policy decisions, including rushing
more arms to one side of the conflict, that I believe to be shortsighted, destructive, unjust, and
contradictory to the very values that we publicly espouse, and which I wholeheartedly endorse: a
world built around a rules-based order, a world that advances both equality and equity, and a
world whose arc of history bends towards the promise of liberty, and of justice, for all.
And I would note with concern in parting, as regards competitions well beyond this current
conflict, that if we want a world shaped by what we perceive to be our values, it is only by
conditioning strategic imperatives with moral ones, by holding our partners, and above all by
holding ourselves, to those values, that we will see it.

I want to close by noting that while bureaucracy is not without its automatons, and that, as I have
learnt, physical courage comes easier than moral courage, I have had the privilege of working
with a large number of truly thoughtful, empathetic, courageous, and good civil servants, and
many of them can be found in PM, from its entry level to its most senior level. As they carry on
advancing the interests of the nation and the world in a field in which, perhaps more than any
other, it is easier to be better than it is to be good, I can say without hesitation that they are the
best. I wish them continued success, strength, and courage. And I wish all of us – peace.”

Josh Paul, October 18, 2023.

From:

https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:7120512510645952512/

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Nan’s Quote of the Day:  “It is easier to be better than to be good.” …Josh Paul

HOW LONG IS LOONEY?..

Published February 23, 2024 by Nan Mykel

Dreamers, 1899. John Brown. (USPD.pub.date, artist life/COmmons.

wikimedia.org)

 

HOW LONG IS LOONEY?

If we live long enough

it’s gonna be tough.

Tell-tale signs of age

spoken off the cuff

betray us and oh

how long and how sad

will it get to be

before…until…we

write bad verse and yet don.t hesitate

to remember to meditate

on what’s gone before

and what lies ahead instead?

Hey nonny nonny

honey, if it it’s not funny

why do we laugh at

our forget-me-nots?

When will we touch base

and head for home?

Not funny, dammit,

unless you’re like me

easier to laugh

than it is to pee.

Ha ha got you there.

You expected “cry.”

I know, poor taste

when e’re I try

and will until my

looney runs dry.

Ouch! Tell me I

didn’t write this.

——————————-

I know about the unholy National Christians; the Peru that forced sterilizations to reduce poverty;  our unpatriotic Congessional  turncoats;  our seething mass of  short-changed  individuals provoking a fight and talking secession; the increased bombing of Gaza during cease=fire talks; the estimated two and a half million persons in our country  who were driven from their houses as a result of  emergency weather conditions in 2023; Navalny’s murder; frozen embryos declared God’s children in Alabama; the wealthiest successfully heading to space; the Biden age argument….as well as the truly unmentionable.  How to select one to elucidate upon?  Any would raise my already endangered blood pressure, thank you very much.

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FUNNY HAHA?

Not in the least…However, I cannot overlook the dark humor (mustn’t say black any more–what happened to ‘black is beautiful’?)  revealed in the two opposing extremes arrived at by those who deign to de-humanize citizens by taking their personal rights away.  During the dictatorship of Alberto Fujimori in Peru, more than 272,000 women and 22,000 men were sterilized in regions with high levels of poverty and a majority indigenous population, as part of Peru’s National Reproductive Health and Family Planning program.  idehpucp.pucp.edu.pe/…/Análisis-del-Dictamen-Fiscal-sobre-Esterilizaciones-Forzadas.pdf    One faction insists every woman should be denied an abortion–some even who are pregnant due to rape and/or incest.  Apparently politics has moved the repercussions from the pregnant woman to the professional facilitating the abortion.  As of 2024, CaliforniaMichiganOhio, and Vermont are the only U.S. states to have explicit rights to abortion in their state constitutions. Other states have implicit rights to abortion subject to state judicial review, such as Kansas and Montana, or simply protect it via state law such as Colorado and Massachusetts. The state constitutions of AlabamaLouisianaTennessee, and West Virginia explicitly contain no right to an abortion, even in cases of rape and/or incest.

So–we have on one hand the dictatorial folks mandating sterilization for the poor and on the other, forcing delivery by the pregnant woman, mandating no abortions for the pregnant.  One U.S. Supreme Court judge has even suggested being against safe sex.  This U.S. citizen (moi) is against limiting the personal rights of men or women, acknowledging that the rights disputed are most often against women, who were not allowed to even vote until 1920. Google says:

“Passed by Congress June 4, 1919, and ratified on August 18, 1920, the 19th amendment granted women the right to vote. The 19th amendment legally guarantees American women the right to vote. Achieving this milestone required a lengthy and difficult struggle—victory took decades of agitation and protest.”  WHY?  What do you think?

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PLAYING THE FIDDLE WHILE EARTH BURNS?

Published February 22, 2024 by Nan Mykel

Image from Katiemiafrederick

 

 

How could we waste life and energy on sandbox atrocities while Earth is heading for destruction,  not even seriously seeking an alternative?  Forcing women to choose between being hog-tied to home with a bundle of unwanted children and punishing trans children and their parents? It’s energy sidetracked into the trough of humanity. The unwanted youth may live to see the results of this foolishness after many of us are gone.

400 anti-L.G.B.T.Q. bills have already been considered in the U.S. this new  year alone, aiming to surpass the 510 anti-L.G.B.T.Q. bills  introduced in 2023, leading transpersons to scary and perjorative attacks.  

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INSTEAD OF OVERSAYING “No,” when my young children were engaged in an activity destined to end in an accident, I would say “Danger.”  I’m mentally hoarse from thinking “danger” to myself now, as I send you away to read elsewhere about nuclear bomb concerns.  I have to say “uncle,” and as a little (but fat) 88 year old southern-born old lady, I have to draw the line somewhere. so be aware that I’m too scared to think about it, much less write.  (Although I’m still subscribed to the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists).

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Science Daily

https://www.sciencedaily.com › news › space_time › s…

June 25, 2021 — Scientists have developed an innovative way to use NASA satellite data to track the movement of tiny pieces of plastic in the …   PLASTIC IN THE OCEAN DEPTHS AND IN OUR OUTER/INNER SPACE!  And of course along our roadsides. and in our refrigerators.  Is plastic going to take us out in addition to fossil fuels?  And what have  I read about air contamination from charging electric cars?  And the “C” word is the largest exporter of electric cars in the world.

___________________

I’VE ORDERED–Oops, tried to order…Have to subscribe to Foreign Affairs first.
—Rachel Glennerster and Seema Jayachandran, How to Get More Bang for Your Climate-Change Buck,” Foreign Affairs                                                                                                                     ___________________

STREAM OF CONSCIOUSNESS   (an oldie from my files–date?)

My mind travels its own route when I drive.

Today it was especially alive.

Like…

Two years ago the small carousel horse

vanished one day from its small graveyard source.

Still gone.

I wonder, what is the name of those trees

that stand like a fork without any leaves?

Beats me.

Like baby bottles, the gourds hang growing

along Route 7, where I am going.

Striking!

Glad to see that camera surveillance

in Cheshire is in current abeyance.

Good!

Every “no edge” sign I spot

wears a garbage bag tied in a knot.

I kid you not.

Down home words used to be the mode

like Bear Wallow Ridge and Bone Hollow Road.

I like them.

I always check on that family plot

with 3 small; crosses, forgotten not.

By the highway.

______________________________

JENNY JOSEPH SAYS  (U.K., 1932-2018)

…Maybe I ought to practice a little now?

So people who know me are not too shocked and surprised

When suddenly I am old, and start to wear purple.

____________________________

 

>

WHO WROTE THIS?

Published February 21, 2024 by Nan Mykel

I DUNNO–will credit if I find out:

Perhaps we might still be able to mitigate the worst effects of climate change, but maintaining our current life into the next century and beyond is optimistic to the point of hallucination. To accept this outcome is difficult because it entails accepting that the future is no longer a space of infinite possibility–rather a house mortgaged to the hilt , a foreclosure waiting. We must create new ways to think about what comes next, but also about what came before. As coastland drowns, as wildfires thin the ground and thicken the air, as changes that used to take centuries begin to take years, it will become increasingly difficult to anchor our memories to a geography, to a stable piece of land. So we must find other anchors–anchors that link memory to people, to relationships, to the solidarity and compassion and resistance that will serve as our only useful lifeboats in this storm.  We have an obligation to document and preserve our stories, ourselves, and we have an obligation to do it now, meticulously, because the stories and the empathy they engender might save us still, might move people to act. And because in time the world in which those stories took place may well vanish, in its place a different, emptier world in which these stories took place may well vanish, in its place a different, emptier world –emptier of nature, emptier of life; the stories, once lost, lost forever….

  ______                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                              MY earliest remembered story begins shortly before the age of two, with an early visit to the farm, and the mother bringing out her puppies to show and then my memory extends over time to the sound of coal settling in the grate in the dark, as I fell asleep…the sweetness of fresh picked figs, their pinked flesh awash in milkwhite ambrosia….I can’t describe the special, unique quieting and reassuring smell that gentled over the land after a heavy rain….The closeness of the attic along with the distant droning of an airplane while snuggling up on the cot in the attic, after climbing the steep stairs sleepily….my doll with the hole in her head to accommodate a hair ribbon….what seemed like hours watching the ant parade as it raced all in a line across the red clay beside the back steps, the ants greeting each other as they marched, and the time they left a gift for me: an old belt buckle….The shiny green leaves of a bush out front, which let you make faces on it with your fingernails, and even the wonder of the taste and weight of the scuppernongs hanging from the grape arbor….And the taste of my grandmother’s homemade peach ice cream after the harvest….and the softness of her lap in the rockingchair, the comforting sound of its squeaking, and the dimples in her elbows….

 

 

 

 

 

 

ThursdayThoughts

Published February 14, 2024 by Nan Mykel

Well, on Wednesday Night….

 

 

 

MY QUESTIONS RECENTLY WERE: Fill in the blanks: 1.  Halleluia I’m a ________ 2.  Jump back turn around ________ 3.  My ______ lies over the ocean  4.  _______  Happy little wash day song  5,  Don’t step on my ___________  6.  Mama Mia, Papa Pia,_________  7.  and on that tree I see, ” __________   8.I’ve got a hot rod Ford and a _________   9.  It gives me a thrill to wake up in the morning on ____________ 10. On the baby’s bottom or the baby’s knee, _________ ?11. Aint gonna study ______ no more. 12.You put your ______ foot in, you put your _____ 13. Who was combing his auburn hair by the light of the silvery moon ?__________  14.__________, where the deer and the antelope play  15. Put your shoes on, Lucy!, don’t you know you’re_________?

THE ANSWERS:  My answers:  1. bum    2.pick a bale of cotton   3.Bonnie  4. Rinso white, Rinso bright!….  5. my blue suede shoes!  6. Baby’s got the diarrhea!   7. “I’ll love you til I die” [There’s a Tree in the Meadow]   8. Two dollar bill… 9. Mockingbird Hill  10. where will the baby’s dimple be?  11. war  12. left foot; right is ok  [and you shake it all about]  13. The old baboon [I Went to the Animal Fair…]    14. …where the buffalo roam [Home on the Range]  15. in the city?

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WHAT WOULD A BETTER GENETIC BUILDING STONE BE?    Not that we can influence it, but at least it’s a positive way of looking at the future…sort of.  Since our primary genetic motivation seems to be survival of the fittest and kinship selection, what else might work?  Survival of the kindest and comfort selection?  Survival of the honest and peace-loving selection?  Your ideas:

_________________________

NO ADDITIONS TO LIFE Part One? Don’t be shy…

________________________

WHO SAID THIS?  Bernie Sanders? …

Socialism is what they called farm price supports. Socialism is what they called bank deposit insurance. Socialism is what they called the growth of free and independent labor organizations. Socialism is their name for almost anything that helps all the people.  No, Harry Truman

_________________________

JUST BE AWARE THAT…There’s lots more going on than I can cover.  Just topics to be aware of, if interested:

I’m going to ask how much my major stores charge when I use a debit card. Apparently it can be a problem, since New York has a new law that the amount must be posted.

___________________

In my town, efforts to raise goods for Ukraine met opposition with local food pantries’ requests instead. .  My thoughts:

  • “Which also has bombs dropping on their heads?”  Just my thoughts, of course. Besides, it shouldn’t be “either…or…”

_________________________

OUCH!  What a life…  In Gaza, assistance includes emergency self-delivery items for pregnant women.  Yikes.  Post partum depression?  Difficult to think about it, much less be there now.

_________________________

SOCIAL MEDIA TO THE RESCUE:

  • In Pakistan,  social media reportedly was used by the party of imprisoned former prime minister Imran Khan to win the most seats in their Parliament.  AI also was used to simulate his voice.

In the USA, President Biden’s campaign has reportedly used Tik Tok to reach out.  (“lol hey guys”)

_________________________                                                                                                                                                ____________________________________

WHEN I FIRST STARTED writing about the NRA I was unable to discover how many members it had–at least easily, that is.  Now that it’s in trouble I see that it has lost more than a million members since an earlier peak of 6 million in 2018.  Gun Owners of America is one outfit that considers the NRA “too liberal.”

TODAY  I see there was a 20+ shooting after a Super Bowl party, with several cxhildren being shot.

_________________________

THOUGHT FOR THE DAY:

“If you’re reading this…
Congratulations, you’re alive.
If that’s not something to smile about,
then I don’t know what is.”
― Chad Sugg, Monsters Under Your Head
_________________________
WATCH OUT
I may be the only person who fell for this, but when I received a strange looking debit card in the mail without return address or note inside saying who it was from or why, I cut it up, assuming it was a con.  Then I discovered that it was my new card because my old one was out of date.  And that’s messed me up quite a bit.  Maybe I need a file for suspicious e-mails or snail mails for future reference?  Guess I thought if I confessed this it would make you feel better, or at least forewarned.

 

A BREATHER….

Published February 12, 2024 by Nan Mykel

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fill in the blanks….

1.  Halleluia I’m a ________

2.  Jump back turn around ________

3.  My ______ lies over the ocean

4.  _______  Happy little wash day song

5,  Don’t step on my ___________

6.  Mama Mia, Papa Pia,_________

7.  and on that tree I see, ” __________

8. I’ve got a hot rod Ford and a _________

9.  It gives me a thrill to wake up in the morning on _____________

10. On the baby’s bottom or the baby’s knee, _________

11. Aint gonna study ______ no more.

12.You put your ______ foot in, you put your _____

13.Who was combing his auburn hair by the light of the silvery moon ?__________

14.__________, where the deer and the antelope play

15. Put your shoes on, Lucy!, don’t you know you’re_________

THAT WAS FUN FOR ME!  How’d you do?

Nan

LIFE — Part One

Published February 10, 2024 by Nan Mykel

 

 

 

 

 

 

LIFE – PART ONE

Is it a negative hallucination

that we mortals cannot see?

 

All around us

what linking knot has come asunder?

What forces have come undone

or made invisible?  Who are we?

Is the Anti-Christ real after all?

 

The wind whispers around me,

fresh and cool for now, but moaning.

Or are those tears?  “Bugs

have invaded my hair!  And

I am running out of air.”

 

Our dark velvet skies, brighter but not

healthier.  The effusion now includes

“space junk,”  which is tracked.  To which

space will it be delivered,

along with us?

 

I can remember being gentled by the wind’s

soft kisses.  How long will the memory endure?

______________

P. S. LETTER TO READERS:  What more can we say or do other than to stir the pot of our knowings, even if it’s too late now to change results?

__________________

YOUR ADDITIONS?

__________________

News Item:

ROBOTIC SPACE PLANES The United States and China currently have reusable robotic spacecraft regularly in orbit: two X-37Bs, built by Boeing and operated by the U.S. Space Force; and a vehicle believed to be operated by the Chinese Ministry of National Defense. Combined, the two X-37B craft have flown six times in space since 2010, most recently landed after 908 days in November 2022.

Status: In service; 6 spaceflights completed; 7th spaceflight underway–Wikipedia 2024

 

 

You Go, Flaco

Published February 8, 2024 by Nan Mykel

AT LEAST WE HAVE LOVE FOR ANIMALS

My heart drops when I see vicious remarks aimed at groups of people–transgenders, refugees, non-whites–but I am encouraged at the news stories about the rat hole hero in Chicago; Flaco, the freed owl in New York City; and the pediatrician who volunteers care for the pets of the homeless in California.  Some of us can still be touched by what we consider beauty (I wish there was another word for what I mean), but my rotten feelings get so easily swept along in the path of manipulation, dishonesty, elitism, and so much more I don’t want to remind myself of.

___________________

Socrates believed one should be skeptical of everything, and he practiced what he preached regarding democracy. Socrates was an outspoken critic of the Athenian government. Two of his biggest criticisms of democracy concerned the majority rule’s lack of knowledge and the potential for a demagogue.  Sound familiar?
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REPRESENTING THE LAND   Earlier this month, the Board of Trustees in Nederland, 45 miles northwest of Denver, authorized the appointment of two guardians to represent Boulder Creek and the watershed for purposes of preparing annual reports about the ecosystems’ health and to make recommendations on improving water quality, wildlife habitats and wetlands protection.

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HANDS OFF THE  HELPERS

Given a reported shortage of doctors, due in part to high insurance costs and to encroaching attempts to stomp out their professional oaths, including standards of care  being set by some state legislatures, the public is aimed at many being brutalized by the movement, be they women conscripted to parenthood, as well as the transgender treatment situation, both of them overlaid by volatile, uninformed emotions often twisted and shoved like a painful colonoscopy.  The abortion camps seem to have clarified themselves, but the question concerning Transgenders remains as murky as ever.  National uninformed pressure appears to be taking its toll on doctors, and therefore on patients.

For those with overwrought views on transition treatment for children, pro or con, I reviewed several articles on Google and did come away with the idea that maybe “Gender affirming treatment” misleads and possibly promotes less careful evaluations.  Just from my selective reading it seems that the first task of treatment is a joint approach by medical and psychological experts to determine an inclusive assessment prior to proceeding with “gender endorsing treatment.”

“Instead of promoting unproven treatments for children, which surveys show many Americans are uncomfortable with, transgender activists would be more effective if they focused on a shared agenda. Most Americans across the political spectrum can agree on the need for legal protections for transgender adults. They would also probably support additional research on the needs of young people reporting gender dysphoria so that kids could get the best treatment possible…A shift in this direction would model tolerance and acceptance. It would prioritize compassion over demonization. It would require rising above culture-war politics and returning to reason. It would be the most humane path forward. And it would be the right thing to do.”

 

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Loves, lamentation, and life through prose, stories, passions, and essays.

The Life-long Education Blog

Let's Explore The Great Mystery Together!

Ned Hamson's Second Line View of the News

Second Look Behind the Headlines - News you can use...

Evolution of Medical profession-Extinction of good doctors

choosing medical career; problem faced by doctors; drawbacks of medical profession;patient tutorials

Petchary's Blog

Cries from Jamaica

Memoirs of Madness

A place where I post unscripted, unedited, soulless rants of a insomniac madman

Life Matters

CHOOSE LOVE

Mybookworld24

My Life And Everything Within It

Mitch Reynolds

Just Here Secretly Figuring Out My Gender

Frank J. Peter

A Watering Hole for Freelance Human Beings Who Still Give a Damn

Passionate about making a difference

"The only thing that stands between you and your dream is the will to try and the belief that it is actually possible." - Joel Brown

Yip Abides

we're all cyborgs now