WHAT I WON’T TELL YOU TODAY

Published July 31, 2023 by Nan Mykel

WHAT I WON’T TELL YOU TODAY

I won’t tell you the sad but important lessons from the 3-hour movie OPPENHEIMER, nor more of the truth about diet pop.  Nor will I tell you about the N.Y. Times stories on  The Secret History of Gun Rights: How Lawmakers Armed the N.R.A., or The Morning: An Enemy in Mexico.

I will tell you  that I wish I’d titled my blog DOWN HOME, but it probably costs moolah to change it now.  NAN MYKEL doesn’t sound nearly as nice as NAN’S NOTEBOOK, a different Nan’s blog.

AND I GUESS I DO NEED to let you know  that the  local Letter to the Editor attack against the Athens Ohio County library system following Pride week recognition, as well as a religious attack for its Dungeons and Dragons games, backfired.  A whiff of fresh air. Thank you, Athens County.

Also to let you know about the Ohio vote on  Issue 1, the GOP’s move to make it more difficult for citizens to change anything in the state constitution.  If the effort ever came to pass, the public could only make a change in  our state constitution with a 60 percent endorsement. The vote will be Tuesday, August 8.  Even the League of Women Voters has taken a stand against it.  It’s seen as a move to make it more difficult for citizens to  challenge forced abortions or even  the use of contraception.

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DOWN HOME

And OH YES, the 3-day Nelsonville Ohio Music Festival happened week before last. My friend Alexa Abercrombie Ross wrote about it for her weekly writing group and I thought you might enjoy the flavor of a local music festival, with her kind permission (edited slightly for space concerns). Alexa writes:

NELSONVILLE MUSIC FESTIVAL 2023

Nelsonvillains (people who live in Nelsonville) get free tickets for the three day festival, so I was in, although not a big fan of the music scene.  The parking pass was $35 for the three days but I knew the entrance was just  two blocks from the main drag of our undistinguished neighboring town, Buchtel with free parking next to the only gas  station.It was a nice long walk for ue three denizens of the Nelsonville Senior Citizens.  Advised to bring chairs, I would have had a hell of a walk if one of my collapsible metal things had been intact.  Even with a lightweight aluminum woven chair it was a punishing walk in the sun a quarter mile down a rocky road,  but once we were there we could just open up those 30-year old lawn chairs, face the stage and look around. I’d come last year out of curiosity and had enjoyed the Korean barbecue tacos and the hippie ambience of the place, with three stages.

Colorful Passion Works art by challenged adults lined the entrance.The creekside stage had lots of occupied hammocks strung between the trees. Everywhere there were lines, for food, water, porta-a-potties and beer. Lines were where you met and talked with people.

What happens at a music festival?  You fill the water bottle. You hit the john.  You stand in line for food after a tour of the possibilities.  You wait for the food. Then you sit at a picnic table with other people and eat. We wanted to explore but had those damn chairs to worry about.  “You don’t have to worry about it,” the dyke in the next lawn chair said.

The Beer Tent:  Festival glasses to hold your local artisanal beer were twelve dollars.That fancy beer cost eight dollars and up.. Nothing dark was available of course, the way I like it.  I met a guy carrying four glasses in two stacks. The top two glasses still had beer. He gave me a twelve dollar glass and I asked why he hadn’t reused it instead of buying 3 more. He said he didn’t want to wait in line.  With only pale ale available, I got a tiny can of  cabernet sauvignon with pomegranate for a cool $7.  Bargains are relative.

But on a hot day beer is not advisable. You get sluggish and even walking  becomes a challenge over uneven ground. I watched a fellow in hot blue jeans and a flowered shirt dance like no one  was watching, His skin was burned rose from the sun.

I saw many familiar faces, notably Democratic women from Athens.No voter registration booth this year. Most patrons were out-of-towners if not out-of-staters.  Babies and children frolicked in the play area by the stage up the hill below the campsite.  My friends bought Garlic Naan bread from the Fat Indian cart.  The dyke was eating an ice cream cone, so the others decided they needed one too.

I actually enjoyed  the musical act,  Sierra F—-,  a catchy female lead on guitar,  The only act I’d heard of were the headliners, Kurt Vile and the Violators who were loud loud loud. My friends were gone a long time. It was getting dark and I was more than ready to leave, thinking of leaving alone when they finally returned. (I volunteered to drive us all in my electric car.) One had noticed what looked like a smear of blood on her cone and got a free replacement, after she’d enjoyed most of it. I noticed a van heading out and recognized the driver. and asked if they were going to Buchtel..We didn’t have to make that long walk back to my car! I dropped off the on in Doanville and the other in Frog Hollow. I got home and fed the cats, and went to see what was on PBS for more entertainment!….

Alexa

 

 

 

 

 

REFLECTIONS

Published July 21, 2023 by Nan Mykel

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

It’s all too much. Let’s pretend it ain’t so, because the photo above somehow penetrates me with its unstranslated and unstranslatable meaning or message. If it were a message it might be nice, because it would suggest that something sentient out there might bother to connect.

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OHIO AIN’T ALL BAD:

An amputee rabbit named Miss Rose holds a special place in Greif’s heart for being one of the “best therapy rabbits” that came through her care.

From <https://athensindependent.com/rabbit-rescue-gives-hope-to-countys-pets-and-people/>

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IS THE CHRISTIAN GOD AN UNCLE?

I’m confused.  Doesn’t the Bible suggest a competition between Gods?  If so, does that mean they’re

all uncles, offspring of our Grandfather God who embraces us all?  I’d sure like something to unite human kind….

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REBLOGGED FROM CLOUD CUCKOO:

How many labels do we need in order to feel complete?

“„I‘m a Caucasian American. A New Yorker. A Democrat. A pharmacist. An Ivy League graduate. A baseball aficionado. A BMW driver. A church member. A family dad.” – Good for you!

Or is it? What does all that say about your essence?  And do labels help us to make this world a better place?

You know what always strikes me odd? People complain about all the negativity in the (world) news but can’t do without apparently. They seem trapped in a vicious circle. “One must stay informed”, they tend to justify themselves. What for? In order to stay a part of the general negativity?

“Those nasty delinquents should be punished much more severely!” – Why? Does society mainly consist of saints who are threatened by a few criminals?

Isn’t it remarkable how the civilized man constantly looks for a scapegoat? In every single age of history, in every single region of the world.

There are actually numerous folks who read a book by a spiritual author like Eckhart Tolle and afterwards they claim, “Even if this guy is right the masses will never change!” Guess what, it’s not about the masses. It’s about us.

Why do we keep expecting only the people in charge to improve life on earth? Hardly anyone becomes a politician to establish world peace. And probably nobody becomes a CEO in order to introduce social justice. Man seeks power for his own material benefit. Or do you really give a significant part of your income to charity? Don’t you consider a comfortable house for yourself more important than a dignified life for a random person somewhere in the less privileged parts of the world?

In fact, no one is to be blamed. For in essence we are all equal….

“But what about an idealistic activist?”, one might ask. Well, what are the true motives of their actions? After all, there are a number of established lobbyists who threw stones when they were students. Peaceful warriors like Mahatma Gandhi, Martin Luther King, Tenzin Gyatso, or Thich Nhat Hanh, on the other hand, have always been extremely scarce. Probably because they are ancient souls.

We necessarily create. Whether more misery or more miracles depends on our level of consciousness. As long as we identify with a superficial label we separate ourselves from the rest of humanity, from life on earth, from the universe. As soon as we overcome the vicious circle of self-defining we become free. Free of any burden. And free to embrace the essence of life—which is true beauty.

By cloud cuckoo kissin self-reflection13. March 2021460 Words13 Comments

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CAREERING: A REBLOG

Published July 17, 2023 by Nan Mykel

WOW…Telling it like it is!

 

howard johnson's avatarehjohnson3

“If one wanted to crush and destroy a man entirely, to mete out to him the most terrible punishment … all one would have to do would be to make him do work that was completely and utterly devoid of usefulness and meaning.” ― Fyodor Dostoyevsky

Wealth is agile, you are not.

Wealth can move any which way around in the economy. Left alone—or manipulated by an invisible hand—it concentrates. it bubbles up, it doesn’t trickle down. That myth was invented by people who benefit from the bubble-up truth to keep those who don’t, doing what needs to be done to keep the system as it is. In this economic but not political sense, they are Conservatives. 

Then there are economic Progressives, they are the folks who want to distribute incoming wealth differently. These days as capital (what one has) is valued more than labor (what one does) progressives want…

View original post 1,090 more words

OUCH

Published July 17, 2023 by Nan Mykel

I just realized that the big tech corporations that own the most advanced and convincing AI robots are the wealthiest and most conservative.  Aren’t liberals  duped losers already?

An article by Jane McAlevey in the July 10/17 The Nation reminds us that hope for a turn-around may exist in nationwide negotiations by the International Brotherhood of Teamsters and the United Auto Workers (UAW), following revitalized teachers’ unions in Chicago and Los Angeles that shone light on the impact of privatization, tax breaks to corporations,  real estate developers and the rich, which have been draining resources from public education, affordable housing, and key social services.

The Federal Reserve’s tendency to suggest that the main driver of inflation is workers’s wage growth instead of executive compensation and stock paybacks enables a two-tiered structure of political and economic power and the two-tiered economy that we are experiencing.  (More than two thousand dollars to attend a show?  Who are these people?)

How many squabbling diversions of attention there are in each day’s headlines, detracting from the clarity and understanding of our two-tiered system!  The Teamsters President Sean O’Brien and UAW president Shawn Fain have signaled  their intention to “show a better, fairer and more just country–starting in the workplace.”

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THINKING

Well maybe not thinking
but tousling with ideas,
trying to recall dreams
and now, pencil in hand
I write and remember
the trees all green but not
the forks, stripped and  bare of
 life among their brothers.
Or would they be not forks
but the Devil’s tridents,
poor souls.
Nan  7/17/23

From Here to There to…

Published July 16, 2023 by Nan Mykel

Marley

ANIMAL ADVENTURE THIS WEEK:

As a long retired member of the human race, It’s not often that I come into contact with other animals (than those like me). This week I had a small adventure (or sighting) of four other animals: a racoon, a ground hog, a skunk and a Chihuahua.  Remember, I’m an elder, so it was exciting for me, though probably incidental to the reader.

My daughter and I decided to get a dog, and had to drive to Columbus to adopt one of our choosing.  We found one at the Humane Society, but he already had interested folks,  though it would be first come at 2 p.m. the following day, first takers. Since Athens was almost 2 hours away, and despite not having my nighttime pills with me, in order to be first in line we drove down the road and found a rest area and slept in the car.  At the rest stop and prior to sleeping, my daughter saw a large racoon running up to me, and fearful that it might be rabid and attack me, she threw it food in the other direction. Shortly thereafter a huge racoon climbed a garbage can right in front of the car before it and a companion ran off into the woods.  I do wonder where they sleep.  I can’t imagine running across one sleeping during the day. 

IN  ORDER TO ASSUAGE MY GUILT ABOUT PERHAPS USURPING SOMEONE ELSE FOR MARLEY, I HOPED THEY WERE ONE OF THE PUPPY FOLKS WHO BUY ALL THE PUPPIES THEY CAN IN ORDER TO RESELL THEM AT MUCH HIGHER PRICES.

Back home in Athens that night there was some excitement when a groundhog became trapped in a wired garbage cage (my vocabulary fails me).  Its head was stuck under the strong wire fencing  during the hottest part of the day.  A neighbor’s dog noticed him stuck there with his nose pinned to the earth, and barked.  Three female college students tried to free the ground hog to no avail. My daughter and I came out of the condo building, roused by the nighttime activity, and began trying to saw through the bars to no avail. One student called the police to come with bolt cutters, and a big strong policeman soon appeared without bolt cutters, but muscles.  At this point the little feller had been trapped in high temperature, and although my daughter brought out a bowl of water it wasn’t clear that he would be alive to drink it, even if rescued.  The big strong policeman just grabbed the enclosing metal fence and pulled it up, freeing  the little feller, who ran like heck across the lawn of the condo building to hide behind the outside air conditioning units there.  My daughter put the bowl of water down near where he was hiding, and we all thanked the policeman.   A few minutes later my daughter went out to toss a few crumbs of bread for the ground hog, and found a large skunk drinking from the bowl.  When he saw my daughter not far away he ran right at her.  She avoided him and isn’t sure he had really seen her or just headed in her direction.  That’s three of the animals we ran into this week, and oh yes, I forgot to mention Marley, who joined our family that day (actually, yesterday). And I forgot the two deer sightings during the trip.

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Pray Never to become an Immigrant:

“The political left in both Europe and the U.S. has struggled to come up with a response to these [immigration] developments. Instead, many progressives have dismissed immigration concerns as merely a reflection of bigotry that needs to be defeated. And opposition to immigration is frequently infused with racism: Right-wing leaders like Marine Le Pen in France traffic in hateful stereotypes about immigrants…”

Source lost–probably nytimes this week__

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Opinion David French

WHO TRULY THREATENS THE CHURCH?

To quote Jesus in the book of Mark, “There is nothing outside a person that by going into him can defile him, but the things that come out of a person are what defile him.” All manner of sin and evil comes “from within, out of the heart of man.”

Under this understanding of Scripture, we are all our own greatest enemy — Christians as fully as those who do not share our beliefs. We do not, either as individuals or as a religious movement, possess an inherent virtue that should entitle any of us to rule. We shun the will to power because we rightly fear our own sin, and we protect the liberty of others because we do not possess all wisdom and we need to hear their ideas.

“Of course that is not to say that external voices and ideas can have no negative effect in our lives. We might be our own greatest enemy, but we’re not our only enemy. But if we are deeply flawed, then that realization has to profoundly impact how we approach politics. It has to temper our confidence that we either can control or should control the public square.”

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UNBELIEVABLE

“Mr. Trump’s lawyers asked Judge Cannon this week to postpone the trial indefinitely, a move that could serve to push it until after the 2024 election. If that were to happen and Mr. Trump were to win the race, he could try to pardon himself after taking office or have his attorney general dismiss the case.”

From <https://www.nytimes.com/2023/07/14/us/politics/trump

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MAUREEN DOWD SAYS

The ingesting and synthesizing of words, images and music is going on in giant gulps. Indeed, the day is fast approaching when the digerati will be able to make a whole fake movie.

As Lanier said, “They might say, ‘Make me a movie that’s similar to Tom Cruise’s “Mission: Impossible.” However, make sure that none of the synthetic actors can be mistaken for known actors and make sure that we’re not going to get sued, but let’s go right up to the line.’ That’s not quite feasible today, but I don’t see any reason why it wouldn’t be. It’s just math. And we can do it.”

From <https://www.nytimes.com/2023/07/15/opinion/writers-actors-strike.html?campaign_id=191&emc=edit_ntmd_20230715&instance_id=97605&nl=maureen-dowd&regi_id=92821497&segment_id=139388&te=1&user_id=808aa8374858aa0bb61eef25d704e6b0>

FUNNY OR SERIOUS?

Published July 14, 2023 by Nan Mykel

I laughed so long at the following 7/12/23 Letter to the Athens News that now I’m not sure if it’s serious or funny. Again, I won’t mention the author’s name but it was in the Athens News this week along with six other responses to last week’s Athens News letter  (one of which was mine).  The letter I took or mistook for comic is the following:

READER GLAD LIBRARIES, SCHOOLS CALLED OUT

To the Editor:

I’m glad people are finally calling out the libraries and schools for their obvious liberal socialist agenda. I, for one, was shocked to learn that the libraries hold weekly Dungeons and Dragons meetings for kids. What other anti-religious  meetings are they allowing to happen to try to turn our kids against God and his word? Why are they holding meetings like Dungeons and Dragons with their focus on demons and witchcraft, that are known to be harmful to children?  This indoctrination of our kids must stop! County residents concerned about their children  should  show up at the next library board meeting and school board meetings to demand answers to why our taxpayer money is being used for an anti-family agenda and to promote anti-religion to our kids. I also encourage churches in the area to pray for the libraries so that they may be shown the light.

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At least the above did not end with the word Amen.  I think my laughter was because decades ago when I played Dungeons and Dragons it never occurred to me that it had anything to do with religion.   If this is legit, then we should bar many fairy tales and any information on the Greek gods and goddesses.

 

 

Tell Me What to Do

Published July 10, 2023 by Nan Mykel

I like to blog, but now I’m a little suspicious of the internet to re-tell a lot of “information.”  I don’t even know if AI has my number, though I’ve never invited it in.  Au contraire!  How would I know if “they” have a contract with Alexa? There’s nothing I especially want to keep secret, but for Pete’s sake!  If nothing else has caused it, AI is making folks paranoid and disbelievng….me, anyway.

I’m not even sure about the New York Times.  I know it has funneled stories onto its site full of unscrupulous ads (as the false U.S. postage stamps).  And today I’m wondering about how much Chinese money went into the LONG story about the United States’ abuse of its current colonies, including Guam.  I’ve heard criticism of  England for having colonies, but not us.  That’s good to know, but I have to wonder what or who’s behind this exceptionally long article at this point in  time.

Not to malign the authors (I’m adding authorship below) but to be struck by how long it is and how many photos there are.  Given the level of scheming today I can’t help wondering if some organization from China moneywalled it, or those U.S. citizens who are pulling for Russia and China to win perhaps?  Just too handy for them to be accidental at this time, though true?  Warren Buffet is one of the supporters of the womens’  journalism group who produced it, and I can’t tell from reading Google/Wikipedia where he stands on things.

I’m tempted to question the New York Times as well as other “news,” sources (and nobody, even you, can assure me that what I read and see is not AI-tainted.)

“Sarah A. Topol is a contributing writer for the magazine. She lived in Cairo and Istanbul for over a decade, reporting from the Middle East, the former Soviet Union, Asia and Africa. Her work for the magazine has won a National Magazine Award for feature writing and an Overseas Press Club award. This reporting was supported by the International Women’s Media Foundation’s Howard G. Buffett Fund for Women Journalists. Glenna Gordon is a documentary photographer whose work seeks out unexpected narratives. She is also a teacher and a licensed E.M.T.”

Now I’m regretting the title of this post, because I can understand some responses as being Shut Up!

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WHAT’S GOING ON IN LOCAL  OHIO

I don’t know whether to list her name or not…maybe not, but the Letter to the Editor was in  The Athens News of Wednesday, July 5, 2023, and I’m leaving some out only for brevity’s sake:

Libraries Should Be a Place for All, and that Includes Its Traditional Families 

“In regards to our county libraries, no one is arguing that libraries don’t do good or aren’t valuable. What many like-minded individuals are realizing that our libraries are promoting alternate lifestyles and wokeness on children. I wasn’t blind to the fact that The Plains Library has pride flags strewn all over the building when I walked in. I should feel comfortable sending my child to the library without it being in your face. We want safe public libraries for all!

“….We encourage all like-minded supporters who object the blatant sexualization of children to show up  [at the next board meeting] and voice their disapproval of the library  board and the direction of the county libraries and demand the current library board be replaced by those that actually listen to the county residents. Hopefully we can then get a new director who is more willing to listen and respond and not take sides with the immoral agenda of the left.

“We must not allow our children to suffer at the hands of the liberal agenda. Unite to wipe this scourge out completely! We publicly invite Jay Edwards* to attend and hope to have representatives from the growing Moms for Liberty** organization join us at this school board meeting,”

*Jay Edwards - "Jay Edwards was born and raised right here in Southeast Ohio. He shares our faith, our values and our commitment to community – and to one another. Jay is a graduate of Nelsonville-York High School, excelling in the classroom and in sports. He earned a scholarship to Ohio University, where he received his Bachelor of Science  degree in mathematics. Today, Jay lives in Nelsonville and works as a Realtor. He is a member of the Farm Bureau, Athens Area Chamber of Commerce, Nelsonville Chamber of Commerce, Nelsonville Rotary, Belpre Chamber of Commerce, 
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce, Marietta Area Chamber of Commerce and the National Rifle Association. Jay Edwards is not a career politician. He is also an appointed member of the Athens County Transportation Improvement District and the Meigs County Transportation Improvement District. He's one of us."  From jayedwardsohio.com
**Moms for Liberty –  Pick your definition from Google.
FOUNDERS OF MOMS FOR LIBERTY:
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SOMETIMES I DON’T KNOW WHAT THE WORDS MEAN
I looked it up, and you might as well  throw out the word “progressive,” because there are too many contradictory meanings. Certainly I don’t know what it means when I read it!
“Liberal democracy” means  Widespread political participation by adult citizens, including members of minority groups that include racial, ethnic, religious, linguistic, and economic …per Encyclopedia.com
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AN EARLIER QUESTION: Why is the statue of liberty a woman?  (Women are the least free gender on the planet)

For example, recall some states’ actions to prevent any abortions and also the following development:

“There is a movement in the Southern Baptist Convention, a denomination that is often a bellwether for evangelical America, to purge women from its leadership.

“The right wing of the Southern Baptists, the largest Protestant denomination in America, is now — like conservatives more broadly — cracking down on what it sees as dangerous liberal drift. Most people in the denomination have long believed that the office of head pastor should be reserved for men. But an ultraconservative faction with a loud online presence is going further, pressing for ideological purity and arguing that female pastors are a precursor to acceptance of homosexuality and sexual immorality….”

Elizabeth Dias reported from New Orleans and Ruth Graham from Dallas.  June 13, 2023 Updated 7:52 p.m.  nytimes

The Philanthropic pig reblog

Published June 26, 2023 by Nan Mykel

I enjoyed this one!

By cloud cuckookiss in tales

The message of the philanthropic pig

It had once become unbearable for a free-range pig at home. Everyone just ate and drank and scolded ‘those up there’, i.e. the farmers in this case.
“Can’t we be thankful,” he dared to ask, “to be provided with food and drink by humans every day?”

The conspecifics thought they had misheard and stopped in unison in front of the feeding troughs. Suddenly one of the relatives spoke up.
“Damn! Be thankful for these crumbs? You must be chestnuts!”
Then, belching, he devoted himself to the opulent crumbs again, and the others had also recovered from the shock. So the philanthropic pig decided to go out into the world to—well, let’s say to broaden his horizons, and would neither rest nor relax until he found an animal that didn’t resent man.

He soon heard a beeping which identified itself with pretty much anything over the course of its lecture. But as he got closer it turned out to be the voice of a she-vole. The philanthropic pig listened in fascination and watched the vole like a person in front of the television. Only when a fox grabbed at the vole did our pig regain consciousness.
“My reddish friend!”, he spoke to the fox, “Let’s have a chat!”
The fox had not noticed the pig and was so surprised that the vole managed to jump out of his mouth. He gritted his teeth as he saw her slipping away but immediately put on a mask of politeness.
“Greetings, dear little pig! What can I help you with?”

“So tell me what you think of people.”
The interviewee made a face.
“Well, what are we supposed to think of these insidious trappers! This is the scum of the animated world! Where should I start there? All they have in mind is discord and falsehood. Even when they pretend to be kind they secretly hatch sinister plans! They represent a serious threat to all life! You would have to wipe them out, finish them off, and then peace would finally reign…”
He had talked himself into such a rage that he didn’t even notice how the philanthropic pig continued on his way.
The next animal he encountered was a clamoring she-goat.
“My horned friend,” it interrupted her nagging, “do you have anything positive to say about people?”
“About these always dissatisfied and nagging contemporaries who are never content with anything and who always have something to complain about?”
And so the philanthropic pig left her behind. It wasn’t long before it saw a donkey standing around.

“My grey friend,” the pig asked him, “do you have a good word for people?”
“For these lazy folks? Let me think for a moment… no!”
Not far away stood a cow.
“My dairy friend,” she was addressed by the philanthropic pig, “how do you feel about people?”
The cattle raised her head and asked the ingenious counter-question.
“People which are so stupid there?”

The philanthropic pig kept walking but none of the animals seemed particularly fond of man.
Dog. “Those callous creatures that bite the weaker and lick the hand of the strongest?”
Snake. “That ruthless rabble that only sprays poison as soon as it opens its mouth?”
Wolf. “Those voracious vultures that can never get enough to eat?”
Magpie. “That envious entity that begrudges anyone anything?”
Hare. “Those fearful fellows that run away from every challenge in life?”
Cuckoo. “Those perilous parasites who prefer to settle in the nest?”

Depressed by the animal world’s general contempt for humanity the philanthropic pig ran into the forest and began to weep bitterly. His squeaking called the moon into action who, feeling disturbed in its holiday rest, turned on the light to confront the culprit.
“For Heaven’s sake! Who the heck is disrespecting my well-deserved tranquility?!
“Oh dear moon,” sobbed the philanthropic pig, “I went out into the world as a herald of philanthropy to meet like-minded animals but no one wants to overcome their inner misanthropy apparently.”
The old celestial body took pity on the pig’s fate.
“I am not authorized to divulge the secrets of the universe but let me tell you, my friend, the path is the goal.”
With these words he turned off the light again and the philanthropic pig was groping in the dark.

A herd of wild boar came along; as the leader became aware of him he stopped abruptly and asked,
“Friend or foe?”
“Everyone’s friend!” replied the philanthropic pig in a voice of conviction.
The wild boar eyed it suspiciously.
“There may be something piggy about you but you’re not one of us! What are you looking for here?”
“I’m trying to find like-minded animals.”
“Indeed! And what do you have in mind?”
“The love for humans.”

The whole herd flinched at the last word. Then the boar spoke.
“Those mean greencoats who shoot everything that comes their way? Get away from us because you’re out of your mind!”
Shortly thereafter, a voice sounded from the oak tree under which our pig was left alone.
“Damned black coats! Do you always have to undertake your night walks through my territory?!”
The philanthropic felt addressed because the pack was already out of earshot.
“Excuse me, dear tree!”
“I’m an owl, you simpleton!”

“You must mistake me with some…”
The owl didn’t let him finish.
“Yes, yes! I got well enough what you are! I’ll drive this obsession out of you!”
He immediately gave an epic lecture on the depravity of the human race in a historical context (or something like that). What felt like an eternity later, he summed it up.
“And now you know that we who deviate from the human norm in any way have always been killed, imprisoned, domesticated and castrated. You probably don’t know the story of the chimpanzee who got locked up in a zoo, threw stones at the people there as a thank you and as a result lost his… you-know-yet, right?”
The philanthropic pig shook his head.
“Well, now you know. So we have every reason to despise them even if it’s certainly a waste of energy!”
At this very point the philanthropic pig dared to dig deeper.

“Accordingly, everything speaks in favor of trying affection for a change.”
The owl reacted indignantly.
“Now, which animal is widely regarded as wise, the owls or the pigs?!”
The strange representative of the latter did not give up.
“Will you, in your boundless wisdom, not at least give it a try?”
“Never ever!”
The philanthropic pig thought it wise to say goodbye.

“In the event,” the owl told him, “that your obsession should, contrary to expectations, catch on and ministerial posts should be distributed–I will be available of course.”
The philanthropic pig was puzzled.
“Ministerial posts? What do you mean by that?”
“Well, if your revolution should be crowned with success, the power of the eagle in the air and that of the lion on land comes to an end, a new system of rule takes the place of the old one, then you will need the wise advice of this very owl!”
“But I don’t wish for a revolution at all!” replied the philanthropic pig.

“Are you implying that you don’t care about fame and glory at all, that you—dare I put it—preach philanthropy for its own sake?!”
“If you want to call it that way, yes.”
“Incredible! And with such a weirdo I’m wasting my valuable time!”
The owl flew away and one could hear him swearing through the forest for a long time.

The philanthropic pig was so tired after all this that he went home, stretched out on all fours and started snoring. He dreamed of a world where animals and humans lived in harmony with each other (that sounds cheesy, I know, but what else can you expect from a philanthropic pig). When it woke up the farmer came to lead it to the slaughterhouse along with two other pigs. He was amazed that one of the three stayed perfectly still while the other two made a riot. Once he heard a short grunt before he… Well, we don’t want to go into the details here. One of the witnesses to this execution was that megalomaniac vole who in a way owed her life to the philanthropic pig. That’s how she heard his message.

“Forgive the people because we often don’t know what we’re doing either!”
From then on, she dedicated her life to spreading this message–with success: many animals accepted it in their hearts and thus found inner contentment. The others absorbed them with their minds, set up a new system of government and became ministers or the like. But that is another fable and requires a narrator who knows what he is doing.

Reblogged Warm Fuzzy

Published June 24, 2023 by Nan Mykel

How My Father and I Drew a New Life

By Brian Frazer  June 16, 2023

When I was 13, my mother learned that she had multiple sclerosis. By that point she couldn’t drive, get dressed or walk by herself. My father became her sole caretaker, and she was less than appreciative.

When she rang the buzzer, he never got there fast enough. When he brought her a glass of water, there was never the right amount of ice. He wore long sleeves even in the summer because she scratched his arms in anger when he was helping her.

They eventually moved from Long Island to Fort Myers, Fla., so she could have a house with no stairs and a driveway with no snow. But in Florida my father had no friends, so I worried how he would cope with the lack of personal purpose once she was gone.

One thing made me worry less. As a teenager, my father had been declared a prodigy by his art teacher. He had commuted an hour-plus each way from Brooklyn to go to the High School of Industrial Art in Manhattan and then to Pratt Institute.

He went on to become an art teacher and had some exhibits of his oil paintings in libraries and galleries in Queens and Long Island. But when my mother got ill, his creative life came to a halt.

As my mother’s condition worsened, she was admitted to an assisted living facility, where my father was her constant bedside companion. Once when I flew in from Los Angeles, where I worked as a freelance writer, I was wandering the halls and heard a patient yell at a nurse that he was being “micromanaged.”

I had an odd thought: Do one-celled organisms under a microscope complain about being “micro micromanaged”? I scribbled it into the notebook I kept in my pocket. When I returned to my mother’s room, she was napping. I remembered my father’s love for art and quietly asked him if he had any interest in drawing a single-paneled cartoon.

He gave no definitive answer to my cartoon query. I asked him again the following day. Still no real response. I ultimately dropped the idea of collaborating and went home.  I understood. He had enough on his plate already.

About a week later, my computer pinged with an email from my then almost 80-year-old father — with an attachment. I downloaded the file and there it was. The micro micromanaging cartoon that I had asked him to draw. The positioning of one cell scolding the other cell to “Move your membrane to the edge of the slide, please!” was just as I had described to him. His style was reminiscent of the 1950s; crisp simple lines with no wasted energy. It was perfect.

We began to do four to five single-panel cartoons per week. I would come up with a series of ideas, email them to him, argue with him about where the joke was and fight for an occasional curse word if the cartoon wouldn’t work without it. My father had a lot of off-limit subjects: no foul language, no sex, no politics. Comic book heroes were a favorite topic of his, and we did a series called “Superheroes When Their Mothers Are Around.”

Here’s what a typical emailed idea to my father would look like:  We see a person drowning in the ocean yelling, “Help me, Aquaman!”

Aquaman, his mother at his side, is on the edge of the sand yelling back, “Sorry! I just ate. Can’t go in the water for another half-hour.”

My mother enjoyed seeing the cartoons as much as we enjoyed creating them. Unfortunately, she wasn’t around for very many. After burying her, my father was propelled into the land of unknowns. When an elderly person’s spouse passes, there are often two paths to choose: give up on life or reinvent oneself. I was determined to make sure my father picked the latter.

I began to post our cartoons on social media and a (very) small following ensued. I then started a website where I would repost them. The process of emailing my father the cartoon ideas, talking on the phone daily and then giving feedback and tweaks on his art gave us purpose. By then, most of my magazine work had dried up, as had my jobs in television. Worse than the financial hit I had taken was the creative slump.  Even though we lived 3,000 miles apart, my father and I grew closer than we had ever been. He began to relax his litany of taboos and, with a modicum of pressure, nearly every topic was now in play except politics. Occasionally he would even pitch me his ideas, nearly all of which lacked punchlines. Conversely, I would take a crack at drawing, but the ensuing art was dreadful. We needed each other for this to work.

The art motivated my father in other ways, too. He joined Overeaters Anonymous, a gym, several book clubs and a temple. He eventually started dating.

Drawing gave him confidence. Besides, he told me, if his prospective date laughed at our cartoons, it checked a lot of boxes. I started coming up with more relationship-oriented content. He particularly liked the one captioned “Bad Blind Dates” with a porcupine seated at a restaurant across from a balloon twisted into the shape of a dog.

Shortly after my father’s 85th birthday, I got a call from my sister, Patti, who lives around the corner from him. “Dad’s in the hospital,” she said.He had suffered a heart attack. I got on the next plane to Fort Myers to see him before it was too late. He was in his hospital room, snoring. On the back of his food tray, I spotted a napkin with some doodling. The caption said, “Surgical Luxuries.” The drawing was too messy to decode the joke, if there even was one.

But it gave me an idea.

“Dad, how about this for a cartoon,” I said when he awoke. “The World’s Worst Cardiologist. Then we see a doctor operating on someone, holding their damaged heart aloft as if it were a trout, saying, ‘This heart looks terrible. Good thing everyone has two!’”

My father laughed. Eleven days later, I was able to drive him home.

The first thing he did after I shut his front door was drag his oxygen tank over to his drafting table. The day of his heart attack he had been working on a cartoon of ours about how it was impossible to tell who was the better air harmonica player — with two men each holding their hands, sans instrument, up to their mouths. My father was determined to finish it that day, which he did, even when the plastic oxygen cord and his drawing hand became entangled.

As my father’s strength returned, he was over the moon about cartooning. He often carried a folder of his favorites to show to new friends at the synagogue, post office and Silver Sneakers yoga class. For decades his art muscles had atrophied, but as he built them back up, his teenage self’s enthusiasm returned.

Then last April I felt lightheaded, with odd heart palpitations — something that, as a devout exerciser, I had never experienced. I went to the doctor who sent me to the hospital, where, on my 20th wedding anniversary, I wound up spending the night.The next morning, seconds after I had checked my email, five nurses rushed in. My resting heart rate had spiked to 187. They assumed I’d had a heart attack. I explained that I had just received an email saying that my father and I had sold our first cartoon to The New Yorker.The nurses didn’t seem to understand the magnitude of the situation.

After nearly a year of waiting — and almost a dozen years since my father and I started collaborating — our first cartoon appeared in the magazine two months ago (and three weeks before my father’s 90th birthday). He may very well be the oldest first-time cartoonist in The New Yorker. He is now painting, drawing and talking so much I have to pretend I’m getting another call to escape his exuberance. If he were to ask me whether I was prouder of the cartoon or of him turning his life around, I would say, “Both.”

From <https://www.nytimes.com/2023/06/16/style/how-my-father-and-i-drew-a-new-life.html?campaign_id=9&emc=edit_nn_20230616&instance_id=95289&nl=the-morning&regi_id=92821497&segment_id=135860&te=1&user_id=808aa8374858aa0bb61eef25d704e6b0>

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The next morning, seconds after I had checked my email, five nurses rushed in. My resting heart rate had spiked to 187. They assumed I’d had a heart

When she rang the buzzer, he never got there fast enough. When he brought her a glass of water, there was never the right amount of ice. He wore long sleeves even in the summer because she scratched his arms in anger when he was helping her.

 

He gave no definitive answer to my cartoon query. I asked him again the following day. Still no real response. I ultimately dropped the idea of collaborating and went home.

I understood. He had enough on his plate already.

About a week later, my computer pinged with an email from my then almost 80-year-old father — with an attachment. I downloaded the file and there it was. The micro micromanaging cartoon that I had asked him to draw. The positioning of one cell scolding the other cell to “Move your membrane to the edge of the slide, please!” was just as I had described to him. His style was reminiscent of the 1950s; crisp simple lines with no wasted energy. It was perfect.

We began to do four to five single-panel cartoons per week. I would come up with a series of ideas, email them to him, argue with him about where the joke was and fight for an occasional curse word if the cartoon wouldn’t work without it.My father had a lot of off-limit subjects: no foul language, no sex, no politics. Comic book heroes were a favorite topic of his, and we did a series called “Superheroes When Their Mothers Are Around.”

Here’s what a typical emailed idea to my father would look like: We see a person drowning in the ocean yelling, “Help me, Aquaman!” Aquaman, his mother at his side, is on the edge of the sand yelling back, “Sorry! I just ate. Can’t go in the water for another half-hour.”

My mother enjoyed seeing the cartoons as much as we enjoyed creating them. Unfortunately, she wasn’t around for very many.  After burying her, my father was propelled into the land of unknowns. When an elderly person’s spouse passes, there are often two paths to choose: give up on life or reinvent oneself. I was determined to make sure my father picked the latter.

I began to post our cartoons on social media and a (very) small following ensued. I then started a website where I would repost them. The process of emailing my father the cartoon ideas, talking on the phone daily and then giving feedback and tweaks on his art gave us purpose. By then, most of my magazine work had dried up, as had my jobs in television. Worse than the financial hit I had taken was the creative slump.  Even though we lived 3,000 miles apart, my father and I grew closer than we had ever been. He began to relax his litany of taboos and, with a modicum of pressure, nearly every topic was now in play except politics. Occasionally he would even pitch me his ideas, nearly all of which lacked punchlines. Conversely, I would take a crack at drawing, but the ensuing art was dreadful. We needed each other for this to work.

The art motivated my father in other ways, too. He joined Overeaters Anonymous, a gym, several book clubs and a temple. He eventually started dating. Drawing gave him confidence. Besides, he told me, if his prospective date laughed at our cartoons, it checked a lot of boxes. I started coming up with more relationship-oriented content. He particularly liked the one captioned “Bad Blind Dates” with a porcupine seated at a restaurant across from a balloon twisted into the shape of a dog.

Shortly after my father’s 85th birthday, I got a call from my sister, Patti, who lives around the corner from him. “Dad’s in the hospital,” she said. He had suffered a heart attack. I got on the next plane to Fort Myers to see him before it was too late. He was in his hospital room, snoring. On the back of his food tray, I spotted a napkin with some doodling. The caption said, “Surgical Luxuries.” The drawing was too messy to decode the joke, if there even was one.  But it gave me an idea.

“Dad, how about this for a cartoon,” I said when he awoke. “The World’s Worst Cardiologist. Then we see a doctor operating on someone, holding their damaged heart aloft as if it were a trout, saying, ‘This heart looks terrible. Good thing everyone has two!’” My father laughed. Eleven days later, I was able to drive him home.

The first thing he did after I shut his front door was drag his oxygen tank over to his drafting table. The day of his heart attack he had been working on a cartoon of ours about how it was impossible to tell who was the better air harmonica player — with two men each holding their hands, sans instrument, up to their mouths. My father was determined to finish it that day, which he did, even when the plastic oxygen cord and his drawing hand became entangled.

As my father’s strength returned, he was over the moon about cartooning. He often carried a folder of his favorites to show to new friends at the synagogue, post office and Silver Sneakers yoga class. For decades his art muscles had atrophied, but as he built them back up, his teenage self’s enthusiasm returned. Then last April I felt lightheaded, with odd heart palpitations — something that, as a devout exerciser, I had never experienced. I went to the doctor who sent me to the hospital, where, on my 20th wedding anniversary, I wound up spending the night.

The next morning, seconds after I had checked my email, five nurses rushed in. My resting heart rate had spiked to 187. They assumed I’d had a heart attack. I explained that I had just received an email saying that my father and I had sold our first cartoon to The New Yorker.The nurses didn’t seem to understand the magnitude of the situation.

After nearly a year of waiting — and almost a dozen years since my father and I started collaborating — our first cartoon appeared in the magazine two months ago (and three weeks before my father’s 90th birthday). He may very well be the oldest first-time cartoonist in The New Yorker. He is now painting, drawing and talking so much I have to pretend I’m getting another call to escape his exuberance. If he were to ask me whether I was prouder of the cartoon or of him turning his life around, I would say, “Both.”

 

From <https://www.nytimes.com/2023/06/16/style/how-my-father-and-i-drew-a-new-life.html?campaign_id=9&emc=edit_nn_20230616&instance_id=95289&nl=the-morning&regi_id=92821497&segment_id=135860&te=1&user_id=808aa8374858aa0bb61eef25d704e6b0>

History Wipeout?

Published June 24, 2023 by Nan Mykel

I’d like to hear from you on this one. An Opinion Guest Essay in the NY Times June 21, 2023 appears to be a warning voice in the wilderness about the unregulated loss of history via the internet.  Titled The World’s Digital Memory Is at Risk, it is by Nanna Bonde Thylstrup. Dr. Thylstrup is a professor at the University of Copenhagen.

“As a scholar of digital data, I know that not all data loss — the corrosion and destruction of our digital past — is tragic. But much data loss today occurs in ways that are deeply unjust and that have monumental implications for both culture and politics. Few nonprofit organizations or publicly backed digital libraries are able to operate at the scale needed to truly democratize control of digital knowledge. Which means important decisions about how these issues play out are left to powerful, profit-driven corporations or political leaders with agendas. Understanding these forces is a critical step toward managing, mitigating and ultimately controlling data loss and, with it, the conditions under which our societies remember and forget”.

“Public spheres now exist precariously at the mercy of social media companies. And each day, corporations like Amazon, Alphabet and Meta extract and assetize our data, stockpiling it and monetizing it under dubious consent structures.”

From <https://www.nytimes.com/2023/06/21/opinion/digital-archives-memory.html?campaign_id=39&emc=edit_ty_20230621&instance_id=95649&nl=opinion-today&regi_id=92821497&segment_id=136278&te=1&user_id=808aa8374858aa0bb61eef25d704e6b0>

 The essay brushes against something I’ve already noticed: something no longer being available on the internet.  (A doctored photo of Frump and a critical post about Henry Ford).  If you can, it wouldn’t hurt to COPY something you would like to have accessible in the future.

Is there something other than Google? Who are the corporate owners of Google?  According to the aforementioned Guest Essay,  maintenance of information on the internet is not regulated.  Given the attitude of  many  anti-woke conservatives, history is suspect and contains evidence of wrongdoing (therefore the current  push to suspect and/or forbid teaching of parts of it in public schools and some universities, as in Ohio).

I’m surprised that this is the first time I’ve heard of the selective destruction of history.  I knew about selective banning of books, but not what selective  editing of the internet might result in. Two more strains in this sad melody:
1. The issue is complicated due to a number of  creative ownerships involved.  Maybe including or not including old  copyrighted material could be separated.
2. The corporate embrace of Artificial Intelligence is in the process of making everything suspect.
Opinion

Guest Essay

The World’s Digital Memory Is at Risk

A photo of Michaelangelo’s “David” with an Apple operating system drop-down menu superimposed in front of it with options reading “Open,” “Open With,” “Move to Trash,” and “Get Info.” “Move to Trash” has been highlighted by a cursor.
Credit…Illustration by Sam Whitney/The New York Times
A photo of Michaelangelo’s “David” with an Apple operating system drop-down menu superimposed in front of it with options reading “Open,” “Open With,” “Move to Trash,” and “Get Info.” “Move to Trash” has been highlighted by a cursor.

A few pertinent remarks:  ”

“Tech companies, too, have a record of questionable policies around data, content moderation and censorship. They have their own motives — including a business model based on generating different data enclosures and on hardware and software obsolescence — and exist in a complex political and regulatory ecosystem. That ecosystem often offers perverse incentives to both maximize profit by selectively storing some data and reduce regulatory burdens by removing access to other data. Marginalized communities may be particularly vulnerable. During the 2020 Black Lives Matter protests, some activists accused social media sites like Facebook of censoring their posts. Platform removal of adult content disproportionately affects queer communities. And in conflict zones, regimes and content moderation systems frequently remove material that could be crucial evidence in war crimes investigations.”

_______________________
Another good Times article is by John McWhorter on Reparations,  June 22.
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