Saturday, December 28, 2019

Team Mates 2020: Saturday Political Soap Box 231

Yeah.  This is misleading.  This is a potential 2020 Democratic ticket, but not one I would not necessarily recommend.  It's the only picture I can find of a proposed Democratic ticket.*


There's no doubt.  We need the best ticket we can muster to have the best shot of preventing something that cannot happen - the reelection of the corrupt, unfit, racist, and narcissistic Trump. Or any Republican for that matter.

Outside of the Electoral College and its quirks, the biggest challenge to the Democrats is to create a broad enough coalition to maximize and energize their various factions.

What does that mean?

The ticket must maximize voting potential in four groups - 

1)  The Suburban Middle Class.  These are voters in the suburbs and exurbs who in the past have voted for Republicans, and hold moderate views on social issues.  They are repulsed by the vulgarism and intolerance of the Trump administration but may be skittish about economic reforms that they fear may cost too much.  My own feeling about this group is that they are going to be the hardest to win over.  Many will talk smack about Trump, but then go into the booth and vote for him.  This is what happened in 2016.  It is likely to repeat in 2020.  Nevertheless, Democrats want to make as many inroads as they can but do so without becoming defacto Republicans.

2) Progressive voters.  That's people like me. I'm clear about my position.  I will set aside my causes if it means having to support a nominee that is less likely to sufficiently move the country in the direction that I want.  This is the most enthusiastic part of the Democratic Party.  We provide money and energy.  We support our candidates with small donations that demonstrate a grassroots juggernaut.  It is foolish for the Democratic Party not to tap into this.

3) People of Color.  Without overwhelming and motivated support from African-American and Latino voters, Democratic candidates lose.  They have to have a ticket that will energize these groups and others, including Asian and Jewish voters.  Had African American turnout in the Michigan, Wisconsin, and Pennsylvania been what it was in the Obama elections, Trump would have lost the Electoral College.

4) White Working Class.  This is a group that should solidly be in the Democratic camp, at least based on policy.  But they are the hardest to get, because of culture war issues and resentment carried towards other groups.  Corporate Democrats do not make it easy, as they want to mute the very programs that could appeal to them.  This is the group that, despite their sometimes conservative/reactionary rhetoric, find appeal in issues such as Medicare For All and increases in the minimum wage.

The most important section of the country to win back is the Midwest.  Democrats have to win back Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania to have a shot.

How do we do that?

Here are some tickets that I feel give us our best shot -


Warren/Klobuchar

This may be a disturbing ticket to some of my progressive friends, but I'm afraid it makes too much sense.  It combines the strength of the progressive movement with the Midwestern, more pragmatic appeal of Klobuchar.  Make no mistake about it.  This is a year where we will have to have a ticket with cross-appeal. 

The most substantial weakness of this ticket is that it may not enthuse the African American and Latino communities as much as will be needed.  

On the other hand, an all-female ticket would enthuse women across the spectrum and would drive the misogynistic Trump crazy.

Other potential running mates for Warren include Kamala Harris, Julian Castro, Cory Booker, and Sherrod Brown.

Biden/Harris

This also would be a great team to get under the skin of Trump.  It would help maximize the interest of people of color, but would also enthuse women voters. Biden's appeal to suburban voters and the Midwest should be a strength to the ticket.

The weakness would be in appeal to progressive voters, and the lack of appeal to the white working class.  Biden would stop short of advocating the type of programs that would actually help them and may be perceived as politics as usual.

Other potential running mates for Biden include Pete Buttigieg, Cory Booker, and Elizabeth Warren.  His experience and name recognition may enable him to pull in a lesser-known name, such as Oregon Governor Kate Brown, or Stacey Abrams of Georgia.

Sanders/Brown

Sanders is going to be very tempted to double down with a very progressive candidate.  He needs to resist that urge as much as possible.  He's going to need to win as much support from the corporate Democrats as possible.  That is why I recommend Democratic Senator Sherrod Brown of Ohio for a running mate.  Sherrod may be pragmatic, but he is also very progressive, and winning elections in otherwise conservative Ohio.  He is the poster child for how Democrats win in places that Democrats don't usually win.  They would have the best chance of winning the white working class.

It may make it tough to get the support they need from people of color and women.  Even though Sanders/Brown makes electoral sense, I would vastly prefer that the Democrats have a female nominee in one or both of the ticket slots.

Other potential running mates for Bernie Sanders include Cory Booker, Julian Castro, and Kamala Harris.  There are many lesser-known progressives he could choose, but he has to resist that urge and put in somebody with an appeal to the corporate Democrats.

Yes, I know.  Other candidates may win the nomination, but the same rules apply.  This is an election for coalition broadening, not base shrinking.  Two corporate Democrats running together would be a complete disaster (e.g., Biden/Klobuchar).  The same is true of two progressive Democrats (e.g.. Sanders/Warren - as much as I would LOVE that team).

I would reiterate my greatest fear for the 2020 election - that Trump dumps the bland but dangerous Mike Pence, and replaces him with former South Carolina Governor and UN Ambassador Nikki Haley.  And then the first elected female Vice President will be a...Republican.

We cannot let that happen.

So, yes, my preferred ticket is Warren/Klobuchar.  Barring that, a woman absolutely has to be on the Democratic ticket.

Everything is at stake.





































Thursday, December 26, 2019

My Best TV 2019


7) The Good Place (NBC)

A family favorite, now that Benjamin has caught up to it as well.  It has that simple thing that makes great comedies work - a cast you care about in funny situations.  Its philosophical overtones have been very intriguing to Benjamin, who took a philosophy course this Fall.  Alison is a huge Kristen Bell fan and has grown to love all the characters.  I appreciate it's fast pacing, with the storyline not getting stuck in one place.  The AI character, Janet, deserves an Emmy for best supporting actress (comedy).




6) Marvel's Agents of SHIELD (ABC)

Once again, the best show on broadcast TV.  For fans of Joss Whedon's work, it is the best thing available that shows his influence.  It's another show with swift plotting and great characters.  It's occasionally had a hard time keeping up with the changes in the Marvel movie universe, but it's still done an excellent job of staying exciting and vital.  Ratings would probably be better if they had an occasional guest appearance by an Avenger or two, but they are either too expensive or highfalutin to do that.



5) Stranger Things (Netflix)

Great show, even as the kids age.  Adding a more significant role for Steve Harrington and Robin, centered on the ice creamery, Scoops Ahoy.  I love slips into alternate worlds, and the writers have done a clever job in slowly introducing us into their nightmare vision.




4) The Handmaid's Tale (Hulu)

Great extension of Margaret Atwood's novel, as it moves uncomfortably close to our own reality.




3) For All Mankind (Apple +)

For those who like their alternate history super-realistic and done with precision.  One minor historical variation, the Russians landing first on the moon, and the ripple effects are amazing to behold.  One of them is shown above - women added in force to the astronaut core early on, spurred by the Russians landing the first woman on the moon.

My son, Gregory Strait, is the editorial colorist on this show.  The work he has done is amazing and adds significantly to the effects and feel of this show.

This streaming service, Apple +, came online at the same time as Disney Plus, and it has heavily overshadowed it.  Check out its array of programs.  It's $4.99 a month, but worth checking out.  The annual cost is $59.88, which may seem like a lot, but it is less than the cost for two or three people to have a meal at Olive Garden.


2) Game of Thrones (HBO)

The ending that I longed for (or close to it), although I do concede that the season was rushed, and needed more episodes to prepare the viewer for where the show was going.  I've read the books, some twice, and the ending was on cue as to where I think the author intended to go.  I don't mean specifically who becomes King, but to the geopolitical growth that occurred.  I look forward to George RR Martin completing the book series.



1) Watchmen (HBO)

Oh, my Lordy, did this show blow me away!  So much more than even an extension of the classic Watchmen graphic novel, it was a tour-de-force exploration of our country's racism and prejudices.  Regina King deserves every performance award ever made.  If you have HBO or access to it, you must not miss this show!



Honorable mentions: Servant (Apple +), Supergirl (CW), Orville (Fox - soon on Hulu), Superstore (NBC), The Cook Kids (Fox), all on HBO - Silicon Valley, The Righteous Gemstones, Succession, Barry, On Becoming A God in Central Florida (Showtime), Why Women Kill (CBS All Access), Castle Rock and The Act (Hulu), The Boys (Amazon Prime), Killing Eve (BBC America, Hulu), Doom Patrol (DC Universe), You and Russian Dolls (Netflix).

Yeah, I like streaming services.  Free country.  Deal.








Tuesday, December 24, 2019

Merry Christmas One and All!



Merry Christmas, one and all!

From the Straits



Tom 



Alison & Benjamin




Doug & Paige




The Happy Father, Doug the Groom & Greg the Best Man





Skitty



Cocoa Bear


Ellie


Pixie



Boss-A-Man

Merry Christmas!

Merry Merry Christmas!

From our little family!




Monday, December 23, 2019

Star Wars! Nothing but Star Wars! Nothing But Star Wars Do I See!


I crawled out of the womb, a science fiction and fantasy fan.

I loved the Adventures of Superman on television.  Anytime the Wonderful World of Disney showed anything imaginative. I was right smack in front of the TV, a big smile on my face.  I started a lifelong love affair with comic books at 5, beginning with any Classics Iluustrated, Jr's that focused on the rescuing of princesses and then graduating on to superhero comics, like the Legion of Super-Heroes set in the 31st century.  By the time I was 8, I was buying science fiction magazines like Worlds of If and Fantastic Stories, and joining the Science Fiction Book Club, reading stuff like The Foundation Trilogy by Isaac Asimov.  TV was a flood of great shows,  like The Twilight Zone, The Outer Limits,  Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea, Star Trek, Lost In Space, The Time Tunnel, and so much more.

But the movies?  They lagged terribly.  They always fell short of what I could dream they could be.  Many were cheesy and cliche, with miserable special effects.  I didn't understand 2001:A Space Oddysey (even when I saw it again in later years).  They always seem to cut short in really bringing in to a different world.

And then, one summer as I was home from college, there come rumblings of a movie that was something special.  It started in larger cities and did not come to smaller places until weeks later.  But some people from our area had made their way to Detroit to see it, and the word was - there had never been anything like it before.

When it finally came to Saginaw, I was in line for it's first showing.  And...it blew me away.  It was everything I had dreamed a science fiction movie could be.  It didn't back away.  It took you there.  And what a there it was!  By the time of the cantina scene, I was almost in tears, tears of happiness and joy that the movies had caught and exceeded all my expectations.

There were rumors that Geroge Lucas, the director behind Star Wars, planned on this being a nine movie epic.  Then he quit after three, and I thought that was it.  Amazingly, some twenty years later, the story continued, showing the prequel, the beginning of the story.

Then Lucas lost interest again, and once again, I thought it was over.  But Disney swooped in, bought the rights from Lucas, and the story continued again, this time moving into the future, showing events after the original three movies.

Do you know what I won't miss about Star Wars now being over?  I won't miss all the griping and complaining from people over which movie or series of movies were good or bad.  So much caterwauling, it drives me crazy!

I saw every Star Wars movie in the theatre, virtually always on the first weekend, it came out. There was not one that I did not tingle in anticipation to see.  There was not one I was disappointed in.

Yes, one could always quibble at the edges.  Jar Jar Binks was a huge misfire, and there were plenty of other overly commercial aspects (Ewoks?  Anyone? Anyone?).  And yes, I had my favorites and favorite moments.  If pressed to the wall, I would have to say The Empire Strikes Back is a favorite, but that is not to diminish any of the others. But I was there for the entire journey.  From beginning to end.

I loved the original cast of characters, their joy and spirit, and interaction.  I appreciated the acting skills displayed in the second set of movies, with Ewan McGregor and Natalie Portman, among others, and Yoda taking center stage.  And the diversity of the cast of the third set of movies was very impressive to me  - I am a huge fan of Rey and the whole gang.

So, please.  Save your discussion about why some of the Star Wars movies sucked.

For me.....


I LOVED THEM ALL!!!

And I look forward to whatever is next to come!

May the Force be with you!

And, as Bill Murray sang on Saturday Night Live.




Saturday, December 21, 2019

Reclaiming Evangelism: Saturday Political Soap Box 230



Thank you, Christianity Today!

The respected magazine, founded by Billy Graham, has published an editorial endorsing President Trump's impeachment and removal.

From the editorial

Trump’s evangelical supporters have pointed to his Supreme Court nominees, his defense of religious liberty, and his stewardship of the economy, among other things, as achievements that justify their support of the president. We believe the impeachment hearings have made it absolutely clear, in a way the Mueller investigation did not, that President Trump has abused his authority for personal gain and betrayed his constitutional oath. The impeachment hearings have illuminated the president’s moral deficiencies for all to see. This damages the institution of the presidency, damages the reputation of our country, and damages both the spirit and the future of our people. None of the president’s positives can balance the moral and political danger we face under a leader of such grossly immoral character.

Also:

 To use an old cliché, it’s time to call a spade a spade, to say that no matter how many hands we win in this political poker game, we are playing with a stacked deck of gross immorality and ethical incompetence. And just when we think it’s time to push all our chips to the center of the table, that’s when the whole game will come crashing down. It will crash down on the reputation of evangelical religion and on the world’s understanding of the gospel. And it will come crashing down on a nation of men and women whose welfare is also our concern.

Christianity Today is not a liberal magazine.  It is well within the framework of conservative Christianity.  

Some blog readers have commented in the past that I have used the word evangelical too negatively.  I do not view the concept of evangelism as wrong in and of itself.  Spreading the word of the Gospels is vital.  But I'm afraid evangelical has been captured and perverted by the Christian Right.

For a true concept of how evangelism can be a positive, please see Jim Wallis and Sojourners Magazine.


Franklin Graham, Billy Graham's lost soul son, has condemned the editorial and accused Christianity Today of becoming a liberal magazine.  Trump, of course, is incoherently apoplectic, and transactional - I gave you stuff!  You should be loyal to me!  I DID YOU A FAVOR, THOUGH.

Think Christianity Today is some bastion of progressive Christianity?  Read these parts of the editorial - 

Trump’s evangelical supporters have pointed to his Supreme Court nominees, his defense of religious liberty, and his stewardship of the economy, among other things, as achievements that justify their support of the president.

------------

Can we say with a straight face that abortion is a great evil that cannot be tolerated and, with the same straight face, say that the bent and broken character of our nation’s leader doesn’t really matter in the end?

It's not worth it, my Christain Right friends.  It's no longer worth your soul.  Please join Christianity Today in repudiating a man morally unfit to hold the office, Impeached President Donald J Trump.

  











Thursday, December 19, 2019

Profiles of Courage; Glimpses of Cowardice


President Trump is impeached.

Whatever else happens, that stain will stick with him forever.  It will always be in the first line of any historical bio written about him.  And deservedly so.

Every significant moment in history brings us instances of great courage, and, unfortunately, glimpses of incredible cowardice.

Profiles of Courage:



Congresswoman Elissa Slotkin of Michigan

Elissa is one of those freshman Democrats who were elected in congressional districts that in the past had gone for Republicans, and had voted by significant margins for Donald Trump in 2016.  Voting for impeachment would be a tremendous risk, possibly costing them a second term.

Elissa has a background in the Defense Department and was also a CIA analyst.  She researched carefully and was quite aware of the magnitude of the malfeasance of Donald Trump.  Her decision was not reached lightly, and she realized that it could end her political career.

Nevertheless, she realized she had no choice but to vote for the articles of impeachment.  She made her announcement at a town hall of her constituents.  There was some applause, but there were many boos.

Many of her Freshman Democratic colleagues were in the same boat.  But all but two made the decision to vote for articles of impeachment.


Congressman Justin Amash of Michigan

Congressman Justin Amash was a Republican.  Justin is a very, very conservative libertarian, and he is quite a bit distant from my political ideology.  But he does believe in our constitution, and to call out abuse and wrongdoing when it happens. He spoke out against Trump and was for an impeachment inquiry. He was on board for this long before even many of the Freshman Democrats mentioned above.

Of course, Republicans could not abide this.  He was made to be a pariah and an outsider.  Rather than cower, he declared himself an independent.  Many who backed his campaign earlier, including members of the wealthy DeVos (Amway) family, have disavowed him.

He will have a tough row winning his district again as an Independent if he chooses to try to stay in Congress.  But his integrity was too high to make any other choice.

Glimpses of Cowardice



Congressman Jeff Van Drew of New Jersey

This coward caved rather than standing for what is right.  He caved so hard that he appears to be preparing to announce his switch to the Republican Party.

He knows better.  He is valuing his re-election more than his principles.  Or maybe he just doesn't have any principles.

Most of his staff have already quit rather than participate in his switch.


Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii

I used to like Tulsi a lot.  Not enough to make her my choice for President, but enough to want her voice to be heard.

I am done with that now.

She decided to vote PRESENT on the articles of impeachment.

WTH???????

She had some convoluted reason for doing so.  She thought Trump was guilty, but because not a single Republican voted for them, that she thought Trump should be censured rather than impeached.

WTH????

It's not an act of principle.  It's an act of cowardice.  The most important decision of her political career and she decides to punt.

Oh, well.  She had a good career in politics.  I guess soon it will back to surfboarding on Oahu.


Every single Republican Congressperson

Wow.  What incredible diversity in that party.

The Democratic Party looked like America.  The Republican Party looked like a Klan Rally where they decided it wasn't necessary to wear robes anymore.

And that lack of diversity extended to their lockstep defense of Trump.

Well, it wasn't so much of a defense as a long and ugly whine, filled with yelling and fury signifying nothing.

Oh, you just hate Trump!

Well, I mean, the Ukrainians eventually got their money, didn't they?

The Democrats were mean in the process they used.

Why couldn't we expose the whistleblower and make his/her life a living hell?

You know, Trump has it worse than the Salem Witch Trials.  It's like Pearl Harbor.  It's like McCarthyism.  Trump has it worse than Jesus Christ!

They could not defend Trump's character.

They could not refute the basis of the charges.  He did it.  TRUMP SAID HE DID IT.

Not one of them stood up for their country and constitution.

They all cowered to Trump.

Every single one of them.

They may think they saved their jobs.  They all think they avoided the terrorism of Trump's mean tweets.

Maybe they have.  Maybe they maintained their good graces with the most extreme of their constituents, and the foul beast tweeting madly from his 15-time flushed toilet.

Maybe they did escape all that.  But what they will not escape?

The judgment of History.  And it will not be kind.

























Tuesday, December 17, 2019

Acorn Bombardier


I've started to take Coca Bear on my morning walks.  It helps her with her stress levels, as she is getting more anxious as she ages.  It used to be that she would get nervous whenever it rained and try to get in our bedroom, toss dog beds, and clothing.  She would gnaw at the doorknob, tearing it up and causing her mouth to bleed, so we put a tennis ball on the doorknob.  She still can get it in, but it doesn't hurt her mouth.  It has now grown to be that she does anytime both Alison and I are gone.

The walks have helped a little bit.  It certainly hasn't hurt her.  The walk is pretty steady, except for an occasional pitstop.  At first, I wasn't bringing "pick up bags," but I've learned that lesson.  She doesn't have a problem leaving surprises not just in people's yards, but also in the middle of the road.  She needs to let people and animals know that "Cocoa Bear was here." I fight to prevent that message.

On the way back, over a block away from our house, I heard these thuds and pings, like little bombs, or large pieces of hail.  What house was so noisy?

It was our house.  We have a large oak tree in our back yard, and it spends a lot of the Fall and Early Winter shedding acorns all over our back yard.  Many of them hit our metal roof, making it sound like our house is always under siege.  Alison thinks it's one of the things contributing to Cocoa Bear's nervous, the military-like barrage striking the metal roof, then rolling down into our backyard.

Limbs periodically fall off this mighty oak.  That's a real thud when they hit.  One punched a hole in the top of our screened-in porch.  That was fun to fix.

Squirrels are attracted to our yard.  This creates a lot of entertainment for our dogs. They don't really catch the squirrels.  I don't know if they would know what to do with them if they did.  But it does provide exercise for all involved.

There is a hole in the tree near the base.  I think the hole is growing deeper, but I am not sure.  I am not sure of the overall health of the tree,  I think it's ok.  I'm sure it's one of those types of trees that have been there for a very, very long time.  I'm pretty sure it's the largest tree in our neighborhood.  We may get somebody to look at it, someone who can make an honest assessment, and not just have the ulterior motive of earning a lot of money to chop it down.

For now, we put up with our acorn bombardier and the occasional fallen limb.  It is a pretty tree.  It is a mighty tree. 

And when Cocoa Bear and I go for walks, we don't have to worry about getting lost.  We can follow the sound of the acorn explosions until we reach home again.












Saturday, December 14, 2019

Blue & Red Country: Saturday Political Soap Box 229



This is something I posted directly to Facebook.  That was unusual in that I don't usually post anything that long.  If it's that long, I would post it on my blog, and have people see it there.

It's frustrating.  Over 20 people posted reactions to it (like, love, anger, etc.), and there were nine comments.  Doesn't sound like many?  Contrast that with the usual reaction to my blog entries - maybe zero to three likes, if I'm lucky one comment.

I guess trying to bring people to greater blog participation is another way I tilt at windmills.

Nevertheless, I persist.

Anyhoo, here is the direct post I made.  Additional comments or clarification are in normal size type (like this).


My son, Benjamin, was an early huge fan of Barack Obama. He chose the part of Barack Obama at his elementary school's Wax Museum. He used in his speech one of his favorite lines of Obama's - "There are no blue states. There are no red states. There is only the United States of America." Sadly, ten years later, I have come to the heartbreaking conclusion that my son and Obama were wrong.

This happened in the spring of 2009.  To the best of my recollection, Benjamin was in third grade.  He played it straight, with no makeup or accent.  He just wore a suit and was behind a podium.

Benjamin was the first in my family to support Barack Obama. Eventually, support from my family (parents, sister, etc.) was universal.  My father was very big on him.  My mother was very worried in late October 2008 that Obama might lose.  She had early voted by absentee ballot.  She had to go to the hospital for a health problem, and I talked to her by phone from there.  I reassured her that Obama was going to win, that Colin Powell had endorsed him, and events were favoring Obama.  She worried that if something happened to her before the election, her absentee vote wouldn't count.  I thought that was a strange worry, but I told her that I thought that it would.  That was the last conversation I had with her.  She died later that day.

There is a blue country. There is a red country. The blue is imperfect, but it does believe in factual reality. The red country has many decent people, but it believes in an alternate fantasy, one that is distant from democratic values. Nothing the blue country does can wake up the red country to the damage they are causing.

And despite media reports to the contrary, those countries are mixed.  Even living in a county that voted 87% for Trump, I still find blue country people.  It's not easy for us, but we exist.

While our friends, at work or at church or other organizations, get to shoot off their mouths about anything they want, us blue countriers have to be cautious about everything we say.

It may seem like I am very bold and forthright with my opinions, but that is in print.  In-person, I tend not to discuss unless confronted., or I am with a group of like-minded people.

Watching the United Kingdom sink further towards hate and nationalism, seeing the Judiciary Committee Republicans spin crap and lies while holding firm against any sense of reason, is making me lose all hope for the future.

The United Kingdom vote has given fire to corporate Democrats, who blame the considerable Labour loss on Labour trying to be too Progressive.  That kind of transference is a horrible and fatal mistake and one that would take several blog posts to refute in full.

The effects of the UK vote, whatever its cause, is going to be horrific and devastating.  

I will not stop tilting at windmills, but I confess, I am growing depressed and weary. I see fewer and fewer ways out of this. I had not wanted to live in a time like the 30s, where the dark clouds of authoritarian fascism threatened the planet, but I now realize that once again, that is the time we are in. I'm not sure how we're getting out of this.

The Judiciary Committee has voted two articles of impeachment against President Donald J Trump, on a party-line vote.  When it comes to the floor, there may be a tiny handful of Democrats that vote against it, while Republicans are likely to remain united in opposition.  The trial in the Senate not only is almost 100% certain to favor Trump, but it is also expected to be a sham trial with McConnell already stating THAT IT WILL BE SO.

Does that make the Impeachment wrong and partisan?

HELL NO!

He used the power of his office to try to extort a country to provide something he could use against a political opponent.  He withheld military aid contrary to US policy and jeopardized the lives of our ally, the Ukrainians.  He put HIS interests ahead of the US interests.  He refused to participate in the impeachment inquiry, blocking White House representatives and Cabinet officials from participating.  He would not turn over any documents.  He set himself up as tyrannical King rather than a President subject to Congressional oversight.  He publicly confessed his guilt, as did his Chief of Staff/OMB director, Nick Mulvany.

The fact that no Republican is supporting this says a lot more about the Republican Party than the Democratic Party.

They choose Trump over the country.

They choose lies over the truth.

They choose the restoration of monarchy and fascism over the constitution and a  participatory republic.

Sorry, red country.  I know many of you are decent people.  But you are making the mistake of your lives supporting this monster, and history will not view you kindly.

Not kindly at all.







Friday, December 13, 2019

Rains Upon the Kingdom: Friday Flash Fiction

The rains will not stop.

All across the Kingdom, the floodwaters rise.

Some people have some small boats.  The few with yachts have already left.  There is no Noah.

KIng Franklin was just on the air. Well, most could no longer access their TVs, but they heard him on the radios or saw via their phones.  The internet that remained was limited and highly restricted in content, but it sure was available for government propaganda.

Fellow brothers and sisters in Christ, loyal citizens of The Kingdom, the rains that deluge our promised land will soon dissipate.  This is what our weather diviners tell us, and the power of our prayer will make it so.

Until then, the love of God protect us all.  Seek the highest ground you can.  Listen to the radio or your phone for bulletins, and the nearest location of assistance from the Kingdom's Guards.  They are setting up shelters across the breadth of the Kingdom.  No matter how dire it seems, you are not far from those who love you and strive to keep you safe.

As for the foul rumors you may hear emanating from insurrectionists and heathens, or those from lands outside the Kingdom, the rains are not caused by global warming.  Is that not a ridiculous notion?  If the world was warming, would that not cause the rains to evaporate?  We have proved over and over that any extreme weather we experience is simply a natural phenomenon, a reflection of the will of God.

The best solution is to pray.  The quickest route to the ceasing of the rain is to get right with God.  Too many of us have been slack.  Too many of us have backslid to old and dangerous ways of thinking.  Too many have been questioning of the wisdom and principles of the Kingdom.

This must stop.  If you know of those whose spirit is damaging the Kingdom, please let your pastor know, or someone from the Kingdom Guard.

May God bless you with the riches of the Kingdom.  May God see you through this storm.

Many prayed.  Some drowned.  A multitude lost their homes and possessions.

The rains continued.  They would continue for forty days and forty nights.

And then we will see what is left.


Tuesday, December 10, 2019

Emergency Sausage Pie Delivery!


Emergency!

Call 9-1-Parents! 

Benjamin starts finals week ON HIS BIRTHDAY!

What are parents to do?

Every Christmas morning, He gets his favorite food all year - sausage pie made with sausage and cream cheese, with crescent roll sheets on top and bottom.

But this year, we thought we would surprise him early.

We got up at 4:30 in the morning, and after some food prep, were on our way to Milledgeville joust before 6.  A little after 9, we were parked outside of his dorm.

Mom called him no answer.  Dad texted him.  No answer.

Then, after answering my text, he called his Mom.

Mom:  Would you like sausage pie this morning?

Benjamin: uhhhhh....yes?

Mom:  Would you meet us at the dorm's front door and let us in?

Benjamin:  uhhhhh...ok?

A very shocked young man let us in.  We used a dorm kitchen facility to finish the sausage pie, and also had a big container of his favorite brownies.  We even brought a bottle of mustard, because what is sausage pie without a little mustard?

We spent some time together, walking around campus, getting some coffee at his favorite coffee place, Blackbird Coffee.  Dad & son even visited a shop that had some comic books.  It had a few books, but not many.  Milledgeville's biggest lack is that it does not have a decent bookstore near campus.




We even found Santa!  Thankfully, it wasn't the MAGA Santa that roamed the Mall and Blackshear Elementary.  Yes, we had a Santa here that thought it would be cool to wear a Trump hat.  I'm pretty sure that had Benjamin been in elementary school, he would have knocked that hat right off that fool. 

It was a brief visit, but a pleasant and genuine surprise for Benjamin.


In just another day or two, Benjamin will be home for Christmas Break.  Will we still have sausage pie on Christmas morning? 

Oh, you bet your sweet crescent roll we will!









Friday, December 6, 2019

Pet Cavalcade


Oh, yes we do!  We have a household full of loving pets!

Above is our lone kitty. Skitty.  She is a Hemmingway cat that Alison rescued as a kitten.  She was from a litter of cats that I would call feral, adapted from a co-worker who had them just in her yard.

Skitty is 12 years old.  She is the lazy cat poster child but is also very close to Benjamin. She looks very much forward to Benjamin returning for Christmas break.  At least, we think she does.  Sometimes with cats, it's hard to tell.



This is Cocoa Bear.  We rescued her via an online pet rescue site, going all the way up to Chattanooga to get her.  She was promoted as being a mix between Dachshund and King Cavalier Spaniel.

I saw the litter she came from (the puppies, not the parents).  She definitely is part Dachshund, but the Spaniel part?  Given her size, I think it is some other kind of spaniel.  

She is energetic and friendly, although occasionally shy.  She likes to go inside and then outside, over and over again, all day long.

Cocoa Bear is 11.



Ellie Mae was rescued via a local couple who have done so much for animals in our area, Rick and Nancy Allmon.  Ellie came to visit us one weekend and never went back.

I have never had a dog as sweet, particularly with people. She is a mix, just guessing that the most prominent is chihuahua and dachshund.  It doesn't matter to her.  It doesn't matter to us.

Rescued as an adult, we are unsure of her age,  Her coat has whitened considerably in the last few years.  It's hard to tell if she has slowed down because she never was a high energy dog.

Our best age estimate is between 12 and 18.



Pixie Dust was our first foster, and our first foster failure.  When I was told that this sweet but shivery girl would be transported for adoption in Canada, I said no way!  We were keeping her.

She loves our family, but she mostly loves her Mama.  She is almost always by Alison's side and gets anxious when Alison leaves.  She is a mix, mostly chihuahua, I would guess.  You wouldn't think a little dog like that would shed so much, but holy shedolies!  She sure does.  Alison often goes to work coated in pixie dust!

Another adult rescue, my best guess for her age is between 7 & 10.




Boss-A-Man was our most recent foster, and our second foster failure.  He had several challenges when we began fostering him, having lived with almost a dozen other small dogs with two ladies who lived in a van under a bridge.  We were concerned that others might not have the patience to nurse him back to health.

We adopted at the same time I became semi-retired, so he's like my retirement dog. We spend a lot of time together, and I love him to pieces.

What is he?  Who knows?  I see chihuahua, pomeranian, and papillon.  He is all love and affection.  What more do I need to know?

How old is he?  Another mystery.  The vet guessed at the time we got him that he might be 10, which would make him 12 now.  I'm less sure that he is that old.  He was in rough shape when we got him.  He had been through so much.

So my guess is between 6 and 10.

All I know for sure is that I will cherish every minute with him.







Wednesday, December 4, 2019

She Made Dreams Come True



I had a dream.  A dream that I could be a writer, a dream that I could find and fuel a writer's guild here in our small corner of southeast Georgia.

She made my dreams come true.

Inspired by the support of my friend, Okefenokee Heritage Center Director Steve Bean, I started the Okefenokee Heritage Center Writer's Guild.  We started with more people than I anticipated.  Still, it was nervy that year to begin the Okefenokee Heritage Center's Writing Contest.

You never know what might be inspired by a writing contest.  Steve told me of a woman at Baptist Village who had wanted to submit a poem but was concerned about the format she had to submit it in.  He helped her type it up and got it ready for submission.

That poem, My Life in Rhymes, won in the poetry division.  She came out to our awards banquet, and this wonderful, charming, 85-year-old woman received her prize.

I fund that she had inspired to write in recent years, and was building up a coterie of poems, short stories, and reminisces.  They were all wonderful, folksy and heartwarming, revealing how different daily life may have been, but the one great universal truth was family, friends, and love.


She expressed an interest in attending her our monthly meetings but had no transportation from Baptist Village. I could solve that.  For the next five years, I brought her each month to the Heritage Center.

Grace Lee meant so much to me.  Her writings were an inspiration.  She had a wonderful spirit and a beautiful connection to people and events.  Her writing style often reminded me of Mark Twain.  There was a truth and decency that permeated her works.

She inspired me, starting to write at 85.  I had often felt like it was too late for me, that I let that ship sail by.  No, I have not had the success that I wanted.  But I do love to write and to share it with whoever is willing to read it.  She helped me understand that it was never too late to pursue your dreams.

Like many in my age range, my own parents had passed, my mother in 2008, and my father in 2013.  I miss them every day.  But Grace helped with that.  My father was like Grace, raised on a farm, and an educator, a sweet-natured man that was kind to all. He also wrote about his family and growing up - I have a half dozen binders filled with his stories and genealogical research, going back 13 generations.  Spending time with Grace was like getting extra time with my father and the world he came from.  Both lived to be 91, Grace passing December 2nd.  Both struggled with mobility issues in their final years. Both remained loving and kind, filled with stories and humor.

Time with Grace was a very special time for me.  Picking her up, and talking with her in the car, and at meetings, was always filled with lively and intelligent talk.  Her memory of events and people was stronger than mine.  I enjoyed spending time visiting her at Baptist Village, something that I did not so often enough. I am ashamed that I saw her very little in the last few months.  We get so busy sometimes, we forget the truly important things in life.

She helped make my dream of a Writer's Guild come true.  She inspired my dreams of being a writer.  She connected me to dreams of my parents.

Those dreams, and my memory of her and how she touched my life, will live on.  I will continue to share her stories. 

She is with Jesus now, with her loving husband and other family members that have passed.  She is with my mother and father, looking down with love and caring, inspiring us, keeping our dreams alive.

I love you, Grace Lee, for inspiring my dreams, for being my friend, for your unconditional love and support.  I will always cherish you.















Monday, December 2, 2019

Advent Falls Monday Musings



Now we are at Advent.

Advent time of year!

The first Sunday of Advent was yesterday.  Advent covers four Sundays.  Above is one version of the four candle display used in our church to represent each Sunday. An additional candle is lighted each Sunday until all four are lit on the last Sunday of Advent.

It is a season of reflection and preparation for the arrival of Jesus and Christmas.

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This year, the day after Advent, Fall finally Falls!  The projected high today is a very pleasant 56, well within the range of temps that make me feel like it is Fall.  It will not last.  Low to mid-70s will return by the weekend.  That might not sound too high to you, nut it is enough to make the gnats dance again, and enough to make going outside unpleasant.  But we may finally be headed to where Fall-like days outnumber the late Summer-like days.

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My expectations were too high.  Once again, OSU crushes Michigan.  There were moments where it looked like it might be competitive, but they did not last, and eventually turned into just another old-fashioned beat down.

The Bulldogs have done very well this season, and only have to win the SEC championship against LSU to ensure their place in the college championships.  A simple task, I am sure.

I sm pulling for Wisconsin to upset Ohio State.  I'd rather the Big Ten not have a representative in the college championship than it be OSU.

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What am I watching?  A lot of stuff.  Castle Rock (shades of Misery and Salem's Lot!), The Dublin Murders (since we spent a ten-day vacation in Ireland we know think of it as our second home), The Purge, Servant (an Apple + series by M. Night Shamallayn), and, of course, the best current program available, the show with best editorial coloring in the business, For All Mankind.

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What am I reading?  Testaments by Margaret Atwood, the follow-up to The Handmaid's Tale.  End the mystery about what a Pence administration would be like and read it today!

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We had Benjamin with us from Tuesday night until Sunday afternoon.  It was a great visit, and it won't be long before he is back home for Christmas bock - only about two weeks!

Until next time,

T. M. Strait