Wednesday, July 29, 2009

THERE ARE CERTAIN THINGS EVEN DESPERATE TIMES DO NOT EXCUSE

University Food Bank, Seattle, Washington
Photo by MS(R)M

To Caitrona Siobhan Deidre Gallagher

Well, hi again and happy heat wave. I understand from several of you that in Dallas, the lawns are straw and that the infamous tribute to tough Lonestars ~ I have no fear of Hell because I have been to Texas ~ is being adopted as far west as Arizona and as far the other way as Richmond and Savannah.

Chicago has its own version of that and Seattle is also not too laid back to care. We get the temperatures we’ve having now ~ 30 degrees above normal for this time of year ~ not often enough for most of us to invest in home air conditioning. So we adjust and we sweat and we flock to churches, temples, mosques and the deep woods to pray for better weather. Realizing that each region is different, this story also includes some tips as to how to better survive and it is tendered in that regard only.

Most of what I share with you folks has a news link. This one does not and if it is faintly reminiscent of Studs Terkel, it certainly resonates Depression era America, as John Steinbeck wrote about it. This story is about what some men are willing to do when they feel they’ve run out of steam and decide it would be better to put their families someplace safe and hit the road looking for work.

That proud Judeo-Christian work ethic needs a little expanding if doing so means without consulting the family and giving them a chance to come up with a better plan in which all responsibility does not fall on the male bread winner. It means working as a team behind common goals and to that degree, breaking out of role model stereotypes which may have been appropriate once but are clearly not so any longer.

It means, as well, realizing that there are lots worse things than being unemployed and one of them is employed without family to be there to come home to. Hard times don’t do that to people because it happens even in good times. But when all a man can see is his family growing leaner and more anxious and there’s not one bloody thing he can think of to do except put his family in the best hands he can and hit the road, there seems to me something really wrong with that within the family values context.

It’s a decision that has some pretty lonely consequences, not the least of which is that those most impacted didn’t have any choice. And no matter how it works out, there’s never the same feeling of “one for all and all for one” that characterizes marriage and family as I’ve been brought up to believe both institutions should be and mostly have been since about the first appearance of our species on this planet.

Desperate times produce desperate measures and I realize that. But those desperate measures do NOT include abandoning a family in safer hands just because you lost a job. That will pass and there will be other jobs. But families are not so easy to replace. And come on, even in the Rustbelt and the Allentown mills, we never were heroes to our families because we worked the line. We were and are heroes because we come home to those who love us.

Well, this week’s critter story has some interesting personal spin-offs. Goats and sheep are being used more and more in place of chemical and mechanical weed and other invasive plant control. The applications are incredible and, as Judah pointed out to me several weeks ago, they can yield milk/cheese, hair which can be woven into cloth and a coat that can be sheared and made into wool.

Since Judah does not eat pets, the culinary aspects are not something she stressed in her attempt to sell me on the idea of her having a couple of goats at her condo. She’s a media major at the University of Nevada, in Las Vegas and somehow, goats and sheep in the city limits clashed with my images of all those casinos, five star hotels and other splendid monuments to our species’ sometimes insane obsession with the self-indulgent. (The U of N was not my first choice. The one I wanted her to go to was ~ quote ~ “too granola, too foggy and too wet. Besides, I don’t even know what a hippie is so why would I want to live with a bunch of old ones?”)

Like I occasionally do in light of further information, reflection and rollercoaster riding in the amusement park of my mind, I’ve decided that it would be really cool if Judah had a couple of goats. She’s fantastic with animals and I’ve often suspected it was she who taught Ralph the Raccoon how to open the combination lock on the refrigerator. In light of absolutely no proof, however, the kid’s off the hook for that one. That young woman has the luck of one entire Irish county. On Saint Patrick’s Day. Sigh. However, I digress.

I’m delighted to report that up north, on Vancouver Island, in a part of Canada with which I am very familiar, the T'Sou-ke Nation has just finished solarizing their village and now they’re effectively off the provincial power grid. The project involved several government agencies and tribal councils and funding came from a variety of sources. It’s considered a good working model and is being studied by other Nations in British Columbia and across the Canadian Commonwealth. For those of you into that sort of thing, I think you’ll find this one a good read.

And in the world of women (unabashedly my favourite species and right up there with Maine coon cats and Little Blue Penguins), a recent study released by the University of Granada, in Spain, establishes a solid link between sexist jokes and the physical and emotional abuse of women. I was raised to respect this other (and I suspect superior) species and maybe it’s just me, but I’ve found misogynistic jokes a form of low humour to which I am incapable of stooping.

I refuse to have anything to do with anyone who finds sexist humour amusing and if it’s directed at any of my family or in a public place, I deal with it as the very real threat that it is. This is NOT one of those “sticks and stones but words can never hurt you” situations. These words lead to the abuse of other human beings and I can find not one shred of comedy in that.

And, under the heading "A Window of the Future," I grew up on the novels of H. G. Wells and Jules Verne, Isaac Asimov, Ray Bradbury and Robert Heinlein. When television came to our house, the fascination for things that projected us into the future grew to include Buck Rogers, Flash Gordon and certainly and of course, Star Trek (I loved all the different versions), Battlestar Galactica and Buck Rogers in the 21 Century. If you’re at all like that, check this out. Here’s the lead from a recent San Francisco Chronicle story.

“This futuristic electric car sports rooftop solar panels that support the four motors underneath. But the ATNMBL isn't just "green;" it's intelligent.”

The story goes on to explore solar transportation and other related technologies that will soon be cost effective and consumer-friendly. They’re clean alternatives and quiet ones. And the technology involved can be easily learned by anyone who can read newspaper or magazine. It’s also illustrated and has a host of links to related information. I could easily have spent three hours with this one and probably will, once the sidewalks in Seattle quit running into the Sound and the streets stop smelling like an infamous Southern California tar pit.

Speaking of said heat, it’s steaming up even as this goes to press. I’m headed off down to the Ship Canal in my Birkenstocks, running shorts and my “I’m Canadian, not stupid” t-shirt with the maple leaf flag on the front and a real nice photograph of Queen Liz on the back. Under the picture of the Queen is a legend in Latin which, translated means, “I do not indulge fools so kiss my royal arse and be gone.” (It was a gift from a friend. You don’t think I’d be dumb enough to pay money for something like that, right? Nevermind. An answer to that question really isn’t necessary. Of course I am. Only I didn’t. This time.)

I’m packing a Tupperware of salad, a couple of pint water bottles, and I’m taking the digital camera with me. If I melt anywhere along the line, my family’s been instructed to have me immersed in ice up to me, um, elbow and lectured some on the downside of going on a photo shoot in the middle of a heat wave. Fortunately for me, it will be a fait accompli by the time any of them read about it.

Enough of this simmering madness, then. I’m off to either ply a kayak with photographic grace and dexterity or swim with salmon. And Judah, you might consider a sheep and a goat. My favourite cheese, Feta, is made from the milk of the former and flavoured by the milk of the latter. If it works, maybe we can open the first Pygmy Sheep and Goat Las Vegas Online Dairy and Cheese Emporium in the world.

These are desperate times, child and Necessities has offspring stranger than that.

And on that note, I am outa here. Take care; stay well and until next week, eh?

Rusty

NORTHSTAR RECOMMENDS

The Tomatoman Times – a life commentary blog with the blended stylings of John Steinbeck, Mark Twain, Jack London and Will Rogers. Poignant, at times rancorous but very contemporary and ultimate celebration.

Vinyl Cafe with Stuart McLean – Live from the smallest record store in North America. Canadian humor, entertainment and commentary at its maple leaf best. Popular on National Public Radio in the States.

Ask Barbie, Advice Columnist. -- a blog that delivers the amiable maternalism of Ms. Landers, the slightly off-centre humour of Erma Bombeck and the ingenuousness of an unreconstructed romantic with no axes to grind.

Sightline Daily (formerly Tidepool) – The “United Press International/Reuters of the American West/ Updated and informative news shorts with links to the source. It’s editors draw from a coverage area which includes Alaska, British Columbia,California, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington. Update and informative collected news shorts from. They also put out an excellent weekly environmental edition.

Free People Search – This is an American online White Pages that I found really simple, quick and user friendly. I looked for myself under the several versions of my name and it found them all. It’s also free and doesn’t involve anything to download.

U Got Style is a monthly ezine dedicated to independent films. Fully illustrated, it features hard news, interviews, reviews and a wide variety of other information. It’s also fun to read.

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

TO WALTER CRONKITE AND A COMSUMER DRIVE MEDIA



Hi again, folks. Nice to see you again and I hope you and yours are doing well. It’s been kind of a sad last seven days for me. I lost a good friend and comrade in arms who was also an outstanding example of what humans can be in a society which appreciates compassion, dignity, gentility and, perhaps most importantly to the millions of listeners and viewers into whose homes he came five nights a week for well over four decades, integrity.

I was very young when my family acquired their first television set. Before that, the program I remembered the most listening to on the radio was
Sergeant Preston of the Yukon. The first television show I ever watched was Sidney Lumet’s You Are There, sponsored by Prudential Insurance (Remember the Rock of Prudential?). It featured historical reenactments in which Walter Cronkite was the “attached reporter,” as it were.

Walt’s legacy is so much a matter of public record that it needs little further delineation here. As a journalist, I will miss him. He was an outstanding role model to reporters and editors of my generation, those who came before and certainly those who followed.

He proved that despite the prevalence of a national consumer passion for sensationalism, there was an audience out there for news gathered and reported, as factually and as unbiased as it was possible by deadline. He was also a nice guy and that meant something to him. It did, as well, to thousands of big city journalists and small town weekly editors and reporters.

It still does, at least to me, this being a good journalist and a good neighbour. When I hear criticism of a jaundiced media and am confronted with glaring examples of it, it hurts me because such reportage dishonours the likes of Walter Cronkite, Peter Jennings, Edward R. Murrow, Ernie Pyle, Dick Tregaskis and John Steinbeck.

All of them were journalists, the last four covered war from the front and Dick died on Guadalcanal. Yes, Judah,
Guadalcanal Diary and yep, kidders, the Grapes of Wrath guy, Sweetheart. That John Steinbeck.

So for as much as I share the disgust and frustration, I need to remind myself that the media is a consumer-driven business. If you don’t like what you hear and see on (pick a station) or read in (pick a publication), thanks to some Constitutional guarantees that the Fourth Estate (“the media”) has had to defend often, you now have options.

If you don’t want junk news, quit buying it Look for people like Walt Cronkite and read them and the media they report for. Buy from people who carry their ads. You surely don’t think subscriptions pay that business’s bills.

So yep, Walt, we’re going to miss you but I know you’re up there somewhere, looking down and still being amused. And this week’s critter story will, I hope, Sire, bring a smile to that rugged but unimpeachably honest face.

This one comes right off my back porch, as it were and it’s the story of how a curious cat managed to get 35 feet up a tree above a raging river and finally get coaxed down after five days thanks to a small town putting a watch on this feline and NOT risking anyone climbing up that tree and dying for lack of patience. I can think of more than a few instances these days when that example might be applied creatively.

I’m not fond of bad news and especially when it comes from where I live. Like everywhere else, Seattle has a homeless population and, unfortunately, it’s growing. Despite a general trend among King County and City of Seattle officials to grant permits and to actively seek funds for housing and other assistance for these folks, State government seems to be lagging behind.

They’re evicting one homeless group for camping a little too long on an industrial site where they’re not really interfering with anything. A State Department of Transportation was quoted as saying that while their agency has the utmost sympathy for this particular group, they, the State DOT, are bound by state laws and they have no choice but to move these people on down the road.

To me, there is the letter of the law and there is the spirit of it. It takes awhile for laws to change and sometimes that change doesn’t come quick enough. This is Washington State and our legislators in Olympia have mostly understood that. When that’s happened, they’ve leaned on the spirit of the law in their interpretation of it and worked to correct for the letter.

That’s not being done in this case and as much as I’m proud to promote my home as a good example worth emulating, by the code of ethics which governs my profession, I am honour bound to present a bad example which could be avoided.

And in keeping with this overall theme of good media coverage and a honest, if not sympathetic and sometimes painful window on the daily life of the white collar unemployed, I highly recommend a blog called, with appropriate irony,
Lords and Ladies of Leisure.

Since the problems it addresses are not Seattle’s alone, what I like especially like about this one is it’s also an invitation to share resources and it empowers by essentially saying, “Hey, this is a real downer but we can get through it. We’ve just gotta talk to one another.” She’s a breath of fresh air and rather than even naming her, I’m offering you this opportunity to go to her site and get to know her on your own terms.

Well, that’s it for this week, folks. Take care, stay well and God Bless. Thanks again for the ear and we’ll see you next week.

Rusty

NORTHSTAR RECOMMENDS

The Tomatoman Times – a life commentary blog with the blended stylings of John Steinbeck, Mark Twain, Jack London and Will Rogers. Poignant, at times rancorous but very contemporary and ultimate celebration.

Vinyl Cafe with Stuart McLean – Live from the smallest record store in North America. Canadian humor, entertainment and commentary at its maple leaf best. Popular on National Public Radio in the States.

Ask Barbie, Advice Columnist. -- a blog that delivers the amiable maternalism of Ms. Landers, the slightly off-centre humour of Erma Bombeck and the ingenuousness of an unreconstructed romantic with no axes to grind.

Sightline Daily (formerly Tidepool) – The “United Press International/Reuters of the American West/ Updated and informative news shorts with links to the source. It’s editors draw from a coverage area which includes Alaska, British Columbia,California, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington. Update and informative collected news shorts from. They also put out an excellent weekly environmental edition.


Wednesday, July 15, 2009

GOVERNOR PALIN, LIGHTNING SURVIVORS AND A NEW JERSEY BEAR WITH A PASSION FOR HOAGIES

This nice lady and her dog very graciously posed for me in Seattle's University District. Photo by MS(R)M

Well, hi again, folks. It’s been a real interesting week on the political scene, eh? Sarah Palin decided to resign as Alaska’s governor amid speculation she’s preparing for higher office. That, coupled with her media-wide tete to tete with a highly respected comedian who is living proof that if you run your mouth long enough, it better be big enough for both feet (Know THAT one well), she’s managed to capture the spotlight brilliantly.

I’m sorry but I’m okay with that. If that’s what the public needs right now to cope with all this other “interesting stuff,” Sarah’s one of the best shows in town. And it’s admission free. Sarah, for some reason, reminds me of someone I dated back when chivalry was still an overcoat across a puddle.

She was a beautiful lass, this one, with a lot going for her. But she was extremely concerned about her health and had a real sincere and independent interest in things involving medicine, health, etc. She was also acutely empathetic and had a habit of acquiring personal symptoms from a spectrum of sources.

I happened to know a doctor with an extra big heart and I suggested she might want to talk to him to see if he could help her deal with her apparent hypochondria. Yep, you’re way ahead of me. She ran off with the doctor and they’re living happily ever after.

Sarah Palin reminds me of Shakespeare’s classic use of fools. It’s one thing to act like one. It’s an entirely different matter to be one. And the Bard knew something the younger of the Smothers Brothers played to the hilt. We all love watching a fool, don’t we?

If Governor Palin indeed IS a fool ~ and before any of the Conservative readership starts trumpeting or the Liberals braying, I said IF she’s a fool ~ look at the attention she’s getting and ask yourself, for one fleeting second, what that says about those of us who keep her in that spotlight in the first place. Personally, I’m off the hook. I’m just here for the company and the free popcorn. Aaaand moving right along here and stuff.

This past Fourth of July proved, despite a statewide ban on private fireworks, a little more dazzling than most of us would have liked, I suspect, for a Washington State couple who pulled their car over during a thunderstorm and still got hit by lightning when a bolt ricocheted off a tree and into their rig. The vehicle in question suffered two flat tires and a fried ignition system. The couple were unharmed but, I rather imagine, some thoughtful about such arcane matters as luck, Fate and that ubiquitous and all-encompassing, “sometimes ‘stuff’ just happens.”

This week’s critter story poses a couple of unique demographic/cultural challenges for me because while, on the one hand, it involves a bear, it’s about one “east of the mountains,” as we say here. That’s a term that we use locally to describe that part of Washington state on the eastern side of the Cascade Mountains. In a broader sense, it can include everything up to and including the Atlantic Seaboard.

I have a native Northwesterner’s mixed feelings about people from the East Coast. I admire and respect especially New Yorkers. I have cousins in Flatbush with whom I speak occasionally and while they talk so fast that I have to record them and then play it back at half speed, they suggest, and perhaps rightfully so, that they could retire before I finish a sentence.

On the other hand, considering I can get mugged by a squirrel for a peanut butter sandwich at the Washington State Convention Center and yet never have been bitten, clawed, scratched or really inconvenienced by anything in the Deep Woods or the Seattle suburbs from a cougar to a lost topcutter (lumberjack/timber jockey) on payday Friday night strongly suggests to me that I’d last about 15 seconds on the wild streets of the Big Apple.

That having been said, when 9/11 happened, like much of the rest of the world, I raged, wept and rose up in unmitigated and unqualified admiration for those alleged victims/survivors. There was nothing ‘victim’ about the emergency personnel and the ‘average’ New Yorker to suggest running away or amok with this. They dug out the living, buried the dead, held the requiems, repaired, reinforced and rebuilt. They vowed it would not happen again in their city and it has not.

I’ve spoken with several friends who survived the Blitz bombing of London during World War II and the more recent terrorist attack on their subway system. The most succinct but perhaps profound expression of empathy and identification came from a Manchester-born cabbie who said, “Every once in awhile, I almost feel like inviting a Yank home to tea. As long as he’s not from bloody Boston.” Has he done so yet? I don’t know. I think I knew better than to ask? Eh?

We need to say thanks to the reader from Vancouver, British Columbia who sent us this photo and story about Canada’s preparation for electric transport. The picture portrays what looks like an ordinary gasoline/petrol pump replete with hose and nozzle. Except these are designed to keep engine blocks from freezing during extremely cold weather.

The same 120-volts can be used to recharge hybrids, which only use their motors at low speeds before the engine kicks in, and ‘true’ electrics which only have an electric motor. I’d suggest a term like Canadian Ingenuity and come up with the French equivalent. I am bilingual but I am not fluent in French and I have too much respect for you folks to even make the attempt. However, I still think it’s a good idea and Seattle’s had recharging stations for about as long as we’ve had electric buses.

And definitely under the category of “Just No Pleasing Some Folks,” it appears that some concern has been raised that electric cars are too quiet. I didn’t particularly like the stealth/terrorist lead on this story but this is the New York Times and they do that sometimes. I got passed that quickly and I see some legitimacy to the fear that the blind may not hear them coming or that other ambient noise may totally muffle the noise of, let’s say, a Prius.

Two things bother me about the time and energy involved in this one. Because of the sensory compensation factor, most blind people hear better than those of us with sight. Second of all, if they can put a bell on a bicycle and chirping birds on a crosswalk sign (Seattle), it doesn’t seem like a monumental engineering challenge to put a voice on quiet car.

It also probably wouldn’t hurt most big city pedestrians to pay a little more attention to what’s going on around them in general. Having gotten so lost in thought myself that I almost got broadsided by a Metro bus in rush hour, again, voice of experience suggesting here. It is one thing to focus. It is another to get yelled at by a public transportation driver who can cuss the bark off a birch in three languages. Slow learning curve but I do have one. Sometimes. Nevermind. I digress.

And finally, our gratitude (I think) to the reader who sent us the Crosscut.com article headlined
“the many uses of manure”. I’m not quite sure on what or how many levels we’re supposed to take that but it was an interesting read.

Manure’s been used for a long time here to generate gas for heating, etc. but now apparently, the methane itself can be used to generate electricity. Thanks to the Bonnieville Power Administration, electricity in the Pacific Northwest is incredibly cheap so thus far, it hasn’t been cost effective.

However, that could certainly change and this is in keeping with the general trend here toward integrated energy sources. It’s like a spare parachute; nice to have just in case and it might as well be one you either packed yourself or wasn’t packed by an angry spouse or someone who owes you a lot of money.

On that note, that’s it for this week. Take care, stay well, God Bless and thanks once again for the ear.

Rusty


NORTHSTAR RECOMMENDS

The Tomatoman Times – a life commentary blog with the blended stylings of John Steinbeck, Mark Twain, Jack London and Will Rogers. Poignant, at times rancorous but very contemporary and an ultimate celebration.

Vinyl Cafe with Stuart McLean – Live from the smallest record store in North America. Canadian humour, entertainment and commentary at its maple leaf best. Popular on National Public Radio in the States.

Ask Barbie, Advice Columnist. -- a blog that delivers the amiable maternalism of Ms. Landers, the slightly off-centre humour of Erma Bombeck and the ingenuousness of an unreconstructed romantic with no axes to grind.

Sightline Daily (formerly Tidepool) – The United Press International/BBC/CBC/Reuters of the American Northwest. Delivered by email to subscribers and available on their web site, they offer news shorts with links to the source. Its editors draw from a coverage area which includes Alaska, British Columbia, California, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, and Washington. They also put out an excellent weekly environmental edition. And they’re growing.

U Got Style.com – Those of you involved in or aficionados of independent films and the arts in general will totally love this one. The writing is lively, the interviews engaging, the artwork original and occasionally delightfully retro. Definitely worth checking out.

Rusty Miller, Freelance Photojournalist -- Yep, a little shameless self-promotion here to help pay for the blog. Take a look at the services offered menu on my writer-for-hire homepage and samples of my digital lens work on my photography website. If you see something you like, email me and we’ll get together on it.


COMING ATTRACTIONS

In the weeks to come, we’re going to create ~ in addition to Northstar Recommends ~ a Northstar General Store in which you, the readers, will have an opportunity to market your own goods and services and, as well, to shop here. We’re going to get real creative with this and whenever possible, we’ll have tried what we’re carrying on the shelves, as it were. We’ll be taking a straight ten percent for this, via Paypal. We’ll also consider barter and trade.

If you’ve got any recommendations of your own and are interested in the General Store, email me and we’ll talk.

MS(R)M

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

FROM METEORS TO MINNESOTA SENATORS, AND THOSE WE WILL REMEMBER

To My "Daughter" Judah
Looking north across Seattle's Ship Canal
Self-Portrait
Well, hi again, folks. It’s been kind of a sad past week, hasn’t it, then, eh? Some good people are no longer with us and the reaction worldwide and certainly among this readership strongly suggests that English cleric, essayist, and poet John Donne was right when, in the second paragraph of Meditations XVII, he contended:

“No man is an island, entire of itself; every man is a piece of the continent, a part of the main. If a clod be washed away by the sea, Europe is the less, as well as if a promontory were, as well as if a manor of thy friend's or of thine own were: any man's death diminishes me, because I am involved in mankind, and therefore never send to know for whom the bells tolls; it tolls for thee.”

Well, I for one was delighted to see that Minnesota finally decided on who their other senator is going to be. My best friend/”kid brother” Denny’s from the Red River Valley so I got to kid him about Jesse Ventura and Al Franken both. NOT one of my better ideas. Why? (Sigh)

I was raised in California? As in Governor Ronald Regan, Senator George Murphy and the present governor, whose last name I don’t even want to try to spell? Point, game and match to the Minnesota farm boy.

The Denster and I have both been in the Pacific Northwest for well over 30 years now, though, and we’re living in a state which has produced two outstanding women governors, two U.S. Senators of considerable integrity, who also happen to be women; and so far, under the present presidential administration, those we’ve sent to ”the other Washington” include a former governor, a King County chief executive and a Seattle Police chief. So we figure it’s all worked out the way it was intended. But maybe that’s just us, eh?

This week’s critter story is a LIT-TLE weird, even for this column and for Seattle. (But not for you yahoos and yahoo-ettes, no offence and just sayin’) Several days back, someone caught a giant squid right from the shore near a boat house pier in West Seattle. What it was doing there, no one’s quite sure. It was returned to the water but, for other reasons upon which we can only speculate, it was later “retrieved” by Fish and Wildlife, who said it was the biggest of its kind seen in the area.

As near as we can figure, considering the “encroachment” of bear and cougar from the landward side of Seattle and the fun Fish and Wildlife has had with them, they’re just not really in the mood to fight containment on two fronts. Totally unreliable and unconfirmed sources report that this squid is going to be reeducated and returned to the Puget Sound to spread the word among its mates to just cool it for awhile until negotiations have been reached with said bears and cougars.

Stranger things happen out here, folks. Trust me on this one. Like the 3.7 earthquake we had on July 1 here that hardly anyone really noticed. We’ve been told by the University of Washington’s seismology lab that this is a wakeup call. But I live four blocks west of that lab and I haven’t noticed anything in the behaviour of my neighbours which suggests we’re the slightest bit worried about it.

But then that’s us. We live with volcanoes, earthquakes, a bit of rain now and then, the odd week-long blizzard, hot summers, weather as schizophrenic as the Seven Faces of Eve, The Boeing Aircraft Company, Microsoft (no offence Melinda and Mr. Gates), and other natural and unnatural phenomenon. We’re also slowly pulling out of this current recession so it’s probably just a matter of priorities. Nature we know. The rest of it, just like everyone else, we’re still studying on some.

I’m also very proud to report that our Canadian cousins are kicking a little slumlord butt in Vancouver. According to the Sun’s Rebecca teBrake, The city now has the ability to take landlords to court to ensure that buildings are kept in a safe condition, and will consider this week whether to use that option in an ongoing battle with the owners of a rundown Dundas Street apartment building.

They’ve been fighting this one hard since 2005 and as far as I’m concerned, even if you’ve no particular fondness for “Canucks,” this is still good city government in action.

Under the heading “recognition long overdue” and this one I love because I hate women driver jokes, on July 4th, President Obama gave the Congressional Gold Medal to a group of World War II veterans most folks have never heard of. They were test pilots of military aircraft; they trained and they ferried all manner of aircraft across the Atlantic when they were needed most.

They were known as WASPs, Women Airforce Service Pilots and according to the National Public Radio story:

“Even though they wore uniforms and worked on bases, they were never considered members of the military. Their contribution to the war effort was so controversial, in fact, that all records pertaining to their service were sealed and deemed classified in 1944. That pretty much consigned the WASP to the dustbin of history for decades.”

Theirs is an incredible story and one more chapter in the history of women who have been serving valiantly in battle on this planet for at least the last 4,000 years. It’s nice to see America getting up to speed on that one. No offence intended, Mr. Obama. And I assume none taken, Mr. President.

I’d also personally like to thank President Obama for going to Russia and getting the Strategic Arms Limitations Talks going again. Ever since Seattle went digital tv, I’ve been able to relax with “vintage” (notice the wince?) movies and I watched Meteor this weekend. Sean Connery alert here folks.

It’s nice to see our two countries getting together BEFORE the cosmic “big one”. And remember Brian Keith? He played the Russian scientist involved in helping save the world. Say whatever you want about Hollywood, there’s no denying creative casting when it slaps you on the butt. Yep, I digress.

And on a final and hopefully encouraging and empowering note, we’ve taken a look at some economic forecasts and the news is guardedly optimistic. We just could be pulling out of this current economic downturn as early as this year. Check this out and judge for yourselves. It’s headlined:

Is The Worst Of It Over? Most Economists Say Yes

It’s been an admittedly tough week and there’s no getting around that, is there? I mean really? But then again now ~ and across the four nations this blog reaches ~ we’re tough folks when the times require and this too will pass, right? Until next week then, take care, stay well and God Bless. And thanks for the ear. (and stuff)

Rusty aka Mick McGuire


NORTHSTAR RECOMMENDS

The Tomatoman Times – a life commentary blog with the blended stylings of John Steinbeck, Mark Twain, Jack London and Will Rogers. Poignant, at times rancorous but very contemporary and an ultimate celebration.

Vinyl Cafe with Stuart McLean – Live from the smallest record store in North America. Canadian humour, entertainment and commentary at its maple leaf best. Popular on National Public Radio in the States.

Ask Barbie, Advice Columnist. -- a blog that delivers the amiable maternalism of Ms. Landers, the slightly off-centre humour of Erma Bombeck and the ingenuousness of an unreconstructed romantic with no axes to grind.

Sightline Daily (formerly Tidepool) – The United Press International/BBC/CBC/Reuters of the American Northwest. Delivered by email to subscribers and available on their web site, they offer news shorts with links to the source. Its editors draw from a coverage area which includes Alaska, British Columbia, California, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, and Washington. They also put out an excellent weekly environmental edition. And they’re growing.

If you folks have any to recommend, send them to us and we’ll check them out.
minstrel312@aol.com

Rusty

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

INDEPENDENCE DAY TWICE: THE PASSION OF TWO NATIONS

Peace Arch Park
Blaine, Washington
Douglas, British Columbia

Well, hi again, yahoos and yahoo-ettes (and those with fancier titles in life). And happy birthdays to two countries I love. It’s Canada Day where I was born and about three days shy of Fourth of July in one I’ve come to care about some. So happy birthday, as well, to the States, from a son of an appreciative neighbour with some investment this side of the border, eh?

In honour of both the apparent love of the readership for critter stories and my pride in the maple leaf, we’re leading off this week with this one about a
Canadian leatherneck turtle tagged in Halifax some while back and turned up in the waters off Columbia, South America. The Canadian Sea Turtle Network (CSTN) tagged 11 of them off Halifax.

The CSTN has since removed that tag from the one who showed up down there and yep, by going down there and doing it and studying that turtle to see how she'd taken the trip. That turtle was a lady named Nuevo Esperanza. I know that wasn’t lost on Ottawa. It’ll be interesting to see how it resonates beyond the pale.

I’m also tempted to wonder what Lady New Hope is going to do down there but it gets a little busy around here so I can only assume that, being Canadian and all, she’s got her reasons, and she’ll get back to us.

This Canadian lady leatherneck turtle comes from a quietly strong land and one with a great deal of patience in the face of the unappreciative. She has a vision of a simpler world and for all her struggles to actualize it within her own boundaries (Quebec, sigh), she has achieved more than enough domestic success to justify promoting it quietly to a southern neighbour especially, who could benefit from the perspective.

There is also a stark reality behind this worth remembering on the independence day of two contiguous neighbours. If Canada’s strength must be measured by the sons and daughters who have fought and died for the former British Empire and then beyond, given the percentage, her record for walking her talk for democracy, freedom, equal rights, and a clean planet are unimpeachable.

As vast as Canada is, there is not one square kilometer of that panoramic yet relatively sparsely settled and often icy and tempest-tossed land that is not consecrated in the blood of her citizens, from Inuit to French Canadian to all the others she’s taken in under the shadow of a French statue a bit south of her southern border. Canada may be a ‘small land’ and her people a modest one. But as I love both countries, she can be as passionately devoted a friend as she can an implacable enemy. I’m glad America is one of her best buds. If you’d like to learn more about Canada,
here’s a good place to start. So and stuff and moving right along, eh?

And about the time that
America celebrates her 222nd birthday (I used 1787 because that’s when the U.S. Constitution was ratified), a Seattle native will arrive in Boston to add a bit to that city’s population. His name is Ivan and he’s a fur seal who, despite some opportunities locally, doesn’t seem to have found a mate here on the West Coast. We’ll miss him but behind wishing him the best of luck on the “other coast,” we’ll be some humbled by the realization that as much as we’re proud of the Pacific Northwest, it does not work for everyone. Take care of him, Linda, and remind him to occasionally write home.

Well, it had to happen sooner or later, and it’s going to be a real blow to a couple of generations raised on the power of positive thinking and daily affirmations.
A new study by Canadian psychologist Joanne Wood and reported in Psychology Today found that for those with high self-esteem to begin with, saying things like “I am lovable” tended to reinforce an already healthy ego.

But for those at the other end ~ those who, for one reason or another had an extremely low opinion of themselves ~ these affirmations did a lot more damage than good by reminding them that if they needed to say things these to themselves, about themselves, it’s because they were NOT okay.

Quite frankly, I’ve been skeptical of pop psychology ever since a mental health care professional counseled a lady rape victim friend of mine and a guy I served with in Vietnam to keep reliving the traumatic experiences until the pain went away.

What a flipping crock. It just made it worse. They didn’t need to remember that stuff and when they started putting good memories between themselves and the bad, they got better. Why am I somehow not surprised?

This past week, the world of man – woman relationships also got a rather seismic jolt in the United Kingdom when
the Daily Mail Online’s Victoria Lambert revealed that men who married women 15 – 17 years younger added years to their own life. However ~ and this is a BIG however ~ the same study showed that those younger women died earlier than those of their peers who married people closer to their own age. Ms. Lambert’s story also has some very practical tips for both genders on extending both the duration and the quality of their lives and I found it, if for no other reason than that, worth the read.

It also comes as no surprise to learn, from
an article in Environmental Health News, that far more premature babies are born in areas of heavy traffic, like freeways and neighborhoods adjacent industrial parks. The numbers sent a chill through me. Pregnant women living in the worst traffic-generated pollution were 128 times more likely to deliver too early. American author Pearl S. Buck contended that "If our American way of life fails the child, it fails us all." To me, the wakeup call couldn’t be much clearer.

On a lighter note, for those of you who enjoyed Ann Landers or the advice columnist in your high school newspaper, here’s a blog that delivers the amiable maternalism of Ms. Landers, the slightly off-centre humour of Erma Bombeck and the ingenuousness of an unreconstructed romantic with no axes to grind. The name of this blog is
Ask Barbie, Advice Columnist. Enjoy, then?

And finally, we’re totally delighted to report that Seattle, Washington’s Green Bike Project is more than living up to the expectations of it. In a story headlined “
Green Bike Project reduces congestion, changes lifestyles” Seattle Post-Intelligencer Online reporter Scott Gutierrez reported that the program involved 25 area employers and some 265 people.

It was a pilot project whose future funding is at issue but I’ve a strong hunch it’s attracted the attention of Bill and Melinda, Paul Allen or other community benefactors, agencies and associations. Seattle may be slow to actualize a good idea (light rail) but this particular city is even more reluctant to give up one. The Emerald City is convinced that biking to work is good for all concerned so, one way or another, that’s pretty much how it’s going to be from now on.

That’s it for this week, folks. Once again, thanks for the ear. Take care, stay well and God Bless.

Rusty

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NORTHSTAR RECOMMENDS

The Tomatoman Times – a life commentary blog with the blended stylings of John Steinbeck, Mark Twain, Jack London and Will Rogers. Poignant, at times rancorous but very contemporary and ultimate celebration.

Vinyl Cafe with Stuart McLean – Live from the smallest record store in North America. Canadian humor, entertainment and commentary at its maple leaf best. Popular on National Public Radio in the States.

Ask Barbie, Advice Columnist. -- a blog that delivers the amiable maternalism of Ms. Landers, the slightly off-centre humour of Erma Bombeck and the ingenuousness of an unreconstructed romantic with no axes to grind.

Sightline Daily (formerly Tidepool) – The “United Press International/Reuters of the American West/ Updated and informative news shorts with links to the source. It’s editors draw from a coverage area which includes Alaska, British Columbia,California, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington. Update and informative collected news shorts from. They also put out an excellent weekly environmental edition.