Open Thread - Rants, Muses, Books & Music (and Some Cooking Too).

It's good to see you. Come on in, leave your shoes in the hallway, we've got fire on the stove preparing lunch for later. In the meantime, browse the bookshelves and plunk down on the sofa with one, or pick out some tunes from the music library or come in to the kitchen to help with the cooking. Our special blend of tea is steeping and will be right up.

Make yourself at home...

It's been amusing and somewhat confounding to watch the reactions of how people (even me to myself), especially progressives like us, feel about this major upsurge, or discovery if you'd like, of the power of protest.

From the woman's march in DC to the massive turnouts at the airports this past weekend in solidarity with the detainees who held after little fascist boy Drumpf's autocratic decree, there's been an undeniable new-found spirit of protest.

I've had mixed feelings about it. Mostly have leaned toward cynicism, primarily since the election night results were followed by relentless protest in front of Drumpf Towers and all over the country which seemed to be Hillary-dominated (in coverage anyway). Any whiff of Hillary support/DNC maneoverings gets me pissed off and discouraged about the chances of a necessary revolution by the 99% coalescing against the hijacking of society by the 1% and the merciless grinder of unbridled capitalism of which they wield.

There’s lots of cognitive dissonance about everything right now, it seems. No doubt much of it stems from a feckless, lapdog media and the rapid fire, integrate lying of Drumpflethinskin. The far Left thinks it’s a front to shepherd the lemmings back into the “veal pen” of Democratic party politics. The far Right of course are their typically demented selves, calling this weekend’s amazing show of solidarity for immigrants (including a cab strike in NYC by the mostly Muslim and Sikh drivers union who upon hearing the news of the protest refused to pick up passengers from the airport) a ploy by the Muslim Brotherhood.

Yet, I think one has to feel, as a "progressive" as it is defined by the community here at C99, meaning one who knows our radical and subversive history as told by Howard Zinn as opposed to Neoliberal, think tank, corporate marketers, "brand"-obsessed, Protectorates of their Rich Donors lip service to it, that all major societal progress, from child labor laws and the 8 hour work day only one hundred years ago to the civil rights and Gay rights movements securing rights for the oppressed, has come only when we've gotten in the streets and scared the powers that be.

To wit, both marches/rallies I’ve attended these past two weekends, which I was informed about by some staunch Bernie or Bust supporters, proved to be much less about $hills than they were about a recognizable solidarity against a fascist encroachment on basic civility and human rights (nonwithstanding the fact that Obama engaged in similar transgressions, of course, but with such a more likeable face and little coverage in the media, so all is forgiven, right?), and a gathering acknowledgment that the Dem Party is not the oppositional force it was once thought to be. The smaller rally this past weekend (though big for locals) resembled a family day out, held outside a museum, where lots of strollers, young families and cardboard signs could be seen. We got there late. But a friend told me that by far the biggest applause line of the day was when a local activist said that this was the result of the Democratic Party’s failings and how we need to change course politically. That was encouraging.

We'll see (and should keep our eyes peeled)...

Back home Sunday night we were cleaning out things making more room (which always seems to be the case lately) and came upon some activist flyers, magazines, etc. There I found a marked-up issue of Brooklyn Rail, a really cool slightly highbrow arts and culture magazine distributed for free in bookstores, galleries, etc (during Occupy they had some wonderful pieces about the movement). I’m not at all really an art gallery person but I’ve found the writing, political discourse and cultural discovery to be edifying any time I’ve come across this publication.

It was creased over to a page of an excellent interview with an author named Sarah Lewis, and it has stayed with me for these past couple of years. I was really struck by the back and forth in which they broached the nature of the human spirit in transforming failure into art, and the transformative effects of sound and pictures to “ignite these inner shifts that have led to some of our most impactful social movements.”

Here are some excerpts:

Lewis: The question of how an ordinary person becomes someone remarkable is precisely the reason that I not only wrote the book, but decided to reference my grandfather in the first essay, “Archer’s Paradox.” I noticed when I was very young that there was a paradox he had to wrestle with, the different lives he had lived and how difficult they all were. I remember he was telling me that in the 11th grade he was expelled from high school for asking where African Americans were in history books. The teacher told him that African Americans had done nothing to merit inclusion, so stop asking. He was expelled. His pride was so wounded that he never went back. That difficult circumstance created a fire in him that launched his career as an artist. It just occurred to me that we often don’t discuss this paradox enough in our everyday discourse.
… Sometimes you have to suffer before you get to realize what you really want to do in life. Because of that desire you may be given strength to get to a place of bliss, full of paradoxes and adversaries, yet you don’t think of them as burdens.

Rail: Well, one way of addressing that feeling of underestimation is what Ben Saunders, the legendary explorer did—I mean he framed his report card from when he was 13 above his desk at home that reads, “Ben lacks sufficient impetus to achieve anything worthwhile.”

Lewis: That’s it, yes. What did that do for him? Ben became the first person in the world to trek to the North Pole and back, solo and on foot, South Pole and back, solo and on foot. What shifted in Ben when he saw that report card? That is the same question I asked myself when I saw Dr. Martin Luther King received Cs on his report card in an oratory class in seminary and then went on to awaken our nation with the power of his spoken truth.

Rail: Not to mention his speech impediment.

Lewis: Right. We don’t usually associate such an impediment, a failing of that degree, with Dr. King. But he did manage to overcome his tic—a speech hiccup. As he told his friend Harry Belafonte, “Once I’d made my peace with death, I could make my peace with all else.” I think that we rob ourselves of the guidepost that we need to understand the true nature of becoming by not acknowledging the challenges people go through. It’s the fuller nature of becoming that leads to the journeys of endurance.

Rail: And how that leads to the chrysalis nature of becoming is impossible to describe. How Abraham Lincoln, for instance, in seeing Carlton Watkins’s photographs of Yosemite Valley’s granite cliffs, was inspired by the natural beauty that resulted in the signing of legislation in 1864.

Lewis: Which led to the founding of the National Park Service. I couldn’t believe when I found that reference. We’re often inspired by these moments of aesthetic force, which is a catalyst for some of the profound changes in our lives, more than we would admit, when we surrender ourselves to the power of the beauty of nature or a work of art that may evoke some deeper sources within ourselves. This is why I wrote what Aristotle said, “Reason alone is not enough to make men good,” or women good, it’s whatever frees you from the relative reality around you, be it music, as it happened to Charles Black, who heard the genius coming out of Louis Armstrong’s horn in 1931 when he was just a freshman in college; he knew immediately that segregation must be wrong. This of course led to his prominent role as a lawyer in the historic Brown v. Board of Education ruling in 1954.

Rail: That’s really not that different from your grandfather, asking why African Americans are not in the history book.

Lewis: You’re right. And that’s why I loved that my grandfather chose the arts as a way to express what had been denied to him as a form of education—seeing the full embrace of American life. He chose the arts because, I believe, he knew and anticipated, by playing bass often as a backup for Count Basie and Duke Ellington, that the arts could impact us with a unique force. There is a power to the arts that we often deny, and it’s important as we consider what a life of service is about. We often forget that the arts can allow us to have a contributory life because they ignite these inner shifts that have led to some of our most impactful social movements.

(emphasis mine)

I love the idea of epiphany, upon hearing Louis Armstrong’s coronet, knowing crystal clear at your core in that moment, that segregation was wrong and needed to be fought, and then actually going to fight it at the highest level and winning.

We're here to inspire one another. Keep the antenna up, folks. Develop the eye and ear to see that the truth of art and music is everywhere, waiting to channel those dormant inner truths within us into a full blossom of the higher evolved self, capable of transforming the world.

Back in the kitchen we're listening to:

(I was mesmerized by this album since I first heard it as a mischievous, alternately joyous and brooding 12-13 yr old looking inward to negotiate the rocky terrain of adolescence, exactly at the time of being transferred out of public and into an out-of-town Catholic school, where a bursting libido was only exacerbated by the revelatory dress code requiring the girls to be in dresses. "Dogs" really hit me hard. Its masterful musical and lyrical exploration of the how the treadmill of the business world and the coldness of survival-of-the-fittest capitalism turns people into animals. It left an indelible impression on me, and still ranks as one of my all-time, singular, favorite pieces of music).

So, what's going on with you?

iPad Reading List:

Henry David Thoreau, "Walking"
Frederick Douglass, "John Brown"
Herbert Spencer, "Essays on Education and Kindred Subjects"
Jack London, "The Strength of the Strong"
(all downloaded for free at the iTunes store)

for fun:

Joe Perry with David Ritz, "Rocks: My Life In and Out of Aerosmith"

Butternut Squash Soup

roast halves of butternut squash in oven.
sauté onions, carrots and celery in pot.
when golden brown, add squash to pot.
add dash of cinnamon, lesser dash of cloves.
add water or chicken broth, bring to a boil.
puree until smooth.
(for creamier, add soy or whole milk)

Lemongrass Chai Blend

heaping scoop of dried Thai lemongrass
shards of cinnamon bark
a few cardamom pods
a few black peppercorns
A few cloves
fresh chopped ginger

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Comments

riverlover's picture

PG tips is my new choice, love the shape of the bags.

Thinking many things this morning. Smoke detector alarm beeping background. Thinking of some years ago of a work associate, grad student Carolyn, who was murdered by her new husband on a running trail in Ithaca. He ambushed her on the trail and cut her throat. Blamed anti-malarials for insanity. Honeymoon drugs. What a waste of two lives.

Snow has begun for the day.

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Hey! my dear friends or soon-to-be's, JtC could use the donations to keep this site functioning for those of us who can still see the life preserver or flotsam in the water.

Redstella's picture

@riverlover Just had my cuppa. Do not want tea unless it is PGTips. Feeling sad and confused about what we are going through just now. This first week or so has been a bit breathtaking, to say the least. We are in Taos just now (roadtrip) and saw signs along the road protesting Trump. We visited with friends who found an apartment in Mexico in case they had to leave the US. Things is moving and when things move, you don't really know the outcome, do you?

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riverlover's picture

@Redstella And if it had been liveable, I would have kept it as the go-to place. But $100K in and stud walls inside was bleak. Perhaps boat living is possible?

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Hey! my dear friends or soon-to-be's, JtC could use the donations to keep this site functioning for those of us who can still see the life preserver or flotsam in the water.

Mark from Queens's picture

@Redstella I think it's just this narcissistic, vindictive douchebag's m.o. As a lifetime ruthless capitalist who doesn't mind inflicting pain on perceived opponents as long as in his warped mind "he's winning," he'll be running the WH the same way. He's really a low life.

Good to see visible protest out in Taos.

Reminds me that I may need to pick up the book by recently departed and former Village Voice reporter/muckraker Wayne Barrett at some point. Or maybe not. Drumpf already repulses me so much.

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"If I should ever die, God forbid, let this be my epitaph:

THE ONLY PROOF HE NEEDED
FOR THE EXISTENCE OF GOD
WAS MUSIC"

- Kurt Vonnegut

WaterLily's picture

@Redstella I'm inclined to agree.

https://medium.com/@jakefuentes/the-immigration-ban-is-a-headfake-and-we...

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Redstella's picture

@WaterLily he is saying the same thing that the article I cited. That makes at least 2 saying the same thing.

Part of me is saying " run around in circles, hold my head, and panic scream" Other part is saying " OK then. Is that how things are playing out-what is our next move, fellow citizens of these United States?" We might be seeing a real coup here in a matter of weeks or months.

And as far as a bolt holes -well, we all need one, no? It's a hard time of year to want to go to Canada. And there is no guarantee that Mexicans will welcome any Americans in the near future. We might have to stick and fight it out... As it were, so to say.

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Mark from Queens's picture

@riverlover Think we're going to get some sprinkles of snow here. Still love the feeling of seeing snow falling.

Tragic story about student. This song came to mind, "If You Love Somebody Set Them Free."

Ginger in the tea is nice.

Listened to a lot of Sting/Police while in college Upstate...

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"If I should ever die, God forbid, let this be my epitaph:

THE ONLY PROOF HE NEEDED
FOR THE EXISTENCE OF GOD
WAS MUSIC"

- Kurt Vonnegut

Nice mix of thoughts, music, food and tea. Glad you could pick up this thread!

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Mark from Queens's picture

@QMS Going on fumes Tues mornings.

The usual: late night gig, little sleep, and now with the baby.

He's dragged a pot cover into the living room. Seems to like putting it on top of his little pail. Just looked back now and he was trying to fit my snug winter slipper over his foot. He'll mostly amuse himself all day.

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"If I should ever die, God forbid, let this be my epitaph:

THE ONLY PROOF HE NEEDED
FOR THE EXISTENCE OF GOD
WAS MUSIC"

- Kurt Vonnegut

Steven D's picture

@Mark from Queens as I recall. Hope fatherhood is everything you hoped it would be Mark.

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"You can't just leave those who created the problem in charge of the solution."---Tyree Scott

Raggedy Ann's picture

Another day in America. What does it hold in store? Will President Bannon, er Drumpf, shock and awe us again today? Contact your congresscritters and make them earn that salary for once!

Have a beautiful day, everyone! Pleasantry

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"The “jumpers” reminded us that one day we will all face only one choice and that is how we will die, not how we will live." Chris Hedges on 9/11

Mark from Queens's picture

@Raggedy Ann I'm hopeful that it seems like something has switched on in the collective conscience. Maybe it'll lead long-term to a better sense of civic responsibility, and a recognition of the vigilance it requires, no matter who is in office.

Talked with a big Obama supporter last night. He gets it now too. The Democratic Party has abandoned the middle (working) class. The salient point is that the duopoly is a charade. Doesn't matter who's in power, because Goldman Sachs always wins. He still thinks it can be reformed from within. Though we both agreed that the signs were dismal to that end, given the old guard lock on power and their refusal to acknowledge how deep their failure of tactics, strategies and policies goes. Told him to look up Kshama Sawant as the kind of elected official we should be looking for. Democratic Socialist.

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"If I should ever die, God forbid, let this be my epitaph:

THE ONLY PROOF HE NEEDED
FOR THE EXISTENCE OF GOD
WAS MUSIC"

- Kurt Vonnegut

Raggedy Ann's picture

@Mark from Queens As my friend, who is still a Black Panther, said, "who knew we needed Trump to awaken us?", which is right in line with your thoughts:

Maybe it'll lead long-term to a better sense of civic responsibility, and a recognition of the vigilance it requires, no matter who is in office

.

Peace, bro!

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"The “jumpers” reminded us that one day we will all face only one choice and that is how we will die, not how we will live." Chris Hedges on 9/11

Redstella's picture

I found this in the Automatic Earth, (https://www.theautomaticearth.com/2017/01/debt-rattle-january-31-2017/?u... ) which I have been relying on these days. It's an article that asks where were we when the real cause of our and the world's misery began
http://www.paulcraigroberts.org/2017/01/30/left-self-destructing-paul-cr...

All I can say - we were no where. But now, maybe we can be on the right side-? Easy to be against Trump.

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Mark from Queens's picture

@Redstella Thanks Redstella.

Will read Paul Craig Roberts article too.

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"If I should ever die, God forbid, let this be my epitaph:

THE ONLY PROOF HE NEEDED
FOR THE EXISTENCE OF GOD
WAS MUSIC"

- Kurt Vonnegut

riverlover's picture

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Hey! my dear friends or soon-to-be's, JtC could use the donations to keep this site functioning for those of us who can still see the life preserver or flotsam in the water.

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"Religion is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich."--Napoleon

Redstella's picture

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Raggedy Ann's picture

@riverlover in my network. Also shared the Heather Richardson article on the "shock event." We must share these on all social media to keep getting the word out.

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"The “jumpers” reminded us that one day we will all face only one choice and that is how we will die, not how we will live." Chris Hedges on 9/11

Thanks for the morning OT Mark. It is so great having different people from the community participate.

riverlover left this link on FB. It is longish but a good read when you have the time.

The Dying Days of Liberalism

Another article that I found interesting.

Trial Balloon for a Coup?
Analyzing the news of the past 24 hours

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"Religion is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich."--Napoleon

Mark from Queens's picture

@dkmich Just waking a little while ago, after napping hard while the boy did. Wow. I needed that...

Look forward to those articles when I get some time this afternoon/evening.

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"If I should ever die, God forbid, let this be my epitaph:

THE ONLY PROOF HE NEEDED
FOR THE EXISTENCE OF GOD
WAS MUSIC"

- Kurt Vonnegut

gulfgal98's picture

@dkmich I am currently reading the first link and am still in the midst of reading it. It is a very long , but extremely worthwhile essay that I highly recommend. I have cut this one quote from it, which appears fairly early in the essay. I am posting it here to give folks a little taste of the essay.

Liberal democracy has been reduced to a shell, more a name than a fact that deserves the name. For many years, liberalism has been liberal authoritarianism or post-liberalism or neoliberalism, with a high elitist disdain for democracy and a fear of the masses everywhere. Promises of inclusion, fairness, and welfare, were replaced by sensitive-sounding rhetorical tricks and tokenism. Moral narcissism, virtue signalling, identity politics, and building patchwork quilts of diversity were the order of the day. Protests were encouraged abroad, against target nations, in the name of democracy promotion—but at home, protests were shut down by an always more militarized police. Nations around the world were lectured about transparency and accountability, but at home it was all about mass surveillance, domestic espionage, and a crackdown on whistleblowers. Liberal leaders claimed to be upholders of peace and order, while multiplying the number of wars.

I want to thank Mark for his excellent OT today. So much food for thought and for eating too. Thanks Mark! Good

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

Lookout's picture

Good morning Mark and all. Hope your gig went well last night and you got some rest.

It has been interesting to read peoples take on the protests. Seems those that went were encouraged, and many of those who didn't see it as a democrap party trick. I must admit, I'm for the protest. It is true the dems may try to capitalize but I wouldn't bet on 'em.

What drives people to art? I remember that question occurred to me as a young person when I saw these incredible painted clay masks made by a sole share cropper in Mississippi back in the 30's. They were found at his death. Sure wasn't fame and fortune...but something in his spirit driven to come out in his art.

Sometimes a song or a tune flows out like that - from something inside the spirit. Well here's hoping we all tap into our creative spirit and find joy in our own art. I also hope we find the courage of our convictions to stand up to evil...because sadly we (the US) are the evil empire.

All the best!

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

Steven D's picture

@Lookout though they clearly scrambled to take advantage of and credit for them. As per usual, National Dems were reactive rather than responsive.

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"You can't just leave those who created the problem in charge of the solution."---Tyree Scott

Mark from Queens's picture

@Lookout I think for even those who don't think they can paint, draw, play/create music, sing, or write, if you dream at night there's art in you. If you daydream during the day, that's having artistic vision. Imagination is art, art is imagination.

Art is what makes us human. And should be the binding and unifying thing that supersedes politics in getting to the universal notion of all things, specifically with respect to what policy is enacted.

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"If I should ever die, God forbid, let this be my epitaph:

THE ONLY PROOF HE NEEDED
FOR THE EXISTENCE OF GOD
WAS MUSIC"

- Kurt Vonnegut

Steven D's picture

It's not an easy book to read, with multiple shifts in point of view and an intrusive narrator, use of the second person at times, and constant shifts back and forth from a non-linear narrative to one that focuses on a single Jewish family, the Lustigs, who are sent to a concentration camp based on Terezin (or in German, Theresienstadt), but if you are willing to spend the time and effort you will be greatly rewarded).

The name of the book in English is "The Journey" originally published in 1962, and reissued by Penguin Random House under their Modern Library Classics brand.

The author is H.G. Adler, a nearly forgotten writer on the Holocaust, and not just as a novelist, but also as a a writer on history, sociology and philosophy as well as poetry. His work helped found the academic discipline of Holocaust Studies, including his monumental documentary work, "Theresienstadt 1941-45" often called the best account of any concentration camp. He also wrote a number of sociological studies about the Shoah, which includes "The Administered Man" regarding the Nazi's deportation of German Jews.

The Journey clearly includes many autobiographical elements from Adler's own life - he was sent to Theresienstadt with his wife and her family and eventually was transferred to Auschwitz where he lost his wife. In total, the Nazis murdered 16 members of his extended family. However, you never get the feel that it is a fictionalized autobiography. For example, the book never once mentions the Nazis, the Holocaust or the Jews, although it is apparent from early on that this is the setting for the novel. There are elements of magical realism, stream of consciousness, and fairy tale in The Journey, as well as echoes of the existentialists, particularly Camus in his novel The Plague, but the work is sui generis in my opinion and ranks with one of the great masterpieces written in the 20th Century, not just about the Shoah, but in any genre. Adler also wrote two other novels about the Shoah, that with The Journey combine to make a loose trilogy (none of the books share any common characters), the other two being Panorama and The Wall, which was named one of the 2014 Best Books of the Year by Publisher's Weekly in a gesture of supreme irony, since it was never published in Adler's lifetime, and was ignored by the German and European literati until this recent revival of Adler and his reputation as one of the key figures who wrote about the Shoah during the Post-war era.

In any event, in our current situation, where we are seeing elements of the Trump administration promoting an agenda that demonizes particular groups based on race, ethnicity, gender (particularly the Trans community) and religion, it seems particularly relevant. I hope those of you who read this comment take a chance on the book, which can be purchased in various formats including paperback and e-book editions. The Kindle edition of The Journey is currently reasonably priced at 2.99, and you don;t need to own a Kindle to read it, just download the Kindle app to your computer or one of your other devices. Its a work both epic in scope and yet at times frankly extremely intimate, especially in the last part of the novel which focuses on the sole survivor of the Lustig family, a character clearly based on Adler himself.

And no, I am not being compensated for promoting this book by anyone. Smile

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"You can't just leave those who created the problem in charge of the solution."---Tyree Scott

Mark from Queens's picture

@Steven D apropos for now, indeed.

Drumpf is a bigoted RW xenophobic, pea-brain. His worldview reminds me of and seems aligned with another insufferable NY schmuck, namely congressman Peter King.

During Occupy this droopy dog-faced fascist King who probably eats too much meat at lunch with his high balls sounded like the typical RW Fear Boy that Drumpf apparently is also, making McCarthy-like smears toward the movement. Basically another guy, like Giuliani, who yearns for the days of white male dominance, when all women were pregnant and barefoot in the kitchen, and the hippies hadn't yet smelled up the place. King also famously made horrendous remarks towards Muslims regularly.

They uphold the Fox News worldview that a parade of narrow-minded fake blonds make the man, that brusque middle aged white male bloviators must exhibit believable fullness of Fear of "the other" so that they have as many bogeymen as possible to rail at to keep their audience distracted from grabbing pitchforks to find the slick white men of Wall St and corporate America in 3-piece suits who continually pick their pockets and are the cause of all their economic deprivations, and all must share in a myopic, stunted adolescent grasp of things.

These willfully ignorant numbskulls wouldn't know the value of a piece of art of any kind, including good books, if it smashed them in the head.

Thanks, I need that. To get a good rant out about these pricks who Drumpf epitomizes. Wouldn't it be wonderful if we could inflict a temporary amnesia on the propagandized, and substitute the archetype of Fear planted in their brains of the the scarf-wearing or turban-wearing Muslim with that of the 3-piece suit-wearing banker of Wall St, as the realenemy?

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"If I should ever die, God forbid, let this be my epitaph:

THE ONLY PROOF HE NEEDED
FOR THE EXISTENCE OF GOD
WAS MUSIC"

- Kurt Vonnegut

@Steven D Steven D. I will get this book.

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riverlover's picture

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Hey! my dear friends or soon-to-be's, JtC could use the donations to keep this site functioning for those of us who can still see the life preserver or flotsam in the water.

I do a butternut squash soup fairly often. A bit of ground nutmeg and a dollop of spiced yogurt add a nice touch to the soup. Smile

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Thanks for the stories above.

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