The Kennedy Center: Our Cultural Home No Longer

Shortened to the “Kennedy Center”, it is officially the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, sitting majestically on the Potomac. It opened in 1971 to honor the late President for his and Mrs. Kennedy’s great passion for the visual and performing arts.  It contains commissioned works of art, a gallery of flags from around the world, and wonderful performing venues.  It is home to the National Symphony Orchestra and the Washington National Opera. In short, it’s the United States’ cultural home and showplace. 

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When to Stop Worrying?

When, as a parent, do you stop worrying about your children?  If you chose “never”, that’s the correct answer.  The only exceptions would be advanced dementia or death.  Other than that, you never stop worrying.  Even when they’re settled, it doesn’t stop.  Are they ok?  Are they happy? A great line from “Law and Order”, from the character Lt. Anita Van Buren, states “A parent is only as happy as their unhappiest child.”  Yup, that sums it up.

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Renewing my Canadian Roots

This week’s piece is a mixture of serious and not-so-much. I was working on something for the local newspaper, which for some reason sees fit to print my articles – personal perspectives and something topical from the news.  My submission this week is titled, “O, Canada”.  It included bits of Canadian history – my mother was Canadian, and a lament about the rapidly deteriorating relationship between the US and Canada.  If you haven’t been keeping up, Canada has decided to go ahead with its federal election in April, despite its designation as our “51st state” by Donald Trump, who calls the Canadian Prime Minister, “Governor.”  That designation seems to be going over well, almost as successful as the “Gulf of America”.  

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Emerging from Winter

We’re enjoying the first prolonged stretch of warm weather.  Earlier ones were a tease, because then it got cold again. Today is the first day that I haven’t turned up the heat as I got up, and we slept with a window open in the bedroom.  There was a bunny, a small one, sniffing around my gardens out front – it kept its back to me, guilty no doubt because the minute my new bulbs start to sprout, he/she/they will be waiting.  I was looking out back too, yesterday morning, and saw a possum emerging from the swampy area behind the house, what we call the “dell”.  Admittedly, we watch a lot of UK television.  

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Don’t Bother Leaving a Message

Some time ago – actually five years, if I’m counting, I wrote about answering machines and voice mail, which had been, it seems, the gold standard for reaching out to friends and family.  Some of you older folks remember when they were first developed, with separate devices hooked up to the telephone. Cordless phones were the size of FBI walkie-talkies, and we had to plug in car phones. Yes, answering machines were so innovative, such an improvement. Until they’d be filled up with junk callers, telemarketers, and stuff we didn’t need to hear. Then, we’d get unseemly pleas from the technology to “please empty your voicemail.”  

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The Daigneaults

My late father-in-law grew up in the rich, rolling farming country of far northern New York, just west of Lake Champlain along the Saint Lawrence River.  It was a largely French population that had moved south from Quebec, where village names like Chateaugay dotted the map. Alfred was one of ten children, second youngest in a large farming family whose name, Dore, with an accent over the “e”, evolved from “dor-EH” to the anglicized “DOR-ah”, the “e” switched to “a”.  

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House Hunters “Off the Grid”

Yes, I know.  It’s been too long since I gave you faithful readers an update on the saga of “House Hunters”, where people looking to buy a house, and which gets more and more bizarre as time goes by.  A recent trend has been to “get away from it all.”  It’s a new, truly disturbing twist on what is frequently referred to as work-life balance. I wasn’t really sure how some of these folks could get to this point, but they have.  

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Going Into Hibernation

Yes, it’s all too much for me.  The cold, the winds, the snow, the new administration.  Bears have the right idea.  Step 1: Eat up and put on “winter weight”.  Ok, I’ve done some of that, particularly over Christmas and New Year’s, but probably not enough to get me through until April.  I will need to restock from time to time. Step 2: Crawl into a warm place and sleep for  . . . . . .  I’ll have to get up at intervals to eat more or use the bathroom.  Who cares, really, if a groundhog sees its shadow.  Winter is stretching on endlessly.  Tonight, another prediction of snow, turning to freezing rain and icing by tomorrow morning.  And one or two more “weather episodes” next week.  In between, there are cold temperatures and blustery, windy unpleasantness.  It’s all too much.

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And the Craziness Is Back

Yes, he’s back.  The man who delights in upsetting the applecart has returned to the White House.  The first two weeks in office have been like watching a squirrel in the middle of the road.  Working on nerve endings and knee-jerk reactions.  Blinding lashing out at “opponents”, the previous administration, diversity.  Rather than consoling the friends and families of after that terrible, tragic plane/helicopter crash over the Potomac, he pointed his long, ugly finger at Joe Biden for allowing “diversity” into the ranks of air traffic controllers.  Replace sadness and compassion with anger.  Vintage Trump.

Rule by Executive Order.  After all, Americans gave him a “mandate”.  He swept the popular vote by a truly mind-blowing 1.5% margin. For comparison, Richard Nixon beat George McGovern by just over 23% in 1972.  Ronald Reagan won his second term by almost 59% of the popular vote over former Vice President Walter Mondale, and Mondale only captured 13 votes in the Electoral College.  So, with this new “mandate”, President Trump really doesn’t need Congress. The Constitution either.  “Birthright Citizenship” is clearly spelled out in the 14th Amendment, which states that citizenship is acquired in one of two ways – a person is born in the US and its territories, or at least one parent is an American citizen.  This was passed just after the Civil War, and its intent was clear – former slaves would automatically become citizens.  It was meant to negate the flurry of state legislation prohibiting citizenship rights to African Americans.  No matter, contend Republicans supportive of the latest action, that’s not what post-Civil War legislators really meant.  

There has been a barrage of back-and-forth, squirrel-like scurrying as decisions are made, rescinded, and blocked by the courts.  Federal employees scrambling, their jobs uncertain from day to day, hour to hour. Because most of his intention to cut spending is outside his purview – that is Congress’ job.  In fact, he’s not absolutely clear on the roles of each division of government.  Congress sets policy through legislation, and determines allocations of money.  The Executive branch carries out those policies, and oversees the funding that Congress has approved.  And the Judicial determines that which is legal and that which isn’t. Clearly defined.  Nowhere in the Constitution is the President authorized to appoint his friends and family to an outside “department” review the operations of government. The Constitution, nor acts of Congress, allow those outside individuals to demand official government records and documents, or to interfere with normal government operations. 

Interestingly, the piles of executive orders tell us more about what Mr. Trump doesn’t like, rather than what he does.

He doesn’t like diversity.  Few non-white nominees for key positions.  Marco Rubio, Secretary of State, and Kash Patel, designate for FBI director are about it.  Vivek Ramaswamy has stepped away from the “department” to which he was ‘appointed” as he considers a possible run for office elsewhere.  Mr. Trump has issued decrees banning any policies in government departments that mention diversity and/or equity, and has revoked funding for transgender medical care.  He even finds the name, “Gulf of Mexico”, offensive.

He also doesn’t particularly care for non-rich people.  His advisors and appointees include more than a dozen billionaires.  We should expect that, like his tax overhaul of 2017, new policies and regulation-cutting will favor those with money – lots of it.  We remember Betsy DeVos, the Secretary of Education in his first term, pushing for-profit schools (and denying debt-forgiveness when those schools went belly-up), private schools and vouchers. This time, he’s appointed a billionaire donor from the world of professional wrestling, who’s mission, apparently, is to abolish the department altogether.

He doesn’t put much “stock” in alternative energy sources, or the development thereof.  His pick of Chris Wright, a man right out of the fossil fuel industry and an advocate of “fracking”, to be Energy Secretary, isn’t likely to advance new initiatives.  Mr. Trump has taken the US out, once again, of the Paris Climate Agreement, and issued an executive order that cancelled funding for wind turbines, solar energy, and other energy development projects.  Pleasant news for the Chinese, virtually “passing the ball” on to them to develop the globe’s new sources of energy when oil and gas run out, which they will.

He doesn’t place much value on medical research, having put a freeze on funding grants by the National Institute of Health for the development of new medications, vaccines, and treatment programs. Included were cancer treatments and possible immunizations for new global infectious diseases should they come along, which they will, and withdrawn the US from the World Health Organization, which shares vital information among its member countries. 

He also doesn’t care much for foreign aid, having listened to his billionaire advisors, who probably aren’t seeing much return from it on their business investments.  Even though it funds clean energy, medical care, preventing pollution, and education in poor and developing countries, the world’s good will isn’t that important.  It’s more important that we’re number one and keep it that way.  “We Are the World” has been replaced by “America First.”

It is one thing to take a systematic review of government investments and the services they provide its citizens.  But it would seem to this observer that it is a time-consuming process, looking at all aspects of those services and, in particular, the unintended consequences of their reduction or elimination.  For example, reducing the number of tax examiners at the IRS would seem, on the surface, to be a popular, vote-getting idea.  Until you factor in the lost revenue from illegal tax avoidance.  Reductions in the numbers of federal employees typically means that agencies are slower and less able to respond to changes in policy, like the recent Social Security Fairness Act, or to things like natural disasters – floods, wildfires, and hurricanes.  One of the more concerning issues from the last election is affordability, and skyrocketing prices of housing.  Will the deportation of thousands, perhaps millions of immigrant construction workers, desperately needed to rebuild southern California and across the country, hinder solutions to construction and reconstruction?  (Side note – the building industry estimates it will need, going forward, almost half a million workers that it currently doesn’t have.) Or, how will putting tariffs on the supplies of building materials from Canada affect home prices? Probably not well. But as our new president has sounded loudly the alarm against the undocumented, the vast majority of whom are in fact “documented” – holding drivers licenses, residency documents, and paying taxes with valid tax returns, he feels committed to both avenues of narrative. Will cybersecurity take a hit as hackers both at home and abroad gain a foothold? It’s possible the government could lose track of possible terrorist cells and other bad actors, because the FBI tracks them.  These are all essential services that we take for granted, even if we don’t see them in action every day.  

It won’t be tomorrow, or even in a month or two.  But the craziness will catch up with us.  The disruptions in which Mr. Trump delights will manifest themselves negatively, and it will get ugly. It did before, and it’s starting again. Americans that voted for him, confident that he would bring down prices, that he’d “improve” the economy, and deport undesirables will find themselves sadly disillusioned in the not-too-distant future, possibly even by the next mid-term election.  The political pendulum will, as it always does, swing back.  

The New “Pethood”

I was in the line for the drive-up window a few days ago at the local coffee shop, and in the car ahead of me, a little furry head poked out of the driver’s window.  The server reached through the window and started feeding the dog from a packet of potato hash brown nuggets.  Now, I love pets as much as the next person, particularly dogs, but as there wasn’t much opportunity for her to go and wash her hands, and she’d be handing other people’s food using those same, dog-licked fingers, I was awfully glad that I had ordered only coffee.  And further, the driver pulled away with that same furry face peeking out the driver’s window, meaning it was in the driver’s lap.  I do hope dog and pet- parent weren’t going far.  

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