Monday, December 30, 2013

Sick of the Republicans' talking points yet?

In this morning's Informed Comment, Juan Cole discusses the NYTimes's article by David Kirkpatrick. 

Benghazi Consular attack was Local, not al-Qaeda: NYT Correspondent Demolishes GOP Talking Points

David D. Kirkpatrick at the New York Times has settled the controversy over events in Benghazi on September 11, 2012, by actually going to Benghazi and digging into the story. Admittedly, it was a somewhat dangerous assignment, but Kirkpatrick risked it.
The take-away of this careful investigation, depending on a range of interviews with Libyans who had been at the scene of the attack on the US consulate in the Libyan port city, is that al-Qaeda had nothing to do with it.

The chief suspect is an eccentric local militia leader, Ahmad Abu Khattala and his Obeida Ibn Al Jarra Brigade, which fought against Muammar Gaddafi in the 2011 revolution. Abu Khattala had no gratitude to the Americans who helped his people against the dictator, and is viewed as one bulb short of a chandelier by many of his acquaintances. He, like many Benghazi fundamentalists, had spent years incarcerated by the Gaddafi government in the notorious Abu Salim prison, where in the 1990s Gaddafi dealt with a prison revolt by just having hundreds of inmates mowed down.

Another fundamentalist organization in the city, Ansar al-Sharia, was also involved, though it continues to deny involvement in the consulate attack.

The ginned up Islamophobic attack “film” on the Prophet Muhammad probably produced secretly by the Islamophobic network in the US in hopes of causing trouble abroad for President Obama in an election year did provoke demonstrations at the US consulate, which morphed into the attack on it. In fact, in my darker moments I suspect that some US GOP officials knew about the “film” and the likelihood it would get the Muslims’ goat, and had a narrative ready to go that Barack Obama on the Middle East was another helpless Jimmy Carter. Whatever the origin of their narrative, they clearly weren’t willing to let go of it simply because it flew in the face of the facts as known.

US officials in Benghazi knew that there were dangerous fundamentalist militias in the city. But they had dozens of CIA operatives at a nearby safe house, who they were sure could protect them. And they had allied with the fundamentalists against Gaddafi and so expected if not gratitude at least tolerance for their presence.
The Republican attack propaganda on President Obama and his team maintained that the consulate attack was the work of Ayman al-Zawahiri’s al-Qaeda, that it was preplanned, and that the “Silence of the Muslims” film had nothing to do with it.
The Republican attack propaganda on President Obama and his team maintained that the consulate attack was the work of Ayman al-Zawahiri’s al-Qaeda, that it was preplanned, and that the “Silence of the Muslims” film had nothing to do with it. Sen. Lindsey Graham alleged that “everyone knew” that Benghazi was controlled by al-Qaeda in summer of 2012. Rep. Mike Rogers, who is more of a prevaricator even than most politicians, asserted the same thing.

I was in Benghazi in late May of 2012 for a few days and gave a talk at a community center there. The city most certainly was not in the control of “al-Qaeda.” There were a few fundamentalist militias, but they were not representative of the city, which had municipal elections in late spring.

On the occasion of the appearance of Kirkpatrick’s important reportage, I’ll leave you with my own deconstruction of the false GOP narrative, from last year. I think it is largely vindicated by what Kirkpatrick was able to find out on the ground.
“Top Ten Republican Myths on Benghazi:
1. Republican senators keep saying that it should have been “easy” to find out what happened on September 11, 2012, by simply debriefing US personnel who had been there. John McCain, Ron Johnson and the others who make this charge are the most cynical and manipulative people in the world. The Benghazi US mission was very clearly an operation of the Central Intelligence Agency, and that is the reason that the Obama administration officials have never been able to speak frankly and publicly about it. McCain and the others know this very well, and they know that their public carping cannot be “simply” answered because the answers would endanger sources and methods. The consulate was amazingly well-guarded by some 40 CIA operatives, many of them ex-special forces, in a nearby safe house. These were viewed by consular officials as “the cavalry.” It is still not clear what Ambassador Chris Stevens and the CIA were doing in Benghazi, and unless we know that we can’t know why they were attacked. (They were not overseeing the shipping of weapons to Syria; the Syrian revolutionaries complain bitterly that the US *prevents* them from getting medium and heavy weapons).
2. Republicans keep posturing that their questions about Benghazi are intended to bolster US security. In fact, they are harming it. Republican hearings in the House of Representative have disgracefully revealed the names of Libyans talking to the US consulate, thus endangering their lives and harming US efforts to understand the situation in the country, since who would risk talking to the embassy if they know about Darrell Issa’s big mouth?
3. The GOP figures keep saying that it was obvious that there was no demonstration at the Benghazi consulate against the so-called “film,” the ‘Innocence of Muslims’ that attacked the Prophet Muhammad. But in fact Libyan security officials repeatedly told wire services on September 12 that there was such a demonstration, and that the attack issued from those quarters. An American resident in Benghazi at that time confirms that there were such demonstrations that day. The secular-minded revolutionary militia that guarded the US consulate for the Libyan government kept the demonstrations far enough away from the consulate gates that they would not have shown up in security videos.
4. Benghazi, a city of over a million, is not dominated by “al-Qaeda,” contrary to what Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina has repeatedly said or implied. The city had successful municipal elections in May, just before I got there. The number one vote-getter was a woman professor of statistics at the university. While political Islam is a force in Benghazi, only some relatively small groups are militant, and it has to compete with nationalist, tribal and regional ideological currents. In Libya’s parliamentary elections of July, 2012, the Muslim Brotherhood did very poorly and nationalists came to power. Women won 20% of the seats! The elected Speaker of Parliament, Muhammad Magarief, called for a secular constitution for Libya and a separation of religion and state.
5. Contrary to repeated assertions that it was obvious that terrorist groups were rampaging around in the city, members of the Benghazi municipal council told then US ambassador Chris Stevens that security in the city was improving in summer, 2012.
In fact, one Senator John McCain said during a visit to Libya last February, ““We are very happy to be back here in Libya and to note the enormous progress and changes made in the past few months… We know that many challenges lie ahead… but we are encouraged by what we have seen.” Doesn’t sound to me like McCain was running around like Chicken Little warning that the sky was about to fall on US diplomats there. Want to know who else came along on that trip? Lindsey Graham, who likewise didn’t issue any dire warnings in its aftermath.
6. Contrary to the “Libya-is-riddled-with-al-Qaeda” meme of the GOP politicians, there is a strong civil society and tribal opposition to fundamentalist militias in Benghazi, of which Amb. Chris Stevens was well aware. Tripoli-based journalist Abd-al-Sattar Hatitah explained in the pages of the pan-Arab London daily al-Sharq al-Awsat [Sept. 30, 2012, trans. USG Open Source Center]:
“It appears that the simple rule Benghazi’s people thought of applying was based on other experiences in which the radical Islamists or militants in general managed to grow, prosper, and expand by seeking protection from the tribes, as happened in Afghanistan, Somalia, and Yemen. But the civil movements which became very active [in Benghazi] after the fall of Al-Qadhafi’s regime were the ones that formed alliances this time with the tribes, the notables, wise men councils, and civil society figures against the militants. This is akin to the “Sahwat” in Iraq. The alliance managed to expel the brigades from the town and encouraged the nascent Libyan authorities to tighten their restrictions on all armed manifestations…
He adds that [a meeting by secular notables with the tribes] was also attended by representatives from the army chiefs-of-staff and the Interior Ministry as well as a number of members from the National Congress (parliament). “All civil society organizations also took part with us. Everybody consented to issuing the statement against the presence of the [fundamentalist] brigades and we distributed 3,000 copies. “
This was around September 3. After the attack on the US consulate, tens of thousands of people in Benghazi demonstrated against the violence and in favor of the US and Stevens. Then they attempted to sweep the fundamentalist militias from the city.
7. Al-Qaeda is not for the most part even a “thing” in Libya. The only formal al-Qaeda affiliate in the region is al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), which is not a Libyan but an Algerian organization. Just calling all Salafi groups “al-Qaeda” is propaganda. They have to swear fealty to Ayman al-Zawahiri (or in the past, Usama Bin Laden) to be al-Qaeda. The main al-Qaeda connection in Benghazi is to Abu Yahya al-Libi, who was killed in northern Pakistan by a US drone strike in June. Some of his close relatives in Benghazi may have been angry about this (depending on how well they liked him), but they are not known to form a formal al-Qaeda cell. There are also young men from Dirna in the Benghazi area, some of whom fought against the US in Iraq. Their numbers are not large and, again, they don’t have al-Zawahiri’s phone number on auto-dial. Sen. McCain was a big supporter of the US intervention in Libya and seems to have been all right with Abdul Hakim Belhadj being his ally, even though in the zeroes Belhadj would have been labeled ‘al-Qaeda.’
8. Ansar al-Sharia (Helpers of Islamic Law) is just an informal grouping of a few hundred hard line fundamentalists in Benghazi, and may be a code word to refer to several small organizations. There are no known operational links between Ansar al-Sharia and al-Qaeda. It is a local thing in Benghazi.
9. Leaders of Ansar al-Sharia have denied that they directed their organization to attack the US consulate and have condemned the attack.
10. Lindsey Graham and others point to instances of political violence this past summer in Benghazi as obvious harbingers of the September 11 consulate attack. But it was a tiny fringe group, the Omar Abdel Rahman Brigades, that claimed responsibility for setting off a small pipe bomb in front of the gate of the US consulate last June. This is what the US statement said last June:
“There was an attack late last night on the United States office in Benghazi,” a US embassy official said, adding that only the gate was damaged and no one was hurt. The diplomat said a homemade bomb had been used in the attack on the office, set up after the 2011 uprising against Muammar Qadhafi and kept open to support the democratic transition “
You’d have to be a real scaredy cat to pack up and leave because of a thing like that, which is what Sen. Graham keeps saying should have been the response. Likewise the same small cell was responsible for attacks on the office of the Red Cross and on a convoy of the British consulate, which injured a consular employ. Security isn’t all that great in Benghazi, though actually I suspect the criminal murder rate is much lower than in any major American city. I walked around freely in Benghazi in early June, and couldn’t have disguised my being a Westerner if I had wanted to, and nobody looked at me sideways. A pipe bomb and a shooting, neither of them fatal, did not stand out as dire in a city full of armed militias, most of them grateful to the US and Britain for their help in the revolution. You can understand why the Red Cross packed it in after a couple of attacks, but the US government is not the Red Cross.”

Tuesday, December 24, 2013

Conditioning.....

OK...."Santa Baby"  is a perfect example of  the "conditioning" to which we are subjected, especially as girls, when we grow up.  I'm borrowing from Cheryl Huber's book, How to Get  from Where You are to Where You Want to Be.  I can hear my favorite bloggers going on about what we as women are expecting from life when this song, "Santa Baby" plays.  Maybe not.  They're pretty much used to me by now--to my odd choices of music, and my weird  kind of feminism (if that's what it can be called).  But  I've been reading Cheryl Huber's books  on the metro, and trying to accept the wisdom in them.  

So here's what Huber says about "Conditioning":  
The internal programming by which an individual is turned into a person who will fit into a given culture.  The conditioning process is initiated (usually unconsciously) by a child's primary caregivers, and continued and supported by family members,  institutions, and society at large.
 Well, what that says is that from our earliest days, we are taught how to think about things, especially ourselves, by the people who take care of us from the start.

I've got that.  But where does Eartha Kitt come in?  Ah... 


Santa Baby.....

This song was a big hit on the radio when I was a student at Shanley High School in Fargo, N.D.  Do they still have hits on the radio station?  Who sings them?  Lady GaGa? Justin Bieber?  Any adults?


Sunday, December 22, 2013

Meanwhile, Back on the Farm.....

Let's keep paying attention to what's going on with Iran and Israel and heed what President Obama is saying.  Juan Cole's Informed Comment again has more info on this than we'll find in the MSM. 

black pepper tofu??

This is a real recipe from Sauveur magazine/website.  I like the idea of it (using lots of coarsely ground black pepper, lots of garlic, shallots, scallions, etc. plus little slices of red chiles and fresh ginger, BUT.....there is a LOT of oil (2 cups for frying the tofu plus 11 tablespoons of butter for frying the shallots, garlic, and ginger) and 2 Tablespoons of sugar--in addition to the sweet soy sauce (Indonesian variety).  Still--no meat!  Well, wish us luck!!

2 cups canola oil
1 ¾ lb. firm tofu, cut into 1″ cubes
½ cup cornstarch
11 tbsp. unsalted butter [one stick plus 3 more tbsp]
3 tbsp. finely chopped ginger
12 small shallots, thinly sliced
12 cloves garlic, crushed
8 red serrano chiles, stemmed and thinly sliced
5 tbsp. coarsely ground black pepper
3 tbsp. kecap manis (sweet soy sauce; available at onlinefoodgrocery.com) [also Amazon.com]*
3 tbsp. light soy sauce
4 tsp. dark soy sauce
2 tbsp. sugar
16 small scallions, cut into 1 ¼″ pieces
Cooked white rice, for serving

INSTRUCTIONS

Heat oil in a 12″ skillet over medium-high heat. Toss tofu and cornstarch in a bowl until evenly coated. Fry tofu until browned all over, about 3 minutes. Drain and set aside; discard oil, and wipe skillet clean. Return skillet to medium heat with butter. Add ginger, shallots, garlic, and chiles; cook until soft, about 15 minutes. Stir in pepper, soy sauces, and sugar. Return tofu to skillet; cook, stirring, until warmed through, about 2 minutes. Stir in scallions; serve over rice.

*or make your own from light soy sauce and 1/4 c + 1/8 c of brown sugar boiled together.  There's all that sugar again.

Friday, December 20, 2013

cooking for self

ok, i know I have been supposed to check out eggplant and its nutritional qualities.  Well after that chicken post, I am ready for eggplant!  it has a lot of fiber!!  yay.  So I got one tonight, sliced it nicely, made a batch of breadcrumbs mixed with parmesan cheese (from the green can, you know....not anything fancy).  dipped the slices in beaten egg, then in the breadcrumb cheese mixture, then FRIED it on both sides.  then stacked it in a baking pan with cheese slices between the eggplants.  and BAKED it.
actually pretty good, though I should have made some tomato sauce, too.  Anyway, it could have used a few capers, too, to liven it up.  I am full to the gills, and will eat the rest tomorrow.  But I feel pretty good about this.  I made something mostly vegetarian (no meat).  And it was cute....not bad-looking.  no chickens or little pigs or anything died for my supper tonight.  yay!  merry christmas to all!!

tonight is the full moon, and I am wishing on a number of stars to win a prize in a lottery.  see see...

big hugs and kisses!! 

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Sorry, Fox News's Megyn Kelly.....


Any fool knows Santa is a black cross-dressing comedian!  

from Tyler Perry Studio's "A Madea Christmas"





Can't wait to see it!  Madea makes me laugh, which is more than Santa ever did. 

Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Have Some More Fried What??

Good old USDA.  Now they're letting chickens from China into the country--whether cooked or uncooked.  Sez the USDA (FSIS), if we say the growing/living conditions for chickens in China are the same as these conditions for them here, what's the problem?  Well, for one thing, the growing/living conditions for chickens HERE, even the USDA approved ones, are nothing to brag about. 

"The USDA seems to have no recognition whatsoever that animals are conscious beings with memories, social lives, experiences and goal-oriented behavior. The agency simply pretends that “all animals are mindless animated matter” and every USDA policy and regulation flows from that delusion." (from Alex Jones' INFOWARS.com/usda-to-allow-u-s-to-be-overrun-with-contaminated-chicken-from-china). 

So....it's come to this.  a big supermarket chain hereabouts offers rotisserie cooked chickens every Friday for the price of 2 for $10.  Ordinarily, a rotisserie-cooked chicken weighs about 4+ lb., and costs about $7.99 each--virtually the same cost as for the same size of chicken uncooked.  So, if you're not paying any more (and often a bit less) to get a chicken that's already cooked (with 3 or 4 different flavorings/spice blends), what's not to like?

Well, I have to ask myself what kind of chickens do the big markets use for these bargain rotisserie birds?  The pristine, well fed and well cared-for chickens?  Or the ones who can barely stagger out of the cage? Or the ones that come from China all loaded with arsenic and lead and other goodies not considered newsworthy by China or  the USDA?  At 2 for $10, that's taking a big chance with your food budget.

Oh, I've done this myself. I love roasted chickens, and there are days when I can't deal with cooking or eating any more farm-raised salmon or tilapia or canned tuna or eggs (thanks again, chickens!). 

Saturday, December 14, 2013

Sincere Christmas Greetings!

My niece Mary sent me this photo today. 

Bubbly Perfection Salad and Grasshopper Pie

This salad is what we used to eat at Christmas dinner in our house in Fargo, ND.  It has a smattering of fresh green veggies and little red bits, and because you can set the jello in a wreath-shaped mold, it looks seasonal and festive.  I know for a fact that this is what Santa Claus ate every year at our house.  I don't know why it was called "Perfection" salad.  Maybe because Santa would eat it.  He and many Midwesterners of our acquaintance eschewed fresh green vegetable salads, dismissing them as "grass." 

Here goes:

1 box lime, orange, lemon, or pineapple gelatin (size?  I'd say the 3 ounce.)
1 small can pineapple tidbits, drained (save the juice, see below)
1 carrot, peeled & shredded
1 T minced onion
1/2 cup finely shredded cabbage
1 cup finely diced celery
1/4 cup chopped pimiento stuffed olives
1 cup hot pineapple juice (can add hot water to make 1 cup)
1 cup COLD 7Up (or water, if you don't like the idea of soda)

In a big bowl, combine hot juice with gelatin until dissolved.  Cool, then add about 1/2-1 cup COLD 7Up and stir.  Chill until almost set.  Fold in the veggies and pineapple tidbits.  Pour into the mold or a glass bowl and chill until firm.

Grasshopper Pie
                                     
 This is not to be confused with the real grasshopper concoctions available at Jose Andres's fancy Mexican restaurant, Oyamel, here in DC.  This is my Aunt Mary's favorite (my mom's, too) that is
cobbled together with crushed Hydrox cookies and 1/4 cup melted butter (mixed together and packed into a buttered 9" pie tin for the crust), and a filling of 1/4 c. green Creme de Menthe, stirred into 1 pint jar of marshmallow creme (or 23 marshmallows, melted), and 2 cups of whipped heavy cream, folded into the green mixture.  Freeze for several hours or until firm.  Remove from freezer a few minutes before serving.  Aunt Mary did love her Grasshopper pies, and she lived to be 95!! 

Bonne Appetit!, as they say on the Food Network, or bonne chance!  as we say around here.

Bonne Noel!!



Thursday, December 12, 2013

Words Or Reality?

Juan Cole addresses the question many Obama supporters struggle with:  Is he serious about dissent???  Or just a good talker who ignores reality??  And what is this "octopus-like secret government that has substituted itself for the elected one"  Or better yet, "Who are they?"

Meanwhile, in this candle-lighting season, here's a quote from Nun other than Sister Karol Jackowski's Book of Spells and Blessings on lighting candles & making wishes:

Lighting a candle and making a wish is a little spell and blessing all by itself.  It's also the perfect way to pray when that's all the time and energy you have.  The power in fire and the power in heartfelt wishes make this simple spell work like magic.  Nature and necessity always make magic whenever we light a candle and make a wish.

So whenever you hear even the faintest call to pray, light a candle and make a wish.  And never light a candle, for whatever purpose, without dedicating it to someone or something.  In a similar manner, never extinguish a candle without confirming your wish with a "Blessed be" or an "Amen."  Keep in mind that every time you light a candle and make a wish you are taking part in a divine activity.  You too are making magic.

Is that woo-woo enough for you??

Saturday, December 07, 2013

Tuesday, December 03, 2013

Tracy and her rellies on L.I.


Last month, my dear friend Tracy and her spouse, Rabbi Lisa Edwards, from L.A. were visiting D.C.  Shortly after they left, I found a photo of Albert Einstein (AE) taken when he was on Long Island.   I emailed it to Tracy and asked if the other person were one of her relatives.  Not quite.  He was the proprietor of a local store and the grandfather of one of Tracy's cousin Jeff's best friends.   
Apparently Einstein knew a LOT about physics and was an "eager sailor, but not a very good one," and he loved to sail in the bay off the L.I. coast where Tracy's family home sits.  I've heard the AE stories from Tracy and her family--about how "Aunt Connie and Betsey Jenkins helped pull AE's sailboat off the shore after he'd beached it."  Tracy contacted her cousin Jeff about the photo, and he told this wonderful story about AE and his friend's grandfather:

That's David Rothman, who owned Rothman's Variety Store in Southold. 
There's a famous story about Einstein coming in and asking for sundials. 
After some confusion, it turned out he was seeking sandals. Al was an 
eager sailor, though not a good one. You may recall the stories of Aunt Connie 
and Betty J... pulling him off the shore when he ran aground. 
There he would be, contemplating the universe, with his head in a paper bag. 
(In addition to sandals, he lacked a hat, so he would tame his wild locks 
in a paper bag cinched with a rubber band. Imagine finding the smartest human 
on the planet aground with his head in a bag.) 
David Rothman's grandson, Ron, is a buddy of mine and a fellow guitarist. 
He now runs Rothman's, and sells vintage guitars there, as well as sundries. 
I buy guitar strings from him, and recently bought a guitar too. 
I have a few more Einstein stories from my years as the newspaper guy out here, 
but I'll spare you for now.  [the following link will have more information on  
Einstein and his sojourn in L.I.  You can sign up for the newsletter, too.]
http://www.southoldhistoricalsociety.org/Einstein%20%26%20Southold.htm

 

 


 

Saturday, November 30, 2013

Chip Out!!

OK....when in history has it been necessary for voters to follow up their votes with cash donations?  In the past few days, I've received three pleas from those representing progressive causes to "chip in" $80 so that others will contribute two matching dollars for every one of mine to fight against the massive infusion of Koch Brothers millions as they seek to whatever....just what are they after, these Koch Brothers?  Electing Republican Senators or Representatives?  (Are the Koch brothers all that dumb, for all their money?)  The Republicans have done NOTHING to earn their fat salaries.  Is this why they need money to put them in office??

Eighty bucks??  Excuse me, dear progressives, but right now I don't even have EIGHT to spare for anything.  The Republicans, if they had their way, would take even that away.  Bah humbug!!

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Peace in the Middle East?

Juan Cole lists the various positive reactions to the recent U.S.-Iran agreement among virtually all the countries in the Middle East but Israel. Which Middle Eastern country actually has nuclear weapons?  Israel.  Let us pray. 

Remember Nevil Shute's novel On the Beach? (Or the resulting movie starring Ava Gardner and Gregory Peck?)  Amazon calls the book, "Nevil Shute’s most powerful novel—a bestseller for decades after its 1957 publication—is an unforgettable vision of a post-apocalyptic world." Post-apocalyptic, meaning after nuclear World War III.   The New York Times said it was “The most haunting evocation we have of a world dying of radiation after an atomic war.” 

Congratulations to all parties who contributed to the past week's agreement.  

Sunday, November 24, 2013

Dream Board

UP:
Thought of personal commandment #2.  (In case you've mercifully forgotten, #1 was Keep on Learning.) #2 is Keep a Dream Board.  If eggplant (my first learning-about project) is gonna help me live longer, I want the rest of my days to be more fun.  So where does this start?  By visualizing what more fun will look like.  And keeping a record of things I see that feel supportive (oh, god....it's come to feeling and using words like supportive).  It's not about HAVING THINGS--see, this is where it starts....any time I think of something I'd like, my own personal Greek chorus sings "THAT'S NOT GOOD!  Fine.  I'll get around the Greek chorus by putting up pictures of things I'd like and enjoying those.

Aside:  One of the things my dad had when he died was one of those automatic smoker things--for
game and fish.  It looked like the automatic cooker my mother used to use on weekends at the lake.
But it not only cooked the items, it smoked them, too.  My dad's smoker looked unused--brand new, a gift from one of my brothers.  So she gave it to me when she was clearing out the cottage before she sold it.  I brought it home with great excitement:  we could use it to make smoked turkey!  My husband was enthusiastic about it, too.  Came the divorce,  however, and the smoker was still unused.  So I kept it.  Finally, the kids and I landed in Iowa in our own house, and I decided, egged on by some of my coworkers, to smoke a turkey one Thanksgiving (when turkeys were cheap).  So I did. Have you ever had smoked turkey?  You can buy slices of smoked turkey in some delis, and it costs more than slices of just plain cooked turkey.  For sandwiches, etc.  But a whole smoked turkey?  Nobody wanted to eat it, especially not me because I was so shocked that this big turkey had that smokey taste all the way through.  No stuffing, no gravy=fail!  Imagine....my tastes were formed at an early age when I could sneak down into the cellar at night and pick at the turkey carcass.  I didn't LIKE smoked turkey.  Ish.  I gave the smoker to the chief egger-on-er at work, and said, no, I don't want a smoked turkey in payment.  You keep it. You're welcome. 

Believe me, a dream board can avoid this very thing. If there's something my little heart thinks it wants, I can pin up a photo:  a house with a big garden?  a place by the shore?  Fine.  there are tons of
magazines and advertisements and emails arriving chez XE regularly, and I can clip/print out pictures of appealing items and put them on my dream board.  After a few months of this, we'll see what happens.  A dream board is a good way to move things into my life OR get them out of my system. 

DOWN: Not much down today.  Except a big load of laundry waiting to be done, and it's Sunday.  Don't want to run the washer and dryer on a Sunday and disturb the quiet.  (Maybe I can do it this morning while my neighbors are at church.  Ha.)

Thursday, November 21, 2013

"He's makin' a list, checkin' it twice..."

Santa Claus had the right idea:  make a list!  Gretchen Rubin of The Happiness Project fame also counsels us to make lists--"Write Your Own Set of Personal Commandments." (Rubin comes up with 12!)  What?  the 10 big ones aren't enough?  The wacky nun/ex-nun Karol Jackowski came up with "seven more commandments" in her book Ten Fun Things to Do Before You Die:
Don't work too hard
Share
No hitting or hurting
Have a real good time
Always let conscience be your guide
Forgive and forget
Let it be
 So what's fun about that?  Well, you can take your own sweet time to find just the right personal commandments.  And nobody is gonna be standing over you until you do it or give advice on whether
it's worth your time.  Or keeping track of whether you keep your personal commandments or not.  Except you.  That would pass for fun here in chez XE.

My personal commandment #1 is Keep on Learning!  There is so much I don't know, and with bloggers supreme Cop Car, Ole Phat Stu, Hattie, & Little Red Hen as my inspirations, I'm gonna dig
into topics I don't know much about.  #1 is eggplant.  What the hell good is eggplant for but soaking up calories when you fry it?  We all know that kale is a fountain of good health & vitamins, but eggplant?  Well.  You get my drift.  Cop Car and Stu are the engineers/physicists/pilots--there's hardly
anything they don't know about math (urk). Hattie stays ahead of the game from her far outpost, and LRH provides a feast of information, often about baking bread, weird crafts, and other topics relating to Home Ec.

Anyway, following nun other than Jackowski's "other seven," I won't work too hard on this, and I'll share my findings (ha--fancy word for results?). 

Sunday, November 17, 2013

Sunday, 11/17

UP:

1)  Going to see the Van Gogh Repetitions exhibit at the Phillips Gallery today, then have dinner
with pals.  No formal event today for the VG--just the pictures hanging in the galleries.  VG has two famous repetitions:  the road builders and the plane trees.  First time they've been exhibited together.
Always love to visit the Phillips gift shop, too.  I always get good ideas, if not gifts.

2)  Cleaned--vacuumed, washed the cushion covers, aired the cushions on the porch) and reassembled Cathy's former sofa (many thanks, Cherie).  Got rid of all evidence of the hound (hair, dust/dirt, odor) who had captured it for his napping place.  Perfect size for human napping, too.  Adds another place to accommodate visitors overnight. 

3)  Just saw a very interesting video clip: Visualize with Cynthia--about a woman who won $112 million in a lottery, and she says her secret to success was to VISUALIZE it!  Well, I can do that.  I think.  Hard to imagine having 112 million bucks in the old exchequer, but why not?  One thing she did was to write that figure down and leave it around her house in various places where she could SEE it and accept its place in her life.  We all can do that, too.   Why the heck not?

DOWN:

1)  With all the opening and shutting of the porch door yesterday (see above), another big fat house cricket got in.  I know they are outside bugs, but this variety is the brown & grey HOUSE cricket, not the shiny black FIELD cricket.  This a.m. at 4, when I got up, there was a VERY big cricket on the bathroom rug.  When I stepped across it (not on it, I don't like to kill bugs), it vanished into thin air.  Have not seen it since, and I have been checking my pjs frequently to make sure it didn't hop onto me!  Brrr.

2)  Gonna visualize seeing that big cricket out in the open (not in my pjs or in my bed!!) where I can invite her to the dustpan and give her a ride to the outdoors!!



Thursday, November 14, 2013

pasta bolognese!!

OK, having seen the prize-winning French movie, "Blue Is the Warmest Color," I, like many others, am craving the pasta featured in this movie.  Which turns out to be plain old Pasta Bolognese.  I'm making some right now.  Wot th hell, This is something I've made all my life, but now I'm using the Barefoot Contessa's recipe, as this has been recommended by others who have sought to make this glorious family-type dish.  Mine never had any nutmeg in it, and from the looks of it in the movie, the recommended recipe has no saffron in it (doesn't it look as if it has saffron in it??)  it does to me.  It's very YELLOW in the movie, but not so much in real life. 

I did LOVE this movie--it portrays the loneliness of love better than anything else.  and I guess I'm getting old, the 7-minutes of heavy breathing did not seem erotic to me.  It was a wonderful movie, though, and I look forward to tonight's pasta bolognese!!  All it lacks now is a bit of cream and parmesan cheese!!  wow.

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Bob Would Appreciate This....

UP:

"The email of the species is deadlier than the mail."--Steven Fry 

My brother Bob always preferred what he called "Dmail":  handwritten communiques that circulate via the USPS.  The "D" is for his last name.  He refused to own a computer or participate in email, which often irked the rest of us.  His longtime friends used to thank him for never moving house--same address, same phone number since the early 1950s.  Every year on Valentine's day, he'd send out those little grade school valentines, signed "love, Bob."  Now he's gone, and those little cards with him.  For my birthday, I'd get a long letter telling all his news--of his children, grandchildren, and so far, one glorious great-grandchild, the neighbors, his old friends whom I knew, and the Minneapolis weather, which involved, usually by my birthday, lots of snow shoveling (which he did himself with a shovel, not a blower).  Even in his 80s, he loved to ride his bike over to St. Paul to visit his daughters there.
Dmail, indeed!  He lived a Dlife!!--his own and under his own power until the very end.






Monday, November 11, 2013

Feliz Lunes-y

Thoughts of the Day So Far:

DOWN:  There will be a special place in hell for whoever invented those incessantly whining leaf blowers!*  Lazy guy outside  blowing leaves from one side of the driveway to the other.  Then where do they go?  I think he blows 'em into the street for the city to pick up.  Grrr.  Better than stuffing them in plastic bags, I guess, but a lot of them wind up in the Anacostia River, which doesn't need our debris.  How about mowing over them so they make mulch?  Then you can just let it stay on the grass over the winter.  With the right kind of grass, it'll work just fine, don'tcha think?

*Ditto for whoever invented spraying lawns.  Boo.  When I was a kid, "perfect" grass lawns were not sacred.  Every lawn had its own bald patches, ant hills, and wild flowers. 

UP:  Got a great recipe for mushroom-barley soup from Sally via email today.  I think I'm going to change the broth from chicken to beef.  Why?  I have drippings from last night's steak that I hate to throw away.

Stayed overnight at pal's house so I could watch "Downton Abbey"--except, ha.  DA doesn't start a new season till January!  "Paradise" didn't do much for me.  Oh well.  I watched "Foyle's War" and enjoyed it.  Especially the relationship between Foyle and Sam, his driver.  

MEH:  Wot would the Britcoms do if there were no such thing as war?  Lionel and Jean would have been long married, and Foyle would have been a private eye, spying on or for the royals.  Your turn.....




Saturday, November 09, 2013

photo albums, continued.....

Well, XE seems to have bitten off a lot more than she can chew with this photo thing.  The biggest challenge has become finding photos of previous ancestors.  That will involve contacting lots of people with whom I've NEVER been in contact before.  And people with whom I once lived but who now are far away.

We have no photos to speak of of my grandsons Ian's & Sean's father.  We took a few photos of him in Iowa when his oldest was born, then they all went back home to California, then Missouri.  And now he's gone, may he r.i.p.  But he was grandfather to two of the cutest little guys on the planet, and he deserves to have his image in the family album.  The little guys deserve it.  It's possible that the V.A. might have a photo of him, as he was in the army (marines??).  There has to be more of a photographic record of him than we have.

I have despaired of finding any photos of my maternal grandparents.  I didn't even see their pictures until my mother's funeral.  We had none at home.  Fractured families, wars, they all take their toll on keeping records.  




Monday, November 04, 2013

Photo Album of Your Own Life.....

Who was it?  Gretchen Rubin, author of The Happiness Project, who wrote in Positively Positive the other day about, among other things, taking tourist photos of your own life.  Why?  Because the places and people will change, and when they've done so, you will have pictures of them, and it will help you stay connected with your past.  So Rubin has taken photos of the bench on the Yale campus where she was sitting when her future husband first passed by and attracted her eye.  Things like that.

And I thought it was a splendid idea.  My background has been photo-challenged from the beginning.
Although my parents had lots of pictures of my brothers when they were growing up in Nebraska and visiting my dad's parents in Michigan, but I am not in the crowd, usually.  I came along about 7 years after the pack, and there are a few pictures of me with Mom or Dad, but hardly any of the five of us kids.

When I was in elementary school, the camera was no longer functioning, and with WWII upon us, there was little money for things like camera repair or film.  The day I got out of the hospital after having polio, however, Mom did take a picture of me and my brother Bob, second oldest and in his AAF uniform, waiting for the bus back to his base.  He had been home on leave to visit our brother Gene, the youngest of the boys, who was still in the hospital recovering from the surgery necessitated by the paralysis.

I'm thinking of the vast contrast between then and now, when every day I get new photos--often video clips--of my new great-grandsons (see "new boyz on the block" on the right-hand side of the page).  I can't quite keep up with them in terms of posting, but they are all saved.  I also am becoming fonder of still photographs, which are easier to nail down than the little videos.  It's given me a whole new perspective on all the photos I do have in my "files."  They need better organizing, for one thing.   Time to get with it!!

Saturday, November 02, 2013

Grammar and all of that.....

This morning, Herr Savory (aka Stu) emailed me two cartoons about the rules of grammar, apparently found in facebook's Grammarly page.  Here's my favorite:

https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjfsPt3yoVEk6paVZXJnkt93BAMXZcRXJNU0Ql7F9jSGJb_M25TNCsSu3VQK1_bnGhRu4i6GPPr6to3r9rAnAoq4OR-zHs6y3l6IvB-2vzz5WIK39MjM3brRmdyhrOmNyTlhsjfVw/s1600/1ancient+gramam+p;olice.jpg

Here's the other:

https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj42OI9IYvMCA7_ODvoT_F5XBBEvW-itr4E6gWPOYecBoOf_X7nYexIMzdE_o42XZgCQP64IFzKxrn3WMMLO9rKnptsP93o5bIEOz7IMo6owm5BR9UQxRi1xbp4YrDxzJudaTh-BQ/s1600/1wit+to+whom.jpg

I also found, when looking into the Pali language (in which many Buddhist texts are written), that the word quiddities struck me on a number of charts, "Quiddities of Laoti/an/Cambodian Pali."  Quiddity is one of those words I THINK I know, but can't describe in 25 words or less.  As luck would have it, my OED compact, volume II, P-Z, is right on the table here instead of in the case, ditto a magnifying glass.  The Qs take up very little  room in this volume, and the Qui words hardly any at all.  Quiddity means "the real nature or essence of a thing; that which makes a thing what it is." And quiddity represents all the things our German scholar's blog comprises.  I think.  Right, Stu??  

And not to worry, Stu.  I'm not getting all academic on you.  I was looking up the Pali language because it was a clue in the impossibly quirky City Paper crossword that comes out here every Thursday.  A four-letter word beginning with "P" for the language in which many Buddhist texts are written??  Hindu is 5 letters and no p, and Sanskrit is eight letters and no p.  That's all I could think of, so I googled it. 


Friday, November 01, 2013

More on Walking & Pedestrianship....

Here's a good one: 

I've also added "Where the Sidewalk Starts" in my Blogs I Love.  Scary bidness!  And yes, I'm going out for my daily 30 minute walk right now. 


Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Visiting the Past and the Future.....

UP:

1)  A whole day and more of swanning around Gotham City with le Jack!  and his 'rents and great-auntie.   So wonderful and so surprising.  I have never felt worthy of being anyone's ancestor, but there i was.   Can't beat that with a stick.

2)  Enjoying the chaos in Eataly, and experiencing the travails of getting a TAXI to anywhere.  It used to be so easy.  Is not now.   

DOWN:

1)  Taxi-getting, as mentioned.

2)  Realizing that I am a VERY QUIET PERSON, which drives a lot of people nuts.  Sorry about that, but that's me.  And when I try to make conversation, people misinterpret it, and if I try to set the record straight, all hell breaks loose.

3)  I also am not a jolly person, and that doesn't go over well, either.  Eff that, I say.

MEH:

1) So what, etc.?

2)  I do like a good medium-rare hamburger (without cheese or bacon) but with good crisp lettuce, pickles, and tomato.  and with "fence fries," as my glorious niece used to call them.  
??\
3)  Jack does like pancakes! 

4)  What is the secret of LIGHT, FLUFFY pancakes?  Aunt Jemima mix?  extra baking powder?

5)  Ver vaist??



Tuesday, October 22, 2013

"Entitlement"?? Wrong Word....

When VA Sen. Mark Warner declaimed recently that "the Democrats are going to have to give on entitlement reform," I saw red.  And what does it mean to "see red"?  Red in this case is not a code word for indebtedness or the loopy political bent of the Tea Party states.  It's anger.  Why? Because Social Security is NOT some entitlement, not some giveaway we're didn't earn but are "entitled" to because FDR felt sorry for old people at the end of the Great Depression.  We've already paid for the Social Security checks we'll get in our old age.  That money has come out of our paychecks, starting with the first, bite by bite, and it has been invested in a special trust fund to be used for no other purpose.

I hope Warner considers the "reform" needed to be stopping the raids on the SS trust funds to finance the idiot wars and tax cuts for the wealthy visited upon us in recent years.  It's hard to believe he is a Democrat and not some mean-spirited Republican in disguise. 

Monday, October 21, 2013

Feliz Lunes-y

DOWN:

1)  I can't believe they're really gonna shut down iGoogle.  In my pitiful experience, it's the ONE THING GOOGLE does that actually WORKS!  No wonder they're getting rid of it.  Rats!  And what can replace it?  I've looked, but the advertising assaults are too much for me.  I don't want to spend
time watching idiots look for new cars or see them eat some kind of hypersweetened boxed cereal.  Keep it to yourselves is what I say.

2)  They are going to resurface our parking lot today, and a big tank truck of stinky stuff is parked
right across from my what...porch?  patio?  terrace?  ha.  It's a balcony kinda thing.  And now they
are making such a dreadful racket even I can hear it.  I just looked...apparently they're sawing off
the top step.  Sweet Jebus.....  The city not only never sleeps, it spreads its scary nightmares around in the daylight.

UP:

1) Never mind about that.  One of my favorite blogs (Belgian Waffle) started out with this phrase a few days ago.    

Er is een meeuw in mijn stapelbed

You don't know Dutch?  It means "There is a seagull in my bunk."  Be nice if there were a seagull in my bunk.  That might mean I was by the sea!!

2)  When La Waffle's youngest returned from camp, he also said the food was "épouvantable."  That bit was in French (Walloon??)  (Belgians are at least bilingual, but in Waffle's case, her kids are trilingual or more, studying German, Chinese, or what-have-you.)  "épouvantable" means "appalling."

3)  Only an hour & 15 minutes till breakfast!  And I won't have to eat eggs again (and my mama is not around to pay me cash money to eat oatmeal).....I got some hot dogs last night at Giant.  "épouvantable,"  you say?  I likes 'em.  If you boil them they're not so bad.
Boiling dissolves out all the dread chemicals, doesn't it?


Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Simpling down....

(Is that title even grammatical?  One of this former editor's hobbies is playing with language--including misspeling, odd syntax, and wotever else appeals.)

UP:

1)  Among my many books is Cooking for One by Nancy Creech.  It's got just about any recipe I want to make and in portions that mean I won't be eating it nonstop for three days.  Today it's applesauce, since I bought three Granny Smith apples t'other day at WF, and well, if I don't make it today, the apples will begin to shrivel.  Not so much the Granny Smiths, though.  They're quite sturdy.  This recipe takes about 10 minutes (after you get the apples peeled & chopped), and I'm
looking forward to having this tonight after it sits a while.  I did NOT add the raisins called for, since I don't really like raisins in applesauce.  This, to me, is THE joy of cooking.  You can cook what you like and in the way you like it.

2)  The painting I want to do came to me in a dream last night.  And since my benefactor wants
the colors of dusty rose and pale blue, that's what I'm gonna do the whole thing in.  Save for a
few terra-cotta pots, green foliage, and pink flowers.  There is hardly any sunshine in the scene except
where it sneaks in up at one corner.  A challenge.

DOWN:

1)  That recipe does not produce enough JUICE to suit me.  I grew up dining on home-canned applesauce that had lots of glorious juice.  Looks kinda gummy. 
Hmm....May require another modification, though the taste will be more important.

MEH:

1) I was saying yesterday how much I like not eating until 11 a.m.--"I can eat anything I want until 7 pm, and I love it."  The g.f. said "But you don't know that's good for you!"  And I said I never claimed it was good for me, only that I like it.  And she said, "Well, your pants are falling off without dieting, so I guess I should keep my mouth shut."

2)  Also, I am having long, elaborate dreams about important things, and that hasn't happened in a long time.  Is that an UP?  meh.....