Or maybe a drone in 30 minutes?

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National Search Underway for Even One Person who Voted for Elon Musk

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA (The Borowitz Report)—A nationwide search has begun to locate even one person who voted for Elon Musk, the leader of the manhunt announced on Friday.

The leader, Harland Dorrinson, said that searchers had fanned out across all fifty states but had yet to turn up a single Musk voter.

“Given that Mr. Musk is the most powerful person in the U.S. government, you would think it would be easy to find someone who voted for him,” he said. “Something weird is going on.”

Meanwhile, in Washington, Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) announced that billions of dollars could be saved by eliminating empathy.

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Buckle up: Navigating the noise around routine vaccination

Katelyn Jetelina

Thanks to Barb W.

The arguments against routine vaccination are already escalating. Just last week, it was unearthed that a prominent lawyer on the RFK Jr. transition team questioned the safety of the polio vaccine, and the long-debunked measles-autism myth is finding new life online due to several high-profile interviews.

This is happening before the new HHS Secretary—a figure with a well-documented history of sowing doubt about vaccines—is confirmed. If confirmed, the noise will only intensify. In other words, this is just the beginning.

But as we navigate this storm by examining the data together, it’s equally important to come up for air and ground ourselves in perspective.

Recognize successes

The next four years are going to be a volume problem. Fake controversies and minor concerns will dominate the headlines, while the monumental successes of vaccination will remain largely invisible.

But make no mistake: Vaccines have saved more lives in the past century than any other medical intervention. The data is clear and compelling:

  • Consider smallpox—once a global scourge, eradicated thanks to vaccination.
  • Or polio, which paralyzed tens of thousands annually in the U.S. alone before vaccines turned the tide.
  • Deaths from measlesdiphtheria, and tetanus have plummeted to near-zero in most parts of the world with high vaccine uptake.

These successes are so profound that they’ve become invisible—people rarely see the diseases vaccines prevent and, as a result, sometimes fail to appreciate their value. This data visualization by Jia You at Science perfectly sums up vaccines’ dramatic positive impact. (continued)

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But who’s playing whom?

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The Honeymoon Won’t Last

by Adam Kinzinger in Substack

It’s always a temptation to feel like the current state of facts or misery will continue unabated into the foreseeable future. This is a bias of our minds and souls; it’s difficult for us to envision how situations that seem bigger than us could ever come to an end. But history proves otherwise. Every storm, no matter how severe, eventually passes, even when it feels like it’s here to stay.

Today, Donald Trump’s continued popularity, his reckless cabinet picks, and his inflammatory rhetoric may seem insurmountable, as though they fall on apathetic or deaf ears. And perhaps, for now, they do. Yet, I am certain of one thing: every presidency has a honeymoon period, and this one will be no exception (and may end quickly).Subscribe

For President Biden, that honeymoon period lasted until the disastrous pullout from Afghanistan. Even though he was setup by Trump to fail, his popularity plummeted in its aftermath and has struggled to recover since. Trump, too, will face crises—international or domestic—and when those moments come, the bubble of his current momentum will inevitably pop. What makes this moment unique, however, is Trump’s apparent belief that his popularity and goodwill are infinite. This hubris sets the stage for him to burn through it all much faster than most.

Take his cabinet picks, for example. While they might not initially register as earth-shattering to voters, their cumulative effect on the American psyche will be profound. They reveal a man less interested in governance and more fixated on settling scores and indulging in image-driven theatrics. Americans may tolerate this approach for a time, especially before Trump’s swearing-in, but that tolerance has a limit.

Let’s start with the Defense Department. Trump’s selection of Pete Hegseth, a Fox News personality with limited qualifications, signals a preference for loyalty and optics over expertise and leadership. The Pentagon oversees the safety and security of our nation; its leader must inspire trust, not controversy. Americans care deeply about our military, and Hegseth’s appointment raises questions about Trump’s seriousness in protecting national defense.

Then there’s the matter of public health. RFK Jr., a prominent vaccine skeptic, has been nominated as Health and Human Services secretary. On paper, this sounds like a thought experiment gone wrong. In practice, it could have devastating consequences. Imagine the public’s reaction to the first outbreak of a preventable disease like measles under his watch. Add to this the inevitable controversies stemming from his long history of unscientific claims, and the trust Americans place in public health institutions could unravel overnight.

The intelligence community is another critical area where Trump’s appointments raise alarm. Former congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard, with pro-Assad and pro-Russian sympathies, was selected to oversee intelligence coordination, and its quite troubling. Our allies depend on us—and we on them—for the exchange of vital information. What happens when those allies no longer feel secure sharing sensitive intelligence with a U.S. government led by officials whose loyalties appear compromised? The ramifications for global security and America’s standing in the world could be severe.

And let’s not forget the FBI. Kash Patel, a former staffer for Devin Nunes and now a purveyor of conspiracy theories on Steve Bannon’s podcast, has been named to lead this storied institution. The FBI has long been celebrated in American culture for its role in thwarting foreign espionage, terrorism, and domestic crime. Turning it into a political revenge tool would undermine decades of public trust and cripple its effectiveness.

Americans are patient, to a point. But patience has its limits. Trump’s inclination to prioritize loyalty over competence and revenge over responsibility risks pushing the public’s tolerance to the brink. His choices for leadership positions, while initially tolerated by some as political theater, will eventually be scrutinized for their real-world consequences. And those consequences will make it clear that his administration is not a serious effort to lead the nation but a spectacle designed to settle personal scores.

History has shown us that no leader is immune to accountability, no matter how insulated they may seem. Trump’s tenure will not defy this truth. The American people may be willing to give him a chance, but they will not hesitate to withdraw their support when it becomes evident that his administration poses a threat to democracy itself. Recklessness, in the end, is a self-defeating strategy. Trump appears determined to test how quickly he can squander the goodwill he has, and when he does, it will only serve to reinforce what so many already know: his leadership is a clear and present danger to the principles that hold this nation together.

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Possibilities for the New Year

from Microsoft Co-Pilot

That’s an exciting way to head into the new year! Here are some creative and unique resolutions to consider:

  1. Learn a New Skill Each Month: Dedicate each month to learning something new. It could be as diverse as origami, juggling, or even a new programming language.
  2. Adopt a Zero-Waste Lifestyle: Challenge yourself to reduce waste by going plastic-free, upcycling old items, and composting.
  3. Write a Letter a Week: Rediscover the joy of handwritten letters by sending notes to friends, family, or even strangers who could use some cheer.
  4. Create a Year of Memories: Commit to doing one memorable activity each month, whether it’s hiking a new trail, attending a local festival, or trying a new restaurant.
  5. Random Acts of Kindness: Make it a goal to perform at least one random act of kindness each week. It could be paying for someone’s coffee, helping a neighbor, or volunteering.
  6. Document Your Year: Start a visual journal or photo diary to capture moments of joy, creativity, and growth throughout the year.
  7. Cook Around the World: Each month, choose a different country and cook a meal from its cuisine. It’s a delicious way to explore global cultures.
  8. Detox Your Digital Life: Unsubscribe from unnecessary emails, declutter your social media, and set boundaries for screen time.
  9. Reconnect with Nature: Spend more time outdoors, plant a garden, or take up birdwatching to cultivate a deeper connection with nature.
  10. Personal Growth Challenges: Set monthly challenges for self-improvement, such as a month of daily meditation, learning to draw, or mastering a musical instrument.

These unique resolutions can add a lot of fun, excitement, and enrichment to your year. Which one resonates with you the most?

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How Netflix Made Magic Look Real in ‘One Hundred Years of Solitude’

The series, which will be released this week, adapts the novel for the screen for the first time. Even the author didn’t think it was possible.

By Annie Correal. Photography by Federico Rios. In the NYT.

The town of Macondo never existed. It was never supposed to. And yet, here it is.

A street in a small town with low buildings and an unpaved street.

The idyllic town in Colombia was the imaginary setting for “One Hundred Years of Solitude,” the 1967 novel that helped Gabriel García Márquez win the Nobel Prize and that, over the years, led to many offers from Hollywood to create an adaptation.

The author always refused, insisting that his novel, in which the real and fantastical converge, could never be rendered onscreen. His Macondo, he said, could never be built.

But now, in a rambling field outside the city of Ibagué, stands Macondo. Built by Netflix from the ground up for the first-ever screen adaptation of the novel, the town has real birds nesting in its trees and dogs wandering its narrow streets.

A dirt street in a small, ramshackle town.

García Márquez did not want Hollywood to make a movie from his book, his son Rodrigo García said, because he could not picture English-speaking actors playing the Buendías, the family at the center of the novel. Nor could he see the epic story being squeezed into two hours — or three, or four, for that matter.

And then there was the issue of magical realism, which the author used to conjure his experience of Latin America’s capricious, stranger-than-fiction reality.

In the novel, which opens in the 19th century, the people of Macondo marvel at things already considered ordinary elsewhere: a daguerreotype machine, magnets, ice. But no one questions the presence of a ghost — or whether a baby can be born with the tail of a pig or flowers fall like rain from the sky.

A dense, green garden with a massive tree and a woman watching as tiny yellow flowers rain down.

Onscreen, magical realism has proved notoriously hard to replicate: The visual effects used to create such images in the past tipped at times into fantasy or horror, or just looked silly. The 2007 film adaptation of “Love in the Time of Cholera,” the author’s other best-known book, was a box-office flop.

But in the decade since García Márquez died, much has changed and, in a turn he could not have imagined, Netflix has been able to overcome his old objections. (continued)

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Eh, what’d you say?

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The woman helping amputees rebuild their lives in war-torn Ukraine

Zhanna Bezpiatchuk and Anastasiya Gribanova BBC 100 Women and BBC Ukraine

Thanks to Pam P.

Olga Rudnieva Olga Rudnieva walks next to a ramp holding the hand of one of the amputees in her trauma centre - a man with a double leg amputation in a wheelchair
Rudnieva has provided prostheses and trauma therapy to over 1,000 amputees

Serhiy Petchenko lost both hands while defending Ukraine from Russian invaders in June 2023.

After surviving the bitter months-long battle for the city of Bakhmut, his injury came in a railway incident further from the front line.

It left the 42-year-old feeling helpless and in despair. After the amputations, his wife, Anna, had to remain by his side 24/7 for six months.

“What helped us survive is our love,” says Serhiy.

But it’s hard to believe he went through such an ordeal when you see him now, standing on the doorstep of a brand-new café, which he is about to open in Lviv, in the west of Ukraine.

He smiles widely, his arms – and hands – by his side.

Serhiy received two prosthetic hands and full rehabilitation at the Superhumans Center, a private clinic for people with war injuries, located outside the city.

At the same time, the couple received the training they needed to open a family business.

Serhiy says the centre gave him a chance to return normal life, while learning to live with a new disability.

Chad Andrii-Mykhailo Serhiy Petchenko and wife Anna outside their new cafe
Serhiy Petchenko and his wife Anna, outside their new cafe

At least 50,000 Ukrainians have lost limbs in nearly three years of war according to the Ukrainian Health Ministry – both soldiers and civilians. (continued)

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The Wolf

Thanks to Pam P.

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OPRAHCARE

thanks to Pam P.

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UW Medicine – Masking Policy Update

Thanks to Ed M.

Ed note: We are now in “virus season.” The UW has triggered a masking requirement because of the risk over the next three to four months. This requirement is triggered whenever any of the three most prominent viruses are above a given threshold. For us, it’s an individual decision but please protect yourself and your neighbors if you have compromised immunity or have any signs of a respiratory illness.

To the UW Medicine Community:

Starting Monday, Dec. 16, all UW Medicine personnel will be required to wear, at a minimum, a medical or surgical mask that covers the nose and mouth in all patient care areas. Respiratory virus transmission levels in King County are rising and we want to ensure we protect patients and each other.

  • We recommend that all personnel wear the highest level of respiratory protection tolerated, for example, an N95 respirator.
  • Patient care areas include, but are not limited to, patient-facing spaces within radiology, laboratory, therapy, surgical, procedural, emergency department, urgent care, ambulatory and inpatient units.
  • Masking is strongly recommended but not required in nursing stations, hallways not in patient care areas, administrative and shared spaces, work rooms, cafeterias and breakrooms.
  • All patients, visitors and families are strongly encouraged to wear a mask while in clinical spaces.

Our Methodology:

  • We collaborate with healthcare system partners, public health agencies and the Northwest Healthcare Response Network to identify data that indicate the start of the respiratory virus season and a return to masking in patient care spaces.
  • The most dependable metrics are emergency department diagnoses due to COVID-19, influenza and RSV. These data are collected from all emergency departments through a system called the Electronic Surveillance System for the Early Notification of Community-Based Epidemics (ESSENCE). Public Health — Seattle & King County posts these data weekly for each virus and reports alert thresholds that indicate a substantial risk for the specific virus in the community.
  • When any one of these viruses is diagnosed at a rate above the alert threshold, we require healthcare worker masking. Last week, RSV exceeded this threshold and is expected to continue to rise.

The UW Medicine community can anticipate this masking requirement to end after all three of the respiratory viruses are below the threshold for two consecutive weeks. Given past respiratory virus seasons, masking is likely to be required until the end of March or the beginning of April.

Regardless of virus thresholds, routine masking while indoors continues to be strongly recommended in all UW Medicine facilities at all times. Read more about the UW Medicine Required Masking Policy (AMC login).

We appreciate your commitment to the safety of our patients, staff and community.

Sincerely,

UW Medicine Employee Health and Infection Prevention & Control Teams

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1 million+ patients lose coverage as insurers, hospitals drop Medicare Advantage

HUNTSVILLE, Ala. — Libby and Andrew Potter usually ignore the avalanche of Medicare Advantage ads that land in the mailbox at their home in Huntsville, Alabama, each fall as Medicare’s open enrollment period begins.

Libby, a retired middle school librarian, has what she considers good health insurance through the state employee health plan. Andrew has insurance through his job as a university professor and plans to join Libby’s insurance when he retires next year.

But this year, a few days before open enrollment began, a letter arrived from UnitedHealthcare, informing the Potters that the region’s largest hospital system would no longer be considered in-network for Libby’s Medicare Advantage plan.

The Potters spent the next couple of weeks worried and unsure what to do. It seemed incredible that 14 area hospitals, including the area’s only Level 1 trauma center, could suddenly become much, much more expensive.

“We were being very careful in how we go up and down stairs,” Libby joked.

Medicare is the federal health insurance program for people over 65 and those with certain disabilities. Medicare Advantage is a version of Medicare run by private insurance companies that contract with the government. These plans typically offer extra benefits, such as dental, vision and prescription drug coverage, that aren’t included with traditional Medicare. More than half of eligible Medicare beneficiaries now get their coverage through private Medicare Advantage plans.

But this year, as Medicare’s open enrollment season kicks off, more than 1 million patients will have to shop for new health insurance. Facing financial and federal regulatory pressures, many insurers are pulling their Medicare Advantage plans from counties and states they’ve deemed unprofitable. Meanwhile, large health systems in states including Alabama, Minnesota and Vermont have cut ties with some Medicare Advantage plans. (continued)

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Tariff on Chinese Goods Hikes Price of Trump Bible to $1000

BEIJING (The Borowitz Report)—Mar-a-Lago descended into crisis on Wednesday after the proposed tariff on Chinese goods sent the price of a Trump Bible soaring from $60 to $1000.

In a brief statement on the matter, Chinese President Xi Jinping said, “It is what it is.”

Acknowledging that Trump’s supporters might be inconvenienced by the Holy Book’s bloated price tag, Xi added, “Perhaps they should have googled ‘tariff’ before voting.”

In a panic, Trump is reportedly mulling a number of cost-cutting measures, including slashing the number of Commandments to five.

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The other neighborhood skybridge

The brightest thing in the night sky, looking up from the top floor of Skyline. The window-washer’s crane is red because of a red aircraft warning light nearby.

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Boasting is Easy, Governing is Hard

By Joel Connelly in Post Alley (thanks to Mary M.)

One of the best presidents America never had, Adlai Stevenson, put it bluntly when he said: “The ability to govern is the final test of politics, the acid, final test.”  Stevenson could have been talking to Elon Musk.

The world’s richest man, along with failed Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy, have been tapped by President-elect Donald Trump to head something called the Department of Government Efficiency. It’s not a cabinet-level agency or a “Department,” but a likely home for authors of the Heritage Foundation’s controversial Project 2025 with its 900-plus-page proposal on ways to slash the federal government.

Musk and Ramaswamy set about their duties with much boasting. Musk has promised to “send shock waves through the system.” Ramaswamy has proposed to fire all federal employees with odd numbered Social Security numbers. And Trump has described their mission as “the Manhattan Project of our time.”

Headstrong business bigshots have talked big when taking government posts in the past. They’ve usually made a mess of their task and sullied their reputations. They’ve failed to understand that effective governing means working out society’s compromises and that means listening. (continued)

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Positive outlook for a Skybridge!

At our last update meeting, the progress report from the Skybridge Committee team was very encouraging. The project goes for approval to the Seattle City Council Transportation Committee and to the Council itself in early 2025. The full documentation can be found in the update report on Caremerge.

The late Noriko Palmer was a major force behind the resident driven effort to have this project revisited after it was turned down previously. Resident testimonials, street usage data and leadership by Doug Palmer were all critical as the current proposal went through the rather labyrinthine approval process required by the city.

The residents of the Skybridge Committee unanimously recommend that the bridge be named The Noriko Palmer Skybridge.

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Important News Updates by Heather Cox Richardson

The sudden collapse of the Assad regime in Syria yesterday took oxygen away from the airing of President-elect Trump’s interview with Kristen Welker of NBC’S Meet the Press. The interview told us little that we didn’t already know, but it did reinforce what we can expect in the new administration.

As Tom Nichols pointed out after the interview, when Donald Trump ran for the presidency this year, he “wasn’t running to do anything. He was running to stay out of jail. The rest he doesn’t care about.”

Nichols was reacting to the exchange that began when Welker asked the president-elect: “Do you have an actual plan at this point for health care?” Trump answered: “Yes. We have concepts of a plan that would be better.” “Still just concepts? Do you have a fully developed plan?” Welker asked.

The answer, nine years after Trump first said he would repeal the Affordable Care Act and replace it with something cheaper and better, is still no. He went on to add, “I am the one that saved Obamacare,” although he spent his first term trying to weaken it.

Trump also reiterated his plans for revenge against those he perceives to be his enemies. He told Welker that when he is president, the Department of Justice should pursue and jail the members of the House Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the U.S. Capitol, more commonly known as the January 6th Committee. He singled out committee leaders Representative Bennie Thompson (D-MS) and former representative Liz Cheney (R-WY). (continued on Page 2)

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A cartoon with a warning

Thanks to Pam P.

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Pardon me!

thanks to Pam P.

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And on each day there will be ……..

“Looks like it’s another creepy appointee to a federal agency.”

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Update on Syria

by Heather Cox Richardson

Late last night, the White House said in a statement that “President Biden and his team are closely monitoring the extraordinary events in Syria and staying in constant touch with regional partners.”

Early this morning, the Syrian government of Bashar al-Assad fell to armed opposition.

According to Jill Lawless of the Associated Press, the forces that toppled Assad are led by Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, or HTS, a coalition of Islamic groups formerly associated with al-Qaeda’s branch in Syria and currently designated a terrorist group by the U.S. and the United Nations, although its leaders have tried to distance themselves from al-Qaeda.

President Bashar al-Assad succeeded his father to the Syrian presidency in July 2000, establishing a totalitarian dictatorship. In 2011, Assad cracked down on protesters who were part of the Arab Spring, sparking a civil war of a number of factions fighting Assad’s troops, which by 2015 relied on support from Russia and Iran.

That war has turned half of Syria’s prewar population of 23 million (a little more than the population of Florida) into refugees and killed more than half a million people. With Russian and Iranian support, Assad managed to regain control of most of the country, with rebels pushed back to the north and northwest.

A stalemate that had lasted for years ended abruptly on November 27.

Iran and Hezbollah have been badly weakened by the ongoing fight of Israel against Iran-backed Hamas, Hezbollah, and the Houthis. On November 27, Israel and Lebanon signed a ceasefire agreement that made it clear that Hezbollah had been tied down in Lebanon and that its ability to fight had been severely compromised. At the same time, Russia has been badly weakened by almost three years of war against Ukraine, and the Russian ruble fell sharply again in late November after additional U.S. sanctions targeted Russia’s third-largest bank, creating more economic hardship in Russia and undercutting Putin’s insistence that he is winning against the West.

When opposition forces began an offensive on November 27, they took more than 15 villages in Aleppo province that day. Journalist Lawless recounted a quick history of the next 11 days, recording how the insurgents swept through the country with little resistance, taking Syria’s largest city, Aleppo, on the 29th. The Syrian military launched a counterattack on December 1, but the insurgents continued to gain ground, and by December 7 they had captured Syria’s third-largest city, Homs. They announced they were in the “final stage” of their offensive.

Today, December 8, Assad fled with his family to Moscow, where Russian president Vladimir Putin has offered him asylum. As Nick Paton Walsh of CNN put it, “Without the physical crutches of Russia’s air force and Iran’s proxy muscle Hezbollah, [Assad] toppled when finally pushed.”

In Damascus, crowds are praying and celebrating, and opposition forces have liberated the prisoners held in the notorious Saydnaya military prison. More than 100,000 detainees are unaccounted for, and their families are hoping to find them, or at least to find answers.

Meanwhile, after Assad’s regime fell, the U.S. Air Force struck more than 75 ISIS-related targets in Syria. “ISIS has been trying to reconstitute in this broad area known as the Badiya desert,” a White House senior official told reporters. “We have worked to make sure they cannot do that. So when they try to camp there, when they try to train… we take them out.”

National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan explained at the Reagan National Defense Forum in Simi Valley, California, that the U.S. will work to prevent the resurgence of ISIS. It will also make sure “that our friends in the region, Israel, Jordan, Iraq, others who border Syria, or who would potentially face spillover effects from Syria, are strong and secure.” Finally, he said, the U.S. wants to make sure “that this does not lead to a humanitarian catastrophe.”

Speaking to the nation this afternoon, President Joe Biden announced: “At long last, the Assad regime has fallen. This regime brutalized and tortured and killed literally hundreds of thousands of innocent Syrians.” He called the fall of Assad’s regime a “fundamental act of justice” and “a moment of historic opportunity for the long-suffering people of Syria to build a better future for their proud country.”

But it is also “a moment of risk and uncertainty,” the president said. He noted that the U.S. is “mindful” of the security of Americans in Syria, including freelance journalist Austin Tice, who was kidnapped in 2012 and imprisoned by Assad’s regime. “[W]e believe he is alive,” Biden told reporters. “We think we can get him back, but we have no direct evidence of that yet.”

Biden noted that Syria’s main backers, Iran, Hezbollah, and Russia, could not defend “this abhorrent regime in Syria” because they “are far weaker today than when I took office.” He continued: “This is a direct result of the blows that Ukraine [and] Israel” have landed on them “with the unflagging support of the United States.”

In contrast to Biden’s comments, President-elect Donald Trump’s social media accounts took Russia’s side in the Syrian events. Noting that the insurgents looked as if they would throw Assad out, Trump’s account said that “Russia, because they are so tied up in Ukraine, and with the loss there of over 600,000 soldiers, seems incapable of stopping this literal march through Syria, a country they have protected for years.” The account blamed former president Barack Obama for the crisis of 2011 and said that Russia had stepped in then to stop the chaos. The Trump account suggested that Assad’s defeat might be “the best thing that can happen to” Russia, because “[t]here was never much of a benefit in Syria for Russia, other than to make Obama look really stupid.”

“In any event,” the account continued, “Syria is a mess, but is not our friend, & THE UNITED STATES SHOULD HAVE NOTHING TO DO WITH IT. THIS IS NOT OUR FIGHT. LET IT PLAY OUT. DO NOT GET INVOLVED!”

In contrast to Trump’s focus on Russia, journalist Anne Applebaum, a scholar of autocracy, took a much broader view of the meaning of Assad’s fall. In dictatorships, she wrote in The Atlantic, “cold, deliberate, well-planned cruelty” like Assad’s “is meant to inspire hopelessness. Ludicrous lies and cynical propaganda campaigns are meant to create apathy and nihilism.” Random arrests create destabilizing waves of refugees that leave those who remain in despair.

Authoritarian regimes seek “to rob people of any ability to plan for a different future, to convince people that their dictatorships are eternal. ‘Our leader forever’” she points out, was the slogan of the Assad dynasty. But soldiers and police officers have relatives who suffer under the regime, and their loyalty is not assured, as Assad has now learned.

The future of Syria is entirely unclear, Applebaum writes, but there is no doubt that “the end of the Assad regime creates something new, and not only in Syria. There is nothing worse than hopelessness, nothing more soul-destroying than pessimism, grief, and despair. The fall of a Russian- and Iranian-backed regime offers, suddenly, the possibility of change. The future might be different. And that possibility will inspire hope all around the world.”

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MORE PAVING, FEWER TREES. SO MUCH FOR A GREEN ‘ONE SEATTLE’

Thanks to MaryLou P. – from the Seattle Times

For Seattleites who appreciate trees, Mayor Bruce Harrell’s “One Seattle” comprehensive plan ought to spark grave concerns.

The city’s proposed 20-year blueprint for growth contains major changes for residential neighborhoods, paving the way for developers to build across lots with little room for shade-providing trees.

Residents have an opportunity to learn more and weigh in. The public comment period for the comprehensive plan closes on Dec. 20. The Seattle City Council is expected to make final decisions in June.

With Seattle failing to meet its own goals of 30% tree canopy by 2037, residents should make sure council members understand what’s at stake. City parks and the strip between streets and sidewalks do not contain enough trees or space to make Seattle green.

A 2021 city study determined that neighborhoods contribute nearly half of Seattle’s tree canopy. Only strong protection and replanting policies will help ensure Seattle maintains the arboreal beauty that defines the city, as well as equitable respite from lethally hot weather.

Here are the some of the lowlights of the what’s being discussed: Currently, the maximum coverage for a typical 5,000 square foot residential lot is 35%.

Under a proposal floated by the Office of Planning and Community Development, homes could take up 50% of a lot. The city would then mandate 20% of the remaining lot as open space, but that could include walkways with no soil, let alone trees.

Planners propose shrinking setbacks (required space between the edge of a building and the property line) from 20 feet in front and 25 feet in back to 10 feet in front and 10 feet in back — or zero distance if there is an alley. What’s more, planners would allow covered porches to extend six feet into the setback.

That would likely make growing large trees impossible.

So what does this look like in real life? In South Park, which has had this kind of zoning since 2019, developers are building up to six separate, small houses on a single lot, with no room for shade trees to grow.

The effect is a colorless, charmless, heat island that makes money for developers at the expense of everyone else.

You wouldn’t want to live next to it, and chances are, in the next heat wave, you wouldn’t want to live in it, either.

When The Times editorial board asked Birds Connect Seattle (formerly Seattle Audubon Society) about its position on the comprehensive plan, a spokesperson said: “We have yet to issue a formal statement, but I can say that Birds Connect Seattle is concerned that, in addition to reducing average tree canopy cover across the city, the changes seem likely to exacerbate existing tree canopy inequities.”

There is a better way. Trees and development can coexist, if planning is done carefully. Tacoma and Portland are examples of cities that got it right.

To learn more about proposed changed to neighborhood residential zoning, OPCD is hosting a community engagement meeting at 5:30 p.m. on Dec. 10, at the Seattle Center Exhibition Hall, 301 Mercer St. For more information, go to: st.news/zoningupdate

The Trees and People Coalition, which advocates for urban forests, will be hosting an information session on Dec. 11, 5:30 p.m., at Douglass-Truth Library, 2300 E. Yesler Way, Seattle.

Land use planning is often complicated and hard to follow. Take the time to learn about what’s coming down and engage with City Hall.

And remember: Concrete is forever.

Editorial board members are editorial page editor Kate Riley, Frank A. Blethen, Melissa Davis, Josh Farley, Alex Fryer, Claudia Rowe, Carlton Winfrey and William K. Blethen (emeritus).

Posted in environment, Government, In the Neighborhood, Law, Parks | Leave a comment

Jingle Bells at the Performance Hall by the Northwest Firelight Chorale

Ed note: Hope you didn’t miss this outstanding group which we haven’t seen for a few years. Hope they’re back in 2025!

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Santa comes to Skyline

Ed note: Best party of the year! A celebration for our wonderful and dedicated staff.

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