Let’s get that already approved ordinance signed!


| Thanks to Ed M. |
Ed note: This article must make one think about what a tax exemptnon-profit really is. I checked with ChatGPT to ask about the incomes in our area in the “non-profit” Providence-Swedish system: ‘Providence system executives are listed here.
There I sat, in a simple auditorium, surrounded by a sea of silver hair and orthopedic shoes, watching a PowerPoint presentation by a prestigious hospital consortium. The slides were magnificent. The technology was breathtaking. The buzzwords—“innovation,” “patient-centered care,” “cutting-edge outcomes”—cascaded across the screen like a symphony of self-congratulation. I half-expected a standing ovation.
Then came the Director of Philanthropy. Distinguished. Earnest. Her smart red suit looked like a Prada. She leaned into the microphone and gazed out at this assembled crowd of retirees with the practiced look of a woman who has perfected the art of the ask.
“We need your support,” she intoned, “because we are a non-profit hospital.”
I left the room. Not dramatically. I didn’t overturn my folding chair or deliver a soliloquy on the way out. I simply stood up, smiled politely at my neighbor’s confused expression, and escaped into the hallway. Life, as I have come to understand it, is a finite and precious resource. And I have resolved to spend as little of it as possible listening to extraordinarily wealthy institutions explain why they deserve more of my money.
I pause here to perform a small but vital public service: defining what “non-profit” actually means, since the term does an enormous amount of work it was never designed to do.
Non-profit does not mean “we scrape by on donations and good intentions.” It does not mean “our staff subsists on ramen noodles.” It does not even mean “we are indifferent to money.” What it means, in the cold, technical, legally precise sense, is that the organization is not owned by investors who receive dividends. That’s it. That is the whole magic trick.
A non-profit hospital can make colossal amounts of money. It can sit atop revenue streams that would make a Fortune 500 CFO envious. The only requirement is that it doesn’t distribute those profits to shareholders, since there are none. Instead, it channels the money into… well, into whatever it likes, really. Executive compensation. Lavish campuses. Administrative bloat. And, in the most theatrical of gestures, “community benefit,” a category so loosely defined it could theoretically include the parking garage.
Allow me to introduce you to a victim of circumstance. The CEO of this particular non-profit hospital consortium took home a mere $3.6 million in 2024. I use the word “mere” advisedly, because that figure is actually below the industry standard for non-profit hospital executives.
Yes. The industry standard. For non-profits. Let that phrase settle into your consciousness. Somewhere out there is a non-profit hospital CEO making more than $3.6 million a year while accepting donations from retired schoolteachers and widowed veterans. I picture him accepting a plaque at a gala, surrounded by floral centerpieces, gravely explaining that the real reward is serving the community. Then he gets in his car, a modest, let’s say a mid-range Mercedes, and drives home to his not-for-profit life.
One has to admire the audacity. It takes a special kind of institutional confidence to stand before a room full of retirees on fixed incomes and explain that your hospital, the one with the marble lobby, the celebrity surgeon wing, and the annual revenue of a small nation, is in need of their generosity.
I am particularly fond of the word “panoply.” It is a word that suggests abundance and spectacle, a sweeping display. It is the right word for what non-profit hospital executives receive in compensation beyond their salaries: a panoply of perks so comprehensive, so thoughtfully assembled, that one almost forgets it is all being funded by an institution that exists, ostensibly, for the public good.
These may include deferred compensation plans, executive health insurance that would make the average patient’s coverage weep, club memberships, housing allowances, car allowances, and, in the more baroque examples, private aircraft usage. All of it is legal. All of it faithfully disclosed in IRS Form 990, a public document that almost no one reads, which is presumably the point.
And meanwhile, out in the waiting room, a woman is deciding whether to fill her prescription or pay her electric bill.
In exchange for their tax-exempt status—which saves non-profit hospitals billions of dollars annually in federal, state, and local taxes—these institutions are required to provide “community benefit.” This sounds meaningful. It sounds like a promise.
It is, in practice, a suggestion. (continued on Page 2 or here)
PARKER J. PALMER (thanks to Mary M.)
I. Last week, one of our computers went kaflooey, so Saturday morning found us in a nearby store named after the manufacturer of the failed product. On the advice of counsel, I won’t mention that name. I’ll simply say that their products don’t fall far from the tree.
Knowing that our old computer had to be replaced, we ordered a new one online, and were notified that it awaited us at the store in question. “Great!,” we thought, “We’ll be back in business soon.” When the doors opened at 10:00 AM, we walked in and were soon joined by a tall, 30ish manager wearing a shirt with the company logo. I’ll call him Adam.
Without making eye contact or saying good morning, Adam asked, “Why are you here?”, in a tone one might use with an intruder. I almost said, “To rob the store.” But I summoned what’s left of my maturity, explained the situation, and handed him the proof of purchase and promise of delivery we’d been sent by email, plus my personal ID. Looking back and forth between the documents and his handheld device, he said something so fast I had to ask him to repeat it. Twice. My hearing is fine and my mind is fairly sound. But it quickly became clear that Adam had taken a course popular in his generation: “Talking Faster than the Speed of Sound to Get Things Done Quickly.” (continue on Page 2 or here)
“The essence of love is that what is ours should belong to someone else. Feeling the joy of someone else as joy within ourselves–that is loving.” by Swedenborg in Divine Love and Wisdom
Commentary by Heather Cox Richardson
Ed note: Also, for honorable mention don’t we all remember Champion, Silver, Scout, Topper and more ….. (click here to “trigger” your memory)?
Today was the 152nd running of the Kentucky Derby, which was launched in 1875 as horse racing—with its famous Black jockeys, who won more than half of the first 28 derbies—was gaining an audience in the U.S.
A horse-based event gives me the opportunity to repost a piece my friend Michael S. Green and I wrote together a number of years ago on Ten Famous American Horses. While it has no deep meaning, it does illustrate that there is history all around us, a theme you’ll hear more about from me and my team soon. And it was totally fun to research, too. I spent hours watching Mr. Ed shows and reading entertainment theory, but the insightful detail—and the inclusion of Khartoum—is all Michael. This piece remains one of my favorite things I ever had a hand in writing.
So tonight, let’s take the night off from the craziness of today’s America and recall past eras when horses could make history.
1) Traveller
General Robert E. Lee rode Traveller (spelled with two Ls, in the British style) from February 1862 until the general’s death in 1870. Traveller was a grey American Saddlebred of 16 hands. He had great endurance for long marches, and was generally unflappable in battle, although he once broke both of General Lee’s hands when he shied at enemy movements. Lee brought Traveller with him when he assumed the presidency of Washington and Lee University. Traveller died of tetanus in 1871. He is buried on campus, where the safe ride program still uses his name.
2) Comanche
Comanche was attached to General Custer’s detachment of the 7th Cavalry when it engaged the Lakota in 1876 at the Battle of Little Bighorn. The troops in the detachment were all killed in the engagement, but soldiers found Comanche, badly wounded, two days later. They nursed him back to health, and he became the 7th Cavalry’s mascot. The commanding officer decreed that the horse would never again be ridden and that he would always be paraded, draped in black, in all military ceremonies involving the 7th Cavalry. When Comanche died of colic in 1891, he was given a full military funeral (the only other horse so honored was Black Jack, who served in more than a thousand military funerals in the 1950s and 1960s). Comanche’s taxidermied body is preserved in the Natural History Museum at the University Of Kansas.
3) Beautiful Jim Key
Beautiful Jim Key was a performing horse trained by formerly enslaved veterinarian Dr. William Key. Key demonstrated how Beautiful Jim could read, write, do math, tell time, spell, sort mail, and recite the Bible. Beautiful Jim performed from 1897 to 1906 and became a legend. An estimated ten million Americans saw him perform, and others collected his memorabilia—buttons, photos, and postcards—or danced the Beautiful Jim Key two-step. Dr. Key insisted that he had taught Beautiful Jim using only kindness, and Beautiful Jim Key’s popularity was important in preventing cruelty to animals in America, with more than 2 million children signing the Jim Key Band of Mercy, in which they pledged: “I promise always to be kind to animals.”
4) Man o’ War
Named for his owner, August Belmont, Jr., who was overseas in World War I, Man o’ War is widely regarded as the top Thoroughbred racehorse of all time. He won 20 of his 21 races and almost a quarter of a million dollars in the early twentieth century. His one loss—to Upset—came after a bad start. Man o’ War sired many of America’s famous racehorses, including Hard Tack, which in turn sired Seabiscuit, the small horse that came to symbolize hope during the Great Depression.
5) Trigger
Entertainer Roy Rogers chose the palomino Trigger from five rented horses to be his mount in a Western film in the 1930s, changing his name from Golden Cloud to Trigger because of his quick mind and feet. Rogers rode Trigger in his 1950s television series, making the horse a household name. When Trigger died, Rogers had his skin draped over a Styrofoam mold and displayed it in the Roy Rogers and Dale Evans Museum in California. He also had a 24-foot statue of Trigger made from steel and fiberglass. One other copy of that mold was also made: it is “Bucky the Bronco,” which rears above the Denver Broncos stadium south scoreboard.
6) Sergeant Reckless
American Marines in Korea bought a mare in October 1952 from a Korean stable boy who needed the money to buy an artificial leg for his sister, who had stepped on a land mine. The marines named her Reckless after their unit’s nickname, the Reckless Rifles. They made a pet of her and trained her to carry supplies and to evacuate wounded. She learned to travel supply routes without a guide: on one notable day she made 51 solo trips. Wounded twice, she was given a battlefield rank of corporal in 1953 and promoted to sergeant after the war, when she was also awarded two Purple Hearts and a Marine Corps Good Conduct Medal.
7) Mr. Ed
Mr. Ed was a talking palomino in a 1960s television show by the same name. At a time when Westerns dominated American television, Mr. Ed was the anti-Western, with the main human character a klutzy architect and the hero a horse that was fond of his meals and his comfortable life, and spoke with the voice of Allan “Rocky” Lane, who made dozens of “B” westerns. But the show was a five-year hit as it married the past to the future. Mr. Ed offered a gentle, homely wisdom that enabled him to straighten out the troubles of the humans around him. The startling special effects that made it appear that the horse was talking melded modern technology with the comforting traditional community depicted in the show.
8) Black Jack
Black Jack, named for John J. “Black Jack” Pershing, was the riderless black horse in the funerals of John F. Kennedy, Herbert Hoover, Lyndon Johnson, and Douglas MacArthur, as well as more than a thousand other funerals with full military honors. A riderless horse, with boots reversed in the stirrups, symbolized a fallen leader, while Black Jack’s brands—a U.S. brand and an army serial number—recalled the army’s history. Black Jack himself was buried with full military honors; the only other horse honored with a military funeral was Comanche.
9) Khartoum
Khartoum was the prize stud horse of Jack Woltz, the fictional Hollywood mogul in Mario Puzo’s The Godfather. In one of the film version’s most famous scenes, after Woltz refuses requests from Don Vito Corleone to cast singer Johnny Fontane in a movie, Woltz wakes up to find Khartoum’s head in bed with him…and agrees to use Fontane in the film. In the novel, Fontane wins the Academy Award for his performance. According to old Hollywood rumor, the story referred to real events. The rumor was that mobsters persuaded Columbia Pictures executive Harry Cohn to cast Frank Sinatra in From Here to Eternity. As Maggio, Sinatra revived his sagging film career and won the Oscar for Best Supporting Actor.
10) Secretariat
Secretariat was an American Thoroughbred that in 1973 became the first U.S. Triple Crown winner in 25 years. His records in the Kentucky Derby, the Preakness Stakes, and the Belmont Stakes still stand. After Secretariat was stricken with a painful infection and euthanized in 1989, an autopsy revealed that he had an unusually big heart. Sportswriter Red Smith once asked his trainer how Secretariat had run one morning; Charlie Hatton replied, “The trees swayed.”
Thanks to Bob P. for this amazing list. Click here to view!
Thanks to Dan S.
This will be an informative event! Monday May 4th at 7:30 PM in the MBR.
Vanessa Torres Hernandez is the Advocacy Director of the ACLU of Washington. She leads the ACLU-W’s development and implementation of legal, policy, political, communications, and organizing strategies. She will give us insight into the ACLU’s work and answer questions.
The ACLU has been at the forefront of litigation and advocacy to defend democracy and our constitutional rights against the attacks by the Trump administration and his “MAGA” movement.
Vanessa’s talk will be on “Civil Liberties in the Age of Trump.”
Please join us and invite a friend.
5/4/2026 – Mt. Baker Room 7:30 pm
Decoding the King: Brits Hear Subtle Rebuke to Trump that Americans Might Miss (thanks to Ann M.)

By Michael D. Shear in the NYT
Michael D. Shear is the chief U.K. correspondent, and spent the last four days following King Charles on his state visit to the United States.
The reviews are in: The British press say King Charles III delivered a masterful diplomatic rebuke of President Trump this week, in an ever-so-polite royal way.
“King delivers hard truths” read a headline in the Daily Mail, praising him for urging the United States to defend NATO and Ukraine. A journalist at The Sun called him “Britain’s No.1 diplomat.” The Independent said Charles chided Mr. Trump with a “combination of eloquence and élan,” speaking in “such nuanced and sophisticated terms that even Trump and his volatile supporters could not take offense.” The New Statesman said it was “politics couched in regal tones.”
To many Americans, the sharp edges of the king’s seemingly tactful message may not have been apparent. And even Mr. Trump seems to have been oblivious to the fact that Charles was gently taking him to task. After waving goodbye to the royal couple Thursday morning, the president turned to reporters and said: “Great people. We need more people like that in our country.”
The king is, of course, British, and like his fellow countrymen, can be famously indirect. Americans looking for blunt or obvious statements were always going to be disappointed.
Britain’s constitutional monarchy requires, as Buckingham Palace puts it, that the king remain “politically neutral on all matters,” including, presumably, while interacting with the volatile leader of one of the country’s closest allies. (continued on Page 2 or here)
Administrator’s note: There are opportunities to be authors, editors, and administrators of this blog. It will be a learning experience and adventure for us all.
From ChatGPT—this took about 10 seconds to respond to my suggested words/phrases! I’m just surprised that this modern essay includes out-of-date Oxford commas!
Many thanks to Jim deMaine for the many hours of expertise he has devoted to this original and informative blog.
Ann Milam
Skyline Happenings is looking for a new director to help organize and promote our beloved community blog. For years, Dr. Jim deMaine has gone above and beyond—devoting countless hours to curating and sharing essays, poems, cartoons, and a wide range of engaging content for Skyline residents and subscribers.
His dedication has helped shape Skyline Happenings into a vibrant and informative space, keeping us all connected and up to date on important topics spanning politics, medicine, art, and much more.
Please join us in celebrating and thanking Dr. deMaine for his extraordinary effort and leadership. His work has made a lasting impact on our community, and we are truly grateful.
At the same time, we welcome interest from anyone who might like to step into this important role and continue building on the strong foundation he has created!
Ed Note: I encourage you to read this article. Dementia will affect many of us as we age. What are your wishes for care if you are in dementia’s advanced stages? Dr. Hope Wechkin, the Medical Director at Evergreen Hospice spoke here at Skyline last year. Her research about minimal feeding in advanced dementia is cited in this NYT article. Allowing this type of comfort care is something that I personally support if that is the known wish of the patient. It is now part of my own advance directive.
Some consider the regular feeding of late-stage dementia patients to be nonnegotiable. Others see it as extending life unnecessarily. Thanks to Janet M. for submitting this article.
By Kate Raphael who has spent the past three years reporting on complex end-of-life issues.
Not long after high school, Linda Lawson had an experience that stuck with her. While working at a nursing home southeast of Seattle, she spoon-fed residents with advanced dementia — the stage when they cannot recognize loved ones, feed or bathe themselves, or speak more than several words.
From that point on, Ms. Lawson was clear: She never wanted to live that way.
“She believed in quality of life over quantity of life,” said Heidi Hendrickson, her daughter.
Four decades later, Ms. Lawson began repeating stories and losing her place mid-recipe. She’d pour herself a cup of coffee and forget where she’d left it — then pour herself two more mugs and forget those, too. She missed her grandchildren’s birthdays and forgot the way to her sister’s house.
In 2014, at age 61, Ms. Lawson was diagnosed with dementia. When she was 64, her family moved her into a memory care unit after she wandered into the woods, where the police found her with only one shoe on. Within a few years of that, Ms. Lawson could utter only a string of unintelligible sounds and had lost the ability to feed herself.
To keep her alive, her care team fed her three times a day. Nurses held her head up and spooned meals into her mouth — eggs and sausages, chicken and vegetables — sometimes waking her to do so. They were providing the very care Ms. Lawson had administered decades earlier and hoped never to receive.
At times, she bowed her head and pushed herself away from the table. Her husband, Stan Lawson, and Ms. Hendrickson took these signs to mean she did not want to eat. It was painful for the family to watch her slowly deteriorate, and they didn’t like seeing her force-fed.
Although Ms. Lawson had previously expressed her preference not to live with advanced dementia, she hadn’t formalized those wishes in a written advance directive, a document that would tell caregivers to withhold food and water once her dementia reached a late stage. Without this, the family wasn’t sure what they could do. But they knew Ms. Lawson’s dementia would progress until she died. They also knew she wouldn’t want to prolong that process.
The family began looking for an offramp. During a meeting with Ms. Lawson’s primary care doctor, they explained the situation: Ms. Lawson spent most of her time in a wheelchair, staring at her knees and often refusing food.
“We were never interested in prolonging her life just for the sake of prolonging her life,” Ms. Hendrickson remembered telling the doctor. “We wanted her to just be happy and comfortable.”
The doctor, who was not employed by the memory care unit, had a suggestion. She had recently read a paper that put forward a new approach, called “minimal comfort feeding,” in which providers stop scheduled feedings and instead offer dementia patients just enough food and liquid to ensure comfort, and only when the patient shows signs of hunger or thirst. The idea was that someone with advanced dementia with no interest in food, or limited interest, might be allowed to die once they begin to refuse enough hydration and calories to sustain them.
Limiting food and water has been used to hasten death in people dying at home since long before it had a formal name. But to accelerate decline this way for people with advanced dementia, whether their deaths are imminent or not, is uncomfortable territory for many.
For Ms. Lawson’s family, though, it felt right. By then, Ms. Lawson had lost almost 40 pounds and showed little interest in food or anything else. The standard approach, which involves intensive work to ensure a patient gets enough daily nourishment to survive, can keep late-stage dementia patients alive for several years. Minimal comfort feeding was a middle ground: honoring a person’s desire for an intentional and dignified death while also keeping them more comfortable than withholding all food and water might. (continued on Page 2 or here)
Thanks to Pam P.
On Monday, the International Energy Agency released its analysis of the energy trends of 2025, covering the entire globe. It confirms and extends the primary conclusion of a more limited analysis by the International Renewable Energy Agency: 2025 was the first year of solar’s dominance. Increased solar production was a key reason the growth of carbon-free energy sources outpaced rising demand.
Coupled with a massive growth in battery storage and relatively stagnant fossil fuel use, the year has led the IEA to declare that “the world has entered the Age of Electricity.”
The IEA report covers energy use, including the electrical grid, transportation, home heating, and other forms of consumption. As such, it can track how some of those uses are shifting, as electric vehicles displace some gasoline use and heat pumps replace gas and oil heating. It also saw a more global trend: The demand for electricity grew at twice the rate of overall energy demand. All of these went into the conclusion that we’re starting the Age of Electricity.
In terms of specifics, the IEA saw electric vehicle demand rise by nearly 40 percent, with electric car sales being a quarter of the total of cars sold last year. While that’s having a measurable effect on electricity demand, it remains relatively small at the moment. It’s almost certain to be contributing to the size of the rise in oil use last year: 0.7 percent. In absolute terms, that’s less than half the average rise of the previous decade.

Heat pump sales were largely flat last year, but in a number of countries, past growth has meant that heat pumps now account for a majority of new heating units sold. But relatively cold weather in populated regions of the world made the building sector the primary driver of demand for natural gas. Even so, its use rose only 1 percent in 2025 compared to 2024.
Trends like these are likely to accelerate in 2026 due to the conflicts in the Middle East. The closing of the Strait of Hormuz will severely affect the flow of oil globally, and a number of countries are dependent on liquefied natural gas from Persian Gulf states. Even if non-fossil alternatives were unavailable, we’d see lower consumption due to a combination of reduced availability and higher prices. Instead, we’re more likely to see an accelerated shift away from fossil fuels due to increased interest in electrified alternatives and government efforts to limit the impact of future fuel shocks. (continued on page 2 or here)
Thanks to Ed M.
In compliance with the March 16 federal court ruling in American Academy of Pediatrics v. Kennedy, CDC restored its official child and adolescent immunization schedule and its official adult immunization schedule to the July 2, 2025, versions. These versions reflect the decisions of the ACIP through its April 2025 meeting, before the replacement of those 17 members with new members in June 2025. The appointments of the new members and their subsequent decisions were stayed by the court. Some CDC web pages are still being updated to reflect the change.
For more information, see the Common Health Coalition’s 2-page summary of the AAP v. Kennedy Ruling and what it means for clinicians and families. (continued on Page 2 or here)

By Alexis Weisend – Seattle Times business reporter
After construction setbacks, a new Barnes & Noble will open May 6 in downtown Seattle.
The bookseller giant will hold a ribbon-cutting ceremony and book signing event with fantasy author Robin Hobb at 9 a.m. on opening day in its new building at 520 Pike St.
The New York-based company originally planned to open the store in April but faced construction setbacks, according to its social media accounts.
Downtown Seattle has lacked a Barnes & Noble bookstore since January 2020, when a former location at Pacific Place shopping center shuttered. Another of its stores closed in West Seattle a year earlier.
The bookstore’s return to downtown hasn’t delighted only book lovers (at least, the ones willing to pay $30 for a hardcover). Some Seattleites hope the new store signals renewed potential for downtown after years of fleeing major retailers.
Barnes & Noble’s 10-year agreement represents the largest retail lease in downtown since 2020, according to the Downtown Seattle Association.
The store will fill a 17,500-square-foot space left by The North Face’s flagship store. The outdoor gear company left the site in 2024 after five years.
Barnes & Noble takes up two stories of the 29-story tower at the highly trafficked corner of Pike Street and Sixth Avenue.
The store joins two other Seattle stores — one at Northgate Station and another in the University District.
Barnes & Noble did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The opening comes at a time of hope for the book-selling industry’s survival.
Industry analysts predicted Seattle-based Amazon’s launch in the mid-1990s would crush booksellers — and it sort of did, for a while. The e-commerce giant quickly dominated the U.S. print book market, generally offering lower prices, a larger selection and home delivery. It opened its own brick-and-mortar bookstores, aptly named Amazon Books, in 2015.
Amazon’s launch contributed to an initial decline in independent bookstores and to the closure of the national bookstore chain Borders. In 2018, Barnes & Noble considered selling to stay afloat.
But in a Hallmark-like twist, booksellers have experienced a notable rebound in recent years, even while Amazon closed its physical bookstores in 2022.
Independent bookstore openings jumped by 31% in 2025, according to the American Booksellers Association. Barnes & Noble also plans to open 60 new locations across the country this year, following a period of strong sales, according to USA Today.
The new Pike location sits about a mile away from Amazon’s headquarters on Terry Avenue.
from Now That Makes Sense compiled by Mark Ortman
Adlai Stevenson: Man does not live by words alone despite the fact that sometimes he has to eat them
George Eliot: Blessed is the man who having nothing to say, abstains from giving wordy evidence of the fact.
Unknown: Never say never and always avoid always
Alfred Tennyson: Words, like nature, half reveal and half conceal the soul within
Just a quick reminder. We’ll have a discussion about this blog tomorrow, Wednesday at 11 AM in the MBR. I hope you’ll be there to give us your ideas for this blog’s future: grow, change or RIP?
Would you like to be a commentator, start a new topic, be tech support, or help edit. There’s lots of room to make the blog more active and informative. Hope to see you tomorrow!
Here’s what ChaptGPT just wrote:
Skyline Happenings!
“On First Hill where voices meet,
There’s news and laughter down the street,
A little blog with heart and cheer,
That keeps good neighbors feeling near.
It’s called Skyline Happenings, bright and clear,
A place where friendly words appear—
For independent folks with style,
Who’ve gathered wisdom all the while.
Progressive minds and curious eyes,
Still chasing dreams beneath the skies,
They post of books, of talks, of plays,
Of garden walks and sunny days.
A ride to town, a concert night,
A neighbor’s art, a cause to fight,
A recipe, a lost blue scarf,
A grandchild’s joke, a shared good laugh.
It’s more than notices on a screen,
It’s community alive between
The coffee chats and hallway hellos,
The place where kindness simply grows.
For seniors strong in heart and say,
Who still help shape the coming day,
Skyline Happenings stands and sings:
“We’re not done yet—we’re doing things!”
In today’s NYT podcast, The Daily, there’s a fascinating discussion about the power dynamics in Iran shifting from a theocracy to a military dictatorship. The incentives in negotiations are now more transactional about power and money in a more pragmatic fashion–yet the problems of nuclear enrichment and face-saving are far from solved. And Trump seems stumped by the “trump card” Iran has discovered with the closure of the Strait of Hormuz.
We hope you’ll consider “Simple Gifts” a heart warming invitation to come to the Hearts of Gold kickoff on Thursday, April 30th at 11 AM in the MBR. This song was sung at the Skyline Strummers February sing-a-long. Please come to hear more songs on the 30th and consider joining this very fun group. But mainly come to learn about the wonderful opportunities to give gifts to help our community, fellow residents and neighbors.
By Steven Lee Myers and Stuart A. Thompson (thanks to Mary Jane F.)
Then, as the war dragged on, Iran shifted tactics. It began circulating short animated videos that scorched President Trump and others with biting satire. Mr. Trump appeared as a hapless Lego figure, as Woody from Pixar’s “Toy Story,” as a shag-haired pop star of the 1980s era of MTV.