Thanks to Gordon G!


Sunday, August 8, the donation box will be ready to accept your surplus books and DVDs. It will be located in the coat closet opposite the Olympic Dining Room and will be there from August 8th to 20th.
NO TEXT BOOKS, ENCYCLOPEDIAS, MAGAZINES, OR CD’S PLEASE!
Plan to come on Tuesday, August 24th at any time from 10:00am-3:00pm, when your donations will be displayed in Mt. Baker North. You may freely select any desired items. All residents, staff & vaccinated guests are welcome.
The Library Committee will screen all donations for special items to be held for our own library shelves before the event. Books not given away will be donated elsewhere.
The Washington State Department of Transportation’s (WSDOT) Montlake Bridge repair project will begin Monday, August 9. This project will require two phases of closures — a 26-day continuous around-the-clock closure through September 3 to general vehicle traffic followed by an additional five weekends of closure to all traffic (vehicle, bike, pedestrian) in the fall. The five weekend closures will not coincide with Husky Football games.
These closures will allow WSDOT to replace the aging grid deck on the Montlake Bridge. Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, an average of 40,000 to 66,000 drivers used the bridge daily. This project will keep the bridge in a state of good repair as it continues to support the needs of a growing population.
The bridge will be closed to general vehicle traffic with the exception of first responder vehicles during this first phase of construction. Vehicle traffic will be detoured to State Route 520 and Interstate 5 and all transit will be rerouted as well. Pedestrian and bicycle access will be maintained.
For more information about the project and commuter resources, please visit the UW Transportation Services website.
Thanks to Donna D.
Heather McGhee was cooking dinner in her Brooklyn apartment in January as she opened a YouTube link to watch Joe Biden deliver his first speech on race as the President. As she bustled around the kitchen, Biden recited a line that seemed so familiar that she nearly dropped her wineglass. “We’ve bought the view that America is a zero-sum game in many cases: ‘If you succeed, I fail,’” Biden said. But, he continued, “When any one of us is held down, we’re all held back.”
McGhee’s first book, The Sum of Us, was about to hit shelves in February, and she’d shared copies of it with some Biden advisers. The book argues that Americans have been fed a “zero-sum story” that says progress for people of color will take away what white Americans already have. “The logical extension of the zero-sum story is that a future without racism is something white people should fear, because there will be nothing good for them in it,” she writes. McGhee uses the book to explain that racism actually costs all Americans, by allowing wealthy conservatives to take away resources from all of us.
McGhee had worried that The Sum of Us, coming after the death of George Floyd and the country’s reckoning with race, was being published too late. But as Biden spoke, she realized it might be coming at exactly the right time. There, in her kitchen, she heard the President of the United States—an older white man—telling Americans that they shouldn’t fear the success of Black people, using some of the very phrases she had used in her book. “I was like, ‘What is happening?! This is amazing!’” McGhee says.
For her book, McGhee journeyed around the nation, interviewing people to illustrate how that zero-sum game hurts everyone. She goes to Montgomery, Ala., where in 1959, white citizens decided to drain the public pool rather than integrate it. The same thing has happened as the U.S. has gotten more diverse, she argues; rather than share the benefits of government with Black people, many white Americans have sought to end benefits for everyone. This history helped answer a question she’d been asking for a long time: Why doesn’t America have well-funded schools, good wages for everyone and low-cost health care?
Thanks to Pam P.

Thanks to Dick Dion, MD
Dan Diamond 7:30 p.m. EDT in the Washington Post
Faced with the explosive growth of a new virusvariant, the state of California and the city of New York gave workers a choice: Get vaccinated or face weekly testing. And an array of hospitals from coast to coast, including the prestigious Mayo Clinic, declared they would require staff to get vaccinated, following a joint plea from the nation’s major medical groups.
Health-care leaders say the moves represent an escalation of the nation’s fight against the coronavirus — the first concerted effort to mandate that tens of millions of Americans get vaccinated, more than seven months after regulators authorized the shots and as new cases rip through the nation. VA’s mandate applies to more than 100,000 front-line workers, New York City’s applies to about 45,000 city employees and contractors, and California’s applies to more than 2.2 million state employees and health workers.
“You can call it a tipping point,” said Mark Ghaly, California’s health secretary, noting that millions of people have declined the shots despite public health experts’ appeals and a range of incentives. “For so many Californians and Americans, this might be the time to get vaccinated.”Residents wait in line to receive a coronavirus vaccine in January at a nursing home and rehabilitation center in New York City. (Yuki Iwamura/AP)
Ghaly noted that in California, about 900 coronavirus cases in mid-June were severe enough to require hospitalization versus nearly 3,000 now, driven by the hyper-transmissible delta variant. “As we stare down schools opening up in just a matter of a couple of weeks, as we look at the projections with delta, we felt now is the right time,” he said.
Confirmed coronavirus infections nationwide have quadrupled in July, from about 13,000 cases per day at the start of the month to more than 54,000 now, according to Washington Post tracking. Hospital leaders in states such as Alabama, Florida and Missouri have implored holdouts to get vaccinated, citing data that the shots preventthe most severe forms of the diseasethat lead to hospitalization and even death.
“We have reached a confluence where health-care workers want vaccine mandates, and government is responding,” said Ezekiel Emanuel, a bioethicist at the University of Pennsylvania who organized the joint statement from nearly 60 medical groups, including the American Medical Association and the American Nurses Association, urging every health facility to require workers to get vaccinated.
Thanks to Jim S
For those interested in politics even stranger than Seattle (maybe) you may find the article below interesting.
Forty-six candidates have filed to run for Governor in the September 14th Recall Election. The ballot consists of two parts: Should Gavin Newsom be recalled from office – Yes or No. If the majority of those casting ballots vote no, that’s it. If the majority vote yes, the person with the most votes completes the remainder of the term, serving until January of 2023.
The leading candidates (July 19-20, 2021 Emerson Poll) are:
Larry Elder (Republican), Radio Talk Show Host and Fox Guest (18 points)
John Cox (Self-Proclaimed anti-politician) running on a self financed $5 Million campaign while travelling with a live bear for campaign appearances (8 points)
Kevin Faulconer (Republican) former Mayor of San Diego (6 points)
Kevin Kiley (Republican) State Assembly Member, former teacher and Deputy Attorney General (4 points)
Caitlyn Jenner (Republican) transgender reality star and former Olympic Gold Medalist in the Decathalon (4 points);
Kevin Paffrath (Democrat) Ventura Real Estate Broker with no prior political experience
Doug Ose (Republican) former Sacramento area Member of Congress, ran for governor in 2018, lost to Newsom by a 62/38 margin
The article below provides significantly more detail about the election.
Who’s running in Newsom recall? Politicians, activists, Californians of all stripes BY LAUREL ROSENHALL AND SAMEEA KAMAL JULY 17, 2021
UPDATED JULY 21, 2021
FROM: CalMatters https://calmatters.org/explainers/newsom-recall-candidates/
California’s second gubernatorial recall election in history is shaping up to be pretty different from the first.
Just 46 candidates filed all the paperwork necessary by the July 16 deadline to run to replace Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom in the Sept. 14 recall — a field that includes GOP politicians, a reality TV personality, a YouTuber, a retired detective, a cannabis advocate, several business owners and even a new-age shaman.
What it doesn’t include: Anyone with the star power that actor and body builder Arnold Schwarzenegger enjoyed when he disrupted the political scene in 2003 and ousted then-Gov. Gray Davis. It also doesn’t include any prominent Democrats who might be seen as a viable alternative to Newsom by California’s overwhelmingly blue electorate.
That’s good news for Newsom as he fights to keep his job, said the man who managed Davis’ unsuccessful campaign against the 2003 recall.
“The biggest problem was Arnold getting in and galvanizing the recall vote. And the second biggest problem was (Democratic Lt. Gov. Cruz) Bustamante getting in,” said Democratic consultant Garry South.
“In this current field, there is nobody who can have that kind of impact.”
But a lot will hinge on how many Californians decide to vote. Polls show that Republicans are enthusiastic about the recall, while Democrats are not very tuned in that it’s happening. Even though, overall, Democrats outnumber Republicans by 22 percentage points in California, Newsom could be damaged by strong turnout among GOP voters and weak turnout among Democrats.
“A sleepy race can pose its own challenges for Newsom,” said Rob Stutzman, a Republican consultant who worked on Schwarzenegger’s campaign. “If there is a lack of intensity among Democrats, something weird could happen.”
Newsom enjoys a massive fundraising advantage over his challengers and has already raised $32 million and counting to fight the recall. State law allows the target of a recall to accept unlimited sums of money —and his campaign committee has already received several donations of $1 million or more. Challengers can only accept as much as $32,400 from each single donor.
But a recent spike in COVID cases and new mask mandates in some parts of California create uncertainty that could change the political landscape.
The recall ballot includes two questions. The first requires a yes or no answer: Do you want to recall Newsom? On the second question, voters can pick one candidate to replace him. Unless a majority votes “yes” on the first, the second doesn’t matter, except perhaps to show who has the most support heading into the 2022 regular election for governor.
“Across our state, Democrats are united against this Republican recall,” said Nathan Click, a spokesman for Newsom’s anti-recall campaign. “They understand this recall is nothing more than a partisan power grab.”
The most well-known challengers include Republicans Caitlyn Jenner, a transgender reality TV personality and former Olympic athlete; Larry Elder, a conservative talk show host; John Cox, a businessman who lost to Newsom in 2018; and Kevin Faulconer, the former mayor of San Diego.
“We have the broad brush that this election deserves,” said Anne Dunsmore, a manager for the recall campaign.
She said she is happy with the field of candidates, “some who have a background in politics and some who don’t, but who have remarkable followings in the endeavors they are involved in.”
Dunsmore said she believes that having lots of candidates in the race — even if none are likely to consolidate a huge number of votes — will help the effort to oust Newsom by bringing in more people to vote “yes” on the question of whether to recall him.
The 46-person field is actually much smaller than it was in 2003, when 135 candidates ran to replace Davis.
This year, candidates had to initially comply with a new requirement: submitting five years of tax returns that were posted publicly on the secretary of state’s website. But on July 21, a judge ruled that the requirement should not have applied to the recall. That put Elder, who sued over the tax returns, on the ballot, along with three others who were only rejected due to the tax document requirement.
Several people who flirted with running — including Trump administration official Richard Grenell, California secession advocate Louis Marinelli and adult film performer Mary Carey— did not, in the end, submit the required paperwork.
On July 17, the secretary of state’s office released a list of candidates who have “fulfilled the qualifications and requirements to appear on the ballot.”The office issued a certified list, with final ballot designations, on July 21.
In facilities like ours, we have a number of immunocompromised individuals. Some have had no protective antibody response to the vaccine. Even so, we might feel safe and remain unmasked because we have herd immunity–virtually 100% of the residents have received the two doses of COVID-19 vaccine.
But wait! Are we really safe. 20% of our staff goes out into the community daily, unimmunized by choice, and exposed to the rapidly spreading delta COVID variant. All staff are masked to be sure. But these are not N-95 masks and the staff often works close to us in various venues. Waiting for a positive COVID test or symptoms is not a useful strategy here.
We’ve tried education and hesitancy support–but this is a continuing public health crisis! Many universities and businesses are instituting vaccine mandates. Many hospitals and nursing homes are also.
It’s time for all staff to be vaccinated unless there is a medical contraindication. This is not a political issue! Let’s value and protect our most vulnerable.
How can I tell an email is fishy
What to do if you have a suspect phishing email?
HERE AN EXAMPLE I RECEIVED TODAY
“You are still using the old Webmail security settings.
Please use the maintenance portal below to switch and automatically enable your new Webmail settings to avoid service interruption and delays in outgoing/incoming mails.
sign in <https://XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
We apologize for the inconvenience.
Thanks for using.
Copyright © 2021 Webmail.”
Thanks to Gordon G.
· When one door closes and another door opens, you are probably in prison.
· Interviewer: “So, tell me about yourself.”
Me: “I’d rather not. I kinda want this job.”
· I had my patience tested. I’m negative.
· Remember, when you lose a sock in the dryer, it comes back as a Tupperware lid that doesn’t fit any of your containers.
· If you’re sitting in public and a stranger takes the seat next to you, just stare straight ahead and ask, “Did you bring the money?
· Age 60 might be the new 40, but 9:00 is now the new midnight.
· I finally got eight hours of sleep. It took me three days, but whatever.
· I hate when a couple argues in public and I missed the beginning and don’t know whose side I’m on.
· When someone asks what I did over the weekend, I glance both ways and whisper, “Why, what did you hear?”
· Sometimes, someone unexpectedly comes into your life out of nowhere, makes your heart race, and changes you forever. We call those people cops.
· The older I get, the earlier it gets late.
· My luck is like a bald guy who just won a comb.
Thanks to Al MacR
“I asked a friend who has crossed 70 and is heading towards 80 what sort of changes she is feeling in herself?
She sent me the following:
1 After loving my parents, my siblings, my spouse, my children and my friends, I have now started loving myself.
2 I have realized that I am not “Atlas”. The world does not rest on my shoulders.
3 I have stopped bargaining with vegetable & fruit vendors. A few pennies more is not going to break me, but it might help the poor fellow save for his daughter’s school fees.
4 I leave my waitress a big tip. The extra money might bring a smile to her face. She is toiling much harder for a living than I am.
5 I stopped telling the elderly that they’ve already narrated that story many times. The story makes them walk down memory lane & relive their past.
6 I have learned not to correct people even when I know they are wrong. The onus of making everyone perfect is not on me. Peace is more precious than perfection.
7 I give compliments freely and generously. Compliments are a mood enhancer not only for the recipient but also for me. And a small tip for the recipient of a compliment, never, NEVER turn it down, just say “Thank You.”
8 I have learned not to bother about a crease or a spot on my shirt. Personality speaks louder than appearances.
9 I walk away from people who don’t value me. They might not know my worth, but I do.
10 I remain cool when someone plays dirty to outrun me in the rat race. I am not a rat and neither am I in any race.
11 I am learning not to be embarrassed by my emotions. It’s my emotions that make me human.
12 I have learned that it’s better to drop the ego than to break a relationship. My ego will keep me aloof, whereas, with relationships, I will never be alone.
13 I have learned to live each day as if it’s the last. After all, it might be the last.
14 I am doing what makes me happy. I am responsible for my happiness, and I owe it to myself. Happiness is a choice. You can be happy at any time, just choose to be!
Why do we have to wait to be 60 or 70 or 80, why can’t we practice this at any stage and age?
Thanks to Barb W.
Though some of its own senior officials said there was little evidence of benefit for patients, the F.D.A. nonetheless greenlighted Biogen’s Aduhelm, or aducanumab.
By Pam Belluck, Sheila Kaplan and Rebecca Robbins Updated July 20, 2021, 9:29 a.m. in the New York Times
Ed note: The expert independent science panel felt the drug should not be approved. That the risk of brain hemorrhage was significant in the face of minimal, or no efficacy. More studies are needed. Is this an example of the medical-industrial complex gone amok? Major institutions like the Cleveland Clinic are refusing to prescribe the drug. So how did this all happen? It’s still murkey.
Two months before the Food and Drug Administration’s deadline to decide whether to approve Biogen’s controversial Alzheimer’s drug, aducanumab, a council of senior agency officials resoundingly agreed that there wasn’t enough evidence it worked.
The council, a group of 15 officials who review complex issues, concluded that another clinical trial was necessary before approving the drug. Otherwise, one council member noted, approval could “result in millions of patients taking aducanumab without any indication of actually receiving any benefit, or worse, cause harm,” according to minutes of the meeting, obtained by The New York Times.
“It is critical that the decision be made from a place of certainty,” the minutes said.
The session, whose details have not been reported before, represented at least the third time that proponents of approving aducanumab in the F.D.A. had received a clear message that the evidence did not convincingly show the drug could slow cognitive decline.
On June 7, the F.D.A. greenlighted the drug anyway — a decision that has been met with scathing rebuke from many Alzheimer’s experts and other scientists and calls for investigations into how the agency approved a treatment that has little evidence it helps patients.
How and why the F.D.A. went ahead and approved the drug — an intravenous infusion, marketed as Aduhelm, that the company has since priced at $56,000 a year — has become the subject of intense scrutiny. Two congressional committees are investigating the approval and the price. Much is still unknown, but an examination by The Times has found that the process leading to approval took several unusual turns, including a decision for the F.D.A. to work far more closely with Biogen than is typical in a regulatory review.
The morning anchor’s plea was urgent and framed in the starkest of terms: Get the Covid-19 vaccine, or you could die. “It will save your life,” he said on Tuesday, echoing a now-common refrain in the news media as the highly contagious Delta variant drives a rise in coronavirus infections.
But the messenger in this case was Steve Doocy, the conservative co-host of “Fox & Friends,” and the venue was Fox News, the Rupert Murdoch-owned network whose stars have often relayed the view that vaccines can be dangerous and Americans are justified in refusing them.
Mr. Doocy was not the only big Fox News personality to intensify his warnings about the coronavirus this week. Sean Hannity urged viewers on Monday to “please take Covid seriously — I can’t say it enough.” He added: “I believe in the science of vaccination.”
Fox News has not changed overnight. When Mr. Doocy made similar remarks on Monday, his co-host Brian Kilmeade issued a counterpoint, telling viewers to “make your own decision” and adding, “We are not doctors.” Laura Ingraham, whose 10 p.m. show follows Mr. Hannity, accused Democrats on Monday of trying to “de-platform, cancel, defame or eliminate inconvenient opinions regarding their Covid response.”
Still, the comments from Mr. Hannity and Mr. Doocy turned some heads.
I finally finished posting my four climate talks (February to June 2021) to Youtube. They are all scripted with a voiceover.
https://sites.google.com/view/williamcalvin-org/climate-emergency












The two-minute trailer for the series. Links to talk 1 2 3 4