June/July Memory Hub Newsletter

For the latest nearby Memory Hub newsletter, please click here.

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The loneliness of the woman voter

By Danny Westneat – Seattle Times columnist (thanks to Bob P.)

In the fire hose of news this past week, the airlifts are an image that needs more attention.

“We are now living in two very different United States,” was how one Seattle-area health care provider summed up the dystopian situation.

When the U.S. Supreme Court ruled this week that Idaho hospitals could resume providing emergency abortion care to ill pregnant women, but only temporarily, the story also emerged about how strained that care had become.

Since January, emergency services have been airlifting women, often hemorrhaging or in sepsis, out of Idaho rather than treating them there. It’s due to our new “states’ rights” health care system, where abortion is a felony here, and available and legal over there.

“In Idaho, we’ve been flying out about a patient a week to Utah or Oregon or Washington, because the fetus is nonviable or the life of the mother is at risk,” Dr. Edward McEachern, of Boise State University, said this past week.

“I am seeing patients from Idaho, but also from Texas, Arizona, Alabama and other states,” said Dr. Elizabeth Harrington, a University of Washington OB-GYN.

One justice called it a “months-long catastrophe.”

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Trump Abandoned by Republicans

from the Dworkin Report

Here’s a list of prominent Republicans and Trump’s former backers who are not supporting him, and some of their quotes. Keep in mind this is just a sample of key players and not a full list:

GOP Gov. Brian Kemp: “I didn’t vote for him.” Kemp confirmed he didn’t vote for Trump in the Georgia primary.

GOP Sen. Susan Collins: “I cannot support former President Trump,” and says she did not vote for him in the primary.

GOP Sen. Lisa Murkowski: “I certainly can’t get behind Donald Trump.”

GOP Sen. Mitt Romney: Trump is “not suited to be president of the United States and to be the person who we hold up to our children and the world as the leader of the free world.”

GOP Sen. Todd Young: Trump “just consistently loses. In fact he has a habit of losing not just his own elections, but losing elections for others … I don’t think conservatives would be well served by electing someone whose core competency seems to be owning someone on Twitter.”

GOP Rep. David Valadao

Fmr. GOP Rep. Adam Kinzinger: “It’s because of my unwavering support for democracy, that today, as a proud conservative, I am endorsing Joe Biden for reelection.”

Fmr. GOP Rep. Liz Cheney: “We cannot survive a president who is willing to torch the Constitution.”

Fmr. Georgia Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan: “It’s disappointing to watch an increasing number of Republicans fall in line behind former president Donald Trump,” saying he has “no choice but to pull the lever for Biden.”

Fmr. VP Dick Cheney: ““In our nation’s 236-year history, there has never been an individual who is a greater threat to our republic than Donald Trump … He tried to steal the last election using lies and violence to keep himself in power after the voters had rejected him. He is a coward. A real man wouldn’t lie to his supporters. He lost his election, and he lost big. I know it, he knows it, and deep down I think most Republicans know it.”

Fmr. RNC Chair Michael Steele: “I get it with some Republicans who say, ‘Oh, I just can’t vote for a Democrat.’ But this is not — you’re voting for your country. You’re not voting for a Democrat, in this case … I do get the idea that it is hard for some Republicans to go across the street. But baby, you need to do it … The country needs you more than your party does, trust me.”

Fmr. Trump WH Press Sec Sarah Matthews: “While I’ve never voted for a Democrat a day in my life, I would support Biden over Trump if he becomes the GOP nominee … I won’t support someone who refused to participate in a peaceful transfer of power, tried to overthrow a free and fair election, and incited a mob to attack the U.S. Capitol.”

Fmr. WH Press Sec. Stephanie Grisham: “I spent six years nonstop with Donald Trump, and I’ll tell you what: If Biden does decide to debate Trump, I would sure like to prep President Biden.”

Fmr. WH Aide Cassidy Hutchinson: “I’ve never voted for a Democrat in my life, but I would absolutely consider voting for Joe Biden this upcoming November because he will not seek to destroy our nation …He will not seek to destroy our Constitution. And he has the statesman character that we need in an elected official.”

Fmr. WH Comms Dir. Alyssa Farah Griffin: Trump “is a threat to democracy, and I will never support him.”

Fmr. WH Counsel Ty Cobb: Trump “has never cared about America, its citizens, its future or anything but himself … In fact, as history well shows from his divisive lies, as well as from his unrestrained contempt for the rule of law and his related crimes, his conduct and mere existence have hastened the demise of democracy and of the nation.”

Fmr. WH Chief of Staff John Kelly: “What’s going on in the country that a single person thinks this guy (Trump) would still be a good president when he’s said the things he’s said and done the things he’s done? … It’s beyond my comprehension he has the support he has.”

Fmr. Defense Sec. Mark Esper: “There’s no way” I’ll support Trump. Trump “is a threat to democracy.”

Fmr. VP Mike Pence: “I cannot in good conscience endorse Donald Trump in this campaign.”

Zero Fortune 100 CEOs have donated to Trump.

Paul Ryan and John Bolton both refuse to support Trump and say instead they’ll write-in another Republican… how brave of them. Can you sense my sarcasm? And Chris Christie is still all over the place. No bold font for them.

We will keep a running list on this post as it grows. Because each day, more and more Americans are speaking out about the dangers of Trump and the horrors of having him back in the White House. Which we can never let happen.

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The choice

Thanks to Mike C.

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LGBTQIA+ MEANING: ACRONYM BREAKDOWN AND DEFINITIONS

From the San Francisco Gay Men’s Chorus

Pride flag

Struggling to understand the LGBTQIA+ meaning of the acronym? You’re not alone. 

For many people who are new to the LGBTQIA+ community, this acronym can seem confusing or overwhelming. 

If you are new, welcome! We’re so glad you’re here with us today. 

And if you aren’t new to the community, but are curious to learn more about how the community has changed over the years, we’re delighted you’ve joined us today, too. 

The way the LGBTQIA+ community interacts – both with each other and with the world around us – is constantly changing. We strive to include everyone and to make everyone feel seen and understood. 

What Does LGBTQIA+ Mean?

For many years, the umbrella term “gay” was used to describe the community. 

Now, many people worry about how to come out, but coming out before the 1970s wasn’t even an option, as many states illegalized what they called “homosexuality” or “sodomy.” There was also no acronym at all, restricting the inclusivity of our community.

Once an acronym appeared, all versions of it began with “L” – for an important reason. 

In the early days of the gay rights movement, the lesbian community often felt dismissed or rejected. This led to strong division within the community, with lesbians feeling like “second class” in the gay rights movement. 

During the AIDS crisis in the 80s and 90s, thousands of gay men were disowned by their families after contracting AIDS. The lesbian community came together to care for men with this illness as members of their community. 

As a gesture of gratitude for their support, the acronym was set in stone as “LGB”. 

But we had a ways to go before getting to LGBTQIA+. The LGBTQIA+ meaning is being as inclusive as possible. The “T” was added to include our transgender brothers and sisters in the early 2000s, and “LGBT” was the standard for many years after that. 

The “Q” was officially added in 2016, though many people had been using it for years prior. 

WHAT ARE THE NEW LETTERS IN LGBTQ+?

The new letters in the LGBTQ+ acronym have been added to expand the inclusivity of our community further. No term will be perfectly inclusive, but our community wants to give everyone a voice. 

As we learn more about gender and sexual expression, the LGBTQIA+ meaning and acronym will change and evolve, too. The acronym isn’t typically standardized, so some communities may add additional gender or sexual identities, especially if they’re representing a community center or non-profit dedicated to those communities. (continued)

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Treaty Justice by Charles Wilkinson

Thanks to Ed M.

From Post Alley by David Brewster

Fifty years ago, federal Judge George Boldt issued his landmark decision on tribal fishing rights. An admirable new book, Treaty Justice, by law professor and tribal advocate Charles Wilkinson, has just been published by UW Press. There are two good reasons to read this lucid book. It is an even-handed and comprehensive primer on this vexed, core issue in the Northwest. And the entire salmon saga restores one’s faith in the legal system, just in case you are needing some good news to counter today’s problematic Supreme Court.

As the author states, the Boldt Decision of February 12, 1974 “vividly displays the brilliance and worth of the American system of justice and the moral and tangible benefits it can achieve at its heights.” Indeed the Court tried to end the raging Indian Wars of the times, established tribal sovereignty, and was a daring leap of faith in shared management of salmon fisheries.

It ranks up there in judicial boldness with the Supremes’ decisions about civil rights, school integration, old-growth protection, and voting rights. The lingering question is whether Judge Boldt, a crusty, conservative Montana Republican, bit off too much and escalated for years the war over salmon. It was reflective of an age of progressive judicial activism, now long gone. (continued)

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Presidential debate analysis by Heather Cox Richardson. Trump’s lies, the Gish Gallop and the failure of the media to call him out.

Thanks to Pam P., MaryLou P., and Diana C.

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President Biden, I’ve Seen Enough

By Nicholas Kristof in the NYT

President Biden is a good man who capped a long career in public service with a successful presidential term. But I hope he reviews his debate performance Thursday evening and withdraws from the race, throwing the choice of a Democratic nominee to the convention in August.

One of the perils facing this country, I believe and Biden believes, is the risk of a victory by Donald Trump. And after the debate, it’s hard to avoid the feeling that Biden remaining in the race increases the likelihood that Trump will move into the White House in January.

Biden has never been a great debater, but his voice and manner didn’t put to rest the doubts about his age and effectiveness. Rather, he amplified them. I happened to chat today with a woman who is undecided about whom to vote for — she says she distrusts both Trump and Biden but will choose based on who will do better for the economy — and I bet that now she will be supporting Trump.

In some sense, this may be unfair. This was one debate. A candidate’s physical frailty, hoarse voice and rambling responses may not be good predictors of how that person will govern. But in this election, they probably are good predictors that the candidate will lose in November and not have a chance to govern again.

We see the world through narratives, and one of the narratives about Biden is that he is too old. His performance reinforced that narrative when he needed to shatter it. Biden, unable to puncture Trump’s repeated falsehoods, allowed a convicted felon to win the debate.

Biden can resolve this by withdrawing from the race. There isn’t time to hold new primaries, but he could throw the choice of a successor to the Democratic National Convention in Chicago. The Democratic Party has some prominent figures who I think would be in a good position to defeat Trump in November, among them Gov. Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan, Senator Sherrod Brown of Ohio and Gina Raimondo, the secretary of commerce. And there are many others.

My phone has been blowing up with texts from people saying, as one put it: “Dear God. What are we going to do?” Another, also a fan of Biden, texted: “It’s imperative we change horses.” But Democrats have been reluctant to say this out loud and undermine Biden. So it will be up to Joe and Jill Biden to make this choice themselves.

This will be a wrenching choice. But, Mr. President, one way you can serve your country in 2024 is by announcing your retirement and calling on delegates to replace you, for that is the safest course for our nation.

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Happenings in Freeway Park

Book Carts & Buskers

June – September : Mon – Fri: 12-2pm : Located in Seneca Plaza

Book Carts

Seattle is the most literary city in the nation! Get book club ready with new and gently used books at the historic Book Carts in Seneca Plaza. Book prices range from $2-4 each and proceeds go to Friend’s of the Seattle Public Library.

Buskers

Enjoy live music and support local musicians while you visit the Park.

Park Services Cart: June – September; Tuesdays & Thursdays: 12-2pm; Wednesdays: 4-6pm

Located in Upper Lawns (lawn space by Pigott Corridor): Stop by and say ‘hi’ to FPA staff, find out what’s happening in the Park, and stay awhile! On Wednesday evenings we’ll have lawn games, and music to enjoy. This is a chance to get to know FPA staff and to learn more about the unique space that is Freeway Park.

Wellness Classes: Mondays & Tuesdays in July + August starting July 8th

Zumba: Mondays: 5:30-6:30pm: July 8th – August 26th: Located in Seneca Plaza

Free Fitness Classes taught by the Washington Athletic Club. Shake a tail feather and break a sweat at one of these all-levels and all-ages cardio dance classes in Seneca Plaza.

Yoga: Tuesdays: 12-1pm: July 9th – August 27th: Located in Upper Lawns (lawn space by Pigott Corridor)

Free Fitness Classes taught by the Washington Athletic Club. All levels and abilities welcome in Upper Lawns on the grassy lawn adjacent to the Seattle Convention Center. Water and a few mats provided, but bring your own if you can!

Dancing ‘Til DuskL Thursdays in July: 6-9pm: Located in Seneca Plaza

July 11th – English Country Dance (Called by Laura  Smith)

July 18th – The Hot Tango Four (Tango)

July 25th – Swingin’ In The Rain  with Dina Blade (Variety)

One of the best excuses to get outside on a weekday! Free dance lessons and live bands in Seneca Plaza. Lessons begin at 6pm, with a live band and dancing from 7-9pm.

Happy Hour Garden Party: Wednesday, July 10th 4-6pm: Located in Upper Lawns (lawn space by Pigott Corridor)

It’s a jungle out there! Meet up in Upper Lawns past 8th. Ave underpass and we’ll be out weeding, pruning or planting. Join us for 5 minutes or the whole time! We will have some drinks and snacks! Tools and gloves provided – but bring your own if you can.

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Here’s to the crazy ones

Thanks to Pam P.

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When you’re in deep …..

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2028 Presidential Candidate? Newsom Uses Annual State Address to Confront Republicans Across the Nation

In an unconventional version of the State of the State, Gov. Gavin Newsom attacked Republicans and held up California as a beacon of democracy.

Gov. Gavin Newsom, wearing a blue suit and dark tie, gestures with his left hand as he speaks at a podium that has the governor’s seal. An American flag is behind him, as is the state seal.
Gov. Gavin Newsom of California used his annual State of the State address to criticize Republicans and promote California as an “antidote to the poisonous populism of the right.” Credit…Rich Pedroncelli/Associated Press

By Shawn Hubler in the NYT

Gov. Gavin Newsom of California, whose liberal state has been hammered by Republicans for months as a hellscape of homelessness, crime and high taxes, used his annual State of the State address on Tuesday to slam “conservatives and delusional California bashers” and defend “the California way of life.”

Rather than appear before a joint session of the State Legislature, Mr. Newsom prerecorded his speech and posted it on social media, directing his message at least as much to a national audience as to Californians. It came two days before former President Donald Trump and President Biden were scheduled to debate in Atlanta, where Mr. Newsom was expected to appear in the so-called spin room as a feisty surrogate.

In his remarks, which hinted at arguments Mr. Biden is likely to touch upon on Thursday, Mr. Newsom presented the Democratic policies that are California’s hallmark as an “antidote to the poisonous populism of the right.”

Mr. Newsom, 56, has been among the president’s most visible supporters, and has long contended that Democrats have underestimated the hostility of the MAGA Republican movement. He has been viewed as a future presidential candidate and has seemed to relish challenging conservatives head on. (continued)

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Federal Officials Revise Recommendations for R.S.V. Vaccine

Among Americans aged 60 to 74, only those with certain health conditions need to receive the shots, the agency concluded.

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A white-gloved hand holding up a tiny glass vial, which has a blue cap and a white label with black text, against a white background.

Pfizer’s Abrysvo is one of three R.S.V. vaccines approved by the F.D.A. The other two are GSK’s Arexvy and Moderna’s mRESVIA. Credit…Pfizer, via Associated Press

By Apoorva Mandavilli

June 26, 2024 Updated 6:00 p.m. ET (Thanks to Ed M)

In an unusual move, federal health officials revised their recommendations for who should receive the vaccine against the respiratory syncytial virus.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommended last year that adults age 60 or older could receive a single lifetime dose of an R.S.V. vaccine, in consultation with their health care providers.

On Wednesday, scientific advisers to the agency reframed that guideline. Based on recent safety and effectiveness data, they unanimously recommended that all Americans age 75 and older receive one dose of an R.S.V. vaccine.

But for adults 60 to 74 years of age, the panel endorsed vaccination only for those with certain serious conditions, such as chronic heart or lung disease, advanced kidney disease and diabetes with organ damage.

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This flag thing

Thanks to Bob P.

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Researchers Have Found a Creative Way To Save Forests: They’re Letting Trees Tweet

From Good Good Good. Thanks to Pam P.

In July 2018, a century-old red oak went live on Twitter. The account @awitnesstree, tweeting from the Harvard Forest in Petersham, Massachusetts, introduces itself in its bio:

WITNESSING LIFE AS A TREE IN A CHANGING ENVIRONMENT FOR MORE THAN A CENTURY. VIEWS ARE MY OWN – SORT OF (DATA TRANSLATED BY SCIENTISTS AND COMMUNICATORS AT HF).

Every few days, the tree updates its 9,118 followers. On February 24 2020 it posted: “The last 2 days were extremely hot for February. When is this heatwave going to end?”

The day before, it had complained even more:

In 2019, it just kept raining and snowing. Overall, it was the 8th wettest year I have experienced here at Harvard Forest. We all need water, but when there's too much, I have a harder time getting oxygen and keeping stable footing in the soil.
IN 2019, IT JUST KEPT RAINING AND SNOWING. OVERALL, IT WAS THE 8TH WETTEST YEAR I HAVE EXPERIENCED HERE AT HARVARD FOREST. WE ALL NEED WATER, BUT WHEN THERE’S TOO MUCH, I HAVE A HARDER TIME GETTING OXYGEN AND KEEPING STABLE FOOTING IN THE SOIL. / VIA @AWITNESSTREE ON TWITTER

Now, after a hiatus due to COVID-related challenges, the Witness Tree is coming back online.

The tree’s messages are based on data from a suite of sensors on and around its trunk, using a real-time approach to tree monitoring pioneered by Witness Tree’s inspiration and sister project TreeWatch.net.

Led by Ghent University, TreeWatch.net set up its first tweeting tree in 2016, and currently monitors sensor data from 21 trees across Belgium, Germany, India, the Netherlands and the UK.

The sensors fitted to Harvard’s Witness Tree include a ribbon embedded in its trunk to track water flow, a spring-loaded pin pushing against its bark to monitor shrinkage and swelling and a camera to capture leaf growth. (continued)

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No AC but the ‘greenest’ ever Games? Inside Paris’ landmark Olympic Village

By Joshua Berlinger, CNN (Thanks to Pam P)

Air filters line a street in the Olympic Village in Saint-Denis.

Air filters line a street in the Olympic Village in Saint-Denis. Nathan Laine/Bloomberg/Getty Images

When Paris last hosted the Summer Olympics 100 years ago, organizers were so keen to bring athletes under the same roof that they built the first-ever Olympic Village.

It was spartan, made up of furnished wood huts, and it was razed shortly after.

The competition is back in the City of Lights a century later, but French officials are doing something completely different this time around. As part of their effort to make Paris 2024 the “most responsible and sustainable games in history,” they’re building something that’s meant to last.

“This village was thought up as a neighborhood, a neighborhood that is going to have a life afterwards,” said Georgina Grenon, the Paris 2024 director of sustainability. “Paris 2024 is renting it for a few months.”

Instead of rooming in apartments tailor-made for them, athletes in the Olympic Village this summer will be living in what will become someone else’s home or workplace.

Once the Paralympics have finished on September 8, the village — which contains 82 buildings — will be converted into office space for 6,000 workers and apartments to house another 6,000 people. (continued)

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Today’s Teenagers Have Invented a Language That Captures the World Perfectly

By Stephen Marche in the NYT. (Thanks to Put B.)

Mr. Marche is the author, most recently, of “The Next Civil War.”

My son just completed high school and when he leaves for college in the fall my life will change in ways I’m still struggling to contemplate. Among the things I’ll miss most are his lessons in teenage slang. My son has always been generous with me, and I’ve found the slang of his generation to be so much better and more useful than any that I’ve ever used. His slang has also offered me an accidental and useful portrait of how he and his generation see the world.

The primary value of slang has been to create linguistic shibboleths, a way to differentiate yourself quickly from other people. Sometimes the distinction was generational, sometimes it was racial, and sometimes it was ideological, but the slang itself was ultimately a form of social etiquette. From one generation to the next, the terms changed, but the meanings typically didn’t. New words were routinely adopted to express familiar concepts: one generation’s “cool” becomes another’s “dope” and so on.

Members of my son’s generation have a vastly superior approach to slang. They’ve devised a language that responds to the new and distinct reality they face.

Anyone with children, especially ones on the cusp of adulthood, has to reckon with the shameful fact that the world we’re leaving them is so much worse than the one we brought them into. My son’s slang reflects that: It’s a distinct language created for a society that’s characterized, online and off, by collapsing institutions, erosions in trust and a loss of faith in a shared sense of meaning.

“Mid” is an obvious example. I don’t think it even qualifies as teenage slang anymore — it’s too useful and, by now, too widespread. In my son’s usage, things that are mid are things that are essentially average or slightly below. You can’t really complain about them, but they produce no joy. They’re often the result of the refinement of market research to the exact level that tepid consumer acceptance is achieved. Everything in Starbucks falls into the category of “mid.” So does everything in an airport. It’s a brilliant, precise word for a world full of mild disappointments, where the corner bakery that used to do some things well and other things poorly has been reliably replaced by yet another Le Pain Quotidien. (continued)

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Commandments for hypocrites

Thanks to Bob P.

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Jamie Pederson honors Rep. Frank Chopp

Thanks to Mary Jane F.

Dear friends and neighbors, When Rep. Frank Chopp retires from the Legislature at the end of the year, he will leave a legacy of transformational change for the 43rd Legislative District and our entire state. Frank’s remarkable 30-year career in Olympia has helped improve countless lives. I am incredibly grateful for his service, partnership, and friendship over the years. Frank was a skilled community organizer when he was first elected to the House in 1994. In that election, Democrats suffered a catastrophic defeat, losing 29 seats and going from a 65-33 majority to a 62-36 minority. Frank led his caucus back to the majority, serving as Speaker of the House from 1999 to 2019. His leadership produced many historic moments for our state, including the passage of the marriage equality bill in 2012 (which he had just signed in the photo above). For the last few years, freed of his leadership duties, Frank focused tirelessly on housing and behavioral health. He has helped lead the legislature’s efforts in creating affordable housing through the Housing Trust Fund; expanding healthcare to children through the Apple Health for Kids program; and integrating behavioral health and healthcare systems and building out new facilities such as the UW Behavioral Health Hospital. He also played a key role in our state’s efforts to fund education, make our economy more fair, help workers organize, protect our air and water, and invest in critical infrastructure. On a personal level, Frank has been a mentor and friend who has helped shape my own approach to public service. I’d like to share three moments from my last three years serving in the House with Frank. In the 2011 session, Frank collaborated closely with me, Rep. (and now Speaker) Laurie Jinkins, and Sen. David Frockt to develop a challenge to a series of Tim Eyman-backed initiatives that purported to require 2/3 supermajorities for the Legislature to raise taxes. For nearly 20 years, those initiatives had prevented the Legislature from doing anything but cutting services to balance our budgets – and the Supreme Court had rejected multiple challenges on procedural grounds. But in our case, League of Education Voters v. State of Washington, the Supreme Court struck down all of those initiatives and held that the state constitution required that tax bills pass or fail based on the will of a majority of legislators in each chamber. That decision has freed us to make rational policy over the last 10 years as we worked to make our tax system more fair and adequate to meet the needs of the people of Washington. In the 2012 session, I was the House prime sponsor of the marriage equality bill.  We had agreed that the Senate would try to pass the bill first, because we did not know if we had a majority in support. My job was to help that effort by proving that we had the votes in the House to pass it. I needed 50 signatures to demonstrate that we had a majority – but I had several colleagues who said that they would vote for the bill but did not want to put their name on it. So for a few days, I was stuck at 49. As House Speaker, Frank had a strong policy of never sponsoring bills so that he could demonstrate that he led the chamber fairly. But when I went to him and asked him to be the 50th sponsor, he did not hesitate to break his self-imposed rule and thanked me for asking him. In the 2013 session, in the wake of the Sandy Hook school shooting, Frank and I worked closely on a bill requiring background checks for all gun purchases. He shut down floor action in the House for days as we worked furiously to marshal the votes for the bill. Although we were unsuccessful that year, the voters passed the bill as Initiative 594 in November 2014, and Washington began its sustained work to enact gun violence prevention legislation, continuing to this day. In all of those efforts – and many others – Frank’s passion, skilled organizing, and strong progressive values helped achieve success. I am certain that dozens of my legislative colleagues could tell similar stories about the issues on which he has improved the lives of people in our state. Frank, thank you for your service and commitment to the people of Washington. I will miss serving with you. Thanks for taking the time to read my newsletter. This will conclude my series of e-newsletters on the 2024 legislative session.  


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NYT letter about the tax code

Thanks to Mike C.: A good letter in 6/23/24  NY Times (that I did not write):

To the Editor:

In his anguished attempt to place the country’s woes at the doorstep of progressives, David Brooks ignores the single greatest creation of inequality in the U.S. today — the tax code. Progressives did not pass the Reagan tax cuts of 1981, nor the Bush tax cuts of 2001, nor the Trump tax cuts of 2017, which have shifted enormous wealth from the middle class to the very wealthy — a shift that shows no signs of abating anytime soon.

The economic divide in this country has not been unwittingly created. The divide is the result of concerted effort by a greedy class, not the educated class. The educated class, though, has been better at navigating the resulting system than the working class, an effect that the wealthy class has used to divide and conquer to insure that the educated and working classes do not finally work together to create a more just society.

John Q. Gale

Hartford, Conn.

The writer is a member of the Hartford City Council.

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Evidence refuting lab origin of COVID-19

Thanks to Ed M.

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The diagnosis is ……

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Moon rise a few nights ago

Thanks to Mary M.

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The “Say Hey” Kid

Thanks to Pam P.

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Feeling unseen?

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