Subscribe to Blog via Email
Join 192 other subscribersCategories
- Addiction (16)
- Advance Directives (12)
- Adventures (7)
- Advocacy (339)
- Aging Sites (169)
- Animals (165)
- Architecture (18)
- Art (155)
- artificial intelligence (6)
- Books (83)
- Business (126)
- Caregiving (22)
- CCRC Info (48)
- Charity (3)
- Civic Engagement Group (118)
- Climate (54)
- Communication (57)
- Community Engagement Group (6)
- Cooking (15)
- Crime (59)
- Dance (49)
- Dementia (98)
- Disabilities (23)
- drugs (7)
- Economics (54)
- Education (172)
- end of life (128)
- energy (6)
- Entertainment (104)
- environment (307)
- Essays (382)
- Ethics (25)
- fashion (1)
- Finance (76)
- Fitness (36)
- Food (74)
- Gardening (26)
- Gay rights/essays (3)
- Geography (1)
- Gifts (2)
- Government (518)
- Grief (34)
- Guns (36)
- happiness (135)
- Health (869)
- History (362)
- Holidays (77)
- Homeless (26)
- Hospice (8)
- Housing (9)
- Humor (1,003)
- Immigration (29)
- In the Neighborhood (479)
- Insurance (4)
- Justice (60)
- Kindness (44)
- language (8)
- Law (142)
- literature (22)
- Love (2)
- Media (59)
- Memory Loss (3)
- Mental Health (21)
- Military (45)
- Morality (29)
- motherhood (2)
- Movies (14)
- Music (216)
- Nature (180)
- nutrition (4)
- Obituaries (16)
- On Stage (8)
- Opera (23)
- Organ donation (1)
- Parks (36)
- Pets (14)
- Philanthropy (21)
- Philosophy (19)
- Photography (98)
- Plants (2)
- Poetry (50)
- Politics (598)
- Poverty (16)
- prayer (11)
- protests (29)
- Race (107)
- Recipes (1)
- Recycling (3)
- refugees (1)
- Religion (101)
- Remembrances (65)
- Retirement (17)
- Safety (63)
- Satire (59)
- Scams (41)
- Science and Technology (227)
- sexuality (1)
- Shopping (11)
- Singing (2)
- Skyline Info (59)
- sleep (10)
- Social justice (189)
- Space (3)
- Spiritual (17)
- Sport (18)
- Sports (57)
- Taxes (11)
- technology (14)
- terrorism (3)
- theater (15)
- Traffic (17)
- Transportation (76)
- Travel (33)
- Uncategorized (1,643)
- Vaccines (16)
- Volunteering (25)
- Voting (5)
- WACCRA (7)
- War (105)
- Women (8)
Subscribe to Blog via Email
Join 192 other subscribers
Skyline.Notices 2/13/20
Wanted
Irene Campbell (kiscinike@msn.com) would like to borrow a pasta maker to construct a dessert. If you can loan her one, send her an email to let her know.
Announcement
The Papyrus Store in Downtown Seattle is closing. Everything is 50% or more off. Valentine cards, sympathy cards, birthday cards, anniversary cards, Christmas cards, get well cards, thank you cards, etc., etc., are all still available as of last Sunday. Also, wrapping paper, ribbon, gift bags, and numerous other items. It’s located on one of the upper floors on the west side of Pacific Place, 600 Pine Street (right across from Nordstrom). Thanks to Mary Terrell for this information.
Query
Did anyone attend the meeting at the Frye on Tuesday evening who can tell Put Barber a little about what happened? (Or, pick up for him instead at the CEG meeting 4pm Friday?) Let him know by calling 206-325-8818 or emailing putnam.barber@gmail.com.
About this blog post
The goal for this blog posting is to increase the connections among people who live at Skyline in whatever ways make sense. Other kinds of announcements that fit with that goal are welcome.
On Wednesdays, Put Barber will compile any announcements sent to skyline.notices@gmail.com into a list of notices like the ones above, which will then be posted to “Skyline 725 Happenings” (https://www.skyline725.com/) early Thursday morning. Please include your contact information in your message and, if f you prefer to be contacted in some way (text, email, phone, or at a specific time), please include your preference as well.
Please send anything you would like to suggest to be included before 5 pm on Wednesdays to skyline.notices@gmail.com.
Paging Michael Bloomberg

By Thomas L Friedman in the NYT
My fellow Americans, we face a national emergency. Never before have we had a president so utterly lacking in personal integrity, so able to lie and abuse his powers with such impunity and so blindly backed by an amoral party, an unscrupulous attorney general and a media-fund-raising juggernaut. It is an engine of raw power that will cram anything the president says or does right down your throat.
James Carville had it exactly right when he noted on “Morning Joe” the other day that the only thing standing in the way of lasting damage by this machine to all that makes America unique and great is the Democrats’ nominating the right person to defeat Donald Trump.
We have to get this right. This is no ordinary time, no ordinary Republican Party, no ordinary incumbent, and it will require an extraordinary Democratic machine to triumph.
Because, without doubt, Russia and China also will be “voting” Trump 2020 — for three reasons: (1) Trump keeps America in turmoil and unable to focus on building the infrastructure we need to dominate the 21st century the way we did the 20th. (2) Both Beijing and Moscow know that Trump is so disliked by America’s key allies that he can never galvanize a global coalition against China or Russia. And (3) both Russia and China know that Trump is utterly transactional and will never challenge them on human rights abuses. Trump is their chump, and they will not let him go easily.
So who is the right Democratic candidate? Well, for starters I will tell you who it is not. It is not Bernie Sanders. On which planet in the Milky Way galaxy is an avowed “socialist” — who wants to take away the private health care coverage of some 150 million Americans and replace it with a gigantic, untested Medicare-for-All program, which he’d also extend to illegal immigrants — going to defeat the Trump machine this year? It will cast Sanders as Che Guevara — and it won’t even be that hard.
Yes, the failures of American capitalism to deliver inclusive growth, which have propelled the Sanders campaign and animated his followers, require urgent attention by our next president. But Sanders, in key cases, has the wrong solutions to the right problems. He’s the wrong candidate to take down Trump.
Please, Democrats, don’t tell me you need Sanders’s big, ill-thought-through, revolutionary grand schemes to get inspired and mobilized for this election. You want a revolution? I’ll give you a revolution: four more years of Donald Trump, unencumbered by the need to get re-elected. That will be a revolution! And it will do permanent damage to the institutions and norms that have sustained this country since its founding, not to mention our environment, which Trump has been selling off to oil, gas and mining companies at an alarming pace.
So, who is the right candidate and what is the right strategy?
On strategy, we know the formula that works, because it already has: Appeal to independents, moderate Republicans and suburban women. These are the constituencies that did not like Hillary Clinton and were ready to give Trump a chance in 2016 — but abandoned him in 2018 and delivered the House of Representatives to the Democrats, and then also two governorships in red states.
If Democrats can choose a candidate who can hold the core Democratic base and also appeal to these same independents, moderate Republicans and suburban women in the key swing states, they can absolutely defeat Trump.
How do you do that as a candidate?
For starters, by stressing national unity, personal integrity and a willingness to pursue bipartisanship whenever the other side is ready. A lot of Americans are worried sick that Trump is tearing the country in half.
As Larry Diamond, editor of The Journal of Democracy, pointed out to me, several studies he’s been publishing show that the best way to defeat illiberal populism is not by trying to out-polarize the polarizer in chief but rather through broad, inclusive electoral strategies that pragmatically address the economic and social concerns of voters, including those who had previously voted for the populist.
That was the approach that enabled the secular opposition to defeat the party of Turkey’s autocratic president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, in municipal elections last year in Istanbul and other cities. A similar depolarizing approach powered the victory of Greece’s liberal-centrist New Democracy party over the ruling left-wing populist Syriza in national elections last year.
You also do it by repeating every hour every day — with evidence — that Trump is out to destroy Obamacare through the courts, which means eliminating its coverage for pre-existing conditions, and only the Democrats will save it and improve it.
You do it by not only talking about how to redivide the pie — which we need to do — but by also talking about how to grow the pie, how to create more taxpayers and how to inspire more innovators. Ours is a capitalist country. Americans admire successful entrepreneurs. Let’s praise job creators and risk-takers — as long as they and their companies pay their taxes. You want more and better jobs, you need more Steve Jobs.
You do it by celebrating the growing economy that Barack Obama reignited and Trump continued, while making clear that it still needs work. Too much of the Trump tax cuts have gone to companies and the most wealthy, with virtually nothing invested in infrastructure — roads, ports, schools, bandwidth, scientific research — or affordable housing, which we must have for inclusive prosperity.
You do it by hitting Trump hard on the environment, but not focusing just on “climate change,” which is an abstraction for most people. Trump is unfit to serve four more years because of how he has removed so many protections for the water and air America’s kids drink and breathe every day.
And you do it by supporting a balanced approach to immigration reform — a high wall, with a big gate.
I was glad to see candidates with this kind of message, like Amy Klobuchar and Pete Buttigieg, trending better in Iowa and New Hampshire. It showed that lots of Democrats are searching in this direction.
But there is one candidate on the Democratic side who not only has a track record of supporting all those issues but also has the resources to build a machine big enough to take on the Trump machine.
This candidate also has the toughness to take on Trump, because while Trump was pretending to be a C.E.O. on the show “The Apprentice,” this candidate was actually building one of the most admired global companies as a real C.E.O.
This candidate is not cuddly, he is not always politically correct and he will not always tell you what you want to hear — or try to outbid you on how many free services he’ll give away. He’s made mistakes, especially around stop-and-frisk policing in New York City, which disproportionately targeted black and brown men and for which he recently apologized.
His mistakes, though, have to be weighed against a record of courageously speaking out and devoting enormous personal resources to virtually every progressive cause — gun control, abortion rights, climate change, Planned Parenthood, education reform for predominantly minority schools, affordable housing, income inequality and tax reform. And he has vowed as president to focus on building black wealth, not just ending poverty.
And this candidate knows how to get stuff done — he can fight this fire at the scale of the fire. His team has for years used social networks to promote progressive issues to centrist and conservative audiences. He won’t cede the internet/Facebook/Twitter battlefield to Trump’s team, who are killers in that space.
And this candidate is now rising steadily in the polls. This candidate is Michael Bloomberg. This candidate has Trump very worried.
Yes, Sanders is also polling well against Trump, but the Trump machine has not begun to focus on him yet — it hasn’t begun bombing Facebook with ads about how Sanders honeymooned in the Soviet Union.
Sitting here today, Bloomberg — paired with a progressive vice-presidential candidate who can appeal to Sanders’s voters — has the best chance to carry the day.
In an age when political extremists go all the way, and moderates tend to just go away, Bloomberg has the right stuff — a moderate progressive with a heart of gold but the toughness of a rattlesnake — for what is going to be an incredibly big, brutal task: making Donald Trump a one-term president.
(Disclosure: Bloomberg Philanthropies has donated to Planet Word, the museum my wife is building in Washington, to promote reading and literacy.)
Posted in Politics
Comments Off on Paging Michael Bloomberg
Chinese Opera in Volunteer Park
Posted in Opera
Comments Off on Chinese Opera in Volunteer Park
CEG Meeting Agenda, 2/14/20
February 14, 2020 – Mt. Baker Room
- Opening – Put Barber, Facilitator
- Past Events
- Jamielyn Wheeler, Common Purpose – Jan. 22 (and future dates)
- Carri Campbell, Seattle Public Schools Director of Communications – Jan. 24
- First Hill Improvement Association Meeting – Jan. 30
- David Domke lectures – Mt. Baker Room – February 4th, 5th. and 7th
- Health Care online forum – Feb 8
- Coming Events
- Presidential Primary Soapbox – February 21st (3:30 PM) – Mt. Baker Room
- Issues: Which candidates should be included (all; people who are campaigning; candidates with higher polling numbers)?
- WACCRA Update and Annual Meeting – March 7, 10-12 at Emerald Heights
- Robert Zarate, Director of Bishop Lewis House – March 18, 3:30 (P&J)
- Knute Berger, editor-at-large, Crosscut – March 31, 11:00 AM
- Is there anything else to announce?
- Presidential Primary Soapbox – February 21st (3:30 PM) – Mt. Baker Room
- Discussions
- Is there a future for CEG?
- Do we want to do anything about the revisions to Washington’s redistricting commission (HB 2575)? Other pending legislation?
- Unscheduled possibilities (for January and later)
- Possible speakers of interest:
- Anne McCullough, ED FHIA?
- Stuart Elway – Seattle based political pollster
- Other suggestion, ideas, comments, and initiatives….?
- Possible speakers of interest:
Next Meeting: March 13
Posted in Civic Engagement Group
Comments Off on CEG Meeting Agenda, 2/14/20
43rd Legislative District TOWN HALL
Saturday, February 22nd 2020 1:30 pm – 3:00 pm at Seattle First Baptist Church; 43rd Legislative District TOWN HALL
Jamie Pedersen, Frank Chopp, and Nicole Macri will give an update on the 2020 Legislative Session and hear y our comments, concerns, and questions.
Posted in Civic Engagement Group, Politics
Comments Off on 43rd Legislative District TOWN HALL
What goes up must come down
Thanks to Mike C. for the great photo!

Posted in In the Neighborhood, Photography
Comments Off on What goes up must come down
Skyline author and his beloved Corgi

We have talented authors among us. I recently found out this memoir – congratulations Hollis! The paperback and kindle version can be found on Amazon.
Meet the 71-year-old staging a one-man protest in his Trump-loving retirement community – The Villages in Florida
Ed McGinty is a rare protester in the Trump stronghold of The Villages. “When Trump won, it changed the whole ballgame for me,” McGinty says. “I thought to myself, ‘This was supposed to be a joke. What’s wrong with these people?”
By Brittany Shammas in the Washington Post.
Thanks to Michael C. for sending this along.
For most of his life, Ed McGinty kept his political beliefs to himself.
Raised Irish Catholic in Philadelphia, the 71-year-old retired real estate broker has always been a Democrat, just like his parents before him. But the last time he remembers being especially politically motivated was when Hubert Humphrey ran against Richard Nixon in 1968. After that, he’d wake up the morning after Election Day, find out George W. Bush or another Republican had won and say, “Okay, well, back to work.”
Then Donald Trump was elected.
“When Trump won, it changed the whole ballgame for me,” McGinty told The Washington Post. “I thought to myself, ‘This was supposed to be a joke. What’s wrong with these people?’ ”
In the three years since then, the once-quiet political observer has transformed into the best-known Trump protester in The Villages, a sprawling, meticulously planned and maintained retirement community that lies about 45 miles northwest of Orlando. McGinty’s daily vigil with signs blasting the president as a “SEXUAL PREDATOR” (among other things) has drawn ire in the Trump-loving Florida town he has called home since 2016. It has also brought viral fame.
Diagnosed with dementia, she documented her wishes for the end. Then her retirement home said no.

Ed Note: A common fear in aging is the onset of dementia–something not unfamiliar to all of us. Should we all have a dementia directive–the answer in my opinion is “yes.” But will it be honored–the answer is “it depends.” The ethics in this new area of discussion will be touched upon in a talk at Skyline coming up on Tuesday February 18th from 2-3:30 PM titled “Our Lives Our Choices.”
By JoNel Aleccia
Thanks to Allan A. for sending this in.
When she worked on the trading floor of the Chicago Board Options Exchange, long before cellphone calculators, Susan Saran could perform complex math problems in her head. Years later, as one of its top regulators, she was in charge of investigating insider trading deals.
Today, she struggles to remember multiplication tables.
Seven years ago, at age 57, Saran was diagnosed with frontotemporal dementia, a progressive, fatal brain disease. She had started forgetting things, losing focus at the job she had held for three decades. Then tests revealed the grim diagnosis.
“It was absolutely devastating,” Saran, 64, said. “It changed everything. My job ended. I was put out on disability. I was told to establish myself in an [extended] community before I was unable to care for myself.”
Early signs of dementia that family members may notice
So Saran uprooted herself. She sold her home in 2015 and found a bucolic retirement community in rural New York whose website promised “comprehensive health care for life.”
And now, she is fighting with that community over her right to determine how she will die — even though she has made her wishes known in writing. Similar fights could ensnare millions of Americans with dementia and similar end-of-life directives in coming years.
Posted in Advance Directives, CCRC Info, Dementia, end of life
Comments Off on Diagnosed with dementia, she documented her wishes for the end. Then her retirement home said no.
After 91 years
Thanks Michael C. for the photo and sad memory

Posted in Business, History, In the Neighborhood
Comments Off on After 91 years
Olympic Tower crane erection

Just a reminder of the URL. The view is better from the Bistro.
Posted in Uncategorized
Comments Off on Olympic Tower crane erection
This orangutan saw a man wading in snake-infested water and decided to offer a helping hand
Thanks to Pam P.

(CNN)The natural world never fails to surprise us, and this moving encounter between an orangutan and a man in Borneo has melted hearts all over the world.Amateur photographer Anil Prabhakar captured the fleeting moment, in which one of the Indonesian island’s critically endangered apes stretched out its hand to help a man out of snake-infested water.
Prabhakar was on a safari with friends at a conservation forest run by the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation(BOS) when he witnessed the scene.He told CNN: “There was a report of snakes in that area so the warden came over and he’s clearing snakes.
Posted in Nature
Comments Off on This orangutan saw a man wading in snake-infested water and decided to offer a helping hand
What’s a true apology?
Ed note: We see a lot of “non-apology apologies” in the media and may have been involved some half-baked efforts ourselves. Let’s face it. It’s hard to admit fault! Elton John and his lyricist Bernie Taupin had it right, “It’s sad, so sad. Why can’t we talk it over? Oh, it seems to me that sorry seems to be the hardest word.”
A bit of quick research defines a true apology as follows:
These are the elements of a good apology:
- Say I’m sorry, not I’m sorry but …
- Face to face is best, phone next best–email/text the worst
- Own up to the mistake – the person must know you are accepting responsibility for your hurtful action
- Describe what happened. This in itself may help clarify any misunderstanding
- Outline a plan to help make things better
- Admit you were wrong
- Humbly ask for forgiveness
Things to avoid in an apology:
- Justifying your action
- Saying “I’m sorry you were hurt by my words/actions” but not admitting they were wrong
- Pushing back on the feelings of the other person – their truth is theirs, yours is yours
- Going off point and talking about other things
It was refreshing to read about Alaska Airline’s apology, albeit it 20 years overdue, for loss of lives in a crash in flight 261. Alaska admirably admitted its errors to the families and publically humbly apologized. Click here for the article.
Posted in Essays
Comments Off on What’s a true apology?
HIDDEN COMMON GROUND INITIATIVE: HEALTH CARE: HOW CAN WE BRING COSTS DOWN WHILE GETTING THE CARE WE NEED?
Thanks to Mary Jane F.
Please join us for a Common Ground for Action (CGA) online deliberative forum on Saturday February 8th at 2pm ET/11am PT to discuss “Health Care: How Can We Bring Costs Down While Getting the Care We Need?”
TO REGISTER CLICK HERE: https://tinyurl.com/w62hvuw
During our deliberation, we’ll be talking about how to fix our We’ll be talking about actions and drawbacks to reducing health care costs by three different options:
(1) Ensuring health care for all: All Americans deserve health care, so let’s cover everybody, but doing so would eliminate private insurance
(2) Build on what we have: Improve the mix of public and private options by revising the ACA, but doing so keeps private insurance in place and wastes billions of dollars on advertising and paperwork
(3) Let people make their own choices: Reduce government involvement in health care by allowing stripped down insurance or no coverage, but doing could lead to everyone paying more and people receiving sub-par care.
If you haven’t had a chance to review the issue guide, you can find a downloadable PDF on the National Issues Forums Institute website: https://www.nifi.org/es/issue-guide/issue-advisory-2019-health-care
If you’ve never participated in a CGA forum, please watch the “How To Participate” video before joining. You can find the video link here https://vimeo.com/findcommonground
Read Public Agenda’s report on the hidden common ground on where American’s are seeing eye-to-eye on health care reform: https://www.publicagenda.org/reports/where-americans-see-eye-to-eye-on-h…
Posted in Health
Comments Off on HIDDEN COMMON GROUND INITIATIVE: HEALTH CARE: HOW CAN WE BRING COSTS DOWN WHILE GETTING THE CARE WE NEED?
Skyline.Notices 2/6/20
Announcements
I have finished my library copy of The Power and the Glory which is the book club selection for Monday night’s discussion. If you would like to read it this weekend, call me: Sue VanLeuven – 1503 or 206-407-1923
From FHIA: Join the First Hill Improvement Association and your neighbors at the Frye Art Museum (Terry & Cherry) at 5:30pm on Thursday, February 13th for the first of three community visioning events to share ideas and priorities for the future of our neighborhood greenway. Free and open to the public. You can free and open to the public. You can RSVP to the event on Eventbrite
Information available
Barb Williams has put a few copies of LifeLine, the newslatter of the National Continuing Care Residents Association (NaCCRA) in the WaCCRA box on the shelf at the east end of the Skybox room on the 4th floor. The newsletter contains news and commentary and descriptions of other CCRCs across the country.
KP Sr Caucus tomorrow
A ride to the Kaiser-Permanente “Senior Caucus” will be leaving from the circular drive on 5 at 9:30 Friday morning. There will be room for four residents. If you would like to be part of the group, just come down to the lobby a little early (first-come, first-served). The topic this month is an overview of the newly formed Group Health Washington Foundation. Put Barber has organized this expedition and will be going.
Follow up
The request for loan of a pasta-maker worked. And pasta has been made!
About this blog post
The goal for Skyline.Notices is to increase connections among people who live at Skyline in whatever ways make sense. Announcements of all sorts that fit that goal are welcome.
Put Barber will compile any announcements sent to skyline.notices@gmail.com into a list, which will then be posted to “Skyline 725 Happenings” (https://www.skyline725.com/) early Thursday morning. Please include your contact information in your message and, if f you prefer to be contacted in some way (text, email, phone) or at a specific time, please include your preference as well.
Please send anything you would like to suggest to be included before 5 pm on Wednesdays to skyline.notices@gmail.com.
Wayfinding in Seattle
Thanks to Barb W.
Posted in In the Neighborhood
Comments Off on Wayfinding in Seattle
Need some smiles?
Smiles and love – click here. From Donna D
Posted in happiness, Uncategorized
Comments Off on Need some smiles?

