Understanding American for the Non-American Black: American Tribalism

At the Skyline book club last night, Americanah by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie was discussed. How does a non-American black begin to understand our tribal system in the USA? (By the way, if you like to read and discuss the books, please come at 7:30 PM each month on the second Monday in the Sky Club Lounge. Find the book list on the pages above or give Don Phillips a call). Adichie wrote these thoughts about our tribal system as a Nigerian black coming to our country with fresh eyes and an incredible command of our language.

“In American, tribalism is alive and well. There are four kinds – class, ideology, region, and race. First, class. Pretty easy. Rich folk and poor folk.

“Second, ideology. Liberals and conservatives. They don’t merely disagree on political issues, each side believes the other is evil. Intermarriage is discouraged and on the rare occasion that it happens, is considered remarkable.

“Third, region. The North and the South. The two sides fought a civil war and tough stains from that war remain. The North looks down on the South while the South resents the North.

“Finally, race. There’s a ladder of racial hierarchy in America. White is always on top, specifically White Anglo-Saxon Protestant, otherwise know as WASP, and American Black is always on the bottom, and what’s in the middle depends on time and place…Or as that marvelous rhyme goes: if you’re white, you’re all right; if you’re brown, stick around; is you’re black, get back…..The longer you are here, the more you start to get it.”

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Warning! Stay inside due to unhealthy smoke haze

Haze obscures the Seattle skyline and most of the color, shot from Bellevue’s Somerset neighborhood, Monday, August 13, 2018. (Ellen M. Banner / The Seattle Times)

From the Seattle Times today: “Regional wildfires have made the air quality so bad that five public-health agencies are jointly warning the public to beware of the haze.

“The Puget Sound Clean Air Agency (PSCAA), alongside Kitsap Public Health District, King County and Seattle Public Health, Snohomish Health District, and the Tacoma Pierce County Health District, are predicting air quality to reach levels considered unhealthy for some vulnerable groups through Tuesday.

“A news release from all five agencies says high-pressure in the upper atmosphere is pushing smoke from fires in British Columbia toward the ground in the King, Kitsap, Pierce and Snohomish county areas.

“The haze could seriously impact children, the elderly, pregnant women, people who have had strokes, and those with heart and lung issues such as asthma.

(Gif from firesmoke.ca)
(Gif from firesmoke.ca)
 Agencies are advising people belonging to sensitive groups to stay inside, limit physical activity, close windows, avoid using the air-conditioning that intake fresh air from the outside and use masks such as N95 or N100 rated masks that can efficiently filter airborne particles.

“It’s coming from the British Columbia area, there’s a bunch burning in that area,” said Art Gaebel, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service.

“The air quality is expected to return to “good” or “moderate” conditions by Wednesday because winds on Tuesday are expected to clean the air.

“By tomorrow evening or Wednesday we should see a gradual wind shift,” he said. “More of a Southerly flow that will push it back into Canada.”

 

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What’s on your “must read” list

Ed Note: Donald Hall, a former poet laureate of the United States who found a universe of meaning in the apples, ox carts and ordinary folk of his beloved rural New England, died on June 24th of this year. I’ve not yet read any of his essays on aging but the reviews are glowing. What books do you have on your “must read” list.

From a reviewer: “Burnished by the honesty which comes with extreme age and mellowed by the inevitable absence of the loved ones who have preceded them, writers approaching their own demise have much to offer the perceptive reader. This collection of posthumously published short essays and epigrammatic vignettes is surprisingly lighthearted despite Hall’s descriptions of his physical infirmities. Encountering these prose musings often seems like discovering a cache of Rembrandt’s paintings tucked away in a deceased grandparent’s dusty attic. These final fragments of Hall’s long and productive literary life are worthy of contemplation by readers approaching the end of their own allotted spans with either dread or anticipation.”

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Have you signed up for Smart 911?

Smart911 is available in Seattle and unincorporated areas of King County. You can sign up today at Smart911.com.

smart-911-logo
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The politician with a problem

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In a Haze About e-Cigarettes? 5 Things to Know

Ed note: The battery powered nicotine vaporizing delivery system called e-cigarettes is gaining in popularity. There are many unknowns. How much safer is it than cigarette smoking? How harmful is second hand “vape.” It’s one more addiction for our addiction prone populace. It’s focusing on kids! Why? I guess it’s good marketing and the flavors. But why isn’t this regulated like a drug?

From Medscape: “If you’ve ever walked down the sidewalk and passed through the scented plume of someone vaping away on an e-cigarette, you’ve had a firsthand encounter with what is essentially a nationwide experiment with our health. Poorly regulated and largely untested, these products are nonetheless experiencing a meteoric rise in popularity.

In 2016, it was estimated that 9 million Americans regularly used e-cigarettes[1]; middle- and high-school students comprised 2 million of those users.[2] And in 2015, 5% of middle-schoolers and 16% of high-schoolers reported use.[2]

This trend has added urgency to the search for answers about these products, what they may be doing to our bodies, and what can be done to curtail their use. Here, Medscape presents our review of some of the latest data.

How Much Nicotine Do e-Cigarettes Contain?

e-cigarettes use a battery-powered system that produces an inhalable aerosol by heating a liquid that includes nicotine, flavoring, and additives. The resulting aerosol vapor (hence, the terms “vaping” for the act of using these products and “vapers” for those who use them) is designed to avoid the carcinogenic byproducts of tobacco, which has led to their being marketed as a healthier choice than smoking.

These products do not stint, however, on the nicotine. The most popular e-cigarette product among adolescents is Juul, which offers users accompanying pods consisting of 5% liquid nicotine by volume, approximately double that of many other top-selling products.[3]

One of the key criticisms of e-cigarettes is that their often sweet and candy-like flavors are a thinly veiled inducement to adolescents. Indeed, in polling, nearly 80% of adolescent users say they would not use the products if they weren’t available in flavors.[4] In addition, younger users may be drawn in by the fact that inhalation is less harsh than burned tobacco, which, when combined with a highly addictive delivery system, is “likely to be particularly problematic for public health.”[5]

These products pose an additional indirect risk to children and adolescents. Nearly half of adults participating in a 2016 survey were not sure whether vaping around children exposed them to nicotine, and a majority did not know that the released vapor can remain on household surfaces.[6] Unsurprisingly, accidental ingestion of nicotine-containing products has been on the rise.[7,8]Nicotine poisoning can result in a full spectrum of adverse events, from mild nausea and agitation to coma and death.[9]

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Construction begins to the NE and NW

Here is the 800 Columbia lot to our NW.  Internal fences are down; new perimeter fence up.  Note alley is blocked and no-parking signs on Columbia.  Progress photos will be taken from this same spot, the NW corner of our 26th floor deck.

800 lot clearing 2018-08-09 Here is the dig across from the Frye.  No more parking on the west side of Terry.Frye pit 2018-08-09

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Organ donation myths – by ZDoggMD

Ed note: ZDoggMD posts many satirical and funny videos about the medical scene. Working in the ER and ICU he has many experiences to relate. This one however is a serious commentary on organ donation. The oldest known donor, by the way, is 93 years old. 

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Common scams – a primer

From The Skyliner, December 2015 by Dr. Jerry Lewis, Skyline Resident

Although the Federal Trade Commission is the focal point for collecting data on scams, most scams are never reported because of embarrassment from falling for one or lack of information on how to report them. It is estimated that 13 million Americans are victims of identity theft annually and many more are victims of other costly scams.
Common scams targeting seniors include lottery scams, particularly the “Jamaican Lottery” that threatens to harm you and your family if you do not pay the supposedly owed taxes or other costs entailed with your “win.” It’s important to remember that, by law, Americans cannot participate in foreign lotteries, and of course, if you did not buy a ticket you cannot win! Also popular is the “Grand-parent Scam,” where a caller says they are a relative (often a grandchild) who is now in trouble in a foreign country and has been hospitalized or put in jail and needs money to be released. They urge you to send money by Western Union, MoneyGram or a Green Dot card. These money transfer businesses rarely question your intentions.
A variation of this scam is an email using the name of one of your friends saying he is in a foreign country, was robbed and needs money to get home, which he will repay promptly when back in the US. Note: the scammer has never lost his passport because that would mean he would have to work through the US Embassy, which would recognize this scam. These hackers have gained access to your email address book. Tip-offs are errors in grammar and spelling or using the exact name in your friend’s email address, whose usual name is shorter (e.g. using “Ronald” for your friend “Ron”). If you are a victim of this scam, contact your network administrator and change the password to your email server or online accounts you suspect have been hacked.

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William Ruckelshaus speaks out

From the Washington Post – by William Ruckelshaus

“President Donald Trump is acting with a desperation I’ve seen only once before in Washington: 45 years ago when President Richard Nixon ordered the firing of special Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox. Nixon was fixated on ending the Watergate investigation, just as Trump wants to shut down the special counsel’s investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election.

“A lesson for the president from history: It turned out badly for Nixon. Not only could he not derail the investigation, but also, 10 months later, he was forced to resign the presidency.

“In fact, in some ways, Trump is conducting himself more frantically than Nixon, all the while protesting his innocence. Nixon fought to the end because he knew that what was on the tape recordings that the prosecutor wanted would incriminate him. We don’t know what Trump is hiding, if anything. But if he is innocent of any wrongdoing, why not let special counsel Robert Mueller do his job and prove it?

“In October 1973, Nixon ordered Attorney General Elliott Richardson to fire Cox. Richardson refused and resigned. As deputy attorney general and next in line, I was ordered by the president to fire Cox; I also refused and resigned. Cox was finally fired by Solicitor General Robert Bork. The result is what came to be known as the Saturday Night Massacre.

William Ruckelshaus
William Ruckelshaus

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A trendy place

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Dow Constantine, King County Executive speaks at Skyline

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A place for hope

Image result for marshall ramsey cartoons bush

It’s been a while since Barbara Bush, former First Lady of the United States, passed away in the spring, but a lot of people still are living on the hope she bequeathed to them. Throughout their long lives in the public eye, George and Barbara Bush mourned the loss of their daughter, Robin, at age 3, and talked openly of their confident faith that they would see her again when they moved from this world. This cartoon by Marshall Ramsey of the Jackson, Mississippi, Clarion Ledger captured that spirit. Indeed, it made such a powerful connection with the human spirit – especially with parents who have lost a child – that it quickly went viral. It was cited on TV networks coverage of Mrs. Bush’s funeral and was reprinted and re-tweeted across the land. Marshall Ramsey wrote a column in USA TODAY about the impact of his cartoon, quoting a letter from a father who had lost a college-age daughter to a car accident: “My heart swelled as I took note of (the cartoon) because of our own loss and our desire to be able to see our own daughter again.” After describing her loss he said: “I just hope that at some point in time we are able to greet her as indicated by your touching artwork. Thank you for such a heartwarming moment.” Surely there is no greater pain for a parent than losing a child.

Ramsey said he’s drawn many obituary cartoons, usually well received, but what made this one different? “Because I didn’t approach it as a cartoonist. I drew it as a dad.” He had read about the Bushes and the loss of their daughter. “Here was a person who had everything, yet had suffered the hardest loss a parent can face. I thought about my own kids, how much pain I would feel if I were her and how I would hope for healing.” And then the idea came to him. It worked because it connected with the hope and faith that sustains us all. “Suffer little children, and forbid them not to come unto Me: for of such is the kingdom of heaven.” (Matthew 19:14)

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The danger of conspiracy theories in the age of social media

“Q” is a secret anonymous deep state individual with the highest security clearance. He (or she) is sending cryptic messages to his followers – the adherents to the Qanon conspiracy theory. According to him the Mueller investigation is fake and actually run by Trump in order to uncover a coup attempt by Obama, Clinton and others involved in such things a child sex trafficking. No, I didn’t make this up! Q supporters are now showing up at Trump rallies promoting violence. Q has not been mentioned by Trump one way or the other so far except to say they don’t condone violence.

Another bizarre and so sad theory is that the Sandy Hook killings were faked. Alex Jones, a powerful media commentator has promoted this theory which has influenced his followers to harass the mourning families. From the NYT: “In the five years since Noah Pozner was killed at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., death threats and online harassment have forced his parents, Veronique De La Rosa and Leonard Pozner, to relocate seven times. They now live in a high-security community hundreds of miles from where their 6-year-old is buried.

“I would love to go see my son’s grave and I don’t get to do that, but we made the right decision,” Ms. De La Rosa said in a recent interview. Each time they have moved, online fabulists stalking the family have published their whereabouts.”

The family is finally suing Jones, however he has filed a counter suit for defamation of character. So much hate and harm has been done that You Tube and Facebook have finally taken Jones postings off their sites. Click here for the full article.

I saw an interview lately where the harms of Facebook were felt to be greater than the benefits – and that it should be closed. What do you think? What kind of policing of “free speech” is realistic, useful and adherent to the first amendment? How can facts so easily get distorted or even disappear?

Posted in Essays, Law, Media, Politics, Scams | 1 Comment

Hard to answer

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ELVIS, EVERGREENS & UMBRELLAS – Seattle films & more

50 YEARS OF SEATTLE ON THE BIG SCREEN

FILMS FEATURED IN THE RECENT PRESENTATION at Skyline

  • It Happened at the World’s Fair, starring Elvis Presley
  • Cinderella Liberty, starring James Caan and Marsha Mason
  • The Slender Thread, starring Sidney Poitier and Anne Bancroft
  • Parallax View, starring Warren Beatty
  • McQ, starring John Wayne
  • Scorchy, starring Connie Stevens
  • The Fabulous Baker Boys, starring Jeff Bridges and Michelle Pfeiffer
  • Sleepless in Seattle, starring Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan
  • Prefontaine, starring Jared Leto
  • The Ring, starring Naomi Watts
  • Practical Magic, starring Sandra Bullock and Nicole Kidman
  • 10 Things I Hate About You, starring Heath Ledger and Julia Stiles
  • Singles, starring Kyra Sedgewick, Campbell Scott and Matt Dillon
  • Assassins, starring Sylvester Stallone and Antonio Banderas
  • Safety Not Guaranteed, starring Aubrey Plaza and Mark Duplass
  • Grassroots, starring Jason Biggs and Joel David Moore
  • Four Minute Mile, starring Kelly Blatz and Richard Jenkins
  • Late Autumn, starring Tang Wei and Hyun Bin
  • 21 and Over, starring Miles Teller and Skylar Astin
  • Lucky Them, starring Tony Collette and Thomas Haden Church
  • Switchmas, starring Elliott Gould and David Deluise
  • Laggies, starring Keira Knightley and Chloe Grace Moretz
  • Captain Fantastic, starring Viggo Mortensen

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The Terraces gets 5 star ratings in all categories

In the categories of health, quality, fire, staffing, etc. Skilled Nursing (floors 7 & 8) in the Terraces at Skyline scores in the top 10% in their evaluation on the Medicare.gov website. If you wish to look at the details from the last inspection earlier this year click here.  You can see from clicking through the report that the “deficiencies” noted were somewhat minor (though detailed) and not difficult to correct. The DSHS inspections are unannounced and occur over several days. Kudos to Jim Bennett and all the employees at the Terraces!

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Tariffs affecting the farmer – speaking to the Presidnet

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Fascism a Warning – by Madeleine Albright

Fascism: A Warning

Ed note; We must remember Mussolini, Hitler, Stalin and Milosevic in order to understand democracy and how it can be eroded. This book was given to me – one that I didn’t know about. It’s one though that I think all Americans should read in order help us to not repeat history. Below is one of the many notable passages which lead from Mussolini to the current world leaders.

From Albright’s Fascism: “Mussolini observed that in seeking to accumulate power it is wise to do so in the manner of one plucking a chicken – feather by feather – so each squawk is heard apart from every other and the whole process is kept as muted as possible ….Most often, the signposts that should alert us are disguised: the altered constitution that passes for reform, the attacks on a free press justified by security; the dehumanization of others masked as a defense of virtue, or the hollowing out of a democratic system so that all is erased but the label.”

Posted in Books, History, Politics | 1 Comment

“Sessions Vows To Protect All Deeply Held Religious Bigotry”

Ed Note: In case you’re not familiar with The Onion, it specializes in political satire where there happens to be so much fertile ground these days. 

From the Onion: “WASHINGTON—Standing firm in his commitment to one of the nation’s guiding principles, Attorney General Jeff Sessions went on record Wednesday vowing to protect the deeply held religious bigotry of all Americans. “Dating back to colonial times, America has been a place where individuals are free to live in accordance with their own personal prejudices, and I’m dedicated to ensuring our people retain the right to discriminate against others based upon their religion,” said Sessions, condemning what he described as secular trends within society that threaten the freedom to treat people as second-class citizens if they adhere to a different faith or no faith at all. “I was raised in a devoutly intolerant household, so I understand the importance of being allowed to hate in whatever way one sees fit. To me, that’s what being an American is all about.” In his closing remarks, Sessions warned that surrendering the right to discriminate according to religion could be the start of a slippery slope that ends with Americans losing their sacred right to discriminate according to gender, sexual orientation, or even race.”

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Three Identical Strangers – triplets separated at birth find each other

Three Identical Strangers is now playing locally at the Regal Meridian 16. Are any of you adopted? I know some here at Skyline have adopted children (one of our three is). What if your adopted child turned out to be a triplet separated at birth and found out at age 18 of the existence of two look-alike brothers? This movie is a true documentary with intriguing twists and turns. It raises the age old question of nature or nurture – which is more important? There is no answer here, but several clues are telling. The scandal of why these children were separated unfolds as the movie progresses. If you have your own experience with adoption and wish to share it, please do!

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Tennis and Blue Angels this weekend

STC

This Friday, Saturday and Sunday you can enjoy high level tennis at the Washington State Open which is held at Seattle Tennis Club in Madison Park. The grounds and stands are open to the public. There is no entrance fee. It’s also right on the approach path of the Blue Angels as they zoom right over the startled tennis players. There is handicapped access but parking is tough. Uber is recommended.

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Quote poetry carefully

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Alan Alda tweets about his Parkinson’s and speaks on NPR

From NPR: He encouraged people who receive a Parkinson’s diagnosis not to be “immobilized by fear.”

He requested a test after he noticed that he had a symptom of the disease that he read about in The New York Times – he was acting out his dreams while he was asleep. Alda told CBS that he threw a pillow at his wife while he was dreaming about throwing a sack of potatoes at an attacker. The Times described this as “one of the strongest prediagnostic symptoms” for Parkinson’s.

When he was diagnosed, he said he had no other symptoms. He said that “if there’s anything I can do, I want to do it, before things start to show up.”

The actor also hosted Scientific American Frontiers on PBS for more than a decade.

Alda has continued to act since his diagnosis, and he’s not alone in Hollywood. For example, actor Michael J. Fox was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease in 1991and has continued to act, including playing a character with Parkinson’s disease on The Michael J. Fox Show. He started The Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson’s Research, which says it has funded more than $800 million in research for a cure.

According to the Parkinson’s Foundation, symptoms include tremors and balance problems. “The cause remains largely unknown,” the foundation said, and “although there is no cure, treatment options vary and include medications and surgery.”

Some 930,000 people in the U.S. are expected to be living with Parkinson’s by 2020, according to a Parkinson’s Foundation study.

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AgeWise King County – advisory commitee’s activities

A useful website is from AgeWise King County. I attended a meeting of their advisory committee and found it quite interesting. You can get their updates from SUBSCRIBE FOR FREE

In the August  Issue: Note the article on Leaving Your Legacy

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