Why Does This House Have a Skybridge?

Developments with a skybridge or hallway connecting two homes have been popping up all over Seattle in recent years.

A skybridge connecting two homes in Seattle — one single-family home and one smaller attached accessory dwelling unit, or A.D.U.

By Jane C. Hu in the NYT – Photographs by Ruth Fremso – (Thanks to Tim B.)

A peculiar architectural feature has spread throughout Seattle. On a single lot, you’ll see three houses, one somewhat bigger than the others, and between the big one and a smaller one is a walkway. Sometimes it’s on the ground floor, and sometimes it’s through the air — in other words, a skybridge.

On paper, what you’re looking at is a single-family home and two accessory dwelling units, an arrangement locally known as a 3-pack. These compounds popped up after Seattle eased building restrictions on A.D.U.s in 2019, as part of the city’s efforts to increase housing density and drive down prices. A.D.U.s are built on land that would not otherwise be developed — often, what would be a house’s backyard — and tend to cost less than conventional single-family homes.

A street view of the same development where the skybridge connects two monochrome paneled houses. The house on the right is smaller, with an upstairs terrace.
Seattle developers build A.D.U. compounds, or “3-packs,” to maximize living space on a lot, but per city regulations, one unit must be connected to the main house. Enter the skybridge.

Before 2019, Seattle allowed only one A.D.U. per lot, and the owner of the main house had to live on site and provide an off-street parking spot for any new unit. Under those restrictions, most A.D.U.s were built by homeowners on their existing lots, for use as guesthouses, studios or offices. (continued on page 2 at website www.skyline725.com)

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Recommended by RFK, Jr.

Thanks to John R.

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Res Ipsa Loquitur

“The thing speaks for itself.” (Thanks to Mike C.)

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The 14th amendment and the history of birthright discrimination

Commentary by Heather Cox Richardson

After the Supreme Court today decided the case of Trump v. CASA, limiting the power of federal judges to issue nationwide injunctions, President Donald Trump claimed the decision was a huge victory that would permit him to end birthright citizenship, that is, the principle that anyone born in the United States, with very limited exceptions, is a U.S. citizen. To reporters, he claimed: “If you look at the end of the Civil War—the 1800s, it was a very turbulent time. If you take the end day—was it 1869? Or whatever. But you take that exact day, that’s when the case was filed. And the case ended shortly thereafter. This had to do with the babies of slaves, very obviously.”

This is a great example of a politician rooting a current policy in a made-up history. There is nothing in Trump’s statement that is true, except perhaps that the 1800s were a turbulent time. Every era is.

The Fourteenth Amendment that established birthright citizenship came out of a very specific moment and addressed a specific problem. After the Civil War ended in 1865, former Confederates in the American South denied their Black neighbors basic rights. To try to remedy the problem, the Republican Congress passed a civil rights bill in 1866 establishing “[t]hat all persons born in the United States and not subject to any foreign power, excluding Indians, not taxed, are hereby declared to be citizens of the United States; and such citizens of every race and color…shall have the same right[s] in every State and Territory in the United States.”

But President Andrew Johnson, who was a southern Democrat elected in 1864 on a union ticket with President Abraham Lincoln, a Republican, vetoed the 1866 Civil Rights Bill. While the Republican Party organized in the 1850s to fight the idea that there should be different classes of Americans based on race, Democrats tended to support racial discrimination. In that era, not only Black Americans, but also Irish, Chinese, Mexican, and Indigenous Americans, faced discriminatory state laws. (continue on Page 2 at www.skyline725.com)

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The pace of life

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Harborview – towers and more are planned in 1.7 billion expansion and renovation project

Thanks to Mary M.

“A man stopped by from Harborview yesterday with some handouts for the neighborhood that describe about the first step of their upcoming major construction. Apparently he is part of a group that will be keeping the neighborhood informed.

The new construction will be quite close, could be quite noisy at times (e.g., pile driving).”

Ed Note: There is a lot of detail on-line about this multi-year bond approved expansion at Harborview. Of interest will be one or two new towers behind (west of) the hospital. There is a lot in information on-line at https://www.djc.com/news/re/12169507.html and www.HarborviewBondProgram.com.

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Want a good “feel good” movie to watch on Netflix?

I think you might enjoy Robert De Niro as the intern and Ann Hathaway as the boss. Lots of positive reviews from young and old.

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COSTCO opening earlier for executive members

from the Seattle Times

Early morning shopping runs are about to get a lot easier for some Costco members.

Starting June 30, the retailer is opening early for customers with an Executive membership, the higher and pricier of Costco’s two membership tiers.

Only executive members will be able to access the store from 9 to 10 a.m. Sunday through Friday, according to a post on the company’s Instagram account. On Saturdays, the executive-only access will run from 9 to 9:30 a.m.

All other members will be able to access the store starting at 10 a.m. Sunday through Friday and at 9:30 a.m. on Saturday.

The company also said its U.S. warehouses will be open for an extra hour on Saturdays, closing at 7 p.m.

Costco offers two membership options: the standard Gold Star membership and the premium-tier Executive membership.

A standard membership costs $65 a year and gets you access to the store.

Executive memberships cost $130 a year and get members access to discounts on certain Costco services, as well as 2% rewards on Costco purchases.

Costco, which is headquartered in Washington, has 34 locations across the state, according to its website.

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How prayers may be changing

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Think about 2050?

Thanks to John R.

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Skyline resident honored

Evergreen Treatment Services

May be an image of 1 person and text that says 'ETS EIGHTH ANNUAL oets ETSEIGHTHANNUALEVENT. EVENT ts OF RECOVERY 5.31.25 5.31.25|6-10PM 6-10 Suzanne Hitman EVERGREEN TRAILBLAZER AWARD'

We are proud to announce Suzanne Hittman, longtime friend of ETS and philanthropist in Seattle, as the 2025 Evergreen Trailblazer Award recipient!

Suzanne has spent her life as a catalyst for change through her roles as a social worker, professional fundraiser, Seattle School Board president, and political activist. Now in her 90s, she continues to meet with city leaders and speak truth to power about addiction, housing, and recovery.

Suzanne’s journey with Evergreen Treatment Services began with a voicemail in 2017 after she read a bold article on safe consumption spaces in the Puget Sound Business Journal. At a time when few dared to publicly support harm reduction, Suzanne stood up and said, “Let’s talk.”

Since then, Suzanne has become one of ETS’ most generous supporters including being the first to make a major gift to redevelop ETS’ new state-of-the-art treatment clinic in SODO.

ETS is grateful for Suzanne’s leadership, advocacy, and heart. Please join us in celebrating Suzanne Hittman, an extraordinary woman helping move mountains for recovery in the Puget Sound region.

Posted in Advocacy, Philanthropy, Volunteering | 1 Comment

The Irony of RFK Jr.’s Conflicts of Interest Gambit

RFK Jr. purged the CDC’s vaccine advisory committee claiming they were in the pocket of the pharmaceutical industry. But who is really conflicted?

PAUL OFFIT JUN 24 (thanks to Ed M.)

On June 9, 2025, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS), fired all 17 voting members of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP), which advises the CDC. In an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal, RFK Jr. wrote, “The committee has been plagued with persistent conflicts of interest and has become little more than a rubber stamp for any vaccine… A clean sweep is needed to re-establish public confidence in vaccine science.”

RFK Jr. cited a 2009 report that—as described by Jessica Steier and her team at Unbiased Science—“fails to give the true context of the report,” which “did not find serious conflicts of interest. Instead, it showed that many forms (97%) had errors and omissions due to form errors, such as putting information in the wrong section, or failing to initial and date in the correct places. Furthermore, recent independent investigations into ACIP members found ‘no substantial conflicts or disclosure errors’.” (continued on Page 2 at www.skyline725.com)

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Try your lawyerese

Thanks to MaryLou P.

The man in the street says, “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.”

The lawyer writes, “Insofar as manifestations of functional deficiencies are agreed by any and all concerned parties to be imperceivable, and are so stipulated, it is incumbent upon said heretofore mentioned parties to exercise the deferment of otherwise pertinent maintenance procedures.”

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IN PERSON: Stomp and Shout: The Untold Story of Northwest Rock & Roll

When July 22, 2025 at 1:00 pm (from Humanities Washington, thanks to Mike C.)

Where: Skyline Seattle; 725 9th Ave; Seattle, WA 98104

Northwest Rock & Roll’s historical highpoints are well documented—in the late 20th century, Nirvana, Soundgarden, Pearl Jam, and other grunge gods took the world by storm. Previously, Seattle’s Queensrÿche and Heart had ruled the heavy metal realm. And prior to that, The Wailers, The Kingsmen, Paul Revere and The Raiders, and The Sonics had all fueled local teen dances with garage-rock versions of the region’s signature song, “Louie Louie.”

Yet these iconic bands are only half the story. In this talk, join author Peter Blecha to discover the lesser-known but vitally important bands and scenes that laid the foundation for what was to come—finally connecting all the dots between the fabled Northwest era of Ray Charles, Quincy Jones, and Jimi Hendrix, and the R&B-spiked roots of a distinct regional art form: the “Original Northwest Sound.”

Peter Blecha (he/him) is the director of the Northwest Music Archives, an award-winning author, a founding curator at MoPop, and a longtime staff historian at historylink.org. Blecha’s newest book, Stomp and Shout: R&B and the Origins of Northwest Rock and Roll, draws on his deep knowledge as a leading expert on Pacific Northwest music history to chronicle both well-known and overlooked icons of the early Northwest Sound.

Blecha lives in Seattle.

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The Irony of RFK Jr.’s Conflicts of Interest Gambit

FK Jr. purged the CDC’s vaccine advisory committee claiming they were in the pocket of the pharmaceutical industry. But who is really conflicted?

PAUL OFFIT JUN 24 (thanks to Ed M.)

On June 9, 2025, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS), fired all 17 voting members of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP), which advises the CDC. In an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal, RFK Jr. wrote, “The committee has been plagued with persistent conflicts of interest and has become little more than a rubber stamp for any vaccine… A clean sweep is needed to re-establish public confidence in vaccine science.”

RFK Jr. cited a 2009 report that—as described by Jessica Steier and her team at Unbiased Science—“fails to give the true context of the report,” which “did not find serious conflicts of interest. Instead, it showed that many forms (97%) had errors and omissions due to form errors, such as putting information in the wrong section, or failing to initial and date in the correct places. Furthermore, recent independent investigations into ACIP members found ‘no substantial conflicts or disclosure errors’.”

RFK Jr.’s bogus claims that the CDC advisory committee is a shill for the pharmaceutical industry is an attempt to distract the public from his real conflicts of interest. RFK Jr is the driving force behind hundreds of lawsuits by people suing Merk’s HPV vaccine, Gardasil. No one recognized this obvious conflict of interest more than Senator Elizabeth Warren (D, MA), whose questions before a Senate confirmation hearing on January 25, 2025, provided a frightening glimpse into the future.

Warren: In the past two years, you’ve raked in $2.5 million from a law firm called Wisner Baum. You go online and do commercials to encourage people to sign up with Wisner Baum to join lawsuits against vaccine makers. And for everyone who signs up, you personally get paid. And, if they win their case, you get 10% of what they win. So, if you bring in somebody who gets $10 million, you walk away with $1 million. Mr. Kennedy, will you agree that you won’t take any compensation from any lawsuits against drug companies while you are Secretary and for four years afterwards.

Kennedy: I’m not going to agree to that.

Warren: As Secretary of HHS, if you get confirmed, you could influence every one of those lawsuits:

• You can publish your anti-vaccine conspiracies, but this time on US government letterheads, something a jury might be impressed by. (On June 5, RFK Jr. wrote a letter under an HHS letterhead stating that Covid vaccines for young children and pregnant women were dangerous and ineffective.)

• You could appoint a vaccine panel who share your anti-vax views and let them do your dirty work. (On June 9, RFK Jr. fired the entire vaccine advisory committee to the CDC. Two days later, he appointed eight new members, many of whom shared RFK Jr.’s anti-vaccine, anti-science views.)

• You could tell the CDC vaccine panel to remove a particular vaccine from the vaccine schedule (On May 27, RFK Jr. announced that he would remove young children and pregnant women from the Covid vaccine schedule.)

• You could remove vaccines from special compensation programs, which would open manufacturers to mass torts. You could make more injuries eligible for compensation even if there is no causal evidence…You could change which claims are compensated in the Vaccine Injury Compensation Program. (On June 16, RFK Jr. paid $150,000 to an Arizona law firm with an expertise in the Vaccine Injury Compensation Program that had a national reputation for litigating claims of vaccine “injuries.”) I’m asking you to commit right now that you will not take a financial stake in every one of those lawsuits so that what you do as Secretary will also benefit you financially down the line.

Kennedy: I have complied with all the ethics rules.

Warren: No one should be fooled here. Kennedy can kill off access to vaccines and make millions of dollars while he does it. Kids might die, but Robert Kennedy can keep cashing in.

Kennedy: Senator, I support vaccines. I support the childhood schedule.

The day before the Senate confirmation hearing before the HELP committee, Caroline Kennedy, the daughter of President John F. Kennedy, sounded a similar warning about her first cousin, whom she had witnessed firsthand growing up. Caroline Kennedy wrote that RFK Jr. “preys on the desperation of parents of sick children,” noting that he had vaccinated his own children while discouraging others from vaccinating theirs. Regarding his lawsuits against the HPV vaccine, Caroline wrote, “He is willing to enrich himself by denying access to a vaccine that can prevent almost all forms of cervical cancer, which has been safely administered to millions of boys and girls.” She continued, “Unlike Bobby, I try not to speak for my father—but I am certain that he and my uncle Bobby [RFK Jr.’s father], who gave their lives in public services, and my uncle Teddy, who devoted his Senate career to improving health care, would be disgusted.”

On February 13, 2025, RFK Jr. was confirmed to head HHS. He is now poised to make himself and his personal injury lawyer friends richer. Let the grift begin. We can’t say we haven’t been warned.

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‘I Feel Like I’ve Been Lied To’: When a Measles Outbreak Hits Home

From a lone clinic in Texas to an entire school district in North Dakota, the virus is upending daily life and revealing a deeper crisis of belief.

By Eli Saslow & Visuals by Erin Schaff in the NYT (thanks to Ed M.)

He was a chiropractor by training, but in a remote part of West Texas with limited medical care, Kiley Timmons had become a first stop for whatever hurt. Ear infections. Labor pains. Oil workers who arrived with broken ribs and farmers with bulging discs. For more than a decade, Kiley, 48, had seen 20 patients each day at his small clinic located between a church and a gas station in Brownfield, population 8,500. He treated what he could, referred others to physicians and prayed over the rest.

It wasn’t until early this spring that he started to notice something unfamiliar coming through the door: aches that lingered, fevers that wouldn’t break, discolored patches of skin that didn’t make sense. At first, he blamed it on a bad flu season, but the symptoms stuck around and then multiplied. By late March, a third of his patients were telling him about relatives who couldn’t breathe. And then Kiley started coughing, too.

His wife, Carrollyn, had recently tested positive for Covid, but her symptoms eased as Kiley’s intensified. He went to a doctor at the beginning of April for a viral panel, but every result came back negative. The doctor decided to test for the remote possibility of measles, since there was a large outbreak spreading through a Mennonite community 40 miles away, but Kiley was vaccinated.

“I feel like I’m dying,” Kiley texted a friend. He couldn’t hold down food or water. He had already lost 10 pounds. His chest went numb, and his arms began to tingle. His oxygen was dropping dangerously low when he finally got the results.

“Positive for measles,” he wrote to his sister, in mid-April. “Just miserable. I can’t believe this.”

Twenty-five years after measles was officially declared eliminated from the United States, this spring marked a harrowing time of rediscovery. A cluster of cases that began at a Mennonite church in West Texas expanded into one of the largest outbreaks in a generation, spreading through communities with declining vaccination rates as three people died and dozens more were hospitalized from Mexico to North Dakota. Public health officials tracked about 1,200 confirmed cases and countless exposures across more than 30 states. People who were contagious with measles boarded domestic flights, shopped at Walmart, played tuba in a town parade and toured the Mall of America.

But what frightened Kiley more than the potential spread was the severity of the disease: About one in five unvaccinated people with measles will be hospitalized, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. As many as one in 20 children contracts a secondary pneumonia infection. More than one in 1,000 dies. Measles stops spreading when 95 percent of a community is immune, but national vaccination rates for children have fallen to less than 92 percent. In parts of West Texas, they’ve dropped below 80.

A person peering into the doorway of what looks like a medical treatment room. In the room is a man in scrubs touching a patient’s shoulders. On the right is a second door with a person lying face-down on a treatment table.
Kiley Timmons with patients in his chiropractic clinic. Kiley is vaccinated for measles but contracted a breakthrough infection when the disease spread through West Texas earlier this year.

Kiley’s business catered in part to patients who were skeptical of mainstream American health care and wanted to try alternative treatments. “The doctor of the future will give no medicine,” read one sign that he hung in his office. A former farmer, he believed in caring for everyone in his hometown — even if that meant sometimes taking payments in the form of a haircut, a used gun, a dishwasher or unpasteurized cheese from a member of the Mennonite community. Most of what he remembered about measles came from an old “Brady Bunch” episode, where the children celebrated staying home from school and played board games. “If you have to get sick, sure can’t beat the measles,” one of the children said. (continued on Page 2 at www.skyline725.com)

Posted in Government, Health, Vaccines | 1 Comment

Life is all about …..

Ed note: A friend and his wife received this card recently. Inside it said “78 is the new 78.”

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ICE tactics

Commentary by Heather Cox Richardson

Individuals in plain clothes with their faces covered and without badges or name tags are snatching people off the streets and taking them away. Todd Lyons, the acting director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), which is housed within the Department of Homeland Security, claimed that such measures for anonymity are imperative because “ICE officers have seen a staggering 413 percent increase in assaults against them.”

Philip Bump of the Washington Post looked into that claim and noted that by using a percentage, ICE avoids the question of just how many assaults there have actually been. He points out that year-to-date assaults against Customs and Border Protection are currently 20% lower than they were in 2024 and that at least one ICE news release blurred the distinction between “threatening to assault” and “assaulting.” ICE would not provide evidence for their claims.

Bump concludes: “[W]e should not and cannot take ICE’s representations about the need for its officers to obscure their identities at face value.” After Bump’s article appeared yesterday, the Department of Homeland Security posted on social media: “New data reveals that ICE law enforcement is now facing a 500% increase in assaults while carrying out enforcement operations.”

Bump noted that ICE “has been eager to level dubious charges against Democratic legislators,” and the message from Homeland Security bears that claim out. After claiming a 500% increase in assaults, it continued: “Make no mistake, sanctuary politicians are contributing to the surge in assaults of our ICE officers through their repeated vilification and demonization of ICE. This violence against ICE must end.”

The Department of Homeland Security appears to be trying to convince Americans that their agents must cover their faces because their opponents, especially Democrats, are dangerous.

On Tuesday, masked, plainclothes ICE agents assaulted and arrested New York City comptroller and mayoral candidate Brad Lander, the city’s chief financial officer. Lander was accompanying an immigrant to a scheduled court hearing to try to protect him from arrest in one of ICE’s sweeps of those showing up for their court hearings. Lander asked the agents to produce an arrest warrant for the man they were arresting, and was himself arrested.

Homeland Security said it would charge him with impeding a federal officer and “assaulting law enforcement.” As Bump notes, a video of the incident shows that Lander “assaulted the officers in the sense that a bully might accuse you of having gotten in the way of his fist.” Lander was later released, and New York governor Kathy Hochul said the charges against him had been dropped. (continued on Page 2 at www.skyline725.com)

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Robert Reich – The Most Dangerous Corporation in America

Thanks to Pam P.

Friends,

Draw a circle around all the assets in America now devoted to Artificial Intelligence.

Draw a second circle around all the assets devoted to the U.S. military.

A third around all assets being devoted to helping the Trump regime collect and compile personal information on millions of Americans.

And a fourth circle around the parts of Silicon Valley dedicated to turning the United States away from a democracy into a libertarian dictatorship led by tech bros.

Where do the four circles intersect?

At a corporation called Palantir Technologies and a man named Peter Thiel.

In Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings, a “palantir” is a seeing stone that can be used to distort truth and present selective visions of reality. During the War of the Ring, a palantir falls under the control of Sauron, who uses it to manipulate and deceive.

Palantir Technologies bears a striking similarity. It sells an AI-based data platform that allows its users — among them, military and law enforcement agencies — to analyze personal data, including social media profiles, personal information, and physical characteristics. These are used to identify and surveil individuals.

In March, Trump signed an executive order requiring all agencies and departments of the federal government to share data on Americans. To get the job done, Trump chose Palantir Technologies.

Palantir is now busily combining personal data on every American gleaned from the Department of Homeland Security, Defense Department, Department of Health and Human Services, Social Security Administration, and Internal Revenue Service, including their bank account numbers and medical claims.

Will the Trump regime use this emerging super database to advance Trump’s political agenda, find and detain immigrants, and punish critics? Will it make it easier for Trump to spy on and target his ever-growing list of enemies and other Americans? We’ll soon find out.

Thirteen former Palantir employees signed a letter this month urging the corporation to stop its endeavors with Trump. Linda Xia, a signee who was a Palantir engineer until last year, said the problem was not with the company’s technology but with how the Trump administration intended to use it. “Combining all that data, even with the noblest of intentions, significantly increases the risk of misuse,” she said. (continued on page 2 at www.skyline725.com)

Palantir’s work on such a project could be “dangerous,” Representative Warren Davidson, Republican of Ohio, told the Semafor news site. “When you start combining all those data points on an individual into one database, it really essentially creates a digital ID. And it’s a power that history says will eventually be abused.”

On Monday, a group of Democratic lawmakers sent a letter to Palantir, asking for answers about huge government contracts the company got. The lawmakers are worried that Palantir is helping make a super database of American’s private information.

Behind their worry lie several people who are behind Palantir’s selection for the project, starting with Elon Musk.

Palantir’s selection was driven by Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency. At least three DOGE members formerly worked at Palantir, while others had worked at companies funded by Peter Thiel, an investor and a founder of Palantir, who still holds a major stake in it.

Thiel has worked closely with Musk, who devoted a quarter of a billion dollars to getting Trump reelected and then, as head of DOGE, helped eviscerate swaths of the government without congressional authority.

Thiel also mentored JD Vance, who worked for Thiel at one of his venture funds. Thiel subsequently bankrolled Vance’s 2022 senatorial campaign. Thiel introduced Vance to Trump and later helped convinced Trump to name Vance his vice president.

Thiel also mentored billionaire David Sacks, who also worked with Thiel at PayPal. As a student at Stanford University, Sacks wrote for the Stanford Review, the right-wing student newspaper Thiel founded as an undergraduate there in 1987. Sacks is now Trump’s “AI and crypto czar.”

The CEO of Palantir is Alex Karp, who said on an earnings call earlier this year that the company wants “to disrupt and make the institutions we partner with the very best in the world and, when it’s necessary, to scare enemies and on occasion kill them.”

Palantir recently disclosed that Karp received $6.8 billion in “compensation actually paid” in 2024 (you read that right) — making him the second-highest paid chief executive of a publicly traded company in the United States (behind Musk).

A former generation of wealthy U.S. conservatives backed candidates like Barry Goldwater because they wanted to conserve American institutions.

But this group — Thiel, Musk, Sacks, Karp, and Vance, among others — doesn’t seem to want to conserve much of anything, at least not anything that occurred after the 1920s, including Social Security, civil rights, and even women’s right to vote.

As Thiel has written:

“The 1920s were the last decade in American history during which one could be genuinely optimistic about politics. Since 1920, the vast increase in welfare beneficiaries and the extension of the franchise to women — two constituencies that are notoriously tough for libertarians — have rendered the notion of ‘capitalist democracy’ into an oxymoron.”

Hello?

If “capitalist democracy” is becoming an oxymoron, it’s not because of public assistance or because women got the right to vote. It’s because billionaire capitalists like Musk and Thiel are intent on killing democracy.

Not incidentally, the 1920s marked the last gasp of the Gilded Age, when America’s robber barons ripped off so much of the nation’s wealth that the rest of the U.S. had to go deep into debt both to maintain their standard of living and to maintain overall demand for the goods and services the nation produced.

When that debt bubble burst in 1929, we got the Great Depression. Benito Mussolini and Adolf Hitler then emerged to create the worst threats to freedom and democracy the modern world had ever witnessed.

If America learned anything from the first Gilded Age and the fascism that grew like a cancer in the 1930s, it should have been that gross inequalities of income and wealth fuel abuses of political power — as Trump, Musk, Thiel, Karp, and other oligarchs have put on full display — which in turn generate strongmen who destroy both democracy and freedom.

The danger inherent in Palantir’s AI-powered super database on all Americans is connected to the vast wealth and power of those associated with the corporation, and their apparent disdain for democratic institutions.

Last Saturday, had you walked to the end of Trump’s military-birthday parade and gazed above Trump’s reviewing stand, you’d have seen on a giant video board an advertisement for Palantir — one of the chief sponsors of the event.

Tolkien’s palantir fell under the control of Sauron. Thiel’s Palantir is falling under the control of Trump. How this story ends is up to all of us.R

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Major vaccine decisions are upon us

A big vaccine policy meeting: What to expect, pre-bunking, and some answers to your questions

Katelyn Jetelina Jun 20, from Your Local Epidemiologist

Next week (June 25-26), ACIP—the external committee that sets vaccine policy in the U.S.—meets. Normally, these meetings barely make headlines. They happen three times a year and are usually a routine part of the bureaucratic process determining who gets vaccines and how they’re made available.

Figure created by Your Local Epidemiologist

But these aren’t normal times.

This will be the first meeting since RFK Jr. dismantled the previous committee of 17 and replaced them with eight handpicked members—ranging from anti-vaccine activists to Covid-19 contrarians (i.e., mRNA kills and masks are child abuse) to some with genuine expertise. At this meeting, they’ll discuss fall vaccines for Covid, flu, and RSV, vote on a handful of new policies, and review routine vaccinations. What they say or decide could ripple across insurance coverage, government vaccine programs (which serve nearly half of U.S. kids), school entry requirements, and create widespread confusion.

Here are four things to anticipate: the new members, topics I expect to bubble up on social media, some answered (and unanswered) questions, and some hope.

Note: If you have no idea what I’m talking about, catch up here first before moving on.

1. Time to meet the members

When these new members were appointed, RFK Jr. framed it as “restoring trust,” “bringing in experts,” and “following gold-standard science.” He pointed to credentials like MDs and PhDs.

Those of us raising concerns about this new committee also talk about trust, expertise, and science, but we’re using those words to sound the alarm. One of the most disorienting parts of this moment is that it’s turned into a game of he said, she said.

My advice: don’t focus on the words alone, but on the actions behind them. Trust isn’t declared; it’s earned and demonstrated consistently. Research shows trustworthiness rests on three pillars: (continued on page 2 at www.skyline725.com)

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Trump’s World War III

From The American Prospect by Robert Kuttner (thanks to David B.)

What happens when a failing dictator is on the ropes? He imagines winning World War III.

Donald Trump is besieged on several fronts. His Ukraine policy has failed, as has his alliance with Putin and his foray against China. His tariff bluffs are backfiring, making it hard for U.S. manufacturers, importers, and consumers to plan. His executive excesses are mostly being overturned by the courts.

After making a commitment to Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins to spare farmworkers from ICE raids, later extended to hotel and restaurant workers other than suspected criminals, Trump impulsively reversed course and directed ICE to double down on arrests. And his Big Beautiful Bill has fractured his Republican allies in Congress.
Trump’s approval ratings are now deeply underwater. As Trump becomes more unpopular, he becomes more reckless. But his impulsive shift, from trying to contain Israel’s all-out war on Iran last week, to hankering to join it this week, is dividing his party MAGA base like nothing else.

Polls show the vast majority of Americans want the U.S. to stay out of the war. A new YouGov poll released Tuesday found that only 23 percent of Republicans say the U.S. should be involved in the conflict between Iran and Israel, while 51 percent want the country to stay out. Just 16 percent of all Americans support U.S. involvement, while 60 percent are opposed. The majority of Republicans—61 percent—support negotiations over Iran’s nuclear program.

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia wrote in an extensive post on X, “Anyone slobbering for the U.S. to become fully involved in the Israel/Iran war is not America First/MAGA. Wishing for murder of innocent people is disgusting. We are sick and tired of foreign wars. All of them.”

And this brings me to my old pal Steve Bannon. He has already done one service for Trump and the country by helping escalate the feud between Trump and Elon Musk, which ended with Musk’s ignominious exit. And while Bannon remains close to Trump as a trusted back-channel adviser, Bannon has gone public with his scathing critique of Israel’s Iran war and Trump’s impulse to join it.

Speaking on Tucker Carlson’s podcast Monday, Bannon said, “Who are the warmongers? They would include anyone who’s calling Donald Trump today to demand airstrikes and other direct U.S. military involvement in a war with Iran.”

Bannon, as much as anyone, was Trump’s tutor in the run-up to the first Trump victory in 2016. Bannon had a cogent theory of how to connect economic nationalism and isolationism to racist nationalism. As he told me in the too-candid August 2017 phone call that led to his firing from the White House, “The Democrats—the longer they talk about identity politics, I got ’em. I want them to talk about racism every day. If the left is focused on race and identity, and we go with economic nationalism, we can crush the Democrats.”
But Trump has no cogent theory of nationalism and internationalism. He functions basically as a shock entertainer, tacking from one impulsive and inconsistent policy to another.
Trump’s China strategy is an incoherent blend of isolation and aggression. He has destroyed the “soft power” exemplified by USAID that is consistent with a military pullback and a rebuilding of the domestic economy. He has promoted tariffs while dismantling the sort of industrial policies that the right sort of economic nationalism can facilitate, from subsidies to biotech via NIH and NSF to the bipartisan green industrial policies enacted under President Biden.

Benjamin Netanyahu is every bit as much a crazed megalomaniac as Trump, but a far more strategic thinker and planner. Think of it as the proxy war of the puppets. Trump is the dummy, but a dummy who commands the world’s largest military. The two competing ventriloquists are Bannon and Netanyahu.

Having created a fait accompli and what seems to be a nearly costless victory, Netanyahu is enticing Trump to join in and reap some of the credit. Trump is sorely tempted. Following one fiasco after another, he dearly needs a win.

Trump’s impulsive actions remind me of the old Irish joke about a brawl in a pub. A bystander asks the barkeep, Is this a private fight or can anybody get into it? After temporizing, Trump has concluded that he wants to get into Bibi’s brawl.

Bannon, meanwhile, in public and in private, is reminding Trump of the grave risks. Direct U.S. military involvement in a Mideast war will achieve one thing that Trump’s other blunders couldn’t do. It is seriously dividing MAGA, and could leave Trump with even less popular support, not to mention the international risks.

Nor, as the expression goes, will this be good for the Jews. When Israel manipulates the U.S. into joining an unpopular war, a lot of right-wing faux friends of the Jews will revert to their usual antisemitism. Israel will be even more of an international pariah, dividing the U.S. from what’s left of American allies.

Netanyahu, seconded by Trump, could end up doing what no other Israeli leader has done, uniting Shiite and Sunni states that hate each other but don’t want to see the Zionist nation dominating the region. Israel can perhaps defeat Iran, whatever that turns out to mean, but Israel can’t win a simultaneous war against the entire Middle East. Other nations in the region will not be pleased by this brutal assertion of U.S. military might—which could be turned against them on a presidential whim.

However much Saudi Arabia may be gloating about the annihilation of Iran and its subsidiaries in Hamas and Hezbollah, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has an astute sense of the regional balance of power. Israel’s all-out war on Iran is also annihilating the fledgling Abraham Accords, which created a cynical and corrupt alliance between Israel, the Saudis, and other regional powers such as the Emirates.

Since 2023, the Saudi governnent has pursued détente with Iran. The kingdom’s government last week issued a “denunciation of the blatant Israeli aggressions against the brotherly Islamic Republic of Iran.” Yesterday, the Emirati ruler, Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed, called the Iranian president to express “solidarity with Iran and its people during these challenging times.”

If things work out, Trump will get credit for demolishing Iran’s uranium enrichment labs buried deep underground at Fordo, using the 30,000-pound bunker busters that only the U.S. possesses. Maybe he will also join Netanyahu in assassinating Ayatollah Khamenei, and a grateful Iranian nation will rise up against the theocracy and become a pro-West democracy at peace with Israel.

What could possibly go wrong?

Posted in Government, Uncategorized, War | Comments Off on Trump’s World War III

Problems with the FDA and exempted generic drugs

From ProPublica (thanks to Sylvia P.)

There have been significant concerns about the FDA’s abilities and willingness to adequately supervise the production of many of the generics we daily use (often from India and China). For the article please click here.

Posted in drugs, Government | Comments Off on Problems with the FDA and exempted generic drugs

Such a busy schedule

Thanks to Pam P.

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Such a busy schedule

In the NYT yesterday

To the editor:

The vast turnout for the “No Kings” demonstrations across the country (70,000 reported in Seattle) allows President Trump to again claim that he has generated the largest crowds in American History.

Michael Caplow – Seattle

Posted in Advocacy, protests | Comments Off on In the NYT yesterday

Friday Farmers Market Returns to First Hill

Thanks to Mary M.

      Date: Summer Fridays (June 20 – September 26)
     Time: 10:00 AM – 2:00 PM
     Location: 9th Ave. & University St.

The Pike Place Market’s Express Market returns to First Hill on June 20th and runs through September 26th (with no Market on July 4th). This year, the First Hill Farmers’ Market will include new additions including BUSKERS from 11am-1pm and Greek FROZEN YOGURT from Hellenika.  
Posted in Food, In the Neighborhood | Comments Off on Friday Farmers Market Returns to First Hill