Oh yeah?

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How parking lots across the U.S. are being turned into housing

Thanks to Pam P.

And not a moment too soon.

BY ADELE PETERS

Right now, there are probably between 700 million and 2 billion parking places in the U.S. But the sea of American parking lots is slowly shrinking.

In Los Angeles County, for example, parking took up around 200 square miles of land in 2010—an area larger than Denver—including nearly 10 million off-street, nonresidential spaces. Since then, nearly 20,000 parking spaces have been sold for redevelopment, a small but still meaningful amount.

Many former parking lots are turning into housing. (Some are also becoming parks, in cities including Dallas and Detroit; in San Diego, part of one parking lot has been restored to a salt marsh.) And as cities realize that they’ve built more parking than they need, dozens have eliminated parking requirements in new buildings. In California, any new construction near public transit no longer has to include parking. That means there’s room for more apartments, and rents can be lower. Here are nine recent parking lot transformations.

[Photo: Grubb Properties]

CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA: LINK APARTMENTS MONTFORD

Built at a former office park with large parking lots, this development renovated the offices, and then repurposed the parking lots for new housing. After the first two phases of construction, there are 553 new housing units. “By purchasing the office buildings and then rezoning the land for multifamily use, we essentially got the land for free,” says Emily Ethridge, communications director for the developer, Grubb Properties. “This is particularly powerful in urbanizing parts of cities like this one where land is expensive. In these areas, surface parking is a very poor use of that precious resource.”

[Photo: Jonathan Ramirez Archlenz Photography/courtesy KFA Architecture] (continued)

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Upcoming Events at the nearby Memory Hub

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Popular Portland-founded doughnut chain planning Seattle location

Thanks to Bob P. for letting us know about this walk to burn off calories as we head to this coming establishment!

SEATTLE — One of the West Coast’s most popular doughnuts is coming to Seattle.

Voodoo Doughnuts, founded in Portland back in 2003, filed plans to build its first location in western Washington on Pine Street in Seattle’s Capitol Hill neighborhood.

It is unclear when the Seattle location will be opening. Voodoo Doughnuts did open a location down in Vancouver last year and has already expanded out of the Portland area to such states as Colorado, Texas, Arizona, Illinois, Florida and California.

Currently, 1201 Pine Street houses Pho 4 You. Building plans appear to show Voodoo plans to utilize most of the space in its building for storage and production, with a small stand-up bar area as well as a merchandise display and table for condiments. The estimated cost for the project appears to be $500,000.

Just down the street from the proposed location is the Starbucks Reserve Roastery on Pike Street, and the new doughnut shop would be just on the other side of Interstate 5 from the Seattle Convention Center.

Voodoo Doughnuts isn’t the first popular chain in recent months to file plans for a new Seattle-area location. Raising Cane’s Chicken Fingers has filed plans for two stores in western Washington, including one in the University District.

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Skylines 9th Annual Book Giveaway!

!Reminder!

Collection:

Collection Box Location: Under stairs across from the Cascade Dining Room
Collection starts: October 22nd, Sunday
Collection ends: November 6th, Monday

Giveaway:

Date: November 7th, Tuesday
Time: 10am to 4:30pm
Place: Mt Baker Room

Link to Poster

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Footballisms

Thanks to Sybil-Ann

Gentlemen, it is better to have died a small boy than to fumble the football “.. 

– John Heisman, first football coach at Rice

“I make my practices real hard because if a player is a quitter, I want him to quit in practice, not in a game.” 
– Bear Bryant / Alabama

“It isn’t necessary to see a good tackle, you can hear it!” 
– Knute Rockne / Notre Dame

“At Georgia Southern, we don’t cheat. 
That costs money, and we don’t have any.” 
– Erik Russell / Georgia Southern

“The man who complains about the way the ball bounces is likely to be the one who dropped it.” 
– Lou Holtz / Arkansas – Notre Dame

“When you win, nothing hurts.” 
– Joe Namath / Alabama

“A school without football is in danger of deteriorating into a medieval study hall.” 
– Frank Leahy / Notre Dame

“There’s nothing that cleanses your soul like getting the hell kicked out of you.” 
– Woody Hayes / Ohio State

“I don’t expect to win enough games to be put on NCAA probation I just want to win enough to warrant an investigation.” 
– Bob Devaney / Nebraska

“In Alabama, an atheist is someone who doesn’t believe in Bear Bryant.” 
– Wally Butts / Georgia

“I never graduated from Iowa. But I was only there for two terms – Truman’s and Eisenhower’s” 
– Alex Karras / Iowa 

“My advice to defensive players is to take the shortest route to the ball, and arrive in a bad humor.” 
– Bowden Wyatt / Tennessee

“I could have been a Rhodes Scholar except for my grades.” 
– Duffy Daugherty / Michigan State

” Always remember Goliath was a 40-point favorite over David.” 
– Shug Jordan / Auburn

“I asked Darrell Royal, the coach of the Texas Longhorns, why he didn’t recruit me “ 
He said, “Well, Walt, we took a look at you, and you weren’t any good” 
– Walt Garrison / Oklahoma State/Dallas Cowboys

“Son, you’ve got a good engine, but your hands aren’t on the steering wheel.” 
– Bobby Bowden / Florida State

“Football is NOT a contact sport, it is a collision sport. Dancing IS a contact sport.” 
– Duffy Daugherty / Michigan State

After USC lost 51-0 to Notre Dame, his post-game message to his team was;
“All those who need showers, take them.” 
– John McKay / USC

 If lessons are learned in defeat, our team is getting a great education.” 
– Murray Warmath / Minnesota

“The only qualifications for a lineman are to be big and dumb. To be a back, you only have to be dumb.” 
– Knute Rockne / Notre Dame

“We live one day at a time and scratch where it itches.” 
– Darrell Royal / Texas

“We didn’t tackle well today, but we made up for it by not blocking.” 
– John McKay / USC

“I’ve found that prayers work best when you have big players.” 
– Knute Rockne / Notre Dame

Ohio State’s Urban Meyer on one of his players: 
“He doesn’t know the meaning of the word fear. In fact, I just saw his grades and he doesn’t know the meaning of a lot of words.”

Why do Auburn fans wear orange?
So they can dress that way for the game on Saturday, go hunting on Sunday, and pick up trash on Monday.

What does the average Alabama player get on his SATs?
Drool.

How many Michigan State freshmen football players does it take to change a light bulb?
None. That’s a sophomore course.

How did the Auburn football player die from drinking milk?
The cow fell on him.

Two Texas A&M football players were walking in the woods.
One of them said, ” Look, a dead bird.” 
The other looked up in the sky and said, “Where?” 

What do you say to a Florida State University football player dressed in a three-piece suit?
“Will the defendant please rise.”

How can you tell if a Clemson football player has a girlfriend?
There’s tobacco juice on both sides of the pickup truck.

What do you get when you put 32 Kentucky cheerleaders in one room?
A full set of teeth.

University of Michigan Coach Jim Harbaugh is only going to dress half of his players for the game this week. The other half will have to dress themselves.

How is the Kansas football team like an opossum?
They play dead at home and get killed on the road

How do you get a former University of Miami football player off your porch?

Pay him for the pizza.

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Rite Aid, Facing Slumping Sales and Opioid Suits, Files for Bankruptcy

The pharmacy chain, one of the country’s largest, faces more than a thousand lawsuits that say it filled illegal prescriptions for painkillers.

By Jordyn Holman and Lauren Hirsch in the NYT

Rite Aid, one of the largest pharmacy chains in the United States, filed for bankruptcy on Sunday, weighed down by billions of dollars in debt, declining sales and more than a thousand federal, state and local lawsuits claiming it filled thousands of illegal prescriptions for painkillers.

The company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in New Jersey. Its largest creditors include the pharmaceutical company McKesson Corporation and the insurer Humana Health. The pharmacy has raised $3.45 billion to fund its operations while its in bankruptcy, during which it expects to continue to operate its stores and serve its customers.

The company also appointed a new chief executive, Jeffrey Stein, to lead its restructuring. Mr. Stein is the founder of Stein Advisors, a financial advisory firm that focuses on fixing troubled companies. Elizabeth Burr had been serving as Rite Aid’s temporary chief executive since January.

Rite Aid is one of many drugstore chains dealing with lawsuits stemming from the deadly abuse of opioids in the United States. In March, the Justice Department filed a complaint against Rite Aid and its various subsidiaries asserting that the company filled prescriptions for excessive quantities of opioids “that had obvious, and often multiple, red flags indicating misuse.”

The company has denied these claims.

Rite Aid, which has more than 45,000 employees, has struggled in recent years to compete against larger peers like CVS and Walgreens Boots Alliance, as well as Amazon. Deteriorating sales left the company with less money to invest in its businesses, and more difficultly in paying back its debt. As of June, according to company filings, it had $3.3 billion in debt, not counting the pending opioid litigation. (CONTINUED)

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Honest Aging: An Insider’s Guide to the Second Half of Life

What can I do about this potbelly? How can I improve my sleep? Is this dementia? A physician sets out to provide ‘honest’ guidance on aging.

By Judith Graham in the Washington Post (thanks to T&T B.)

How many of us have wanted a reliable, evidence-based guide to aging that explains how bodies and minds change as we grow older and how to adapt to those differences?

Creating a work of this kind is challenging. For one thing, aging gradually alters people over decades, a long period shaped by individuals’ economic and social circumstances, their behaviors, their neighborhoods and other factors. Also, while people experience common physiological issues in later life, they don’t follow a well-charted, developmentally predetermined path.

“Predictable changes occur, but not necessarily at the same time or in the same sequence,” said physician Rosanne Leipzig, vice chair for education at the Brookdale Department of Geriatrics and Palliative Medicine at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York. “There’s no more heterogeneous a group than older people.”

I called Leipzig, 72, who works full time teaching medical residents and fellows and seeing patients, after reading her new book, “Honest Aging: An Insider’s Guide to the Second Half of Life.” It’s the most comprehensive examination of what to expect in later life I’ve come across in a dozen years covering aging.

Leipzig told me she had two goals in writing this guide: “To overcome all the negatives that are out there about growing older” and “to help people understand that there are lots of things that you can do to adapt to your new normal as you age and have an enjoyable, engaged, meaningful life.”

Why call it “Honest Aging”? “Because so much of what’s out there is dishonest, claiming to teach people how to age backwards,” Leipzig said. “I think it’s time we say, ‘This is it; this is who we are,’ and admit how lucky we are to have all these years of extra time.”

The doctor was referring to extraordinary gains in life expectancy achieved in the modern era. With advances in medicine and public health, people 60 and older now live far longer than was the case at the dawn of the 20th century.

Still, most of us lack a good understanding of what happens to our bodies during this extended period after middle age.

What questions do older adults tend to ask most often? Leipzig rattled off a list: What can I do about this potbelly? How can I improve my sleep? I’m having trouble remembering names; is this dementia? Do I really need that colonoscopy or mammogram? What should I do to get back into shape? Do I really need to stop driving?

Underlying these queries is a poor understanding of what’s normal in later life and the physical and mental alterations aging brings.

Can the stages of aging be broken down, roughly, by decade? No, said Leipzig, noting that people in their 60s and 70s vary significantly in health and functioning. Typically, predictable changes associated with aging “start to happen much more between the ages of 75 and 85,” she told me.

Here are a few of the age-related issues she highlights in her book:

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Book(s) for Buddhism class

Thanks to Mary R.

For those of you who are attending the Buddhism lectures Helen McPeak suggested two books, one of which was LIVING BUDDA, LIVING CHRIST by Thich Naht Hanh,

It is available in the Bookstore at St. James Cathedral across the street. The bookstore is in the courtyard, open daily from 11:00 AM to 3:00PM

Ed note: Another book I’ve found of interest: SWEDENBORG: BUDDHA OF THE NORTH by D.T. Suzuki

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Find an adjective

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His main interest

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A scammer in the House

Thanks to Pam P. for the Borowitz Report

Santos Says If G.O.P. Lets Him Stay in Congress He Will Stop Using Their Credit Cards
He also expressed “deep regret” for checking into the Bellagio Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas last weekend under the name Marjorie Taylor Greene.
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I’m Going to War for Israel. Palestinians Are Not My Enemy.

By Nir Avishai Cohen (Thanks to Mary Jane F.)

Mr. Cohen, a major in the reserves of the Israel Defense Forces, is the author of the book “Love Israel, Support Palestine.”

I was in Austin, Texas, for work on Saturday when I received a call from my commander in the Israel Defense Forces to return to Israel and head to the front line. I didn’t hesitate. I knew that the citizens of my country were in real danger. My duty first and foremost is to join the fight against those who unleashed a massacre on my people. I boarded the first flight I found out of Austin to head home to join the I.D.F. reserves, where I serve as a brigade operations command officer.

During my long flight to Israel, my mind couldn’t rest. I was trying to write down my feelings and thoughts about everything happening — and everything that’s about to happen — in my beloved country.

Little by little, the dimensions of the horrors of the most brutal attack that Israelis have experienced since the establishment of the state were being revealed. Hundreds of Hamas terrorists slaughtered more than 1,200 people, including women, children and older people. About 150 citizens and soldiers have been taken captive. There’s nothing in the world that can justify the murder of hundreds of innocent people.

But I’d like to say one thing clearly, before I go to battle: There’s no such thing as “unavoidable.” This war could have been avoided, and no one did enough to prevent it. Israel did not do enough to make peace; we just conquered the Palestinian territories in the West Bank, expanded the illegal settlements and imposed a long-term siege on the Gaza Strip.

For 56 years Israel has been subjecting Palestinians to oppressive military rule. In my book “Love Israel, Support Palestine,” I wrote: “Israeli society has to ask itself very important questions about where and why the blood of its sons and daughters was spilled. A Messianic religious minority has dragged us into a muddy swamp, and we are following them as if it were the piper from Hamelin.” When I wrote these words last year, I didn’t realize how deep in the mud we were, and how much more blood could be shed in so little time.

I am now going to defend my country against enemies who want to kill my people. Our enemies are the deadly terrorist organizations that are being controlled by Islamic extremists.

Palestinians aren’t the enemy. The millions of Palestinians who live right here next to us, between the Mediterranean Sea and Jordan, are not our enemy. Just like the majority of Israelis want to live a calm, peaceful and dignified life, so do Palestinians. Israelis and Palestinians alike have been in the grip of a religious minority for decades. On both sides, the intractable positions of a small group have dragged us into violence. It doesn’t matter who is more cruel or more ruthless. The ideologies of both have fueled this conflict, leading to the deaths of too many innocent civilians.

As a major in the reserves, it is important to me to make it clear that in this already unstoppable new war, we cannot allow the massacre of innocent Israelis to result in the massacre of innocent Palestinians. Israel must remember that there are more than two million people living in the Gaza Strip. The vast majority of them are innocent. Israel must do everything in its power to avoid killing innocent people and to focus on destroying the militant army of Hamas.

This war, like others before it, will end sooner or later. I am not sure I will come back from it alive, but I do know that a minute after the war is over, both Israelis and Palestinians will have to reckon with the leaders who led them to this moment. We must wake up and not let the extremists rule. Palestinians and Israelis must denounce the extremists who are driven by religious fanaticism. The Israelis will have to oust National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich and their far-right circle from power, and the Palestinians will have to oust the leadership of Hamas.

I try to look for shreds of hope. The Yom Kippur War, the most difficult war that Israel had known until this week, started by surprise in 1973. After a peace agreement between Israel and Egypt was finally signed in 1979, the border with Egypt — one that was once the site of the dead and wounded — became a border of peace.

Israelis must realize that there is no greater security asset than peace. The strongest army cannot protect the country the way peace does. This current war proves it once again. Israel has followed the path of war for too long.

At the end, after all of the dead Israelis and Palestinians are buried, after we have finished washing away the rivers of blood, the people who share a home in this land will have to understand that there is no other choice but to follow the path of peace. That is where true victory lies.

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Skyline’s 9th Annual Book Giveaway!

Collection:

Collection Box Location: Under stairs across from the Cascade Dining Room
Collection starts: October 22nd, Sunday
Collection ends: November 6th, Monday

Giveaway:

Date: November 7th, Tuesday
Time: 10am to 4:30pm
Place: Mt Baker Room

Link to Poster

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I don’t want CPR; will anyone listen?

By Jim deMaine

Special to The Seattle Times published Saturday September 23rd

I’m 85 years old and am in reasonably good health considering my age — mild hypertension, cured prostate cancer and macular degeneration. It’s been a wonderful life and I continue to enjoy friends and family, but if my heart stops, please don’t bare my chest and shock my heart trying to get it restarted. I don’t have some kind of death wish. I’m just trying to be realistic.

Now you’ve probably heard that Seattle leads the world in successful cardiac resuscitation. It’s true! If you happen to be quite a bit younger than I am, go into cardiac arrest with someone nearby who can start cardiopulmonary resuscitation while 911 is being called, your chance of survival may be as high as 55% (elsewhere in the country a 15% survival would be a good outcome). However, in my age group, it’s less than 5% chance of survival (only one in 20) — with a significant risk of brain damage, broken ribs and winding up in a nursing home.

I’ve expressed my wishes to my doctor for do not resuscitate or intubate orders, filled out an advance directive, completed portable orders for life sustaining treatment and talked at length with my designated durable power of attorney for health care.

So why might I, against my wishes, still be at risk of undergoing CPR? Well, picture me at an exciting Mariners game where suddenly I slump over with no pulse. My DPOA-HC is not present. My forms are in my apartment. Sustaining life is the norm for our community. Likely someone will step in and begin CPR and call for an automated external defibrillator. My wishes will be unknown. If I survive, waking up with a tube in my throat in an ICU is my nightmare.

So, what can I do? Very appropriately, 911 responders will do everything to save a life unless there is an explicit order/reason not to. In California and many other states, persons like me can obtain a certified DNR bracelet or medallion, which is covered in their legal codes. In Washington, we can wear a DNR bracelet or medallion but there is not a state or 911 policy addressing their use. When I talk to the medics, I find they vary quite a bit in their opinions about the utility of DNR bracelets/medallions — they haven’t received clear training about whether to honor the engraved DNR message. Oregon has a statewide registry of Physician Orders for Life Sustaining Treatment forms stored in an electronic database, so a 911 responder can immediately locate and act on one’s stated wishes. Washington has no such registry. Some will put their wishes on a wallet card, thumb drive or cellphone — but these are not easily found in an acute emergency.

I remain uncertain if my end-of-life wishes will be followed. This needs to change. We need to respect the wishes of persons like myself who are wearing a DNR bracelet. Basically, there are two things we need to do: First, we should have statewide policy to honor a DNR bracelet/medallion. Second, we need a statewide registry of POLST forms with a rapid retrieval mechanism for 911 responders.

Many elderly people like me want to leave this Earth in a natural way without CPR. Can we make the needed changes so that these wishes will be honored?

Jim deMaine is a retired pulmonary/critical care physician living in downtown Seattle. He is an author and clinical professor of medicine at the University of Washington.

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Resources for discussing and documenting end of life choices

Here are the references in the handout at the October 10th “Speaking of Dying” talk

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Slides from “Speaking of Dying Presentation”

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Here are the slides presented yesterday by Dr. Kate Brostoff. The full presentation will be on CareMerge within two weeks. Also these slides will be available on CareMerge under documents from the Health Care Committee.

As a reminder our chaplain Helen McPeak is available to meet with you individually or in small groups to discuss end of life issues. Forms are available from Sharon Redding RN and also from Helen. If you would like more one on one assistance Kate, Jim deMaine and Bob Wood are available to meet with you.

Posted in end of life, Health, Uncategorized | 2 Comments

Charles Feeney, Who Made a Fortune and Then Gave It Away, Dies at 92

After piling up billions in business, he pledged to donate almost all of his money to causes before he died. He succeeded, and then lived a more modest life.

By Robert D. McFadden in the NYT (thanks to Mike C.)

Charles F. Feeney, a pioneer of duty-free shops and a shrewd investor in technology start-ups who gave away nearly all of his $8 billion fortune to charity, much of it as quietly as he had made it, died on Monday in San Francisco. He was 92.

His death was announced by the Atlantic Philanthropies, a group of foundations he had started and funded since the early 1980s. He lived in a modest rented apartment in San Francisco.

In December 2016, with his donation of $7 million to his alma mater, Cornell University, for student community-service work, Mr. Feeney officially emptied the Atlantic Philanthropies’ accounts. It also fulfilled his pledge to give away virtually all of his wealth before he died, a rarity in the philanthropic world.

With what he called decent but unextravagant provisions made for his five adult children, Mr. Feeney said he retained about $2 million for himself, a small fraction of the billions he had amassed over six decades in business and given away over 35 years while often going to great lengths to conceal his identity, wealth and philanthropies.

“Chuck Feeney is a remarkable role model, and the ultimate example of giving while living,” his fellow billionaire Bill Gates told Forbes in 2012. Another of the world’s richest people, Warren Buffett, presented a Forbes 400 Lifetime Achievement Award to Mr. Feeney in 2014, calling him “my hero and Bill Gates’s hero — he should be everybody’s hero.”

Unlike philanthropists whose names are publicized, celebrated at banquets and emblazoned on building facades and museum wings, Mr. Feeney gave anonymously to universities, medical institutions, scientific endeavors, human rights groups, peace initiatives and scores of causes intended to improve lives in the United States, Vietnam, South Africa, Australia, Israel, Jordan and other lands. (continued)

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“Their Own Civil War”: Kim Schrier Talks about the Chaos in the House

By Joel Connelly

As colleagues savored soundbites on Sunday morning TV shows, a welcome opportunity came to hear out solid work-horse member of Congress who reaches across the aisle in the “other” Washington.  But U.S. Rep. Kim Schrier, D-Wash., did not bring any reassurance about a body that just ousted the Speaker it elected last January..

“Things are crazy right now,” said Schrier. Of the Republicans, who hold a narrow House majority: “They have their own civil war.” Of Speaker Kevin McCarthy, to get elected after 15 ballots: “He cut deals that would handicap him for his entire tenure.” When McCarthy had the opportunity to make Congress work: “He was down at Mar-a-Lago kissing the ring [of Donald Trump].”

The tail wagged the dog in the form of “20 to 25 crazies” of the far right. McCarthy “did not have to kowtow to them,” Schrier told an Eastside fundraiser. With a narrow 222-213 Republican majority, there was the option of reaching out to Democrats. McCarthy got a temporary budget fix earlier this year with the help of Democratic votes, then went on CBS’ Face the Nation to demean the Ds.

A modest use of intelligence might have yielded a different result. Just look, for a minute, at Washington’s delegation. Chaos is not on its agenda. “I went back there to get stuff done for Southwest Washington . . . I believe in bipartisanship,” newly elected Rep. Marie Gluesenkamp-Perez (MGP) told a recent town meeting in Tenino.

Rep. Derek Kilmer, D-Wash., spent four years chairing a bipartisan committee charged with improving internal operations of the House. Schrier has worked with Rep. Dan Newhouse, R-Wash., on the Yakima Basin Project. She pressed for the Inflation Reduction Act provision that capped insulin costs for diabetic seniors. MGP co-chairs the centrist Blue Dog Coalition, cosponsoring bipartisan legislation on issues ranging from forest management to farmers’ right-to-repair their equipment.

“He’s [McCarthy] shown he’d rather be held hostage by a bunch of weirdos than admit that he cannot lead the peoples’ house,” Gluesenkamp-Perez said after last week’s vote. In Rep. Kilmer’s words, McCarthy “weakened the institution by bending to extremists rather than collaborate across the aisle. He has inherited the chaos he has sown.”

Ahalf century ago, former Minnesota Sen. Eugene McCarthy quipped: “A moderate Republican is someone who gets to follow Richard Nixon into battle and shoot the wounded.” Spot-on observation, true in different form today. The Republican Party has grown insular and combative in the image of Donald Trump.

What of Republican colleagues who want to make government work? Some come from “red” districts, Schrier told donors. They are afraid of being “primaried” by MAGA voters. After all, six-term GOP Rep. Jamie Herrera Beutler lost to Trump-endorsed Joe Kent in last year’s primary, with Kent then losing to MGP.

Trump has his candidate for House Speaker, Ohio’s strident GOP Rep. Jim Jordan, and the ex-president may show up when House Republicans caucus on Tuesday. Jordan chairs the House panel launching an impeachment “investigation” against President Biden. Even House Majority Leader Steve Scalise is seen as more collegial, said Schrier, even though Scalise once described himself as “David Duke without the baggage.” (Duke, a fellow Louisiana politician, is a former Grand Dragon of the Ku Klux Klan.)

Self-described GOP moderates have spurned joining with Democrats to elect a new Speaker. Instead, they blame D’s for casting votes for McCarthy’s downfall. But what reason did Democrats have to rescue the maladroit McCarthy? “He has been completely partisan, refusing to work with Democrats at every turn to appease MAGA Republicans in Congress,” said Rep. Adam Smith, D-Wash., who chaired a collegial House Armed Services Committee when Democrats ran the House.

In the meantime, crises mount. Shutdown looms. The federal government is funded only until November 17. The Republican right has long resisted legislation to deal with the immigration crisis, even when a bipartisan bill passed the U.S. Senate by a 68-30 vote.

“Now Ukraine funding is hanging in the balance, and we have a war thrust on Israel,” lamented Schrier. “Now, at a precarious moment, we have chaos in the House.” She noted the political right’s loud lip service to Israel, adding: “If we can’t get aid to Israel, all this wrapping in the Israeli flag while also associating with anti-Semites will go for naught.”

What a difference time makes. Democratic Speaker Tom Foley, D-Wash., used to have fiery House floor debates with GOP Rep. Henry Hyde over the Reagan administration’s push for U.S. assistance to the Contra guerillas in Nicaragua. When done, the two big Irishmen would stroll arm in arm from the chamber.

As House Speaker, Nancy Pelosi had to work with a 221-214 Democratic majority, yet the House passed major Infrastructure legislation, the CHIPS act to bolster U.S. manufacture of microchips, and the Inflation Reduction Act with its major investment in green energy.

“We’re the ones who govern,” said Schrier. The “crazies”, as she put it, stand willing to “blow up the country.”

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Sigh!

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In states without Medicaid

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As you get your COVID vaccine, thank these two scientists

Thanks to Ed M.

Yesterday, the 2023 Nobel Prize Winners for Physiology or Medicine went to Drew Weissman and Katalin Karikó for their discoveries in the biotechnology behind our Covid-19 mRNA vaccines. 

Behind the amazing story of perseverance and collaborative spirit (it’s a fascinating story) is an absolutely revolutionary scientific discovery. 

Here is the problem they solved, how we leveraged it for the pandemic, and the far-reaching implications.

The problem

In 1961, we discovered RNA in living things. RNA is a string of letters that gives our cells instructions on how to function. (continued)

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Amazing early photographs reborn

Now with added colour! Early photographs reborn – in pictures
From seaside bathers to the Moulin Rouge in Paris, these images from the early 20th century have been revitalised with the latest colour technology. Thanks to Bob P.

Read in The Guardian: https://apple.news/ANVqtrEM9REq5iE2Y65UShg

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What They Don’t Tell You About Getting Old

By Roger Rosenblatt in the NYT – thanks to Tim and Tony for sending this along

Mr. Rosenblatt is the author of several novels and memoirs, including “Cataract Blues: Running the Keyboard.”

I recently turned 83, and while there are many joys to getting older, getting out of taxis is not one of them.

What you don’t want to do is get your left foot caught under the front right seat before you try to swing your right foot toward the door; otherwise, you’ll topple over while attempting to pay the fare, possibly injuring your ankle, and causing the maneuver to go even more slowly. If you make it past the taxi door, there is still the one-foot jump to the street. You’re old. You could fall. Happens all the time.

And that’s when it’s just you in the taxi. If some other old person is with you — a friend, a spouse — there’s a real possibility of never getting out of the vehicle. You might live out the rest of your days in the back seat, watching Dick Cavett do real estate ads on a loop.

“Old People Getting Out of Taxis.” I was thinking of making a film with that title, if I knew how to make a film. Figure it would run four hours. I asked an actor friend, also old, if he’d star in it. His response: “If I can get out of my chair.”

It’s no joke, old age. It just looks funny. Mel Brooks latched on to this in his 1977 film “High Anxiety” with Professor Lilloman (pronounced “little old man”), a stock character who moves at a turtle’s pace, mumbles and whines as he goes, equally irritated and irritating.

I used to find the professor a lot funnier than I do now. Slow? Merely to rise to my feet in a restaurant takes so much angling and fulcrum searching, the waitstaff takes bets on whether I will do it at all.

Old age isn’t what the books promised it would be. Literature is littered with old people for whom the years have brought some combination of wisdom, serenity, authority and power — King Lear, the ageless priest in Shangri-La, Miss Marple, Mr. Chips, Mrs. Chips (I made that up), Dickens’s Aged P, crazy Mrs. Danvers. In fiction, old folks are usually impressive and in control. In life, something less.

I can’t think of anyone who has come to me for wisdom, serenity, authority or power. People do come to sell me life insurance for $9 a month and medicines such as Prevagen, which is advertised on TV as making one sharper and improving one’s memory. Of course, that is beneficial only to those who have more things they wish to remember than to forget.

One thing I need to remember is which day for which doctor. Two years ago, my wife and I moved back to New York City after 24 years of living by the sea. The city is safer, we thought — just in case we may ever need to be near medical facilities. Since our move, not a day has passed without one of us seeing a doctor, arranging to see one or thinking or talking about seeing one.

On one day last week, I had a vascular sonogram in the morning, consulted my ophthalmologist in the afternoon, made an appointment with a retina specialist, spoke to my primary care physician about test results and put off my dentist. As a result of such activities, my vocabulary has increased. I now can say “occlusion” — and mean it. Has anyone seen my oximeter?

Activities such as getting out of a taxi are not only degrading and humiliating; they take so much effort, they simply make you tired. You may reasonably say, “Why not take the subway?” I would, except for the two hours needed to get up and down the stairs. Still, it’s all a matter of adjustment. It took me three or four years of taxi rides to finally admit to myself that I’m old.

Old. Even the word sounds like a sigh of surrender.

I wrote a book called “Rules for Aging” 25 years ago, when I used to leap in and out of taxis like a deer, if you can picture such a thing. The rules were less about aging than about living generally, one of the first being “Nobody’s thinking about you.”

In old age that’s true in spades. And that’s another of aging’s unnerving surprises. You disappear from the culture, or rather, it disappears from you. Young women and men shown on TV as world famous, you’ve never heard of. New idioms leave you baffled. You are Rip Van Winkle without having fallen asleep.

To be sure, old age has compensations. Grandchildren. Their company is delightful, partly because they think you have something useful to impart, if you could remember to impart it. Waitresses tend to treat you sweetly. Doormen and maintenance crews show respect. And there are positive or harmless activities for the over the hill. Women take up watercolors and form book clubs. Men find loud if pointless camaraderie in diners and on village benches all over the country. Hey, old-timer.

While here in the city, we hail taxis. And cringe to see whether the one we have hailed is a normal car, for normal people, or one of those sliding, clanging door jobs that require a forklift for entry. I’m not exaggerating — much.

My point is: Who ever expected to spend time wondering if Madison Beer is a beverage honoring a founding father? Who ever expected that one’s social circle would consist of Marie, who does blood work, and an M.R.I. technician named Lou? Who ever expected that getting out of a taxi would be so momentous an issue that one is a bundle of nerves planning exit strategies halfway through the ride? Who ever expected old age?

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The danger of debates

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