Jefferson’s words on the need to interpret the Constitution over time

Thanks to Margaret F. (from a letter to the Seattle Times). Click on this site for more words etched in marble in the Jefferson Memorial.

Southeast Portico of the Jefferson Memorial:

“I am not an advocate for frequent changes in laws and constitutions, but laws and institutions must go hand in hand with the progress of the human mind. As that becomes more developed, more enlightened, as new discoveries are made, new truths discovered and manners and opinions change, with the change of circumstances, institutions must advance also to keep pace with the times. We might as well require a man to wear still the coat which fitted him when a boy as a civilized society to remain ever under the regimen of their barbarous ancestors.”

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Amazing sculptures

Thanks to Mary Jane F.

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Seattle Chamber Music Rehearsal at Skyline

Thanks to Diane S.

This coming Thursday, from 2:30 to approximately 5 PM, there will be an open rehearsal of one of the pieces which will be played the following evening at the Seattle Chamber Music Society’s Summer Festival in Nordstrom Hall, Benaroya.  We had our first open rehearsal in Skyline’s new performance Center at the last SCMS Winter Festival and many of you found the experience a wonderful one so I am happy it can be repeated once again.

Please find below detailed information as well as bios of the two musicians who will be participating.  Since this is a rehearsal you may come any time between 2:30 and 5:00 PM although I advise coming on the early side as it is up to the musicians to determine how long a rehearsal they need.

I also want to confirm that transportation to and from Benaroya Hall will be provided to the one matinee performance on Sunday, July 31st.  Please go to the Caremerge calendar for July 31st to sign up or contact Jensen Ng by phone.  As of today, there are three people signed up and there may well be a minimum number needed for the transportation to remain available.  For details on the concert that day, kindly go to seattlechambermusic.org

I look forward to seeing many of you at the rehearsal and at Benaroya Hall.  Best regards to all,  Diane  (Member of the SCMS Board)

Yegor Dyachkov

Lauded for his remarkable stage presence, depth of insight, nuance and generosity, cellist Yegor Dyachkov is an inspired recitalist, chamber musician and concerto soloist. Since being proclaimed Artist of the Year by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, in 2000, Mr. Dyachkov has gone on to perform throughout Europe, Latin America, Asia, Canada and the United States, making his New York debut at Lincoln Center in October 2000. He has appeared with major orchestras in such cities as Antwerp, Geneva, Montreal, Rio de Janeiro, Toronto and Vancouver, and has performed at numerous international festivals in Évian, Kronberg, Lanaudière, Ottawa, and Tanglewood.

A champion of new music, Yegor Dyachkov has premiered works dedicated to him such as the Sonata by Jacques Hétu, Ironman by Michael Oesterle, Vez for solo cello by Ana Sokolovic, as well as Menuhin : Présence by the late André Prévost.  He was invited by Yo-Yo Ma and Sony Music to take part in the Silk Road Project.

Winning the Orford International Competition led to an invitation from the Chandos label to record his debut CD in 1997. His other acclaimed recordings can be found on the Brioso, Pelléas and Analekta, Riche Lieu and Atma labels. Yegor Dyachkov’s principal mentors have been Aleksandr Fedorchenko in Moscow, Yuli Turovsky in Montréal and Boris Pergamenschikow in Cologne. He teaches at the Schulich School of Music of McGill University and at l’Université de Montréal and offers frequent masterclasses.

Joyce Yang

Blessed with “poetic and sensitive pianism” (Washington Post) and a “wondrous sense of color” (San Francisco Classical Voice), Grammy-nominated pianist Joyce Yang captivates audiences with her virtuosity, lyricism, and interpretive sensitivity.

She first came to international attention in 2005 when she won the silver medal at the 12th Van Cliburn International Piano Competition. The youngest contestant at 19 years old, she took home two additional awards: Best Performance of Chamber Music (with the Takàcs Quartet), and Best Performance of a New Work. In 2006 Yang made her celebrated New York Philharmonic debut alongside Lorin Maazel at Avery Fisher Hall along with the orchestra’s tour of Asia, making a triumphant return to her hometown of Seoul, South Korea. Yang’s subsequent appearances with the New York Philharmonic have included opening night of the 2008 Leonard Bernstein Festival – an appearance made at the request of Maazel in his final season as music director. The New York Times pronounced her performance in Bernstein’s The Age of Anxiety a “knockout.”

In the last decade, Yang has blossomed into an “astonishing artist” (Neue Zürcher Zeitung), showcasing her colorful musical personality in solo recitals and collaborations with the world’s top orchestras and chamber musicians through more than 1,000 debuts and re-engagements. She received the 2010 Avery Fisher Career Grant and earned her first Grammy nomination (Best Chamber Music/Small Ensemble Performance) for her recording of Franck, Kurtág, Previn & Schumann with violinist Augustin Hadelich (“One can only sit in misty-eyed amazement at their insightful flair and spontaneity.” – The Strad). She has become a staple of the summer festival circuit with frequent appearances on the programs of the Aspen Summer Music Festival, La Jolla SummerFest and the Seattle Chamber Music Society.

Other notable orchestral engagements have included the Chicago Symphony, Los Angeles Philharmonic, Philadelphia Orchestra, San Francisco Symphony, Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin, the BBC Philharmonic, as well as the Toronto, Vancouver, Sydney, Melbourne, and New Zealand symphony orchestras. She was also featured in a five-year Rachmaninoff concerto cycle with Edo de Waart and the Milwaukee Symphony, to which she brought “an enormous palette of colors, and tremendous emotional depth” (Milwaukee Sentinel Journal). 

In solo recital, Yang’s innovative program has been praised as “extraordinary” and “kaleidoscopic” (Los Angeles Times). She has performed at New York City’s Lincoln Center and Metropolitan Museum, the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., Chicago’s Symphony Hall and Zurich’s Tonhalle. In 2018, Musica Viva presented Yang in an extensive recital tour throughout Australia.

As an avid chamber musician, Yang has collaborated with the Takács Quartet for Dvořák – part of Lincoln Center’s Great Performers series – and Schubert’s “Trout” Quintet with members of the Emerson String Quartet at the Mostly Mozart Festival at Lincoln Center. Yang has fostered an enduring partnership with the Alexander String Quartet, which continued in the 2018/2019 season with performances in Davis, Tucson, San Francisco, Dallas, Aliso Viejo, Rockville and Seattle. Following their debut disc of Brahms and Schumann Quintets, their recording of Mozart’s Piano Quartets was released in July 2018 (FoghornClassics). Jerry Dubins of Fanfare Magazine wrote that the renditions were “by far, hands down and feet up, the most amazing performances of Mozart’s two piano quartets that have ever graced these ears.”

Posted in Music | Comments Off on Seattle Chamber Music Rehearsal at Skyline

Car makers ignore the increased injuries in women

Thanks to Bob P.

Women have 73 percent greater odds of being seriously injured in a car crash than men. Yet the U.S. continues to use dummies based on male bodies for almost all of its crash testing – leaving women at serious risk on the road.

Although there have been countless safety advances over the years, our nation’s auto safety rules are almost entirely designed to protect a 5-foot-9-inch, 170-pound male — the most common crash-test dummy. Yet women represent about half of U.S. drivers, and studies have shown that women are injured differently in auto crashes due to variances in bone density, muscle mass, and other factors. 

Despite piles of data, and years of Consumer Reports and other safety groups demanding change, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has failed to use more representative female dummies in its crash testing. But we can change that by speaking out together now! 

Join Consumer Reports’ petition to NHTSA demanding female crash test dummies! It’s a lifesaver, and a no-brainer!

Sign the Petition

According to government data, a female driver or front passenger who is wearing her seat belt is approximately 17 percent more likely than a male to be killed when a crash takes place — and has 73 percent greater odds of being seriously injured. 

In 2003, NHTSA finally agreed to use a smaller version of the male dummy in a handful of crash tests to try to represent women. But this dummy doesn’t take into account biological differences between male and female bodies. More concerning, this “female” dummy is never the driver in any frontal crash tests — even though women are about half of U.S. drivers.

We’re expecting NHTSA to release a plan soon for future crash-test dummies, and we’re calling for an end to the bias in outdated auto safety testing. It’s beyond time for a more representative female crash-test dummy guided by scientific evidence, not by outdated gender stereotypes about who is driving. 

Join Consumer Reports in demanding NHTSA protect women’s safety and require a new female crash-test dummy.

Sign the Petition    

This is a make-or-break moment in the fight for fairness and safety, so please share this email with friends and family so we can push regulators to do the right thing!

Thank you,

Meg Bohne
Consumer Reports

Posted in Advocacy | Comments Off on Car makers ignore the increased injuries in women

An amazing friend

Thanks to Sybil-Ann

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Thinking about our language

Thanks to Rosemary W.

Posted in Humor | Comments Off on Thinking about our language

Beauty on the 5th floor patio

One of the many nice design features of Skyline is the patio joining the CT and the Terraces. Hard work by residents provides us a wonderful setting where we can enjoy natural beauty in a peaceful setting.

Posted in environment, Gardening | Comments Off on Beauty on the 5th floor patio

NASA’s new telescope shows star death, dancing galaxies

Thanks to Pam P

Click here for NASA’s web site

What looks much like craggy mountains on a moonlit evening is actually the edge of a nearby, young, star-forming region NGC 3324 in the Carina Nebula. Captured in infrared light by the Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam) on NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope, this image reveals previously obscured areas of star birth.  (NASA, ESA, CSA, and STScI )
1 of 11 | What looks much like craggy mountains on a moonlit evening is actually the edge of a nearby, young, star-forming region NGC 3324 in the Carina Nebula. Captured in infrared light by the Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam) on NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope, this image… (NASA, ESA, CSA, and STScI)
Today, NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope reveals Stephan’s Quintet, a visual grouping of five galaxies, in a new light. This enormous mosaic is Webb’s largest image to date, covering about one-fifth of the Moon’s diameter. It contains over 150 million pixels and is constructed from almost 1,000 separate image files. The information from Webb provides new insights into how galactic interactions may have driven galaxy evolution in the early universe.
Today, NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope reveals Stephan’s Quintet, a visual grouping of five galaxies, in a new light. This enormous mosaic is Webb’s largest image to date, covering about one-fifth of the Moon’s diameter. It contains over 150 million pixels and is constructed from almost 1,000 separate image files. The information from Webb provides new insights into how galactic interactions may have driven galaxy evolution in the early universe. (NASA/ESA/CSA/STScI)

Posted in Space | Comments Off on NASA’s new telescope shows star death, dancing galaxies

Commentary: Prosecute Trump? Merrick Garland is investigating aggressively but prosecuting cautiously

by journalist Doyle McManus

The House committee on the Jan. 6, 2021, insurgency, whose hearings resume this week, has produced impressive evidence that could allow prosecutors to argue that former President Donald Trump committed crimes as he tried to overturn the 2020 election.

Thanks to the hearings, we now know more clearly that Trump tried to bully Vice President Mike Pence into blocking Congress’ count of electoral votes, tried to bully Justice Department officials into declaring the election fraudulent even though they knew it wasn’t and stood by with seeming approval while his armed supporters sacked the Capitol.

All of which has led many ordinary citizens — and not just Trump-haters — to wonder: Why isn’t Attorney General Merrick Garland prosecuting this man?

The answer is both complicated and simple. Indicting a former president for trying to subvert a presidential election is harder than it looks.

“It’s definitely not a slam-dunk,” Paul Rosenzweig, a former federal prosecutor (and anti-Trump Republican), told me last week. “It will require tough decisions.”

The problem isn’t lack of evidence. The former Trump aides who have testified before the House committee and been interviewed by the FBI have taken care of that.

The problem, Rosenzweig and other former prosecutors said, is that convincing a jury that Trump is guilty beyond a reasonable doubt will still be difficult — especially when the former president, armed with good lawyers, can challenge that evidence.

“We know from the polls that about 30% of the American people think Trump did nothing wrong on Jan. 6,” Rosenzweig said. “Thirty percent of a jury is three or four people. I think getting a unanimous conviction will be nearly impossible, even in the liberal District of Columbia.”

And a trial that ends in Trump’s acquittal, he warned, would backfire.

“It would not only have the effect of giving Trump impunity,” he said, “it would give him impunity and an aura of invincibility.”

Others disagree. Donald B. Ayer, another Republican former prosecutor, thinks a conviction would be possible. “Trump was ready to have Mike Pence be killed,” Ayer said. “You tell that story to a jury, and I think you win.”

But Ayer notes that Justice Department regulations require that prosecutors believe they have a high probability of winning a conviction before they can indict. By that standard, what Garland is doing is both correct and by the book. He’s investigating aggressively — but prosecuting cautiously.

Justice Department lawyers have served subpoenas on Rudolph W. Giuliani and John Eastman, lawyers who advised Trump on his schemes, and on pro-Trump activists who organized bogus slates of “alternative electors” in swing states like Arizona and Georgia.

Last month, FBI agents searched the Virginia home of Jeffrey Clark, a former top Justice Department official who pushed colleagues to endorse Trump’s claims of voter fraud.

And prosecutors have indicted leaders of the right-wing Proud Boys and Oath Keepers militias on charges of seditious conspiracy in connection with Jan. 6.

All of which suggests that the Justice Department is pursuing a traditional organized-crime model in its investigation: prosecuting small fish to build cases against the higher-ups.

Even so, Trump will be able to argue in his defense that he lacked criminal intent, by claiming either that he genuinely believed the election had been stolen or did not know that interfering with Congress could be against the law.

The most likely charges against Trump are conspiracy to defraud the United States, a broad statute that covers almost any illegitimate interference with government operations, and conspiracy to obstruct an official proceeding.

There is also a broader policy question surrounding a decision to indict a former president, an action no prosecutor has taken before: Would it be in the national interest?

“Indicting a past and possible future political adversary of the current president would be a cataclysmic event,” Jack Goldsmith, a former Justice Department official in the George W. Bush administration, warned last month. “It would be seen by many as politicized retribution. The prosecution would take many years to conclude … (and would) deeply affect the next election.”

Others lawyers, both Republicans and Democrats, disagree vigorously.

“It’s essential that Trump be prosecuted, if only to deter him and future presidential candidates from trying to do this again,” Norman Eisen, a former Obama administration official, argued. “It would do terrible damage to allow a former president to walk free after committing acts for which anyone else would be indicted.”

Those debates don’t amount to a conclusive argument against prosecuting Trump. But they do add up to a list of reasons why Garland should avoid a rush to judgment while his investigators do their work — and that, to all appearances, is precisely what he’s doing.

Doyle McManus is a columnist for the Los Angeles Times. Readers may send him email at doyle.mcmanus@latimes.com.

Posted in Crime, Essays, Government | Comments Off on Commentary: Prosecute Trump? Merrick Garland is investigating aggressively but prosecuting cautiously

It’s one of those days

142 Of The Funniest New Yorker Cartoons Ever | Bored Panda
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Explore The Atlantic

Thanks to Mary M.

      SUPPORTING SPONSOR     For the first time, subscribers can read every story published in The Atlantic from 1857 to today. Below is a note from our editor in chief about preserving the magazine’s rich past, and what awaits readers in the archive.   For the first time, subscribers can read every story published in The Atlantic from 1857 to today.

Below is a note from our editor in chief about preserving the magazine’s rich past, and what awaits readers in the archive.       Jeffrey Goldberg headshot Jeffrey Goldberg

EDITOR IN CHIEF   One of my great joys as a journalist at The Atlantic is to spelunk into our physical archive. And it has been a particular frustration of mine that I could not share the joy with our readers. So it is an enormous pleasure to let you know that we have finally made our full archive—representing 165 years of Atlantic journalism—available online. Nearly 30,000 articles, reviews, short stories, and poems, published between The Atlantic’s founding in 1857 and 1995, the year we launched our website (a site that included, from its start, articles that originated both in print and on the web), are now accessible to subscribers, researchers, students, historians, and that blessed category, the incurably curious.

“The world is all gates, all opportunities,” Ralph Waldo Emerson, one of our founders, said, and the gates to our magazine’s rich past are now open.

I hope that our readers will experience the same wonder I felt when I learned that The King and I, the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical, was birthed in the pages of The Atlantic, in the form of a memoir by Anna Leonowens. Or when I discovered Felix Frankfurter’s defense of Sacco and Vanzetti, or the rolling argument between Booker T. Washington and W. E. B. Du Bois on the methodology of Black liberation, or Mark Twain’s first impressions of the telephone, or one of Hemingway’s earliest short stories, or Rachel Carson’s initial foray into nature writing, or Sylvia Plath’s best poems, or Robert Frost’s “The Road Not Taken” (yes, first published in The Atlantic).

You will find, as you explore the archives, luminous, limpid, and polyphonic prose, but I should warn you that you will find opaque and unintelligible prose as well, along with a good number of writers who merit their obscurity. It’s all here: the good, the bad, the brilliant, the offensive, the ridiculous. We knew from the start that we would engage in no censorship, trimming, or dodging. And so you will find in the archives eugenics sympathizers and people who today would correctly be called racist and misogynistic, imperialist, and anti-Semitic. As journalists, we felt it important to share our archives in full, for reasons of transparency and historical accuracy.

To help our readers begin to explore the millions of words we’ve just uploaded to the web, we’re launching a special project spotlighting 25 writers from our past, with essays written by contemporary Atlantic writers. These featured writers include one of the two greatest figures of 19th-century American life, Frederick Douglass, along with Helen Keller, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Henry David Thoreau, Raymond Chandler, and John Muir. And we’ll keep adding new writers, because the Atlantic bench has infinite depth.

There is a universe of interest in our archives; I hope you find them illuminating. Please explore!

Jeffrey Goldberg
Posted in History, literature | Comments Off on Explore The Atlantic

An inventor promised flights from San Francisco to New York. He created an air disaster instead.

Thanks to Bob P.

Katie Dowd, SFGATE July 10, 2022 Updated: July 10, 2022 6:59 a.m.

Morrell's ill-fated airship takes flight — for a moment — over Berkeley on May 23, 1908. The photo is from the collection of William R. Stein of The Jive Bomber.
Morrell’s ill-fated airship takes flight — for a moment — over Berkeley on May 23, 1908. The photo is from the collection of William R. Stein of The Jive Bomber.From the collection of William R. Stein

J.A. Morrell felt very good about his sausage-shaped airship. In February 1908, the inventor boasted it could “take a businessman to New York from San Francisco in the morning in time for luncheon there and return him to San Francisco to take his evening meal here.” Considering this is barely possible in the 21st century, it was a big claim — and one Morrell was determined to prove.

By late spring, he was ready to send the 450-foot-long prototype into the Bay Area skies. But San Francisco officials, understandably, didn’t think a massive, gas-powered hot dog was a safe thing to try out over a populated area. So Morrell moved his project to quiet, bucolic Berkeley. There, a San Francisco fire chief reportedly cautioned his Berkeley counterparts that Morrell’s airship was a “menace to life and safety.”

Unfortunately for everyone, that warning went unheeded. 

Posted in History | Comments Off on An inventor promised flights from San Francisco to New York. He created an air disaster instead.

What’s easier to get – a six pack or an AK-47?

Posted in Advocacy, Guns | Comments Off on What’s easier to get – a six pack or an AK-47?

Reflections from Graystone

Second from top, in this view from the 26th floor of Skyline East, one sees the 26th floor observation deck reflected from the SE-facing floor of Graystone. The bowed and displaced windows are unevenly bearing the weight of the windows above. Some windows are open.

NW-facing windows at Skyline East are going to get lots of sunlight reflected into them on winter afternoons.

Posted in In the Neighborhood | Comments Off on Reflections from Graystone

VISIT WITH U.S. REP. KIM SCHRIER

Your friends and neighbors will be gathering on: MONDAY, AUGUST 22 ND, 5:00 – 6:30 PM IN THE SKY CLUB LOUNGE (24th floor CT) to meet, talk with and financially support Dr. Kim Schreier in her efforts to retain her seat as the Representative for the 8th Congressional District of Washington.  Light refreshments and beverages will be served.

For better or worse, most Congressional Districts in Washington as well as the other states are not competitive – dominated by one of the two political parties. The 8th District has been identified by both parties and political analysts as one of the few really competitive Congressional races in 2022.

Support for Kim is critical to efforts to retain Democratic control of the House of Representatives. Therefore Katherine Graubard, Suzanne Hittman, Art Pasette and Ed Marcuse are organizing this fundraiser. 

Attendance will be limited due to space considerations. 

If you are interested in an invitation to attend this fundraiser, please contact:

 Ed Marcuse at emarcuse@uw.edu or (206) 660-1132.

Posted in Government, Politics | Comments Off on VISIT WITH U.S. REP. KIM SCHRIER

19 Days in America

Thanks to Ed M.

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Posted in Crime, Government, Guns, Health, Justice, Kindness | 1 Comment

A Neurologist’s Tips to Protect Your Memory

From the New York Times by Hope Reese

A new book by a renowned brain expert says there are a few simple things we can do to prevent memory decline as we age.

As we age, our memory declines. This is an ingrained assumption for many of us; however, according to neuroscientist Dr. Richard Restak, a neurologist and clinical professor at George Washington Hospital University School of Medicine and Health, decline is not inevitable.

The author of more than 20 books on the mind, Dr. Restak has decades’ worth of experience in guiding patients with memory. “The Complete Guide to Memory: The Science of Strengthening Your Mind,” Dr. Restak’s latest book, includes tools such as mental exercises, sleep habits and diet that can help boost memory.

Yet Dr. Restak ventures beyond this familiar territory, considering every facet of memory — how memory is connected to creative thinking, technology’s impact on memory, how memory shapes identity. “The point of the book is to overcome the everyday problems of memory,” Dr. Restak said.

Especially working memory, which falls between immediate recall and long-term memory, and is tied to intelligence, concentration and achievement. According to Dr. Restak, this is the most critical type of memory, and exercises to strengthen it should be practiced daily. But bolstering all memory skills, he added, is key to warding off later memory issues.

Memory decline is not inevitable with aging, Dr. Restak argues in the book. Instead, he points to ten “sins” or, “stumbling blocks that can lead to lost or distorted memories.” Seven were first described by the psychologist and memory specialist Daniel Lawrence Schacter — “sins of omission,” such as absent-mindedness, and “sins of commission,” such as distorted memories. To those Dr. Restak added three of his own: technological distortion, technological distraction and depression.

Ultimately, “we are what we can remember,” he said. Here are some of Dr. Restak’s tips for developing and maintaining a healthy memory.

Posted in Dementia, Health | Comments Off on A Neurologist’s Tips to Protect Your Memory

The cost of gasoline

Thanks to Mike C.

Posted in Economics | 1 Comment

Art in the sand

Thanks to Gordon G.

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Art in the sand

The rise of reactionaries in the wake of the 1918 flu pandemic

Emergent movements, including a resurgence of the KKK, led to more anti-immigration policy, eugenics laws, religious fundamentalism and conservative leadership.

by Knute Berger (thanks to Pam P for sending)

Three people in white robes talking to a man in a suit

Three unidentified Washington Klan members, covered in robes and hoods, are interviewed by Seattle Post-Intelligencer reporter Robert Berman, likely at a Klan initiation or pubic rally in 1923. (Courtesy of MOHAI, PI21477)ADVERTISEMENT

The end of the 1918 influenza pandemic in the early 1920s ushered in a rough, reactionary period in America. People were frustrated by war, inflation, and pandemic restrictions. Pent-up resentments with a rapidly changing society let loose as flu masks flew off and quarantines ended.

The Jazz Age was flourishing, thanks in part to new Prohibition laws. In Seattle, the so-called Jackson Street nightclub and speakeasy scene took off, spreading from Pioneer Square to the Central District and eventually birthing more than a generation of great music and musicians. But while the races exuberantly mixed in the after-midnight hours at clubs like the Black and Tan, nationally — and locally — reactionary racial politics took hold. By day, the segregating redlines in the city were steadfast and racist covenants spread.

Politically, the white middle class yearned for “normalcy,” which brought a sequence of conservative Republican presidents, including Calvin Coolidge, Warren G. Harding and Herbert Hoover, all of whom carried Washington state. But “normalcy” for many people meant a return to aggressive white supremacy. In some cases, Washington led the way.

The Ku Klux Klan revived in the ’20s. Once mostly limited to the South, it found new enthusiasts in the white middle class of the far West and Midwest. The KKK took over towns and state houses, including for a time Oregon’s. Anti-Black, anti-Semitic, anti-Catholic and anti-modernity, the Klan became a powerful force that paraded openly in the streets and rallied tens of thousands of people to witness late-night cross-burnings in places like Issaquah, Yakima and Renton. Some events attracted 30,000 or more people.

Seattle author Timothy Egan has written a book about the 1920s Klan revival, A Fever in the Heartland, due out next spring. Some five million Americans joined the 1920s KKK. In 1924, the Democratic delegations from Washington, Oregon and Idaho together unanimously opposed a plank in the party’s platform that would repudiate Klan violence.

New anti-immigration laws targeting Asians were passed to keep America white. The Northwest had been founded on race-based policies that impacted who could settle here and who could homestead. In 1921, the Washington Legislature passed the first law since statehood aimed at cracking down on Japanese immigrants by revoking their right to lease or rent land. A Washington Congressman, Albert Johnson, shepherded a bill through Congress, the Immigration Act of 1924, that essentially halted all Asian immigration. Johnson called it a “bulwark against alien blood.” These kinds of bills had strong support from both the KKK and the general public.

The year of the immigration act also saw the election of a conservative Republican governor in Washington, Roland Hartley, an Everett politician and timberman who broke with the progressive wing of the GOP. Historian Dave M. Buerge has written, “The 1924 campaign was a particularly grotesque one in Washington politics, with the Ku Klux Klan fomenting hatred against blacks, foreigners, Jews, and Catholics. Government intervention in private life during the war had fostered a backlash.”

Hartley capitalized. He was anti-labor, anti-tax and anti-government when he couldn’t control it with his autocratic ways. He slashed funding for the state highway department and for public schools, and he almost drove the University of Washington into the ground by cutting its budgets and seizing control of its board of regents. He bullied and name-called his enemies, though I’m not sure anyone today would be insulted by being called a “pusillanimous blatherskite.” 

Posted in History, Politics, Race | Comments Off on The rise of reactionaries in the wake of the 1918 flu pandemic

God Bless America

Thanks to Rosemary W.

Posted in Music | Comments Off on God Bless America

July 4th by Heather Cox Richardson

And on July 4, 1776, the Second Continental Congress adopted the Declaration of Independence, declaring: “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness.”

For all the fact that the congressmen got around the sticky little problem of Black and Indigenous slavery by defining “men” as “white men,” and for all that it never crossed their minds that women might also have rights, the Declaration of Independence was an astonishingly radical document. In a world that had been dominated by a small class of rich men for so long that most people simply accepted that they should be forever tied to their status at birth, a group of upstart legislators on the edges of a continent declared that no man was born better than any other.

America was founded on the radical idea that all men are created equal.

What the founders declared self-evident was not so clear eighty-seven years later, when southern white men went to war to reshape America into a nation in which African Americans, Indigenous Americans, Chinese, and Irish were locked into a lower status than whites. In that era, equality had become a “proposition,” rather than “self-evident.”

“Four score and seven years ago,” Abraham Lincoln reminded Americans, “our fathers brought forth on this continent, a new nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.” In 1863, Lincoln explained, the Civil War was “testing whether that nation, or any nation so conceived and so dedicated, can long endure.”

It did, of course. The Confederate rebellion failed. The United States endured, and Americans began to expand the idea that all men are created equal to include Black men, men of color, and eventually to include women.

But just as in the 1850s, we are now, once again, facing a rebellion against our founding principle, as a few people seek to reshape America into a nation in which certain people are better than others.

The men who signed the Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776 pledged their “Lives, [their] Fortunes and [their] sacred Honor” to defend the idea of human equality. Ever since then, Americans have sacrificed their own fortunes, honor, and even their lives, for that principle. Lincoln reminded Civil War Americans of those sacrifices when he urged the people of his era to “take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion—that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain—that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom—and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.”

Words to live by in 2022.

Posted in Essays | Comments Off on July 4th by Heather Cox Richardson

July 4th – a day of celebration and remembrance

Thanks to Pam P.

celebrations pulse   It’s America’s 246th birthday, a midpoint of summer and a chance for communities to celebrate together

Everyone knows the Fourth of July marks the day in 1776 when the Founding Fathers signed the Declaration of Independence. And while that is true, it took a few days for all the members of the Continental Congress to sign, and a few years for the colonies to be truly independent.

How John Adams set the mood on July 2, 1776

The traditional Independence Day celebrations can be traced to none other than John Adams, a Founding Father who would later become the nation’s second president. In a note to his beloved wife, Abigail, he wrote: I am apt to believe that it will be celebrated, by succeeding Generations, as the great anniversary Festival…It ought to be solemnized with Pomp and Parade, with Shews, Games, Sports, Guns, Bells, Bonfires and Illuminations from one End of this Continent to the other, from this Time forward forever more. More than two centuries later, we’re still celebrating!

A celebration of community

Adams was right, of course since July 4th is arguably the biggest day of the year for communities to gather. There are parades, there are bonfires. And there are festivals that might include a hot dog eating contest. Then, after 9 p.m., friends, neighbors, and family all gather to watch fireworks.

If you think about it, besides the stroke of midnight on New Year’s Day each year, July 4th is the only other time when most of our country is united in doing the same thing – collectively looking up to the sky at the majesty of fireworks.

Regardless of where and how you enjoy the holiday, you never get too old to celebrate.
celebrations pulse   July 4th is about honoring America’s freedom

While fireworks fill the sky from coast-to-coast, at the heart of the Fourth of July is recognizing the gift of democracy that our country has. Through the Revolutionary War, the Civil War, and World Wars I and II, America has stood tall, come together, and remained the United States of America. It’s what separates us from the rest of the world.

Perhaps no battle for freedom was more important and successful than the Allied landing on the beaches of Normandy on D-Day on June 6, 1944. Jim recently heard from a friend who shared a story about one of D-day’s most prominent, but little-known patriots. Brigadier General Theodore Roosevelt Jr. the son of President “Teddy” Roosevelt, was the oldest man to hit the beach on the D-day invasion. He was also the highest-ranking person to directly participate in the beach landing invasion.

Roosevelt knew the importance of the mission, he knew much of the invasion force were new, untried soldiers who had never seen combat. His requests to join his men were repeatedly denied, but he persisted, even when his superiors told him he faced near certain death.

The landing of the troops was successful, and General Roosevelt was there to see it all; however, six days later, Roosevelt died of a heart attack. He is buried in France. He has been called “the toughest man on the longest day.”
  celebrations pulse   The midpoint of summer

July 4th comes on the heels of the longest day of the year, which is June 21, when the sun reaches its highest and most northerly point. After that day, daylight begins to become shorter.

The holiday of July 4th is sandwiched between the unofficial start of summer, Memorial Day, and the unofficial end of summer, Labor Day, so you can surmise that July 4th is the unofficial middle of summer.   celebrations pulse   So, at this mid-point, as we celebrate our shared history, let’s think about, for a moment, how we all come together as communities for this one singular day. The last few years, including this year, have been difficult for all of us, yet we persist in being the United State of America. Let’s celebrate our Union, and all that it has given us for the last 246 years.

Happy Fourth of July!
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Canada’s Fourth of July

Thanks to Pam P.

Ed note: This critique by Michael Moore rings true, but Canada is far from perfect. They have a history of discriminating against native populations and forcing children to be educated away from their families in often brutal conditions. There are divisions and discrimination between the English and French speaking Canadians. All that said, it is a much more progressive country with a sense of “we’re all in this together.” Have we lost our way in the USA?

Michael Moore

Yesterday, July 1, was Canada’s 4th of July. Yes, we Americans explain things through our lens, the only lens that matters, we rule the world, we’re #1, so yes, we call it your 4th of July. You Canadians call it “Canada Day”.  Whatever. It’s the day you celebrate YOUR independence from the British. But you didn’t do it our way — violent Revolution! — you had to do it your way, no killing, no death, no tossing and wasting good tea. You simply waited them out until they were sick of the cold and they just left. 80 years after our revolution. 

But when our Continental Congress in 1777 wrote the precursor to our Constitution — “The Articles of Confederation“ — they didn’t want to leave you, Canada, out of the new country! So they included a clause that said Canada could leave the Brits behind whenever they wanted and automatically become the 14th State of the United States of America. Thank you very much. You’re welcome! 

Here it is, Article XI, as written by our Founding Fathers:

ARTICLE XI. Canada acceding to this confederation, and joining in the measures of the United States, shall be admitted into, and entitled to all the advantages of this union. But no other colony shall be admitted into the same, unless such admission be agreed to by nine states.

Canada chose not to accept our generous offer. 

I wonder if maybe now they’d like to reconsider? How many Canadians yesterday on Canada Day spent time at their BBQs wishing they could strip their female citizens of their reproductive rights! And strip their environmental ministry of its authority to stop carbon polluters! 

Oh Canada, how on May 14th of this year you must have looked longingly across the Niagara River at Buffalo while Black people were slaughtered by one of our thousands of white supremacists with legally-purchased guns! You know your Stanley Cup now sits just miles from Columbine High School! 

How weak you must feel having to depend on your government which pays for every single one of your doctor and hospital bills — and you, never having to suffer the pain of bankruptcy due to medical bills, because you refuse to play by the rules of the free market system which decrees there can be no health care without a profit motive! Without the shareholders getting rich through the widespread denial of medical care! All this freeloading — no wonder you’re soft! We’ll never forget that you wouldn’t join us in invading Iraq! 

How can you live like this?! Pre-voter registering every one of your citizens on the day of their birth so that they get their voter card 18 years later to the very day?! How the hell can you suppress the vote that way! Why do you resent the way Democracy works! 

And now your prime minister tells every American woman that if they are unable to get an abortion in the U.S. they are welcome to come to Canada and get one for free! At least 20% of America considers this an act of war!  

To our Canadian neighbors — I’m sure most Americans would still love to have you as part of our Great nation. As we get ready to honor our 4th of July, what a neat celebration it would be to have you with us! We’ll teach you how to shoot, how to gerrymander, and we can help you clean up your constitution (Section 28 of the current Canadian Constitution’s Charter of Rights and Freedoms: “Notwithstanding anything in this Charter, the rights and freedoms referred to in it are guaranteed equally to male and female persons.”)

Think about it!

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The missing support at Graystone’s NE corner

A curious omission.

July 1 photo from NE 26th floor of Skyline.
If this architect’s presentation is still current, it looks like the support’s omission may be to maintain the view from a restaurant.

Any other guesses?

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