Her time has come

Thanks to Sybil-Ann

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Time for a smile

Thanks to Sybil-Ann

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“Meritless to the point of demagoguery” – The National Review

by Heather Cox Richardson

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Motives

Thanks to Sybil-Ann

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Ferry Rider? Take a survey

Thanks to Mary M.

Dear FROG Member: 

At the end of March, the Washington State Transportation Commission will be sending you a link to a new FROG survey that will ask for your input on WSF’s recent performance (January to March 2022).

To get as many people involved as possible, we are hoping we can enlist your help in getting more people to join the FROG and take the survey.  The more people we hear from, the more impact your collective voice will have.

If you know of any ferry riders or people interested in ferry issues, who might want to participate, please pass this email along to them.  All they need to do to sign up is click on the link below and fill out a short form:

(HERE IS THE LINK YOU CAN SHARE FOR OTHERS TO JOIN FROG)
CLICK HERE TO JOIN the Ferry Riders’ Opinion Group –
It only takes a few minutes to join and receive an email invitation to participate in our next survey.

We truly do appreciate you taking the time to share your views via the surveys and appreciate any help you can lend us in getting more folks to join the FROG community.

Sincerely,

Roy Jennings, Chair
Washington State Transportation Commission
http://wstc.wa.gov/

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The next gen

“What I lack in stuff I make up for in generational wealth.”
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Bittersweet from Charles Coghlan

Image
UW Campus Cherry Blossoms

Skyline’s Ikebana teacher shares the thoughts of the cherry tree

Double cherry blossoms

flutter in the wind,

one petal  after another.

             Shiki

As the years pass and we grow older,

we realize that no moment repeats itself.

They are all unique.

                  Sofu Teshigahara 

Happy Springtime to all!

Equinox—that moment of perfect balance

between two polar opposites.

Light and Dark, Fire and Ice, Bitter and Sweet.

Let us celebrate with listening

to the words of a master.

CHERRY

I can be so sweet,

I can be so bitter.

I am Cherry.

While I provided the elixir that gave the Greek deities their immortality, I also provide a bed of blossoms for the magic Phoenix of China to sleep on, ensuring the continuous flow of its vibrant energy.  In the Isles of Japan, I am called Sakura.  Springtime festivals are held far and wide for simply viewing my blooming splendor in quiet contemplation of life’s many precious moments as my petals begin to fall.

A world of grief and pain,

even when cherry blossoms

have bloomed.

        Issa

While my natural habitat spreads far and wide around the globe, I am a tree that often grows alone among other forest inhabitants.  The peoples of the North Country, finding me in blossom in their wanderings through the woods, consider it to be a welcome and auspicious omen for the coming year.  While my wood is tightly grained and sturdy, I provide magic walking sticks for Scottish Highlanders that prevent them from getting lost in the mist.

Mother shake the cherry tree,

Susan catch a cherry.

Oh how fun that will be,

let’s be merry!

One for brother, one for sister,

two for mother more,

six for father, hot and tired,

knocking at the door.

                      Christina Rosetti

The name cherry is derived from French cerise, Spanish cereza.  My fruit has been a favorite of Homo Sapiens from time immemorial, as cherry pits have been found scattered in dwellings dating from the Bronze Age.  It was in Asia Minor where humans first began cultivating me, while I made my way to Rome with returning general Lucius Licinus Lucullus in 72 BC.  I gradually traveled from there northwards, introduced to England by Henry VIII who tasted me on a visit to Flanders.  And then in the early 1600s, the Dutch made me a home in Brooklyn, NY, on the site of the former colony  “New Netherland“.  Heading out west from there, I was warmly welcomed in both Michigan and Wisconsin and then on to the West Coast, in California, Oregon and Washington. 

I am of the large family, Prunus.  Of its 1000 plus species, just a few have given birth to the various varieties of modern commercial cherries.  The two main parents are Prunus Avium, Latin “of the birds”.  I provide tasty sweet treats for my feathered friends while they in turn help me with propagation.  The other parent is Prunus Cerasus.  Bitter fruit, sour to the taste.  This is the cherry responsible for cherry pies and Cherries Jubilee.  Need I say more about that!   

And then there’s my wood, especially my characteristic burls, highly prized for its hues and colors, great for turning, to craft vessels and bowls and bagpipes, too.  Oh, and my resin.  Great chewing gum, kids love it.

I gave my love a cherry, that has no stone.

How can there be a cherry, that has no stone?

A cherry when it’s bloomin’, it has no stone.

            Appalachian Folk Song

I can be so sweet!  Just ask the Celtic sweethearts pledging themselves to each other as they each sip from the quaich, the ritual wedding cup carved from my magic wood.  And I can be so bitter.  Just ask the orchardist who lies awake in the wee hours of a springtime morning, praying to the frost gods to please hold off for just a few more nights.  Just a short hour’s icy kiss can spell sudden doom for the year’s entire crop.  Bitter indeed.  But then, such is life’s journey, is it not?  The bitter and the sweet.  Let us close my story with where we began.  Gazing at my lovely pink blossoms, astounded by their pristine beauty, then seeing them begin to fall, one by one. . .reminding us of the need to savor ever more deeply life’s many precious moments.

I can be so sweet,

I can be so bitter.

I am Cherry.

Be safe.    Be well.

See you in April!

Charles

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Hear evil, see evil and speak evil – the bear cannot “hidernate”

Thanks to Mary Jane F.

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Volunteer for Freeway Park Spring Cleaning

When: Monday, March 28th in Seneca Plaza from 12:00 – 1:30 pm.

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Covid pandemic trend

The trend in Covid patients in Harborview and the other UW Hospitals. Orange bars are ICU cases, now the lowest since December.

However, in UK, Hong Kong, and China, cases are soaring again.

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How to avoid a confrontation with the tools at hand

Thanks to Sybil-Ann

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Beautiful pre-war Ukraine pictures

Thanks to Rosemary W.

https://www.boredpanda.com/beautiful-ukraine-pics/

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COVID variants – why should we care?

Thanks to Mary Jane F.

Date, time: April 6 at 12 p.m. For more information and to register, click here.

SARS-CoV-2 variants: how do we get from sample to variant and why should we care? SARS-CoV-2 variants have been in the news a lot over the past two years. In this talk, Pavitra Roychoudhury will explore viral genome sequencing to learn how we get from nasal swab to sequence to variant. She’ll discuss the different variants of concern, what makes them concerning, and how they monitor for current and future variants of concern in the UW Virology Lab. This free online lecture is hosted by the UW’s Osher Lifelong Learning Institute.

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Companies still doing business in Russia – a Hall of Shame

From Pam P.—A friend sent me this from the Washington Post:

But Zelensky made another ask on Wednesday morning, and it’s something all Americans can help with. We can stop buying the products of businesses that continue to fund Vladimir Putin’s war machine, even after its full horrors — indiscriminately targeting civilians, murdering children — are obvious to the world. 

“All American companies must leave Russia. … Leave their market immediately, because it is flooded with our blood,” the young leader said, asking lawmakers “to make sure that the Russians do not receive a single penny that they use to destroy our people in Ukraine, the destruction of our country, the destruction of Europe. … Peace is more important than income.” 

Most American companies get that. Some 400 U.S. and other multinational firms have pulled out of Russia, either permanently or temporarily, according to Yale’s Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, who has kept the authoritative list of corporate actions in Russia. Oil companies (BP, Shell, ExxonMobil) and tech companies (Dell, IBM, Apple, Google, Facebook, Twitter) led the way, and many others (McDonald’s, Starbucks, Coca-Cola) eventually followed. 

But, according to Sonnenfeld, there are, at the other extreme, 33 companies (as of Wednesday afternoon) that form a “hall of shame,” defying demands that they exit Russia or reduce their activities there. 

“They are funding the Russian war machine, and they are undermining the whole idea of the sanctions,” Sonnenfeld told me. “The whole idea is to freeze up civil society, to get people out on the streets and outraged. They’re undermining an effective resolution” and increasing the likelihood of continued bloodshed. 

Those who want to stop Russia’s murderous attack against Ukraine should stop investing in or buying the products of these companies. 

Koch Industries, whose owners gave to right-wing causes for years, is now financing Putin’s war. The people who make Brawny paper towels, Dixie cups, Quilted Northern toilet paper, Vanity Fair napkins and Georgia-Pacific lumber are abetting the spilling of Ukrainians’ blood. 

Like Reebok shoes? They’re being used to stomp on Ukraine. Authentic Brands Group, which also owns Aeropostale, Eddie Bauer, Brooks Brothers and Nine West, among others, is in the hall of shame. 

Before you bite into a Cinnabon (or Carvel ice cream, Schlotzsky’s sandwich or Auntie Anne’s pretzel) consider that parent company Focus Brands is taking a bite out of democracy in Ukraine. 

So is Subway. While selling you the All-American Club, it’s giving Ukrainians the Cold-Cock Combo by refusing to cut loose its 446 Russian franchises. 

Several other household brands — Truvia and Diamond Crystal salt (Cargill), Avon cosmetics (Natura), LG appliances, ASUS laptops, Mission tortillas (Gruma) and Pirelli tires — are produced by companies on the shameful list. 

Are you or your mutual fund invested in Halliburton, Baker Hughes or Schlumberger? Then you should know that these oil-services companies could deal a huge blow to Putin’s ability to wage war — but they choose profit instead. 

Let’s name and shame all the others among the 33: advertising firms BBDO, DDB and Omnicom; accountant Baker Tilly; industrial companies Air Liquide, Air Products, Greif, IPG Photonics, Linde, Mettler Toledo, Nalco and Rockwool; French hotelier Accor and retailers Auchan, Decathlon and Leroy Merlin; German wholesaler Metro; cloud service Cloudflare; International Paper; and Sweden’s Oriflame Cosmetics. 

An additional 72 multinationals have made only partial pullbacks from Russia, such as reducing current operations or holding off on new investments — actions Sonnenfeld calls “very questionable” and “smokescreens.” Included here: Dunkin Donuts, General Mills, Mondelez (Oreos and other Nabisco products), candymaker Mars, Procter & Gamble, Yum Brands (Pizza Hut, Taco Bell), Hilton, Hyatt and Marriott. 

All these businesses could be doing more to stop Putin’s savagery and war crimes. Because they won’t, we all should do more to stop them. Go to Sonnenfeld’s website via Yale’s School of Management to make sure you aren’t funding the businesses that are funding Putin’s war machine — and reward the vast majority of companies that share Zelensky’s belief that peace is more important than profit. 

And here’s more info from Sonnenberg’s website: https://som.yale.edu/story/2022/over-400-companies-have-withdrawn-russia-some-remain

Posted in Business, War | 1 Comment

The Thin Place at ACT – possible Skyline bus transportation

From Skyline Lifestyle: Skyline will be providing bus transportation if we have more than 8 attendees. As of today, we have 6 signed up. We will be closing the signup for the transportation on Sunday 3/20. Residents can signup on Caremerge Live Calendar or call/text 425-504-3083.

ACT Theatre: The Thin Place

Cost: $27-$50

Run time: 90 minutes, no intermission

Location: Allen Theatre

Closed Captioning is available for all performances.

To purchase tickets:

Online: https://order.acttheatre.org/the-thin-place/11793

Call: 206-292-7676

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Heather Cox Richardson update

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In the War Over Ukraine, Expect the Unexpected

Portrait of Thomas L. Friedman

by Thomas Friedman in the NYT

Every war brings surprises, but what is most striking about Vladimir Putin’s war against Ukraine — and indirectly against the whole democratic West — is how many of the bad surprises, so far, have been for Putin and how many of the good surprises have been for Ukraine and its allies around the world.

How so? Well, I am pretty sure that when Putin was plotting this war, he was assuming that by three weeks into it he’d be giving a victory speech at the Ukrainian Parliament, welcoming it back into the bosom of Mother Russia. He probably also assumed that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky would be in exile in a Polish Airbnb, Russian troops would still be removing all the flowers from their tanks thrown by welcoming Ukrainians, and Putin and China’s President Xi Jinping would be high-fiving each other for having shown NATO and Sleepy Joe who’s going to set the rules of the international system going forward.

Instead, Ukrainians have given Russians a tutorial on fighting and dying for freedom and self-determination. Putin appears locked into his own germ-free isolation chamber, probably worrying that any Russian military officer who comes near may pull a gun on him. Zelensky will be addressing the U.S. Congress virtually. And, rather than globalization being over, individuals all over the world are using global networks to monitor and influence the war in totally unexpected ways. With a few clicks they’re sending money to support Ukrainians and with a few more keystrokes telling everyone from McDonald’s to Goldman Sachs that they must withdraw from Russia until Russian soldiers withdraw from Ukraine.

Here’s another surprise few saw coming — especially China and Russia. China relied on its own vaccines to fight Covid-19, along with a policy of zero tolerance and immediate quarantine to prevent spread of the coronavirus. Alas, the Chinese vaccines seem to be less effective than other Covid vaccines. And because China’s quarantine strategy has left it with little immunity from prior infections, the virus is now spreading like wildfire there. As The Times reported Tuesday: “Tens of millions of residents in Chinese provinces and cities including Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen are under lockdown amid an outbreak of the Omicron variant of the coronavirus. Travel has been cut off between cities, production lines have stopped and malls have been closed.”

Quarantine workers Monday outside a Shanghai neighborhood under lockdown due to Covid-19 cases.
Quarantine workers Monday outside a Shanghai neighborhood under lockdown due to Covid-19 cases.Credit…Qilai Shen for The New York Times

What is that doing? It’s killing demand for, and tanking the price of, crude oil — which, after approaching $130 a barrel because of the war in Ukraine, fell below $100 on Tuesday. And what country desperately needs high oil prices because it has so little else to sell to the world to fund its war? Putin’s Russia. So, China’s Covid strategy is hampering Putin’s oil price strategy — probably hurting him as much as anything the U.S. is doing. We’re all still a lot more connected than we might think.

Posted in Essays, Kindness, War | Comments Off on In the War Over Ukraine, Expect the Unexpected

One flower begets others

Thanks to Mary Jane F.

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Brotherhood – 21st century style

Thanks to Sybil-Ann

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For your doggy bags

Thanks to Mary Jane F.

Ed note: Did you hear that Russian Netflix is being replaced by Nyetflix?

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Incredible balance

Miyoko Shida Rigolo performs an amazing feather balancing act that had me hooked from the beginning as I found this fascinating to watch. The incredible skill and patience she uses to balance a single feather on these sticks of various sizes is truly a talent few could achieve. Be sure to watch all the way to the end of the clip so you can see the role the feather played in the balancing act.

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Putin’s spiritual destiny

by Giles Fraser in Unherd

Ed note: For more, click the following The Ten Hardest Truths About the War In Ukraine.

Threatened by an uprising of his treacherous generals, the Christian Emperor Basil II, based in the glorious city of Byzantium, reached out to his enemies, the pagans over in the land of the Rus. Basil II was a clever deal maker. If Vladimir of the Rus would help him put down the revolt, he would give him the hand of his sister in marriage. This was a status changer for Vladimir: the marriage of a pagan to an imperial princess was unprecedented. But first Vladimir would have to convert to Christianity.

Returning to Kyev in triumph, Vladimir proceeded to summon the whole city to the banks of the river Dnieper for a mass baptism. The year is 988. This is the founding, iconic act of Russian Orthodox Christianity. It was from here that Christianity would spread out and merge with the Russian love of the motherland, to create a powerful brew of nationalism and spirituality. In the mythology of 988, it was as if the whole of the Russian people had been baptised. Vladimir was declared a saint. When the Byzantine empire fell, the Russians saw themselves as its natural successor. They were a “third Rome”.

Soviet Communism tried to crush all this — but failed. And in the post-Soviet period, thousands of churches have been built and re-built. Though the West thinks of Christianity as something enfeebled and declining, in the East it is thriving. Back in 2019, Patriarch Kirill, the head of the Russian Orthodox Church, boasted that they were building three churches a day. Last year, they opened a Cathedral to the Armed Forces an hour outside Moscow. Religious imagery merges with military glorification. War medals are set in stained glass, reminding visitors of Russian martyrdom. In a large mosaic, more recent victories — including 2014’s “the return of Crimea” — are celebrated. “Blessed are the peacemakers” this is not.

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National Pi day cookies – baked by a mathematician

Thanks to Hollis W. and the Duke magazine

Posted in Food, Science and Technology | Comments Off on National Pi day cookies – baked by a mathematician