How to get an “A”

Thanks to Sybil-Ann

Students in an advanced Biology class were taking their mid-term exam. The last question was, ‘Name seven advantages of Mother’s Milk. The question was worth 70 points or none at all. One student, in particular, was hard put to think of seven advantages. However, he wrote:

1) It is perfect formula for the child.
2) It provides immunity against several diseases.
3) It is always the right temperature.
4) It is inexpensive.
5) It bonds the child to mother, and vice versa.
6) It is always available as needed.
And then the student was stuck.
Finally, in desperation, just before the bell rang indicating the end of the test, he wrote:
7) It comes in two attractive containers and it’s high enough off the ground where the cat can’t get it.

He got an A. 

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Is green parking here to stay?

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Traffic shifts along the waterfront

Thanks to Barb W.

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Getting older

Thanks to Mary Jane F.

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Ask the Doctor – My interviews with Michael Hebb

Michael Hebb is an innovative and influential cultural figure, entrepreneur and activist, described by the New York Times as an “underground restaurateur, impresario and provocateur.” He believes that the dinner table is one of the most effective (and overlooked) vehicles for changing the world. Since 1997 Michael has been staging invitation-only salons and dinners where guests from multiple disciplines and various backgrounds focus on specific themes or ideas. His book “Let’s Talk About Death (over Dinner): An Invitation & Guide to Life’s Most Important Conversation” has been widely read and has led to an international movement.

Last Spring, Michael Hebb interviewed me in 8 sessions about end-of-life issues. He is the founder of the End of Life Collective at a Seattle based non-profit called RoundGlass, founded by billionaire Sunny Singh. Click on any of the links below if interested.

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82% of Fox News, 97% of OANN, Newsmax Viewers Believe Trump’s Stolen Election Claim: Poll

Thanks to Mike C.

BY JUSTIN KLAWANS ON 11/1/21 AT 6:42 PM EDTAnew poll published Monday found that the majority of viewers of conservative-leaning cable television believe former President Donald Trump‘s claims that the 2020 presidential election was stolen from him.

The national poll, conducted by the Public Religion Research Institute (PRRI), discovered that 82 percent of regular Fox News viewers—who stated that they trust the outlet more than any other network—agreed with the former president’s unsubstantiated claims of widespread voter fraud.

Fox News reporters have often reiterated Trump’s claims in the year since the election, and the outlet’s website also has an entire page dedicated to stories on voter fraud concerns.

One of the networks’ biggest stars, Tucker Carlson, admitted in a September interview that “I try never to lie on TV. I just don’t—I don’t like lying, [but] I certainly do it, you know, out of weakness or whatever.”

The network has had a $1.6 billion lawsuit filed against it by Dominion Voting after it alleged that the company was using its voting machines to help rig the election.

The polling numbers were even higher among watchers of far-right media like One America News Network (OANN) and Newsmax, with 97 percent of viewers buying into former President Trump’s claims.

A new poll has found that a large number of Republicans believe former President Donald Trump’s claims that the 2020 presidential election was stolen via voter fraud. Here, Trump supporters riot at the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021.ANDREW CABELLERO/GETTY

OANN and Newsmax, in particular, have been described as promoting conspiracy theories and a variety of debunked claims, specifically concerning the COVID-19 pandemic and the 2020 election. Dominion Voting has also filed lawsuits against both networks.

The Washington Post has referred to OANN as propaganda, and a former OANN producer told Reuters that “if there was any story involving Trump, we had to only focus on either the positive information or basically create positive information.”

“It was never, never the full truth,” the producer added.

In all, the poll concludes that 31 percent of Americans, or about two-thirds of registered Republicans, believe that the 2020 election was stolen as a result of voter fraud.

Additionally, PRRI found that while only 11 percent of Democrats and 17 percent of independents surveyed believed violent measures would be needed to fix nationwide issues, the number was much higher among Republicans.

Among members of that party, 30 percent of those polled stated that they believed some form of violence would be needed to fix the aforementioned issues.

The poll, entitled the American Values Survey, also examined a variety of socioeconomic norms in the United States, and how they can be looked at in comparison to prior decades. Additionally, it collected data on former President Trump’s impact on American mindsets.

say that they have ever not felt proud to be an American, 52 percent agreed that American culture had changed for the worse since the 1950s.

The disparity was more evident among party lines, with 70 percent of Republicans saying things had gotten worse, compared to 63 percent of Democrats who believed things had gotten better.

“I’m not an alarmist by nature, but I’m deeply disturbed by these numbers,” said the founder and CEO of PRRI, Robert Jones. He called the results of the poll a “serious threat to democracy.

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A daughter remembers her father’s brush with baseball greatness

By Pam Peterson in the Seattle Times’ Don Shelton’s column

Ed Note: Thanks to Skyline resident Pam Peterson for sharing this memory. As a 10 year old my dad frequently took me to the Lakefront Stadium in Cleveland to watch Feller pitch. I can still recite the Indians’ line-up in 1948–the team that won the World Series.

From the Seattle Times: Reader Pam Peterson is retired, living in Belltown with her husband Bob, enjoying travel, study, Mediterranean cooking and  happy hours with friends. She wrote about one of her favorite baseball memories involving her father Bill Benesiuk, a gifted builder with a deep appreciation for family, friends, good food and drink – especially Jack Daniels with a splash of water.

A tremendous source of pride for my father, Bill Benesiuk, was his service in the United States Navy during World War II.  He enlisted and was assigned to the USS Pensacola, designated for the South Pacific.  During times of an occasional slow-down of hostilities, ships would have athletic competitions.

Hall of Fame Pitcher Bob Feller Dies at 92 - The New York Times
Feller pitched from 1936 to 1941 and from 1945 to 1956, interrupted by a four-year engagement in the United States Navy. In a career spanning 570 games, Feller pitched 3,827 innings and posted a win–loss record of 266–162, with 279 complete games, 44 shutouts, and a 3.25 earned run average (ERA).

My dad was athletic, possessed incredible eyesight, and was not too bad of a baseball player.  One day on, I believe, Guadalcanal, the Pensacola was having a baseball game against the Alabama.  I don’t know who was pitching for the Pensacola, but Bob Feller was pitching for the Alabama.  Here’s how it went, according to my dad:

“I got up to the plate, faced Feller, got into the batting crouch and heard the umpire say ‘STRIKE ONE!’  I didn’t see the ball!  I got into the crouch again, pounded the bat on the plate a few times and heard the umpire say, ‘STRIKE TWO!’  I didn’t see the ball!  Again I face Feller, and would you believe I didn’t see that third ball go by?”

My dad told this story often and with much fondness having at least faced the great Bob Feller, who was known as one of baseball’s hardest throwers, no matter the outcome.

In the mid 1980s I read in a San Francisco paper that Bob Feller would be signing autographs along with other famous baseball players. My husband Bob and I went to the signing. Younger players had lines of folks waiting to have their baseballs signed, but Bob Feller was sitting alone. We approached him and told him the story of my dad not even seeing the ball but being so proud to have faced the great Bob Feller.  He chuckled and took the baseball I handed him.

“What’s your dad’s name?” he asked.

“Bill,” I told him.

Mr. Feller stopped, thought for a moment, wrote something and handed the ball back to me.

It said, “Bill, sorry I struck you out.  Bob Feller”

That ball was treasured by my dad and sat in a little protective case where he could look at it every day.  My dad died last October, a little more than two years after Mr. Feller passed. I have the ball where I can look at it every day, too, and remember how sweet and kind a man Bob Feller was.

Want to be a reader contributor to The Seattle Times’ Take 2 blog? Email your original, previously unpublished work or proposal to Sports Editor Don Shelton at dshelton@seattletimes.com or sports@seattletimes.com. Not all submissions can be published. The Times reserves the right to edit and publish any submissions online and/or in print.

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Author event – Daniel James Brown on Zoom Tuesday 7 PM

Meet the Author: Daniel James Brown

Meet the Author: Daniel James Brown Tuesday, November 2, 2021 Add to Calendar7:00PM – 8:00PM Online event. Click here to register.

Honor Veterans Day with us during a discussion about Facing the Mountain, A True Story of Japanese American Heroes in World War II with author Daniel James Brown, NY Times bestselling author of The Boys in the Boat.  

Facing the Mountain
 is an unforgettable story unfolding across war-time America and the battlefields of Europe, Based on Brown’s extensive interviews with the families of the protagonists as well as deep archival research, the book chronicles the journeys of four Japanese-American families and their sons.  

The virtual event will feature a conversation between Brown and Densho Executive Director Tom Ikeda who writes in the forward: “Facing The Mountain comes to us during a time of deep unrest, a time when our empathy for others is so needed to guide the choices we will make. This book will open hearts.”

Books are available for purchase from Third Place Books.

The Zoom link will be sent to you by email by 5pm on November 2. You may need to check your spam or junk folder if you don’t see it in your inbox.

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A welcome visitor at Carkeek Park

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Why Aren’t More People Comparison Shopping for Health Plans?

Ed note: Medicare insurance choice is impossibly confusing. If you need help, please contact https://www.shiphelp.org/ — the State Health Insurance Assistance Program. They can help sort out the programs and costs available to you for Medicare. If your medications are still too expensive, consider a Canadian pharmacy such as https://www.pharmstore.com/ for mail order delivery at a fraction of U.S. prices.

Eunice Korsah, a retired nurse in Burke, Va., learned her yearly drugs and premiums would be $301 a year if she used a CVS or Giant pharmacy, but $1,125 if she took the same prescriptions to a Walmart.
Eunice Korsah, a retired nurse in Burke, Va., learned her yearly drugs and premiums would be $301 a year if she used a CVS or Giant pharmacy, but $1,125 if she took the same prescriptions to a Walmart. Credit…Kenny Holston for The New York Times

By Paula SpanOct. 30, 2021

One morning last month, Eunice Korsah, a retired nurse in Burke, Va., spent about half an hour on the phone being guided through the complexities of various plans for Medicare Part D, which covers prescription drugs.

Her current drug plan was being discontinued and the insurer wanted to move her into one with sharply higher premiums. “I decided, ‘No way,’” she said. But what to replace it with? She looked at the Medicare website for Part D plans available in Fairfax County and found 23, with monthly premiums ranging from $7.10 to $97.30. “There are so many choices, so I wanted someone to clarify them for me,” she said.

Jack Hoadley, a health policy researcher at Georgetown University, was on the other end of the call with Ms. Korsah. He has for two years volunteered with the State Health Insurance Assistance Program, or SHIP, the federally funded, free counseling service that helps Medicare beneficiaries find the coverage that’s best for them.

“Some very smart people just don’t know how Medicare works and get confused,” Dr. Hoadley said. For example, “it can make a $1,000-a-year difference if you’re willing to try several different pharmacies.”

Ms. Korsah, 74, and her son had already compiled a list of her eight medications — for blood pressure, cholesterol, acid reflux and glaucoma — and their doses. Using the online Medicare Plan Finder, Dr. Hoadley narrowed the field to three suitable selections.

With the cheapest plan, from Wellcare, Ms. Korsah’s estimated total yearly drug and premium costs (“the magic number,” he said) would be $301 a year if she used a CVS or Giant pharmacy — but $1,125 if she took the same prescriptions to a Walmart. Conversely, a Humana plan would cost $525 a year through a Walmart pharmacy, but more than twice that at CVS. With a Cigna plan, the best deal involved a mail-order pharmacy.

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Trick or ?treat!

Thanks to Mike C.

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Shall we dance?

Thanks to Sandy J.

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Political ads aren’t so subtle anymore

Celebrities Pick Their Favorite New Yorker Cartoons | The New Yorker
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Cowards, Not Crazies, Are Destroying America

by Paul Krugman in the NYT

Back in July, Kay Ivey, governor of Alabama, had some strong and sensible things to say about Covid-19 vaccines. “I want folks to get vaccinated,” she declared. “That’s the cure. That prevents everything.” She went on to say that the unvaccinated are “letting us down.”

Three months later Ivey directed state agencies not to cooperate with federal Covid-19 vaccination mandates.

Ivey’s swift journey from common sense and respect for science to destructive partisan nonsense — nonsense that is killing tens of thousands of Americans — wasn’t unique. On the contrary, it was a recapitulation of the journey the whole Republican Party has taken on issue after issue, from tax cuts to the Big Lie about the 2020 election.

When we talk about the G.O.P.’s moral descent, we tend to focus on the obvious extremists, like the conspiracy theorists who claim that climate change is a hoax and Jan. 6 was a false flag operation. But the crazies wouldn’t be driving the Republican agenda so completely if it weren’t for the cowards, Republicans who clearly know better but reliably swallow their misgivings and go along with the party line. And at this point crazies and cowards essentially make up the party’s entire elected wing.

Consider, for example, the claim that tax cuts pay for themselves. In 1980 George H.W. Bush, running against Ronald Reagan for the Republican presidential nomination, called that assertion “voodoo economic policy.” Everything we’ve seen since then says that he was right. But Bush soon climbed down, and by 2017 even supposed “moderates” like Susan Collins accepted claims that the Trump tax cut would reduce, not increase, the budget deficit. (It increased the deficit.)

Or consider climate change. As recently as 2008 John McCain campaigned for president in part on a proposal to put a cap on U.S. greenhouse gas emissions. But at this point Republicans in Congress are united in their opposition to any substantive action to limit global warming, with 30 G.O.P. senators outright denying the overwhelming scientific evidence that human activities are causing climate change.

The falsehoods that are poisoning America’s politics tend to share similar life histories. They begin in cynicism, spread through disinformation and culminate in capitulation, as Republicans who know the truth decide to acquiesce in lies.

Take the claim of a stolen election. Donald Trump never had any evidence on his side, but he didn’t care — he just wanted to hold on to power or, failing that, promulgate a lie that would help him retain his hold on the G.O.P. Despite the lack of evidence and the failure of every attempt to produce or create a case, however, a steady drumbeat of propaganda has persuaded an overwhelming majority of Republicans that Joe Biden’s victory was illegitimate.

And establishment Republicans, who at first pushed back against the Big Lie, have gone quiet or even begun to promote the falsehood. Thus on Wednesday, The Wall Street Journal published, without corrections or fact checks, a letter to the editor from Trump that was full of demonstrable lies — and in so doing gave those lies a new, prominent platform.

Editors’ Picks

A Transporting and Cozy Biography of a Pottery PioneerTo Feed the Dead, You First Need Pan de MuertoEmily Ratajkowski Is a Work in Progress

The G.O.P.’s journey toward what it is now with respect to Covid-19 — an anti-vaccine, objectively pro-pandemic party — followed the same trajectory.

Although Republicans like Ron DeSantis and Greg Abbott claim that their opposition to vaccine requirements is about freedom, the fact that both governors have tried to stop private businesses from requiring customers or staff to be vaccinated shows this is a smoke screen. Pretty clearly, the anti-vaccine push began as an act of politically motivated sabotage. After all, a successful vaccination campaign that ended the pandemic would have been good political news for Biden.

We should note, by the way, that this sabotage has, so far at least, paid off. While there are multiple reasons many Americans remain unvaccinated, there’s a strong correlation between a county’s political lean and both its vaccination rate and its death rate in recent months. And the persistence of Covid, which has in turn been a drag on the economy, has been an important factor dragging down Biden’s approval rating.

More important for the internal dynamics of the G.O.P., however, is that many in the party’s base have bought into assertions that requiring vaccination against Covid-19 is somehow a tyrannical intrusion of the state into personal decisions. In fact, many Republican voters appear to have turned against longstanding requirements that parents have their children vaccinated against other contagious diseases.

And true to form, elected Republicans like Governor Ivey who initially spoke in favor of vaccines have folded and surrendered to the extremists, even though they must know that in so doing they will cause many deaths.

I’m not sure exactly why cowardice has become the norm among elected Republicans who aren’t dedicated extremists. But if you want to understand how the G.O.P. became such a threat to everything America should stand for, the cowards are at least as important a factor as the crazies.

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Could go either way!

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The Cotton Tote Crisis

By Grace Cook in the NYT

Thanks to Diana C.

A laundry line of cotton totes accumulated by a single person since the race to replace plastic began.

Recently, Venetia Berry, an artist in London, counted up the free cotton tote bags that she had accumulated in her closet. There were at least 25.

There were totes from the eco-fashion brand Reformation and totes from vintage stores, totes from Soho House, boutique countryside hotels and independent art shops. She had two totes from Cubitts, the millennial-friendly opticians, and even one from a garlic farm. “You get them without choosing,” Ms. Berry, 28, said.

Cotton bags have become a means for brands, retailers and supermarkets to telegraph a planet-friendly mind-set — or, at least, to show that the companies are aware of the overuse of plastic in packaging. (There was a brief lull in cotton tote use during the pandemic, when there were fears that reusable bags could harbor the virus, but they are now fully back in force.)

“There’s a trend in New York right now where people are wearing merch: carrying totes from local delis, hardware stores or their favorite steakhouse,” said the designer Rachel Comey. (See: the reboot of “Gossip Girl” for pop culture proof.)

So far, so earth-friendly? Not exactly. It turns out the wholehearted embrace of cotton totes may actually have created a new problem.

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Native American story

Thanks to Pam P.

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The power of touch

Ed note: So often doctor’s are neglecting the power of touch. This poignant story from the New England Journal of Medicine is a reminder–hopefully physicians are listening.

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Dolly Parton’s song for Jonny Carson

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Memoir by beloved resident Thaddeus Spratlen

Thanks to Alice M. for bring this to our attention. Knowing Thaddeus, this will be a true success story in a sea of racism where the storms continue.

Journey Up from Down South describes what struggle, resilience, hope, and family life look like for African Americans who achieve far beyond the circumstances of their birth. The author, his wife of sixty years, and many around them were successful in “lifting as they climbed” over the course of their lives. The author’s journey in this memoir is organized around migration from the Jim Crow South to the North and West for better opportunities.

Together, the author and his wife moved from Depression-era poverty, through undergraduate and graduate degrees, and into the mainstream of higher education-battling discriminatory practices during their rise. Through the lens of his family, the author brings to bear his research skills to describe some of the most important issues affecting Black Americans from Reconstruction to the present.

“We turned those obstacles into opportunities. We persevered and won. Our story had a good ending. But to keep it real, our journey will be continued by others. In the end, readers are reminded of the harsh realities and restrictions of how racism still makes ‘living while Black’ a problem.”

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Attention hill climbers (and those wanting a COVID test)

thanks to Mike C.

The Washington State Convention Center has re-opened. It’s a great way to get up the hill without climbing when returning on Pike Street from downtown. Enter at 7th and Pike and hop on the 3 tiers of escalators. A new plus is a drop-in COVID testing site right near the entry door next to the Fed-Ex store. Just bring your insurance card. You can book on-line or just stop by. They were not at all busy today.

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Trump Tells January 6th Panel He Has Diplomatic Immunity as Russian Official

The Borowitz Report in the New Yorker

By Andy Borowitz October 26, 2021

Donald Trump
Photograph by Chip Somodevilla / Getty

WASHINGTON (The Borowitz Report)—In his latest bid to prevent the House Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack from obtaining relevant documents, Donald Trump has claimed diplomatic immunity in his capacity as a representative of the Russian government.

According to Trump’s legal argument, his status as a Russian official during his four years in the White House makes all documents produced during his tenure property of the Russian Federation.

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Information on the Seattle Police

from Mike Caplow. Scroll down for the graphs and data.

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Parkshore plans to link across Lake Washington to Juanita Bay

Ed note: This information is from TA’s web site and an advertisement is Sunday’s Seattle Times.

INTRODUCING

PARKSHORE JUANITA BAY

COMING SUMMER 2025

BY LAKE WASHINGTON’S JUANITA BAY, A NEW AND EXCITING OPPORTUNITY AWAITS FOR THOSE 62 AND BETTER.

Located park-side in Kirkland’s quaint, walkable Juanita Village community, Parkshore Juanita Bay offers all the perks of luxury senior living just a stone’s throw from Lake Washington.

Plus, as part of Transforming Age’s Continuing Care Retirement Community, you will enjoy the peace of mind knowing you have access to a full spectrum of care should you ever need it.

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Diverse Group Of Fit Mature Seniors Outdoors

TRANSFORMING AGE IS PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE THE ADDITION OF A NEW 62+ INDEPENDENT LIVING, CCRC COMMUNITY, IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD.

We are thrilled to expand with the construction of a new satellite community in Kirkland: Parkshore Juanita Bay. The 50-apartment residence located at tree-lined Juanita Park near the Village will include on-site dining, a rooftop deck, yoga studio, movie theatre, game room and more.

Posted in CCRC Info | 6 Comments