Meanderings and Muses

Sunday, July 30, 2023

 

Truly, we live with mysteries too marvelous

 to be understood.


How grass can be nourishing in the

mouths of the lambs.

How rivers and stones are forever

in allegiance with gravity

while we ourselves dream of rising.

How two hands touch and the bonds will

never be broken.

How people come, from delight or the

scars of damage,

to the comfort of a poem.


Let me keep my distance, always, from those

who think they have the answers.


Let me keep company always with those who say

“Look!” and laugh in astonishment,

and bow their heads.


              ~Mary Oliver, Evidence

                      A Poetry Handbook





Posted by Kaye Wilkinson Barley - Meanderings and Muses at 12:22 PM No comments:
Labels: Mary Oliver

Friday, July 28, 2023

Muses from Meat Camp - Good, Bad, and Horrid



Life.


Ups and Downs.  Downs and Ups.

Some days we just float along taking things for granted, and happily so.

Some days come with surprises - some good, some not so great.


Today it is 75 degrees here at our little spot in the mountains, and yes - I do know how lucky we are.   I, stated simply, cannot abide the heat.  Besides the typical sweaty, uncomfortable fact of it with my clothes sticking to me, my hair soaking wet, I tend to get dizzy and nauseous.  Ugh.


As unpopular as cold, snowy weather is to some of my friends, it's what I prefer.


Yesterday we spent a day out and about.  The Highlander had to be taken in to the Toyota place to have an oil hose somethinorother replaced.  This the week after having 4 new tires put on.  As the trite old saying goes, "it's always something."


But.


There is usually some good stuff to help balance out the bad stuff.  I hope I continue being able to remember this till the day my toes turn up.


For instance,

On the way down our driveway, our daylillies are having a party.  They are glorious.

















Our dahlias didn't come back this year (boo), the peonies were puny (boo),  but daisies we can count on, always (yay!).





While in town, we went by Antiques on Howard and finished removing everything from our booth.  It had stopped being fun, so time to end it.


The booth helped get rid of quite a lot, but not everything.  I already have a couple boxes marked "FREE STUFF" to put by the fence at the container site.  Somebody's gonna have fun going through these boxes, and may find a treasure or two.


We also, of course, went  by the Post Office.   Bad stuff - bills (boo).  Good stuff - new book (yay!).



https://www.forbes.com/sites/lauramanske/2023/05/30/french-kiss-the-hedonists-guide-to-enchanting-paris/?sh=6d9a04e97c33


And.


A flag to place in our yard to honor Kevin Reel whose life was snatched away by an asshole temporarily made to feel big and important by carrying a gun.




Sadly, I cannot think of one damn thing to offset this.  Not one.  


Because there's nothing.


Kathy Boone Reel, we love you.  And we will think of you and Philip and your family every single time we lift our eyes to see this flag.  And we will continue speaking out about our lack of common sense gun laws in this country.  Continue writing letters, making phone calls, signing petitions, and voting for change.  As will so many of your friends, and other like-minded, sane, people.  To honor Kevin.









Posted by Kaye Wilkinson Barley - Meanderings and Muses at 12:01 PM 4 comments:

Thursday, July 27, 2023

Rest in Peace Sinead O'Connor - 8 December 1966 – 26 July 2023




https://www.cnn.com/2023/07/26/entertainment/sinead-oconnor-death/index.html


https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sin%C3%A9ad_O%27Connor




I feel totally gutted by all this.  I pray Sinead O'Connor is finally at peace.  This talented, tormented woman spoke her mind, tore up a photo of a man who covered up evil.  And for this she suffered.  Watching this video finished shattering my heart and made me angry.  This young woman stood on that stage completely alone while the audience booed.  Booed her.  ONE person came out to stand by her side.  Kris Kristofferson.  Out of all the musicians involved on this huge concert honoring Bob Dylan, only one of them made his way on stage to offer support.  😪😪😪

https://youtu.be/3HwWDOQoCBM

 





I'm singing this song for my sister Sinead

Concerning the god awful mess that she made

She told them her truth just as hard as she could

Her message profoundly was misunderstood


There's humans entrusted with guarding our gold

And humans in charge of the saving of souls

And humans responded all over the world

Condemning that bald headed brave little girl


And maybe she's crazy and maybe she ain't

But so was Picasso and so were the saints

And she's never been partial to shackles or chains

She's too old for breaking and too young to tame


It's askin' for trouble to stick out your neck

In terms of a target a big silhouette

But some candles flicker and some candles fade

And some burn as true as my sister Sinead


- Kris Kristofferson, "Sister Sinead"


I recommend watching the documentary by Kathryn Ferguson,  Nothing Compares.  

https://www.digitalspy.com/tv/a44661732/watch-sinead-oconnor-documentary-nothing-compares/



This is what the audience missed:  https://youtu.be/2C7tAp5X6Zo

Provided to YouTube by Columbia/Legacy I Believe in You (Afternoon Rehearsal) (Rehearsal Performance at Madison Square Garden, New York, NY - October 1992) · Sinéad O'Connor Bob Dylan - 30th Anniversary Concert Celebration ℗ 1993 Columbia Records, a division of Sony Music Entertainment Released on: 1993-03-03




Posted by Kaye Wilkinson Barley - Meanderings and Muses at 12:38 PM No comments:

Tuesday, July 25, 2023

Today BY BILLY COLLINS

 

If ever there were a spring day so perfect,
so uplifted by a warm intermittent breeze

that it made you want to throw
open all the windows in the house

and unlatch the door to the canary's cage,
indeed, rip the little door from its jamb,

a day when the cool brick paths
and the garden bursting with peonies

seemed so etched in sunlight
that you felt like taking

a hammer to the glass paperweight
on the living room end table,

releasing the inhabitants
from their snow-covered cottage

so they could walk out,
holding hands and squinting

into this larger dome of blue and white,
well, today is just that kind of day.
Posted by Kaye Wilkinson Barley - Meanderings and Muses at 11:59 AM No comments:
Labels: Billy Collins

Sunday, July 23, 2023

Here's to BLTs

 


BLT
by
Barbara Crooker


 



Here’s how to make a great sandwich:
country white bread lightly toasted,
contoured with mayonnaise, leaf
lettuce spilling over the borders,
overlays of tomatoes, train tracks
of bacon leading straight
out of town. No need for road
maps, potato chips, or pickles.
Yes, winter is waiting, just over
the horizon. But right now, I’m
going to sit in the sun and listen
to birdsong. I’m going to eat
every crumb, every plottable
coordinate, now, while I can.









Posted by Kaye Wilkinson Barley - Meanderings and Muses at 12:24 PM 2 comments:
Labels: BLT

Saturday, July 22, 2023

Small Town Living


After taking a little break from Facebook, I dropped in to post a few pictures from a neighborhood get-together.


Friends and neighbors got together Friday evening for dinner.


Some of us have lived in this little 'hood for more than 20 years.  We're pretty fond of it, and one another.  Protective.


We love this little neighborhood in the small community of Meat Camp, NC, north of the small town of Boone, NC in the mountains of NW North Carolina.















Small town living.  MY version.



Also at Facebook you can read about Jason Aldean's version of a small town.  And you can listen to his song - it's about lynching.  



THIS is why I take breaks from Facebook.


Some people want to spread the hate.


Some of us have no stomach for how a racist country music singer views small towns.  He's a pig.  (Change my mind?  HA!)


That song is a rallying call to bigots.  It is what it is. 


He forgets that some of us remember things differently.















So.  

There you have it.


I've shared some good stuff about our neighborhood in a small town.  


I've shared a bigot's version of a small town.



Choose your version.


You can live your life loving the positive, or you can live your life embracing the hate.




Posted by Kaye Wilkinson Barley - Meanderings and Muses at 2:39 PM No comments:

Thursday, July 20, 2023

Life is Good


I'm not a relentlessly nauseatingly cheerful Pollyanna kinda person, but I am a positive thinking person (for the most part - leaving today's political climate of hate aside).  


Negative people, for whatever their reasons, wear me out and I choose to not surround myself with an over abundance of negativity.  That's not to say I don't have compassion, and people who don't understand where I'm coming from with all this still won't understand if I try to explain it, so I'm not going to bother.


Yesterday was a good day.  


I met one of my former bosses, who is a dear friend, for coffee.  For a couple of hours we chatted, and we laughed.   (Thank you, Ozzie)

By spending most days quite contentedly in Meat Camp and being as reclusive as I tend to be, I forget just how delightful and refreshing coffee and laughter with a good friend can be.


Top that with a manicure, a pedicure, a milkshake, picking up a new book at the Post Office (Thank you, MG), coming home to a sweet, cute husband who makes me laugh and who loves me, along with a fluffy little dog who smiles when she sees me, and I am reminded - life is good.































I'm thankful that I know that.


Clara Brooks' poem is, on the surface, quite simplistic, but the lyricism as well as its message speaks to me.


 Life's Mystery

Poet: Clara M. Brooks

"Laugh, and the world laughs with you";
Weep, and the world weeps, too:
'Tis all as you take it, brother;
You pave your own pathway through —

Pave it with woes and sorrows,
With sighs and drops of grief,
Or with onyx stones of gladness
And ruby smiles of relief;

Pave it with sunshine-golden
Or densest hues of night,
With storm-clouds dark of anguish
Or silver stars of light.

Pause not to mourn o'er the failures
You made on yesterday;
The while you are sadly weeping,
The present you trifle away.

The smoothest and brightest diamond
Was once but the roughest stone,
And the rose of rarest splendor
From the meanest sod has grown.

Thus the deepest and richest blessing
Comes oft from the bitterest woe,
And a life of heavenly beauty
From the lowliest place may grow.

The darkest hour of the night-time
Betokens the coming dawn,
And the brightest and warmest sunshine
Comes after the rain is gone.

Would you but gather roses,
And shun the pricking thorn?
Have all thy dawnings cheerful
With never a cloudy morn?

Ah! life is whate'er you make it:
Bid sadness and grief depart,
And the world shall be filled with music,
Begun in thy trusting heart;

Rejoice, and the world around you
The cheeriest smile will wear;
Bow 'neath thy heavy burdens,
And the world is filled with care.

Then forth to thy duty, brother,
Nor falter for wind or tide.
What matter how dark the storm-clouds?
There's always a brighter side.

"Laugh, and the world laughs with you";
Weep, and the world weeps, too:
'Tis all as you take it, brother;
You pave your own pathway through.














Posted by Kaye Wilkinson Barley - Meanderings and Muses at 3:12 PM 2 comments:
Labels: Annabelle Barley, Clara M. Brooks, Don Barley, friendship, life is good, Poetry

Wednesday, July 19, 2023

Letter From An American - July 17, 2023


Normally, I would never share Heather Cox Richardson's Letters From An American by copying and pasting them in full here at Meanderings and Muses.  Normally, I would post the link.


This is one, however, that I think is especially important as we get closer and closer to people finally beginning to realize that there is a very real danger of our country becoming a dictatorship.

Those of you who read my blog know my politics.  Most of you already know of Heather Cox Richardson and probably follow her as conscientiously as I do either at Facebook, or Substack, or her podcast.

Her Facebook page describes her as a "political historian who uses facts and history to put the news in context."

She conveys these facts in a straightforward manner with points referenced by footnotes for those of us who enjoy going a little deeper into the rabbit holes of research, AND for those conservative doubters who might, on occasion, read what she has to say.  

This is a letter I hope you will read and share with others.  And I encourage you t
o read the footnotes.









Open in app or online

July 17, 2023

HEATHER COX RICHARDSON
JUL 18
 
SHARE
 

A story in the New York Times today by Jonathan Swan, Charlie Savage, and Maggie Haberman outlined how former president Donald Trump and his allies are planning to create a dictatorship if voters return him to power in 2024. The article talks about how Trump and his loyalists plan to “centralize more power in the Oval Office” by “increasing the president’s authority over every part of the federal government that now operates, by either law or tradition, with any measure of independence from political interference by the White House.” 

They plan to take control over independent government agencies and get rid of the nonpartisan civil service, purging all but Trump loyalists from the U.S. intelligence agencies, the State Department, and the Defense Department. They plan to start “impounding funds,” that is, ignoring programs Congress has funded if those programs aren’t in line with Trump’s policies.

“What we’re trying to do is identify the pockets of independence and seize them,” said Russell T. Vought, who ran Trump’s Office of Management and Budget and who now advises the right-wing House Freedom Caucus. They envision a “president” who cannot be checked by the Congress or the courts.

Trump’s desire to grab the mechanics of our government and become a dictator is not new; both scholars and journalists have called it out since the early years of his administration. What is new here is the willingness of so-called establishment Republicans to support this authoritarian power grab. 

Behind this initiative is “Project 2025,” a coalition of more than 65 right-wing organizations putting in place personnel and policies to recommend not just to Trump, but to any Republican who may win in 2024. Project 2025 is led by the Heritage Foundation, once considered a conservative think tank, that helped to lead the Reagan revolution.

A piece by Alexander Bolton in The Hill today said that Republican senators are “worried” by the MAGAs, but they have been notably silent in public at a time when every elected leader should be speaking out against this plot. Their silence suggests they are on board with it, as Trump apparently hoped to establish. 

The party appears to have fully embraced the antidemocratic ideology advanced by authoritarian leaders like Russia’s president Vladimir Putin and Hungary’s prime minister Viktor Orbán, who argue that the post–World War II era, in which democracy seemed to triumph, is over. They claim that the tenets of democracy—equality before the law, free speech, academic freedom, a market-based economy, immigration, and so on—weaken a nation by destroying a “traditional” society based in patriarchy and Christianity.

Instead of democracy, they have called for “illiberal” or “Christian” democracy, which uses the government to enforce their beliefs in a Christian, patriarchal order. What that looks like has a clear blueprint in the actions of Florida governor Ron DeSantis, who has gathered extraordinary power into his own hands in the state and used that power to mirror Orbán’s destruction of democracy.

DeSantis has pushed through laws that ban abortion after six weeks, before most people know they’re pregnant; banned classroom instruction on sexual orientation and gender identity (the “Don’t Say Gay” law); prevented recognition of transgender individuals; made it easier to sentence someone to death; allowed people to carry guns without training or permits; banned colleges and businesses from conversations about race; exerted control over state universities; made it harder for his opponents to vote, and tried to punish Disney World for speaking out against the Don’t Say Gay law. After rounding up migrants and sending them to other states, DeSantis recently has called for using “deadly force” on migrants crossing unlawfully.

Because all the institutions of our democracy are designed to support the tenets of democracy, right-wingers claim those institutions are weaponized against them. House Republicans are running hearings designed to prove that the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Department of Justice are both “weaponized” against Republicans. It doesn’t matter that they don’t seem to have any evidence of bias: the very fact that those institutions support democracy mean they support a system that right-wing Republicans see as hostile. 

“Our current executive branch,” Trump loyalist John McEntee, who is in charge of planning to pack the government with Trump loyalists, told the New York Times reporters, “was conceived of by liberals for the purpose of promulgating liberal policies. There is no way to make the existing structure function in a conservative manner. It’s not enough to get the personnel right. What’s necessary is a complete system overhaul.”

It has taken decades for the modern-day Republican Party to get to a place where it rejects democracy. The roots of that rejection lie all the way back in the 1930s, when Democrats under Franklin Delano Roosevelt embraced a government that regulated business, provided a basic social safety net, and promoted infrastructure. That system ushered in a period from 1933 to 1981 that economists call the “Great Compression,” when disparities of income and wealth were significantly reduced, especially after the government also began to protect civil rights. 

Members of both parties embraced this modern government in this period, and Americans still like what it accomplished. But businessmen who hated regulation joined with racists who hated federal protection of civil rights and traditionalists who opposed women’s rights and set out to destroy that government. 

In West Palm Beach, Florida, last weekend, at the Turning Points Action Conference, Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) compared President Biden’s Build Back Better plan to President Lyndon Baines Johnson’s Great Society programs, which invested in “education, medical care, urban problems, rural poverty, transportation, Medicare, Medicaid, food stamps, and welfare, the Office of Economic Opportunity, and big labor and labor unions.” She noted that under Biden, the U.S. has made “the largest public investment in social infrastructure and environmental programs, that is actually finishing what FDR started, that LBJ expanded on, and Joe Biden is attempting to complete.” 

Well, yeah.

Greene incorrectly called this program “socialism,” which in fact means government ownership of production, as opposed to the government’s provision of benefits people cannot provide individually, a concept first put into practice in the United States by Abraham Lincoln and later expanded by leadership in both parties. The administration has stood firmly behind the idea—shared by LBJ and FDR, and also by Republicans Lincoln, Theodore Roosevelt, and Dwight Eisenhower, among others—that investing in programs that enable working people to prosper is the best way to strengthen the economy. 

Certainly, Greene’s speech didn’t seem to be the “gotcha” that she apparently hoped. A March 2023 poll by independent health policy pollster KFF, for example, found that 80% of Americans like Social Security, 81% like Medicare, and 76% like Medicaid, a large majority of members of all political parties.  

The White House Twitter account retweeted a clip of Greene’s speech, writing: “Caught us. President Biden is working to make life easier for hardworking families.”

—

Notes:

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/07/17/us/politics/trump-plans-2025.html

https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2023/06/07/house-republicans-mccarthy-russell-vought-trump/

https://www.pbs.org/newshour/politics/here-is-a-look-at-the-laws-desantis-has-passed-as-florida-governor-from-abortion-to-guns

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/06/26/us/politics/ron-desantis-border-drug-traffickers.html

https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2022/4/28/23037788/ron-desantis-florida-viktor-orban-hungary-right-authoritarian

https://twitter.com/Acyn/status/1680582110636064768

https://www.kff.org/medicaid/poll-finding/kff-health-tracking-poll-march-2023-public-doesnt-want-politicians-to-upend-popular-programs/

https://twitter.com/WhiteHouse/status/1680940415812354049




https://thehill.com/homenews/senate/4098609-gop-senators-rattled-by-radical-conservative-populism/

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Well, while we're all here, let's take a look at today's newsletter from Dr. Richardson, also one of great importance and interest -


Letters from an American

July 18, 2023

HEATHER COX RICHARDSON
JUL 19, 2023
1,381
277
40
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“I approve this message.”

Joe Biden’s Twitter account put that line over an ad using the words of Georgia Republican representative Marjorie Taylor Greene’s Turning Points Action Conference speech from last weekend, in which she set out to tear down the president’s policies but ended up making him sound terrific. 


The description she intended to be derogatory—that Biden “had the largest public investment in social infrastructure and environmental programs that is actually finishing what FDR started, that LBJ expanded on”—was such an argument in Biden’s favor that the Biden-Harris campaign used it to advertise what the Democratic administration stands for: “[p]rograms to address education, medical care, urban problems, rural poverty, transportation, Medicare, Medicaid, labor unions.”


Generally, Biden and Harris have so far made the case for their reelection by meeting with voters in their home districts, emphasizing job growth and infrastructure investment in those districts, seemingly trying to demonstrate—without fanfare—that a well-run Democratic government can help ordinary Americans. But Greene’s misfire was just too good not to highlight. The programs she was denigrating are, in fact, enormously popular.


Biden has generally stayed out of the headlines that involve the 2024 election, giving Republicans free rein to define themselves for the American people.

That definition became clearer this morning, when former president Trump wrote on the right-wing Truth Social network that the Department of Justice’s special counsel Jack Smith has issued him a target letter associated with the investigation into the attempt to overturn the results of the 2020 election. A target letter usually means that prosecutors have enough evidence to charge someone with a crime. It offered Trump four days to appear before the grand jury to tell his side of the story, an offer Trump is expected to refuse. 

Then, it is likely that he will be indicted.


Trump reacted exactly as one would expect, called Smith “deranged,” and claiming his own legal troubles were political: an attempt on the part of President Biden to eliminate his chief 2024 rival. (There is no sign that Biden has touched the investigation, but of course Trump tried to eliminate Biden in 2020 by pushing Ukraine president Volodymyr Zelensky to announce an investigation into Hunter Biden’s work with Ukrainian company Burisma.) 


Trump harped on the idea that the investigation into his attempt to overturn the results of the 2020 election is “A COMPLETE AND TOTAL WEAPONIZATION OF LAW ENFORCEMENT,” an accusation echoed by Trump loyalists Representative Jim Jordan (R-OH) and Marjorie Taylor Greene, both of whom were also involved in the attempt to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election. 

House speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) also echoed the accusation that the target letter is a sign of political “weaponization” of government, prompting Representative Ted Lieu (D-CA) to respond: “As Speaker, you are expected to uphold the rule of law. A target letter does not reveal what evidence the grand jury saw, nor what all the charges might be. Attacking a potential indictment before seeing the evidence and charges is irresponsible.”


But if Trump received the target letter on Sunday, why did he complain about it only today? 


That delay might have had something to do with another legal issue: today’s hearing about the national security documents case, overseen by Judge Aileen Cannon. One of the issues to be discussed at that hearing was setting a date for the trial. The Department of Justice wants to go to trial in December; Trump wants to delay it until after the 2024 election. 


MSNBC legal analyst Lisa Rubin noted that today’s target letter changes the calculations for the documents trial because no matter what Cannon decides, it seems likely that Trump will face another federal trial in Washington, D.C., over the events surrounding January 6, 2021. The Washington, D.C., trials for those involved in the events of January 6, 2021, have moved forward with few delays.

This week’s bad legal news for Trump did not end there. 


On Friday of last week, Trump’s lawyers tried to stop Georgia’s probe into his attempt to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election in that state. They asked the court to disqualify Fulton County district attorney Fani Willis, who has been investigating that attempt, and to stop Willis from using any of the material gathered by the grand jury investigating the case. Yesterday, the Georgia Supreme Court unanimously rejected his petition, allowing the probe to go forward.


Then, today, Michigan’s attorney general Dana Nessel charged sixteen fake electors who signed fake certificates claiming that Trump had won Michigan’s electoral votes in 2020 with felonies: forgery, conspiracy to commit forgery, election law forgery, conspiracy to commit election law forgery, publishing a counterfeit record, and conspiring to publish a counterfeit record. 


The sixteen Republicans met in the basement of the state Republican Party’s headquarters and signed fake documents claiming that they were the state’s legitimate electors and that Trump had won the state. Their actions were part of a plan to claim that the electoral votes of certain states were “contested,” allowing then–vice president Mike Pence to reject the votes of those states and throw the election to Trump. 


The fake electors attested they were “the duly elected and qualified electors for president and vice president of the United States of America for the state of Michigan,” Nessel said. “That was a lie. They weren’t the duly elected and qualified electors, and each of the defendants knew it.” “The false electors' actions undermine the public's faith in the integrity of our elections and not only violated the spirit of the laws enshrining and defending our democracy, but we believe also plainly violated the laws by which we administer our elections in Michigan and peaceably transfer power in America,” Nessel said. “This plan, to reject the will of the voters and undermine democracy, was fraudulent and legally baseless.”


Text messages at the time show that the sixteen were “all asked to keep silent [so] as to not draw attention to what the other states were doing similar to ours!” One of those charged was former co-chair of the state Republican committee, Meshawn Maddock, who called the charges “political persecution.”   


Legal analyst Renato Mariotti noted that the charges against the sixteen fake electors send a powerful message for those at the state level who might consider abetting Trump in the future. Those fake electors aren’t part of Trump’s inner circle who might get some kind of a reward for their trouble. They are just party operatives who are facing an expensive, stressful, and humiliating experience that could lead to hefty fines or imprisonment. Their example might well make others think carefully before they sign on to similar plans.


Josh Marshall pointed out in Talking Points Memo today that the lines of the 2024 election are coming clearer. Trump’s many legal troubles simply strengthen the loyalty of his base, making his nomination for the Republican presidential candidacy even more likely. But voters in the general election are unlikely to rally to someone facing multiple indictments in several different cases, especially ones related to the attempt to overthrow the results of the 2020 election, which horrified most Americans. 


The Republican Party is now “handcuffed to Donald Trump,” Marshall writes. 

President Biden’s policy of focusing on his job while letting the Republicans define themselves might be a smart strategy.

—

Notes:

https://www.rawstory.com/georgia-supreme-court-rejects-trump/

https://www.cnn.com/2023/07/14/politics/donald-trump-fani-willis-georgia-grand-jury/index.html

https://www.cnn.com/2023/07/18/politics/michigan-fake-electors

https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/2020-election/michigan-attorney-general-charges-false-electors-efforts-overturn-2020-rcna94838

https://www.michigan.gov/ag/-/media/Project/Websites/AG/releases/2023/July/Final-Affidavit-July-18-2023.pdf

https://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/michigan-ag-hits-16-fake-electors-with-felony-charges

https://talkingpointsmemo.com/edblog/the-full-2024-picture-finally-comes-into-view

Twitter:

joebiden/status/1681424737384435713

RonFilipkowski/status/1681325293779275778

AWeissmann_/status/1681305658187223040

lawofruby/status/1681313655558914049

tedlieu/status/1681312292464660482

renato_mariotti/status/1681466573754703874

kyledcheney/status/1681405181211074560

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      •  Truly, we live with mysteries too marvelous to be...
      • Muses from Meat Camp - Good, Bad, and Horrid
      • Rest in Peace Sinead O'Connor - 8 December 1966 – ...
      • Today BY BILLY COLLINS
      • Here's to BLTs
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Books Read in 2025

  • All the Colors of the Dark by Chris Whitaker
  • Them Bones by David Housewright
  • Summer Light on Nantucket by Nancy Thayer
  • The Last Carolina Summer by Karen White
  • Other People’s Summers by Sarah Morgan
  • Booked for Murder by P.J. Nelson
  • Maine Characters by Hannah Orenstein
  • Hidden Nature by Nora Roberts
  • These Summer Storms by Sarah MacLean
  • The Red Queen by Martha Grimes
  • Nobody's Fool by Harlan Coben
  • The Secret Library of Hanna Reeves by Christine Nolfi
  • All the Signs by Jessie Rosen
  • The Midnight Estate by Kelly Rimmer
  • The Last Letter of Rachel Ellsworth by Barbara O'Neal
  • Through an Open Window by Pamela Terry
  • The Safari by Jaclyn Goldis
  • Our Last Vineyard Summer by Brooke Lea Foster
  • Propaganda Girls by Lisa Rogak
  • The Homemade God by Rachel Joyce
  • These Heathens by Mia McKenzie
  • The Light on Horn Island by Valerie Fraser Luesse
  • The Doorman by Chris Pavone
  • Mrs. Endicott's Splendid Adventure by Rhys Bowen
  • The Rebel of Seventh Avenue by Annabelle Marx
  • The Violet Hour A Lowcountry Tale by Victoria Benton Frank
  • Cher: The Memoir (Part 1) by Cher
  • The Belles by Lacey N. Dunham
  • The Midnight Hour by Eve Chase
  • Death is a Caberet by Deborah Morgan
  • Hunter's Heart Ridge by Sarah Stewart Taylor
  • All This Could Be Yours by Hank Phillippi Ryan
  • The Forget-Me-Not Library by Heather Webber
  • The Bayrose Files by Diane Wald
  • The Weedless Widow by Deborah Morgan
  • The Marriage Casket by Deborah Morgan
  • Four on the Floor by Deborah Morgan
  • A Paris All Your Own edited by Eleanor Brown
  • The Engagements By J. Courtney Sullivan
  • At Home in the World:A Memoir by Joyce Maynard
  • Under the Stars by Beatriz Williams
  • The Majolica Murders by Deborah Morgan
  • My Beloved by Jan Karon
  • The Saint Laurent Muse by C. W. Gortner
  • The French Ingredient: Making a Life in Paris One Lesson at a Time; A Memoir by Jane Bertch
  • The Mysterious Bakery on Rue de Paris by Evie Woods
  • Apostle's Cove by William Kent Krueger
  • Falling for Provence by Alison Roberts
  • Young Fools by Liza Palmer
  • The Missing Pages by Alyson Richman
  • The Gourmet Club by Michael A. Kahn
  • The Sandy Page Bookshop by Hannah McKinnon
  • The Ashtrays Are Full and the Glasses Are Empty by Kirsten Mickelwait
  • The Tattered Cover by Ellery Adams
  • Aftertaste by Daria Lavelle
  • A Nice Class of Corpse by Simon Brett
  • Mrs., Presumed Dead by Simon Brett
  • Mrs. Pargeter's Package by Simon Brett
  • Mts. Pargeter's Pound of Flesh by Simon Brett

FTC Disclosure Notice

FTC has a regulation which went into effect in December, 2009 which says, basically - "Amateur Bloggers to Disclose Freebies or Be Fined." Significantly fined. So. Since I happen to be an amateur blogger who sometimes receives free books, here's my required FTC Disclosure Notice: Dear FTC - Regarding review copies of books obtained for this blog. No other compensation is accepted beyond review copies of books - ever. When I do write a review, or opinion, the source of the book cited will be disclosed in the post in which the review/opinon appears. If you have questions, please feel free to contact me.




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