Given the Current Mayhem . . .

is it so outrageous to think on the possibility that the election was bamboozled? Given the lawless clearcutting of personnel, funds, and just about everything generous and good of our nation, no, it is not. This piece from Wired, November 14 2024 is interesting to read again in the light of a month’s worth of Project 2025: Source: The Conspiracy Theory That Elon Musk Stole the Election Using Starlink Is Everywhere Now | WIRED

 

Contrast that with what Al Jazeera (November 13, 2024) reported, basically the elections were too secure and Starlink was not able to be used due to voting equipment not being connected to the Internet.

 

The purpose of this is not to rehash conspiracy theories. I want to vociferously protest this rape, yes RAPE, of our country by Trump, Billionaires, and Elon Musk, and everything they represent. How providential was it that Trump needed to win to escape judgement, acquiring the richest person on the planet — a genius of questionable merit, while having the enthusiastic backing of Tsar Vladimir Putin? I do not have the technical capability to discover how this miscarriage of justice could have been accomplished. However, if someone with billions of dollars and a fleet of henchmen couldn’t find a way they’d be sorry sons of bitches, eh?

 

Live News Chat (November 21, 2024) reported on “bullet ballots” where only the presidential candidates were filled in. They state that there were anomalously higher percentages of these in swing states, including 11% in North Carolina, Arizona 7.2%, and Nevada 5.5%. Surrounding states such as Idaho, Oregon, and Utah showed only 0.05%. Having a sole avenue of attack is unlikely; the need to install MAGA would require using subtle and overt strategies.

 

Suicide: Read This First

Lifelines come in many forms. Fortunately, for now, the World Wide Web can be one of immeasurable value. Any who, like me, have chronic depression will have a difficult road in the best of times. These are not the best of times for many, thus this line to life.

If you’re even slightly given to contemplating suicide, please look through the excellent resources listed at this site. I checked throughout and the “This Emotional Life” link was blocked but otherwise all the rest are current and good.

For too long, I’ve told myself I’m sticking around to vote against tRump. Now I’m sticking around to irk him and the cabal he rode in on, and because I love my country and the Earth it resides upon.

Source: Suicide: Read This First

FUDGERY

Alas, absurdity of an ill-nature abounds. Having been assailed by many acts of inanity, I took yesterday off from my medium of choice, Bluesky. This has been refreshing yet, in the manner in which arachnaphobes like to keep a vigilant eye upon the many-legged, one wonders what the fudgerers are up to.

Life and Me. A Colonial/Regency outfitted man is whacking a possibly deceased horse in futile hopes.

Note: I have been reading dear Jane Austen of late and make no apologies for attempting an humourous formality.

These are the New Good Old Days

One hopes to be insightful and profound in every post yet this one will be neither. Five days in and the best thing I’ve read so far on my one remaining social medium is that it feels like it should be January 754th or something. I’ll have to go back and look as my memory isn’t what it used to be, I think.

Until the correction be kind, rewind, be aligned, and don’t get resigned.

Forward to the Past, 2025 to 2017.

Old woman holding upside US flag sign during anti-orange fascist march, 2017.
We Are (still) Not OK.

So here we were/are. I’m not marching and the sign is in my closet. I remain opposed to this entire Orange and White racist enterprise. I remain opposed to willful stupidity and cruelty. Maybe I’ll ignore this blog again, maybe I’ll protest here as opposed to just at/with my cat.

Buckle up, buttercups. Fire in the whole!

Earthrise

Source: Earthrise – Steady

Earthrise

Smile for a Christmas Eve

There have been a lot of firsts in human history, but on Christmas Eve, 1968, there was a first that was, quite literally, out of this world.

While Apollo 11, with the “one small step for man” heroics, gets most of the attention in our history books and public remembrances, it was the Apollo 8 mission that was the first to take humans away from low Earth orbit, and thus provide a perspective on our home planet that no human being had ever seen, or felt, before.

The mission spanned the Christmas holiday. It launched on December 21, and the astronauts – Frank Borman, James Lovell, and William Anders – splashed down back on Earth on December 27. Their greatest distance from our little planet was more than 234,000 miles, insignificant in the vastness of space but meaningful for our humble species. They saw the far side of the moon. They took a lot of pictures of craters. All that was planned.

What was not planned was “Earthrise,” perhaps the most famous picture ever taken from space. Also unanticipated, according to the astronauts themselves, were the spiritual and emotional journeys that led to that moment, and the feelings that followed. These feelings were not limited to those on the spacecraft. Many millions of us would back home on Earth would come to feel them as well when we saw this breathtaking picture.

(The following is an excerpt from our book What Unites Us)

This image, so peaceful and yet so breathtaking, was taken at the end of a turbulent year. It was Christmas Eve 1968, but from up there you would never know that a hot war was raging in Vietnam or that a Cold War was dividing Europe. You wouldn’t know of the assassinations of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. or Bobby Kennedy. From that distance, people are invisible, and so are cities, countries, and national boundaries. All that separates us ethnically, culturally, politically, and spiritually is absent from the image. What we see is one fragile planet making its way across the vastness of space.

There was something about that photograph that struck deep into the souls of many people about our place in the heavens, and a year later it appeared on a postage stamp (six cents at the time) with the caption “In the beginning God . . .”

10 Apollo 8 moon postage stamps for mailing. Mint condition image 1

The photograph is also widely credited with galvanizing a movement to protect our planet. Over the course of the 1960s, people increasingly spoke of a Spaceship Earth, a notion eloquently voiced by United States ambassador Adlai Stevenson in a speech he gave to the United Nations in 1965. “We travel together, passengers on a little space ship, dependent on its vulnerable reserves of air and soil; all committed for our safety to its security and peace; preserved from annihilation only by the care, the work, and, I will say, the love we give our fragile craft.” With the Earthrise photograph, suddenly Spaceship Earth was no longer a metaphor. It was there for all of us to see.

The entire story of the mission and the photograph is captured in a marvelous short film that we share here as well. We think it will make for some thought-provoking Christmas viewing.

We hope these recollections and reflections have brought a smile to your face this holiday season.

Take care. And let us take care, together, of our fragile home.

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