6.15.2020 – A free Government

A free Government
command respect of the world
be exemplified!

Taken from the 1st Inaugural Address of George Washington.

President Washington said, “By the article establishing the Executive Department, it is made the duty of the President “to recommend to your consideration, such measures as he shall judge necessary and expedient.” The circumstances under which I now meet you, will acquit me from entering into that subject, farther than to refer to the Great Constitutional Charter under which you are assembled; and which, in defining your powers, designates the objects to which your attention is to be given. It will be more consistent with those circumstances, and far more congenial with the feelings which actuate me, to substitute, in place of a recommendation of particular measures, the tribute that is due to the talents, the rectitude, and the patriotism which adorn the characters selected to devise and adopt them. In these honorable qualifications, I behold the surest pledges, that as on one side, no local prejudices, or attachments; no seperate views, nor party animosities, will misdirect the comprehensive and equal eye which ought to watch over this great assemblage of communities and interests: so, on another, that the foundations of our National policy will be laid in the pure and immutable principles of private morality; and the pre-eminence of a free Government, be exemplified by all the attributes which can win the affections of its Citizens, and command the respect of the world.

I like President Washington.

I like President Washington a lot.

But, by george, from this distance, did he have make it look so easy.

How did we get from President Washington to “Is it possible that a president who has spent four years lying to the American people now assumes that everyone is lying? Or can he simply no longer distinguish between fact and fiction, between conspiracy theories spread by fringe “news” outlets such as the One America News Network and observable reality? What sane human being could imagine that America wanted to hear that George Floyd was smiling down from heaven at the day’s modestly improved job reports?“, as written in today’s Guardian in the opinion piece, “The gap between Trump’s world and reality is widening. It’s disturbing to watch” by Francine Prose, a former president of PEN American Center and a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

Oh, woe is US.

I have to admit I think the use of the lower case p here is on purpose.

I endorse such a measure.

6.14.2020 – God’s curiosity

God’s curiosity
about Himself resulted
in what we call us

Last night my wife and I watched the protests in Downtown Atlanta of another police shooting of a black man.

Protesters had managed to line up across a stretch of one of the busiest freeway in United States.

A Wendy’s Restaurant where the shooting took place went up in flames.

Rather than turning up the volume on the protest, my friend and reporter for 11Alive Doug Richards, who was on the scene, said that the fire more of less was freaking out the protesters and they ran for cover.

Talking with my wife as the next day, she asked me, why did God create these differences?

These differences in skin color and size and language.

“Was it to test us?”, she asked.

I was quick to say yes.

God wanted to see how we might handle these differences.

God wanted to see if we would react with fear or confidence.

My wife pointed out that the problems went back, all the way back.

Before the Tower of Babel.

What differences where there, on the surface, between Caine and Able.

Yet Caine hated Abel.

So God knew how we would handle the differences if skin color and language and how to serve food and sing songs.

Not well and God knew it.

So why?

In my reading today, my interest was sparked by the comment about another author, that he wanted to live long enough (this was an old comment) so that Thomas Mann could finish the last book of Joseph and His Brothers.

I don’t know anything about this book except that it has been selected as my summer time read.

I did find this one quote though that intrigued.

“Man, then was a result of God’s curiosity about Himself”, wrote Mr. Mann.

Maybe that is the reason for all the differences.

God creates man.

God creates forgiveness.

God creates salvation.

Maybe God was curious if these new creations had limits.

Maybe God saw the easiest way to test these new creations was to add to man easy avenues to differences.

Would man react with fear or confidence.

And would the new creations be sufficient for these reaction’s.

I am not dumb enough to say this is the answer.

I am willing to consider it.

And I am willing to put forward a possible response by God.

I am reminded of an anecdote told by the veteran actor of film and stage, Rex Harrison.

Mr. Harrison was on Johnny Carson or maybe an the old Dick Cavett show, but he told a story of how he was in London, rehearsing a play by George Bernard Shaw.

Sorry to say I cannot recall or Mr. Harrison did not name the play.

ANYWAY, Mr. Harrison and the other cast members were having problems with one scene.

The could not, they felt, get it right.

What was the Mr. Shaw after the cast wondered?

No one could agree on anything except that whatever they were trying to do just did not work on stage.

Then, wonder of wonder, George Bernard Shaw himself came by to watch the rehearsal.

Mr. Harrison and the cast called to him and brought him up on stage.

WHAT DID YOU MEAN and WHERE WERE YOU GOING in this scene, they asked.

Mr. Shaw took a copy of the script and sat down to read.

He read through a few pages.

He turned the script back and read through a few pages.

He turned the script back again and read through a few pages.

Mr. Shaw looked up at the cast, cleared his throat and said, “This really is bad isn’t it?”

I like to think God knew what he was doing from square one.

I like to think that for God, there are no surprises.

I would not, anyway, be surprised if God was curious, as if in a lab experiment, about his latest creation.

I would not be surprised if God decided to give to curiosity and create man.

I for one, have no problem, letting God be God and do what he wants.

And I would not be surprised if God admitted that the results, how we handled or behaved or lived with, his new creation, seems to be turning out really bad, isn’t it?

6.13.2020 – contextualise

contextualise
sequencer algorithm
seismogram data

I would have bet my best friend’s last dollar that no one, and I mean NO one could use the words in my haiku for today in a single, grammatical sentence.

Never the less, that is where I came across these words.

In one single, grammatical sentence, in the article, “Scientists Detect Surprise Structures Wrapped Around Earth’s Core.” by Michelle Starr on the website, Sciencealert.com.

The article is about how scientists realized they can use data from earthquakes to map the interior of the earth.

Geologist Vedran Lekić of the University of Maryland is quoted as saying, “This is really exciting, because it shows how the Sequencer algorithm can help us to contextualise seismogram data across the globe in a way we couldn’t before.”

Side note, not only does spell check throw out contextualise and seismogram, it also questions the name of the geologist.

But that’s science.

If you don’t have a word, you can create one.

I remember once being in the newsroom at WZZM13 in Grand Rapids, Michigan and Meteoroligist and good friend (we had often been confused for each other but that’s another story) George Lessens walked in.

From across the newsroom I yelled out, “George! Derrechio? Tornadic? You guys make all that stuff up!”

The entire newsroom broke up laughing, including George.

He also never denied it.

The Sequencer algorithm can help us to contextualise seismogram data across the globe in a way we couldn’t before.

What a marvelous phrase.

I am in awe.

But what does it mean?

THAT IS THE BEST PART!

The article goes on to state, “The overall findings suggest that Earth’s guts are rather more blobby than we suspected”

Blobby guts!

Me and old mother Earth.

Synergy!

Blobby guts!

I am at the same time one and at peace with my planet.

6.12.2020 – just quiet enough

just quiet enough
to hear fireflies over the roar
made to keep me cool

I just read a note from my brother Jack.

Jack told how a new member of their neighborhood went into battle against his lawn with more equipment then Eisenhower landed at D-Day.

Jack recounted that while the neighborhood was assaulted with the roar of lawn care equipment, the new neighbor attacking his lawn, wore ear plugs.

This amount of noise for this amount of result was too much.

Should something be said?

Jack posed the question of what to do.

I understood.

Somehow George Washington created the first great lawn in America without a weed eater.

I have daydreamed about starting a lawn care company that used only non-powered tools

A lawn care company that would market commercials showing the “loud company” and sound of Boeing 747s taking off or just powered lawn care equipment and then go to my company and clip clip clip of on old fashioned hedge trimmer

The commercials would end with the tagline, “The Quiet Company,”

Then I felt sorry for the new neighbor.

What private hell must his work life be that in order to exhibit some measure of control in his life, he took on the theory and practice of the well kept yard, 21st century style.

Then I shook my head over the fact that anyone would try to control and manicure nature.

Mankind can keep nature at arms length for a while maybe.

When I was commuting into downtown Atlanta, I knew where to spot a sapling that was growing in an expansion joint of an I85 overpass.

It looked to be growing in solid concrete.

Yet it was there every year and every year a little bigger.

I used to own a house that had a back yard of Georgia forest.

When we moved in I attacked the back year with mowers, machetes, chain saws and axes.

My plan was to drive the trees and bracken back and have a real backyard.

I took out about about 20 trees.

Forest management is a fun and un-complicated way to really mess up your life.

Just the words “chain saw” should have mandatory warnings attached.

I mowed over stumps and small trees.

I burned and slashed.

I brought daylight into the forest in one summer.

The next spring, the forest reacted to all the new available sunshine and it exploded right back at me.

Growing up in Michigan, I thought I was an expert on poison ivy.

Down here I chopped poison ivy vines as thick as my wrist .

Over five years I reached a level of rapprochement with nature and we settled on a DMZ of about 15 feet behind the house.

Not sure what has happened since we left but my money is on Nature.

Next to keeping Nature under control, the effort to keep Nature’s heat under control is another effort with the questionable result of being cooler for the price of lots and lots of noise.

I remember a summer family trip to Wisconsin, we had checked into a hotel somewhere about halfway to my Uncle Jim’s summer cabin.

We were, probably about 11 or 12 of us, exploring the 2 hotel rooms and arguing over the folding beds when my brother Jack said, “Let’s go out on the balcony and listen to the roar of the air conditioner.”

I was all for it.

And when we filed out onto the balcony that overlooked the hotel parking lot and fenced in mechanical equipment, we were greeted with the wonderful roar of the hotel’s mighty HVAC system,

I was enthralled.

I was about 10.

I was a lot older before I figured out that Jack was being sarcastic.

I remember reading an essay once by a feller who wrote about the most wonderful sound in winter.

It was the sound an automatic coal basket made when it dropped fresh coal on the furnace fire in the middle of the night.

I knew just what the feller meant.

But for me, it was air conditioning.

To be sure we grew up with a Dad who loved air conditioning.

Dad had two temp settings for the A/C.

Off and FULL BLAST.

Whether at work, at home or in the car.

FULL BLAST.

A family summer trip riding in the front seat of the car with Dad was the coldest winter feeling I ever knew.

5 minutes was nice.

10 minutes was enough.

15 minutes you were numb.

20 minutes it was aching cold and agony and I had to pee so bad I thought I was going explode.

BUT THE sound.

The sound of air conditioning warms my heart and cools my soul.

We recently moved into an apartment.

We have a small ground floor porch that looks out over a forest.

For any apartment complex, any where, it is not too bad.

Of course just down from our porch are the air conditioning units for the building.

Out of sight, just over the hill to our left, about 1 mile away, is I85.

I hear the roar of the AC.

I feel the hum of the expressway.

I sit in a rocker and watch the dark come on.

I have heard these other sounds so long I don’t hear them.

As the dark gets darker, fireflies start flashing.

For me, over the roar of all the machines that run to keep me cool, I hear the fireflies.

It’s a nice spot.

The quiet.

Then without warning, there were kid’s screams,

But the kind of screams kids make when they are having the best time while being scared to death.

Two little boys ran past our porch.

Two little boys who had never seen lightning bugs, as my grand daughter told me to say in place of fireflies, before.

What I would give to be able to remember my first sighting of lighting bugs.

I envy my wife.

My wife had never seen the movie Casablanca.

When Bogart refused to get on the plane, my wife was surprised.

Me?

I cannot recall a time in my life when I didn’t know how Casablanca ended.

What’s it like to see for the first time.

What’s it like to see lighting bugs for the first time.

The boys ran around trying to catch them.

GOT ONE!

Did it bite?

Then the boys were gone.

The lightning bugs stayed around.

For the first time in my life one of them flew onto the porch and stopped about a foot from my face.

It blinked a few times and flew away.

I would have screamed like those boys if I could have got away it.

A quiet night in Georgia.

Listening to the lightning bugs and the roar of the A/C.

I sat back and I rocked in the twilight.

I wonder what my brother will do.

B

6.11.2020 – The Kirtland’s Warbler

The Kirtland’s Warbler
unexpected success in
unexpected place

Kirtland’s warbler.

If you grew up in Michigan in the 70’s and had any awareness of the State’s natural resources and wild lands, you were aware of the plight of the Kirtland’s Warbler.

A small song bird that summered in Michigan and wintered in the Bahamas and was down to about 300 nesting pairs in the world.

I know I was aware of the bird.

But then I had a friend, Larry, who was into birds.

His nickname was Big Bird, or The Bird or just Bird.

For the longest time I thought his name WAS bird.

Bird new all about the Kirtland’s Warbler.

And because of Bird, we all knew about the Kirtland’s Warbler.

But it went beyond just having Bird for a friend.

Michigan’s author of Civil War history, Bruce Catton, wrote an autobiography about growing up in the Michigan titled, Waiting for the Morning Train.

He wrote about that the warbler looked for 2nd growth pine forests to live and nest.

The type of habitat you get where there are regular forest fires.

Back in the early 1900’s almost all the trees in the state were cut down.

Then the State Department of Natural Resources started to prevent forest fires.

As the forest grew up, the 2nd growth pine forests disappeared along with Kirtland’s Warbler.

By the 1970’s the Michigan DNR was setting controlled forest fire to create the habitat the Warbler looked for.

Mr. Catton found that to be an odd track in the circle of the State;s history.

Along with Mr. Catton, Michigan Author Jim Harrison’s books are full of bird watchers and school kids with their Audubon Cards.

I would guess that the story of the Kirtland’s Warbler shows up in half of his books.

Along with these two authors the general newspaper coverage of those years could be counted for yearly updates of the battle to save the warbler.

I remember how Bird and his bird watching friends were out all the time for Warbler counts.

My point is I was very much aware of the fact that this tiny bird that summered in Michigan and wintered in the Bahamas was on the point of extinction.

And then I forgot.

I got married and put together a family and moved to Georgia.

I pretty much forgot all about this little bird.

Then a couple of weeks back, the bird was back in my reading.

Unexpectedly.

Unexpected that the bird was back in the news.

I had not thought about that warbler for years, decades and now it was back in the news.

It was just a casual mention in another story on another topic in the New York Times.

But there it was.

Such a casual mention in this other story to me spoke volumes about this bird and reawakened echos long unheard.

The bird, from 300 nesting pairs or less, had survived.

The nutty plan to protect and even create this special habitat for this bird in Northern lower Michigan had worked.

Some how we had got something right.

This odd track of the story of the death of a wilderness was a success story.

The Kirtland Warbler was back.

Not only was back but was spotted in New York City as recently as 2018.

At that time, one birder, Phil Jeffrey, said in an online interview, “It’s an extremely rare bird for NYC although just short of a national rarity, as the breeding population has rebounded after conservation efforts… It’s in the once-per-Century level for the park and I would suspect few records in NY State, That’s what generates the attention. Many other park ‘rare’ warblers have much larger populations, are more-or-less annual but in very low numbers. Kirkland’s is off the scale by comparison.”

The news of the sighting went viral excited NYC’s birding community in general and a man named Christian Cooper in particular.

I was reading this other article in the Times on a completely different story line when I came across this line: “What he [Christian Cooper] was interested in were birds, like the sighting in 2018 of a rare Kirtland’s warbler that led him to sprint from his office in Midtown Manhattan to the park to catch a glimpse.

I didn’t know a thing about him.

But I felt like I knew him.

I felt like we had 40 years of shared experience tied up in this bird.

A bird that had come close to extinction had made a comeback and caused Mr. Cooper to sprint from his office in Midtown Manhattan to the park to catch a glimpse

The article that mentioned this was titled: “The Bird Watcher, That Incident and His Feelings on the Woman’s Fate”.

The article was a follow up to the article, “White Woman Is Fired After Calling Police on Black Man in Central Park: Video of the incident touched off intense discussions about the history of black people being falsely reported to the police.”

Christian Cooper is the Black Man in the story.

Mr. Cooper who was out bird watching and a woman walking her dog felt threatened enough to call the cops.

Christian Cooper once sprinted from his office in Midtown Manhattan to the park to catch a glimpse of a Kirtland’s warbler,

It was the Warbler mention though that stuck with me.

One reason is kind of silly.

How often are we in situations were we wish we had something to say.

Something that could offer hope or a difference or encourage or just a way out of a bad place.

For myself, I don’t have to think about what I could say to Mr. Cooper if we ever meet.

I would ask him to tell me about that bird.

And for some reason, with everything else to talk about, I feel like he would appreciate that.

The bird could lift us out of the need for an ugly discussion.

I have to say, I really want to know what he felt at that moment of seeing a Kirtland’s Warbler in New York City.’

Another reason?

Somehow, someway, most likely in spite of ourselves, we may have helped bring this bird back.

We, the people we, had a success.

A small success.

An unexpected success in an unexpected place.

Maybe we CAN pull off a bigger one.

Got to try.