the way I see it
don’t matter what you believe
so long you’re sincere

Sincerity, sadly, doesn’t go as far as it used to.
the way I see it
don’t matter what you believe
so long you’re sincere

Sincerity, sadly, doesn’t go as far as it used to.
nature’s first green is
gold, her hardest hue to hold …
nothing gold can stay

Nature’s first green is gold,
Her hardest hue to hold.
Her early leaf’s a flower;
But only so an hour.
Then leaf subsides to leaf.
So Eden sank to grief,
So dawn goes down to day.
Nothing gold can stay.
Nothing Gold Can Stay by Robert Frost, as published in The Poetry of Robert Frost edited by Edward Connery Lathem. (Henry Holt and Company, New York, 1942)
Ashley River with Pink Grass along the marsh, from the Magnolia Plantation near Charleston, SC.
planning construction
in DC? the right permit
is a crucial step

On the website, PermitFlow.com, the page titled, “DC Building Permit Guide for Builders, Developers, Contractor”
If you’re a developer, contractor, or builder who is planning construction in Washington, DC, getting the right permits is a crucial step. Permits help to ensure that your project proceeds legally and under the city’s approval, without either of which you could face fines or orders to remove the work.
Getting a DC building permit can be frustrating. You’re expected to provide proof that your project is thoroughly planned out, including approval from communities and licensed contractors. The biggest challenge is making sure to include everything the city needs to approve your building permit.
This guide will walk you through all the steps of getting a DC building permit, from what projects require a permit to how to make the process easier.
What requires a building permit in DC?
In Washington DC, many construction and renovation projects require a building permit. These can include building a structure of 50 square feet or more or simply as installing a sump pump.
Here’s a list of common projects that need permits:
New building construction
Adding rooms, floors, or decks to existing buildings
Demolishing structures
Major renovations or remodeling
Changing a building’s use (like turning a house into an office)
Installing or replacing electrical, plumbing, or HVAC systems
Building decks, fences, or retaining walls
Adding or removing walls
Installing solar panels
Excavation work
Some smaller projects don’t require a permit (unless the site is in a historic district).
Well!
I mean what is a building code when compared to the Constitution of the United States.
Neither seem to present serious roadblocks, if you know what I mean.
Or are you telling me that the demolition of part of the White House can be arranged by someone just making a phone call to friend who owns a bull dozer and can come over on a Saturday Morning?
OH come on.
I checked the city website for Grand Rapids, Michigan and you can’t even put up a fence without a permit.
Somewhere, someone knows where the bodies are buried and who got paid.
And someday …
Down here in the low country, the part of the country that was in the papers recently because the county prosecutor was found guilty of hiding settlements from clients so he could pocket the money he needed to fund his drug problem. This all unraveled on the guy when he working to get his kid off of charges of DUI in a boating accident that left a young girl dead which led to him shooting both his wife and the son in question. The Country Prosecutor pled not guilty but a jury didn’t buy it.
I mention all that so the reader can get a grasp on the legal climate down here.
See, a guy we met had a coffee shop and he wanted to expand his indoor seating and applied for the right permit but refused to make any other extra curricula financial contributions to help further his request.
And the request was refused on the grounds he didn’t have the required 10 parking spots in his parking lot.
He replied with photos and a map that showed he DID INDEED have 10 parking spots.
When he got to work the next day, there was an official City of Bluffton ‘No Parking’ sign on one spot in his lot.
Today, that sign is still there.
The guy gave up and closed his coffee shop.
Petty.
Petty crime.
The online dictionary defines petty as of little importance; trivial.
What you might expect in the low country.
Not when talking about one of the most famous structures in the United States, if not the world.
sea forced us to tell
ourselves property here is
no longer worth much
In the distance, about half a mile away, you can see the outline of the 400 or so buildings in the village of Miquelon. It sits only 2 metres above sea level on the archipelago of Saint-Pierre and Miquelon. Situated off the Canadian coast to the south of Newfoundland, it is an “overseas collectivity” of France, and the country’s last foothold in North America.
“The constraint of no longer being able to build here – of not being sure that we are sufficiently protected from the sea, with storms that are getting stronger and more frequent – forced us to tell ourselves that our property here is no longer worth much,” he says.
From the article, As rising tides eat away at Canada’s Saint-Pierre and Miquelon archipelago, plans to move the historic village to higher ground have divided friends and families By Sara Hashemi

The islands were an overseas territory of the Nazi-controlled regime of Vichy France after the fall of France in World War II, and were liberated a year and a half later by Free French forces in 1941. After the war, the fishing industry continued to languish, and now fish stocks have fallen so low that fishing is severely restricted. Saint Pierre and Miquelon are now trying to diversify their economy into tourism and other areas.
During the early years of World War II, the United States maintained formal relations with Vichy France. Under the Monroe Doctrine, the US was strongly opposed to any change in control of the islands by force. However, Canada (perhaps due to pressure from Winston Churchill) expressed worries about Vichy forces near Canada. De Gaulle realized that Canada might want to capture Saint Pierre and Miquelon (thereby eliminating French territory so close to Quebec), so he secretly planned its seizure by Free France. On Christmas Eve 1941, Free French forces (three corvettes and the submarine Surcouf, led by Rear-Admiral Émile Muselier) “invaded” the islands. The Vichy officials immediately surrendered.
In the late 1950s De Gaulle offered all French colonies political and financial independence. Saint Pierre and Miquelon chose to remain part of France.
I have long been fascinated with the islands of Saint-Pierre and Miquelon and that a legal part of France was off the coast of Newfoundland.
I remember the old joke of why go all the way to Paris when you can go to Quebec and have people be rude to you.
Of course, I would respond why go all the Quebec when you can shop at Jacobsen’s and have people be rude to you.
But you had to live in West Michigan a long time ago to get that joke.
But there it is, islands, ruled by Government of France, right there 13 miles off the coast of Canada.
It was like after the French and Indian War, those Europeans divvied up all the Risk Cards and someone dropped the Saint-Pierre and Miquelon card on the floor.
Conceivably during World War 2, then Nazis could have staged U Boats out of there, if they could have got there in the first place.
Now they are finding that the Atlantic Ocean is creeping in and that ocean front property, as they say, is no longer worth much.
The constraint of no longer being able to build here – of not being sure that we are sufficiently protected from the sea.
Here I sit in what is called the low country of South Carolina.
The pandemic era WORK FROM HOME concept has caused this area to blow up population wise.
The city of Bluffton, where I live had 900 people living here 25 years ago.
It now has 40,000 and more are moving in every day with new developments both for residents and vacationers.
Houses, Town Homes and Apartments turn up before our eyes.
Vacant marsh land overnight is now a golf course.
But the sea is still a problem for us and it pretty much runs the show.
First off, no one gets to live on the coast.
There is only so much of that.
Second, this is still the low country.
At high tide, 50% of the Beaufort County is under water.
As well as cutting back on available dry land, which pretty much was taken over for roads and railway right-of-ways a long time ago, the amount of fresh water here was maxed also a long time ago.
City and County leaders point out almost every day that the limit for water services and road expansion has been reached.
Then the zoning boards approve another 5,000 homes.
On to of that, the entire area could be wiped off the map by a hurricane.
At some point all of this has to come to smash and the folks here will be forced to tell themselves that their property here is no longer worth much.
kind of behavior
could make a nun kick in a
stained-glass window
He’s tried to restore Confederate statues and names. He’s retreating from the Civil Rights Act of 1964. His flunkies have downplayed Black icons like Harriet Tubman, the Tuskegee Airmen and Jackie Robinson.
That kind of behavior could make a nun kick in a stained-glass window. And it certainly won’t get you into heaven.
From the opinion piece, Trump’s Slavish Stupidity by Maureen Dowd (Aug 28, 2025).
Maureen Dowd is an Opinion columnist for The Times. She won the 1999 Pulitzer Prize for distinguished commentary.
I like the writing of Ms. Dowd.
She has a way often of writing just what I feel.
She has a ‘style’ as they say, all her own.
Be that as it may, she is not above sneaking in the occasional odd reference to American literature.
In this case, a tribute to the great Raymond Chandler who wrote in his novel, Farewell, My Lovely, that wonderful line … “It was a blonde. A blonde to make a bishop kick a hole in a stained-glass window.”
I just wanted to say to Ms. Dowd, that I got it and I loved it.
PS – Found this in my drafts from back in August and never published it and as I am on vacation, I thought it would be a good day to use it.