Monday, July 13, 2026

Book Review: To Be Real

Title: To Be Real

Editor: Rebecca Walker

Date: 1995

Publisher: Anchor / Doubleday

ISBN: 0-385-47262-5

Length: 290 pages text, 40 pages introduction

Quote: “The greatest gift we can give one another is the power to make a choice.”

Rebecca Walker’s first contribution to American feminist thought was this collection of essays by young people who are still concerned about gender parity, but don’t fit the stereotype of the yuppie feminists of the 1980s. One reason they don’t fit the stereotype is that they came along too late to be yuppies. A few ambitious teachers and lawyers contributed essays to this book, but there’s also a model, a stripper, a rodeo showgirl.

There are also some men and some lesbians. Too many to suit me. Gloria Steinem used to cite a dictionary definition of “feminist” as meaning “anyone who thinks women are equally as valuable as men.” By that definition, these days, anyone who is reasonably in touch with reality qualifies as a feminist. If I were collecting a book about the female experience, however, I’d select writing by people who were unequivocally female and had lived an unequivocally female experience. Jeannine Delombard’s explanation of how her ambition to be as totally feminine as possible, too different from the boys even to want to kiss one, shaped her life of lesbian “Femmenism,” is an interesting story but not one the majority of women can really identify with.

I’d also try to include some viewpoints that are conspicuously missing from To Be Real. This book is supposed to be about the diversity of contemporary feminism but all the writers, without exception, are pretty far out on the left wing of twentieth-century politics. As Eleanor Burkitt observed, this is not an accurate representation of feminist thinking and action in the 1990s, which were also the decade when Republicans were begging Elizabeth Hanford Dole to run for President, when Laura Ingraham and Laura Schlessinger became media stars. Any historical study of the 1990s will need to balance this book with Burkitt’s book, The Right Women, a study of the diverse and sometimes baffling manifestations of right-wing feminism.

It might have been hard to persuade Laura Ingraham to write anything that would appear in an anthology along with a piece by Angela Davis, or vice versa, but that would have been the sort of anthology of 1990s feminist diversity that I would have accepted as “being real.”

Most of the contributors to To Be Real were not, and have not become, celebrity authors, although the book opens with Steinem and closes with Davis and includes pieces by Bell Hooks and Naomi Wolf. Most of them were in their early twenties when they wrote these essays, and it shows. The only way to describe the topics some of these writers chose, and the passionate intensity with which they made points they probably prefer to forget having argued now, is to say—as one had to say to some of what was collected in Sisterhood Is Powerful, years ago—“They are so young.” Anna Bondoc writes about being estranged from her conservative Catholic family by her activism on behalf of a left-wing group, or groups, that certainly don’t seem to have filled her life with joy. When she shares with a left-wing group the very personal story of how she’s given up her home and allowance to fight for their cause, a slightly older woman rejects her display of self-abnegation, complaining that Bondoc seems to have cut herself off from her roots...and Bondoc is so upset, you’d think she’d never even heard of the Queen Bee Syndrome. This is a teenage experience, even if Bondoc managed to postpone it into her twenties.

Then there’s Wolf’s essay, “Brideland,” which is remarkably revealing if you (a) are conversant with historical costumes and (b) have already read Hypocrite in a Pouffy White Dress. Wolf has absorbed a feeling that a wedding gown ought to resemble a “milkmaid” dress with “an eigh­teenth-century bodice, three-quarter-length sleeves, and an an­kle-length skirt with voluminous panniers.” (If you’ve never studied period costumes these descriptive words may not mean much, but you’ve seen the style—it’s in all the color illustrations of all the Mother Goose books.) Wolf has also absorbed the belief that a woman who wears this type of dress “is essen­tially dressing up like Queen Victoria.” In historical fact, Queen Victoria approved, more than created, several different fashion looks, but the “milkmaid” dress wasn’t one of them; the “milkmaid” dress was a late eighteenth century style, fondly recalled but not really repeated in nineteenth century fashions. There was a high fashion version of the “milkmaid” look, affected by Madame de Pompadour and Marie Antoinette, and then there was the downscale version real milkmaids might have worn. The downscale version was preserved in many parts of Europe during the nineteenth century’s craze for distinctive “local costumes,” like the Austrian costumes in The Sound of Music. So is the modern woman who wants to put on a pouffy dress trying to feel like Queen Victoria, or like a European peasant...or is she just discovering that the basic idea of the pouffy dress, the fitted waist and full skirt, is remarkably comfortable and flattering to women who don’t fit so well into styles designed for men or children? Regardless of which historical period or village “uniform” might have inspired the details?

Bell Hooks had written several books before To Be Real. She’d even raised a point I consider very important—the need for women to raise our consciousness of the way some of us displace anger at “societal oppression” onto our children and students. Her contribution to To Be Real, however, will probably strike moderate to right-wing readers as surreal. In “Beauty Laid Bare,” Hooks addresses the Far Left: “Militant black power movement...did not encourage a reclamation of atti­tudes about beauty common in traditional black folk culture,” she complains. “All too often...living simply was made synonymous with...living without attention to beauty.” Her solution: “[W]e need to be vigilant in creating an ethical approach to consumerism that sustains and affirms radical agendas for social change. Rather than surrendering our passion for the beautiful, for luxury, we need to envision ways those passions can be fulfilled that do not reinforce the structures of domination we seek to change.” For middle-of-the-road feminists who were and still are likely to connect with each other mainly at arts, crafts, and music festivals, Hooks is probably preaching to the choir, but she is preaching to an “English Only” choir in Sanskrit.

Then there’s the weird effect created by placing Veena Cabreros-Sud’s call for toughness (“don’t ever not fight”) immediately before Elizabeth Mitchell’s whimper of tenderness (“It’s not that I did my dolls wrong,but that I secretly resented them. They made me a mother too soon...Through dolls, the heart muscles of females are strengthened, ensuring that they will be ruled by compassion and, trough that compassion, by others, for the rest of their lives”). Both of these young women have, it seems, been exposed to yuppie feminists who still think altruism is a good thing, who don’t want to hit a mugger because that would lower them to his level. Neither of them has thought seriously about the very radical Christian idea that “God’s will,” or the Highest Good, for two or more seemingly opposed people may be different from and better than either having their own way or giving up their own way. One in an aggressive way (Cabreros-Sud suggests that every undesirable thing in life be seen as “violence” not “limited to the physical” plane, and fought against with “ugly, angry, cuss-ridden mouths”) and one in a passive way (Mitchell talks about the healing benefit of selfishness, but what she seems to mean is that she wants to travel more before she has a baby), they’re still speaking the truth of early adolescence. Neither seems to have thought much about the empowering benefits of responsibility or of genuine, rather than altruistic, love.

For whom was this book written? Who could have learned something from it? I’m not sure. If To Be Real was meant to encourage more young people to think of themselves as feminists, I’ve seen little evidence that it succeeded. Of course, this cannot be attributed entirely to the book’s merits; pressure on public libraries to discard even excellent books to make room for ephemeral electronic junk kept practically any book that wasn’t a computer manual and didn’t feature Harry Potter from being as successful as it would have been ten years earlier, and then the mass media decided to publicize war, foreign policy, and the continuous fall of “the economy” to the exclusion of everything else. I don’t know of any feminists who’ve either abandoned our goals or seriously decided that we’ve met them, but I do know that not nearly as much is being published about feminists as was being published ten years ago.

If To Be Real was meant to persuade people like Alice Walker that people like Rebecca Walker were Real Feminists too, I’m not sure how well it succeeded in that goal either. It does conclusively prove that, although even China had admitted that Marxism or Maoism couldn’t work in the real world, the people for whom left-wing ideology had been a substitute for religious faith were still clinging to their faith in 1995. At the time one could hope that they’d outgrow it. The behavior of some people in the current administration suggests otherwise. The authors in this book were still left-wingers, and probably several of them still are. But “left-wing” and “feminist” are entirely different things.

For whom could this book be useful today? Future historians may want it as a study of the 1990s, but is anyone writing a book or even a paper about the 1990s yet? Well...in the meantime, this is a book of short stories about young people coming of age. Each contributor was asked to write about her or his personal growth through a personal experience of feminism, so although the stories are memoirs rather than polished pieces of literary symbolism, each story can still be enjoyed for its plot and characters. If, like me, you find fact-based short stories more interesting than the ones that are altogether fictional, you will enjoy reading the stories of 21 twenty-somethings.

Butterfly of the Week: Purple Spotted Swallowtail

Graphium weiskei is the Purple Spotted Swallowtail because it has pale purple spots. A few sources give it the more fanciful name "Purple Mountain Emperor," and a few simply translate its Latin name as "Weiske's Graphium." Emil Weiske was a nineteenth century naturalist. Another butterfly (in the genus Delias), a bee, and a bird species were also named weiskei in honor of him. Weiskei is most "properly" pronounced like "vye-sky-ee."


Photo by Gancw1 for Inauralist, December, 2024.


Photo by John Lenagan for herpsandbirds.tumblr.com.


Photo by Gan CW on Tumblr. A little actual pigmentation underlies the purple spots, but they can shade to pink or blue or fade to white, depending partly on the light and partly on the individual's condition. 

Swallowtail butterflies named after real people or places tend to have been named later, so less information is available about them. Graphium weiskei was named only in 1900. It is common in a small habitat, the higher elevations of New Guinea; few people have actually seen it alive, though its unusual color has generated much interest in pictures and dead bodies. 

The underside of the wings, which is more often seen, doesn't look very distinctive, though it may have a faint purplish blush on the upper wing tips. It could be mistaken for Graphium kosii or Graphium gelon or other species. One of its other distinguishing features is that, even for a Swallowtail, it has a big head and stout, furry body.


Photo from Gailhampshire, originally on Flickr, donated to Wikipedia.

It has been found between 4000 and 8000 feet above sea level.

A less than faithful drawing appears on postage from Sao Tome e Principe:


The purple color can be conspicuous on a living butterfly:


Photo from papua-insects.nl. 

On some male individuals it can fade to periwinkle, or sky-blue like the blue spot on the butterfly shown above, or even white. On females, the black base color can fade to brown, and the purple spot can fade to pink. Even the pink spot makes this a very unusual butterfly.

Here is a slow-motion video of Graphium weiskei startled into flight:


Nothing seems to have been documented about this butterfly's food plants or life cycle. Someone in New Guinea can still become famous by learning about this species.

Sunday, July 12, 2026

Book Review: Love Must Be Tough

Title: Love Must Be Tough

Author: James C. Dobson

Date: 1983

Publisher: Word

ISBN: 0-8499-0348-3

Length: 212 pages

Quote: “There would be fewer bitter divorces if young husbands and wives knew how to draw therir drifting partners toward them, rather than relentlessly drive them away.”

Dr. Dobson thinks the concept of tough love is “relevant to all human relationships...business and labor, guards and prisoners, Americans and Russians.” He doesn’t want readers to think he’s promising them more than he can deliver: “Genuine insights into human behavior are not everyday occurrences...if one stumbles into two or three fundamental principles in the course of a lifetime, he has done well. The pages that follow focus on one of my allotted few.”

His insight was that it takes two people to save a relationship. If the other person refuses to do anything to save it, your best chance is to toughen up, stand on your principles, get a life of your own, and let the other person come back around to you. Or not.

In the early 1980s, Dr. Dobson was actually offering a big improvement over what some Christian counsellors were telling people, which was to forgive everything, be a doormat, keep pleading for love and being rejected, and offer your misery up to God.

Now that we’ve all agreed that walking away from a relationship before it becomes toxic is more likely to work toward everyone’s Highest Good than enabling abuse is, however, there is a need for a next step. Christians who are not in twelve-step groups have yet to discover the power of community to help tough love work.

A young couple “fall in love,” get married, believe that making babies is the only way they can really “make love,” and do it often. After ten years, the husband notices that love is not exactly what he feels for his messy house, his five needy whiny children, and his fat, depressive, lactating wife. If he were a Real Man he’d get tough,. himself, and recognize that feelings are supposed to come and go, and plan on doing the decent thing for a few years until the children reach a more enjoyable stage of development and the wife recovers her health. Real Men, however, were always a minority; in his generation they’re an endangered species. So he makes excuses to move out—“on business”—and, since he has a good income and has moved into a low-rent neighborhood, very soon he’s sharing a house with a divorced woman. Then he’s sharing a bed. Then they have a baby. Then he’s genuinely torn for a while, because his wife is beautiful (apart from the temporary weight problem) and has Background, whereas the divorcee is frequently mistaken for a fat boy and is known among her people as White Trash, but in the end, the house with one infant seems more pleasant than the house with five. So he files for divorce.

Now, more than twenty-five years after Love Must Be Tough was first published, at least all the qualified and unqualified counsellors are telling the divorced mother the same thing. Give him tough love! Raise the babies alone! Show him that you’re a thoroughbred! Living well is the best revenge! Get a better job than he’s got, lose the surplus weight, put all five kids through college without him! Go, girl!

It all sounds good, and plays well on TV, but reality is that she's not qualified for a job that's going to put anybody through college. There are those who say, “What she needs to do is beg for handouts.” First of all, there’s a long line of people waiting for every handout our government can still afford to offer, and we all know our government is offering more than it can afford. Then, if she has any assets, such as her looks and Background, instead of feeling moved to help her, social workers probably feel inclined to gloat; they don't want to help her back up to the lifestyle to which she is accustomed, they want to push her further down into the mire. Maybe they can "help" her move into a housing project where she has to share a bathroom with a drug dealer.

Christians need to learn from the apostles’ example. The apostolic church was not content to sit around telling people how they were supposed to feel. The apostolic church understood “love” as an active verb. Although some apostolic church communities actually practiced voluntary communism, or communalism, for a while, no apostolic church community was foolish enough to offer handouts to people who were able to work. Even the “widows...taken into the number” of respectable ladies over age seventy still seem to have been expected to give something back to the community. Instead of doling out handouts and pauperizing people who wanted to be useful, the apostolic church put these people’s talents and energy to work. St. Paul ordered them to “Let him that stole steal no more, but let him labor...that he may have to give to him that needeth,” and, “If any will not work, neither let him eat.”

It would be pleasant if Dr. Dobson had written another book advising Christians how to help fat, depressive, heartbroken rejects practice Tough Love and be fascinatingly independent. That mother of five needs help on both practical and emotional levels if she is going to practice Tough Love. Women, particularly, need to rally around a woman who is in financial straits. This may be hard to do, especially when the lady in distress is still prettier than they’ll ever be, but if they don’t do it their husbands will. They need to keep this woman busy; they need to make sure her income is steady and her loyalty is to them rather than to their husbands.

Well...that’s the book I think Dobson needed to write. What about the book he did write? It’s still worth reading today. If you’ve already heard a lot about Tough Love, as it might be in a therapy or recovery group, you might feel that you no longer need to read all the examples of tough love Dobson shares. If the concept is relatively new to you, even today, then you might still need to read the whole book, with specific examples of how Tough Love can help people whose spouses have left them or cheated on them, families plagued by domestic violence, families of addicts, parents and teenagers, and so on.

Actually, although the first few chapters try to be inclusive, the first two-thirds of the book deal mostly with adultery...probably reflecting Dobson’s counselling experience; the book never discusses examples of Tough Love between “Americans and Russians.” Dobson had discussed Tough Love for parents and children rather thoroughly in Dare to Discipline and Preparing for Adolescence. The final third of this book discusses other family situations that call for Tough Love. Dobson was among the first Christian counsellors to advise wives to leave abusive husbands--not to remarry, just to go somewhere else for their own safety and that of the children.

Those interested in being counsellors probably need to read the whole book. Counsellees may skim over the sections that don’t apply to them. 

Web Log Weekender for 7.10-11.26 (Unless All the Transformers Blow Up Again)

Gentle Readers, I hope your week has been more profitable than mine was. I spent most of mine sweating, wondering what was going on with "the grid" that we need to break down before it gets even more connected so that even more people lack electricity even longer after every little summer storm, and being very glad that I was not one of the people who had gone off to spend a week at the beach, leaving their freezers and refrigerators full of food...

Now I have a week's worth of e-friends' blogs to catch up with, not even to mention the e-mail. So of course Microsoft thinks my top priority should be spending two hours watching it roll out "updates." 

We need a law, if the Internet is to survive, mandating that companies respect the PRIVACY and SOVEREIGNTY of INDIVIDUAL Computer OWNERS. (\Those words are important because the people demanding the never-ending "updates" and obsolescence and wasteful "data centers" haaaate them).The wording of the law should include in a brief preamble a recognition that "Microsoft, Google, Facebook, and other companies have gone too far" and should mandate, as a condition for corporations to be able to "update" computers or send unsolicited messages at all, that all computer operating systems block all input not invited by a specific keyboard command while the computer is in use. It should also specify that third-party input must be reviewed by the FCC and, if found to contain any attempt to "see" any content that has not been published under its creator's name, will result in the company and all of its employees having only "read-only" Internet access for a year.

The alternative? I don't like it, but given the current administration it will probably be necessary: Mass Exodus. If the Internet is not going to serve us the technorati in ways that are ethically acceptable to us, let it crash and burn. We can build a new one.

Animals 

Nice clear photos of England's version of our Ebony Jewel Wing damselflies, showing how different the species really are. In less clear (or lower-magnification) photos they can be hard to tell apart.


The speed at which kittens are adopted in Ohio...similar to here. I'm sure the adorable photos and video helped this purrfect pair.


Vintage meme revived for your delight:


Lens traces the photo to https://sirmend.weebly.com/ , where it's still top of a list of five beautiful bird pictures that seems to be the only post that's been left online. Lens didn't trace the caption. It may have originated with Pointman 12 Deplorable Garbage, who shared the photo and caption on the Meow.

Finally our own status update: Serena's kitten's eyes are open, his ears are starting to unfold, he's adjusted to the size and ugliness of humans and re-learned to snuggle into my hand, and he's walking on stubby little baby legs. He seems to feel a bit bored and lonely, trying to play and exercise all by himself, but to feel that that's the feline condition and not worth complaining about; he's not a whiny kitten. He is a talker, though. He makes it absolutely clear when he wants milk. From the "word" he uses to tell us he's hungry (which Serena is not allowing to happen very often), I've started calling him Mooch. The formal name "Miracle" is still unclaimed, of course, if he lives to claim it. 

I think he gets his looks and precocious activity from Wild Thyme. I think he's going to be absolutely adorable and, unless he's one of those kittens whose actual gender isn't what it appeared to be when they were babies, too much competition for Drudge to be asked to tolerate. He is not up for adoption, though. He's been claimed. If he lives so long, he'll stay here until he's six months old or until Drudge or Serena says he needs to leave, whichever comes first, and then he'll have his own barn to manage. The barn belongs to people with a good healthy level of Glyphosate Awareness so all he should have to fear are clumsy horses. If he's blessed with foster siblings, females who fit in with Serena and Silver can stay here. (Hard to imagine any female cat not getting along with Drudge.)

AARP, Wixness of 

The American Association of Retired Persons has exploited the concept of "retirement" for the Left for longer than I've been alive. I've been burning invitations to join them for years now, despite the benefits they offer members. They reached a pinnacle of wixness, however, with their advertisements on Right-leaning web sites today, demanding that people who they know don't support the group's political agenda "sign the pledge" to support that agenda anyway. 

Know this, AARP: I am a writer. My work is my life. I pledge, if unable to work, to stop eating. Stick your "pledge" up your noses.

Books 

Someone has finally defended the reputation of Warren G. Harding, the United States' only Seventh-Day Adventist President. (As a politician Harding drifted away from a church that didn't really approve of its members being "worldly" enough to vote, but he maintained some ties; his former home became the President's Residence at the Adventist college outside Washington.) Click for details that may make you want to buy the book.


Scalzi's auctioning off a bundle of e-books in aid of World Central Kitchen...hey, you don't have to read all 22 books; I'll take them.


Least Fortunate Criminals 

Although this web site is hiding the street slang title in one of those Embedded Links we don't usually bother to do, we do think this Weird News incident is funny: While Thief #1 was robbing a store, Thief #2 stole #1's vehicle.

Music 

Gentle Readers, this category is open to suggestions. I like the mix of styles, periods, ethnicities, etc., but it could be madder. I think (for example) every full-length music links entry here has some Canadian content; I could be wrong; we could have more, and not always Neil Young. Speaking of Young People, of whom Neil is no longer one, this web site is of, by, and for old ladies whom young people are supposed to visit in order to listen and learn, but listening and learning should work both ways. I like and often post music from my parents' and grandparents' times. I'd like to know more of the music of The Nephews' times, too. What do you listen to, repeatedly, by choice, and why?

Anyway: Roy Buchanan.


The Fixx.


Jefferson Airplane.





Little Texas.


David Crosby.



Dolly Parton.


Ludovico Einaudi.





Ricky Martin. Some PG-rated dancing--I hope nobody's watching videos at the office anyway.


Yuval Gilboa.


Jennifer Lopez.


George Winston. For me this tune is not associated with a specific season. If it sounds like December and brings a pleasant chill to you, all to the good. (It's on his "December" album.)


Alanis Morissette.


Baklava Klezmer Soul. (This song was actually in the school music books in California when I was in primary school, so I grew up singing it--in English.)


Chiloo.


JJ Cale.


Shania Twain.


Mark Knopfler.


One of the America 250 performances, US Air Force band. Amateur recording cuts off short of the end, but you can hear the words so I'll allow it.


Robin Williamson.


Justin Hayward.


Neil Young.


Felix Mendelssohn. Someone at the site where I found the link asked whether this was the piece Felix couldn't get to sound "right" to him, and started to throw away; Fanny made it come out "right" but Felix still published it under his name only. Nobody claimed to know, but that was the way their parents told Felix Mendelssohn to behave. Left to himself he might have shown a little more brotherly spirit. The parents didn't think it was fair for Fanny, who was pretty and married well, to publicize the fact that she was as good a musician as Felix was--until Felix died, and people began to wonder whether any of the works of "F. Mendelssohn" were really Felix's own. (Probably some of them were.)


Justin Johnson.


Emmylou Harris. (Content warning: this is a funeral song.)


Wes Montgomery.



Tom Petty.



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gaPj1GoDpQw (Christmas in July anyone?)


Townes Van Zandt.



Peter Green.


Sergio Mendes.


Antonio Carlos-Jobim.


Metallica.


John Coltrane.


Astrud Gilberto.


Incredible String Band.



Traffic.


Steppenwolf.


Poems 

Arnon Peterson, grade twelve...I'm sure some adult helped him polish these poems. Nevertheless. Dang fine work, and it's worth reading the comments for a live exchange in rhymed quatrains.


Politics 

Maine's Ds finally jettison Graham "Jonah" Platner.


Google says it was done by Chip Bok and posted in lots of places in just two days, including TheViewFromLadyLake, which is where I saw it first. 

This is partisan and uncharitable, but a party that can't find better candidates than Platner deserves it. Why why why can't Ds fold in to the center and reclaim moderates like, well, the current administration? Why don't they just once and for all take an adult view of socialism?

Zazzle

I have no idea whether either of the bloggers who commented about wanting T-shirts that said "Blog stalking--the sincerest form of flattery" have had those shirts printed and worn them out by now, or still want them. But this is the point of the Zazzle Page soon to appear here. Almost any idea can be printed on a T-shirt. And/or on matching ball caps, stationery, pillows, postcards, almost anything. 


In the post immediately after that one, Barb Taub described a family gathering when someone ran out of T-shirts and bought one, and the whole family bought the rest of the store's inventory so they had matching "team" T-shirts. That's what Zazzle is for. You can even order college, movie, or cartoon character themes, although if you do that you're feeding money to corporations rather than supporting this web site.

However, a great way to support this web site (morally--profits are still going to USPIRG until we reach our donation quota, and then and only then will I have a chance to cash an actual check) is to order a shirt with the message of your choice on it. You can add your own images (they need to be fairly high-resolution) or public-domain images from sites like Morguefile or Pixabay, or just play with type fonts, sizes, and colors. You can suggest a design for me to post, then tweak it to suit yourself before buying it; Zazzle is set up to encourage customers to add design elements of their own, especially names and event dates. For example, if I post a shirt that says "Blog stalking--the sincerest form of flattery," you could add a line that lists one or more blogs you follow and/or blogs from which you're hoping to raise a little subscription money for yourself. 

Friday, July 10, 2026

Belated Petfinder Post: Just Some Cats and Dogs

If I could dash off a Long & Short Reviews post, I can dash off a Petfinder post. I'm not willing to squeeze in the time, this afternoon, to learn about the Brussels Gryffon or Bull Mastiff breeds. They will just have to wait. Here's potluck--the best of the first dozen pictures on each of the Petfinder pages I visit:

Zipcode 10101: Kenzie & Louie from NYC 


Born on 10.31.23, this tabby sister and brother aren't described as particularly good at recognizing words, but they generally seem to like hearing humans talk or sing. They could be adopted separately.

Rudolph from Puerto Rico 


Like so many humans from the island, this sato (street dog) came to New York City in search of a better life. He is about six months old, weighs about 35 pounds, and is described as very good at making his foster human feel loved.

Zipcode 20202: Katniss Everclear from South Carolina


Someone drives up the coast regularly so she can be delivered to DC or "the Northeast." If you're not near Route 1, you can still adopt this adorable, kitten-sized two-year-old cat but you'll need to come to South Carolina to meet her. Five pounds may always be her healthy weight. 

Alex from Cleveland, Texas, by way of DC 


Believed to be a Border Collie or more of that than anything else, this handsome dog probably won't be in search of a home for long. He is described as a young friendly dog who likes to cool off by swimming (could be part retriever?). Adopt Alex if you are, or are committed to becoming, an active person who enjoys walking or jogging a few brisk miles every morning with extra strolls around the neighborhood in between times. Border Collies are intelligent dogs who like to have "jobs." 

Zipcode 30303: Wisteria from Chattanooga 


She has siblings but they don't insist that you adopt a sibling with her. Wisteria is described as the smallest kitten in the litter, liking to play with her siblings and to be alone and think. 

Gage from Chattanooga 


He weighs about 60 pounds. He has probably reached his full size. He has a safe foster home; he's not in desperate need of adoption. That his foster family are willing to keep him until the perfect pawmanent home can be found says a lot about this hound's pawsonality. 

Bonus: Zipcode 37660: Shirley from Kingsport 


The alley cat family as rescued includes Shirley, her sister Laverne, and her kitten Squiggy. They're from Connecticut; any resemblance to the Patchnose Family is coincidental, but they could be another social cat family. Shirley is described as a shy cat, not completely feral but not eager to be a pet. If you can adopt the whole family together and wait patiently for the cats to become pets, that may help.

Simon from Texas 


A DNA test suggests that this lovable shaggy puppy is mostly poodle with at least seventeen other breeds mixed in. He was abandoned at a public park and is currently in foster care in Texas, but listed for adoption in every other place his humans are willing to visit. They say he needs to be adopted by someone who has experience training puppies. He is completely ignorant but seems smart and willing to learn. He weighed 15 pounds when photographed but is expected to weigh twice that much as an adult. Small dogs can live as long as cats, so you should plan on his being part of your family for ten to fifteen years or even longer. 

Stores I Wish Still Existed

This week's Long & Short Reviews prompt asked about stores that we wish still existed.


Since I came in late, I can report on what everyone else named...

How could you not guess reviewers would put this first? Independent locally owned bookstores: Every middle-aged person probably knows at least one that closed because some dear older person or couple retired. Oh the days! Add mine to two other votes for bookstores as a general category.

Woolworth's: Sort of a smaller, older precursor to Wal-Mart, a discount department store where the young and underpaid used to look for most of the non-food items we bought. My Woolworth's memories include the ridiculous (the Tarr Shampoo Boy), the still vaguely embarrassing ("If they're not impressed by your resume yet, you'll just have to meet an employer the way they did in old movies. Wear your good school clothes, buy lunch and a newspaper at Woolworth's, and get to know the people who own all those offices!"), and the pure nostalgic delight: I still knit with my Woolworth's 9-pack plastic needles--some of them--and still wear, with pride, the first few sweaters I knitted with yarn from Woolworth's. Add mine to two votes for Woolworth's.

Record stores: To one vote for record stores as a general category, I'll add mine. Takoma Park's House of Musical Traditions sold records, sheet music, instruments, replacement parts, and accessories, and was a great place for anyone who liked music to spend as much time and money as possible. It still exists but it now specializes in instruments, not records. What students with only $5 to spend in any given week are missing!

Clothing stores: This is one type of store that should not be allowed to be eaten up by online stores. For some things, like T-shirts, mail-ordering a "small/medium/large" and finding out how it fits when it arrives may be good enough. For school, work, and party clothes, fit matters and people who buy off-the-rack clothes should insist on trying them on before they pay. Of course, store fitting rooms have always had bad lighting. People have assumed the colors would look better in natural light. That this assumption was often over-optimistic has traditionally fed the good charity stores where people sent their clothes for re-purchase by those whom they actually suited, heh-heh! Mail-order clothes ought in theory to feed even more clothes to charity stores but, hello, they're not feeding in good clothes, the kind one can be proud of saying one bought for two dollars in aid of the Prevention of Blindness Society. Too much of what people order online from Zara and Zulily and similar looks sleazy even before it's been washed and falls apart after. Add mine to one vote for clothing stores.

Malls: "One for all and all to the mall!" Children of two working parents used to be given some money and encouraged to hang out on shopping malls after school, before a parent came to meet them. It worked better for some kids than for others. Some teenagers were responsible enough to walk ten laps up and down the mall with friends, buy groceries for the family before Mom or Dad came to the mall, and save the money they had left for clothes, records, etc. Unfortunately several malls found that kids hanging out after school stole more than they bought. Meh. I never was a real fan of shopping malls, though I did meet the serious boyfriend while working a pushcart on an upscale mall; there was that. Two votes for malls.

Blockbuster: It seemed as if you could rent every movie in the known universe on videocassette at Blockbuster. I never actually rented a movie myself but I went to Blockbuster so many times with friends, friends' children, boyfriend, husband... Add mine to one vote for Blockbuster.

"Dollar theatre," a pre-TV concept where teenagers and/or local groups of people with special interests enjoyed semi-private chaperoned entertainment watching movies from bygone years for a dollar. (The Snarkout Boys, a two-volume series by Daniel Manus Pinkwater, was about teenagers who became friends through "sneaking out" to that sort of theatre.) We didn't really have one in any place where I ever lived; the closest thing was a church-subsidized Christian Cinema, free with offerings taken up at intermission, that operated in Kingsport for a few years. In Gate City, "Cotton" Roberts' "topless theatre" has been given a temporary roof and could easily be opened as a Dollar Theatre by any local movie buffs who want to revive, say, cowboy movies, or Disney Movies from the Walt & Roy Years, or silent movies, or, oh, any specialty that's popular enough to have its own Roku channel... Anyway, one vote for "dollar theatre." 

Waldenbooks: Never as big as Barnes & Noble or Books a Million, but it used to be a nice chain. One vote for Waldenbooks.

Child World: I don't remember this but it sounds like a toy store. One vote for Child World.

Pay Saver: Apparently that was another discount department store. One vote for Pay Saver.

Netto: George Thomas describes this as a Danish-based store that apparently spread to the UK and offered good prices on groceries. One vote for Netto.

The Harmony Club: Described as a "hangout" operated hippie style, more for fun than profit. Few of those survived even the 1970s but oh, they were fun. One vote for the Harmony Club.

Bookstar: Described as a large local chain bookstore. One vote for Bookstar.

Wet'n'Wild: Described as a water park. One vote for Wet'n'Wild.

Odyssey Records: Described as a specific, local record store in Las Vegas. One vote for Odyssey Records.

I should add something. Nobody else has mentioned a wool shop. So many needlecrafters saved up to open a wool shop to run for ten or twenty years between official "retirement" from a job working for someone else and real retirement. Often the shop reopened as a different store, in the same location with some of the same inventory, several times and customers hardly even noticed. Inez's Stitchery in Kensington (often classified as part of Silver Spring but it's a separate place), Maryland, was unique and probably couldn't have been run by anyone else. There was a real Inez; she was awful, but she stocked good yarns and pattern books and she could teach beginners how to knit, sew, and crochet. Even if you didn't like Inez, personally--did anyone?--you'd work there as Christmas help for the discounts. It was a huge store, the top half of a whole building. It had something for everyone who had discovered it. It was publicized and patronized by Goldie Hawn, whom I met while Christmas-helping there. (She was just a hometown girl shopping in her old favorite store. She was, at the time, much prettier in real life than her characters in movies; still, there are a lot of good-looking women in Silver Spring, so it was the voice that made me stop and stare, "Is that REALLY...?") I think I've sold everything I made with yarn from Inez's but I still have some of the pattern books.

Web Log Weekender for 7.3-4.26

I hope everyone had a great weekend...with an adequate supply of dihydrogen monoxide. 

Dihydrogen monoxide? Say what?

Spell it out: H2O. Water. Hard to drink enough of it during a heat wave when you're sweating it out almost as fast as you can drink it in. But it makes the difference between enjoying traditional, sultry July weather, and spending most of it in an expensive hospital. (Where people who have "good" insurance may have the opportunity to learn all about a hundred deadly diseases they don't have, yet, before anyone mentions boring old dehydration.)

Though it can also be deadly, of course.


BayerScience(TM) just loves the dihydrogen monoxide story. Greedheads like that implication that all the garbage they want to dump on us is as natural and healthy as pure water. Though that's even a sillier claim than the claim that dihydrogen monoxide should be banned.

Personally, I had typed that entry, had not decided whether it needed to be in a Category or at the top of the post, had noticed a storm coming close, had set the computers to "hibernate" and unplugged them, minutes before all the transformers started popping in a premature fireworks display on Saturday, the Fourth of July. 

The heat wave was tempered by frequent rain showers and aggravated by extreme humidity, all week long. 

I'm not sure what happened to the linemen. Someone said he'd seen some in the neighborhood. Apparently they got halfway up the ground wire, on the way from the public road to the Cat Sanctuary, and had to stop. Nobody's telling me anything, but a little tree that was not in the way of their work had obviously been spray-poisoned. 

Then again, a lot of transformers exploded during the half-hour storm. 

During most of the work week I sat around in a puddle of sweat wondering whether the company had had to rush a lineman to the hospital with an acute chemical reaction, or wait for more transformers to come in the mail, or maybe both. 

Between a writer prevented from meeting a writing schedule and a bear robbed of her whelps, some reasonable people might prefer to meet the bear. However, when I finally broke down, washed off the existing sweat, put on a clean dry dress, trudged out in search of a phone, and arrived dripping wet on a phone clinger's doorstep, all I actually said was "What happened to the people who were here on Monday? This was not Hurricane Helene. This was the kind of storm we get almost every week in summer." It was Thursday evening. The corporate agent was duly humble, so I didn't need to berate her further, and assured me that my electricity would be working by three o'clock in the morning.

I felt bad about linemen having to work until three o'clock in the morning in the rainforest the Bad Neighbor has allowed to grow around the power line, which had been thoroughly soaked again, not that it had actually dried out since Saturday, but it had been soaked on Thursday afternoon. Possibly that thought gave them an incentive to work efficiently. The lights came on right after midnight and the linemen went home--I hope, to bed. 

And yes, although the cat update below was typed a week ago, it's still true as written. Serena is still trying to produce enough milk for three kittens even though she has only one.

Americans Doing Well 

US-born blogger on Top 100 list of UK blogs:


Animals 

More than most reasonable adults ever wanted to know about sloths.


Cat Sanctuary Update 

Local lurkers, this is important...

My resident Queen Cat Serena, "Serena-Seralini" who has coped with glyphosate poisoning by giving birth to a few dozen kittens who just dropped dead at their first whiff of glyphosate vapors, gave birth to kittens last week. I didn't even bother to count them at birth, or note the colors. I was so sure they couldn't live. 

Well, of course, most of them didn't. Our Bad Neighbor is still exercising a "right to use" the property he signed over, which he'll claim includes a "right to spray." We need to define that "right to spray" by giving the verb "spray" a direct object. It's ethically acceptable when its direct object is: WATER. There is no such thing as a right to spray poison. Anyone who claims there is needs a long rest in a place with bars on all the windows, and if he can get a lawyer, the lawyer does too. Anyway, the first glyphosate poisoning incident brought the number of kittens down to two. The next one brought the number down to one. The one kitten is a flat "blue" grey, not especially pretty as Serena's kittens go, probably male. I'm like "Why why why couldn't it have been the calico kitten?" But anyway she has this one kitten, and it's a lively little thing; even before its eyes opened it was sniffing around the closet.

The Cat Sanctuary agreed to take another cat family in transition, if necessary. As so often happens in our part of the world, it's not been necessary. I was asked to take these cats if A had not already found a place for them and B refused to keep them until A did. So far what I know is that they've not arrived. In any case those kittens would be much too big to be good playmates for Serena's lonely only kitten.

He shows no Manx features. He may or may not show damage from or extra sensitivity to glyphosate vapors, later on, but he's likely to be a bouncy little boycat who needs a sibling, or siblings, to play with. 

Meanwhile...Serena is a large cat who produces large litters of kittens and lavish amounts of milk. Here she was with all this milk and only one small kitten. So...her family are social cats. Her grandkitten Drudge, now three years old, and kitten Silver, now seven years old, are now sharing her milk. 

I feel that they're doing this for a reason. Serena did not try to maintain a milk supply for multiple kittens when Zakitty's brothers died. I think something is telling her that this year a kitten, or kittens, will need the milk.

Orphaned baby kittens don't need rabies shots--yet--but I would like confirmation that the mother didn't have FIV. 

Immigration 

Jeanie from the Marmalade Gypsy blog shared a lovely rainbow-colored map of American ethnicity. I loved the way it blends a surface level at which people in the Blue Ridge Mountains will say their ancestry is "English I guess--we all speak English," until they look it up, and then they might try to identify with one lot of ancestors for a while, and finally they admit that on the Point of Virginia most of us are a mix of three to seven European tribes plus one or more indigenous tribes and it may or may not be possible to identify all of our ancestors and their identities...so what we are is American. If there is such a thing as a plain unhyphenated American we're it. We come from a place where small select groups of relatively civilized Europeans and a select group of relatively sophisticated indigenous people agreed that a multiethnic buffer zone might serve the Cherokee Nation's interests, if and because those people were all capable of living like neighbors, putting the tribal feuds behind them. Possibly we have evolved a step or two ahead of much of humankind.

The trouble is that the map's on nytimes.com, where it has a paywall so I'm not sure I would be able to link you to it. (For a while, at least, you can find it from the link at https://themarmeladegypsy.blogspot.com/2026/07/postcards-from-lake-reflections-on.html .) And it's part of an essay that draws on old, outdated arguments.

Fact: Americans, as we are today, are a nation of immigrants. Even indigenous Americans can often be shown, from archaeological evidence, to have moved into places where other people left, or died out.

Fact: From the sixteenth through the nineteenth centuries, Europeans caused a lot of indigenous people to abandon a lot of good land. They did not do this by force of numbers, technology, or personal superiority of any kind. They did it by bringing in filth and diseases. Indigenous people had evolved perfect herd immunity to several of these diseases, such that the diseases had ceased to exist here for a long time. When the pathogens came back, the people died. So the Europeans rushed in. Oh, how they poured in. We became the "trap" in the drainpipe of Europe. Europeans were totally fed up with living, or more precisely dying, in slums. They yearned for wide-open spaces created by the deaths of thousands, millions, of people from diseases to which Europe's herd immunity remained imperfect, so individuals still had high resistance. 

Fact: For a nation that was rebuilding itself on a mass of graves, wide-open immigration was a viable idea, and worked for everybody...as long as our population density remained generally low.

Fact: In the early twentieth century the plagues Europeans continued to bring in started to make a dent in our population. But something unprecedented happened: we discovered antibiotics, and other cures for the diseases that had thinned out the huddled masses in Europe. Our population started to become too dense. Like overcrowded animal populations we began to show patterns of decreasing fertility, increasing "sexual deviations" from the norm of simple reproductivity, first, with slower increases in infectious diseases, in loss of individual resistance to diseases, and in antisocial behavior--crowded individuals desperately lashing out in homicide-suicides.

Fact: Americans, as we are today, have to close our doors. Other people have to start controlling their own overpopulation. No other country can count on being able to send surplus young people to America any more. 

Fact: It has nothing to do with whether or not we like foreigners. Some people who want to end mass immigration are actively working to help this soldier's translator or this legal immigrant's husband qualify for one of a decreasing number of spaces for legal immigrants, and he's welcome to live in our town if he likes. But there's simply not enough room for them all. Rounding up and deporting the ones who have violated our laws, already, is a reasonable place to start.

I've liked the Mexican people I've known, and I've liked the Colombian people I've known, and I'm not even prejudiced against the people brought into Kingsport to give that city an instant slum, though I mind bitterly that the slum was plopped into the neighborhood where my mother should have had another ten years to live. That's another story. My point is: Rhythm is fine. Color is fine. Spanish is a delightfully minimalist language full of fascinating agglutinative verbs. Spanish-ness is not the problem. And I am poor as the proverbial church mouse myself, so it would be awfully hypocritical of me to mind other people being poor, although I do claim a right to hold opinions about what people do about being poor. And actually, although I speak Spanish slowly and with an accent, although I picked up the sound from acquaintances but learned the grammar and vocabulary from books, I have only pleasant memories of ever having spoken it, so when I hear people speak Spanish in shops and restaurants my feeling is like "Oh cool, she's One Of Us, she knows the special language I used to share with just a few out of my multitude of relatives." I have no problem whatsoever with Mexicans living in the neighborhood that was not, before about 2015, a slum, that had small but reasonably spaced houses a little closer to the factory than the bigger, pricier houses people saved up to retire to. A reasonable number of bodies, at a reasonable density, living reasonably clean healthy lives. 

That's not what the people screaming for more immigration want, and it's not what Kingsport got. What the screamers really want is to ruin the nice neighborhoods where it's possible, and in Kingsport it used to be visible, even in your face, to move up the economic ladder. Leftists want to believe in classes, a European phenomenon, where if you're a factory laborer living in a three-room house three blocks from the factory, you're never going to get a better job and you're never going to have friends who have better jobs and your children are never going to be allowed to marry the children of people with money and so on, because Europe had fallen into a dysfunctional thought pattern when Karl Marx was writing. What we actually have are economic tiers through which individuals move. If you're a laborer living in that three-room house three blocks from the factory, and you make frugal choices and have one child or none, by the time your child is old enough to need a room of its own you can afford to move into a four-room house. 

In Kingsport, the planned structure of "Snob Hill" meant that the laborer's child might be walking to the same school every day with the boss's child. The retired doctor drove his expensive car through the car wash where the laborers' teenaged children worked, to the same post office, the same library, the same selection of shops, the laborers used. Mother and her friends, mostly about halfway up the "upper" part of Snob Hill, had all started out as twenty-something entry-level "career girls" who might have thought they were doing well to afford a three-room house instead of a basement apartment, and all worked hard, married reasonably well, saved their money, and ended up in...Mother's house technically had eight rooms, but the bigger of the two big rooms on the ground floor had room for everything you'd find in a four-room house, easily. It was hard to overlook the way the social contract said that people weren't born into different "classes" because of their spiritual merits or whatever, but were on different economic tiers from which they could move up or down at will. 

Leftists hate that that kind of social contract exists. They want to break it up. So they yammered for more population density, replaced a good midrange shopping plaza with the horrible slum, stocked the slum with drug addicts out of Knoxville and Chattanooga, and watched the neighborhood people wanted to retire to turn--temporarily--into a neighborhood where people didn't want to roll down their car windows. Because tuberculosis.

One kind of opportunist does like it when drug addicts are packed into a new slum. You know what kind that is. They have organized gangs that run parts of Mexico and Colombia. They were there to keep the addicts slowly dying in their puddles of filth--many of them behind what was built, in the Eighties when I was young, as a shiny new upscale office building, especially the bank. 

So in due course, this spring, ICE moved in. Did they get all the drug dealers? I don't think so; the original pair were White and didn't sound as if ICE would have had any interest in them. They got some of them. Nobody likes a drug dealer. But nobody I knew received any of those panicky calls about how the only thing Jorge ever did wrong was live with Maria in between the expiration of his original green card and the issuance of his new authorization to seek citizenship. In Kingsport ICE didn't bother with Jorge. They had narcotraficantes to send back to Mexico and Colombia and, if they put those blighters on robot-controlled planes and programmed those planes to crash, that's fine by me. You can still be waited on by real Chinese waiters at the Chinese restaurant, real Mexicans at the Mexican restaurant, your real Pakistani doctor if you're one of that doctor's patients. The big corporations and the state university still have exchange programs. You still see different kinds of people in Kingsport. You see fewer of the ones most likely to harm you

Nice, ICE. 

I think we have to say no to any increase in existing levels of population density. No existing building is empty? No immigrant can move in. I think we can still afford a few immigrants, and I think being able to afford a few immigrants is a good thing, but we cannot afford to admit masses of immigrants any more. We have to recognize the 1950s-style "Don't be prejudiced against immigrants as people" line of  talk as irrelevant, a worn-out artefact of today's older generation's grandparents' time. 

I doubt very much that people my age and younger are prejudiced against any variety of people--except for the very young, some of whom seem to have been trained to hate their political opposition. Any debate about the amount of immigration we can afford needs to focus on the reality that there's no room for our population to keep growing. In fact we need a population decline--and I for one would rather see that decline come from a combination of fewer couples having fewer babies, and fewer immigrants being let in, rather than the historically more common combination of plagues and wars.

So, clue alert, NYTimes? The year is 2026, not 1956. Write for the audience that is still alive.

Men Behaving Well 

Vince Staten: 


Music 

Donovan.


Mitchell Feeney (John Mitchell and Jim Feeney).


Herbert Pixner.



John Coltrane.


Elijah Bossenbroek.



Olexandr Ignatov.


Stryper (see below).


Crosby, Stills, Nash, & Young.


Tom Petty.



Religious Differences 

Muslims traditionally throw stones at the Devil. A Christian pop group in the 1980s sang "To Hell with the Devil" (see above). This church...I don't know, there are good things to be said for encouraging kids to visualize spiritual warfare in post-Roman form, but let's just say that for most city churches this skit would have been unthinkable. Because you don't discharge a bullet in a place where it might break someone else's window, or worse.


Technology 

AOC calls for restrictions on Big Tech's price inflation and pushes for unsustainable "data centers." Go, girl! Even if her working together with Bernie Sanders on this one means she's going at it the wrong way...you know how, if you need to cut down a tree, you make a few cuts in the wrong direction to encourage the tree to fall in the right direction?


Travel 

Martha DeMeo went to Cherokee Town to see how the attractions have been rebuilt. It doesn't look like disaster tourism any more, although it is. What caught my eye were the tailless Tiger Swallowtails...not a new subspecies; they look like the survivors of some predators that have been feasting at a lek site. But MDeM is not a butterfly specialist, nor do you need to be. There are all kinds of other attractions.