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.