ON THIS DAY: November 27, 2016

November 27th is

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Bavarian Cream Pie Day

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International CARE Day *

Pins and Needles Day *

National Statistics Day *

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MORE! Fanny Kemble, Richard Strauss and Harvey Milk CLICK 

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Fidel is Dead – only Trumpists could claim that Orange Gasbag’s election killed Castro

 

 By ann summers
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Trumpian post-truth trolling by MSM. Oh, if only the event had occurred a few days earlier, but at least we know the CIA’s beard poison works… albeit slowly. A Trumpian discourse makes itself known in interesting ways, embedded in a Miami sports reporter’s obnoxiousness before the 49ers -Tampa Bay NFL game…

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ON THIS DAY: November 26, 2016

November 26th is

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National Cake Day

World Day of Giving *

Small Business Saturday

International Aura Awareness Day

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MORE! Captain Cook, Eugene Ionesco and Tina Turner, click

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ON THIS DAY: November 25, 2016

November 25th is

StoryCorps National Day of Listeninginternational-day-elimination-violence-women

Native American Heritage Day *

‘Black Friday’/Shopping Day

Buy Nothing Day *

International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women *

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MORE! Alfred Nobel, Chief Dull Knife and Agatha Christie, click

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Word Cloud: INDIGENOUS

Word Cloud Resizedby NONA BLYTH CLOUD

Indigenous – aboriginal, earliest, first, native, original

November is National Native American Heritage Month, and the day after Thanksgiving is Native American Heritage Day.

Of course, some Native Americans don’t want to be called Native Americans – and ‘Indian’ also gives offense to many. What if you were an explorer who made landfall in China in 1492, but thought you had reached Europe. How do you think the Chinese, who have over 200 dialects and 55 ethnic minorities, would like it if you kept calling all of them ‘Europeans’?

There are big cultural differences between tribes that evolved from early nomadic hunter-gatherers and those descended from cliff dwellers; between crop growers and animal herders; or the desert-dwellers of the southwest and people living on the tundra above the Arctic Circle.

The U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA), currently recognizes 566 tribes. Before Europeans showed up, it’s estimated that there were 1000 languages indigenous to North America. Today, there are about 250 left, but many of those are in danger of being lost. In too many cases, there is only a single ‘language keeper’ still fluent in their ancestral tongue. The Living Tongues Institute for Endangered Languages launched the Enduring Voices Project to offer assistance in keeping as many languages alive as possible.

Carlos Nakai is a musician whose heritage is both Navajo and Ute. He has traveled across America and around the world studying the music of many tribes. Here, he plays a contemporary piece on his traditional flute that is a bridge between past and present.



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a Democratic Party minus triangulated power politics will win elections … #Recount2016

By ann summers

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Machtpolitik, or power politics was certainly evident in the 2016 DNC not simply because of Wikileaks revelations meant to destabilize the continuation of neoliberal politics somehow in favor of a nihilistic Trumpian minarchism.

The true role of foreign interference with US elections has yet to be revealed, but even without those disclosures, domestic politics lost innovative enthusiasm on the Democratic side as the GOP’s usual reactionary appeals have so far won the day.

Discomfort with the continuation of a flawed Clintonian dynasty brought the otherwise hopeful feminist message of HRC in conflict with a DNC apparatus that often treated primary opposition with less than cooperative or collaborative energy.

In effect the primary clusterflop of 2008 repeated itself, partially by overdetermining the Democratic base and neglecting those indecisive voters more potentially disposed to Orange Gasbagger, (Dependency > Power). For example, a closer post-election analysis of that demographic at the district level in those key swing states might reveal how much anti-HRC votes were affected by the continuing possibilities of Bill’s participation in an HRC White House.

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Trump is the reactionaries’ diametric archetype: a 1980s misogynist media image of Playboy magazine and James Bond film, elements that put to the lie any claim of post-feminism in their longevity as masculinist consumer products.

Trump’s self-dealing, self-interested ethno-nationalism has so far prevailed, although perhaps the #AuditTheVote forces may yet succeed in aligning the popular vote with the anachronistic notion of state voting power represented by the Electoral College.

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Posted in Celebrity, DNC, History, Media, Neoliberals, Political Science, Politics, Presidential Elections, Progressives, Society, States, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Mixed Blessings

from Nona Blyth Cloud

Whatever your plans, whoever you’re with, I wish you fellowship and feasting. Offered here, some food for thought in a difficult year…

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Thanksgiving Letter from Harry

by Carl Dennis

I guess I have to begin by admitting
I’m thankful today I don’t reside in a country
My country has chosen to liberate,
That Bridgeport’s my home, not Baghdad.
Thankful my chances are good, when I leave
For the Super Duper, that I’ll be returning.
And I’m thankful my TV set is still broken.
No point in wasting energy feeling shame
For the havoc inflicted on others in my name
When I need all the strength I can muster
To teach my eighth-grade class in the low-rent district.
There, at least, I don’t feel powerless.
There my choices can make some difference.

This month I’d like to believe I’ve widened
My students’ choice of vocation, though the odds
My history lessons on working the land
Will inspire any of them to farm
Are almost as small as the odds
One will become a monk or nun
Trained in the Buddhist practice
We studied last month in the unit on India.
The point is to get them suspecting the world
They know first hand isn’t the only world.

As for the calling of soldier, if it comes up in class,
It’s not because I feel obliged to include it,
As you, as a writer, may feel obliged.
A student may happen to introduce it,
As a girl did yesterday when she read her essay
About her older brother, Ramon,
Listed as “missing in action” three years ago,
And about her dad, who won’t agree with her mom
And the social worker on how small the odds are
That Ramon’s alive, a prisoner in the mountains.

I didn’t allow the discussion that followed
More time than I allowed for the other essays.
And I wouldn’t take sides: not with the group
That thought the father, having grieved enough,
Ought to move on to the life still left him;
Not with the group that was glad he hadn’t made do
With the next-to-nothing the world’s provided,
That instead he’s invested his trust in a story
That saves the world from shameful failure.

Let me know of any recent attempts on your part
To save our fellow-citizens from themselves.
In the meantime, if you want to borrow Ramon
For a narrative of your own, remember that any scene
Where he appears under guard in a mountain village
Should be confined to the realm of longing. There
His captors may leave him when they move on.
There his wounds may be healed,
His health restored. A total recovery
Except for a lingering fog of forgetfulness
A father dreams he can burn away.

“Thanksgiving Letter from Harry” from Unknown Friends, Copyright © 2007 by Carl Dennis, Penguin

Carl Dennis (1939 – ) is a writer-in-residence and professor of English at State University of NewYork-Buffalo

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When Giving Is All We Have

by Alberto Ríos

One river gives
Its journey to the next.
We give because someone gave to us.
We give because nobody gave to us.

We give because giving has changed us.
We give because giving could have changed us.

We have been better for it,
We have been wounded by it—

Giving has many faces: It is loud and quiet,
Big, though small, diamond in wood-nails.

Its story is old, the plot worn and the pages too,
But we read this book, anyway, over and again:

Giving is, first and every time, hand to hand,
Mine to yours, yours to mine.

You gave me blue and I gave you yellow.
Together we are simple green. You gave me

What you did not have, and I gave you
What I had to give—together, we made

Something greater from the difference.

“When Giving Is All We Have” from A Small Story About the Sky, © 2015 by Albert Ríos, Copper Canyon Press

Albert Ríos (1952 – ) is the inaugural Poet Laureate of Arizona

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I dwell in Possibility

by Emily Dickinson

I dwell in Possibility –
A fairer House than Prose –
More numerous of Windows –
Superior – for Doors –

Of Chambers as the Cedars –
Impregnable of eye –
And for an everlasting Roof
The Gambrels of the Sky –

Of Visitors – the fairest –
For Occupation – This –
The spreading wide my narrow Hands
To gather Paradise –

The Poems of Emily Dickinson, edited by R. W. Franklin, Harvard University Press, 1999

Emily Dickinson (1830-1886) is one of America’s greatest and most original poets

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happy-thanksgiving

 

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ON THIS DAY: November 24, 2016

November 24th is

celebrate-talent

Celebrate Your Unique Talent Day

Horse Welfare Day *

National Sardines Day

Eat a Sandwich Day *

Turkey-Free Thanksgiving

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ON THIS DAY: November 23, 2016

November 23rd is

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Global Cybercrime Awareness Day *

hot-coffeeNational Espresso Day

Fibonacci Day *

National Jukebox Day *

International Thespian Day *

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Orange Gasbag’s soft despotism: Emoluments Clause & Mrs. Claus

 

By ann summers

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So apparently Executive Privilege is simply a version of Absolute Power and Narcissus-elect is now in charge. Spoils system rules are simple and seem to have returned in fullest force with the Orange Gasbag’s soft despotism.

Apparently Trump and his spawn cannot and should not be denied profits of any kind, even as he tarnishes his present and future brands when he begins his first war and/or kills his first human using his power as Capitalist/Commander-in-Chief.

Like Trump even knows about the differences among protocol and hospitality since he clearly doesn’t understand the Constitution or his obligations to it.

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