We’re off on another whirlwind year of who knows what in
this unpredictable life we lead. Taking
stock of what it looks like for me, I’m just continuing to batten down the
hatches, as the saying goes, to stay afloat wherever events lead and hope for
the best.
A review of the recent holiday calm for me included sending
and receiving fewer greeting cards than the previous year. I still
enjoy the letters updating past year events, learning of everyone’s well-being
and sharing information regarding our families which often include photos.
Sadly, there are fewer to whom I sent my holiday letter
because they departed this life during the preceding year – a major negative
about aging. Now, I’m left to wonder about the status of
those who didn’t write with numerous explanations possible.
Much like the rest of you, I’ve been absorbing what is happening
around our world for some hint of what might be expected in 2019. Economic
issues concern us all as we wonder what might the stock market’s acrobatics portend? China is exploring the far side of the moon,
so what implications might that have? Then, there are all those other countries I won't name.
Environmental concerns continue with devastating weather
conditions uprooting people’s lives, others flee oppression in some countries
with resulting challenges for other communities where they seek refuge. That’s only a smattering of the humanitarian
issues too many people face. We’re not
immune in the U.S.A. to nature’s whims or to our own continent’s largely South
American refugees seeking asylum in our country.
Their doing so has been made unbelievably complicated by our
Administration whose leader chose, beginning when he was a candidate, to instill
in our general population an excessive fear of different others from the
traditional ones like him -- as though we did not already have effective protective
screening systems in place receiving continuous technological updating for use with those seeking admittance to our country.
Implying previous security inadequacy to then claim increased
terrorist threat has created a divisive political state. Much more meaningful and unifying would be
addressing how best to secure our nation’s border by implementing long ago bipartisan
determined actions that also have provisions for using funds in a financially reasonable manner.
Our leader and many of those elected to represent the
citizens continue to demonstrate just how out of touch they are with the
majority of ordinary people’s wishes, much less their day-to-day financial
lives. These political leaders persist
in pursuing further destructive governing actions demonstrated by failure to
authorize selected government budgeted department funding. Consequently, affected government employee
wages are withheld though they must continue to work.
Government legislators and our leaders continue to draw their salaries. U.S. Senators seem to have abandoned the working population. They had no problem last year passing tax reductions for the extremely wealthy which includes many of themselves, too. The President signed that bill from which he, his family, and their businesses profited.
Government legislators and our leaders continue to draw their salaries. U.S. Senators seem to have abandoned the working population. They had no problem last year passing tax reductions for the extremely wealthy which includes many of themselves, too. The President signed that bill from which he, his family, and their businesses profited.
I would like to see teeth put in Federal legislative deadlines
requiring budgets funding be established, passed and signed by the President before
any of those responsible for their passage, and their staffs, can receive their
salaries each year. We, the people, should demand our legislators
pass such legislation -- NO BUDGET ... NO PAY!
Our leader’s poor judgment evidences no real comprehension
of how important timely receipt of a regular paycheck is to most citizens – how
their lives are impacted without that regular income. He has never known what life is like for everyday
people so is completely insensitive.
I’m reminded of one of the speakers at a memorial honoring
former President G. W. Bush, of whom I was not a major supporter, but I did have
some respect for him. This intimate
personal friend of the former President described what insight Bush said he had
acquired for the lives of ordinary people to which he had previously been much less aware. Bush came to realize he had been raised in
affluent circumstances with amenities he took for granted that ordinary people
did not have. This knowledge was becoming acquired as his
usual daily benefits ceased once he entered the military during WWII.
Bush has said he acquired increasing insight on this dichotomy
during a period of his military service when he was required to review and
censor for security purposes letters written by troops to their family members
and friends. He spoke of gaining awareness
he previously lacked about the everyday lives, needs, concerns, which would include
financial in some instances, of ordinary people that he previously had not had -- and how they differed from his own. He realized that the vast majority of Americans
did not have the benefits he had known from birth, or the given financial
security he had throughout his life.
We have a leader now whose attitudes, behaviors, actions and
past life give no indication that he has acquired such insight or ever known anything
but affluence from birth – has never had to encounter day-to-day living
challenges to budget affording basic needs dependent on receiving a regularly scheduled
paycheck. There has been little demonstration he is capable of being empathetic with others.
Keeping a roof over his head, putting food on the table, purchasing
clothes, paying for health care – not only for himself, but his children and
family as most citizens experience has been on an entirely different level far
above one of mere subsistence that necessitates budgeting from paycheck to paycheck. Having
fare for a train, bus, cab or buying gas and maintaining a vehicle to even get
to work has not been a necessity for him because his paycheck was suddenly
being withheld and he had no other funds or family to assist him.
His pronouncements of government workers endorsing his obstinance in which he refuses to support authorizing budget passage are unsubstantiated and
highly suspect. Who among them would
want to speak up in opposition given the leader's penchant for being vindictive toward most anyone whose views differ from his own? The leader’s
rhetoric for what he claims to be doing for our nation’s security is simply puffery
he wants to put forth as justifying his actions and to avoid what could and should
legitimately be done to prevent this situation.
California where I live is starting 2019 with a new
Governor. I hope his policies will
continue to keep our state in forward motion, maintain the reserve fund our previous Governor built for a rainy day, and not deplete it, insuring we stay within a realistic
budget. I have welcomed not having a
showboat Governor and hope our new Governor will be the same, unlike what we’re
subjected to at the federal level from the White House.
Term-limited retiring Jerry Brown has been California’s
longest serving governor who inherited a seriously indebted state. Despite our rainy-day fund reserve the public
pension funding continues to be an elephant in the room few speak loudly about,
but Brown’s other policies have been financially benefiting. He’s been a strong leader on environmental,
climate and health issues among other major matters. He’s also stirred controversy with promotion
of a bullet train and the monies that will require. How our incoming Governor Gavin Newsom addresses
that issue and others remains to be seen.
Earthquake Alert Warning System is finally operative in Los
Angeles County only – the first in the United States. Apps are available for iPhone and Androids.
You may read about the system at the United StatesGeological Survey site (USGS) here. You’ll
note on the site its operation and current uptodate dissemination of
information has been adversely impacted by our government’s failure to pass
funding in the current budget situation.
The earthquake warning may only be up to 20 seconds, depending upon the
quake epicenter’s distance from the signal’s recipient, but even a few seconds
can be time for some safety steps, such as a surgeon removing his knife, person getting off a ladder, stopping a car. We’re
told there may be false alarms and other imperfections. The
system is continuing to be developed and refined.
Locally, we have several new City Council members who I look
forward to providing our community new ideas and sound governance through
the coming year.
Our first rain in the new year with welcomed snow in the
mountains has arrived tonight as I write this.
We’re still below water table levels considered to be the needed
average this time of year, but we do look forward to more of the wet stuff in
the weeks ahead to avoid drought conditions we’ve had for too many years. Unfortunately, some So Cal areas experience mud and
rock slides as a result of the devastating fires we had last year. Scenic Pacific Coast highway overlooking the
ocean is temporarily blocked for this reason as I write this.
I’ve previously shared here that I choose to have antenna TV
and have never had cable or satellite since living here. Access
to broadcast signals in the Los Angeles area provide me programming from all
the stations. The only problem I have is
when storms move off the coast eastward -- when they pass over the mountain top
where some of the TV stations towers are, the signals can be affected,
interfering with my reception. Often one
or more other station’s towers located elsewhere do allow me access to
their programs. Other times, depending
on the storm(s) I receive no stations, but this rarely occurs. Interestingly, through my Roku I am still able
to access Netflix, if I want their offerings with clear reception and also have my computer Internet, of
course.
"BERNARD HERRMANN THE TWILIGHT ZONE~ 1ST. SEASON
1959 - Main and End titles music composed and CONDUCTED by BERNARD HERRMANN
Original Soundtrack Recording Twilight Zone 40th Anniversary Edition"
This afternoon unable to find a movie on Netflix I cared to
view, I came across a favorite old but timeless classic TV series “Twilight
Zone”. Rod Serling’s stories and those
some others wrote have plots that resonate even today.
One of my favorites Serling wrote is “The Monsters Are Due On Maple Street” which aired in 1960’s first season. The focus in this program is on aliens and
how they can easily take over our world, neighborhood by neighborhood, by
manipulating everyday routine functions. We
see ordinary people gradually becoming paranoiac and panicking.
Narrator Serling’s closing has meaning for today:
“The tools of conquest do not necessarily
come with bombs and explosions and fallout. There are weapons that are simply
thoughts, attitudes, prejudices – to be found only in the minds of men.
For the record, prejudices can kill – and suspicion can destroy – and
a thoughtless frightened search for a scapegoat has a fallout all of its
own – for the children – and the children yet unborn. And the pity of
it is – that these things cannot be confined – to the Twilight Zone.”
“...more about the fear of terrorism...caused,
not by aliens, but...the government, specifically the United States Army,
experimenting on how small towns react to the fear of terrorism. In the end, the neighborhood takes out its
anger and frustration on a family” in their midst.
Forest Whitaker is the narrator who opens the program saying
the neighbors will soon discover the monsters they fear may already be among
them.
Whitaker’s closing narration seems apropos for our time:
“It isn't enough for a sole voice of reason to
exist. In this time of uncertainty, we are so sure that villains lurk around
every corner that we will create them ourselves if we can't find them –
for while fear may keep us vigilant, it's also fear that tears us apart –
a fear that sadly exists only too often – outside the Twilight Zone.”
The monsters within are always the ones to fear. I think a huge toll has been taken on all of us by this state of constant war, and the absolute poverty in other countries as a result of this. We are all culpable and greedy in ways we don't often recognise. War is always about greed and never for any of the stated objectives - mere camouflage.
ReplyDeleteWell Happy New Year Joared, California is doing somethings right!
XO
WWW
I certainly agree about the toll taken on all of us.
DeleteUnlike you, I've not been watching the Twilight Zone orgy; but, you came up with some good quotes. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteCop Car
Feels like being in the Twilight Zone at times.
DeleteYou sure summed up our political landscape correctly in my opinion. Scary times and they don't have to be...if we had a true leader instead of a drama queen in the White House. I hope our next election turns this administration into an aberration.
ReplyDeleteThat's interesting about the early warning system in your area for earthquakes. Hope your new governor works out well.
Hopefully change will come in 2020.
DeleteI think every single US congressperson should have to pass a regular test with questions such as these:
ReplyDelete1. How much is a loaf of bread in your district?
2. How much is a gallon of gas in your district?
3. What is the starting pay of a public school teacher in your district?
4. What is the average cost of five commonly prescribed medicines, such as amoxicillin, insulin, a blood-pressure med, etc.
5. What is the average cost of a gallon of milk or an item of fresh produce in your district?
Too many reps in DC are painfully out of touch with the Real Lives of their constituents, as is evidenced by the administration and the republican-led government thus far.
One more question — How much dio your constituents earn and what percentage have full time jobs, what kind of benefits (compRed to your own)?
DeleteAgree with you all the way through though I fear I am a bit ignorant about California politics and appreciate your insight. However the fear of the unfamiliar seems to be getting worse thanks to our leader. Wish I saw a way out but can only hang on and cast informed votes very chance I get.
ReplyDeleteLoved Rod Serling--he left us way too soon. His stories were always teaching stories.
California’s state legislature is pretty much Democrat since the few remaining Republicans lost their races this past election.. Some pundits see the Repub. Party as pretty much dead in this state since that Party hijacked along with their values jettisoned by the current Pres. I think opposition views are important since one Party solely in control can lead to problems over time IMHO, but all need to be able to work together for the good of everyone — so will be interesting to see what develops politically.
DeleteYes, I too have hopes for the new governor and some of the local supervisors. I eagerly await the results of the upcoming report. If it is as bad as we think it will be, we can impeach the unspeakable man.
ReplyDeleteHappy new year to you.
So far, rather than impeaching the Pres I want to see him voted out of office in 2020 to convince him once and for all that the majority of citizens reject him in every way. He’ll likely claim the election rigged and some of his supporters who believe everything he says will accept his “altered truth”.
DeleteI agree. Unless it's proven he's done something so awful that even the Republicans cant ignore a Trump crime, voting him out it better for the country because his fans will never believe impeachment or the investigation wasn't rigged.
DeleteYou spent a lot of time venting and I hope it helps with a calm for you in the New Year. I do not want him impeached because that would not reduce his power. He is under various investigations and I will wait calmly until those play out and he and his family spend time in jail.
ReplyDeleteI’ve been calm through all this and view what I wrote as a logical analysis from my point of view. I, too, think it more effective to remove him from office via the ballot box. Will be surprised if he or any of his family get sent to jail and that’s not to say that would bevjudtice.
DeleteGood luck to the new governor, and I am glad there is a new earthquake warning system in place.
ReplyDeleteWill be interesting to see how all work — governor and warning system.
DeleteIt's been fascinating to have had Brown serve twice as governor of our state. In 1980, I think it was, our class took a field trip to Sacramento. We kids shook the hand of Gov. Brown. Cut to the mid-1990s: I jogged past Jerry Brown while going around Lake Merritt in Oakland. That was weird. He's done a good job, for the most part, and I would hope that Newsom does as well.
ReplyDeleteI agree about Brown as Gov. and wish he had another term. Am a little apprehensive about Newsom maybe wanting to spend too much trying to make a name for himself.
DeleteFascinating notes too.
ReplyDeleteA lot to think about Joared. In all my 85+ years I have never been so disgusted with our "leaders" … Mitch McConnell is just sticking his head in the sand and won't even bring up anything in Congress that could help. I have lost all patience with the Trump Republicans who are taking us all down as a nation.
ReplyDeleteYes, there needs to be a day of reckoning for McConnell’s actions and inactions.
DeleteI almost never find movies on Netflix, but when it comes to TV shows especially original programming I have like 20 items on my watchlist! I probably don't know as much about California and it's politics as I should, so good to hear your perspective. As a former, now retired federal employee and the widow of one, don't get me started.......
ReplyDeleteThe federal employees should not be the patsies in this process of making our nation secure.
DeleteAs divided as we have become these days it is refreshing to read a commentary from the left that is concise abd direct s well as free of the hatred andnonsense that regularly comes from the extremes of the left and right. I have friends who simply cannot discuss things these days without jumping into the deep end. I agree completely with your comments about fear mongering. Great read,
DeleteI appreciate your comment. I agree with how difficult discussing issues can be. The hatred and name-calling deliberately introduced for intentionally divisive purposes has certainly taken a toll on logical thought in our civil discourse.
Delete