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                    <text>Day 314
by windoworks

As the days go by, more and more information is coming out about the sequence of events and the events
themselves, on Wednesday January 6. We all knew that Trump was still insisting that the election had
been stolen from him and we hoped the ratification of the electoral votes would be an anticlimax - just
another step in the transition of power. At that point we hoped for a transition of power, but we didn’t
expect a peaceful transition. We truly didn’t expect what happened.
As I look back I remember that the riot/attempted coup/insurrection was breaking news on my iPad. For
some years now, we have had streaming TV only, but January 6 was the day that I discovered I could
stream a number of news channels on the TV. We watched ABC only because it came up first in the list of
choices. And we sat glued to the screen for most of the afternoon. I couldn’t drag myself away. I kept
thinking: where are the police? Where is the National Guard? How can this still be happening?
But, as ever, journalists have been diligently sorting through all the available material and each day, more
details are known than the day before. Yesterday Craig and I watched a video timeline of the event. I
don’t have the link, bu here’s how you find it:

�Washington Post
41 minutes of fear: A video timeline from inside the Capitol siege
Remember I told you that I watched a video of the Twin Towers after the planes hit on 9/11? It was made
by two brothers. I still hear the sound of the bodies hitting the pavement as people jumped from the the
top floors of the burning towers. The 41 minutes of fear video is not quite as confronting as the 9/11 video,
but it is shocking and distressing and it shows an America far removed from the America of my
experience. I was talking with Craig the other day about the fact that in our 18 years here, we have visited
every state except Alaska. I don’t know if I would feel safe to drive across America at this time. I hope this
is just an unhappy period in American history but it seems to me that putting this country back in a stable
and harmonious state will be the work of upcoming generations. Joe Biden will begin the work but it will
far outlast his tenure as President.
Here are some of the unfolding facts:

New York Times
It’s hard to think of another crime that the perpetrators documented so thoroughly and publicly.
The people who participated in the Capitol attack on Jan. 6 posted thousands of videos of it to Parler, a
social network. Journalists and other witnesses have released dozens of their own videos, too. Over the
past several days, news organizations have been studying these videos and have begun releasing more
details about what happened.
This reconstruction work is important, because the attack was a signature moment in U.S. history: A mob,
incited by the president of the United States, stormed the halls of Congress in an effort to prevent it from
certifying the president’s electoral defeat. During the attack, the mob killed a police officer and went
looking for members of Congress.
Many of the attackers openly discussed committing violence, and lawmakers feared for their lives. “Drag
them out!” one man yelled inside the Capitol, referring to lawmakers; another group chanted “Hang Mike
Pence!” As the mob closed in, members of Congress hiding inside the House chamber called loved ones
and told one another to remove their lapel pins so rioters could not identify them.
Some rioters may have been collecting information. The New Yorker video shows a group of men rifling
through Senate desks and snapping photos. One says he is looking for something to “use against these
scumbags.” The F.B.I. is also investigating whether a Pennsylvania woman stole computer equipment from
Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s office and intended to sell it to Russian agents. The woman turned herself in to the
police yesterday. The mob felt empowered by Republican leaders. As rioters pushed their way down a
hallway, one shouted at a police officer, “We are listening to your boss: Trump.” And as a few men looked
through documents on the Senate floor, one, referring to Senator Ted Cruz, said: “I think Cruz would
want us to do this, so I think we’re good.”

�What worries me is their easy reference to sitting Republicans such as Senator Ted Cruz. How did they
know and believe that Ted Cruz would encourage their behavior? What else is going on that we have just
seen the tip of the iceberg? As one news outlet said: the world has watched the US as the best example of
democracy. Now the world is watching how a democracy dies.
On one of our first visits to the States, we were in Mobile Alabama and we saw a group of people dressed
in Civil War clothing, demonstrating in the middle of a grassed roundabout. I asked our guide what that
was about and he said: in the South, the Civil War never ended and it was always known as the Northern
War of Aggression. That was my first experience of the strong grip of fake news. The Civil War was won
by the Northern States - any history text will confirm that, but deep in the heart of many Southerners,
they refuse to believe it.
There is literally today left of Trump’s presidency. What will happen at 12pm tomorrow when he is
officially not President of the United States? Here’s one thing:

Washington Post
On the other side of Donald Trump’s turbulent presidency, the lawyers are waiting.
Leaving aside his Senate impeachment trial, mounting government investigations include a civil probe by
New York Attorney General Letitia James, a criminal probe by Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance
Jr., and a federal probe by acting U.S. Attorney for D.C. Michael Sherwin that may include Trump’s role in

�the catastrophic storming of the U.S. Capitol this month.
But already pending for the soon-to-be South Florida retiree is a trio of lawsuits that allege defamation,
fraud and more fraud — all of which are helmed by one attorney.
Roberta Kaplan’s clients include writer E. Jean Carroll, who filed a defamation case after Trump claimed
she was “totally lying” about her allegation that he raped her a quarter-century ago in a Bergdorf
Goodman dressing room, and niece Mary L. Trump, who claims that Trump and two of his siblings
deprived her of an inheritance worth millions.
“I became the go-to person to sue the president,” says Kaplan, 54, with considerable relish.
She is in many ways the ideal legal adversary to take on Trump. Kaplan is a brash and original strategist,
with neither a gift for patience nor silence, a crusader for underdogs who has won almost every legal
accolade imaginable. Kaplan, says New York Democratic Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo in an email, “has been
indispensable in the fight against the cancer of hate and division that Trump spent four years
exacerbating.”
Before the presidency, Trump was often as engaged in legal tussles as he was in real estate, suing and
threatening to sue his way out of financial trouble. With a return to private life, “his terror is that he will
no longer be protected by the office and will have to deal with these lawsuits,” says his niece. Trump faces
the prospect of spending considerable time in the role of defendant. Kaplan says she will seek to depose
him in all three cases. Trump’s lawyers did not respond to requests for comment on the cases in this story.
Did I mention that the military have denied his request for a leaving ceremony? I have no idea where he
will go or what he will do. I think obscurity would be terrifying for him and so thats my most fervent
wish - that he and his family become discredited and disgraced and relegated to the backwaters of history.
Still, he has this one last day to do as many egregious actions as possible, and there is no depth to his
meanness. Biden is going to have to be very good at multitasking in the days ahead.

Washington Post: Since he clinched the election in November, Biden has made clear the coronavirus and
the profound economic damage it has wrought will be his central priorities until the pandemic eases its
grip on life in the United States. He frequently urges people to wear masks and keep safe distances, has set
a vaccination goal of 100 million shots during his first 100 days in office, and has asked Congress to
approve an additional relief package of $1.9 trillion. About $20 billion of that amount would be devoted to
a more assertive federal role in the mass vaccination campaign.
Here’s an astonishing item that just came to light:

Washington Post
Five prominent anti-vaccine organizations that have been known to spread misleading information about
the coronavirus received more than $850,000 in loans from the federal Paycheck Protection Program,
raising questions about why the government is giving money to groups actively opposing its agenda and
seeking to undermine public health during a critical period.

�The groups that received the loans are the National Vaccine Information Center, Mercola Com Health
Resources, Informed Consent Action Network, the Children’s Health Defense Co. and the Tenpenny
Integrative Medical Center, according to the Center for Countering Digital Hate, an advocacy group based
in the United Kingdom that fights misinformation and conducted the research using public documents.
The group relied on data released in early December by the Small Business Administration in response to a
lawsuit from The Washington Post and other news organizations.
Several of the Facebook pages of these organizations have been penalized by the social network, including
being prohibited from buying advertising, for pushing misinformation about the coronavirus.

In Washington D.C., they are setting out the chairs for the Inauguration Ceremony. It will all be streamed
online so that most of America can watch it from the comfort of their own home - as we will.
So I can report that Craig does not have a cataract problem at this stage. Good news. The Furnace man is
coming this morning to paint sealant on a tiny hole in our furnace, to keep it working until they can
source a new one for us. (So its not just toilet paper or building supplies that are scarce). Online teaching
begins again today for Craig. This is his final semester. I think he’s a bit sad.
Yesterday Oliver said “Hi Imi” to me. My friends all told me that your grandchildren call you either what
they hear or what they imagine they heard and it often becomes their name for you. I was to be called
Mimi but strangely enough I think I like Imi better.

��(CNN)The US has just surpassed 24 million Covid-19 cases -- and more than 60% of them have been
reported since Election Day. The stunning numbers follow brutal surges in the past months -- during
which the US saw hundreds of thousands of new cases daily, while Covid-19 hospitalization and death
numbers reached all-time highs.
And just about a year since the first Covid-19 case was reported in the US, the country's death toll is fast
approaching 400,000 -- more than the number of Americans who died in World War I, the Vietnam War
and the Korean War combined and nearly as many Americans who died in World War II.
Tomorrow is a big day. See you then.

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                    <text>Day 313
by windoworks

I am sitting in the car and it is early in the morning and it is snowing. Craig is having an eye test and
because they will dilate his eyes, I am his designated driver. Under normal circumstances, I would wait
inside the patient waiting room with him, but because of the stringent covid conditions I am in the car
with the engine running so I have some heat. Although there is no wifi available, I can use my iPhone
hotspot. I have no idea how this works.
This edition of a newsletter dropped into my inbox last night:

Dear MoveOn member, Shocking news reports revealed last week that QAnon-supporting
Congresswoman Lauren Boebert live-tweeted House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's location and movements
during the white supremacist attack on Capitol Hill, in what appears to have been an effort to help the
racist mob locate the speaker. We've already impeached Trump, and we are working hard to ensure the
Senate convicts him. But we can't stop there. The Republicans like Boebert, Ted Cruz, and Josh Hawley,
who also helped to motivate this deadly white supremacist mob to invade the Capitol, plant explosive
devices, and murder a police officer, must be condemned, held accountable, and removed from office.
Every day there are new revelations about Wednesday January 6. From Washington Post:

The fiery rallies that preceded the deadly riot at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6 were organized and promoted
by an array of established conservative insiders and activists, documents and videos show.

�The Republican Attorneys General Association was involved, as were the activist groups Turning Point
Action and Tea Party Patriots. At least six current or former members of the Council for National Policy
(CNP), an influential group that for decades has served as a hub for conservative and Christian activists,
also played roles in promoting the rallies.
The two days of rallies were staged not by white nationalists and other extremists, but by well-funded
nonprofit groups and individuals that figure prominently in the machinery of conservative activism in
Washington.
It is surprising who that crowd of insurgents were on January 6. Washington Post:

The radicalization of Trump supporters from all walks of life became jarringly apparent this month when a
phalanx of lawyers, nurses, police officers, real estate agents and stay-at-home parents found common
cause — terrorizing lawmakers for not overturning the results of a presidential election — with
conspiracy mongers and violent white supremacists. Amid the throngs were a university professor, a
hairdresser, a school therapist, a chief executive, a piano teacher, an Olympic gold-medalist and a state
representative from West Virginia. Jenna Ryan of Frisco, Tex., flew to the rally on a private plane and
posted a video from the riot where she hawked her professional services: “Y’all know who to hire for your
Realtor,” she said. “Jenna Ryan for your Realtor.” (She has been arrested.)
And just to show you how seriously authorities are taking the continuing threat of insurrection:

WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S. defense officials say they are worried about an insider attack or other threat
from service members involved in securing President-elect Joe Biden’s inauguration, prompting the FBI to
vet all of the 25,000 National Guard troops coming into Washington for the event.The massive
undertaking reflects the extraordinary security concerns that have gripped Washington following the
deadly Jan. 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol by pro-Trump rioters. And it underscores fears that some of
the very people assigned to protect the city over the next several days could present a threat to the
incoming president and other VIPs in attendance.
Army Secretary Ryan McCarthy told The Associated Press on Sunday that officials are conscious of the
potential threat, and he warned commanders to be on the lookout for any problems within their ranks as
the inauguration approaches. So far, however, he and other leaders say they have seen no evidence of any
threats, and officials said the vetting hadn’t flagged any issues that they were aware of. ”We’re continually
going through the process, and taking second, third looks at every one of the individuals assigned to this
operation,” McCarthy said in an interview after he and other military leaders went through an exhaustive,
three-hour security drill in preparation for Wednesday’s inauguration. He said Guard members are also
getting training on how to identify potential insider threats.
Last night I read a story that a woman who broke into The Speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi’s office, is
being sought to return Nancy’s laptop that she stole. I cannot express how frightening that is. As Speaker

�of the House, Nancy is in line to take over as President if something catastrophic happens. She was privy
to the national security briefings and I cannot imagine what is on her laptop. I also watched a really
disturbing video clip of a man photographing papers left behind in the Senate after the attending senators
were hurriedly evacuated to safety. There are many details coming out now and I suspect there are many
details that we will never know for security reasons. One of the details that really disturbed me was
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s fear that if she followed her Republican colleagues to a safe location, they
would let the insurgents know where she was. She has always been a brave ballsy young woman - but not
that brave! And who could blame her?
I think the really disturbing aspects of January 6 were the real insurgents hidden in the crowd and the
officials who assisted them - the police members, the staff members and the House and Senate
Republicans. We are at such a turning point as a country. We can take this moment as a signal to begin to
right the ship of state, or we can continue on this slide towards anarchy and insurrection.
From CNN:

A battered nation haunted by sickness, death and division is heading into an epic week in which
constitutional principles will triumph over lies and insurrection with the transfer of power from one
president to the next.
President-elect Joe Biden's shouldering of the presidency on Wednesday will end twice-impeached
Donald Trump's four-year assault on truth and tranquility and an administration awash in corruption that
tested US democracy to the limit.His new team will face the gravest national challenges of any new White
House in 90 years, with the pandemic running riot, nearly 400,000 citizens dead, an economy in ruins and
a vaccine rollout faltering. A massive garrison of thousands of troops and security forces in Washington,
DC, and the ugly scar of iron fences ringing the White House and the Capitol to protect the inauguration
from violent pro-Trump mobs bear witness to Trump's legacy of incitement. There will be neither crowds
thronging the National Mall nor footage of the new President and first lady waltzing at glitzy inaugural
balls. The muted pageantry will underscore the mission history has assigned to the oldest President ever to
be sworn into office -- that of digging his nation out of multiple crises. After four years in which Trump
tore at America's racial wounds as a tool of power, there will, however, be a sense of history as California
Sen. Kamala Harris becomes the first female, Black and South Asian vice president when she is sworn into
office by Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor.

�National guards and razor wire topped
fences

Installing the razor
wire

�The Capitol Building behind 7 foot fencing and guarded by National Guardsmen.
And now to the virus. From Apple news:

As the total number of coronavirus infections in California approaches 3 million, health officials said
Sunday that a new strain — different from a highly contagious variant first identified in the United
Kingdom — is popping up more frequently across the state.
Researchers have identified the strain in a dozen counties and have linked it to several large outbreaks in
Santa Clara County. Meanwhile, so many people have died in Los Angeles County that officials have
temporarily suspended air-quality regulations that limit the number of cremations. Health officials and the
L.A. County coroner requested the change because the current death rate is "more than double that of prepandemic years, leading to hospitals, funeral homes and crematoriums exceeding capacity, without the
ability to process the backlog," the South Coast Air Quality Management District said Sunday.
Here’s an update about the vaccines:
New York Times:

The Moderna and Pfizer vaccines — the only two approved in the U.S. — are among the best vaccines
ever created, with effectiveness rates of about 95 percent after two doses. That’s on par with the vaccines
for chickenpox and measles. And a vaccine doesn’t even need to be so effective to reduce cases sharply and
crush a pandemic.
If anything, the 95 percent number understates the effectiveness, because it counts anyone who came

�down with a mild case of Covid-19 as a failure. But turning Covid into a typical flu — as the vaccines
evidently did for most of the remaining 5 percent — is actually a success. Of the 32,000 people who
received the Moderna or Pfizer vaccine in a research trial, do you want to guess how many contracted a
severe Covid case? One.
Although no rigorous study has yet analyzed whether vaccinated people can spread the virus, it would be
surprising if they did. “If there is an example of a vaccine in widespread clinical use that has this selective
effect — prevents disease but not infection — I can’t think of one!” Dr. Paul Sax of Harvard has written in
The New England Journal of Medicine. (And, no, exclamation points are not common in medical
journals.) On Twitter, Dr. Monica Gandhi of the University of California, San Francisco, argued: “Please
be assured that YOU ARE SAFE after vaccine from what matters — disease and spreading.”
The risks for vaccinated people are still not zero, because almost nothing in the real world is zero risk. A
tiny percentage of people may have allergic reactions. And I’ll be eager to see what the studies on postvaccination spread eventually show. But the evidence so far suggests that the vaccines are akin to a cure.
Its Oliver time.

�So small. Sleeping with

�Dad.

�What a toothless
grin!

�Such a big boy now.

�Today is Martin Luther King Jr Day.

Martin Luther King Jr. (born Michael King Jr.; January 15, 1929 – April 4, 1968) was an American Baptist
minister and activist who became the most visible spokesperson and leader in the civil rights movement
from 1955 until his assassination in 1968. King is best known for advancing civil rights through
nonviolence and civil disobedience, inspired by his Christian beliefs and the nonviolent activism of
Mahatma Gandhi. He was the son of early civil rights activist Martin Luther King, Sr. Wikipedia
Today I’ll leave you with this. As Dionne Warwick sang:

Keep smiling, keep shining
Knowing you can always count on me, for sure
That's what friends are for
For good times and bad times
I'll be on your side forever more
So keep smiling and keep shining.

�</text>
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                    <text>Day 312
by windoworks
This morning this blog is harder to write. I keep waiting for sanity to reestablish itself, for there to be an
end to all this madness. I wonder if this is what it is like to live in a war zone, never knowing where the
next explosion will be. I don’t understand the vitriol shouted on FaceBook pages about our Governor
Gretchen Whitmer. All she and her team have ever done is to listen to the doctors and scientists and then
put sensible rules in place to keep us all safe and alive. Apparently a significant proportion of Michigan
and the US would rather be free to choose sickness and possible death over restrictions. In the early days,
people demonstrated because they wanted to be able to go to the hairdresser.
I used to go to the nail salon every 2 weeks. I would have the polish taken off my fingernails, my nails
trimmed and then a different color polish painted on my nails. It was a small luxury I enjoyed. I talked to
other customers and the women working on my nails. I felt pampered. It was lovely. Once the lockdown
began and all nail salons were closed, I waited as long as I could before I attempted to remove the shellac
polish from my nails. I had ordered what I needed online and then I laboriously attempted to get the nail
polish off. I spoke to friends who had struggled just like me. I had forgotten how to look after my nails and
I vowed never to become dependent on visits to a nail salon again.
My hair grew long and unruly. I trimmed bits of it and that was harder than you would think. Craig
bought clippers and trimming set online and I learnt how to cut his hair. By the third time I felt as though
I knew what I was doing. I don’t think he’ll ever go back to the hair salon again. When hair salons were
allowed to reopen, I went cautiously back to have my hair cut. My stylist saw me very early in the
morning so there was never anyone else in the salon. Since this surge I have stopped going to the
hairdresser, especially after she told me that there had been a total of 4 positive cases in the salon. My hair
is now longer and much more unruly than before, but I am learning to live with it.
All this is a long preamble to say: I understand business owners who are struggling to stay afloat, but I
don’t understand demonstrating because you want to get your hair cut.
Meanwhile, Inauguration Day is just 3 days away. After being ill prepared for January 6, the authorities
are gearing up to be almost over prepared. Here’s the latest from the New York Times:

The nation is holding its breath as state capitals around the country brace for possible violence in the
coming days. State officials are activating National Guard troops and closing off Capitol grounds in
response to F.B.I. warnings that armed protesters and far-right groups are preparing to act in the days
leading up to President-elect Joe Biden’s inauguration on Wednesday. Above, St. Paul, Minn.The moves
by state officials point to the growing fear over continuing violence in the aftermath of the pro-Trump
mob attack on the U.S. Capitol that left five people dead. Law enforcement officials are vetting hundreds
of potential airplane passengers and beefing up airport security. Federal officials say a militarized “green

�zone” in downtown Washington is necessary to prevent an attack from domestic extremists. Such groups
“pose the most likely threat” to the inauguration, according to federal intelligence groups. A man was
arrested in Washington with “unauthorized” inauguration credentials, an unregistered handgun and 500
rounds of ammunition. The man, Wesley A. Beeler, said he had been working a security job and had
forgotten that his firearm was in his truck.

National Guard members inside the Capitol building

NPR: Next week's swearing-in of President-elect Joe Biden will see the biggest security presence of any
inauguration in U.S. history. For days, thousands of National Guard troops have been pouring into the
capital, and by Wednesday's ceremony, up to 25,000 troops will be in place to guard against security
threats.
The nation's capital will look much different than it did in the days leading up to the attack on the U.S.
Capitol building earlier this month. The area around the Capitol has been blocked off by barricades, and
the National Mall is already closed to the public across its entire length — from the Capitol down to the
Lincoln Memorial, 2 miles away.
"We cannot allow a recurrence of the chaos and illegal activity that the United States and the world
witnessed last week," Matt Miller, head of the U.S. Secret Service's Washington field office, told reporters
Friday.

�Troops are pouring in from all over the country. "I'm sorry I have to ask you to leave your families and
head down to our nation's capital because our country is so broken right now that we have to defend the
constitution," Maj. Gen. Gary Keefe reportedlytold Massachusetts National Guard troops Saturday
morning. Those troops will join the thousands of camouflaged troops already in the capital, many carrying
M4 rifles. And workers are installing miles worth of metal fencing to hold people back. "It looks like a
military staging area because that's exactly what it is," NPR's Greg Myre told All Things Considered. To
put things in perspective: Only 5,000 U.S. service members are currently stationed in Iraq and
Afghanistan.
D.C. officials have warned would-be visitors to stay away and instead enjoy the inauguration virtually
from their homes. It would be difficult for many to get into the city anyway, as four major bridges from
Virginia will be closed from the day before until the day after the inauguration. It will also be harder for
known extremists to get to Washington by plane. The Transportation Security Administration says it's
vetting hundreds of names passed along by law enforcement agencies. And it has beefed up security at all
three D.C.-area airports, adding more bomb-sniffing dogs, more random gate screenings and more federal
air marshals.
After his inaugural address, Biden will receive a presidential escort to the White House. Online chatter
over the past weeks had included statements from supporters urging pro-Trump extremists to meet in D.C.
and try to prevent Biden from entering the White House, but given the ubiquitous presence of troops and
other security forces, such a move would prove challenging if not impossible. And Facebook has
temporarily blocked people from creating any new Facebook events near the White House or Capitol
through Inauguration Day.
In the ‘ disturbing facts coming to light after the insurrection attempt’ category, here’s this from Crooked
Media whose writers always tell us exactly how it is:

• House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has asked retired Lt. Gen. Russel Honoré to lead a review of security at the
Capitol complex, and the Capitol Police has opened an investigation into whether any members of
Congress led mob members on a pre-riot reconnaissance tour of the building last week. On Thursday, Rep.
Lauren Boebert (R-QAnon) strenuously denied accusations that she was an insurrection tour guide, before
any Democrats had actually accused her, like the guilty character in a community theater murder
mystery. Could be a good place to start.
• At least 28 off-duty law enforcement were in attendance at the January 6 “Stop the Steal” rally in
Washington, DC, and at least 19 agencies in 13 states have since opened investigations into whether their
officers violated internal policies or criminal law. Many of those officers posted about their participation
on social media. A number of Black officers told reporters that it’s just the latest sign of a radicalization
process they’ve been watching unfold in their departments for years, as some of their white colleagues,
emboldened by Trump and protected by their unions, became more open about expressing racist views
and bought into right-wing conspiracy theories.

�• The investigations into the attack are likely to yield troves of awful new details, a troubling majority of
Republicans still believe that Trump won the election, and right-wing threats around the Inauguration
have necessitated the creation of a literal Green Zone in the nation’s capital. But an important majority of
Americans understands that denying a peaceful transfer of power crossed an untouchable line, and as the
insurrectionists are held appropriately accountable, that number will grow.
And just to let you know that the unrest is not confined just to Washington D.C., here’s a FaceBook post
yesterday from the City of Grand Rapids:

In light of recent protests at State Capitols, we encourage our community to be vigilant of suspicious
activity. We all have a responsibility that if we see something, we must say something. You can help by
staying aware of what is happening around us and notifying authorities immediately if you note suspicious
activity. Locally you can reach out to Silent Observer (or call 616.774.2345) as well as the Michigan State
Police tip portal. We hope if you come across suspicious activity, you will use these tools to help keep our
community safe.
This next quote is just unbelievable. How did we reach this state? Oh, I know - Trump.

NPR: Rep. Mikie Sherrill, D-N.J., claimed during a Facebook Live broadcast Tuesday evening that some
Republicans in Congress had given groups a "reconnaissance" tour of the Capitol ahead of the insurrection.
Sherrill's allegations came the same night that Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., addressed
constituents on an Instagram Live video expressing her fear that some of her Republican colleagues would
have disclosed her location during the insurrection on Jan. 6.
"I myself did not even feel safe going to that extraction point, because there were QAnon and white
supremacist sympathizers and frankly white supremacist members of Congress in that extraction point,
who I know and who I had felt would disclose my location and allow me to, who would create
opportunities to allow me to be hurt, kidnapped, etc.," she said.

�If I think about this for too long, I get overwhelmed. Will things begin to improve once Joe and Kamala
are in the Presidents House? I hope so but they have a mammoth job ahead of them - and the portion of
the population who believe Trump won the election will refuse to see reason for the rest of their lives.
What about the virus? I hear you ask. The US case totals stand at 24.3M (!!!!) and the deaths have reached
405,262 as of yesterday.

The Atlantic
A mutating coronavirus
The virus is behaving as expected, James Hamblin writes. “The peril is not that the virus will suddenly

�change in an extraordinary way that transforms the pandemic, but that it is changing in small, ordinary
ways that are playing out on a vast scale, and whose significance we may not appreciate until it’s too late.”
Well, Oliver.

��That’s it for today. Lets hope things begin to calm down. Do your part by wearing your mask properly,
staying a safe distance away from others and washing your hands. And be kind. We need more kindness.

�</text>
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                    <text>Day 311. Saturday January 16. 169 sleeps to go.
by windoworks

�It takes more energy to be afraid than it takes to be courageous.
There are 4 days left until Joe Biden is inaugurated. The country is in a turmoil. Internationally we are
now the proud holders of the title ‘Banana Republic.’ Other developing countries holding elections are
following the tried and true policy of not conceding an election under the guise of fake new and fake
voting counting. All my news sources are filled with accounts of what actually happened at the Capitol on
January 6, what the insurgents plan next, what the fallout has been for Trump, and the daily total of
rioters arrested and charged. The recurring theme from the FBI is: it make take us a while to get to you,
but we will! Here’s one smaller group that participated on January 6:

The Atlantic: In the menagerie of right-wing populist groups, the boogaloo bois stand out for their
fashion, for their great love of memes, and, to put it plainly, for the incoherence of their ideology. Which
is saying a lot, considering that the riot at the Capitol last Wednesday featured partisans of the long-gone
country of South Vietnam, Falun Gong adherents, end-times Christians, neo-Nazis, QAnon believers, a
handful of Orthodox Jews, and Daniel Boone impersonators.
The boogaloos weren’t a huge presence in that mob. But according to federal officials, the attack on the
Capitol has galvanized them and could inspire boogaloo violence in D.C. and around the country between
now and Inauguration Day. The FBI warned earlier that boogaloos could launch attacks in state capitols
this Sunday, January 17.
The boogaloos don’t appear interested in fighting for Donald Trump—they tend to despise him, mostly
because they think he panders to the police. But for the past year, boogaloo bois all over the United States
have been cheering on the country’s breakdown, waiting for the moment when their nihilistic memes
would come to life and the country would devolve into bloody chaos.
It’s hard to know how seriously to take the boogaloo threat. Some are likely just joking when they “shitpost” about shooting cops or “yeeting alphabet boys”—killing government law-enforcement agents. But
others seem serious. They’ve already shown up heavily armed (and in their signature Hawaiian shirts) at
protests and at state capitols. They’ve allegedly killed law-enforcement officers, talked about throwing
Molotov cocktails at cops during the racial-justice protests this summer, and plotted to kidnap Michigan
Governor Gretchen Whitmer. They say they want a total reset of society, even if they haven’t thought
very hard about what, exactly, should come next.
As the days roll by, more and more evidence is surfacing about how close the insurgents came to achieving
some of their goals. One big goal was to hang VP Mike Pence for his crimes against Trump.

Washington Post
The violent mob that stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6 came perilously close to Vice President Pence,
who was not evacuated from the Senate chamber for about 14 minutes after the Capitol Police reported an
initial attempted breach of the complex — enough time for the marauders to rush inside the building and
approach his location, according to law enforcement officials and video footage from that day.

�Secret Service officers eventually spirited Pence to a room off the Senate floor with his wife and daughter
after rioters began to pour into the Capitol, many loudly denouncing the vice president as a traitor as they
marched through the first floor below the Senate chamber.
About one minute after Pence was hustled out of the chamber, a group charged up the stairs to a secondfloor landing in the Senate, chasing a Capitol Police officer who drew them away from the Senate.
Pence and his family had just ducked into a hideaway less than 100 feet from that landing, according to
three people familiar with his whereabouts, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the
sensitivity of the situation. If the pro-Trump mob had arrived seconds earlier, the attackers would have
been in eyesight of the vice president as he was rushed across a reception hall into the office.
The proximity of the Jan. 6 mob to the vice president and the delay in evacuating him from the chamber
— which have not been previously reported — raise questions about why the Secret Service did not move
him earlier and underscore the jeopardy that top government leaders faced during the siege.

�Look carefully: these heavily armed and outfitted men, marching up the stairs in formation.
They are insurgents executing ‘Ranger File’.
Detroit News

Washington – As President Donald Trump’s supporters massed outside the Capitol last week and sang the
national anthem, a line of men wearing olive-drab helmets and body armor trudged purposefully up the
marble stairs in a single-file line, each man holding the jacket collar of the one ahead.
The formation, known as “Ranger File,” is standard operating procedure for a combat team that is
“stacking up” to breach a building – instantly recognizable to any U.S. soldier or Marine who served in
Iraq and Afghanistan. It was a chilling sign that many at the vanguard of the mob that stormed the seat of
American democracy either had military training or were trained by those who did.

�An Associated Press review of public records, social media posts and videos shows at least 21 current or
former members of the U.S. military or law enforcement have been identified as being at or near the
Capitol riot, with more than a dozen others under investigation but not yet named. In many cases, those
who stormed the Capitol appeared to employ tactics, body armor and technology such as two-way radio
headsets that were similar to those of the very police they were confronting.
Experts in homegrown extremism have warned for years about efforts by far-right militants and whitesupremacist groups to radicalize and recruit people with military and law enforcement training, and they
say the Jan. 6 insurrection that left five people dead saw some of their worst fears realized.
The AP’s review of hundreds of videos and photos from the insurrectionist riot shows scores of people
mixed in the crowd who were wearing military-style gear, including helmets, body armor, rucksacks and
two-way radios. Dozens carried canisters of bear spray, baseball bats, hockey sticks and pro-Trump flags
attached to stout poles later used to bash police officers.
A close examination of the group marching up the steps to help breach the Capitol shows they wore
military-style patches that read “MILITIA” and “OATHKEEPER.” Others were wearing patches and
insignias representing far-right militant groups, including the Proud Boys, the Three Percenters and
various self-styled state militias.
The FBI is warning of the potential for more bloodshed. In an internal bulletin issued Sunday, the bureau
warned of plans for armed protests at all 50 state capitals and in Washington, D.C., in the coming weeks.
Meanwhile, police departments in such major cities as New York, Los Angeles, Las Vegas, Houston and
Philadelphia announced they were investigating whether members of their agencies participated in the
Capitol riot. The Philadelphia area’s transit authority is also investigating whether seven of its police
officers who attended Trump’s rally in Washington broke any laws.
NPR has provided a comprehensive timeline which goes right through to January 14. I have only included
the timeline up to Trump’s speech on January 6.

Late 2020
The Department of Homeland Security produces a threat assessment — but it is an overview, a DHS
spokesperson told NPR, focusing on the "heightened threat environment during the 2020-2021 election
season, including the extent to which the political transition and political polarization are contributing to
the mobilization of individuals to commit violence."
Late December. The New York Police Department sends a packet of material to the U.S. Capitol Police
and the Washington Field Office of the FBI. This raw intelligence — bits and pieces of information
scraped from various social media sites — indicates that there will likely be violence when lawmakers
certify the presidential election on Jan. 6.
Tuesday, January 5
The FBI Field Office in Norfolk, Va. issues an explicit warning that extremists have plans for violence the
next day, as first reported by the Post. It releases its advisory report after FBI analysts find a roster of

�troubling information including specific threats against members of Congress, an exchange of maps of the
tunnel system under the Capitol complex, and organizational plans like setting up gathering places in
Kentucky, Pennsylvania and South Carolina where extremists can meet to convoy to Washington.
Wednesday, January 6
Just before noon Trump begins to address the crowd at the Ellipse, behind the White House. He falsely
claims that "this election was stolen from you, from me, from the country."
Trump calls on his supporters at the rally to march on the U.S. Capitol, saying he will walk with them.
Instead, he returns to the White House.
The House and Senate reconvened at 8pm that night and the certifying of the Electoral votes commenced.
And much to my surprise and dismay, there was still arguments over the validity of the election results.
Here’s a photo of all the Republican House members who deserve to be unseated due to their complicity
with Trump.

�Every single one should be unseated according to the Constitution of the United States of
America.

We are 4 days out. Huge changes have been made to the Inauguration ceremony due to credible, ongoing
threats. Across America the 50 state capitol buildings have prepared for possible threats leading up to and
including January 20.
Trump has decided to leave the Presidents House early on January 20 and he wants a military band, a red
carpet, a gun salute and who the hell cares what else. But here’s what I think: once he leaves the
Presidents House he’s officially not the President any more. He can ask all he wants, but only bankruptcy
and ignominy awaits him. His online merchandise has dried up, his major bank has refused to support
him, his deals in New York City are no more and Mitch McConnell hopes he will fade into insignificance.
And, as he won’t be protected by the presidency, he’s fair game for all legal proceedings. In a really
amusing side note, Ivanka and Jared have been told they ‘need not apply’ to the swanky upscale Indian
Creek Country Club near their new $30M property on an island near Miami Florida. Which just goes to
show that you can’t wash the Trump stench off, ever.

�And things are going from bad to worse with the virus. I read yesterday that 1 in 3 people in L.A. County
are covid positive. That’s unbelievable.

Washington Post: As Americans prepare for President Trump to leave the White House, they face a
sickening reality: Nearly 400,000 people have died of covid-19 under his watch. His administration led a
bungled response from the start, health experts have repeatedly said, for which the nation has paid a
devastating price. American deaths make up 20 percent of the global toll — which just crossed 2 million
— despite being just 4.25 percent of the world's population.
The coronavirus is putting an early end to more than 3,000 lives per day as the country focuses on threats
of more political violence in Trump's name following the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol. In the most
alarming announcement on mutations yet, experts at the CDC said Friday that they expect the spread to
get much worse. In every scenario the CDC examined, it found the highly contagious U.K. variant will
become the dominant source of infections in the United States in March. The nation needs a coherent
vaccination strategy now more than ever. Production at Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna is increasing
enough that more than 70 percent of adults could be able to get the two-shot vaccination by the end of
July. But, as we have learned, the existence of doses does not guarantee shots in arms. A promising
announcement earlier this week from Operation Warp Speed — that the government would release more
vaccine doses that were being held in reserve — was dashed when the group admitted to states that the
reserves never existed. Officials had hoped to expand access to millions of elderly people and those with
high-risk medical conditions. One state health official called the revelation “extremely disturbing.”
So there you have it: an ongoing attempt to overthrow the government and a disastrous pandemic - and
Trump.
Yesterday, Oliver went to the beach with his mother and father.

���We’ll return to our Mediterranean cruise soon, but not today. Some days lately, I just don’t have the heart
for it.
We’ve done the virtual walk thru with the moving company and it looks like we can get almost
everything in the shipping container, including my 9 or so glass collage windows (Yay!). We have found
an appreciative home for the piano and have received reassuring photos of Murphy, happy in her new
home. 169 sleeps to go. Sadness is setting in.

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                    <text>Day 310

by windoworks

Heather Cox Richardson: Shortly before the Senate vote on conviction almost exactly a year ago, House
impeachment manager Adam Schiff (D-CA) charged his Republican colleagues to look to the future,
telling them, “you know you can’t trust this President to do what’s right for this country. You can trust he
will do what’s right for Donald Trump. He’ll do it now. He’s done it before. He’ll do it for the next several
months. He’ll do it in the election if he’s allowed to.” Prophetic words indeed.

�Remember I told you there were National Guard soldiers sleeping on the floor in the Capitol building?
Here are just some. Yesterday many Republicans refused to walk through the newly installed metal
detectors, saying “you can’t make me”. Which is alarming on so many counts but mostly (for me) because
it sounds like something a child or teenager would say in defiance to their parent. Have these people, duly
elected by their constituency, never grown up? Are the majority of the Republican Congress still petulant
teenagers? I know Trump behaves badly but is this also a large portion of the people running the country?
Anyhow, the security guards are now allowed to fine representatives and senators who refuse to walk
through the metal detector and then be wanded - $5000 for the first refusal, $10,000 for the second.
Meanwhile, Trump’s TV speech has been analysed and apparently there may be hidden messages such as
‘our movement’. In DC, Airbnb has refunded all monies paid for the Inauguration and there is movement
afoot by DC hotels to close for Inauguration Day. The National Mall will be closed to all visitors as well.
Washington Post

Dozens of people on the FBI’s terrorist watch list came to D.C. the day of the Capitol riot. Most are
suspected white supremacists. The past conduct of the suspected white supremacists so alarmed
investigators that their names had been previously entered into the national Terrorist Screening Database,
a massive collection of individuals flagged as potential security risks, according to people familiar with
evidence gathered in the FBI’s investigation. The presence of so many watchlisted individuals in one place

�— without more robust security measures to protect the public — is another example of the intelligence
failures preceding last week’s deadly assault, some current and former law enforcement officials argued.
In news publications and online, there are long lists with photos of some of the more egregious characters
who were at the attempted coup. One young woman reported her mother for acing badly inside the
Congress. That’s pretty tough when your daughter dobbs you in, but she said she felt it was her civic duty.
In the days since, participators have lost their jobs and been vilified by their communities. I can only
think that they all took their cue from Trump - do whatever you like and no one will say anything, there
will be no consequences. Every story that has never been told before about the Trump family members is
now coming out into the public eye. There is one circulating about the Secret Service agents guarding
Jared and Ivanka. They were not allowed to use any of the 6 or 7 toilets in their house, so they were forced
to use the toilets in the Obama house nearby - wait, what? In the end they had to rent a toilet. I have no
idea if this is true but it shows blatant white privilege. Wasn’t there a famous toilet scene in The Help?

Freshman Rep. Cori Bush (D-Mo.) said failing “to remove a white supremacist president who incited a
white supremacist insurrection” would send a terrible message to predominantly Black communities like
the one she represents in St. Louis. “The 117th Congress must understand that we have a mandate to
legislate in defense of Black lives,” she said. “The first step in that process is to root out white supremacy
starting with impeaching the white supremacist in chief.”
Thirteen months ago, Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) shushed a group of Democrats who started to cheer
after the House passed the impeachment resolution. No one cheered Wednesday. In large part, this was
because no one felt like celebrating. “Every one of us in this room right now could have died,” explained
Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.), the author of the article of impeachment.
Here’s a report from the Washington Post:

Blinded by smoke and choking on gas and bear spray, stripped of his radio and badge, D.C. police officer
Michael Fanone and his battered colleagues fought to push back rioters trying to force their way into an
entrance to the U.S. Capitol. The officers had been at it for hours, unaware that others in the mob had
already breached the building through different entrances. For them, the West Terrace doors — which
open into a tunnel-like hallway allowing access to an area under the Rotunda — represented the last stand
before the Capitol fell. “Dig in!” Fanone yelled, his voice cracking, as he and others were being struck with
their own clubs and shields, ripped from their hands by rioters. “We got to get these doors shut.”
And from Crooked Media ( and I find this upsetting):

The handful of Republicans who actually didn’t bow to the lawless mob, meanwhile, are afraid for their
lives. Rep. Peter Meijer (R-MI), who was one of the 10 House Republicans to vote in favor of
impeachment, said that he and his colleagues were buying body armor, traveling with armed escorts, and
altering their daily routines: “It’s sad that we have to get to that point but our expectation is that someone

�may try to kill us.” Pro-Trump loyalists like Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) have deftly pivoted from demanding
unity from Democrats to attacking the pro-impeachment members of their own party, in calls for Rep. Liz
Cheney (R-WY) to be ousted from House leadership. (House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy said he
wouldn’t support that effort.)
And now its time for the pandemic!

NPR: A team of 13 World Health Organization scientists have now arrived in Wuhan, China, where they
will investigate the origins of the coronavirus that has caused a global pandemic. Nearly 2 million people
have died due to COVID-19, with more than 92 million infections, according to Johns Hopkins
University. "The experts will begin their work immediately during the 2 weeks quarantine protocol for
international travelers," the WHO said Thursday. "China has repeatedly pushed back against consensus
that the novel coronavirus first appeared in humans in Wuhan," NPR's Emily Feng reports from Beijing.
"Officials have suggested without evidence that the virus began elsewhere, including the U.S., and was
brought to China."
Members of the team began the process of traveling to China more than a week ago, after discussions
between the WHO, China's government and other countries the scientists would travel through on their
way to Wuhan. The WHO announced the triphad begun on Jan. 5. But that same day, the international
health agency was told that Chinese officials had not given final permissions for the team to arrive and
begin their work.
In the past week, Chinese authorities have issued stay-at-home orders and other restrictions on 11 million
people in Hebei province, concerned by a recent uptick in new positive tests.
And from The Atlantic:

The new variant, called B.1.1.7, appears to be significantly more contagious than previous versions of the
virus. It has been spreading rapidly in the U.K. and causing a huge surge in cases, hospitalizations and
death. Last week, the U.K. reported a record-breaking 419,000 cases. The governments of England,
Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland issued strict lockdowns, urging people to stay inside their homes.
Studies suggest the new variant increases transmissibility by about 50%. While restrictions have largely
suppressed previous versions of the virus in the U.K., B.1.1.7 has continued to spread exponentially.
With cases already surging in the U.S., having this new variant dominate the outbreak could be very
problematic, researchers say. It could fuel another surge on top of the already staggering surge the country
is struggling to stop.
So just so you know, I don’t make this stuff up. And bad news seems to be all there is at the moment. We
are constantly being asked to pay attention, be careful, follow guidelines. This morning on the radio,
experts were suggesting that it might be time to return to ordering your groceries online or using the
curbside pick up. If you spend no more than 10 minutes inside any store, that’s reasonably safe but any

�longer than that is risky. Craig has developed an admirable speed shopping talent. We go through the
week’s list beforehand and make sure it is in order of the aisles, and then he races around and is back in
the grocery loaded car in under 15 minutes.
I have a friend who has been walking laps inside her house now for about 10 months. Thats her form of
exercise. She has a compromised immune system and is too nervous to walk outside. And yet, she never
complains and is always cheerful when we talk on the phone. I wish I was more like her.
Oliver, at last.

�On Wednesday I made a picnic lunch and we drove down to Opal Beach near Saugatuck.

��It was lovely just to sit in the car and watch the waves. On days like this the lake looks more like the
ocean than a lake. Although the sun was shining, the wind was cold. Ah Michigan midwinter! As I write
this morning, the rain has suddenly turned to snow.
That’s all folks. See you tomorrow.

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                    <text>Day 309.

by windoworks

Truth will out. One way or another, in spite of all efforts to conceal it, the truth will come to be known.
In politics I think it is always prudent to remember this. Last night the House voted to impeach Trump for
the second time. No other sitting President has been impeached twice. Trump then came on TV and called
for calm and an end to violence. I tried to watch but I just couldn’t make myself. He didn’t take
responsibility, he didn’t acknowledge his role and he didn’t recognize that Joe Biden had fairly won the
election. So what else did we expect? But now, the unending sources of Trump’s wealth are slowly drying
up. While he won’t acknowledge his behavior over the last 4+ years, organizations and financial
institutions are withdrawing their funding and support, and more than anything that signals to the world
that his behavior is completely beyond the pale. His honorary degrees from Lehigh University and
Wagner College have been rescinded. But more importantly, his closest allies are deserting him. Hope
Hicks, Betsy DeVos and Elaine Chao (wife of Mitch McConnell) have all resigned, saying ‘I can’t be a
party to this.’

Washington Post: As he watched impeachment quickly gain steam, Trump was upset generally that
virtually nobody is defending him — including press secretary Kayleigh McEnany, senior adviser and sonin-law Jared Kushner, economic adviser Larry Kudlow, national security adviser Robert C. O’Brien and
Chief of Staff Mark Meadows, according to a senior administration official.
And here’s a signal from Europe, and you can bet this won’t happen once Biden is President. How
humiliating for Trump.

From Heather Cox Richardson: Trump has led the party to a major defeat and made it so reviled that it has
lost the White House and the Senate, defeats for which McConnell blames the president. Indeed, the
Trump administration is so reviled that today European officials took the unprecedented step of refusing
to meet with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on a scheduled trip to Europe this week. He was forced to
cancel his trip at the last minute.

�But here’s the deeper, darker story. Last night I watched Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez talk on Instagram
about how she thought she was going to be killed last Wednesday. She said she couldn’t reveal details due
to security but here’s this:

Crooked Media: • It seems like we’ve still only caught a glimpse of what actually happened in the Capitol
last week. In an Instagram Live on Tuesday evening, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) said she had a
“very close encounter” during the attack in which she thought she would die, but couldn’t disclose further
details out of security concerns. Ocasio-Cortez said she didn’t feel safe going to the same secure location as
her colleagues because of “frankly, white supremacist members of Congress,” whom she feared “would
create opportunities to allow me to be hurt, kidnapped.” Sarah Croh, who serves as chief of staff for Rep.
Ayanna Pressley (D-MA), recounted searching for the office’s panic buttons, only to discover that the
whole unit had been inexplicably ripped out before the mob arrived.
The panic button had been ripped out?! And there’s more:

Dear MoveOn member,
Last night, news broke that Republican members of Congress led leaders of the white supremacist riot on
the U.S. Capitol on a "reconnaissance" tour of the building the day before the attack, apparently to make
sure that they would know where to find the targets of their violence, including Nancy Pelosi and Mike
Pence.
Now, one of the leaders of the deadly insurrection has confirmed that three Republican members of
Congress actively participated in planning the attack: Paul Gosar, Andy Biggs, and Mo Brooks.

�This news comes after QAnon Republican Lauren Boebert was caught live-tweeting Speaker Pelosi's
location during the attack to help the mob find her.
The 14th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution clearly states that anyone who "engaged in insurrection or
rebellion" may not serve in Congress. These seditionists must resign or be expelled immediately, before they
get anyone else killed.
This is starting to get scary, very scary.

Linda Christiansen: weekly update. Wednesday January 6, 2021 was a shameful day in USA history.
A day when:
• The President should have been concerned about COVID19 and over 350,000 American deaths along
with the recent upsurge of 3,000 deaths per day… BUT INSTEAD. • the President was still obsessed with
the results of our legitimate election
• after weeks of his false rants and tweets, the President held a “rally” for his supporters on the day the
electoral votes were counted and approved
• the President’s rally cries incited his supporters to march on the Capitol to stop the verification of the
electoral votes which gave the Presidency to Joe Biden
• he told them to: “We never give up, we will never concede,”
• his supporters once again became home-grown infidels who challenged our democracy as they did in
Charlottesville 3 years ago
• his rally turned into an insurgence on the Capitol and threatened our democratic government
• by Thursday January 7, 2021 - 5 people would be dead and the Capitol building damaged and our
democracy in danger
The lessons for us are:
• to ask ourselves; “Is this who we are?”
• to stay vigilant
• to prevent history from repeating itself (remember Hitler’s brown shirts &amp; the Hitler youth)
• to hold peaceful demonstrations
• and most of all to keep voting
Here’s more from Heather Cox Richardson:

Today the FBI finally briefed the public on the events of January 6. Contradicting reports that said there
was no sign of trouble in advance, an FBI official said that on Tuesday, the bureau warned that extremists
were going to muster in Washington, D.C., to launch a “war.” Today, the bureau announced 160 case files
on the insurrection and said this was just the beginning. Acting U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia
Michael Sherwin said people will be shocked about some of the things that happened inside the Capitol.
He also said the Department of Justice is considering filing charges of sedition against some of the riot’s
participants.

�A separate briefing for House Democratic committee chairs seemed to leave them shaken by the scope of
the insurgency. “This was not a peaceful protest that got out of hand,” they said in a statement. “This was
an attempted coup to derail our Constitutional process and intimidate our duly elected leaders through
violence.” “[W]e have grave concerns about ongoing and violent threats to our democracy. It is clear that
more must be done to preempt, penetrate, and prevent deadly and seditious assaults by domestic violent
extremists in the days ahead.”
Very, very scary. The Capitol building is bulging with hundreds of National Guard troops who slept on the
floors of the corridors last night. They slept where they lay, in full battle dress including helmets, on the
cold, hard floor. I was thrilled to see them there. I’m hoping that on Inauguration Day (6 days from now),
more National Guard will be standing shoulder to shoulder around the entire perimeter of the Capitol with their guns. I would be just as happy to see Joe Biden safely Inaugurated in his own living room. Its
the ceremony itself, not the pomp.

���The numbers are not good. In the US we’ve reached 23.1M cases and for the second day in a row, the
death rate was at over 4,000. Now I know we left any real feelings about the numbers far behind us. We
mouth the words: thats terrible, unthinkable, unimaginable, but we passed shock and horror for the virus
months ago. We have descended into what is. The numbers are always alarming, people’s careless
behavior is no longer new and shocking and the large core of virus unbelievers is just something we no
longer think about. Our world has come down to just us - how do I keep myself and my spouse safe and
how do I live my small quiet life and still find some joy in each day.
Soon it will be a year since I began writing this blog. So far its been 10 months I could never have
imagined. Some days it is just keeping moving, one foot after the other. And as if the Pandemic wasn’t

�more than I could deal with, we’ve had the added stress of the present administration culminating in a
coup attempt. What will we tell our grandchildren? Because, all the while, the climate crisis is
accelerating. That is another dark and distressing thought. Here’s an update from the New York Times:

The new variants are scary. Scientists are still learning about new versions of the coronavirus, including
variants that emerged in Britain, South Africa and Brazil. The evidence so far indicates that they “are
much more infectious than the Italian strain, which has been circulating here since February. That’s a
game changer.
Behavior that may once have been only moderately risky — say, airplane travel — may now be more so.
The variants seem to be one reason cases worldwide are spiking. Things are likely to get worse before they
get better. The virus is spreading so rapidly that hospitals are struggling to keep up. About 130,000
Americans are hospitalized with Covid symptoms, more than double the number two months ago. The
strain on hospitals raises the possibility that many patients will not receive the best available treatments.
Los Angeles has recently had to ration oxygen. And Esteban Trejo, an executive at a company in El Paso,
Texas, that provides oxygen to temporary hospitals, told Kaiser Health News, “It’s been nuts, absolutely
nuts.”
Yesterday, while we were watching, Oliver helped his mother put on his new sandals, he then put his sun
hat on with the chinstrap under his chin and he walked to the front door and said a long sentence which
we took to mean: its time to go to daycare Mummy. And then. For the first time, he said ‘Mimi ‘ to me. He
attempted Grandad, but that wasn’t too clear. If I answer the FaceTime call, he points to the space beside
me and asks (in Oliver speak) where’s Grandad?

�That’s it for today. The furnace man is coming soon, so I have to get ready. Be safe, be careful and always
be kind and considerate.

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                    <text>Day 308

by windoworks

Where to start? Where to start? No, really, where to start? First of all, is Trump suffering remorse?

The New York Times. President Trump on Tuesday showed no contrition or regret for instigating the mob
that stormed the Capitol and threatened the lives of members of Congress and his vice president, saying
that his remarks to a rally beforehand were “totally appropriate” and that the effort by Congress to
impeach and convict him was “causing tremendous anger.”
Uh huh. Well you didn’t expect anything else, did you?
Remember I told you the FBI and other assistants were looking for participants in last Wednesday’s coup
attempt?

��See? Someone is always watching and recording. I wonder how long it will take until this man is
identified? And here’s what the FBI is doing.

Washington Post: Justice Dept., FBI have created a sedition and conspiracy task force to pursue charges
against Capitol rioters. The investigation includes counterterrorism facets.
And from CNN

Officials have opened more than 170 subject files and charged over 70 cases in their expansive
investigation into the Capitol riot, according to yesterday's stunning Justice Department news conference.
The acting US attorney in Washington said the scope of the crimes is "mind-blowing" and could include
charges of sedition and conspiracy -- serious crimes that could result in up to 20 years in prison. Other
officials described rioters engaging in open-handed combat with police officers and confirmed there were
pipe bombs planted outside Republican and Democratic headquarters. New threats of terrorism are also
rolling in ahead of Joe Biden's inauguration, including a plot described by a member of Congress in which
thousands of armed extremists would surround the Capitol and prevent Democrats from entering.
Meanwhile, YouTube has suspended President Trump's channel, the latest social media company to
discipline the President for a post it said had incited violence.
Security has ramped up at the Capitol but Republicans aren’t happy. Mask wearing is mandated with a
hefty fine for non compliance and there are new metal detectors installed outside the entrances to the
House and Senate floors. Why? Because so many Republicans keep guns in their offices. Who knew that?
This is a firsthand account from Wednesday:

NPR
Rep. Norma Torres, D-Calif., shared a harrowing account of her experience at the U.S. Capitol last week,
as she fled a violent mob of pro-Trump extremists who breached the building.
"I was 1 of 12 trapped in the House gallery. I heard the shot being fired. I saw the smoke from the tear gas
having been deployed," she recounted during a House rules committee meeting Tuesday.
"I was in the last group to be evacuated. We ran down the halls, stairs near a mob that was being held on
the ground at gunpoint. I sheltered for four to five hours in a room that was packed shoulder-to-shoulder
with people."
She added: "While running for my life, I answered my phone to my son Christopher," she described,
emotionally. "The call lasted 27 seconds. All I could say, 'Sweetheart, I'm OK. I'm running for my life,' and
I hung up."
There were other rooms with members packed in together sheltering. And because a large number of
Republican House and Senate members ascribe to the fake news syndrome, many in these close quarters
were not masked. As of yesterday evening, 3 Democratic House members who were part of the close

�quarters, have tested positive for Covid. I think every Republican member who argued that the election
results were fraudulent should be mandatorily tested to see who is a superspreader. Then they should have
to apologize to all the members whose health was endangered.
Can I just say - there’s not much “I’m sorry, I was wrong” going on, is there? Seems like this would be a
good time for it. And in that vein:

Move On
In shocking new reports, we are learning that QAnon-supporting Congresswoman Lauren Boebert livetweeted House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's location and movements during the white supremacist attack on
Capitol Hill last week, in what appears to have been an effort to help the racist mob locate the speaker.
The Republicans like Boebert, Ted Cruz, and Josh Hawley, who helped to motivate this deadly white
supremacist mob to invade the Capitol, plant explosive devices, and murder a police officer, must be
condemned, held accountable, and removed from office.

Last night, the House voted to apply the 25th Amendment to Trump, specifying that he was no longer fit
or able to govern. Of course that has to be applied by the Vice President and he said no. So now the next

�move by the House is to move to impeach Trump today. And it appears that some Republican Senators are
softening their stance:

CNN: Impeachment
The House is set to vote today to impeach President Trump for the second time. The single article of
impeachment charges Trump with "incitement of insurrection" following last week's Capitol breach. With
the House's Democratic majority and the votes of at least five Republican members who have said they
will join the impeachment effort, the measure is certain to pass. That will make Trump the first US
President to be impeached twice. Just like before, the article will then move to the Senate. Senate Majority
Leader Mitch McConnell has so far been silent on its prospects in his chamber, but he has indicated he
believes impeaching Trump will make it easier to rid the Republican Party of his influence. The House
also voted last night to approve a resolution calling for Trump to be removed from office through the 25th
Amendment, but Vice President Mike Pence, whose power is needed for such a move, has made it clear he
will not invoke it.
Apparently there is a way to skirt around the Senate to impeach and we are all agog to see if that
despicable person in the Presidents House is actually removed. As Crooked Media stays: A Clear and
President Danger.

While Trump and the nearly-murdered Vice President Mike Pence were reconciling in the Oval Office on
Monday night, Capitol Police were briefing House Democrats on three separate potential attacks that
extremists have been plotting for the coming days, including one plot to surround the Capitol and
assassinate lawmakers. (Having lost access to most social media, some extremists have shifted over to the
encrypted Telegram app to organize.) Security officials reminded Democrats that the purchase of a
bulletproof vest is a “reimbursable expense,” and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy reportedly
warned GOP members not to verbally attack colleagues who vote for impeachment because it could put
their lives at risk.
The president who already incited one armed insurrection has threatened further violence, GOP
lawmakers have refused to rescind the voter fraud lies fueling it all, and Democrats have been exposed to a
deadly virus by their cruel colleagues. The Republican Party is profoundly broken and a stark threat to the
country; there’s no path to healing without clear-eyed recognition of that fact.
And in the midst of all this, the virus is spiraling out of control, not only in the US but in other countries
across the world.

CNN: The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has announced it will require a negative Covid19 test from all air passengers entering the United States starting January 26. The measure is intended to
curb rising coronavirus numbers, which seem to be setting new records every day. The US yesterday
recorded more than 4,300 coronavirus deaths -- a new daily high. Things are so bad in Ontario, Canada,

�the province is under a stay-at-home order, and officials have warned of a total collapse of health care
systems. Japan has increased its state of emergency to seven more regions, and Ireland now has the world's
highest Covid-19 rate. How did it happen? Irish health officials say the seasonality of the virus, plus
holiday gatherings, have led to inconceivable numbers of cases and deaths.
We’re all wondering if the vaccine will make a difference to our lives. From Vox:

The best way to set realistic expectations around what life will look like in 2021 is to think of it in three
stages. Stage 1 is what you can safely do once you and your close friends or family are vaccinated. Stage 2
is what you can safely do once your city or state has reached herd immunity, where enough people are
protected against infection that the virus can’t easily spark new outbreaks. Stage 3 is what you can do once
herd immunity is reached internationally. (Note that there’s a good chance we won’t reach that last stage
in 2021.)
A lot will depend on the answer to a crucial open question: Are the vaccines only good at preventing
symptomatic disease, or are they also good at preventing infection and transmission?
“One can imagine a scenario where you are vaccinated and you develop a protective immune response.
You will not get sick, you will not die, but the virus will still be able to grow in your nose and transmit to
other people,” said Barry Bloom, a professor of immunology and infectious diseases at Harvard.
Bloom and other experts are optimistic that the vaccines help reduce infection and transmission, but
nobody knows by how much. “We just need more data on transmission,” he said. “Hopefully it will come
out of the trials in a couple of months.”
So here we are - good news, bad news, scary news, hopeful news. Just another day in the Pandemic.
Yesterday we did a virtual tour of the house with the International Moving Company. Apparently we can
fit everything we want to take with us into our container - and Craig has to stop packing boxes now
please. The packers will do that - even my clothes if I wish it! That’s definitely in the good news category.
Okay just enough space left for Oliver

��Yesterday during FaceTime, he got a small star sticker stuck on his hand, then on his finger, then on his
tongue and actually we didn’t see where it went next, we were laughing so hard. He is so unintentionally
funny and he never seems insulted by us laughing.
Tomorrow then.

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                    <text>Day 307
by windoworks
Just because you can, doesn’t mean you should.

Remember ‘all your chickens coming home to roost’? If you listen, you can hear the clucking as they
waddle in. And among those chickens is an impressive number of big money funders. These big money
groups, worried about their clients and customers opinions, have suspended all funding to Trump and
many of the most complicit Republicans. That reminds me of the saying ‘hit them where it hurts - the hip
pocket’. In a real blow to Trump’s hip pocket, the PGA 2022 Golf Championship has been removed from
Trump’s Bedminster Golf Club. Oh that’s gotta hurt!
The House Democrats have introduced an Article of Impeachment, charging Trump with ‘incitement of
an insurrection’. And interestingly, Trump is not forming a strong defense team. Nancy Pelosi has given
Mike Pence today to invoke Amendment 25 and if (as we all suspect) he doesn’t do this, then tomorrow
the Impeachment will be voted forward from the House. I don’t think Trump can argue against this.
Unfortunately, there is strong and irrefutable evidence of him inciting the gathering to insurrection and
saying, plainly out loud: I will walk with you. Which he didn’t. He scurried back to the White House and
watched it all unfold on TV, chortling with glee and rubbing his hands together in excitement.

�But, there’s always a morning after. A moment in which realization hits and the participators wonder if
they made a mistake, could they be held accountable, and how long will that jail sentence actually be.
And here’s what everyone forgets - the internet is a great tool for finding things and people.

NPR
The riot at the Capitol appeared to be almost all chaos and anarchy. But as private researchers and
ordinary individuals scrutinized online video and photos, they identified some of those who took part and
assisted law enforcement.
John Scott-Railton from Citizen Lab at the University of Toronto focused on individuals who seemed to
have a real purpose amid the mob — like two men who were spotted with plastic handcuffs that could be
used to detain people or take them hostage.
"I kept finding footage of men wearing body armor, communicating with each other and moving with
purpose," Scott-Railton told NPR. "It made me think there were people in there who had specific ideas of
what they wanted to accomplish and had come prepared to execute on them."
As he gathered clues, Scott-Railton put out calls for help to people he already knew, as well as strangers,
creating a spontaneous army of online sleuths that numbers in the hundreds, if not the thousands.
Here’s an amusing follow up to this: one of the men Scott Railton identified as holding plastic handcuffs,
told the FBI (and he said this with a straight face) ‘Oh I just saw these lying on the ground and I picked
them up and then I forgot I was holding them’. Yes, and the moon really is made of green cheese. And
here’s how easy it is to identify perpetrators:

NPR: One of the men holding the handcuffs was photographed in the Senate chamber wearing a combat
helmet and body armor, which included a number of military insignias and the Texas state flag.
Scott-Railton and his informal team of volunteers went to work and soon found a stream of social media
that identified the man as retired Air Force Lt. Col. Larry Brock from Texas.
The other man with the handcuffs — as well as an apparent can of tear gas — turned up in a photo as he
was hopping over a rail. He had gone to great lengths to disguise himself, dressed head-to-toe in black
camouflage. He had a black face scarf and gloves, as well as a black baseball cap that read "Black Rifle
Coffee."
Initially, it looked like a challenging case, Scott-Railton said. But he and his helpers found a photo of the
man earlier in the day, standing next to a woman in a plaid shirt with a military vest. That led to an even
earlier video at the Washington Grand Hyatt Hotel, where the man was in the same gear, with the same
woman — but with his face uncovered.
At that point, he was traced to his social media posts and identified as Eric Munchel from Tennessee.
"Some of the pictures were pretty disturbing, including a shot of him holding a short barreled shotgun up

�in the air mugging in front of a television showing President Trump," Scott-Railton said. "There were
some very sharp-eyed people on Twitter who really helped surface that identity."
Hot damn! You mean all those FBI type TV shows are actually accurate? There are computer nerds out
there who can comb through hours of footage and find criminals and terrorists? Of course, its true people!
Someone is always looking and filming and posting online. Nothing is hidden any more.

Crooked Media: Two Black Capitol Police officers described enduring racist abuse during last week’s
attack on the Capitol, and detailed how police leadership left them high and dry. One officer learned that
violence was imminent not from his bosses, who hadn’t instructed police to bring gear like gas masks, but
from an Instagram screenshot texted to him by a friend. A veteran officer said, “that was a heavily trained
group of militia terrorists that attacked us,” describing the rioters with two-way radios and bear spray in
the crowd of clownish doofuses, and said rioters called him the n-word repeatedly. The outgoing Capitol
Police chief, for his part, has blamed the House and Senate Sergeants at Arms (who have resigned under
pressure from lawmakers), for repeatedly rejecting his requests to put the DC National Guard on standby.
Ah, the finger pointing begins. And the morning after sick realization sets in.

There is a gathering groundswell of outrage and anger. Most of America feels strongly that there must be
consequences. From an opinion piece by Hilary Rodham Clinton:

�Removing Trump from office is essential, and I believe he should be impeached. Members of Congress
who joined him in subverting our democracy should resign, and those who conspired with the domestic
terrorists should be expelled immediately. But that alone won’t remove white supremacy and extremism
from America. There are changes elected leaders should pursue immediately, including advocating new
criminal laws at the state and federal levels that hold white supremacists accountable and tracking the
activities of extremists such as those who breached the Capitol.
And my favorite: Crooked Media: A new ABC News/Ipsos poll found that 56 percent of Americans think

Trump should be removed from office—an unprecedented level of public support this early in the
impeachment process—probably because no president has ever incited a mob to murder Congress. The
attack on the Capitol has proven to be one of those rare events that becomes more frightening with time:
We now know that the mob was just moments away from barging into an unsecured Senate chamber with
lawmakers still present, and that a lone Capitol Police officer, Eugene Goodman, thwarted catastrophe by
antagonizing the rioters and leading them away from the Senate entrance.
From Maureen Dowd, an excerpt from a New York Times op-ed:

In New York, Donald Trump was a corrupt Joker who took cudgels to the historic friezes on Bonwit
Teller. In Washington, he became something evil. He took cudgels to history itself, to our institutions,
decency and democracy. He draped his autocratic behavior in the American flag. Surrounded by Lincoln,
Washington, Jefferson, F.D.R., M.L.K. and monuments to our war dead, this coward whipped up a horde
of conspiracists, white supremacists, neo-Nazis and gullible acolytes to try to steal an election for him. He
said he would march to the Capitol with them, but he didn’t, of course. He watched his insurrection on
TV, like the bum that he is.
So, we ask ourselves, is that it? Is that the last gasp by an outgoing and discredited “President” ? Lets face
it, he never really was President, was he? He did win the title but he never really understood what it stood
for. But the answer to that first question, is apparently, no, it is not it.

Crooked Media: • An FBI bulletin warned that pro-Trump extremists are planning “armed protests” (we
would’ve chosen a different phrase) at all 50 state capitols from January 16-20, and at the U.S. Capitol from
January 17-20. State capitals have stepped up security, and DC Mayor Muriel Bowser has called on DHS
officials to implement heightened Inauguration security measures earlier. Parler, the app where many of
those extremists organize violence and misspell common words, has been functionally dismantled after
Amazon, Apple, and Google all kicked it off of their platforms.
And another idea that is gaining traction and one I would get behind happily is: lets rename the White
House. Yeah? The more you think about it, the more inappropriate it seems. What about a national

�competition to rename it? I’ve heard The President’s Residence suggested but that seems a bit twee. Any
ideas?
Yesterday (and this is big news) I went online and laboriously filled out two forms to schedule
appointments for our first Covid vaccinations. I’ve heard anti-vaxxers refuse to be vaccinated because they
believe (wait for it) that it is a plan to microchip us all, because the GPA in everybody’s cell phones wasn’t
intrusive enough. Anyway, Craig and I will be vaccinated at the Kent County Health Department on Feb
8. Not back to back because in the time it took to fill out the second form, the next 12 appointments after
mine had already been taken. Well at least I got us on the same day, and I believe its free. You have to
wait for 15 minutes after the shot in case you have an allergic reaction and need medical assistance.
Yesterday the US reached a total of 22.7M or 23.1M covid cases depending on the analysis you follow.
Deaths have reached approximately 385,000, and the experts are saying January is dreadful but February
may be worse. In China they are locking down more cities as new cases are found. I hear you wailing: will
this ever end? And the answer is yes, but not in the way you are hoping. And yes, the immediate future,
even with the vaccine rollout does include masks and hand washing and physical distancing.
Some days are 3 Oliver photo days:

�Water play at

�daycare

�Because I
can.

�Bike riding is serious business

�When I first began this daily dairy, I thought that would be the daily main topic. I never imagined the
election would eclipse the dreadful virus news almost completely. In many ways I am not surprised at this
turn of events by Trump. He showed his lack of character and moral compass deficiency during the 2016
election campaign. I never really understood his appeal - but now I do. He appeals to our basest racist
selves. He offers a strengthening and increasing of White America and there are very many who welcome
this. Shame on him and shame on those who support him, especially the large number of Representatives
and Senators who argued against certifying the electoral votes. That’s a really deep concern we should all
be worried about because that speaks to the overthrow of the democracy.
Beyond here lie monsters.

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                    <text>Day 306
by windoworks

��We have our names down for vaccinations in various places, but I have no idea when or if it will happen.
Also,there are no current statistics for today because the numbers aren’t counted on Sundays. I know, I
know. I guess if you are keeping the case and death count for the government, they let you have Sundays
off. What? The answer is - I have NO idea why they can’t publish the statistics every day, regardless of
what day of the week it is. So what the collectors do instead, is lump Sunday and Mondays numbers
together to scare the hell out of you until you remember those numbers are for 2 days together.
In Boston, the numbers have gone below the red warning line for admissions and available ICU beds. I
suspect this is the case around much of the country. Here in Michigan, there is no change to the current
restrictions and the weather is cold, so those igloos and tiny greenhouses outside cafes and restaurants are
damned cold. Not that Craig and I will be sitting in one anyway. On Friday Dr Khaldun said our numbers
were plateauing out and beginning to slightly rise again. So,no real good news.

On the ever present Trump front:

News &amp; Guts: While Colin Powell says he has voted for Republicans and Democrats over his lifetime, the
former Secretary of State has been a member of the Republican party since 1995. But now, 26 years later,
he says: “I can no longer call myself a fellow Republican. I’m not a fellow of anything right now.”

�He says seeing many Republicans cozy up to Donald Trump over the last four years has caused him to
leave the party.
“I don’t know how he was able to attract all these people. They should have known better. But they were
so taken by their political standing and none of them wanted to put themselves at political risk, they
would not stand up and tell the truth or stand up and criticize him or criticize others and that’s what we
need. We need people who will speak the truth…are here for our fellow citizens, they are here for our
country, they are not here to simply be re-elected again.”
Now here’s something you don’t see every day:

WASHINGTON (AP) — In a highly unusual move, American diplomats have drafted two cables
condemning President Donald Trump’s incitement of the deadly assault on the Capitol and calling for
administration officials to possibly support invoking the 25th Amendment to remove him from office.
Using what is known as the State Department’s “dissent channel,” career foreign and civil service officers
said they fear last Wednesday’s siege may badly undermine U.S. credibility to promote and defend
democratic values abroad.
“Failing to publicly hold the president to account would further damage our democracy and our ability to
effectively accomplish our foreign policy goals abroad,” according to the second of the two cables, which
were circulated among diplomats late last week and then sent to State Department leadership.
Sadly the US has already been renamed The Banana Republic by some gleeful leaders of other developing
countries. Certainly leaders in these countries have been extremely vocal about the US no longer having
the right to compel them to be Democratic. In 4 years, our standing as a world leader has slid further and
further down. Trump has denigrated our international standing, as well as done his best to switch us from
a democracy to a dictatorship. But its as though last Wednesday’s catastrophic event has shaken some of
America awake.

Republican members of Congress who voted against certifying Joe Biden’s presidential victory, even after
a mob broke into the Capitol, are being denounced by critics in their home districts who demand that
they resign or be ousted.
Protesters, newspaper editorial boards and local-level Democrats have urged the lawmakers to step down
or for their colleagues to kick them out. The House and Senate can remove members with a two-thirds
vote or censure or reprimand with a majority.
Rep. Madison Cawthorn “needs to be held accountable for his seditious behavior and for the consequences
resulting from said behavior,” a group of Democratic officials wrote in a letter asking House Speaker
Nancy Pelosi to expel the North Carolina freshman who took his oath of office on Jan. 3.
In St. Louis on Saturday, several hundred people protested against Sen. Josh Hawley, the first-term
Missouri Republican who led efforts in the Senate to overturn Biden’s election. The protestors painted
“RESIGN HAWLEY” in large yellow letters in the middle of the street.

�A caravan of about 40 cars circled Sen. Ron Johnson’s office in Madison, Wisconsin, urging him to resign.
Johnson initially supported Trump’s baseless claims of election fraud, but after the riot, he voted in favor
of Biden’s win. Johnson condemned the violence but did not back off voter fraud allegations.
The editorial boards of two of Wisconsin’s biggest newspapers called for Johnson to resign, joining with
editorials published across the country that targeted GOP politicians.
I think the chickens are coming home to roost. This expression is similar to "what goes around, comes

around" and basically means that the consequences of one's evil actions catch up in a negative way. The
idea that a wrongful curse comes back to the one who curses as a "bird returns to its nest" dates back to the
days of antiquity. However, it wasn't until the 19th Century that Robert Southey wrote that "curses are
like a young chicken: they always come home to roost." Since then, the idea of evil men creating returns
to their own door has been encapsulated in this expression. Somewhere on Google.
I read quite a long article about rioters being denied boarding their flights home. They were put on a ‘no
fly’ list. One man begged the authorities to let him go because it was ‘just fun’. Another man said, as he lay
spreadeagled on the ground (and I’m just going to put his words here, they are breathtaking in their
ingrained racism) ‘You can’t do this to me. I’m not black’. And there you have it. A huge portion of White
America adheres to this deeply ingrained belief. If the rioters had been black, most of them would have
been beaten, arrested and killed. Last Wednesday was a stunning display of White Privilege. It is a stain
on American society broadcast around the world. It will never be forgotten and it can never be wiped
away, much as the Trump stench stays on you forever.
During the Black Lives Matter demonstrations last year, there were times when their justifiable anger
spilled over into riotous acts. We could talk about many things in these riots, but I don’t remember blood
and feces being smeared on walls or statues. This did happen last Wednesday. This was (to the best of my
knowledge) the actions of middle class, well off, white people, expressing their contempt for the
Constitution and the rule of law. At least one rioter/insurrectionist flew to Washington in their private jet.
Many, many others flew on planes and shouted at perceived Liberals during their flights. Flight crew
asked for those passengers to be banned - hence the no fly list consequences.
Did they all think they could do this and either (a) the election would be overturned and Trump, their
adored leader would remain in place for not only 4 more years but for ever, if he wanted, or (b) they
would rampage through the building, scaring the shit out of everyone, perhaps take a few hostages or kill
Nancy Pelosi or Mike Pence and then go home again to their everyday lives? Now, these people had
disposable income and sure, some of them are trust fund babies, but the CEOs and the state representatives
MUST have known there’d be consequences. They can’t have been that stupid - or wait, maybe White
Privilege is stupid. Truly, anyone who thinks that the color of a person’s skin indicates their intelligence
quota is obviously not very smart themselves.

�And I just want to say, I was born in New Zealand and I am proud of my heritage but I will never, ever be
a Kiwi. The kiwi is the national bird of New Zealand in much the same way the emu is the national bird of
Australia. No one ever refers to Australians as Emus or Kangaroos which is their national animal. As I get
older, I find Kiwi to be a derogatory term. I am not comparable to a large, nocturnal, flightless bird, just as
Australians are not comparable to a very large flightless bird either.
Trump is facing a second impeachment or an application of the 25th Amendment, or both. The end game
is to strip him of any right to run for office again, anywhere. Of course, he might also go to jail - the
possibilities are endless. Oh thats right. If its jail, he’ll be in there with such a lot of his fans. Won’t that be
fun?
So Oliver.

��So while I was touring the town of Amalfi, Craig went on a hike through the lemon groves.

High above Amalfi. Thats our ship anchored
offshore.

�Ruins from a mining
operation

��The

�group.

�Waterfall

Under the lemon
trees.

�Lemon groves climbing up the hillsides.
And just to make you laugh:

�Stay safe, stay well and above all, stay kind.

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                    <text>Day 305
by windoworks
I am running out of words, which if you know me, is a most unlikely scenario. Each day brings new
revelations. Remember how I told you that people were sitting in front of stacks of computers, identifying
the terrorists, face by face? They’re working 24/7 and each successful identification leads to the next, and
so on. In this age and during this pandemic, IT is all. You can’t hide.
Now we are beginning to get timelines of the day with all the mistakes and poor preparation exposed. I
think the overriding factor was that no one could imagine this happening. And frankly, its still beyond my
imagination. The phrase ‘never in my wildest dreams’ has passed my lips multiple times in the last almost
10 months. My life has assumed a surreal quality, populated by fear, grief and overriding anger.
First up, I offer Heather Cox Richardson’s take. If you like her writing, she posts on FaceBook and you can
join her page.

January 8, 2021 (Friday)
More information continues to emerge about the events of Wednesday. They point to a broader
conspiracy than it first appeared. Calls for Trump’s removal from office are growing. The Republican Party
is tearing apart. Power in the nation is shifting almost by the minute.
More footage from inside the attack on the Capitol is coming out and it is horrific. Blood on statues and
feces spread through the building are vile; mob attacks on police officers are bone-chilling.
Reuters photographer Jim Bourg, who was inside the building, told reporters he overheard three rioters in
“Make America Great Again” caps plotting to find Vice President Mike Pence and hang him as a “traitor”;
other insurrectionists were shouting the same. Pictures have emerged of one of the rioters in military gear
carrying flex cuffs—handcuffs made of zip ties—suggesting he was planning to take prisoners. Two
lawmakers have suggested the rioters knew how to find obscure offices.New scrutiny of Trump’s “Stop the
Steal” rally before the attack shows Trump’s lawyer Rudy Giuliani, Representative Mo Brooks (R-AL),
Don Jr., and Trump himself urging the crowd to go to the Capitol and fight. Trump warned that Pence
was not doing what he needed to. Trump promised to lead them to the Capitol himself.
Even as lawmakers were under siege, both Trump and his lawyer Rudy Giuliani were making phone calls
to brand-new Senator Tommy Tuberville (R-AL) urging him to slow down the electoral count.Trump has
continued to agitate his followers, and today began to call for more resistance.
Here’s the irony. Trump marched up and down, behind 7 feet high sheets of bulletproof glass, raging and
exhorting his rabid followers to march with him to the Congress building. But did he march with them?

�No he scuttled back to the safe haven of the White House (entirely surrounded by a concrete fence and
guards with dogs) and watched it all on TV.
I think the danger here is of saying well that happened, now lets get back to normal life. More and more
Americans are saying ‘there have to be consequences’ - and there have to be serious consequences for
Trump as the fomenter. The saddest thing for me yesterday was to watch clips of world leaders
commenting on the attempted insurrection. And, of course, it isn’t over. The serious domestic terrorists in
the group are just getting started. Now I know every incoming President deserves that special
Inauguration Day with parades and dinners and balls with everyone eager to see what gown the new First
Lady will be wearing. But I am worried that Trump has sent a message to these people by saying he will
not attend and Mike Pence will. As Trump has already thrown Pence under the bus, the terrorists may
believe they have carte blanche to kidnap and kill as many notables as possible. They already planned to
hang Mike Pence last Wednesday.

NPR: The violence at the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday was unprecedented in modern U.S. history — but
some pro-Trump extremists are promising it was just a taste of things to come. "Many of Us will return on
January 19, 2021, carrying Our weapons, in support of Our nation's resolve, towhich [sic] the world will
never forget!!!" one person wrote on Parler, a site friendly to right-wing extremists. "We will come in
numbers that no standing army or police agency can match."
Perhaps the leading force for the terrorists/insurrectionists is QAnon. Who are they? Here’s an excerpt
from an article:

The Atlantic
The QAnon conspiracy-theory coalition was built around President Donald Trump: Believers allege that a
group of elites, a part of the “deep state,” are secretly torturing children—and Trump is working to stop
them. Although the conspiracy theory has evolved beyond its original ideas, the president has remained
close to the movement, and even praised its supporters. The insurrectionists who stormed the U.S. Capitol
this week took part in an attack on American democracy. They also took part in a violent expression of
conspiracism. What people all over the world saw and heard out of Washington, D.C., on Wednesday was
a direct echo of what has been encountered in cities all over America. It was always plain that the growing
QAnon movement would lead to more violence, and it came as no surprise to see so many QAnon
believers in the mob. QAnon is, at its core, a pro-Trump delusion. Its disciples worship him as a savior
figure, and cling to a prophecy that foretells a bloody political revolution that will give way to a mass
spiritual awakening.
QAnon isn’t merely a dangerous conspiracy theory. We are witnessing the birth of a new religion, one
that will continue to fixate on Trump when he leaves office. And, as was made terrifyingly clear this
week, we are likely closer to the beginning of its story than the end.

�Though they failed to derail the certification of Electoral College votes and keep their savior in office, the
worldview of believers is flexible, broad, and not going anywhere. On Instagram, QAnon talking points
are used by wellness influencers, multilevel-marketing queenpins, and parenting bloggers who believe
that the COVID-19 vaccine will be used as a tool of social control.
I have heard ( and this may be a total fabrication) that QAnon was begun by two queer friends as a bit of a
joke. But here’s what is actually known, and if you say ‘don’t be stupid, Pamela! No one could ever believe
that!’ Look back at last Wednesday. If you believe that God sent Trump as a prophet and a leader (deeply
flawed, but that’s okay) then it is just a hop, step and a jump to QAnon. And no matter what anyone says,
like true cult followers, you can’t shake their beliefs. Remember Jonestown, where 909 true believers men, women and children died, most by drinking a soft drink laced with potassium cyanide? You couldn’t
shake their beliefs either.

QAnon is a disproven and discredited far-right conspiracy theory alleging that a cabal of Satanworshipping cannibalistic pedophiles is running a global child sex-trafficking ring and plotting against US
president Donald Trump, who is fighting the cabal. QAnon also commonly asserts that Trump is planning
a day of reckoning known as the "Storm", when thousands of members of the cabal will be arrested.No
part of the conspiracy claim is based on facts. QAnon supporters have accused many liberal Hollywood
actors, Democratic politicians, and high-ranking government officials of being members of the cabal. They
have also claimed that Trump feigned conspiracy with Russians to enlist Robert Mueller to join him in
exposing the sex trafficking ring and preventing a coup d'état by Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, and
George Soros. The QAnon conspiracy theories have been amplified by Russian state-backed troll accounts
on social media, as well as Russian state-backed traditional media. Wikipedia
Will Trump be impeached? I think if he isn’t impeached there will no longer be consequences for
appalling behavior. CBS: Mr. Trump continues to believe any impeachment talk is strictly partisan; top

outside advisers keep telling him it not partisan, but institutional. Congress was under attack this week,
and some Republicans feel it's necessary to push back with impeachment vote – for now and for history.
He’s also wondering about pardoning himself (no one has ever done that before) and VP Pence is looking
to do damage control on his own reputation. And, and this is the best bit, manufacturers have removed
themselves from the Trump brand. Would now be a good time to tell everyone - you can never, ever wash
the Trump stench off. It dies with you.
Yesterday Craig completely cleaned out his office on the Allendale campus. It was bittersweet and he took
2 photos. My window, propped against the glass windows has been donated to the Honors College and
will be properly hung by the Art Department.

��Oliver time

�Eating a cookie.

�Just a reminder than in all this crazy, this is still happening.

Today, I’ll leave you with this:

��</text>
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                    <text>Day 304. Saturday January 9. 176 sleeps to go.
by windoworks
In endless photographs, videos and selfies, America has shown its hidden face to the world. The face that
is normally never looked at, the underbelly. Not the glitzy, make believe world of Hollywood, not the
seamy face of crime bosses and not the face of the high flying coterie of Wall Street. No, this is the true
underbelly of America. These are not struggling people living hand to mouth in trailer parks, and very few
of these people are Latino, or Black or Brown. No, these are people with enough money. Enough money to
travel to D.C. Enough money to buy guns and military style clothing. Enough money to look well fed and
warmly clothed. And enough money to be able to leave their job temporarily and travel to D.C. to cheer
Trump on and then walk willingly to the Capitol Building willing to show the elected officials a thing or
two.
Did they consider, in their arrogance, that there would be consequences? No of course not. Why? Because
where are the consequences for Trump and the rabid Republicans who are so ready and able to turn this
country into a fascist dictatorship. Politicians who refreshed their Oath of Allegiance less than a week
ago.
But, eventually, consequences begin to arrive. 5 people died which changes the charges that are being
brought against the rioters/domestic terrorists. People who take part in these actions always forget that
they are being watched. Media, that wonderful tool is not only used by individuals, its used by the FBI,
Homeland Security, the CIA, federal police, state police and many other organizations unnamed. Already I
have seen consequences at play. The person in charge of the Capitol Police is either resigning or fired.
Senator Josh Hawley who pumped a fist at the rioting crowd and then raised groundless objections to the
electoral votes, has lost his book contract with Simon &amp; Schuster. I think he should lose his Senate seat
next. I have seen entertaining photos of terrorists arrested. Remember the man who broke into Nancy
Pelosi’s office and put his feet on her desk and stole some of her mail? He went home and shaved his beard
off but they still found him and arrested him. Remember the man who stole the podium and
photographed himself walking out with it under his arm? Yep, arrested and look! He put it on eBay!

�He’s asking $5000

�But deeper and darker than this, are all the true domestic terrorists at the heart of this, aided and abetted
by Trump and a large portion of Republicans. Trump may have agreed to a smooth transition but he will
never admit that he lost. And here’s this from Washington Post:

FBI looks into whether some Capitol rioters intended to harm lawmakers or take hostages
Investigators are trying to determine whether some who stormed the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday intended
to do more than disrupt the certification of President-elect Joe Biden’s victory. Authorities are particularly
interested in images of people carrying zip ties, a plastic version of handcuffs, and at least one man was
arrested while allegedly carrying a pistol on the Capitol grounds. (I’ve seen the photos)
From Crooked Media: Then there are the law-enforcement officers who simply participated. Some offduty cops and military members among the rioters flashed their badges as they stormed into the building,
and one Capitol Police officer reportedly gave directions to rioters looking for Chuck Schumer’s office.
Wednesday’s attack could have ended infinitely worse: Mob members carried zip ties with the apparent
intention of taking hostages, attacked members of the press, and chanted about hanging Vice President
Mike Pence for treason. None of it should have taken authorities by surprise; on Tuesday, 8kun users were
openly discussing whom to kill once inside the Capitol. Regrettably, the FBI will have a chance to redeem
itself on January 17, when these dipshits plan to come back for round two.
But in the meantime, Twitter and other online chat platforms are well into the planning on the next event
on January 17. Domestic terrorists plan to march on Congress again as well as State Houses across the
country. They will be better prepared and better equipped. The House and the Senate have 8 days in
which to remove Trump and penalize the sitting Republicans who supported his rhetoric. If there are no
consequences then there is no democracy.
How did we get here? How did it come to this?

Washington Post
The election lies that got us here
Before a pro-Trump mob violently attacked the Capitol this week, leaving at least five people dead,
President Trump spent months building a false narrative that the presidential election would be rigged.
Hundreds of misleading claims and outright lies flooded the airwaves and social media, amplified by
Trump supporters and media figures on Fox News and other right-wing outlets. So when Trump lost, the
groundwork was ready for him to claim despite all evidence that the election was stolen. This epic
disinformation campaign culminated in a deadly attack in the halls of Congress on Jan. 6, hours after
Trump held a rally insisting that President-elect Joe Biden’s election was a fraud and egging on his
supporters to march toward the Capitol as lawmakers and Vice President Pence were certifying Biden’s
victory.

�It’s a grim reminder that the truth matters — and that lies, especially from political leaders, can have
devastating consequences
Our database of Trump’s false and misleading claims, now updated through the date of the election,
illustrates the scale of the deception: more than 1,795 bogus election claims from January 2020 through
Nov. 5. The grand total for Trump is now at 29,508 false and misleading claims during his presidency. He
will easily blow past 30,000 by the time his term is done, whether that’s Jan. 20 or sooner.
But Nancy and Chuck are on the warpath.

New York Times
Speaker Nancy Pelosi of California threatened on Friday that the House could move to impeach President
Trump over his role in inciting a violent mob attack on the Capitol if he did not resign “immediately,”
appealing to Republicans to join the push to force him from office.
In a letter to members of the House, the speaker invoked the resignation of Richard M. Nixon amid the
Watergate scandal, when Republicans prevailed upon the president to resign and avoid the ignominy of an
impeachment, calling Mr. Trump’s actions a “horrific assault on our democracy. Today, following the
president’s dangerous and seditious acts, Republicans in Congress need to follow that example and call on
Trump to depart his office — immediately,” she wrote. “If the president does not leave office imminently
and willingly, the Congress will proceed with our action.” Ms. Pelosi also said she had spoken with Gen.
Mark A. Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, about “preventing an unstable president from
initiating military hostilities or accessing the launch codes.”
At least some Republicans appeared newly open to the possibility, which could also disqualify Mr. Trump
from holding political office in the future.
Senator Ben Sasse, Republican of Nebraska, a frequent critic of Mr. Trump, said he would “definitely
consider whatever articles they might move, because I believe the president has disregarded his oath of
office. He swore an oath to the American people to preserve, protect and defend the Constitution — he
acted against that,” Mr. Sasse said on CBS. “What he did was wicked.”
And there is a groundswell of angry voices clamoring for Trump’s removal in a way that he can never hold
office again. Twitter has closed his account permanently and when he tried to open a new account, they
closed that too. I think he is banned from FaceBook and its affiliates. And other sites such as Parler have
been shut down.
Senator Lisa Murkowski (Rep. Alaska) has called on Trump to resign and says there does not seem to be a
place for her in the Republican Party any more. The Republican Party does seem to have been taken over
by Trumpers.
And of course, as we all know, the pandemic is over. No it isn’t and in fact, the numbers are worse.
Yesterday, the number of new cases in a single day rose to 300,594. Total cases reached 22M. That number

�of positive cases represents over 4 times the population of New Zealand. Yesterday there were 3,895
deaths. The death total stands at 369,000. We have not seen the Christmas/New Year surge yet and of
course the crowds of domestic terrorists surge effect is still about 3 weeks away. And here’s this nugget:

Washington Post
While public attention was fixed on the destruction at the Capitol on Wednesday, the coronavirus killed
more Americans than on any other day: 3,915 deaths and more than a quarter-million new cases. Among
the infected was the newly sworn-in congressman Jake LaTurner (R-Kan.), who tested positive for the
virus hours after he had been on the House floor with hundreds of other members during the chaos.
There are several health and hospitals systems offering vaccinations here in West Michigan but all phone
lines and online calendars are swamped. Craig and I have our names down with our pharmacy, one of our
health systems and Grand Valley as well as our doctors office as a last backup. We’ll see what happens.
On Tuesday we have a virtual tour of our house by the international moving company to see how much
furniture we can fit in a container and then on Thursday we have a furnace person coming because as
everyone knows, the best time to have a leaky furnace and 3 upstairs radiators remain ice cold, is in the
middle of winter. Furnaces are not cheap - and that’s all I’ll say about that.
Here’s Oliver

��Today I’ll leave you with this thought:

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                    <text>Day 303. The aftermath
by windoworks

When 9/11 happened, we were living in Sydney Australia. Like the rest of the world, we sat, trapped in
front of the TV and we watched it happen and the aftermath. We watched the reruns and the dissection
by the experts and we tried to imagine: what if that was me? We also watched the video made by two
brothers of events in the Twin Towers. There are things on that video I can never unsee.
But Wednesday was altogether different. It wasn’t tragedy on a huge scale, it wasn’t an entire city
decimated as well as other places in America. No, it was shocking for another reason. 9/11 was perpetrated
by people who hated America and wanted to inflict great pain on the nation. We could talk about their
justification but that’s not my point today. What shocked me to my core was - these are Americans who
believe the most ridiculous lies and misinformation. They have been carefully nurtured by Trump, his
administration and more than half the sitting Republican house members and senators. They believe
astonishing things implicitly. They can offer no evidence, that’s not important. What’s important is that
Trump, his family members and cohorts have confirmed all these lies and fabrication to be true. You
cannot argue with them. They have shut their minds and closed their ears.

The Atlantic
Today’s extremists displayed a religious zeal … “Donald Trump is in the Bible,” one told our editor in
chief, Jeffrey Goldberg, during their march to the Capitol. “Get yourself ready.”

�In the Bible? Really? What page?
This morning, those already identified and publicly named , once they returned home to their families,
immediately tried to scrub any reference to themselves off media such as FaceBook and Twitter. Did
sanity suddenly rear its ugly head? One man (the one in the horned helmet) has a wife who’s a doctor and
he suddenly realized this might impact her medical practice. He frantically removed the house numbers
off the front of his house and worried about his children’s schools - but too late. Is it that once you get
away from Trump and his hypnosis, sanity and consequences occur? What were they all thinking? Was it
-we’ll just smash the glass in the windows and then rifle through offices and sit in the Leader of the
House’s chair. And then take a selfie and post it on FaceBook or Instagram, because why not?

Just because you can, doesn’t mean you should.
The repercussions are starting in earnest.

Washington Post
President Trump was ensconced in the White House residence Wednesday night and into Thursday
morning, raging about perceived betrayals, as an array of top aides weighed resigning and some senior
administration officials began conversations about invoking the 25th Amendment — an extraordinary
measure that would remove the president before Trump’s term expires on Jan. 20.
A deep, simmering unease coursed through the administration over the president’s refusal to accept his
election loss and his role in inciting a mob to storm the Capitol, disrupting the peaceful transfer of power
to President-elect Joe Biden. One administration official described Trump’s behavior Wednesday as that of
“a total monster,” while another said the situation was “insane” and “beyond the pale.”
Fearful that Trump could take actions resulting in further violence and death if he remains in office even
for a few days, senior administration officials were discussing Wednesday night whether the Cabinet
might invoke the 25th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution to force him out, said a person involved in the
conversations.
A former senior administration official briefed on the talks confirmed that preliminary discussions of the
25th Amendment were underway, although this person cautioned that they were informal and that there
was no indication of an immediate plan of action. Both of these people, like some others interviewed for
this story, spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the matter.
Under the 25th Amendment, the president can be removed from office by the vice president plus a
majority of the Cabinet, or by the vice president and a body established by Congress, if they determine he
“is unable to discharge the powers and duties of his office.”
Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-Ill.) on Thursday called on Vice President Pence and the Cabinet to invoke the
25th Amendment to ensure “we have a sane captain of the ship” because Trump has become “unmoored
not just from his duty or even his oath, but from reality itself.”
Meanwhile, Acting Homeland Security Secretary Chad Wolf on Thursday issued the strongest critique of

�Trump yet from within the Cabinet. Calling Wednesday’s events “tragic and sickening,” Wolf wrote in a
statement, “I implore the President and all elected officials to strongly condemn the violence that took
place yesterday.” He vowed to remain in his position to ensure an orderly transition to the Biden
administration.
And more:

Washington Post
The ‘American carnage’ that Donald Trump vowed to end at the dawn of his presidency was revived in
terrifying, treacherous form at its sunset Wednesday, as Trump made a fiery last stand and incited his
supporters to storm and sack the U.S. Capitol as part of an attempted coup,” writes Philip Rucker. “The
marauders freely roamed the building’s stately halls, some carrying Confederate flags. They occupied the
Senate and House chambers and rummaged through desks. They vandalized the offices of congressional
leaders. They assaulted police and other public servants. They trampled on the gleaming white platform
constructed for [Biden’s] inauguration. One tried to replace the U.S. flag flying above the balcony with a
Trump campaign flag. Lawmakers and staffers hid in locked bunkers. … With Wednesday’s occupation
underway, Trump’s eldest daughter, Ivanka, tweeted that the rioters were ‘American Patriots’ and urged
them to be ‘peaceful.’”
Some people died from medical emergencies during the riot. A woman was shot by a policeman as she
tried to force her way into the Housee. At first it was reported that she was a black woman with a small
baby. We were shocked and dismayed at the same time. But when the dust cleared, it was found that she
was a dedicated QAnon follower, a white woman, a veteran and a strong believer in Trump and violence
to achieve all ends. Take a moment to consider the difference. Last night I watched Joe Biden almost lose
his temper as he articulated the difference between the police and National Guard treatment of Black
Lives Matter demonstrators and Wednesday’s rioters attempting a coup. There have been reports and
footage of Capitol police removing barriers to allow the rioters and looters in and even a posed selfie of a
policeman and a rioter.

�New York Times
After the violence, Trump himself wrote on social media, “These are the things and events that happen
when a sacred landslide election victory is so unceremoniously and viciously stripped away from great
patriots who have been badly &amp; unfairly treated for so long.”
That statement is breathtaking in its delusion. Does anyone looking on imagine for one minute that
Trump actually cares about these people? He cannot function without constant gratification and
reinforcement. He is psychologically incapable of dealing with failure. He cannot imagine that he has lost.
In his mind, failure would be the end of his life. And he is making all of us pay for his failure - it must be
OUR fault. Thus the election was rigged and he really won. It is one thing to understand deep

�psychological deficits, or illness, in a patient, it is another thing entirely to see it displayed daily in the
most important and influential person in the land - and to have all of us suffer the consequences of his
instability.
Movements are underway to apply Amendment 25 and Impeachment. Personally I favor Impeachment. It
can be applied once he is out of office and it bars him from ever running for any office again. And of
course, as soon as he’s out of office (12 more days), he is liable to all kinds of prosecution, as are his adult
children.
And everyone around the world was watching, and continues to watch. Here’s a quote from Crooked
Media: Here’s the president of Zimbabwe using Wednesday’s chaos to undercut the U.S.’s credibility as a

voice for democracy around the world: “Yesterday’s events showed that the U.S. has no moral right to
punish another nation under the guise of upholding democracy.” He’s got a point.
I was really scared and anxious on Wednesday. I know my family who all live far away are sending me
love and saying it’ll be all right, but I think you don’t really appreciate something until you experience it
for yourself. This day came on the heels of a year when I experienced living during a pandemic firsthand.
It came after the angry mobs with guns breaking into the visitors gallery in the Michigan State House and
threatening Representatives. It came after some of those same men planned to kidnap, try for crimes and
execute my governor, Gretchen Whitmer. It came after every responsible, sane person in authority was
threatened and harassed and had to have a security detail attached to guard them 24/7. It came after seeing
pickup trucks with Trump flags and gun racks driving through my neighborhood screaming profanities. It
came after regularly seeing a myriad of huge Trump flags and signs, adorning houses in the countryside. It
came after the many persisting signs saying Impeach Whitmer because she overstepped her boundaries in
trying (successfully) to keep us all safe and alive. It came after a year of watching our Governor and the
State Health Department struggling to find the funding to cope with the pandemic because Trump washed
his hands of his responsibility for the states. It came after 4 years of distress, both watching the dreadful
acts and policies of Trump and losing friends who ‘ just voted for him because he believes in right to life’.
Which of course is blatantly untrue. Trump’s beliefs are only one: himself.
Yesterday the virus statistics were appalling. The daily death rate for the US reached 4,112 people. Just shy
of filling the 5,000 seat Ford Theater. Imagine that theater with almost every seat taken up with a body
bag. Now imagine the 4,112 families and friends. Our US case numbers reached 21.7M and those are just
people who have been tested. And as all the experts keep saying: the virus isn’t finished with us yet.
In good news (is there any Pamela?), we received notification that beginning Monday, Craig and I will be
eligible to be vaccinated. And from the UK:

An arthritis drug that cuts the risk of death for the sickest Covid-19 patients by 24 per cent could save
thousands of lives just as the NHS starts to be overwhelmed. Tocilizumab was also found to reduce the

�time that critically ill patients spent in intensive care by up to ten days, offering help to hospitals facing
what the head of the health service called last night an “incredibly serious situation”.
I have just enough room for Oliver.

��Let us all breathe in, and breathe out. Repeat until your heart rate returns to normal.

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                    <text>Day 302. A day I will never forget.
by windoworks
This will be a record of yesterday. A day I still cannot believe occurred. In the past 4 years I have
repeatedly warned that Trump and his enablers would tear this country apart. I am not happy to be
proved right. Yesterday was unthinkable, terrifying and it eclipsed the shining star of the United States of
America. As a country and the population, we may never recover. Trump has ripped the very fabric of
democracy. There is no safe haven and the halls of government have been desecrated. What led all those
jeering people to do this? Who encouraged their dangerous behavior? Of course, we all know the answer it was Donald Trump. The man who lost his bid for a second term and orchestrated the loss of the
Republican Senate majority. Trump, who reduced Mitch McConnell to the lesser position of Senate
Minority Leader. And who, withheld permission for the authorizing of the National Guard so that VP
Pence had to take control and authorize them. For the entire length of the riot and attempted
coup/insurrection, Trump sheltered in place watching events on TV and Mike Pence had to assume the
role of the Acting President.
There is so much more I could say, but instead I offer this account:

Crooked Media
Today’s attack on the Capitol was the horrific culmination of Donald Trump’s four-year-long attack on
this country; it was the rejection of democracy that he represents, and it belongs to an era we’ve worked
so hard to leave behind. It’s Democrats’ responsibility to make sure Trump gets left behind with it: If this
country can’t impeach and remove a president for attempting a violent coup, and disqualify him from
running for office again, we’ll be building our bright, bold Biden era on historically shaky ground.

�There were more Trump flags than American
flags

Not a mask in
sight.

�No words.

New York Times
Donald Trump has been attacking American democracy for much of his time as president.
He has told repeated lies about voter fraud, undermining people’s confidence in elections. He has defied

�parts of the Constitution. He has spent his final weeks in office pressuring other government officials to
overturn the result of an election he lost. He has occasionally encouraged his supporters to commit
violence.
Yesterday, hundreds of those supporters decided to take Trump literally.
They fought their way through armed police, smashed windows and stormed the U.S. Capitol to prevent
Congress from certifying President-elect Joe Biden’s victory. They then spent several hours inside the
building, vandalizing offices and the House floor. They injured at least 14 law enforcement officers. Vice
President Mike Pence, members of Congress and others fled for their safety.
There were still six senators and 121 representatives who voted to sustain the Arizona objection, late last
night. They were overwhelmingly voted down by the rest.

The rioters used teargas on the
police

�They scaled the
walls

�And scared the hell out of the few
guards.

�Shouting

�Screaming

Some were contained and
arrested

They smashed windows and forced open
doors

�These are FBI agents with their guns trained on
rioters

�This is a rioter jumping down to the floor of the
House

���This is (I believe) a staffer from Fox News, sitting in Speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi’s
chair. They left insulting notes for her on her
desk.

A rioter blatantly stealing a
podium.

�This photo says it

�all

They are scrambling to impeach Trump or apply Amendment 25 (The Twenty-fifth Amendment to the
United States Constitution says that if the President becomes unable to do his job, the Vice President
becomes the President). This happened yesterday when the Vice President took over and coordinated
with the DC police, the Mayor of DC, the Virginia Police and the National Guard. He took over because

�having unleashed this monster, Trump seemed completely incapable of acting to subdue the rioters or
even ask them to go home without adding erroneous and further inciting talk of the election being stolen.
To do that, he would have to admit that he was wring and that he had, in fact, lost his re-election bid. I
suspect, like his deluded cult members, Trump will die believing he was cheated out of the win. If that
doesn’t signify some sort of mental confusion that qualifies him for immediate removal to a secure
psychiatric facility, I don’t know what will. Or a prison - I don’t care.
Yesterday was a dreadful day and we begin today still frightened and worried by what Trump and his
Republican adherents might do between now and January 20. (This morning I have heard he is continuing
with this shameful lie). I am frightened and worried for incoming President Biden and Vice President
Kamala Harris. I have seen footage of the police opening the barricades and beckoning the rioters inside.
Who can we trust to keep reasonable and fair politicians safe? There is much talk of the difference in the
police behavior yesterday and in Lafayette Square for Trump’s barge through peaceful protesters or the
nightly debacle in Oregon last year. As people are correctly saying: what if yesterday’s rioters had been
black instead of overwhelmingly white? I guess, in our hearts we all know the answer.
I spent time yesterday afternoon talking to my neighbor and we cried together. She had made her college
aged daughter watch it on TV, so she could tell her grandchildren about it in the future. Of course we
spoke on the phone - we had no other option open to us in the pandemic. And just in case yesterday
wiped all memory of the pandemic we are suffering through - yesterday was the WORST day so far. Cases
reached 21.4M and deaths increased in one day by 3,963 to a total of 361,000. We have reached hell in our
hand basket.
I could go on, but instead I will leave you today with these words published yesterday by President-Elect
Biden. I watched this speech and i also received it in my inbox addressed to me. reading this through
again, reduces me to tears. This is MY President.

At this hour, our democracy is under an unprecedented assault. An assault on the Capitol itself. An assault
on the people’s representatives, on the police officers sworn to protect them, and the public servants who
work at the heart of our Republic. An assault on the rule of law.An assault on the most sacred of American
undertakings: The doing of the people’s business.
Let me be very clear: The scenes of chaos at the Capitol do not reflect the true America. This is not who
we are. What we are seeing is a small number of extremists dedicated to lawlessness. This is not dissent. It
is disorder. It is chaos. It borders on sedition. And it must end. Now.
I call on this mob to pull back and allow the work of democracy to go forward. You’ve heard me say this
in different contexts: the words of a President matter, no matter how good or bad that president is.
At their best, the words of a president can inspire. At their worst, they can incite. To storm the Capitol, to

�smash windows, to occupy offices, and to threaten the safety of duly elected officials is not protest.It is
insurrection.
The world is watching — and like so many other Americans, I am shocked and saddened that our nation,
so long a beacon of light, hope, and democracy has come to such a dark moment. Through war and strife,
America has endured much. And we will endure here and prevail now. The work of the moment and the
work of the next four years must be the restoration of democracy and the recovery of respect for the rule
of law, and the renewal of a politics that’s about solving problems — not stoking the flames of hate and
chaos. America is about honor, decency, respect, and tolerance. That’s who we are. That’s who we’ve
always been. The certification of the Electoral College votes is supposed to be a sacred ritual in which we
affirm the majesty of American democracy.
Today is a reminder, a painful one, that democracy is fragile.
To preserve it requires people of good will, leaders with the courage to stand up, who are devoted not to
pursuit of power and personal interest at any cost, but to the common good. Think of what our children
who are watching are thinking. Think of what the rest of the world is looking at. For nearly two and a
half centuries, we the people, in search of a more perfect union, have kept our eyes on that common good.
America is so much better than what we’re seeing today. Watching the scenes from the Capitol, I was
reminded of Abraham Lincoln’s words in an annual message to the Congress whose work has today been
interrupted by chaos.
President Lincoln said: “We shall nobly save or meanly lose, the last best hope of earth….The way is plain,
peaceful, generous, just — a way which, if followed, the world will forever applaud, and God must forever
bless.” Our way is plain here, too. It is the way of democracy, of lawfulness, and of honor — respect for
each other, and for our nation.
Notwithstanding what we’ve seen today, I remain optimistic about the incredible opportunities. There has
never been anything we can’t do when we do it together. And this God-awful display today is bringing
home to every Republican, Democrat, and Independent in the nation that we must step up.
This is the United States of America.
President Trump, step up.
May God Bless America. May God protect our troops and everyone at the Capitol who is trying to protect
the order.
Thank you,
Joe Biden

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                    <text>Day 301.

by windoworks

Remember how I said: you can’t make this stuff up? Turns out I was wrong - you CAN make this stuff up.
Lets start with the Georgia runoff, an election which could change the balance of power in the US Senate.
At this point (7.47am Eastern Standard Time) Rev. Raphael Warnock (Dem) has won his seat and with
98% of all votes counted, Jon Ossoff (Dem) is leading over David Perdue (Rep) 50.2% to 49.8%. So with all

�fingers and toes crossed, Mitch McConnell may have lost control of the Senate. Here’s hoping. Of course,
here’s the new mantra of the GOP from Crooked Media: Only Republicans can win elections

legitimately. In the long run, I don’t think that’s going to fly.
Naturally, there are memes:

Today marks the second of three huge events in January. First was the Georgia runoff and the second
happens this afternoon when the House and Senate convene to confirm the Electoral College votes to

�install Joe Biden in the White House. Several House members and a few Senators have vowed to contest
these valid results with absolutely no evidence whatsoever. This means that the vote will take much
longer than normal as each state result questioned (and there appears to be three) takes 2 hours each to
discuss. Really? What could possibly take more than 2 minutes to say: there is no evidence of fraud at all.
Move on. But no matter how long it takes, Joe Biden and Kamala Harris won the election (dare I say it?)
fair and square, and no matter what, will be moving into the White House on January 20. If anything else
happens to affect that, then we are no longer living in a democracy. And of course, Trump has called his
supporters (Proud Boys etc) to come to DC today to cause a riot, kill people, whatever.

New York Times: • Mayor Muriel Bowser of Washington requested support from the Army National
Guard as right-wing groups, including the Proud Boys, traveled to the capital to protest in support of
Trump.
So Trump said at his “rally” in Georgia on Monday that if VP Pence didn’t overturn the election results on
Wednesday, he wouldn’t like him so much. But as Pence has repeatedly stated, he doesn’t have that
ability.

CNN
And what the actual heck could Pence do after Trump was defeated at the polls, rejected by the courts,
unseated by the Electoral College and denied by members of his own party?
Here’s what’s really happening at the White House:

The Atlantic. President Donald Trump may still be pushing to overturn the election results, but the staff
of 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue know it’s over.
“None of the advisers and aides I’ve spoken with over the past couple of weeks is under any illusion that
Trump will serve a second term,” our White House correspondent Peter Nicholas reports. “The show’s
about to end.”
Today, Congress is set to vote to certify the Electoral College results, despite antidemocratic defections by
Trump and allies.
• Here’s what the last days in the White House are like.“After January 6, I think you’ll see a traditional
defeated president,” one person close to the White House told Peter.
• One of Trump’s final rallies of his term was “a classic of the form.” By that, our staff writer David A.
Graham means that the Dalton, Georgia event was “sometimes entertaining, often incoherent, always
erratic, and entirely terrifying.”
• Meanwhile, the race to succeed him is on. “Look at the behavior, over the past few days, of the most
ardent Trumpists,” Anne Applebaum writes. Trumpism, she argues, is really about the fantasy of unending
victory.

�And remember how I told you Trump was planning to fly to his golf course in Scotland? Last night First
Minster Nicola Sturgeon locked Scotland down due to the raging pandemic. No international flights in or
out except for essential travel. Actually, I think the lockdown is just a handy excuse in Trump’s case - she
wouldn’t want him there in the best of times.

Washington Post The White House denied reports that President Trump will be in Scotland during Joe
Biden's inauguration, after the Scottish leader warned that golf is not essential travel.
Although Trump accused Bob Woodward of drinking the Kool Aid regarding the pandemic, I think
Trump must imbibe it daily. And here’s what that expression means:

“Drinking the Kool-Aid" is an expression used to refer to a person who believes in a possibly doomed or
dangerous idea because of perceived potential high rewards. The phrase often carries a negative
connotation. Wikipedia.
So that leads us to the virus. Here’s how things stand in California.

NPR
• Paramedics in Southern California are being told to conserve oxygen and not to bring patients to the
hospital who have little chance of survival as Los Angeles County grapples with a new wave of COVID-19
patients that is expected to get worse in the coming days.
• The Los Angeles County Emergency Medical Services Agency issued a directive Monday that ambulance
crews should administer supplemental oxygen only to patients whose oxygen saturation levels fall below
90%.
• In a separate memo from the county's EMS Agency, paramedic crews have been told not to transfer
patients who experience cardiac arrest unless spontaneous circulation can be restored on the scene.
• Both measures announced Monday, which were issued by the agency's medical director, Dr. Marianne
Gausche-Hill, were taken in an attempt to get ahead of an expected surge to come following the winter
holidays.
• Many hospitals in the region "have reached a point of crisis and are having to make very tough decisions
about patient care," Dr. Christina Ghaly, the LA County director of health services, said at a briefing
Monday.
• "The volume being seen in our hospitals still represents the cases that resulted from the Thanksgiving
holiday," she said.
• "We do not believe that we are yet seeing the cases that stemmed from the Christmas holiday," Ghaly
added. "This, sadly, and the cases from the recent New Year's holiday, is still before us, and hospitals
across the region are doing everything they can to prepare."
So they are reaching that moment we have seen in medic tents in war movies where the red tag on a
patients toe means: leave this patient to die. We can’t save them. The directive speaks to ambulances

�taking in non-responsive Covid patients (that is, dead) and transporting them to hospital while trying to
revive them. The consequences of that action are: extreme risk for the ambulance crew and then time out
for deep sanitation of the ambulance. Also, L.A. County is running out of oxygen because Covid
pneumonia patients with use significantly more oxygen per minute than regular pneumonia patients. Who
knew that?
And just to cheer you up:

NPR
An 18-year-old Georgia man tested positive for a variant of the novel coronavirus SARS-CoV-2, the
Georgia Department of Public Health said Tuesday. This is the state’s first reported case of COVID-19
variant B.1.1.7, which is the same variant discovered in the United Kingdom in September 2020.
The Atlantic: 4 Numbers That Make the Pandemic’s Massive Death Toll Sink In
It’s difficult to fully comprehend the magnitude of 357,000 deaths.
Other metrics can be more illuminating.
1. ON AVERAGE, EACH PERSON IN THE U.S. WHO HAS DIED FROM COVID-19 WAS

DEPRIVED OF ABOUT 13 YEARS OF LIFE.
2. FOR THE FIRST TIME SINCE WORLD WAR II, U.S. LIFE EXPECTANCY AT BIRTH

COULD DROP BY A FULL YEAR.
3. ABOUT ONE IN 800 BLACK AMERICANS HAS DIED FROM COVID-19, WHILE ONE IN

1,325 WHITE AMERICANS HAS.
4. ROUGHLY 3.1 MILLION AMERICANS HAVE LOST A CLOSE RELATIVE TO COVID-19.

�Is it Oliver time yet, I hear you ask. We need Oliver to cheer us up. Okay, I hear you.

�Oliver graduated to the next room at Daycare. He’s a big boy now and he only has one nap a
day. As Zoe would say: where did my baby go?
After Rome, our next stop was Amalfi. In the morning, Craig and I opted for different tours. I went on a
walking tour of the town.

�The Amalfi coast from the ship. Obviously we had to anchor offshore and ride in on a
tender

�Our tour

�guide

�Walking up the steep steps to the Amalfi Cathedral for the next part of our

�tour.

�The Baptistery
doors

�The Moorish Courtyard

�inside

�Medieval wall
paintings

�The private chapel/museum.

�Stunning.

�Downstairs there was a Mass being
conducted

�I was overheated and exhausted so I begged off the rest of my tour and waited for Craig to

�return. Then we found this little cafe to have lunch. When I asked if they had gluten free,
the waiter looked at me in astonishment and said: but of course! We then ate the best 4
course gluten free lunch ever!
More Amalfi tomorrow. Be careful, be safe and always be kind.

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                    <text>Day 300. Wow!
by windoworks

There are some mornings where I don’t know where to start. If I incorporated most of the articles I have
read since yesterday morning, this blogpost would become a long winded saga. Just like my life at the
moment. Washington Post asked 8 scientists when they thought life would return to normal, and first,
when would the US achieve herd immunity. Here’s a definition from John Hopkins:

When most of a population is immune to an infectious disease, this provides indirect protection—or herd
immunity (also called herd protection)—to those who are not immune to the disease. For example, if 80%
of a population is immune to a virus, four out of every five people who encounter someone with the
disease won’t get sick (and won’t spread the disease any further). In this way, the spread of infectious

�diseases is kept under control. Depending how contagious an infection is, usually 50% to 90% of a
population needs immunity to achieve herd immunity.
Yesterday the case total reached 20.9M in the US. In a prior post I said that scientists had calculated that
the true number of cases was 8-10 times that number. Recently the consensus is that 3 times the number is
the true number. So while yesterday’s count was 20.9M, in fact it is more likely that approximately 63M is
the true number of cases. That makes us all sit up and take notice, doesn’t it? So the experts in the article
all seemed to agree that any return to ‘normal’ depends on vaccination distribution (coping with limited
supplies and efficient systems of distribution, staff to inject etc). Overall they seemed to think that 2021
may look distressingly similar to 2020 and that herd immunity may not occur until the end of this year.

Crooked Media: The more contagious (but not more deadly) coronavirus variant first found in the U.K. has
spread to dozens of countries, and has been detected in Colorado, California, Florida, and New York.
In the UK, my niece Elle and her partner Terry are locked down again for the next 6 weeks. Elle can work
from home, but Terry who is a self-employed builder, doesn’t know if he’ll be allowed to work or not.
And in keeping an eye on Southern California, here’s this from Crooked Media:

Groups of anti-maskers have been terrorizing grocery stores and shopping malls in Los Angeles, where
hospitals are so overwhelmed that ambulances are waiting up to eight hours to offload patients.
Lets just read that last part again, shall we? Hospitals are so overwhelmed that ambulances are waiting up
to eight, eight hours to offload patients. I didn’t mention the new death total from yesterday, but this
seems like a good place to put it: 354,000. That is just 30,000 less than the entire population of Cleveland.
Imagine all but one corner of Cleveland empty. And every single one of these deaths is on the shoulders of

Donald Trump. Every single one. I hear you say: perhaps its not his fault, and I say: for 2 reasons - 1. If he
had done anything to facilitate the smooth roll out of testing, equipment , given a federal mask mandate,
encouraged vaccination (I could go on), the results would have been vastly different. And 2. HE IS THE
PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES. The buck stops with him.

��Washington Post: New year, same rhetoric. The coronavirus death toll in the United States passed 350,000
on Sunday, and President Trump used the day to minimize the number of dead, which he called “far
exaggerated.” With 2,000 to 3,000 people dying each day of covid-19 in the U.S., the nation's top health
officials quickly disputed the president's claim.
“All you need to do . . . is go into the trenches, go into the hospitals, go into the intensive care units and
see what is happening,” Anthony S. Fauci told NBC. “Those are real numbers, real people and real deaths.”
Trump also complained that he is “in no way given credit for” his work on the coronavirus, while others
are doing victory laps. But one thing that Trump wants to claim credit for — the vaccine rollout — is not
going that well. Though the pace of development was incredible, Americans are frustrated and struggling
to sign up for their shots in a system that varies widely from county to county and is in many places
overwhelmed.
Here’s another all-consuming news story.

NPR
A top election official with the Georgia secretary of state's office went line by line Monday refuting
allegations made by President Trump about the state's voting system.
The strong pushback by state officials comes a day after a phone call between Trump and Georgia
Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger was made public, in which Trump urged the secretary to "find"
enough votes to overturn his loss in the state.
During that call, Trump cited a number of conspiracy theories that Gabriel Sterling, the state's voting
system implementation manager, debunked as inaccurate or false Monday afternoon.
More than a month ago, Sterling warned that "someone's going to get shot" due to the Trump-inflamed
conspiracy theories. Those unfounded theories have continued online and in far-right circles as Tuesday's
runoff elections in the state approach. Those races will decide which party controls the U.S. Senate.
"It's whack-a-mole again," Sterling said Monday, speaking in front of a poster that had many of the
debunked claims Trump mentioned. "It's Groundhog Day again."

�Here’s the poster.

Interesting that Gabriel Sterling used the time honored format of ‘show and tell’.

Crooked Media • In his closing arguments at Trump’s impeachment trial, Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA) said,
“What are the odds if left in office that he will continue trying to cheat? I will tell you: 100 percent. A
man without character or ethical compass will never find his way.” That prediction has proven true, and

�now we have to ask ourselves: What are the odds if left unpenalized that the GOP will continue using his
anti-democratic playbook? We don’t need to look very far backwards to know the answer.
And also:

The Atlantic
But a subset of elected officials, nicknamed “the sedition caucus,” remains troublingly aligned with the
president's antidemocratic campaign.
• What these Republicans are doing is worse than treason, Tom Nichols argues. “The sedition caucus is
worse than a treasonous conspiracy. At least real traitors believe in something.”
• McConnell’s grip on the Senate is slipping. About a dozen Republicans plan to defy him in Wednesday’s
vote. Though the majority leader will likely survive the mutiny, “he’ll have to manage a conference
divided” under Biden, Russell Berman warns.
• This is the price of a failed impeachment. Saturday’s call, David A. Graham writes, was “eerily
reminiscent” of the Ukraine phone call at the center of those proceedings. Back then, critics warned that,
if not removed, Trump would do it again.
This morning Craig read a story that says Trump has booked a plane to fly to Scotland on January 19, the
day before the Inauguration of Joe Biden. Is he hoping for shelter at his golf course there? First Minister
Nicola Sturgeon of Scotland will not be pleased. I think there is an extradition policy between the
Scotland and the US. He may have to come back here to face the music. And Ivanka and Jared have
bought a private island off the coast of Miami, but unless they declare it an independent nation - they’ll
have to face the music too.
In the meantime, Georgia votes today. Please, oh please let both the Democratic Senate candidates win!
Then tomorrow is the day the Congress votes to confirm Joe Biden as the next President of the United
States. We’ll see how that goes and whether the dissenters face any consequences. And remember how
Trump encouraged all the crazies to come to Washington DC tomorrow to show him support?

Washington Post
Proud Boys leader arrested in D.C. on a charge of burning a Black Lives Matter banner stolen from a
church last month, police say, Enrique Tarrio, who had just arrived in the District for Wednesday’s
planned protest, also was charged with illegally possessing firearms magazines, police said. He was being
held late Monday.
Police spokesman Dustin Sternbeck said Tarrio is charged with one misdemeanor count of destruction of
property in connection with the Dec. 12 burning of the banner from Asbury United Methodist Church.
Tarrio had told The Washington Post last month that he was among those who burned the banner. Police
found the magazines during the arrest.

�Because, as we all know, you need lots of firearms at a protest - to shoot people if they don’t agree with
you.
After all that: Oliver

�Its water play day at Daycare - my favorite!

�Flashback (Yes! Its back!) Our next port of call was Civitavecchia, which is the main port for Rome. This
signaled the end of the second cruise and the start of the third and final cruise. We could have taken the
bus into Rome, but we have been to Rome before and so we decided to explore Civitavecchia instead,
which turned out to be quite interesting.Civitavecchia is a coastal town northwest of Rome, in Italy. Built

in the 2nd century, the Port of Civitavecchia still retains some of its original features, like the Roman
Dock. The port area also includes the 16th-century Michelangelo Fort. Nearby, the National
Archaeological Museum displays bronze and ceramic artifacts. Northeast of town are the Terme Taurine,
the ruins of a Roman thermal bath complex. ― Google

The covered
marketplace

�Ahh,
cheese.

�The docks with our ship in the back
ground.

�Medieval
fortifications

�The Michelangelo
Fort

�Features of the Roman dock.

And to finish, here’s two memes I couldn’t resist:

�And............

�See you tomorrow.

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                    <text>Day 299.

by windoworks

Yesterday in an astounding news item, a transcript and recording of a phone call Trump made to Brad
Raffensperger, the Georgia Secretary of State was released. Washington Post ‘obtained’ a recording of the
call and released it to the whole wide world. It is jaw dropping stuff and with 16 days left of his presidency
left, it puts Trump in a precarious position legally. He can’t be touched for the remaining 16 days but after
that, its game over. Lawyers in New York are carefully preparing their briefs as we speak. Here’s some of
the transcript:

President Trump urged fellow Republican Brad Raffensperger, the Georgia secretary of state, to “find”
enough votes to overturn his defeat in an extraordinary one-hour phone call Saturday that election experts
said raised legal questions. Throughout the call, Raffensperger and his office’s general counsel rejected
Trump’s assertions, explaining that the president is relying on debunked conspiracy theories and that

�President-elect Joe Biden’s 11,779-vote victory in Georgia was fair and accurate. Trump dismissed their
arguments.
“The people of Georgia are angry, the people in the country are angry,” he said. “And there’s nothing
wrong with saying, you know, um, that you’ve recalculated.”Raffensperger responded: “Well, Mr.
President, the challenge that you have is, the data you have is wrong. At another point, Trump said: “So
look. All I want to do is this. I just want to find 11,780 votes, which is one more than we have. Because we
won the state.” The rambling and at times incoherent conversation offered a remarkable glimpse of how
consumed and desperate the president remains about his loss, unwilling or unable to let the matter go and
still believing he can reverse the results in enough battleground states to remain in office. The pressure
Trump put on Raffensperger is the latest example of his attempt to subvert the outcome of the Nov. 3
election through personal outreach to state Republican officials. He previously invited Michigan
Republican state leaders to the White House, pressured Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp (R) in a call to try to
replace that state’s electors and asked the speaker of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives to help
reverse his loss in that state.
During their conversation, Trump issued a vague threat to both Raffensperger and Ryan Germany, the
secretary of state’s general counsel, suggesting that if they don’t find that thousands of ballots in Fulton
County have been illegally destroyed to block investigators — an allegation for which there is no evidence
— they would be subject to criminal liability. Trump’s conversation with Raffensperger put him in legally
questionable territory, legal experts said. By exhorting the secretary of state to “find” votes and to deploy
investigators who “want to find answers,” Trump appears to be encouraging him to doctor the election
outcome in Georgia. Throughout the call, Trump detailed an exhaustive list of disinformation and
conspiracy theories to support his position. He claimed without evidence that he had won Georgia by at
least a half-million votes. He floated a barrage of assertions that have been investigated and disproved: that
thousands of dead people voted; that an Atlanta election worker scanned 18,000 forged ballots three times
each and “100 percent” were for Biden; that thousands more voters living out of state came back to
Georgia illegally just to vote in the election.
Trump sounded at turns confused and meandering. At one point, he referred to Kemp as “George.” He
tossed out several different figures for Biden’s margin of victory in Georgia and referred to the Senate
runoff, which is Tuesday, as happening “tomorrow” and “Monday.”
It was clear from the call that Trump has surrounded himself with aides who have fed his false perceptions
that the election was stolen. When he claimed that more than 5,000 ballots were cast in Georgia in the
name of dead people, Raffensperger responded forcefully: “The actual number was two. Two. Two people
that were dead that voted.” Yet Trump also recognized that he was failing to persuade Raffensperger or
Germany of anything, saying toward the end, “I know this phone call is going nowhere.”But he continued
to make his case in repetitive fashion, until finally, after roughly an hour, Raffensperger put an end to the
conversation: “Thank you, President Trump, for your time.”

�So here’s what Subsection 20511 of title 52 of the US Code states:

A person, including an election official, who in any election for Federal office(1) knowingly and willfully intimidates, threatens, or coerces, or attempts to intimidate, threaten, or
coerce, any person for(A) registering to vote, or voting, or attempting to register or vote;
(B) urging or aiding any person to register to vote, to vote, or to attempt to register or vote; or
(C) exercising any right under this chapter; or
(2) knowingly and willfully deprives, defrauds, or attempts to deprive or defraud the residents of a State of
a fair and impartially conducted election process, by(A) the procurement or submission of voter registration applications that are known by the person to be
materially false, fictitious, or fraudulent under the laws of the State in which the election is held; or
(B) the procurement, casting, or tabulation of ballots that are known by the person to be materially false,
fictitious, or fraudulent under the laws of the State in which the election is held, shall be fined in
accordance with title 18 (which fines shall be paid into the general fund of the Treasury, miscellaneous
receipts (pursuant to section 3302 of title 31), notwithstanding any other law), or imprisoned not more
than 5 years, or both.
And that’s just the US code. The State of Georgia code says:

The recording of the conversation between Mr. Trump and Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger of
Georgia, first reported by The Washington Post, led a number of election and criminal defense lawyers to
conclude that by pressuring Mr. Raffensperger to “find” the votes he would need to reverse the election
outcome in the state, Mr. Trump either broke the law or came close to it.
“It seems to me like what he did clearly violates Georgia statutes,” said Leigh Ann Webster, an Atlanta
criminal defense lawyer, citing a state law that makes it illegal for anyone who “solicits, requests,
commands, importunes or otherwise attempts to cause the other person to engage” in election fraud.
And then, then, 10 former secretaries of defense weighed in. From Washington Post:
Ashton Carter, Dick Cheney, William Cohen, Mark Esper, Robert Gates, Chuck Hagel, James Mattis, Leon
Panetta, William Perry and Donald Rumsfeld are the 10 living former U.S. secretaries of defense.

As former secretaries of defense, we hold a common view of the solemn obligations of the U.S. armed
forces and the Defense Department. Each of us swore an oath to support and defend the Constitution
against all enemies, foreign and domesticWe did not swear it to an individual or a party.
Our elections have occurred. Recounts and audits have been conducted. Appropriate challenges have been
addressed by the courts. Governors have certified the results. And the electoral college has voted. The
time for questioning the results has passed; the time for the formal counting of the electoral college votes,
as prescribed in the Constitution and statute, has arrived.

�As senior Defense Department leaders have noted, “there’s no role for the U.S. military in determining the
outcome of a U.S. election.” Efforts to involve the U.S. armed forces in resolving election disputes would
take us into dangerous, unlawful and unconstitutional territory. Civilian and military officials who direct
or carry out such measures would be accountable, including potentially facing criminal penalties, for the
grave consequences of their actions on our republic.Acting defense secretary Christopher C. Miller and his
subordinates — political appointees, officers and civil servants — are each bound by oath, law and
precedent to facilitate the entry into office of the incoming administration, and to do so wholeheartedly.
They must also refrain from any political actions that undermine the results of the election or hinder the
success of the new team.
We call upon them, in the strongest terms, to do as so many generations of Americans have done before
them. This final action is in keeping with the highest traditions and professionalism of the U.S. armed
forces, and the history of democratic transition in our great country.
And also this:

News &amp; Guts
Here’s the problem. We’ve lived with lies from the Trump White House, and their water-carrying GOP
allies for years. But in the eleventh hour, the falsehoods have become dangerous. They are now
threatening our democracy by subverting the will of the voters.
The votes have been counted, re-counted, audited, often more than once, litigated, re-litigated and
nothing has been found. The election was fair. Donald Trump lost. That should be the end of the story.

�All eyes will be on the Georgia runoff tomorrow and then the Congress vote on Wednesday. Will that be
the end of it, who knows?

�Over 4 years the actions taken by Trump and his administration have continued to be cruel and self
serving. A friend published a list of all the actions the Trump administration has done. The list was very
long and extremely depressing. Actions such as lifting restrictions on the amount of mercury released into
groundwater seem without merit. It seemed as though over the 4 years he was motivated by the idea that
he was the President and so he could do anything he felt like, as well as anything that would reverse
actions that the Obama administration put in place. The more he tried to obliterate Obama’s legacy, the
more Obama’s legacy seemed to shine.
And here’s these words to consider.

��Now, to the virus. Yesterday the case numbers in the US reached 20.7M. Remember, this is just the known
cases, from the 20.7M people who have been tested. The real number of positive cases is probably 8-10
times that number. The deaths stand at 352K and that is, of course, the real number of deaths recorded.
This morning, the authorities closed all outdoor dining in Manhattan Beach, L.A., where our friend
Tracey lives. I think about her, hunkered down and on her own. How fortunate are Craig and I to have
each other in this pandemic.
But there’s always a new and disturbing development with the virus:

New York Times
The rest of the world may now be at risk of a new Covid-19 surge.
The variants already seem to have spread around much of the world. More than 30 other countries,
including the U.S., have diagnosed cases with the variant first detected in Britain, which is known as
B.1.1.7. Scientists say that it could soon become the dominant form of the virus. The B.1.1.7 variant
appears to be between 10 percent and 60 percent more transmissible than the original version. One
possible reason: It may increase the amount of the virus that infected people carry in their noses and
throats, which in turn would raise the likelihood that they infect others through breathing, talking,
sneezing, coughing and so on.
There’s a new idea circulating of giving as many people as possible the first dose of the vaccine. That way
more people will have some protection, rather than none. I’m not sure of the science behind that.
Oliver time.

�Out with Dad

�at the
park

�Look Mum and Auntie Benie - I can run!

�Who knows what tomorrow will bring? I’ve given up guessing and I’m hoping for the best while
expecting the worst. I’ll leave you today with these words:

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                    <text>Day 298.
by windoworks
Its one of those mornings where I can’t think where to start. It is gently snowing outside on a day when
my weather app said mainly cloudy. Like all things I am learning to rely on my own judgement. There are
17 days until Biden’s Inauguration. There is one more day before the Georgia runoff (who knows how that
will turn out) and 2 more days before the Congress vote on the election. Meanwhile, the administration is
trying hard to keep Biden, Harris and their team in the dark. And no one, no one at all is saying ‘isn’t
there something in the Constitution and the Amendments which can protect us from all this unsettling
nonsense?’ Apparently the Proud Boys are bringing their flags, their weapons and their vitriol to Washing
DC on Wednesday, to show their support for Trump and his anti American agenda.
Yesterday Craig and I talked about this as we went for a drive in the snowy countryside. Some time ago
Craig told me that historians believe that in the not too distant future, there will be little distinction
between the skin color of humans. As evolution progresses and intermarriage and intermingling become
more common, a person with pale skin will become more unusual. I always wonder why human body
hues are named thus. I have never seen a white skinned person, unless they are an albino which means
they lack the pigmentation to protect them from the sun’s rays. Also, the hugely inappropriate term
‘redskins’ offers an idea of someone with red skin. Again. Never seen one. Yellow peril is a derogatory
term for people of Asian descent and I’ve never seen anyone with yellow skin.
I suspect that these terms were all coined by so called white men, in an effort to confirm their grip on the
peoples of the world they had designated ‘lesser’ and who could be forced into inferior positions working
for the white man. Perhaps what we are seeing now is the frantic effort by so called ‘white’ men and
women to desperately hold on to power and influence over those they still deem inferior.
But we here in the US consider ourselves to be a democracy and of course I consulted Wikipedia and
here’s what I found:

According to American political scientist Larry Diamond, democracy consists of four key elements: a
political system for choosing and replacing the government through free and fair elections; the active
participation of the people, as citizens, in politics and civic life; protection of the human rights of all
citizens; and a rule of law, in which the laws and procedures apply equally to all citizens. Todd Landman,
nevertheless, draws our attention to the fact that democracy and human rights are two different concepts
and that "there must be greater specificity in the conceptualisation and operationalisation of democracy
and human rights".
Hmmm. In a completely different topic and apart from the pandemic, extremely worrying, Russian
hackers based in the US successfully hacked into an ever growing number of government organizations as
well as businesses and - we missed it altogether for 9 MONTHS! Literally since March last year, Russian

�hackers have been worming their way into practically every aspect of American life. Now the news is that
this happened and we are now aware of it - but no one is discussing how we go about fixing this or even if
it is fixable. Last week my messenger account was hacked and every person on my FB friends list was at
risk. I changed my FB password and deleted messenger (I’ll put it back soon) and I advised all my contacts
not to open it or to change their FB password if they did.
And all the while the pandemic persists. This morning the US has a total of 20.5M cases and 350K deaths.
Remember, these totals are from yesterday, not today. In Southern California they are struggling to stay
afloat. Here in Michigan our case numbers are on the rise again with 8,493 new cases yesterday. Michigan
deaths stand at 13,296, soon the dead will fill 3 Ford Theaters.
This morning Craig is in his GVSU office, sorting through his large bookshelves. At home, we continue to
sort and divest - our non essential seasonal decorations have been given away. July seems so much closer
after you have passed through Christmas and New Year.
Oliver.

�It had been raining and the playground equipment was wet, so of course Oliver was wet

�through too. He climbs on everything and has absolutely no
fear.

Walking in Aquinas College
grounds

�Aquinas
woods

�Reeds
Lake

�Reeds Lake

In the bleak midwinter
Frosty wind made moan,
Earth stood hard as iron,
Water like a stone;
Snow had fallen, snow on snow,
Snow on snow,
In the bleak midwinter

In the Bleak Midwinter by Christina Rossetti.
There would be a flashback but I am confused as to where exactly we went next. I need to confer with
Craig.
What will possibly happen next? I ask myself. The world seems in such disarray. Ah well, day 298 of being
extremely careful. Tomorrow then.

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                    <text>Day 297. Saturday January 2. 183 sleeps to go.
by windoworks
Yesterday the US passed the 20M mark of total cases. And all those people who traveled for New Years
Eve are now returning home this weekend. Once again there were posts on FaceBook and videos online of
governors and senior medical personnel begging people to forgo the family gathering and just stay safely at
home. For many, that plea fell on deaf ears. I think thats the hardest thing, to just keep going, to keep
staying safe and being cautious. My brother-in-law wrote that he hoped Craig and I would not spend our
last 6 months in America shut inside. We do go out, in the car, and sometimes we walk together when the
weather is not too harsh and the sidewalk not too slippery with ice.
The family keeps reassuring me that it will be different in Australia, but in this morning’s news the state
borders remain closed with Sydney now facing mandated masking in a number of situations and Victoria,
Western Australia and Queensland noting small outbreaks. There is no immediate plan to begin
vaccinating in Australia, and that worries me. And in astonishing news (if Its correct), the United
Kingdom has begun mixing and matching vaccines. How would that work? Aren’t you supposed to get 2
doses of one particular vaccine? Also, Brexit seems final (finally) and now there is a hard border between
the United Kingdom and Europe. Brexit was supposed to make the United Kingdom a strong independent
entity on the world market - but I don’t think it will happen now. This finalization has made Scotland
rethink its position as part of the UK as financially it is more beneficial to remain a part of the EU. This
may signal the break up of the UK, we’ll have to wait and see.

Washington Post
What a fantastic year! So many great developments, right?
Carbon emissions were down! (Because we were all afraid to leave our homes.)
Confederate statues were toppled! (Because they were up for way too long to begin with.)
Voter turnout broke records! (Because democracy was in great peril.)
Scientists developed the fastest-ever vaccine! (For a virus that continues to ravage the country.)
Sigh.
It was a year that broke our internal clocks. How is it already over when we never even left March? Why
does every day feel like Thursday? Is the election still happening? It's been nine months of the pandemic,
six weeks of electoral bickering, Four Seasons Total Landscaping of complete pandemonium.
It was a year that melted our brains. It was a year that melted Rudy’s hair. The sky was orange. The floor
was lava. The moon was wet. The hornets were murderous. The president was under impeachment.
(Remember that?) UFOs, it turns out, might be real; Ellen’s kindness was not. The Olympics were
postponed. The holidays were canceled. Dr. Fauci carried on.
It was a year that broke our hearts.

�Even though 2021 will bring more of These Challenging Times, soon enough our emails may actually find
us well. And by the way, masks are very much still In.
Here is a prediction from covid19.health data.org: 567,195 COVID-19 deaths based on current projection
scenario by April 1, 2021. I couldn’t find a projection for cases but as it seems we are well over 20M cases
this morning, I imagine we will be at or over 30M cases by Friday this week. Our only option is to stay
safely at home.

CNN
The US surpassed 20 million total recorded Covid-19 cases on Friday, hours after the country ushered in
2021 and left behind its deadliest month of the pandemic.The nation also has set a Covid-19
hospitalization record for four straight days. The high counts are a grim reminder that even with 2020
behind us, the pandemic continues to ravage parts of the country. And some leaders warn the worst is still
ahead. "We are still going to have our toughest and darkest days," Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti told
CNN on Thursday. More than 125,370 coronavirus patients were in US hospitals Thursday, the fourth
consecutive day that number set a record for the pandemic, COVID Tracking Project data shows.
As of early Friday afternoon, the country had recorded a total of more than 20,007,000 Covid-19 cases,
according to Johns Hopkins data. Going by official tallies, it took 292 days for the US to reach its first 10
million cases, and just 54 more days to double it. However, researchers have long said the actual number
of infections likely is many millions higher, undercounted in part because of testing limitations. One US
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention modeling study suggests as many as 53 million people in the
United States might have been infected from February through September alone.
December was the deadliest month of the pandemic for the US, accounting for more than 77,500 of the
country's 346,000 Covid-19 deaths, Johns Hopkins University data shows.And experts have warned the
grim numbers could climb further nationwide in the coming weeks, with swells stemming from
gatherings and travels over the holidays.
Despite repeated calls from local and state leaders for people to celebrate with only members of their
household, millions of Americans opted to spend time away from home. On Wednesday, the
Transportation Security Administration reported its fourth-busiest day of the pandemic, screening more
than 1 million people for the fifth straight day.
And here’s a little known story from Stuff.co.NZ:

A wave of emotionally drained health workers from the United States and United Kingdom are looking to
escape Covid-19-ravaged hospitals by moving to New Zealand. Accent Medical Recruitment managing
director Prudence Thomson said medical recruiters were reporting high demand for work in New
Zealand. “They are exhausted, they cannot see the light at the end of the tunnel … they are angry and
scared – and these are doctors with 30 years experience, and they just want to make the move away from

�their home country.”
Texan nurse Ana Carino was among those hoping a new life in New Zealand would heal the emotional
trauma of working in a country ravaged by Covid-19.
Wow! So now some of our vital nurses and doctors are leaving for the relative safety of New Zealand! And
who can blame them? Their hours have been extended so that staff often work 18 hour shifts. Now I know
this happened long before Covid, but now working long days or nights in very difficult and mainly
depressing circumstances is taking a dreadful toll. And thats not taking into account the number of
medical staff getting sick.
Once more, corruption has arrived, this time in the distribution of the vaccines. Firstly, the federal
government has washed its hands of any responsibility for distribution and has laid it all on the states’
shoulders. They, in turn, have mandated the hospitals to distribute it. Remember, the same hospitals
battling to keep up with the extremely ill covid patients? There’s no extra money from the government to
pay for this, like PPE was, its every state for themselves. In desperation, Michigan’s governor has turned to
those states on the borders to form a coalition to work together: Ohio, Illinois,Wisconsin, Minnesota and
Indiana - and that seems to be working well.
And just to keep us on out tippy toes, there is the Georgia runoff on Tuesday which will determine
whether Mitch McConnell keeps his draconian grip on the Senate, followed by the election ratification by
the Congress on Wednesday in which 140 some Republican house members have vowed to vote against in
hopes of returning Trump to the White House as President. As this constitutes a form of treason according
to the Constitution, Nancy Pelosi does have the power to refuse to seat the 140plus Republicans. I’ve seen
Nancy waggle her finger at Trump. She’s fearless.
So its beginning to look as though Trump will have to be carried out of the White House. He returned
early from Mar-A-Lago on New Years Eve because he was worried he was losing his tenacious grip on the
Republican Party. I cannot imagine what will happen once Biden and Harris are ensconced in the White
House. It may be a disruptive and contentious 4 years. And just a word about all the badly behaved
Republicans in the House and the Senate - midterms are next, baby.
Oliver.

�With Daddy at the seaside.

�For the second part of our day excursion to Lucca, we left the city and drove up into the hills to a winery.

�The winery

�gate

�Walking
in.

Winery buildings including the tasting
room.

�Some of the
vines

�Me in the shade - it was
hot!

�The winery is also a bed and
breakfast.

�An arty shot of the mountains.
See you tomorrow.

�</text>
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                    <text>Day 296. New Years Day.
by windoworks
I think 2021 begins with the phrase: I never imagined. I don’t think any of us imagined what would
happen in 2020. But here’s some things that didn’t happen although scientists did wonder. From Science
Alert:
Yellowstone's supervolcano didn't explode - although it gave off signs that it might have been imminent.
An asteroid didn't slam into Earth - although 2 or more passed by really close.
We weren't broiled alive by solar radiation - the sun seems to have entered a quiet phase.
Aliens never invaded - even though some unknown objects have been seen in the sky.
Armies of the undead never rose from the grave - really? Is that a real thing? I think this refers to the large
number of newly discovered sarcophagi found in Egypt.
In quite startling news:

New York Times
Australia changed a lyric in its national anthem from “we are young and free” to “we are one and free” to
recognize Indigenous populations that have lived on the continent for more than 60,000 years.
I remember the first change to the anthem. “Australians sons“ was changed to “Australians all”. It takes a
while for the government to catch up with the reality of the day. In New Zealand, Maori is the official
language, but in Australia there are about 260 distinct Aboriginal language groups, so it is difficult to
designate a specific language as the official language.
At the same time, In Australia,

Bloomberg: Authorities are battling to contain Covid-19 clusters in Australia’s two largest cities, urging
people to avoid large New Year’s Eve gatherings to prevent wider outbreaks.
Ten new cases were reported overnight in Sydney, with a cluster on the Northern Beaches growing to
144, New South Wales state Premier Gladys Berejiklian told reporters Thursday. A second group of
infections in the city’s inner west has risen to nine.
Neighboring Victoria state, which had gone 61 days without recording community transmission of the
virus, said eight cases had been detected. The outbreaks in the two states are likely connected, with
someone who’d returned from New South Wales attending a Thai restaurant in Melbourne that’s linked to
other new infections in the city.
The outbreaks are a blow to Australia, which had largely suppressed community transmission through
rigorous testing and contact tracing, and by shuttering the international border -- with all returned
overseas travelers made to isolate for 14 days in quarantine hotels

�And in approximately 6 months time, we may have to quarantine upon arrival, unless we are vaccinated
and have an electronic vaccination passport. Here’s a reminder of the dreadful bush (forest) fires in
Australia at the beginning of 2020.

And while you think this infant new year can’t be worse than 2020, here’s this alarm sounding:

AP
A more contagious form of the coronavirus has begun circulating in the United States.
In Britain, where it was first identified, the new variant became the predominant form of the coronavirus
in just three months, accelerating that nation’s surge and filling its hospitals. It may do the same in the
United States, exacerbating an unrelenting rise in deaths and overwhelming the already strained health
care system, experts warned. The new variant seems to infect more people than earlier versions of the
coronavirus, even when the environments are the same. It’s not clear what gives the variant this
advantage, although there are indications that it may infect cells more efficiently.
Meanwhile in the severely challenged Southern California area:

�NBC
LOS ANGELES — For Dr. Anita Sircar, an infectious disease specialist, there are no breaks and few days
off.
An implacable surge of Covid-19 cases has overwhelmed Southern California hospitals and intensive care
units for most of December after public health officials warned for weeks that people should refrain from
gathering with those outside their households over the holidays.
Yet millions of Americans desperate to reconnect with loved ones and restore a sense of normalcy ignored
the warnings on Thanksgiving. As a result, coronavirus cases spiked, and ICU capacity dwindled.
"It's relentless," Sircar said, speaking on the phone between patient rounds and doctor meetings at
Providence Little Company of Mary Medical Center in Torrance.
State public health officials recently extended modified stay-at-home orders for the regions hardest hit by
the surge, including Southern California and the San Joaquin Valley, where ICUs have been full for
several weeks.
Hospitals have built makeshift ICUs, and they sometimes move patients into gift shops or pediatric wards
to care for the sick and dying. At Providence, a tent has been erected in the parking lot to accommodate
overflow patients when the time comes. And the time will come, said several medical professionals
working on the front lines of the pandemic.
"We're on this wheel that just keeps turning," Sircar said. "It's a revolving door that doesn't stop."
Yesterday I texted with Tracey - remember Tracey who wrote a piece for ‘The view from far away’ which
described the difference between her mother’s life in Sydney Australia and her life in L.A? She has
hunkered down, on her own, and is not even going to the grocery store until things calm down again. Her
situation is even more dire than ours.
Of course the extreme weather continues here in spite of the virus. Here’s a photo this week from the
Midwest:

�Well thats scary.

This next piece made me laugh, and I just have to share it with you, with the rider: none of these items
have been eaten or drunk by me.

Washington Post
Dalgona coffee
Many of us have given up regular visits to our favorite barista, and so dalgona coffee, a South Korean drink
in which instant coffee, sugar and milk are whipped into a foamy blend, was a (super-sweet) stand-in for
our coffee-shop fix.
Cloud bread
This airy, meringue-like concoction, made from egg whites, cornstarch and sugar, became a TikTok

�darling this summer. It’s relatively tasteless, but its popularity probably can be chalked up to its ease of
preparation — and that weirdly satisfying moment when people tear into them on camera.
Charcuterie chalets. Move over, gingerbread. This year, we fashioned abodes shingled with salami, sided
with breadsticks and decorated with almonds. Maybe it’s because many of us have been housebound this
year that we created odes to our too-familiar surroundings in a meaty medium?
Sourdough
Sourdough baking, like bingeing “Tiger King,” was a very early-pandemic vibe, fueled by yeast shortages
and an excess of time at home. People nurtured their starters as if they were particularly needy children,
traded recipes for their castoff dough, and photographed the pillowy interiors and artfully slashed crusts
like proud parents.
Carrot bacon
These seasoned, crunchy strips of root vegetable became one of the few non-carby breakout food stars of
the pandemic after vegan chef Tabitha Brown’s TikTok recipe got 3.6 million views. Bonus trend points:
They’re crisped in an air fryer, the pandemic cook’s favorite kitchen appliance.
Canning. There’s something reassuring about having rows of gleaming jars of food you’ve harvested and
“put up” for the long winter. That might be a #cottagecore fantasy for most of us, but enough people
bought into it this year that retailers sold out of jars and lids
Windowsill scallions. Our dreams of self-sufficiency were further fed by the craze for turning kitchen
scraps into crops — even if only on a very small scale. Beyond offering a boost to a salad (or just a way to
entertain a cooped-up kid), those little green sprouts might have been the glimmer of hope we needed.
Fancy focaccia. Dough became the canvas for legions of newly minted flatbread artists, who took to the
trend of studding loafs with baked-in designs for edible masterpieces (van Gogh never had it so good).
Floral motifs were the most popular, with herbs and vegetables forming intricate blooms. Pancake cereal.
Tiny pancakes piled in a bowl and drenched in syrup sounds like a breakfast that only Buddy the Elf
would love. But plenty of TikTokers joined in, apparently wooed by the combination of cuteness
(miniature foods are a whole genre online) and the perennial popularity of cereal, and the platform
dubbed the mash-up its top food trend of 2020. Frog bread. Edible, lumpy amphibians with googly eyes
were the antidote to the precise and lovely ethos of the #breadart trend that we didn’t know we needed.
Bakers delighted in their imperfect creations, sharing photos of their goofy, cartoonish bakes — along
with some badly needed joy.
So here’s what we spent the last day of 2020 continuing to do:

��The spare bedroom has now become Packing Central and I think we have reached box number 20, with
more boxes ordered and a storage facility located nearby. I imagine this will be our daily life now in 2021.
Oliver time:

��I’m rather fond of the big bath at Great Aunt Bernie’s house and I don’t always need water

�to play with the
toys.

�The last 2020 photo of Murphy happily hoarding toys at her new

�home.

Midnight in Sydney. A very subdued fireworks display with almost no audience.
Here in Grand Rapids, a friend offered a ‘chalk the doors’ message:
This day marks the occasion of a time-honored Christian tradition of “chalking the doors.”
The formula for the ritual - adapted for 2021 - is simple:
take chalk of any color and write the following above the entrance of your home: 20 + C + M + B +
21 The letters have two meanings.

First, they represent the initials of the Magi - Caspar, Melchior, and Balthazar - who came to visit Jesus in
His first home. They also abbreviate the Latin phrase, Christus mansionem benedicat "May Christ bless the
house.”The “+” signs represent the cross, and the “20” at the beginning and the “21” at the end mark the
year. Taken together, this inscription is performed as a request for Christ to bless those homes that are so
marked.
And another friend offered this: I will be opening my doors and sweeping out 2020. I believe it is an Irish
tradition. I am not sure how long I should sweep, especially after 2020, but will give it my best shot!
Here’s to a great new year!
So here we are. A new year begins. There is hope for the future but it will not be the normal future. The
world has taken a beating as we have also. From our house to yours - wherever you are in the world - let

�this be a happier year. Let us all be wiser and kinder and more generous and content with the small
pleasures life offers us.
See you tomorrow.

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                    <text>Day 295. New Year’s Eve.
by windoworks

As I write this morning, it is almost 2 hours into 2021 in New Zealand and 6 minutes to midnight in
Australia. 2021 is upon us. Many people have expressed the feeling that if we could just make it to 2021,
everything would magically be better. As a world, we have imbued such hope for a better life in 2021, that
we are bound to be disappointed.

�The first two new variant cases of Covid have appeared in two different states here in the US. In one of
the cases, the patient has not been in contact with anyone who has traveled internationally. So that’s a
worry. And just to bring you up to speed: California has asked all nursing staff to work longer hours than
allowed and some vials of the Pfizer vaccine had to be discarded because they thawed without being
injected. Each state has had to organize how and when and who gets the vaccine as Trump has said its all
up to the states now. And here’s the biggest problem: US hospitals are organized as ‘for profit’ businesses
(I’ll let the sink in, shall I?), so the storing and then distribution of the vaccines turns them unwillingly,
into non-profit entities. They are already struggling because their other services have been pushed back to
allow the housing and nursing of seriously ill Covid patients. In California, where earlier this week it was
reported that one person dies from Covid every 10 minutes, hospitals have suspended all elective surgery.
It’s not that they don’t have the operating theaters and the surgeons - its that they don’t have the nursing
staff or anesthesiologists available. Michigan is holding - the numbers have reduced slightly, but as Dr
Khaldun says: we remain in a fragile position.
Here are the US statistics for today, the last day of 2020. Yesterday 3,903 deaths were recorded bringing
the total deaths to 341K. The positive case total reached 19.7M yesterday, by the end of the year tonight
the US will be close to 20M cases. Australia’s population totals 25.5M - how long will it be before the US
case total exceeds Australia’s population?

cnn
In Nevada, Gov. Steve Sisolak urged residents to avoid high-risk activities to slow the spread of the virus
in the state.
"I know people want to celebrate the end of 2020, and I don't blame them. But if we don't start making
smart choices at the start of 2021, we will look a lot and feel a lot more like 2020 than any of us want it to
be," the governor said.
Celebratory gatherings and travel could help drive another surge of infections -- followed by
hospitalizations and deaths -- health officials have warned. But millions have opted to spend the holidays
away from home. More than a million people passed through airport security checks Tuesday, for the
fourth straight day after the Christmas holiday.
And:

Washington Post: Top federal infectious-disease expert Anthony S. Fauci said Tuesday that the pandemic
is “out of control in many respects,” in the United States right now, and predicted that January could be
even worse than December. But Fauci also expressed hope that President-elect Joe Biden could make an
impact by “showing leadership from the top.”

�And here’s a really disturbing item that we should all take heed of (even if we want to close our eyes and
hum loudly instead):

Washington Post: In its last briefing of the year, the World Health Organization took a moment to warn
that the coronavirus, despite all of the lives lost and all of the disruption, might not even be the pandemic
that health experts have long feared, and that we should prepare for even deadlier outbreaks in the future.

�WHO emergencies chief Mike Ryan said Tuesday that while this pandemic has been severe, it “is not
necessarily the big one.” The coronavirus pandemic, he said, should serve as a “wake-up call.”
Trump has retreated to Mar-A-Lago (even though his neighbors objected) and is tweeting up a storm to
his followers. He wants to overturn the election on January 6 when Congress ratifies the election results.

Washington Post: Formal rallies are planned most of the day and will draw pro-Trump demonstrators to
the Washington Monument, Freedom Plaza and the Capitol. But online forums and encrypted chat
messages among far-right groups indicate a number of demonstrators might be planning more than
chanting and waving signs. Threats of violence, ploys to smuggle guns into the District and calls to set up
an “armed encampment” on the Mall have proliferated in online chats about the Jan. 6 day of protest. The
Proud Boys, members of armed right-wing groups, conspiracy theorists and white supremacists have
pledged to attend.
Trump, meanwhile, has continued to issue calls to supporters to converge on D.C.
“JANUARY SIXTH, SEE YOU IN DC!” he tweeted Wednesday.
YOU CAN’T MAKE THIS STUFF UP!
Now for something entirely different.

NPR: With today's fragmented, social media-fueled pop culture environment, the consumer has never had
more power. And all the biggest media companies are chasing viewer tastes more intensely than ever,
focusing on their streaming platforms as consumers create an increasingly personalized, fractured media
diet. Here's how all that adds up to the four biggest ways 2020 transformed media.
1. For broadcasters, the lockdowns in mid-March forced many shows to end their seasons early

and kept networks like ABC, CBS, NBC, The CW and Fox from developing many new
shows. The fall season, when broadcasters often debut their most-anticipated new series, was
pushed back for months. And a few new shows which managed to debut in the fall, like Kim
Cattrall's Filthy Rich and John Slattery's NEXTon Fox, are already canceled.
2. The problem was highlighted in a recent NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist survey, which found

61 percent of Americans overall trusted the presidential election result, but just 24 percent of
Republicans did. We are learning this year how much of American democracy depends on
the mutual acceptance of norms and basic facts. What we may learn next year, is what
happens to democracy if that mutual acceptance drops even further.
3. This year, I saw three things happen in television that I never expected. The Bachelor chose

its first Black man as a star. Cops and Live PD, two unscripted shows long criticized for
stereotyping poor folks and people of color, were canceled. And CBS, a network long
criticized for its lack of diversity, announced specific diversity goals for scripted and

�unscripted series, aimed at boosting the numbers of non-white people throughout their
productions.
4. The streaming wars kicked off with big platform launches, from Apple TV+ and Disney+ late

last year, to WarnerMedia's HBO Max and NBC Universal's Peacock this year. 2020 showed
us the shape of the coming second phase: increasing and refining what's on these platforms,
to define the identity of the service and hold your attention. Disney this month announced
plans to fill Disney+ with lots of new material – 100 titles annually for the next four years –
including at least 10 new Star Wars shows and 11 Marvel programs. Warner Bros. will debut
all 17 of its feature films scheduled for release in 2021 on HBO Max the same date they hit
theaters. They're both gunning for each other and industry leader Netflix, which still has
more subscribers than either Disney+ or HBO Max.
Oliver:

�Oliver with his

�Dad

�Oliver with his
Mum.

��How cool is that?

�Washington Post: Biden has vowed a far more robust and unified federal response that would utilize the
heft of the U.S. government to prevent state competition. The president-elect said he would find ways to
speed up the production of vaccines and their distribution so that one million people can be vaccinated
each day, which he said would be five to six times the current rate.
So here we are. There is just over 15 hours to 2021. Let us try to move forward into 2021 with hope “Hope” is the thing with feathers That perches in the soul And sings the tune without the words And never stops - at all - (Emily Dickinson)
See you next year. I’ll leave you in 2020 with this:

���</text>
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                    <text>Day 294
by windoworks
I awoke this morning to the sound of snow blowers. It snowed almost all night long. Every year, when the
first heavy snow falls, I remember how quiet the snow makes the world. And somehow the whiteness is
bright. I like snow so much more than rain. Snow is easily shaken off your clothing whereas rain takes
ages for y our wet clothes to dry out.
At last! A meme.

And so say we all - and yes, I was a huge fan of Battlestar Galactica (the new series) and I’m thinking of
watching it again. Speaking of TV series, is anyone else watching the Sundance series: The Name of the
Rose? Its really good but we can only manage one episode at a time. I was reading a friends TV list the
other day and we have watched almost all of the shows he listed. This has been an ‘entertain me please’
year for TV in our house.
This next piece was sent to me by my sister-in-law. Its really what I have been thinking recently. What do
you think?

�And here’s what Trump should have said in January this year, from a New York Times quiz:

“After consulting with our top government health professionals, I have decided to take several strong but
necessary actions to protect the health and well-being of all Americans.”
From the Atlantic and Ed Yong:

1. The vaccine rollout could be rocky. We are trying to plan for the most complex vaccination program in
human history after a year of complete exhaustion, with a chronically underfunded infrastructure and
personnel who are still responsible for measles and sexually transmitted diseases and making sure your
water is clean.
2. The virus could change. What happens next with SARS-CoV-2 depends on how our immune systems
react to the vaccines, and whether the virus evolves in response. Both factors are notoriously hard to
predict, because the immune system (as immunologists like to remind people) is very complicated, and
evolution (as biologists often note) is cleverer than you.
3. But expect some relief by the summer. Many of the 30 epidemiologists, physicians, immunologists,
sociologists, and historians whom I interviewed for this piece are cautiously optimistic that the U.S. is
headed for a better summer. But they emphasized that such a world, though plausible, is not inevitable.
4. Still, this outbreak will leave long-term scars. A pummeled health-care system will be reeling, shortstaffed, and facing new surges of people with long-haul symptoms or mental-health problems. Social gaps
that were widened will be further torn apart. Grief will turn into trauma. And a nation that has begun to
return to normal will have to decide whether to remember that normal led to this.
And this next is also from The Atlantic and looks at restaurants in particular. Yesterday I read a very
comprehensive article about all the really interesting and successful restaurants across the US in the major
cities that have already reluctantly closed their doors. Often these were restaurants you had to book weeks

�in advance to get a table. What’s interesting to me is that this was predicted earlier in the pandemic and so
was the prediction that the big chains like MacDonalds would survive and thrive. This is evident almost
every lunchtime in Grand Rapids. There are long lines of cars all ordering at the drive thru of fast food
restaurants. I am encouraged by our local restaurants and speciality stores that have adapted quickly and
offer curbside pickup. In my neighborhood, masking has been taken seriously in the last few months and
people wait patiently outside cafes etc for their pick up order.

I think that retail capacity will be reduced, relocated, and repurposed,” said Daniel O’Connor, a veteran
retail adviser and visiting executive at the Harvard Business School. Reduced means that thousands of
restaurants will go out of business. “Flat out, I’m telling you a lot of today’s restaurant locations are going
to become gyms,” O’Connor said. Relocated means that many restaurants that hang on will recognize in
the next few months that they can’t survive in expensive downtown areas. They’ll look to open new
locations in the suburbs, or shift their business to a food truck.
“Repurposed means the restaurant of 2010 isn’t going to be the restaurant of 2025,” O’Connor said. “The
pandemic is going to accelerate the shift to contactless delivery of meals, groceries, and products of all
kinds.” As more restaurants recognize that they cannot make rent by filling hygienically spaced seats, they
will become, simply, for-profit kitchens—a place where food is prepared but less commonly eaten.
And here’s the other development: a slew of cooking shows which show you how to make restaurant style
meals - and we all have enough time on our hands now to do this. In our house we have become adept at
repurposing food such as last nights dinner. Its amazing how creative and even frugal a pandemic makes
you. Also, if Craig cannot find something in a store he visits, then I order it online. No more multiple visits
to different grocery stores looking for gluten free pinko breadcrumbs (really, how many Americans are
gluten free?), i just order it online and 2 days later, there it is on my doorstep. Is this responsible? Possibly
not, but it is a pandemic.
Also from The Atlantic, this is part of a longer piece about shopping.

An awkward luxury service mere months ago, supermarket delivery has been forced into the mainstream
so fast that stores and services are struggling to respond. Like Instacart, Amazon (which owns Whole
Foods) can’t keep up with demand; according to one account, its grocery orders have risen 50-fold since
the lockdowns began. The company is hiring 175,000 new delivery and operations personnel, but it has
limited new grocery sign-ups until it can ramp up service. Some supermarket chains have already
repurposed some of their interior space for online-grocery pickup, but many can’t keep up with the
sudden demand, either. Walmart has extended store hours for pickup and delivery at some locations.
Kroger closed at least one of its Ohio stores to the public entirely, reserving it for online-order fulfillment.
I think these changes are here to stay in the US. Whether they exist or are used in other countries, I
cannot say, but I believe this is part of the future, just as online learning is.

�So here we are. Tomorrow is New Years Eve and Friday begins 2021. What have we learned from this
year? For me: nothing is set in stone and learn to roll with the changes. Accept and adapt. These are both
hard words and even harder ideas. For 294 days, I have lived one day after another in exactly the same
way. Each day begins the same way and ends the same way. I have discovered the calming effect of jigsaw
puzzles, addictive but trashy TV shows and endless books on my Kindle. I have read whole series by an
author and I have watched complete seasons of TV shows. Most of all I have written this blog, day after
day after day. It will never be a chore, it is engrossing and rewarding and most of all, fulfilling. It took a
pandemic to show me I was a writer, and for that, I am grateful.
Yesterday Oliver went to the beach. Last time Zoe took him to the beach he screamed in fear at the water.
This time there is a video of him running down to the waters edge and waiting for the wave to come in
over his feet. But that was would knock him over and Zoe grabs him just before he falls. He is saturated
though.

��Flashback: our next port was Lucca - well we didn’t dock there, but Craig and I joined a tour that took us
first to Lucca. I am extremely fond of Lucca as we stayed overnight inside the wall about 10 years ago.

Lucca is a city on the Serchio river in Italy’s Tuscany region. It’s known for the well-preserved
Renaissance walls encircling its historic city center and its cobblestone streets. Broad, tree-lined pathways
along the tops of these massive 16th- and 17th-century ramparts are popular for strolling and cycling. Casa
di Puccini, where the great opera composer was born, is now a house museum. ― Google

�It was raining at

�first

�Our first stop was the St Martin Cathedral - which was under renovation on the
exterior.

�Gorgeous

�ceiling

�The organ
loft

�A version of the Last

�Supper

The view from the bell
tower

�Chiesa di San Michele in Foro. San Michele in Foro is a Roman Catholic basilica church in

�Lucca, Tuscany, central Italy, built over the ancient Roman forum. Until 1370 it was the seat
of the Consiglio Maggiore, the commune's most important assembly. It is dedicated to
Archangel Michael. Wikipedia. No we didn’t go inside.
More tomorrow. In the meantime, smile behind your mask and stay safe. It will be all right in the end,
and if it is not all right, it is not the end.

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                    <text>[RHC-93_Olexa_1946-08-28]
[Page 1]
August 28, 1946.
Hello Hon,
Writing to let you know everything is O.K. here and hope it’s the same with you. I’m kinda tired
when I get home and go to bed early. We only worked to 4 o’clock today and I went looking for
parts to fix the car. I got two parts but need another one. Well, how is the canning coming along.
Got enough to last all winter? I may not work Saturday because work is slack but may work then
anyhow but if I don’t I’ll breeze up there Friday night. Tomorrow, I’ll have to work on my car.
[Page 2]
No mail as yet for us but Nell got one from Cal. It’s been raining practically all day today. I miss
your cooking at nites [sic] when I get home so that’s something ain’t it. Ha! Ha! I got a good
start at “Bach-en it” anyway. I go out every nite with Blondes. [sic] Well, Darling I miss you a
lot so don’t worry. I haven’t been able to get them boards for Dad because the company won’t
sell them. I’ll try elsewhere to see if I can get them. How is everyone at the store. Give them my
regards. I’ll bet they wanted you to start working right away. I’m not far wrong
[Page 3]
am I? Ha! Ha! Little Birdie told me. I’ve already made out my claim for furlough pay and will
send it out tomorrow. If I figure right we’ll get around $500 dollars but I don’t know what the
government is paying. How is Mother and the rest of the kids. Give them my regards. Ollie is
still in the hospital and I haven’t been down to see him as yet. Maybe I’ll go Friday if I work
Saturday. About the new car we weren’t lucky. But one women won two cars so it must have
been the one we were supposed to get. Well, it was a good try and we may have better luck next
time. Did you see about my watch? I sure
[Page 4]
wish it was fixed. Well, I guess I close and hit the hay. [sic] Bye for now. All my Love.
Your Hubby,
Joe
{Signature accent mark}
P.S. Nice Letter Eh! Didn’t know I could do it.

[Envelope front]

�Joe Olexa
1190 Reed Pl. [?]
Detroit, 2 Mich.
{Postmark}
DETROIT MICH. 8
AUG 29
9:30 PM
1946
Mrs. Joe Olexa
c/o Ben [?] Van Der Weide
1913 Berkley Ave. S.W.
Grand Rapids, 9 Mich.

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                    <text>[RHC-93_Olexa_1945-05-31]
[Page 1]
England
May 31, 1945.
“My Dearest Darling,”
Last nite [sic], I received one of your long-expected letters and the picture you sent. You don’t
know “Darling” how greatly relieved I am to get this wonderful letter. I love your picture
“Darling” and it makes you as lovely as I always thought you to be. Gosh! Sweets it’s wonderful
to have all the blues vanish into thin air. If I had you here with me now “Darling,” I’d never stop
squeezing you. My thoughts are always of you “Sweets” and I do hope that
[Page 2]
we will be together again for good. Gee! Honey I’ve been so lonesome for you in the past that at
times I could almost cry. Just like a baby, ain’t I but never the less true. [sic] “Darling” when we
are married, I want to make you as happy as you’ve made me since I’ve been away. God has
gifted me with a wonderful girl and I shall always love you. I know too “Sweets” that it was been
just as hard or harder for you when this war separated us. But it hasn’t broken down our love for
each other and it never will.
[Page 3]
I never cease thinking of the day when I shall return to you and more since the war in Europe is
over. Golly!! I could hold you ever so tight in my arms till they hurt. I wouldn’t mind either
because I’d be the happiest man in the world. I’ve proposed to you so many times that I stopped
counting. Maybe when I do get that opportunity, I won’t be able to speak. Anyway, I’ll try hard
and I’ve always looked forward in being able to put the ring on your finger. The day we are
married I will be a fortunate man to have a lovely wife as
[Page 4]
you. No matter what problems shall arise, we shall see it through and enjoying the happiness of
sharing our lives in the days to come. We also have a lot of plans that we need to talk about and
how I wish that we could do it now. But it’s best to waite [sic] till we are together. I am still
waiting for my name to appear on shipping orders, but it will be a little while yet. As I’ve written
before, I have 126 points and hope that I will go home by air. Gosh!! “Darling” we have so much
lost time to make up and it’s going
[Page 5]
to be wonderful. Isn’t it going to be nice to fall asleep in each other’s arms? At least I won’t have
to squeeze an old pillow all nite [sic] making believe it’s you. Ha! Ha! I was sorry to hear you
rec’d some of yours back and it has happened to a lot of people. I went to the movie last nite and

�saw “Impatient Years.” It was a swell picture. I didn’t see the picture, “I’ll Be Seeing You.” Will
have to keep it in mind. Yes, it is a great relief for these people over here to know they won’t be
bombed anymore. It even seems odd to
[Page 6]
me to see the lights on the streets and in the houses. Did you see any of the pictures about the
Germans Concentration Camps? They are horrifying but true. If we didn’t get into the war when
we did, America would have had the same fate. The people back home are mighty fortunate but
do not realize it. The weather here in England is very changeable. It rains, shines, clouds and so
forth every day. No, I haven’t heard from Roy or seen him since he got married. I don’t think he
ever will write. I hope it didn’t scare you too
[Page 7]
much “Darling” when you saw the Japanese money. Otherwise, I wouldn’t have sent it to you. I
don’t believe my buddy will be back for our wedding, so I shall have to rely on Amen, Johnny,
or Ollie to be the best man. I’m disappointed though not having Andy. How are your folks these
days? Don’t forget to give them my best wishes? How is Gloria making out with her boyfriends?
Gee! “Honey,” I only hope that I will be home for one of the summer months. We never did
spend one together did we?
[Page 8]
Well, “Precious” I must close for we have an inspection in 15 minutes. Sending all my love and
it was wonderful to get one of your lovely letters. “Bye!”
Always,
Your Future Husband
Joe
{Hand-drawn symbols representing hugs and kisses and the words “you” and “me”)
P.S. Enclosing a clipping. I enjoyed it.

[Envelope front]
S/Sgt. Joseph P. Olexa (12016893)
6916 Reinf. Co. (Prov.)
A.P.O.-551
c/o PM. – N.Y., N.Y.
{Postmark}
U.S. ARMY POSTAL SERVICE
551

�JUN
1
1945
A.P.O.
Miss Agnes Van Der Weide
1913 Berkley Ave. S.W.
Grand Rapids, 9 Mich.

�</text>
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                    <text>[RHC-93_Olexa_1945-05-04]
[Page 1]
England
May 4, 1945.
“My Dearest Darling,”
Rec’d your lovely letter of Apr. 24th and was very pleased to get it. It’s been almost 3 weeks that
I have waited to get it and I must admit my morale was pretty low. I also got three V-mails from
Ollie which is surprising. It sure is a relief to know you got all of the money I sent. Now I can
destroy the receipts. I also got some very old letters that were sent to me when I was wounded
last July. My thoughts are always of you “Darling” and how grand it will be when I shall be with
you again. It’s been ages but I shall make up for last time. Ha! Ha! I love you more and more
each day. Gosh!! I wish I could squeeze you right now. I could stand a lot of it myself, right now.
How about you? Ha! Ha! Very teasing, ain’t I? [sic]
[Page 2]
I’m still patiently waiting for the go to pack up for my furlough and when it does come I might
faint. Ha! Ha! I’ve written three long letters to you last week and I hope you rec’d them already.
I’m coming along fine but pretty busy and I shall try to write to you at least twice a week. If I
can write more I shall do it. I really miss your letters when I don’t get them and at times it seems
as if someone heavy is sitting on my morale. Yes, it was a great shock and surprise to hear of
President Roosevelt’s death and at first I didn’t believe it. There was big parade over here the
day he was buried. His name will go down in History of Being the Best Leader of all time. The
little dog I wrote to you about is gone now and I wish I could have kept him. I’m going
[Page 3]
to have a nice Fox Terrier or a Cocker Spaniel someday. They’re smart and I like them. I’m glad
to know that the papers are putting the pictures of all the things that went on in the Concentration
Camps in Germany. Maybe the people will now sit up and take notice. The Germans are
Monsters not Human Beings and the German women are just as bad. Whatever the Allies do to
them after this is over, will be too good for them. I have no sympathy for them at all. The war
news is very good and when this was in Europe is over, we shall show the Japs that we mean
business, to live like Human Beings. Helen writes that Gaylord is in Camp Wheeler. Hope he
makes the best of the new life he will lead. I wish him luck. Well, “Darling” what have you been
doing lately? Working hard as ever I suppose and thinking of me? Gosh!! “Sweets” what
[Page 4]
are we going to do the first day I arrive? I believe I’ll squeeze you to death then back to life.
Think you can stand it? I can. Ha! Ha! How are the folks these days? Don’t forget to give them a
Hello for me, will you? Well, I must close for now and write real soon.

�Loads of Love &amp; Kisses,
Your Future Husband
“Joe”
{Signature accent mark}
P.S. Enclosed is some Japanese invasion money my Buddy sent me.

[Envelope front]
S/Sgt. Joseph P. Olexa (12016893)
6916 Reinf. Co. (Prov.)
6903 Reinf. Bn. (Prov.)
A.P.O.-551 c/o PM. – N.Y., N.Y.
{Postmark}
U.S. ARMY POSTAL SERVICE
551
MAY
6
1945
A.P.O.
Miss Agnes Van Der Weide
1913 Berkley Ave. S.W.
Grand Rapids, 9 Mich.

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