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                    <text>Day 360. Saturday March 6. 120 sleeps to go.
by windoworks

In Australia, there is more development in the story of the Attorney-General and the rape allegation
during his teenage years. Apparently he went on TV in an emotional state and strongly denied it. He has
taken time off for stress. (I make no comment on whether the allegation is true or false. There is no
investigation at this time). The Prime Minister Scott Morrison didn’t really understand the fuss (and
hadn’t read the breaking story) but luckily his wife explained it to him, using his daughters as an example.
Really? There seems to be an unspoken belief (not only in Australia) that women who recount stories of
rape or inappropriate touching etc., are protagonists. That is, they are at fault, not men. But I think, to be
accurate, it is society’s fault. Some time ago I asked Craig, with his historian’s hat on, when did women
become secondary to men? His answer: during the Paleolithic (Old Stone Age), women and men shared all
tasks equally. But then, about 10,000 years ago, in the Neolithic (New Stone Age), the dawn of agriculture
began. This meant that people became sedentary, built permanent dwellings and stayed to manage the
crops. Women were then confined to the ‘house’ and in charge of all things domestic while the men began
to take part in more leadership and governing roles. Women began to lose their equality. As a side note:
Craig says that the common belief is that during the Paleolithic Age, men did all the hunting, but in truth,
the women were often the better hunters.
So once agriculture began, we lost all our equal rights - and we’ve been trying to regain them, in one way
or another, ever since. And we compensate by telling our daughters how to behave in ways that won’t
provoke sexual assault. I could expound on this topic for some time - but I won’t.
To the virus: yesterday the mayor of Detroit, Mike Duggan, apparently said that he didn’t want the
Johnson &amp; Johnson vaccine for his citizens because the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines were better. Then a
lot of foot shuffling occurred and he said that he would be happy to receive the J&amp;J vaccine, of course. The
problem is that there is so much misinformation out there, that his possible initial remarks helped to stoke
the unease about vaccines in general. We are set to get our second dose on Monday morning. Having even
the first dose makes you feel as though you have some protection from the COVID-19 virus. Scientists say
the first dose offers about 60% protection. It jumps to the low 90s after the second dose. What no one can
agree on, is how long this protection lasts. And the rider is: you have to keep wearing a mask and
physically distancing.

�Ahhh, Texas!

Across Europe this is happening:

Washington Post
Meanwhile, Europe is also experiencing an end to six weeks of declining case numbers as the virus mounts
an unwelcome resurgence. New cases have risen by 9 percent in the past week, with central and eastern
Europe impacted the most. World Health Organization officials attributed some of the increase to a more
contagious variant, first detected in the United Kingdom, that is driving an outbreak in the Czech
Republic and Hungary.

�We’re all so tired of being far from family and so constrained. Here’s some suggestions that might make
you feel better:

The Atlantic: Below, you’ll find five scientifically supported suggestions for improving your well-being.
Although they certainly aren’t a cure-all for the very real pain that so many are experiencing, we hope
they might provide a little relief.
1. Fight fear with love.

“More isolation plus more hostility equals less love; less love equals more fear. To reduce
fear, we need to bring more love into our lives. … Make your love overt. Today, tell
someone you love her or him.”
2. Try measuring your happiness to improve it.

“Understanding the measurement of happiness can itself make you better at improving your
own well-being—and avoid some critical errors.”
3. Get up and move.

“The stillness of pandemic life and our resulting inactivity can help explain some of the
dramatic happiness declines during the pandemic.”
4. Making other people happy makes you happy, too.

“Spending money on others and volunteering have both been shown to raise one’s own
happiness levels.”
5. Consider giving something up.

“The most compelling happiness benefit of voluntary sacrifice is that it fosters self-mastery,
or—the term that social scientists prefer—‘self-efficacy,’ which refers to confidence in one’s
ability to control one’s own behavior.”
And here’s two snippets to consider. First:

Washington Post
Capitol Police ask for 60-day extension of National Guard presence at the Capitol, Pentagon officials say.
The mission for the 5,200-strong force, established in the aftermath of the Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol, is
slated to end March 12.
Two officials said the extension request has been received by the Defense Department and will be
considered by Army officials and Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin. If approved, it would keep Guard
members on duty through May, the officials said, speaking on the condition of anonymity because of the
sensitivity of the issue.
And second:

Crooked Media: Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-CA) has sued Donald Trump, Don Jr., Rudy Giuliani, and Rep. Mo
Brooks (R-AL) for inciting a violent mob, following a similar suit filed by Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-MS).

�Swalwell’s lawsuit also cites the Ku Klux Klan Act, and alleges that Trump &amp; Co. broke Washington, DC,
laws.
Across the world, in protests and in their own language, protesters are singing this song from Les
Miserables. They have sung it in Hong Kong, Poland and most recently in Myanmar:

Do you hear the people sing?
Singing a song of angry men?
It is the music of a people
Who will not be slaves again!
When the beating of your heart
Echoes the beating of the drums
There is a life about to start
When tomorrow comes!
Oliver

���More Iceland tomorrow.

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                    <text>Day 359

by windoworks
Its Friday and today the city is sending someone out to check that our new furnace has been installed
properly. I am going to the doctor because I don’t know about you, but this has been the worst year for
allergies for me, and now the cold weather is easing and the snow is melting ..... and its the first week of
March.
Yesterday people scrambled to higher ground in parts of New Zealand after this happened:

Washington Post: A major magnitude 8.1 earthquake struck roughly 600 miles northeast of New Zealand
on Thursday afternoon, triggering concerns of a potentially damaging tsunami across large portions of the
Pacific. The risk spanned from New Zealand and Australia to as far east as Central and South America. The
8.1 tremor was the third major earthquake in less than eight hours on the Kermadec Fault, which passes
east of New Zealand. A magnitude 7.3 hit near New Zealand early on Thursday, followed by a 7.4 about
560 miles to the north a few hours later.

�That’s for all those reluctant to be vaccinated.
Meanwhile they’re building a global time capsule of the pandemic because - of course they are.

Washington Post On the wooded site of a former golf course in suburban Washington, archivists are
building a global time capsule of the pandemic. The digital repository — to be housed at the National
Library of Medicine, a Cold War-era fortress appropriately built for fearful times — holds 30 million
documents from 9,000 sources, with links to similar troves from Beijing to Paris. Reading like a great
international scrapbook, the archive also serves as a warning. Its podcasts, photographs, videos, health
documents, website captures, news stories and social media posts will reveal to future generations what we
did wrong in 2020.
Some things, they’ll learn, went surprisingly right, particularly in east Asia, Australia and New Zealand.
Even in nations still counting their dead, the archive tells us, humanity stepped up. Our descendants will
be moved by the selfies of a London nurse, her skin blotchy with fatigue and mask marks after a nine-hour
coronavirus shift. They’ll cheer the Maryland distillery that halted vodka production to make hand
sanitizer. But the graduate students of the 22nd century — like some of the archive’s researchers today —
might be most struck by our colossal failures. They’ll know we had our Cassandras. The infectious-disease
experts. Bill Gates. The CIA. A global pandemic is inevitable, they warned. Take what we’ve learned from
H1N1, SARS, Ebola and Zika. Draft strategies, and don’t stick them in drawers. Be prepared to halt
movement. Share, don’t shield, information. Use consistent messaging. If you must, shut down daily life
— even if it’s unpopular — to save lives.
Yet despite decades of planning, cutting-edge centers for disease control and years of experience battling
smaller outbreaks in “poorer” countries, the world’s wealthiest peoples, the future will learn, were unable
or unwilling to halt what might mostly be remembered as a rich nation’s virus without suffering massive
casualties. In piercing prose, they’ll see the lack of leadership. The failure to coordinate. The on-again, offagain lockdowns. The no lockdowns at all. The misinformation and politicization of a health crisis. The
virus deniers and never-maskers from Missouri to Medellín who confused personal freedom with a
criminal disregard for everyone else. The digital memorial to the Great Pandemic of 2020 (and, really,
2021) will give us a three-terabyte epitaph to an outbreak that saw humanity’s best instincts often
undermined by its worst.
No single country, epidemiologists and health experts say, has suffered as great a failure as the United
States. It will be a cold hard fact, as evidenced by 500,000 tombstones and counting, that a nation
President Donald Trump declared “more prepared” than any other has clocked the globe’s largest death
toll, becoming a symbol of deadly hubris and apathy. A mad scramble for personal protective equipment
and ventilators betrayed a lack of preparation, even as a sort of toxic masculinity sickened health policy. It
wasn’t just the United States. A quarter-million Brazilians died of what President Jair Bolsonaro dismissed

�as a “little flu.” Tanzanian President John Magufuli ridiculed masks and lockdowns, pledging “God will
protect us” even as hospitals were being overrun.
Social distancing, they told us, was for sissies. Face masks for pinkos and atheists. Last month in Rio de
Janeiro, the maskless masses reveled in its sultry streets despite the cancellation of Carnival. In April in the
city of Guayaquil, Ecuador — a tropical metropolis initially reluctant to social distance — fly-covered
cadavers filled the streets.
In Britain, they kept calm and carried on — and died for the privilege. Prime Minister Boris Johnson kept
bars, schools, museums and restaurants open, even as Paris, Rome and Madrid were shuttering theirs. The
Sunday Times would denounce the “38 days when Britain sleepwalked into disaster.” “A senior adviser to
Downing Street,” the outlet reported, said Johnson “didn’t chair any meetings. He liked his country
breaks. He didn’t work weekends … There was a real sense that he didn’t do urgent crisis planning.”
Some countries were much less of a mess. Australia got it mostly right. On a Thursday in November, when
the United States had 52,049 people hospitalized and 10,445 in ICUs for the coronavirus, the Sydney
Opera House had reopened and office workers were streaming back to their cubicles. The country had put
its faith in science, quickly shutting its borders and severely limiting interstate, even intrastate,
movement.
Messaging was king. Political leaders on the right and left sent up a collective cry: Wear masks. Social
distance. Stay at home. Save Australian lives. South Korea excelled through contact tracing and testing.
Japan deployed its sense of the collective and a culture militantly respectful of others. New Zealand’s
success was written with quarantines and aggressive shutdowns. “There wasn’t a single path out of this
pandemic, but it took being proactive and aggressive and — most of all — taking the virus seriously,” said
Ashish Jha, dean of Brown University’s School of Public Health. “A bunch of countries did it, and a bunch
of countries just didn’t.”Asked to grade humanity’s response to the global pandemic, Jha offered a fairly
decent “B-.”Then he paused.
“Okay, maybe a C+.” The United States, the United Kingdom, Russia, others, they just really bungled the
response,” he said. “You saw more than 2 million deaths, hundreds of millions infected, and we should
have all known this was coming. That’s why we don’t get an A. But I don’t think a D or an F is fair. My
God! We built vaccines — several vaccines — in less than year!”
What I wonder is this - will future generations heed the lessons of this pandemic or will they forget like
they did after the 1918 influenza pandemic? And here’s a new squabble developing:

Washington Post
Italy has blocked the export to Australia of 250,000 AstraZeneca coronavirus vaccine doses, amid a dispute
with the drug manufacturer over delivery shortfalls inside the European Union, the Italian foreign
ministry said Thursday. The move was the first time an E.U. country used new powers introduced in
January, after AstraZeneca announced it would deliver sharply fewer doses to the E.U. than promised for

�the first months of the year. Italian leaders proposed the block on the Australian shipment, and E.U.
policymakers in Brussels signed off on it, the Italian foreign ministry said in a statement. The decision to
block the doses was because of “the lingering shortage of vaccines in the E.U. and in Italy, and the delays
in the supply of AstraZeneca vaccines to the E.U. and Italy,” among other reasons, the statement said. The
European Commission announced in January that it would require vaccine manufacturers to ask
permission of national governments before they could export doses outside of the bloc.
Well that’s unfortunate. And just to cheer you up a little, a gem from CNN: At Paris Fashion Week,

Coperni transforms a colossal arena into a drive-in runway. Sitting front row? Out. Sitting front lane? In.
You’ll notice I have said nothing about the Senate shenanigans; the stubborn lifting of all restrictions in
two states; and anything else newsworthy. Its just too tiring. As I haven’t given you any statistics update
in, oh, forever, here goes: US confirmed case total as of yesterday: 28.9M. Keep in mind the real case total
is probably 3 x that number (86.7M). However, deaths are easier to be accurate about. Yesterday the US
had 520,000 deaths recorded due to the virus. In the state of Michigan, the case numbers plateaued after
dropping and are now slowly increasing again. In Kent County we have an average of 100 new cases a day.
I can remember when 20 new cases a day was shocking. We can all play ‘lets pretend the virus has gone
away’, but that’s all it will be - a game.
In Isafjordur, Craig went walking by himself.

�He climbed up the steep
hills.

��Wildflowers

�Fishermen

�A map of where Isafjordur is
located

�House with tin
roof

�The
museum

�Our ship anchored offshore.

More Iceland adventures tomorrow.
Oliver - look how grown up he looks. When we FaceTime he says: Hi Mimi. Where’s Gandad?. Yesterday
we sang Twinkle, twinkle together with all the hand movements. That dinosaur picture was a gift from his
Great Aunt Kym. Oliver loves dinosaurs.

��Just a note here: in Michigan all 50+ year olds with health issues etc can be vaccinated from Monday
March 8 onwards. For all other 50+ residents, vaccinations are available from Monday March 22. As my
friend Mary Alice says: if there is a phone number to call, hang on the line for however long it takes.
Don’t give up. See you tomorrow.

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                    <text>Day 358

by windoworks

First off: a retraction. The Australian Attorney-General has strenuously denied the rape allegations and is
taking 2 weeks stress leave. There is no investigation of the allegations planned. I have no idea why I
thought he had acknowledged the allegation - my sincere apologies. And obviously, I am not cognizant
with Australian politics at all.
Now back to the US. From CNN: Federal law enforcement is on high alert today after an intelligence

bulletin this week warned of a group of violent militia extremists discussing plans to take control of the US
Capitol and remove Democratic lawmakers on or about March 4. The date is central to a fringe conspiracy
theory among supporters of former President Trump, some of whom believe today is the “real”
inauguration and that he will somehow regain power. The House even changed its schedule in light of the
threat to avoid being in session. The Senate will still meet to debate the Covid-19 bill. Rep. Michael
McCaul, the top Republican on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, says Trump has a duty to call off
any supporters planning action today.
And from Crooked Media: Intelligence analysts have been tracking online chatter about March 4 for

weeks: Some QAnon luminaries have latched onto it as the date upon which Donald Trump will be
inaugurated as the 19th president, based on logic that is too sophisticated for a healthy mind to
understand. DHS and the FBI released a joint-intelligence bulletin about the threat late on Tuesday,
noting that extremists had discussed plans to “remove Democratic lawmakers.”
So the House is not meeting but the Senate is. Of course, we all read the announcement that the House
would not meet today and thought: well, that seems reasonable, but then you stop and think - wait, how
did this become normal? I have researched when was the House forced to shut down before due to the
threat of serious violence and insurrection and the answer is NEVER. So I ask: how are we accepting this?
Why aren’t we objecting as a voting majority to the Republicans continued attempt to overturn
democracy and establish authoritarian rule? Why isn’t it being made clear that if as a sitting Republican,
you continue to support the erroneous idea that the election wasn’t fair and open, then you are in danger
of being removed from your seat under the Constitution:

Section 3 of the Fourteenth Amendment stipulates that: “No person shall be a Senator or Representative in
Congress, or elector of President and Vice President, or hold any office, civil or military, under the United
States, or under any state, who, having previously taken an oath, as a member of Congress, or as an officer
of the United States, or as a member of any state legislature, or as an executive or judicial officer of any
state, to support the Constitution of the United States, shall have engaged in insurrection or rebellion
against the same, or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof…”

�Well that seems crystal clear and I don’t think you have to remove them from office - just threaten to
remove them if they persist in contradicting their Oath of Office.
Here’s a bill that I think has passed through the House:

Well all that seems reasonable, but of course there will be a battle over it in the Senate. And what
happened to the investigation to be set up to look at the events of January 6? Here’s a roundup:

NPR
In the nearly two months since the attack, cross party tensions in Congress have intensified in floor
debate, in committee hearings, and in personal relationships. At an Oversight Committee hearing last

�week on the postal service, Rep. Gerry Connolly. D-Va., snapped at Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, one of
former President Donald Trump's most vocal allies in the House, after Jordan accused Democrats of
politicizing the postal service to hurt Trump in the election. "I didn't vote to overturn an election. And I
will not be lectured by people who did about partisanship," Connolly responded.
The House Natural Resources Committee recently changed their rules to explicitly ban guns in their
committee room, a decision seemingly targeted at one Republican: freshman and gun rights enthusiast
Lauren Boebert of Colorado. Democrats have criticized her for tweeting about the whereabouts of Speaker
Pelosi during the Jan. 6 invasion, and for her advocacy to carry a handgun on the House floor.
Democrats have felt so threatened by Republicans that they installed metal detectors for lawmakers to
enter the House chamber — which Boebert called "a political stunt" — and instituted fines of up to
$10,000 for those who don't comply. Several Democrats have also also alleged — without evidence — that
some Republican lawmakers may have aided Capitol rioters.
"I wish we didn't have to fear that they were bringing a weapon on the floor," Casten said. "I wish we
didn't have to fear that they may have incited some of what happened. I wish we didn't have to fear that
they may have shown people where the tunnels were. But it's not clear to me they can be trusted."
Davis says the metal detectors and those kinds of allegations have likewise eroded trust among
Republicans towards Democrats. "It's very frustrating when you have colleagues without any evidence just
throw out wild conspiracy accusations, and frankly there's got to be some accountability on their behalf to
provide that evidence or apologize."
Congress may need to hand over this investigation to an outside entity because there's no indication
House lawmakers can do it together. Aguilar said most Democrats see the only path to reconciliation is for
those 139 Republicans who objected to Electoral College results to say it was a mistake. "The more they
continue to perpetuate the 'Big Lie,' and continue to push back against it, it's really hard to move past
that," Aguilar said, in reference to conspiracies promoted by Trump that the election was fraudulent.
"They need to acknowledge that Joe Biden was elected in the safest election and the fairest election ever
held."
So you can see that nothing good will come out of this standoff. I subscribe to the White House page and it
depresses me that a positive action taken and reported on the page is immediately overwhelmed by
vitriolic comments from non-Democrats. I find it hard to understand why Facebook puts any comments
up under posts. I think it should be organized so that you, the reader, can choose to look at the comments
under a post, or not.
Here’s a lone voice of reason from the Republican side:

Washington Post: As Congress investigates the deadly Jan. 6 Capitol riot, Rep. Michael McCaul (R-Tex.)
believes two things: The attack was domestic terrorism, and it showed law enforcement needs broader
powers to fight back, like those granted after 9/11. “In today’s world, the FBI tells me they’re having more
domestic terrorism cases than international terrorism,” McCaul, a former Homeland Security Committee

�chairman, said in an interview. “During my career at Homeland, it was the threat from al-Qaeda, now
we’re looking at what happened January 6th.”
In other news, at least two states, Texas and Mississippi have declared mask wearing is over. This directly
contradicts President Biden’s 100 days of mask wearing mandate. Let us just return for a moment to
Texas’s belief that to join a national utility grid in the 1930s would allow unnecessary federal interference
in Texas autonomy. Fast forward to today: how reasonable does that stand alone decision seem today?
Here’s part of an opinion piece by Paul Begala:

CNN: Texas politicians' right-wing ideology caused them to opt out of the national power grid in 1935,
making it essentially impossible to bring in electricity from out of state when most in-state power plants
froze up.
Millions shivered without heat; pipes burst, water was cut off, roads were impassable. People died: an 11year-old boy's family says he froze to death in his bed in Conroe, Texas. In Sugar Land, where I grew up, a
house fire -- possibly caused by an attempt to heat the home after the power went out -- wiped out almost
an entire family -- a grandmother and three young children: ages 11, 8 and 5, perished. Only the
children's mom survived.
Former Texas governor and US energy secretary Rick Perry seemed to think it was all worth it for the
larger cause of right-wing political correctness. "Texans would be without electricity for longer than three
days to keep the federal government out of their business," said Perry. Right, Rick. Tell that to my family
and friends in Texas who shivered in the dark for days”.
And from CNN:

Some state leaders are facing tough criticism for easing coronavirus restrictions despite myriad expert
warnings that the worst isn’t quite over. Dr. Anthony Fauci called decisions like those of the Texas and
Mississippi governors to lift precautions “inexplicable,” and President Biden called it “Neanderthal
thinking.” At the same time, some Catholic bishops are discouraging people from getting the latest singleshot vaccine from Johnson &amp; Johnson when alternatives are available because it contains lab-grown cells
that descend from cells taken in the 1980s from the tissue of aborted fetuses.
When Dr Fauci was asked what vaccine he would tell us to choose, he answered: any one you’re offered.
But I know you’re wondering when will it end, when will life go back to normal? We have discussed this
before but here’s the latest thinking:

Reuters: A new consensus is emerging among scientists, according to Reuters interviews with 18
specialists who closely track the pandemic or are working to curb its impact. Many described how the
breakthrough late last year of two vaccines with around 95% efficacy against COVID-19 had initially
sparked hope that the virus could be largely contained, similar to the way measles has been.

�But, they say, data in recent weeks on new variants from South Africa and Brazil has undercut that
optimism. They now believe that SARS-CoV-2 will not only remain with us as an endemic virus,
continuing to circulate in communities, but will likely cause a significant burden of illness and death for
years to come.
As a result, the scientists said, people could expect to continue to take measures such as routine maskwearing and avoiding crowded places during COVID-19 surges, especially for people at high risk.
Even after vaccination, “I still would want to wear a mask if there was a variant out there,” Dr. Anthony
Fauci, chief medical advisor to U.S. President Joe Biden, said in an interview. “All you need is one little
flick of a variant (sparking) another surge, and there goes your prediction” about when life gets back to
normal.
The shift in thinking among scientists has influenced more cautious government statements about when
the pandemic will end. Britain last week said it expects a slow emergence from one of the world’s strictest
lockdowns, despite having one of the fastest vaccination drives.
U.S. government predictions of a return to a more normal lifestyle have been repeatedly pushed back,
most recently from late summer to Christmas, and then to March 2022. Israel issues “Green Pass”
immunity documents to people who have recovered from COVID-19 or been vaccinated, allowing them
back into hotels or theaters. The documents are only valid for six months because it’s not clear how long
immunity will last.
For Craig and I, we are expecting to have to quarantine in a Sydney facility for 2 weeks while we undergo
3 or 4 more Covid tests, even though we will have a document showing that we are fully vaccinated for 3
months prior to arrival. Is it worth getting upset about this? No, these are the iron clad regulations in
Australia and New Zealand, two Democratic countries that have taken these strict precautions to protect
all their citizens - no matter how they voted in elections. Both countries borders are closed. We will only
be allowed back in because we are both dual citizens - Australians and Americans - and we will have to
use our Australian passports to enter the country.
Yes, you could say these restrictions are draconian but they allow both countries to immediately swing
into action and overcome any sudden community spread of the virus or variants. In Auckland there is
currently a Level 3 lockdown (the strictest is Level 4) and most Aucklanders have taken this in their stride
knowing it won’t last that long. In Britain, PM Johnson said yesterday he had no real idea of when their
lockdown will begin to ease. (I can hear Elle groaning). Tomorrow Michigan will allow 50% customer
attendance in restaurants. I think a lot of people still won’t frequent them. Take out is always a good
option.
Flashback: after Akureyri we sailed on to: Ísafjörður is a town in the Westfjords region of northwest

Iceland. It's known for its dramatic landscapes. The old town has wooden houses with corrugated tin roofs
built by fishing merchants in the 18th and 19th centuries. The Westfjords Heritage Museum has exhibits

�on the town’s maritime history, including a collection of old fishing boats. The old hospital, now a cultural
center, contains archives and photography. ― Google

�On my excursion we stopped first at a site where an avalanche during winter buried an

�entire village. The houses were rebuilt but the villagers are only allowed to live in them in
summer. The whole village was relocated down the
road.

�The

�memorial

�We went inside this little church for a demonstration of Icelandic
ballads

�This woman sang 2 Icelandic lullabies - awful words about dead babies and

�trolls.

�I forget exactly, but I think this is somewhere giants or trolls live. Icelanders believe in such
things.

Our last stop was for coffee and a snack and a lecture on Arctic Foxes. Their coats turn
brown in summer but revert to white in the winter.
Craig’s Isafjordur adventure tomorrow.
Oliver:

�Building stuff for the farm animals.
See you tomorrow.

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                    <text>Day 357

by windoworks

Some mornings (and this is one of them), I feel as though a lot of people have learned absolutely nothing
from the pandemic experience. There seem to be some irrefutable facts that people just can’t get their
heads around. One is that there are a number of far more contagious variants out there. Another is that
assuming that you’re not sick if you don’t have symptoms can be wrong. Not wearing a mask in crowded
situations is also dangerous. But the very worst erroneous idea is that this pandemic will magically end and there’ll never be another one. That’s like the end of all those fairy tales: and they all lived happily ever

after. I think our lives have changed and going forward it will be a different normal.
Our book club has chosen a book, The New Wilderness by Diane Cook. I am two thirds of the way
through it. I was trying to explain to my daughter yesterday why it made me uncomfortable, although it is
very easy to read. I think its because it shows a very negative vision of the future. A future in which
children in cities die because the smog shreds their lungs. Cities become overcrowded and dangerous. I
could go on, but it is like our worst imaginings and in this moment, it seems so much more possible.
In Australia, where they are dealing with the pandemic so much better than us, their problems are to do
with the morals and ethics of the lawmakers. Their Attorney-General, a very prominent and powerful
politician, has admitted to raping a girl when he was a young man and before he got into politics. With
that admission, he feels that he has done enough. How could that be enough? Where are the
consequences? That poor raped girl killed herself after years of distress. In any group of women friends,
you would be amazed how many of each group have been molested at some point in their younger years. I
once sat drinking coffee with a group of 5 women friends and during a casual discussion, 4 of them
admitted to having been molested in some way as a young girl.
But the deeper problem seems to be this enforcement of stereotyped roles for men and women. It seems
that women (even successful women) can be cast as somehow suspect as to how she became successful.
Rape continues to be the woman’s fault. Her clothes were provocative, she was drunk, she was asking for
it (really?), when she said no, she really meant yes. So - we ask our daughters to wear non-provocative
clothes, to not walk alone on dark streets at night, to never drink too much in public, to not wear too
much make up.... in my mind’s eye I see every woman reading this, nodding their heads. I have seen posts
that call VP Kamala Harris a whore and say she only reached her status by lying on her back with her legs
open. That is disgusting, degrading, demeaning and dismissive of her talents, abilities, strong character and
hard work ethic. But what I really want to say is that although Kamala Harris got to her position by sheer
determination and hard work, the only way some people can come to terms with her rise is to assume she
must have risen through sexual favors - and that assumption brings her down to some lower point that
threatened males in particular can cope with. And that makes me so sad: a man can reach the top of his

�profession no matter what the circumstances but a woman, what did she have to do to get there? Not use
her brains and capabilities, obviously.
Washington Post: By now, many of the basic facts about how Covid-19 spreads are clear. People tend to

become infected by inhaling droplets that come from the mouths and noses of others. Crowded indoor
spaces — where infected droplets can linger in the air — are the most dangerous places. They are
particularly dangerous when people are not wearing masks. Yet consider some of the new policies that
state governments have put in place this week:
Texas and Mississippi both announced they would lift their mask mandates (following Iowa and Montana,
which did so last month) and allow businesses to operate at full capacity.
Massachusetts removed capacity limits on restaurants.
South Carolina will allow gatherings of more than 250 people.
In announcing the changes, Tate Reeves, the governor of Mississippi, wrote: “It is time!” Greg Abbott,
Texas’ governor, said, “State mandates are no longer needed,” while adding that he hoped Texans would
practice “personal vigilance.”
Perhaps the better yardstick would have been the number of people vaccinated in their states, rather than
just the arrogant assumption that their opinion was the right one.

�Well, I could tell you all about the ridiculous things the Republican lawmakers, state and federal, are
doing. Mean, petty, self-serving actions that benefit only them and their white supremacist friends and
backers, but that would take up this entire day’s blog and it wouldn’t make me or you feel better.
Flashback: the next day Craig and I went on a whale watching expedition from Akureyri.

�I can’t tell you how cold it was out on the Iceland

�Sea

Another whale watching
boat

�You’ve got to be quick to catch them with your
camera

��Waiting, waiting,
waiting.

�Ah Iceland! So wet, so misty.
Oliver.

���On that note, I’ll leave you today.

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                    <text>Day 356

by windoworks

Where to start? First up, a little excerpt from Heather Cox Richardson’s daily post:

On Monday morning, conservative pundit William Kristol wrote in The Bulwark what a number of us
have been saying for a while now, and it dovetails cleanly with the current Republican attempt to
suppress voting. Kristol warns that our democracy is in crisis. For the first time in our history, we have
failed to have a peaceful transfer of power. The Republican Party launched a coup—which fortunately
failed—and “now claims that the current administration is illegitimately elected, the result of massive,
coordinated fraud. The logical extension of this position would seem to be that the American
constitutional order deserving of our allegiance no longer exists.” “So,” he notes, “we are at the edge of
crisis, having repulsed one attempted authoritarian power grab and bracing for another.”
Claims that American democracy is on the ropes in the face of an authoritarian power grab raise
accusations of partisanship… but in this case, the person making the claim is a conservative, who goes on
to urge conservatives to join behind President Joe Biden to try to save democracy. Kristol warns that “a
dangerous, anti-democratic faction” of the Republican Party “is not committed in any serious way to the
truth, the rule of law, or the basic foundations of our liberal democracy.”
At the Conservative Political Action Committee (CPAC) conference this weekend in Orlando, Florida,
Trump supporters doubled down on the lie that Biden stole the 2020 election. From a stage shaped like a
piece of Nazi insignia, speakers raged that they were victims of “cancel culture” on the part of Big Tech
and the left, which are allegedly trying to silence them. To restore fairness, they want to stop “voter fraud”
and restore “election integrity,” and they want to force social media giants to let them say whatever they
want on social media. In the Washington Post, commentator Jennifer Rubin said the modern
conservatives at CPAC had no policy but revenge, “resentment, cult worship and racism,” and no political
goal but voter suppression. It is “the only means by which they seek to capture power in an increasingly
diverse America,” she notes. A poll showed that “election integrity” was the issue most important to CPAC
attendees, with 62% of them choosing it over “constitutional rights” (which got only 48%).
This just makes me so tired. And the lies are just ridiculous. The other day when we drove out to Grand
Haven, there was a sign in front of a house shrieking a warning about liberals=socialism. But here’s the
thing - when that non-taxable stimulus money pops into that person’s account and they gleefully accept it
- wouldn’t that be a form of socialism? Along with Medicare and (gasp!) Social Security? The phrase
‘having your cake and eating it too’ springs to mind. I know, I know, you’re asking what does that mean?
Here’s what Wikipedia says: You can't have your cake and eat it (too) is a popular English idiomatic

proverb or figure of speech. The proverb literally means "you cannot simultaneously retain your cake and

�eat it". … The proverb's meaning is similar to the phrases "you can't have it both ways" and "you can't
have the best of both worlds."
Crooked Media has renamed the Johnson &amp; Johnson vaccine the ‘j&amp;j one jab wonder’. Seems appropriate.
But here’s some worrying news: Crooked Media- The U.S. isn’t out of the woods yet—it’s still March, after

all. New coronavirus cases have begun ticking upwards again after steadily declining for weeks, and on
Monday, CDC Director Rochelle Walensky warned states not to ease up on public-health mandates: “At
this level of cases, with variants spreading, we stand to completely lose the hard-earned ground we have
gained.”
And from CNN: The threat of coronavirus variants is growing, and CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky

warns that, if we’re not careful, their spread could reverse falling case numbers and delay the recovery
that’s just now coming over the horizon. In the UK, officials are racing to track down a single person
infected with a variant first identified in Brazil to prevent further spread. The key to getting over this
hurdle? Vaccinations, experts say, and a few more excruciating months of safety precautions.
And there you have it: a few more excruciating months of safety precautions. And in 4 months time, Craig
and I are pretty sure we’ll have to mask up for the two 12 hour flights to Sydney via Narita.
Remember I asked you if you had a piece you’d like to share about the moment you realized the pandemic
would change life as we knew it? First up, here’s Craig’s piece:

Two Moments when it All Changed Two moments stand out for me. The first was the morning of March
1st, the day our Holland America ship docked in San Diego after a New York Times Central America
cruise. By then cruise ships around the world were being quarantined, with passengers stuck on board for
weeks. As we waited for our disembarkation color tickets to be called over the ship’s intercom, I kept
thinking ‘any moment now they will discover a case of Covid on board and we will be quarantined’. I
walked round and round the promenade deck with a sinking feeling, but then our number was called so
we quickly grabbed our bags and headed for the gangway. I still can’t believe they let us get off (there
were a lot of ill people on board with Covid-like symptoms) but I have never been so glad to walk off a
ship and onto a dock in my life!
The second moment occurred in the classroom with my GVSU big history honors students during the
afternoon of March 10th. The 25 students and I had been together inside and outside the classroom for 6
hours a week since August. The previous week had been spring break, so everyone was really happy to be
back together again. I began the class by raising the possibility that this might be the last time we would
ever meet in person as a class. The students were incredulous. They said, ‘But Professor B there are only
two cases in Michigan’ (which was true that day), yet universities around the country were already
starting to close. As we tried to focus on class content students were also watching their phones. During
the course of the afternoon another dozen universities closed and started sending students home. My

�students would gasp and say ‘Professor B, Ohio State has just closed’; or ‘Professor B, all the universities in
the Cal State system just announced they are closing’, and so on. As we ended class around 5.00 pm, we all
knew that this was probably the last time we would ever meet together as a community. I told them all I
loved them, some were in tears, and we all headed out of our classroom for the last time.
Authors note: GVSU closed at the end of class the following day. Craig taught his other class, face to face
on March 11 and they were all aware that this would be the last face to face day for the semester. There
were tears that day too.
And is this a taste of what I really hope will happen to Trump?

CNN
Former French President Nicolas Sarkozy has been sentenced to three years in prison for corruption and
influence peddling. A French court found him guilty of trying to illegally obtain information from a senior
magistrate in 2014 about an ongoing investigation into his campaign finances. Sarkozy was President from
2007 to 2012 and is the first president to be sentenced to jail in France’s modern history.
Yesterday we drove to South Haven and the further south we drove, the harder it snowed.

�Ice on the Black River at South
Haven

�Looking south from South
Haven

�The South Haven lighthouse. Those bits in the sky are hard snow pebbles stuck on the
lens

�Heading home along Lakeshore Drive. Look at the change in the weather!
Oliver

�Sticker fun

�While I was eating and shopping at Seydisfjordur, Craig went on a hike.

�Iceland has lots of rivers, streams waterfalls

�etc

Wild
country

����Our ship.

See you tomorrow.

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by windoworks
Its the first day of March and there is now just over 4 months until we leave the US. There are 10 more
days until Michigan went into lockdown a year ago and I began writing this blog. This morning NPR
published an article which asked the question: #TheMoment They Realized The Pandemic Was Changing

Life As They Knew It.
I had to think what was my clearest memory. Here goes: I remember attending a meeting of the Finance
Committee followed by a Board meeting of a club I belonged to, in the board dining room of a local
retirement village. We met once a month and ate a delicious lunch between meetings. I don’t remember
why I was so alarmed and so sure it would change our lives possibly forever, butI remember taking hand
sanitizer, a box of tissues and disposable gloves with me, and placing them all on the table in front of me.
The rest of the women looked at me as if I had gone temporarily insane. We talked about the virus
reaching the US and that perhaps we would have to suspend our normal Thursday luncheon and program
meetings for the foreseeable future. I remember the shocked faces around the table and the almost instant
refusal to accept what they were hearing. One absolute stand out moment in the 4 hours of meetings, was
a woman leading the meeting handing out reports - and she licked her finger to separate the pages that
were stuck together. My mind boggled. When lunch was brought in, one server wore disposable gloves.
The club did close to all face to face meetings and that day was the last day I saw most of those women in
person. When Craig came home from GVSU that night, he received notification that all campuses were
closed.
What was your moment? I felt like the canary in the coal mine. My friends thought I was overreacting,
but I knew life as we knew it would never be the same.
This morning the Johnson &amp; Johnson vaccine has been approved and will soon be available. CNN: The J&amp;J

vaccine is different than the other two because it only requires one dose. Which should you get? Dr.
Anthony Fauci says, “I would take whatever vaccine would be available to me as quickly as possible.”
Today, Mexico's President is expected to ask President Biden about the US possibly sharing its vaccine
supply. Mexico has several purchase agreements with drug makers, but many have gone unfulfilled.
Meanwhile, more than 2,400 cases of the UK, Brazil and South Africa coronavirus variants have been
detected in the US, and the CDC warns the actual number could be much higher.
Vaccinations are well underway in Britain, the US, Israel, Australia, New Zealand and other places I don’t
know about . A word of caution: it is really exciting when each of us fortunate people receive our first
dose and then our second dose - but there are many, many people out there desperate to get on a list (and
many more on a number of lists) all trying to wait patiently for their first dose. It is very hard for these

�people when we publicly celebrate our successful vaccination. Plus, real safety will only occur when most
people have been vaccinated. Lets not crow.
What else is happening? Most importantly, its Women’s History Month.

CNN: Women's History Month, which is observed in the US, UK and Australia in March, and in October
in Canada, began with a single day. International Women's Day is March 8, and it has been observed in
some shape or form since 1911. It was officially commemorated by the United Nations in 1975 and was
officially recognized by the UN two years later. Besides International Women's Day, March holds a few
more important milestones for women's history:
Title IX, which prohibits sex discrimination in all federally funded education programs, was passed by the
Senate on March 1, 1972. It became law later that year. In fact, the educators who formed the first
Women's History Week a few years later did so to help schools comply with Title IX regulations.
The Equal Rights Amendment, a constitutional amendment which guarantees rights regardless of sex past
those assured by the 19th Amendment, passed the Senate on March 22, 1972. (P.S. -- it's still not fully
ratified.)
Earlier in the 20th century, two significant women's suffrage events took place in March. The first major
suffragist parade took over Washington, DC, on March 3, 1913, and the National Woman's Party, a
political group dedicated to women's suffrage, was officially formed in March 1917.
Also, it might be a coincidence, but seeing as how demonstrations and public displays were an integral
part of the women's suffrage movement, the month of "March" certainly seems to fit.
Also from CNN: Online chatter suggests QAnon supporters believe former President Trump could still be

inaugurated Thursday. National Guard troops will remain in Washington through mid-March over
concerns about potential violence. "Some of these people figured out that apparently 75 years ago, the
President used to be inaugurated on March 4. Okay, now why that's relevant, God knows," said Rep.
Adam Smith, chair of the House Armed Services Committee.
And then there’s this coming up: CNN: The National Day of Unplugging starts Friday. After the year

we've had so far, this would be a good time to step away from electronics and go for a walk, hike, do arts
and crafts, play board games -- anything to take a break from the doomscrolling.
This morning we are planning to pack chicken salad, cookies and coffee and drive down to South Haven
for a day’s outing, so my post is shorter today. However, I do have time for the flashback.
After 2 days at sea filled with lectures from Craig and the others we reached Seydisfjordur on the coast of
East Iceland.

�Iceland always looked like this: forbidding cliffs and
mist.

�The sweaters made from Icelandic sheep’s wool are scratchy - apparently Icelanders like it
that
way

�Walking to morning

�tea

�Through the
trees

Tea shop and
museum

�Beautiful stove for warming the

�room

�A waterfall
stop

Wild country.

This was my day out. Craig’s excursion tomorrow.
Oliver:

�Contemplating the lake with Great Uncle Drew.

�If you have a moment you realized the pandemic was changing your life and would like to share it on my
blog - please send it to me via Messenger.

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by windoworks
Here’s an interesting piece: Gold has long been associated with a divine sphere, both in pre-Christian and

in Christian religion. The shine of gold, its indestructible nature, its malleability and its relative scarcity
made it an ideal material to embody divine qualities, but also expressions of human veneration of the
divine.

In case you didn’t recognize him: its Trump in gold. He is scheduled to speak at CPAC (Conservative
Political Action Conference) today.

�This is the stage at CPAC, Orlando, Florida. This image shows (or resembles) a symbol that was used by
the National Socialist (NSDAP/Nazi) government of Germany or an organization closely associated to it, or
another party which has been banned by the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany.

Washington Post: Investigators have uncovered video appearing to show someone spraying a chemical
irritant at Capitol Police Officer Brian D. Sicknick and other law enforcement personnel fending off
rioters in last month’s attack, though they have yet to identify the person or tie the activity directly to
Sicknick’s death, according to people familiar with the matter.
Sicknick’s death has vexed investigators exploring the Jan. 6 riot, as they have struggled to figure out how
precisely he died and whether someone could be held criminally accountable in connection with the
death. Investigators determined Sicknick did not die of blunt force trauma, people familiar with the
matter said, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss an ongoing investigation. U.S. Capitol
Police in a statement Jan. 8 said that Sicknick died “due to injuries sustained while on duty.” No autopsy or
toxicology report has been made public, unusual seven weeks after a death.
Acting deputy attorney general John Carlin said Friday that prosecutors have now charged more than 300
people in connection with the Jan. 6 attack at the Capitol, when a mob supportive of President Donald
Trump stormed past barricades and sparred with police inside and outside the building. They have
arrested more than 280, Carlin said.
Why am I posting this? Yesterday I was talking to Craig on our way home from Grand Haven. Some of our
best philosophical discussions have taken place on car journeys. Anyway, we were talking about how
despairing we both felt about the political situation here in the US. For example, as soon as the
Biden/Harris Administration was safely established and many good things began to happen, the
Republicans across the country immediately started to put in place laws that severely restricted liberal
voters. In Georgia, they have introduced laws which make mail in voting almost impossible and in person
voting restricted to white people. In other words, they have disenfranchised everyone who isn’t white.

�These actions in Georgia are a direct result of the two Democratic senators being elected after a stunning
campaign success mostly orchestrated by Stacey Abrams, a black politician from Georgia.
It seems to me (and bear in mind that although I am an American citizen, I still feel as though I am
looking at this from the outside), that this fragile nation is crumbling. I don’t think the South ever got over
losing the Civil War, and I also think that President Obama brought all that distrust, resentment and
white superiority to the fore.
I watched all of Bridgerton, that English period piece based loosely on the traditions of the day. The cast
was an amazing mix of black and white people - even the Queen was black. Then I saw a post questioning
the inaccuracy of casting half the show in either black or brown actors, saying it was historically incorrect.
I’m sorry, but didn’t the person posting notice the name of the company at the beginning? Shondaland?
The company owned by Shonda Rhimes, a black television producer, screenwriter, and author. That
should have been your first clue.
But I make this point to show that although the US is changing, the old guard are hanging on for dear life.
I think this country is tearing slowly apart. Texas has talked on and off about seceding for years. The
question is not will they secede but can they afford to secede? They decided in the 1930s to keep their
power utilities completely separate to any federal scheme, and recently, that didn’t work so well for them.
In Canada, Quebec has muttered about seceding for many years also, and the western provinces of British
Columbia and Alberta have said ‘go ahead’ but the Quebecois might struggle to be financially viable. And
in Australia, there have been rumblings from Queensland about becoming an independent nation - but
somehow, the idea always dies on the table.
I have seen discussions recently of what the reformed US would look like: the Red States of America and
the Blue States of America. and before you scoff and dismiss this out of hand - look carefully at what is
happening right now. If the Republicans can’t force all the US to be red, they’ll take what they can get.
Yesterday we had our far flung family book club. We were just finishing saying our hellos when someone
asked Zar, my oldest, if he and Alva were locked down again. He answered yes, the lockdown had begun
two hours before. Later he sent me this:

Stuff.co.nz
ANALYSIS: One new case was enough to force Auckland back into lockdown less than a week after it
returned to Level 1.
New Zealand has dealt with nearly a dozen border failures and minor community outbreaks of Covid-19.
Only a couple have resulted in an alert level escalation, including the discovery of three new cases in the
community on Valentine's Day. That latest outbreak was seen as a "false alarm" by some and Auckland left

�Level 3 just days after the lockdown began. Why, then, did the identification of a single new community
case, likely linked to the Valentine's Day cluster, necessitate a return to Level 3?
Not having identified the source leaves us with: Are there undetected chains [of transmission]. Another
concerning aspect of the new case is the possibility that they have been spreading the virus in the
community for the better part of a week. While, as a household contact of a Papatoetoe High School
student, Case M was required to be isolating at home for this period, contact tracing has revealed that they
in fact visited a number of high-risk venues. These include a gym, a supermarket and the Manukau
Institute of Technology, where the case takes classes. This may mean that there are downstream cases
currently in the community that are also infectious. Given the combination of factors - a more
transmissible variant spread by a person who visited numerous high-risk locations over the past week
while the source of their own infection remains unclear - the Government made the prudent choice to
return to lockdown. We can only hope we haven't acted too late.
The family asked if we were really locked down here is the US. Well, probably not officially locked down,
but Craig and I lead a reasonably isolated life and in 11 days we will have been living this way for an
entire year.
Earlier in the day yesterday we drove out to Grand Haven to sit in the car, drink coffee and look at the
lake. There was a thick lake mist. Craig took these photos:

��These were two young women who got out of their car next to us and began walking out
across the ice. The beach ends in the foreground where that black line on the right is. They
are now far out on the lake itself. You can’t see it in the photos, but there is another ice line
on the horizon. Some years the ice has extended out for as far as the eye can
see.

�Me walking in Fairplains Cemetary
Oliver.

�Thats all for today.

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                    <text>Day 353. Saturday February 27. 127 sleeps to go.
by windoworks

I’m tired this morning. It’s exhausting selling your house (who knew?). There seems to be just one more
form to sign or one more hurdle to jump over. Now the city has to come and approve of our new furnace,
which seems very correctly installed to me.
In the meantime, arrant nonsense is being spouted by the Republican lawmakers. And if we thought they
were reprehensible during Obama’s presidency - you should look closely at how they are behaving now.
My guess is it comes down to each voters decision: do you want real politicians with empathy,
understanding and a real desire to work hard to help achieve a better life for all Americans, regardless of
gender, race or personal beliefs? Or do you want someone (or many someones) just like Ted Cruz, who
always puts himself and his needs first?
As there is a possible plot to blow up the Capitol during the State of the Union speech, the date for this has
not been set. And of course, next Thursday is March 4 the date when Trump will ride in and be crowned
as k......, no, sorry, be installed as President again. But, here is hope on the horizon. All of Trump’s tax
records and financial records that he has fought for years to keep out of prosecutors hands, are now finally
in their possession. I assume they have a large team working their way through this ton of paperwork and
are planning the order in which they will prosecute him.
Flashback: months before the cruise, we had been informed that the ship would alter it course so those of
us who wanted to, could buy tickets to attend the Edinburgh Tattoo.The Royal Edinburgh Military Tattoo

is an annual series of military tattoos performed by British Armed Forces, Commonwealth and
international military bands, and artistic performance teams on the esplanade of Edinburgh Castle in the
capital of Scotland. The event is held each August as one of the Edinburgh Festivals. The term "tattoo"
derives from a 17th-century Dutch phrase doe den tap toe ("turn off the tap") a signal to tavern owners
each night, played by a regiment's Corps of Drums, to turn off the taps of their ale kegs so that the soldiers
would retire to their billeted lodgings at a reasonable hour.With the establishment of modern barracks
and full military bands later in the 18th century, the term "tattoo" was used to describe the last duty call of
the day, as well as a ceremonial form of evening entertainment performed by military musicians. Since the
1970s on average, just over 217,000 people see the Tattoo live on the esplanade of Edinburgh Castle each
year, and it has sold out in advance for the last decade. 30% of the audience are from Scotland and 35%
from the rest of the United Kingdom. The remaining 35% of the audience consists of 70,000 visitors from
overseas. Wikipedia
I was born in Dunedin, in the South Island of New Zealand. Two of the main cities in that part of New
Zealand are Dunedin and Invercargill, which speak to the history of Scottish settlers in the South Island.

�In fact, there are many Scottish words still peppering the everyday language in the South Island. My
father would roll his rs so that for example, ironing became irrroning.
One of my first memories was of the Annual Southland Highland Games, held (I think) in January. There
was Scottish dancing, caber tossing, wood chopping and pipe bands. There was also a Parade and all locals
were invited to attend. Somewhere, I have a photo of my brother, my sister and I all dressed up (I’m sure
my brother was dressed as a pirate). For some reason I had my doll’s pram which had been decorated with
red, white and blue paper chains. What I remember most was the marching pipe bands. You either love
bagpipes or hate them. I have always loved them. It is such a strong link to my early childhood.
So, of course, we bought the really expensive tickets to the Edinburgh Tattoo. After an early dinner
onboard the ship, we assembled at the dock to board one of the many busses to take us into Edinburgh.
They dropped us off some distance from the castle and we walked the rest of the way. Our tickets were for
two seats on the bleachers - hard seats at that. Craig rented us a cushion each to sit on and as we waited
for the Tattoo to begin, we lamented the fact that we had not thought to bring the balcony blankets from
our cabin. But once the evening began (after an exciting episode of someone being carried off, presumably
ill, which delayed the start somewhat) I forgot about the cold altogether.

�Edinburgh is a city of different street

�levels

You can see the next level up from where we were
walking

�Waiting for the Tattoo to
begin

�Getting the sick person out
safely

�The cauldrons burned, the castle gate lit up and the massed pipe band came out playing

�Scotland the Brave. I
cried.

�The band Marshall’s at the front with their bearskins and batons. The pipers and the

�drummers
behind.

�After an evening of song and dance from around the world, there were the obligatory

�fireworks and laser
show.

�The big

�finish

The massed pipe band marched out the gate below us - and just like that, it was over.
Later that night we set sail for 2 days across the North Atlantic to Iceland.
Oliver

���See you tomorrow.

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                    <text>Day 352.

by windoworks

CNN: Cars line up at NRG Park in Houston as people wait to get Covid-19 vaccines.

The Trump administration did a very good job getting the vaccines manufactured, but then they stopped
there. After 38 days in office, among the myriad of national and international actions, the Biden
Administration unwrapped this:

New York Times: What wartime mobilization really means.
President Biden has compared the fight against Covid-19 to wartime mobilization. And successful wartime
mobilization in the United States has always involved much more than the government. The best example
is World War II, when private companies like Ford and General Motors quickly overhauled their
operations to contribute to the war effort. In the fight against Covid, however, the private sector — with
the big exception of pharmaceutical companies — has done relatively little so far. It has not made a major
push to persuade Americans to remain socially distant, wear masks or get vaccinated as soon as possible.
Later this morning, Biden administration officials and business leaders will announce a plan to change
that, White House officials told me. The plan includes some of the country’s largest corporate lobbying
groups — like the Chamber of Commerce, the Business Roundtable, the National Association of
Manufacturers and groups representing Asian, Black and Latino executives — as well as some big-name
companies.
Ford and The Gap will donate more than 100 million masks for free distribution. Pro sports leagues will
help set aside more than 100 stadiums and arenas to become mass vaccination sites. Uber, PayPal and

�Walgreens will provide free rides for people to get to vaccination sites. Best Buy, Dollar General and
Target will give their workers paid time off to get a shot. And the White House will urge many more
companies to do likewise.
Many of the steps are fairly straightforward, even obvious. That they have not happened already is a
reflection of the Trump administration’s disorganized Covid response. Trump officials oversaw a highly
successful program to develop vaccines, but otherwise often failed to take basic measures that other
countries did take.
“We’ve been overwhelmed with outreach from companies saying, ‘We want to help, we want to help, we
want to help,’” Andy Slavitt, a White House pandemic adviser, told me yesterday. “What a missed
opportunity the first year of this virus was.”
I remember a meme which said that if you gave the vaccine shots to Amazon delivery drivers, everyone
would be vaccinated by Sunday - or Wednesday if you were a Prime member. So what happens once I’m
fully vaccinated? For myself, I have made an appointment with my hairdresser at the end of March. There
will be no photos of me until after that appointment. I seem to have aged 5 years in a single year. Here’s a
piece that addresses that question:

The Atlantic
Here are a few things to remember in these next, awkward steps toward normal.
• One principle can help you—whether you are vaccinated or not—navigate this new phase. “When
deciding what you can and can’t do, you should think less about your own vaccination status, and more
about whether your neighbors, family, grocery clerks, delivery drivers, and friends are still vulnerable to
the virus,” Rachel Gutman writes.
• Vaccine makers don’t need a perfect dosing regimen. They need an effective one. Vaccination is about
data, but also trust, Katherine J. Wu explains: “In the absence of public trust, even an immunologically
ideal vaccine-dosing regimen won’t be the one that protects the most people.”
• Vaccines might never bring us to herd immunity, but they can still help end the pandemic. “The role of
COVID-19 vaccines may ultimately be more akin to that of the flu shot: reducing hospitalizations and
deaths by mitigating the disease’s severity,” Sarah Zhang wrote earlier this month.
• Don’t forget about the global picture. As one expert told James Hamblin, many low-income countries
may end up far behind in vaccine distribution. That’s dangerous for the world: “Providing the virus with
new places to spread will allow it to linger with us indefinitely. The longer it sticks around, the more time
it has to mutate—which is bad news for the entire world, Americans included,” James notes.
Yesterday two major things happened. The first one was that the appraiser came and spent a looong time
inside our house with us there. After we walked him around, he went back around, photographed inside
and outside the house, measured things and opened every single door, closet and cupboard. It felt

�incredibly intrusive - and dangerous. He didn’t say whether he was vaccinated or not, but he stood closer
than 6 feet to me on occasion, but at least he had a mask on.
The second thing was: two nights ago, my neighbor posted in our FB block group that she had made
corned beef, potatoes, carrots and cabbage for diner that night and it was far too much for the two of them
- and would someone like it? I quickly responded yes please! So last night, with the addition of a white
sauce, Craig and I ate a delicious meal that neither of us had cooked. And during the meal, I remembered
all the delicious meals we have eaten at our neighbor’s house over the last 18 years. I was both happy and
sad.
Now here’s two things from the Capitol. The first is exciting:

Washington Post
House votes to pass Equality Act, sweeping legislation prohibiting discrimination based on sexual
orientation and gender identity. The legislation would amend federal civil rights laws to ensure
protections for LGBTQ Americans in employment, education, housing, credit, jury service and other areas.
It is a top legislative priority of President Biden but faces an uphill fight in the Senate.
And the second is scary (and will it never end?):

Crooked Media: Acting Capitol Police Chief Yogananda Pittman testified in a House hearing that some of
the January 6 insurrectionists have discussed wanting to blow up the Capitol during the State of the Union
address, which is why Capitol Police haven’t eased up on security.
Do you need a laugh? I need a laugh.

��Flashback: during the night, the ship sailed back down the coast of Scotland and we anchored at
Queensferry. Our shore excursion during the day was to Falkirk and Stirling.

�The Falkirk Wheel is a rotating boat lift in central Scotland, connecting the Forth and Clyde

�Canal with the Union Canal. The lift is named after Falkirk, the town in which it is located. It
reconnects the two canals for the first time since the 1930s. It opened in 2002 as part of the
Millennium Link project.
Wikipedia

The wheel raises boats by 24 metres (79 ft), but the Union Canal is still 11 metres (36 ft)
higher than the aqueduct which meets the wheel. Boats must also pass through a pair of locks
between the top of the wheel and the Union Canal. The Falkirk Wheel is the only rotating boat
lift of its kind in the world, and one of two working boat lifts in the United Kingdom, the other
being the Anderton Boat Lift.
Wikipedia

��It really wasn’t my shining hour. But in compensation, the fudge I bought afterwards at the

�visitors center was delicious.

Stirling castle. Before the union with England, Stirling Castle was also one of the most used of the many

Scottish royal residences, very much a palace as well as a fortress. Several Scottish Kings and Queens have

been crowned at Stirling, including Mary, Queen of Scots, in 1542, and others were born or died there.
Wikipedia

Stirling
Castle

�View from the
battlements

�The Great

�Hall

Beautiful gardens inside the
walls

�Robert I (11 July 1274 – 7 June 1329), popularly known as Robert the Bruce was King of Scots

�from 1306 to his death in 1329. Robert was one of the most famous warriors of his generation
and eventually led Scotland during the First War of Scottish Independence against England.
He fought successfully during his reign to regain Scotland's place as an independent country
and is now revered in Scotland as a national hero. Wikipedia
No, I didn’t go to the castle - I went shopping in Stirling instead. There’s still more of our day tomorrow.
And no, I didn’t forget Oliver:

��See you tomorrow.

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                    <text>Day 351

by windoworks
Yesterday I had to have the remainder of a basil cell carcinoma removed from my face just in front of my
right ear. I have a big white bandage covering the seven tiny stitches and Craig says I remind him of Van
Gogh (who cut off his ear). The stitches are taken out next Wednesday, and I hope that’s the end of it.
The news is all very depressing. As soon as a new vaccine, Johnson &amp; Johnson, was approved, two new
contagious variants were found in New York City. The Republican lawmakers have solidified behind
opposition to the desperately awaited stimulus bill that 65% of all Americans want. No I can’t comment on
that because I can’t imagine why lawmakers wouldn’t want to help their constituents. In Texas, they say
the underlying belief is that Texans would rather go 3 days without power than join any federal utility
scheme. Hmm. Have they asked actual Texans? Also, their provisions for emergency power is based on a
much lesser storm some years ago, because - how much worse could it be? Are we shortsighted?
Travel. Now this is close to my heart. 5 experts collectively thought: soon, but not that soon; depends on
vaccinations and virus levels and - maybe just wait until 2023. Craig and I are just following our plan and
hoping that being fully vaccinated for at least 3 months will allow us to fly back into Sydney. Apparently
the police then escort you from the plane to the quarantine hotel. We might have to quarantine for 14
days before being allowed out and reunited with family. We’ll see.
Yesterday the person doing the radon mitigation came to inspect the basement. His team will return on
March 12 and they will dig a pit under the basement, where the radon gas will collect and be driven
upwards by a fan, through a pipe that goes through the basement wall, then up the side of our house and
then along the gutter and finally up into the air above the roofline to vent harmlessly into the air above
the house. Today (will this never end?) the appraiser is coming to look at our house. Well at least the sun
is shining.
There have been programs set up to help the families of QAnon cult believers. From Washington Post:

Washington Post
She bought ammunition, camping gear, a water purifier and boxes of canned food. Then, Tyler’s mother
started wearing a holstered pistol around the house, convinced that 10 days of unrest and mass power
outages were coming. The chaos would culminate, she assured her son, in former president Donald
Trump’s triumphant return to power on March 4, the original Inauguration Day before the passage of the
20th Amendment in 1932. Tyler, 24, had been living with his mother an hour north of Minneapolis since
he graduated from college in 2019. The paranoia and fear that had engulfed his home had become
unbearable in the months since Trump began to falsely claim that the 2020 election had been stolen from
him.
“Any advice for dealing with a qanon parent who thinks ww3 will happen during the inauguration?” Tyler

�asked last month on r/QAnonCasualties, a fast-growing Reddit group for those whose loved ones have
been consumed by the bizarre and byzantine universe of baseless conspiracy theories known as QAnon.
“Do they have weapons?” one of the site’s moderators asked.
“Yep. A lot of them,” Tyler replied. “I would leave, but I don’t have anywhere to go.” He said he couldn’t
imagine cutting ties to his mother.
Far from Washington, the falsehoods that had whipped so many into a frenzy were wreaking a different
sort of chaos; one that was tearing families apart. Family members spoke of their loved ones as if they were
cult members or drug addicts, sucked in by social media companies and self-serving politicians who
warped their views of reality. They begged and bargained with parents and partners to put down their
phones for just a few days in the hope that the spell might be interrupted and they might return to their
old selves.To some it seemed as if the United States was gripped by an epidemic of conspiracy theories.
QAnonCasualties, the Reddit group where Tyler had turned for support,
offered a rough barometer of the growing turmoil. Since last summer it had grown from about 10,000
members to more than 130,000 in the days after Joe Biden’s inauguration.
Each day there was a flood of new posts:
A woman in Chattanooga, Tenn., was just days away from moving out of the house she and her partner
bought five years earlier. “I feel like I’m in a twisted black mirror episode that’s lasting WAY too long,”
she wrote. “I feel hopeless that we will ever get back to the beautiful life we shared in our lovely home.”
A woman in Palm Beach, Fla., had gone two weeks without speaking to her mother and was starting to
wonder if the rift was irreparable. “I grieve for her every day as if she is dead,” she wrote.
A teenager in Annapolis, Md., worried that she no longer “knew” her father. “I’ve come to the breaking
point,” she confessed. “My heart goes out to everyone else in this situation. It really sucks.”
Tyler, alone in his bedroom, read many of the new posts, hoping that they would help him make sense of
his mother’s beliefs. Sometimes it felt as if every conversation with his mom and her new husband circled
back to Trump-related conspiracies.
Tyler said he and his mother discussed QAnon one time; a bizarre conversation in which his mother
insisted that QAnon prophecies were the product of artificial intelligence. He described an atmosphere of
growing conspiracy and fear that pervaded his home. At first she insisted that Trump, not Biden, would be
inaugurated on Jan. 20, and for a while Tyler held out hope that Biden’s swearing-in would jolt his mother
back into reality. She would put away her gun and life would return to normal. But, the ceremony in
Washington seemed to make little difference at his house in Minnesota.
“She’s waiting for March 4th now,” he wrote.
“What’s March 4th?” asked one of the QAnonCasualties group members.
“Trump’s inauguration as new world president,” Tyler replied, referring to a common belief among some
QAnon followers that it represented the true Inauguration Day as set out in the Constitution.

�Authors note: Tyler moved out to his father’s home where his stepmother welcomed him. All ties have
been cut with his mother.
This story illuminates such a growing tragedy. Its almost to bizarre to believe, unless you watched the
January 6 attempted insurrection, as I did. And then, last week, I was reading a friends FB post and a
mutual ‘friend’ wrote insulting and degrading things about Democrats, Biden and Harris in the comments
section. My good friend didn’t look at his post for 2 days (because, busy) and then when he did, he was
horrified and removed the so-called ‘friend’ from his page and apologized and apologized and apologized
to us all, his real friends. I was amazed that a person I had known for years through ArtPrize and had
always seemed so friendly and warm, would suddenly start spouting the QAnon vitriol and nonsense - and
post it in the comments of my real friends page. I suddenly understand Tyler’s anguish. There is no
reasoning with these people and that is a tragedy of enormous proportions.
Here’s how to make it through this next stretch from the Atlantic writers and editors:
1. Take a neighborhood plant walk.

I have taken up night walks, wandering the empty streets of Oakland and Berkeley after my
kids go to bed. Every once in a while, I find a succulent from a neighbor and snip just a tiny
piece. Then, I take it home, stick it in water, and wait for its roots to sprout and grow down.
Eventually I plant it in the tiny garden that I've built.
— Alexis C. Madrigal, staff writer
2. Then: Build on your indoor garden.

Grow it; don’t throw it: Plant some kitchen scraps (lemon seeds, lentils, celery stalks,
avocado pits) and watch new life happen in days, no extra soil or pots required.
— Shan Wang, senior editor
3. Call someone.

Pick up your phone and call—actually call; don’t text—a friend just to catch up. Any time I
have talked to a friend during this pandemic, I have found the conversation restorative,
grounding, and gratifying. Plus, you never know when the person on the other end of the
line really needs a friend, too.
— Rebecca J. Rosen, senior editor
4. Make pierogies.

One weekend, perhaps seized by the spirit of some ancient Polish ancestor, I found myself
irresistibly drawn to the idea of making pierogies. The little dumplings require an
astonishing amount of time and patience, at least by my standards, but the process is
meditative, and at the end, you have something delicious for the freezer. Any filling works.
I’ve followed recipes from the Gefilteria and NYT Cooking.
Emma Green, staff writer

�5. Take a fake commute.

I learned this trick from one of my favorite newsletters, Girls’ Night In: If you're working
remotely, create a daily commute and take a walk around the block in the morning.
Quarantine has blurred so many work-life boundaries that even a pretend journey can feel
refreshing.
— Marina Koren, staff writer
6. Learn about cicadas.

Maybe you or your kids are fascinated by bugs. If so (and if an overabundance of insects isn’t
too biblical-plague-esque for you), now’s a perfect time to study up on them before your
spring hikes: The Brood X cicadas are emerging for the first time in 17 years. (Did you know
that there are also 13-year broods?)
— A.C. Valdez, senior podcast producer
Two days ago, my sister-in-law cut Oliver’s hair while he was sitting on Zoe’s lap. He was suspicious - but
every time he turned around, Bernie just hid the scissors.

��It’s a cute pageboy bob and doesn’t bother him as much. What a blondie!
Inverness. Inverness, royal burgh (town), Highland council area, historic county of Inverness-shire,

Scotland. It is the long-established centre of the Highlands and lies at the best crossing place of the River
Ness, which flows from Loch Ness at the east end of Glen Mor. Situated astride the river and the
Caledonian Canal, it commands the route system of northern Scotland. Encyclopedia Britannica

�Flora Macdonald was the young woman who helped Bonnie Prince Charlie escape from

�Scotland after the Jacobites were routed at the Battle of Culloden in
1746.

Inverness
Castle

�The Old High

�Church

�Shopping while Craig climbed up to the

�castle

The view of Inverness from the
top.

�Pipers piping us out as we left the dock.

�Edinburgh tomorrow.
Be careful - it isn’t over yet.

�</text>
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                    <text>Day 350.

by windoworks
Someone asked me today why former president Trump seems still to get more news coverage than
President Biden. My answer was that Trump is still a powerful force and explodes into the news because
he is so unpredictable, while Biden is behaving like presidents always did before Trump, holding meetings
and letting Congress get on with its own business, which is much less immediately newsworthy for all
that it matters in the longer term. Heather Cox Richardson.
And that’s the thing: every day President Biden works at light speed to help the American people. He
continues to undo many of the actions Trump took, while mending relationships around the world, and
taking steps to address heinous actions such as the Russian hack Solar Winds. And he and Vice President
Harris still found time to hold a vigil for the 500,000 Americans who died from Covid. He has visited the
Pfizer facility in Kalamazoo, Michigan and will visit Houston, Texas today to recognize the devastating
problems Texas is having due to the massive winter storm and the resulting power outages. I could go on,
but you see my point.
But what I fail to understand is why someone like Senator Ron Johnson (R-Wisc) would read a fallacious
item into the record during the opening day of the investigation into the January 6 attempted coup.
Everybody (all Republicans, Democrats, Independents) knows that the January attempt to overthrow the
government and stop the voting on the electoral rolls, was carried out by white supremacists on the
direction (instruction, order, command) of Donald Trump. We’ve all watched the video and heard the
words. Ron tried to tell the investigating panel that those people wearing body armor, carrying Trump
flags, wearing MAGA hats and shouting Kill Nancy (Pelosi) and Stop the Steal (among other words) were
Democrats dressed up and fake MAGA fans.
Okay, if they were Democrats dressed up as white supremacists - why would they want to kill Nancy
Pelosi or stop the electoral vote acceptance? Why would they want to stop Joe Biden being formally
recognized as the winner of the 2020 Presidential election?
So here’s my problem: while a large portion of the US is trying its best (with a lot of help from President
Biden and his appointees) to get back to some sort of normal life with ‘equality and justice for all’ - why
would a portion of the population, aided an abetted by most Republican lawmakers, be trying to
undermine all this progress and good cheer, in the middle of a global pandemic that just took 500K
American lives? It must come down to ‘what’s in it for me’ and having found what’s in it for me, how do I
hold on to that, come what may?
Oh I remember. White Supremacy.

�What else? Yes, the virus

Washington Post
When will daily life resume? When will it be safe to hug or party or sing karaoke or do X thing, like
normal? No one knows. Uncertainty is perhaps the only thing U.S. public health experts will say that's
certain about the future.
Those experts include infectious-disease researcher Anthony Fauci, who has declined to offer a timetable
for the return of life as we knew it. By summer? Halloween? Christmas, even? “God willing,” Fauci has
said, the 2021 winter holiday will look different from 2020’s. The doctor did predict, though, that face
masks may be necessary into 2022.
Vaccines are beams on the bridge to back to normal. They work. The first real-world results from a
nationwide vaccine program, analyzing the vaccinated vs. unvaccinated populations in Britain, show
strong evidence of protection.
And from The Atlantic:

At long last, Americans are able to see the relief on the horizon, and the end of the outbreak that’s cost the
country more than 500,000 lives. Here’s the most likely timeline for life to return to normal. The short
version, from our staff writer Joe Pinsker: “Life this spring will not be substantially different from the past
year; summer could, miraculously, be close to normal; and next fall and winter could bring either
continued improvement or a moderate backslide, followed by a near-certain return to something like prepandemic life.”
Experts propose a simple rule of thumb for knowing when the outbreak is over. Alexis C. Madrigal
explains the “flu test”: When the virus is killing as many Americans as the annual flu, we can start to move
away from our emergency posture.
Prepare yourself emotionally for the end. Pandemic-spurred anxieties won’t go away overnight.
Well I can get behind this as I suffer from pandemic-spurred anxieties. Actually it makes me feel better
that it now has a name. 2 months ago, Craig and I went online to Spectrum Health, filled out the relevant
form and waited to hear when we could schedule an appointment for our first vaccine shot. Since then,
we have received at least 4 text updates saying: we don’t have a spot for you yet. In the meantime, we
went to a different website and scheduled our first shot on February 8. At that appointment they
scheduled our second shot for March 8. Then yesterday we both got a text from Spectrum saying: you can
schedule your vaccination now. Wait, what? I think we’ll wait for our scheduled March 8 second shot.
How disorganized is that?
And then this:

CNN
Global virus cases have been declining for six straight weeks, according to the World Health Organization.

�Still, the world last week saw 2.4 million new cases and 66,000 new deaths. In the US, a trio of major drug
companies has promised a total of 240 million vaccine doses by the end of March, enough to fully
vaccinate about a third of the US population. A fourth vaccine could also pass FDA scrutiny by April.
Russia has opened seven vaccine production centers around the country, and China may be on the brink
of approving another vaccine as well. This is all good news, but experts still worry about all those
coronavirus variants and say such cases could lead to another surge in the US in coming weeks. But
hopefully, any spike would subside by summer.
And in a CYA (Covering Your Ass) moment and then obvious finger pointing to put the blame elsewhere.
The FBI are pretty sure they warned the D.C. police and the Capitol police and others, but for stinky,
smelling to high heaven reasons the bulletins weren’t read. Or maybe they were.....

Washington Post: Around 7 p.m. on Jan. 5, less than 24 hours before an angry mob overran the U.S.
Capitol, an FBI bulletin warning that extremists were calling for violent attacks on Congress landed in an
email inbox used by the D.C. police. That same evening, a member of the Capitol Police received the same
memo.
But the alert was not flagged for top officials at either agency, according to congressional testimony
Tuesday — deepening questions about the breakdowns that contributed to massive security failures on
Jan. 6.
Both acting D.C. police chief Robert J. Contee III and former Capitol Police chief Steven Sund said the
intelligence community at large failed to detect key information about the intentions of the attackers and
adequately communicate what was known in the run-up to the Capitol riot. “I would certainly think that
something as violent as an insurrection at the Capitol would warrant a phone call or something,” Contee
told lawmakers.
And as Crooked Media pointed out: Had security officials seen any of the numerous media reports that

Trump supporters were flooding online forums with calls to attack the Capitol? Great question—still
unclear! Sure seems relevant to their job descriptions, though.
Does anyone else hear the subtext: Not My Fault?
And here’s what President Biden is doing about Trump’s bestie (Handler? Manipulator? Sleeper activator?)
Putin:

Washington Post
Biden administration prepares sanctions to punish Moscow for SolarWinds hack, Navalny poisoning. Part
of the administration’s response will be an attribution statement stronger than the one that the
intelligence community released in January saying that Moscow “likely” was behind the SolarWinds

�operation. A White House official said last week that the Russian campaign hit nine U.S. government
agencies and about 100 private companies. They include NASA and the FAA, officials told The Post.
Well now, it must be Oliver time.

�And singing: row, row, row your boat!

�Flashback: So we sailed from Copenhagen to Scotland.

Coming up the fiord to
Invergordon.

�North Sea oil
rigs

�Under construction or repair before being towed out to the North
Sea.

�The lone piper piping us in. We docked at Invergordon and then we bussed to Inverness for
our excursion. More tomorrow.
Its warmer and the snow is melting - puddles everywhere. Be carful out there.

�</text>
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                    <text>Day 349

by windoworks

You may be wondering why this post is so late today. Its because this morning, just after breakfast I had an
aura migraine and I took a medication which always makes me more foggier than usual. Its after lunch
and I am just finishing the post now.
Yesterday, after days of warning, the US surpassed 500,000 deaths from COVID-19. Here’s a chart of
world wide deaths from other viruses to put that into perspective:

And yesterday, the President, the First Lady, the Vice President and the Second Gentleman held an event
to mark the 500,000 deaths in the US.

�A moment of
silence

�President Biden spoke, and he talked almost exclusively to those who have lost a loved one or more to this
virus. Half a million family members and friends that will never be seen again. It is both sad and shocking.
A fifth of all virus related deaths across the world have happened here in the US.

CNN: Flags around the US are flying at half-staff to mark the more than 500,000 people who have died on
American soil as a result of Covid-19. Dr. Anthony Fauci addressed the travesty plainly, saying, “We’ve
done worse than most any other country.” Meanwhile, as England prepares to reopen, its chief medical
officer said Covid-19 will likely be a problem “for the next few winters.” It’s a reminder that, like the flu,
Covid-19 will still threaten even with widespread vaccinations. There are other health risks to consider as
well: Japan has appointed a minister for loneliness to combat a rising suicide rate amid the pandemic. And
in the US, clinics are springing up to treat sufferers of “long Covid,” whose symptoms linger long after the
infection has cleared.
As this blog has evolved, I have written more and more about facts and figures - mostly because those are
safe topics for me to discuss. What I have not written about is how I am truly feeling. Sometimes I think
we don’t talk about our personal feelings for a number of reasons - too much information, I might sound
as though I’m moaning etc. But I have to tell you that as we approach the one year mark (16 days until I
have been posting this blog daily for 1 whole year), it has been a hard year.
There have been times when I thought that it was too hard for me to keep going. Now that was always just
an ‘it’s not fair, why me?’ type of moment. Some days when the sun is shining, as it is today, the isolation
seems doable. On days that are grey, all day, unceasingly, it seems harder. Some days our usual routine
seems warm and comforting and on other days, the routine seems almost prison like.
At the beginning of this, Craig would say to me: think about the British during the Second World War
and how they managed. Recently we watched an interesting series, the Wartime Farm, in which a female
historian and two male archeologists lived on a farm for a year as if it was the 5 years of the war. I think
what the British did under dreadful circumstances was, they made the best of the circumstances, every
single day. They kept shining through. Finishing watching the Wartime Farm led to the discovery of The
Tudor Farm, The Victorian Farm, The Edwardian Farm and the one we are currently watching - Secrets of
the Castle. This is the same 3 people, but this time they are helping to rebuild Guedelon Castle, a medieval
castle just outside Paris. With this series and the Tudor Farm, we have heard the origin of many common
expressions used today. I can’t remember any Tudor Farm ones, but from the Castle series so far: when
Peter took off the chain mail vest he said- well thats a weight off my shoulders. And Ruth ground barley
between 2 stones (a quern) and said that medieval women had to do this every day to make bread and ale,
in other words- the daily grind. We still have the Victorian Farm and the Edwardian Farm to watch.
In the amazingly creative news, museums and art galleries around the world have set up online visits to
their premises. You can also visit popular tourist sites and cities online. Our local sculpture garden, Meijer

�Gardens, hosts a virtual gardening class and a children’s book reading every day. They are getting ready to
host the Butterfly Collection in person, as they do each March/April, but as it involves time spent with
numbers of people and children in a very warm and steamy venue, I think we’ll pass this year. Here’s a
photo from the Gardens this year:

Craig and I also enjoy watching police TV series from all around the world, and years and years of the
Great British Menu. This is a show in which 3 chefs from each geographical area of the United Kingdom
compete for one whole week to cook at a national celebratory banquet. Each week the 3 chefs cook a
starter on Monday, a fish course on Tuesday, the meat course of Wednesday and dessert on Thursday. On
Thursday their scores for each day are added up and the top two chefs cook all 4 courses for the 3 overall
judges on Friday. The winner goes through to the finals with a chance to cook one of their courses at the
annual banquet. It is a very calming show to watch as it is completely removed from the pandemic. We
have watched 2 seasons so far. The first season celebrated local producers close to National Trust
properties and the second season celebrated the Comedy Red Nose project which began in Africa. The
current season we are watching is celebrating the 70th anniversary of D Day in Britain. I think its really
addictive to watch because it takes you away from the familiar pandemic routine.
Oliver

���Two weeks after our 3 week Mediterranean cruise, we flew to Copenhagen to begin a cruise to Iceland.
When we landed in Copenhagen it was unbearably hot. Even our bus to take us from the airport to the
hotel had a poor air conditioning system. We arrived in time to unpack and later we went to dinner at a
wonderful gluten free restaurant - again with no air conditioning. In the morning we had enough time to
sightsee a little before boarding the ship.

Happy
shoppers

�Copenhagen old city is an ornate

�area

�The Royal Copenhagen china

�store

Tivoli, also known as Tivoli Gardens, is an amusement park and pleasure garden in
Copenhagen, Denmark. The park opened on 15 August 1843 and is the third-oldest operating
amusement park in the world, after Dyrehavsbakken in nearby Klampenborg, also in
Denmark, and Wurstelprater in Vienna, Austria.With 4.6 million visitors in 2017, Tivoli is the
second-most popular seasonal theme park in the world after Europa-Park. Tivoli is the fifthmost visited theme park in Europe, behind Disneyland Park, Europa-Park, Walt Disney Studios
Park and Efteling. It is located directly in downtown Copenhagen, next to the Central rail
station for the city.
Wikipedia

�Sadly, the Tivoli Gardens didn’t open until we had left for the
ship.

��Arriving at the dock to board the ship. more Iceland adventures tomorrow.

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                    <text>Day 248.

by windoworks
Its Monday and by my count, it is exactly 19 weeks until we board the plane for Australia - hopefully.
Yesterday, which was Monday in Australia, the vaccine roll out began. It is interesting to note that in spite
of the difficulties faced by many Americans in getting that first vaccine shot, the US is one of the countries
that has a good record of vaccinating its citizens. This might be because our record of containment, testing
and contract tracing was so abysmal while the other guy was in charge - and he didn’t tell us the truth in
case we all panicked. As astonishing as it seems, there are still a significant number of Americans who
refuse to be vaccinated, refuse to wear a mask and refuse to believe that the election was fairly conducted
and Joe Biden really did win the election without any fraud. Its hard to convince these people otherwise
when the greater majority of Republican lawmakers so loudly profess disbelief. For the rest of my life, I
will never understand this. People elected to govern are meant to have their constituents needs at heart.
But this is a road I’ve already traveled down with you, so I’ll stop now.
However, this just in and its deeelicious!

Washington Post: Dominion files defamation lawsuit against MyPillow CEO for false claims that voting
machines rigged election against Trump. Dominion Voting Systems is seeking $1.3 billion in damages from
Mike Lindell and his company after he repeatedly echoed former president Donald Trump’s baseless
accusations of widespread voter fraud involving Dominion.
I just had to share this: FB post from a friend: who is wondering if you'd heard that they are going to open
the Donald John Trump Presidential Library, even though only half the books have been colored so far?
And in big news, Prime Minister Boris Johnson said all UK adults should be vaccinated with their first
dose by July 31. As my niece said: we’ll see.

�And this means you, too.

Now from Washington Post:

The state of Michigan and the city of Detroit have asked a federal judge to sanction attorneys who filed
lawsuits that falsely alleged the November presidential vote was fraudulent, the first of several similar
efforts expected around the country. An Atlanta-area prosecutor has launched a criminal investigation
into whether pressure that President Donald Trump and his allies put on state officials amounted to an
illegal scheme to overturn the results of the election. And defamation lawsuits have been filed against
Trump’s allies — the start of what could be a flood of civil litigation related to false claims that the
election was rigged and to the subsequent riot at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6.

�The goal, according to lawyers and others supportive of such efforts, is to mete out some form of
punishment for those who helped undermine confidence in the election results and fueled the Jan. 6
attack on the Capitol. But even more, they said, they hope to discourage other public officials from
rerunning Trump’s strategy of attempting to overturn an election result by sowing doubt about the
legitimacy of the vote.
“There has to be some consequence for telling these lies — because when you lie to people, they take
action based on what they think is true,” said Philadelphia City Commissioner Al Schmidt, a Republican
who received threats after false allegations of fraud in the counting of the city’s votes. “Because it’s such a
dangerous new thing that occurred, there has to be some reconciliation. Moving on isn’t enough.
One of the big sticking points with the stimulus bill is the $15 an hour minimum wage hike. I’m not
certain if this is included in the stimulus package or a separate bill. In the US the minimum wage is $7.25,
but the tipped wage is $2.13. A worker earning a tipped wage relies heavily on tips to pay their bills, rent,
food supplies. I don’t know about you but I wouldn’t even start my car to drive to work for $2.13 an hour.
When we last ate out at a restaurant, the expected lowest tip was 20% of the bill. One fifth the cost of the
meal - breakfast, lunch or dinner.
What governments world wide are now starting to think about is a Living Wage. This differs from a
minimum hourly wage as it addresses earning enough money per hour to pay for the necessities of life and
participate as an active citizen in the community. In the US a Living Wage would be $16.54 per hour,
more than double the national minimum wage. A side note here: in Michigan the minimum wage is set at
$9.45 per hour.
And here’s a nifty chart to get you thinking:

�I just want to say, its very traumatic selling your house and your car in a pandemic. Our car is probably
going to be bought by our neighbors (so we have to look after it in the meantime) and we are part way
through selling our house. After the inspectors report, there was a little renegotiating on the final price.
I’m sure this is all how it usually works, but to keep having to let other people into your house during a
pandemic is extremely stressful. If the house sale goes through (well before it was going to be put on the
market) we will be renting the house back from the new owners for our last 3 months - and having to be
extra careful of what was our house. This morning the inspector is coming back to retrieve the radon
monitor he put in our basement last week. On Thursday this week, the appraiser is coming to appraise our
house and we have to be here. Will it never end?

�In Texas, the growing concern is that the big freeze that just happened, will happen again. From the New
York Times:

The Texas economy revolves around oil and gas. And those fossil fuels have created two threats to the
state’s economic future. The first is climate change, which is making Texas a less pleasant place to live.
The number of 95-degree days has spiked, and severe hurricanes have become more common, including
Harvey, which brutalized Houston and the Gulf Coast in 2017. Paradoxically, climate change may also be
weakening the jet stream, making bouts of frigid weather more common.
The second threat is related to climate change but different. It comes from the possibility that alternative
energy sources like wind and solar power are becoming cheap enough to shrink Texas’ oil and gas
industry. Instead of investing adequately in new energy forms, though, many Texas politicians have tried
to protect fossil fuels. Last week, Gov. Greg Abbott went so far as to blame wind and solar energy —
falsely — for causing the blackouts. The main culprit was the failure of natural gas powered plants.
Years ago, (maybe early 1990s) we had new neighbors at our Sydney home. They had moved from
England because the husband worked for British Petroleum (BP) who had sent him out to investigate solar
and wind power possibilities, which showed that an international fossil fuel company was considering the
future market even then.

�Several days ago we drove down to view the Grand River, first at Riverside Park.

��And then coming into downtown along Monroe:

��Yes, that’s all the Grand River.
Oliver.

�Wearing his new sneakers because daycare lost one of his Nike sandals. No really.
Well thats it for today. I’ll begin a new cruise adventure tomorrow.

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                    <text>Day 347

by windoworks

Well, probably not, but there seems so much else to talk about. To begin with, many people are refusing to
have the vaccine. When I was 4 years old, or thereabouts, the district nurse decided I wasn’t gaining
enough weight and I was summarily sent off to Health Camp for 6 weeks, far from home. In those days,
mothers were hounded by the district nurse. They laid down the law regarding children’s development
and bullied the mothers into complying. Health Camp was probably a nice enough place but it turned my
world upside down. I was terribly homesick and in truth, after the 6 weeks were up and at my final
weekly weigh in, I had lost weight rather than gained it. But I digress. The event that stands out in my

�memory, so many years later, was that the Matron’s daughter came down with chicken pox, and I was one
of a small number of children included in the ‘chicken pox party’. Think about that for a minute. Several
small children were deliberately exposed to a significant childhood disease. Of course, I came down with
chicken pox. They isolated us in a newly constructed dormitory and bathed our poxes in red paint for very
itchy spots and green paint for mildly itchy spots, but on the whole, the staff left us entirely unsupervised.
I remember that taste of freedom was intoxicating. We felt too miserable to do anything too stupid, but I
do remember dancing on my bed. Long after my chicken pox bout, a vaccine was introduced for children
in the hopes of eradicating chicken pox.
Imagine then, Covid parties. Events organized with the express purpose of spreading the virus and getting
it over once and for all. But wait, don’t some people end up in hospital, struggling to breathe? And don’t
some people get a mild dose but then become a long hauler - constantly tired and suffering heart problems
and brain fog, and many other debilitating symptoms? What would be better than throwing caution to the
wind and taking a chance that severe illness and death might be the consequence? Oh, I know - getting a
vaccine to prevent severe illness, death and debilitating long term symptoms. But of course, there are still
people who read non-scientific, erroneous opinions - so here are some answers:
Washington Post:

Everyone eligible should get the vaccine is to protect those who cannot get it. With studies on children
and the virus just getting started, it’s likely that young kids and babies won’t be able to receive the vaccine
until fall 2021. Immunosuppressed people may need to rely on the immunity of others to help them stay
healthy. In this sense, not getting a vaccine is like not wearing a mask: Your decision affects not just you
but everyone around you, too.
There’s no point in getting the vaccine if we still have to wear masks. Vaccinated people should keep
wearing masks and follow social distancing guidelines. In fact, we will all need to wear masks for some
time. Although the vaccine is more than 94 percent effective at reducing symptomatic illness, it isn’t yet
known whether it reduces the likelihood of contracting the coronavirus and being an asymptomatic
carrier — a person who can unknowingly infect others. As vaccination brings us all closer to herd
immunity, there will be a point when enough of the population is protected that we can do away with
masks. That could happen by the end of 2021. In the meantime, vaccination is a crucial tool. It doesn’t
replace other tools but is a powerful measure that can help save lives and help the economy recover.
We don’t know how long the vaccine will protect us. Virus mutations could mean the vaccine won’t
work. A study of the Moderna vaccine found a robust antibody response for at least 119 days. We don’t yet
have data beyond this, though some experts believe immunity should last at least a year. As for mutations,
all viruses mutate. Vaccines are designed to consider possible mutations, though it’s possible that enough
mutations could eventually reduce the potency of the existing vaccines.

�It may turn out that people have to receive regular booster shots, as we already do for tetanus or an annual
shot that adjusts for variants, as we do for influenza. The theoretical necessity of future vaccinations
doesn’t override the urgency of getting one now.
Of course the other negative point of catching chicken pox is that it remains in your system forever (as far
as I can tell) and in later life, it can come back as very painful shingles.

A reactivation of the chickenpox virus in the body, causing a painful rash.Anyone who's had chickenpox
may develop shingles. It isn't known what reactivates the virus. Shingles causes a painful rash that may
appear as a stripe of blisters on the trunk of the body. Pain can persist even after the rash is gone (this is
called postherpetic neuralgia).
Both my children had chicken pox as small children. My youngest child scratched a couple of poxes on his
face so badly, he has faint scars there even today. And years later, he developed shingles. I’m not certain
that chicken pox and the subsequent bout of shingles didn’t lead to other health problems. I’m telling you
this because I want everyone who can, to be vaccinated. If people refuse for erroneous reasons, the virus
will keep mutating and spreading and we will never be able to take off our masks or hug our loved ones
again. People continue to hold on to that tenuous idea of herd immunity.
From John Hopkins:

What is herd immunity? 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. Remember: When the
coronavirus that causes COVID-19 first started to spread, virtually nobody was immune.
Measles, mumps, polio, and chickenpox are examples of infectious diseases that were once very common
but are now rare in the U.S. because vaccines helped to establish herd immunity. We sometimes see
outbreaks of vaccine-preventable diseases in communities with lower vaccine coverage because they don’t
have herd protection. (The 2019 measles outbreak at Disneyland is an example.)
Why is getting infected with SARS-CoV-2 to “get it over with” not a good idea? COVID-19 carries a much
higher risk of severe disease and even death. The death rate for COVID-19 is unknown, but current data
suggest it is 10 times higher than for the flu. It’s higher still among vulnerable groups like the elderly and
people with weakened immune systems. Quicker is not always better, as we have seen in previous
epidemics with high mortality rates, such as the 1918 Flu pandemic.

�My final point is: the vaccines will do the same job that the vaccines for polio, measles, chicken pox and
mumps do - they will prevent widespread outbreaks with hospitals and morgues being overwhelmed. At
this time, there are 5 vaccines: Pfizer and Moderna being used in the US, and AstraZeneca, Janssens and
Novavax being used in other countries.

New York Times:
500,000 deaths. Roughly one year since the first known coronavirus-related death was reported in the
U.S., an unfathomable toll is nearing — the loss of half a million people. As of Sunday, the pandemic death
toll was 497,403, higher than in any other country. More Americans have died from Covid-19 than on the
battlefields of World War I, World War II and the Vietnam War combined.
And just when you thought it was safe to go back in the water:

(CNN)Russian authorities say they have detected what is believed to be "human infection with avian
influenza H5N8," the World Health Organization (WHO) has confirmed to CNN. Russia notified WHO of
the possible strain. "If confirmed, this would be the first time H5N8 has infected people," a WHO Europe
spokesperson said in a statement Saturday. The reported cases were workers exposed to bird flocks,
according to preliminary information, the statement added.
The workers were "asymptomatic and no onward human to human transmission was reported," the
spokesperson said.
What? An avian flu? No human-to-human transmission - yet. I’m not ready. I’m not ready. I’m so not
ready.

�CNN: After an awe-inspiring landing, NASA's newest Mars rover is checking out its forever home and
beaming back stunning photos from the red planet. Its sidekick helicopter also provided a good report that
everything's operating as expected. On Monday NASA will provide additional details about the mission by
the Perseverance rover and the helicopter attached to its belly.
The other day (don’t ask me when, its a pandemic!) Craig walked to Reeds Lake early in the morning.
Here are some photos:

���And if you’re wondering: yes that is Craig standing on the frozen lake and yes those are fishing shacks. Ice
fishing is big in the MidWest. Two weeks ago (before the latest freeze) the ice on Reeds Lake was 5-6
inches thick. That’s fresh snow on the top of the ice. There is more snow forecast for tonight although the
next few days will be a little warmer.
Oliver

�We watched a similar moment yesterday. He can get himself up there easily enough but he can’t get
himself down. I think he’s screeching ‘get me off’.
Stay safe, stay hydrated, stay warm or cool. See you tomorrow.

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                    <text>Day 346. Saturday February 20. 134 sleeps to go.
by windoworks
Just to make you laugh.

In a pandemic you never know what will happen next. Yesterday, after the inspector arrived, we began
our drive out to Grand Haven. We had homemade soup, cheese rolls and cupcakes for lunch and we were
set. Until the snow got so heavy that Craig decided to turn around and drive back to the Ravine near
GVSU, to eat our lunch.

��The inspector said he’d be done by 1:00pm and we thought we’d sit in the car across the road until he left.
As we drove up our street, we could see that he had gone already (good news!) and we parked the car in
the garage and went inside. 10 minutes later I heard a chainsaw start up and Craig said: good thing we
came home early because the tree guys are parked across our drive.
To backtrack: 2 summers ago, both TJ next door and Craig called the city to say that trees in front of our
houses were ailing and could someone come and take a look. Nothing, nada, zilch. I think the guys gave
up. So, yesterday, in 45 action packed and militarily organized minutes, this is what happened:

����But the really astonishing thing was - nobody told TJ and Amy. They were both out on different errands
while this happened and were gobsmacked when they both came home. The tree guys left the big logs
behind for later collection and TJ, never one to to pass up free firewood, spent hours outside in the dark,
sawing the logs up. There’s just really the stump left now.
So, the virus. From Crooked Media: First, the good news: The pace of vaccinations has picked up

substantially. More than 41 million Americans have received at least one dose of the vaccine, and more
than 16 million have received both doses. The U.S. is now administering an average of 1.7 million doses
per day, almost double the average from the week before President Biden took office. This week, the
White House announced that the total vaccine supply to states will increase from 11 million doses per
week to 13.5 million doses, and that the supply going directly to pharmacies will double to two million
doses.
And about the second dose:

Crooked Media: A new Israeli study published in the Lancet medical journal found the Pfizer vaccine to
be 85 percent effective two to four weeks after a single dose. It’s not clear how long that protection would
last, and the second dose is still necessary to get the vaccine’s full 95 percent protection, but that finding is

�a solid bit of data to support the U.K.’s strategy of delaying a second dose by up to 12 weeks in order to
free up supplies for more first doses. Separately, Pfizer has found that its vaccine can actually be stored in
regular medical freezers, rather than ultra-cold storage, which would make it much easier to distribute
across the U.S.
So that means Craig and I are almost at the 2 week mark (this Monday) so we’ll be 85% covered. But just
when you think its all good news, here’s this from Washington Post:

In Japan, about 100 people have been confirmed to have a new variant that has caused infections in the
Kanto region, in the eastern part of the country. It's too early to know whether that variant's mutations
make the virus more contagious or harmful. It's also important to remember that the coronavirus is
constantly mutating. Though tracking how the pathogen changes is critical, each emergent variant isn't
necessarily a cause for alarm.
And in line with this, is this disturbing piece from The Independent:

The Chinese city of Wuhan had more than a dozen Covid variants by December 2019, new findings by a
team of World Health Organisation (WHO) scientists probing the origins of the pandemic suggest.
Peter Ben Embarek, who led a team of WHO investigators in Wuhan, said 13 different genetic sequences
of the SARS-COV-2 virus were found in the Hubei province city, adding thousands more blood samples
have been requested for analysis. It suggests that the infection had been circulating in China earlier than
previously thought. Wuhan is widely considered to be "ground zero" of the outbreak, although its exact
origins and timeframe continue to be debated, with some reports suggesting the disease was present in
Europe as early as October.
In an interview with CNN published on Monday, Mr Embarek told the network "the virus was circulating
widely in Wuhan in December, which is a new finding”. Mr Embarek said Chinese officials had presented
his team with 174 cases of coronavirus in and near the Wuhan area in December 2019, around 100 of
which had been laboratory test-confirmed, with the remaining cases identified through the clinical
diagnosis of the patients' symptoms. He said this suggested there could have been as many as 1,000 cases of
the disease in Wuhan by December. Mr Embarek said that the 13 variants examined alongside other
patient data across China in 2019 could provide vital clues to the origins of the outbreak.
He added: "Some of [the variants] are from the markets… some of them are not linked to the markets.
Professor John Watson, a former deputy chief medical officer, said while China remained a “very, very
possible source”, reports that the virus was circulating in other parts of the world, notably northern Italy,
as early as September and October, warranted further investigation. But China was “by no means
necessarily the place where the leap from animals to humans took place and I think we need to ensure
that we are looking beyond the borders of China, as well as within China,” he added. A study released by

�the National Cancer Institute (INT) in Milan in November showed the new coronavirus was circulating in
Italy in September 2019.
And if you’re still wondering if you should be vaccinated, here’s this from the New York Times: . The

evidence so far suggests that a full dose of the vaccine — with the appropriate waiting period after the
second shot — effectively eliminates the risk of Covid-19 death, nearly eliminates the risk of
hospitalization and drastically reduces a person’s ability to infect somebody else. All of that is also true
about the virus’s new variants.
And here’s a tiny snippet, tucked away on a many snippets page also from NYT: The number of confirmed

Covid deaths in the U.S. is on pace to exceed 500,000 in the next few days.
How can that be? Here’s the stats today: total US cases (remember this is the total number of cases tested):
28M. Worldwide case total: 111M. Total US deaths: 496K (yes we are about 2 days from 500K deaths).
Worldwide deaths: 2.45M. Here in Kent County we have 51,098 confirmed cases and 699 deaths. Hmmm.
Next, Teddy. Did you mean to make us laugh at you, while crying for your constituents?

��There is a movement afoot to have Ted removed from office. He deserves that. And just in case you
thought the DOJ and the FBI had found all the insurrectionists who participated in the January 6
attempted coup:

Capitol riot involved wider conspiracy with Oath Keepers, prosecutors say, as six more individuals face
charges The addition of six people to the indictment means that nine defendants, led by three already
charged U.S. military veterans, face allegations that they “planned with each other, and with others
known and unknown” to obstruct the certification of President-elect Joe Biden’s election. Prosecutors say
those newly charged are Oath Keepers members or associates.
And the sentences for these people could be extremely long without parole.
Before you freak out, this is a doctored photo of Mars.

�Oliver: still life with glue.

��So, Venice:

The last day of the
Redentore

�Our last White Night
onboard

�Venice, Italy - of course the entertainment was an opera
singer

�The fireworks to celebrate the end of of the Redentore began at
midnight.

��The fireworks lasted for over 20 minutes. After 10 minutes we went to
bed.

�Flying out over the Venetian flatlands the next morning. Our 3 week cruise was over.
Today I’ll leave you with this:

��See you tomorrow.

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                    <text>Day 345

by windoworks
It usually takes me an hour or so to write the day’s post but today I will have to be quicker. At 10:30, a
person will come to inspect the house and with them will be the buyers. I’m not sure how I feel about
meeting the buyers and Craig and I will have to leave the house because the Covid rule is only 2 families
in a house for sale. The inspector is one family and the buyers are the other. Now the inspection process
can take up to 3 hours which is difficult to fill in the middle of a pandemic. So I have hot soup in a
thermos and we will probably drive out to the big lake, to sit and look at the ice and waves while we eat
our lunch.

�Oh yes it does

Now on the news front. First some photos from Texas:

�Lining up for dwindling supplies in a grocery
store.

�Not a warming center but a furniture store that the owner threw open for Texans to shelter
in

Turtles rescued from the bitter cold and being warmed up indoors.

�CNN: The lights are back on for most Texans, after a devastating week of freezing temperatures and
winter storms. But now the state is facing a new crisis: nearly half of its residents are having to boil water
due to a critically low water supply. Some are dealing with burst pipes and flooded homes, while others
are struggling to find food. Carbon monoxide poisonings are spiking. To add to that, some Texans face yet
another round of record lows tonight into tomorrow morning. Meanwhile, Sen. Ted Cruz is under fire
after flying to Cancun while his constituents were suffering. He has since called his decision a mistake.
What amazes me, every time, is that some people in positions of responsibility imagine they can do
whatever they like and no one will notice. Social media is full of photos (like this one below) of Ted Cruz
at the airport with his passport. This reminds me of the Prime Minister of Australia, taking his whole
family to Hawaii for a vacation, during the worst bushfires ever in Australia. Scott had to admit that was a
mistake too. Just because you can, doesn’t mean you should.

�The Atlantic
When the snow came, the state of Texas failed. Its self-maintained power grid stopped working—and its
politicians seemed to do the same: Senator Ted Cruz flew to Cancún, Mexico, with his family, only to take
a return flight the next day amid outcry.
In the absence of political leadership from Cruz and other state leaders, many Texans continue to face
dangerous conditions, their access to power, drinking water, and food threatened.
Cruz is no hypocrite. He’s worse. That he couldn’t think of any way to help Texans is “a failure of

�imagination and of political ideology,” David A. Graham argues. (Cruz also appears on our list of the 147
members of Congress who chose despotism over democracy in the aftermath of the Capitol attack.)
One of our Texas-based writers is freezing cold—and burning mad. Fixing the state’s power grid “will
require actual governance, as opposed to performative governance,” Andrew Exum writes from Dallas.
Perhaps the days of just doing whatever you liked because Trump was your example - perhaps those days
are over. And suddenly, people are beginning to argue over President Biden’s actions. Oh, I remember this
- this is how a real democracy works! Healthy discourse.
Now I know its February and the cases are easing a little but sometimes we have to look back. January was
the worst covid month of all: each day in January, covid-19 killed an average of 3,100 people in the United
States — one every 28 seconds.

�I’m cheered by this - aren’t you? In New Zealand vaccinations began yesterday and in Australia,
vaccinations are scheduled to begin on Monday. Help is coming. My daughter’s test finally came back
negative and she really does just have a rotten cold.
In other news of the day: the Perseverance rover touched down in the Jezero Crater on Mars to begin its
search for signs of past life. Next, from Crooked Media:

White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki has warned that two emerging Ebola outbreaks in the Democratic
Republic of the Congo and Guinea require swift action to stop them from becoming large-scale epidemics.
On February 7, the DRC confirmed four cases of Ebola in Butembo, a city that was the epicenter of the
second-largest Ebola outbreak in the world, which was declared over in June. A week later, officials in

�Guinea declared an Ebola epidemic, after at least three people died and four others were infected. The
outbreaks aren’t linked, according to public health experts. The WHO has urged West and Central African
countries to stay on high alert for potential infections, and national security advisor Jake Sullivan has
spoken with ambassadors from Guinea, the DRC, Sierra Leone, and Liberia “to convey the United States’
willingness to work closely” with those countries.
Then, from Washington Post:

Biden authorizes FEMA to provide generators, supplies to hard-hit states such as Texas amid severe
weather. In a tweet, President Biden said he has declared states of emergency, is ready to fulfill additional
requests and added, “Please heed the instructions of local officials and stay safe.” In a White House
briefing, homeland security adviser and deputy national security adviser Liz Sherwood-Randall said that
states of emergency have been declared for Texas and Oklahoma and that the administration is
considering a request from Louisiana.
And, from Workplace Safety:

��Rush Limbaugh died yesterday and Trump was devastated. Well, Rush was a faithful enabler and
promoter of Trump’s worst excesses. What else is happening for ‘that other guy’?

CNN: The fallout over Donald Trump's second impeachment trial continues. The former President on
Tuesday went after Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, who offered a blistering criticism of Trump
just after voting to acquit him. The insults leveled by Trump against McConnell come as the Republican
Party at large is grappling over whether to continue in Trump's likeness or forge a path veering from the
former President's legacy. In other news, Trump's longtime personal attorney Rudy Giuliani is not
currently representing the former President in any legal matters, an adviser said. Trump is facing multiple
criminal investigations, civil state inquiries and defamation lawsuits by two women accusing him of sexual
assault.
Randy Rainbow’s offering: Rudolph the Leaky Lawyer says it all.
Oliver:

�And I’m also

�teething again.

Well, that’s it for today. I promise, I promise I’ll post more of Venice tomorrow but I have to get ready to
leave the house now. I’ll leave you with this gem from Crooked Media:

• Earth had its quietest period in decades during 2020 while humans were all under lockdown—urban
ambient noise fell by up to 50% at some measuring stations.

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                    <text>Day 344

by windoworks
The big news of the day: remember we had to leave the house last Saturday so some prespective buyers
could look at the house? They sent us an offer on Sunday afternoon which we declined. And that, I
thought, was the end of it. However, on Tuesday they made a second offer which was much more
attractive, so we accepted it. Now all the folderol begins. Tomorrow we have to leave the house at
10:30am and stay away for approximately 3 hours while the house is formally inspected. Where to go and
what to do for 3 hours in a pandemic? Plus, I think we’ve looked after our house really well, but then I
love it. And in another side note - this morning the toaster died, because pandemic and we’re leaving the
country in just under 4 months and none of our electrical goods will work in Australia.
There is lots to talk about this morning but first, here’s a piece from my daughter Zoe. As an addendum to
her piece, yesterday she had a cold that she had caught from Oliver who caught it from daycare - you get
the picture. She found out that if she wanted to go to the office yesterday instead of working from home,
she had to get tested for Covid, it was the new rule. I haven’t heard her results yet.

Our team was probably the first in our district office to try working from home, in mid-March of 2020. I
remember coming in on a Tuesday and some of my team members were quite stressed about the growing
numbers of COVID-19, asking if it was possible to work from home. I went to my Director, who thought
it might be a good “test case” for our office, so from the next day, we were all at home.
For the most part, we have worked at home since then. I started coming in to our office once a week from
about August, and have increased that to twice a week occasionally as well.
As of the last few weeks, our messaging is beginning to change. Australia’s numbers of COVID have on the
whole, been kept relatively low (thanks to vigorous lockdowns and quick reactions from our state
governments), and in New South Wales where I live, following a minor outbreak over Christmas, we have
sat on no new community transmission cases for 30 days now. This means our state government (who I
work for) is interested in promoting the idea of returning to the office, in a COVID-safe way, primarily I
think because of the economic concern that the city has become so unpopulated, which won’t be great in
a post-pandemic tourist sense.
I am now working with my team members (I manage 5 people) about them returning to the office for at
least a few days a week, and making sure they don’t feel anxious about this, as many of them have to take
public transport to get here (where we still wear masks). I like being in the office, it’s something I missed a
lot last year – especially as COVID hit only about 5 weeks after I had returned from maternity leave, and I
was craving the company of adults (and coffees!) But I also recognise we are trying to balance being safe in
the office, with appreciating the need for flexibility in people’s lives, and the reality that COVID showed
us we can work from home just fine with, if anything, more productivity.

�Zoë Benjamin | Manager Communications
Office of the Executive District Director
Department of Communities and Justice. I respect and acknowledge Aboriginal people as the traditional
owners of the land on which I live and work and pay my respects to Elders both Past and Present.
It is interesting to me that the acknowledgement of the Aboriginal people is included in every state and
federal communication. Recently I have watched the Covid updates from British Columbia, Canada, and
each time, the speaker acknowledges and thanks the Native Canadians for allowing them to be on their
lands.
Here’s something about the future of jobs from Washington Post:

Millions of jobs that have been shortchanged or wiped out entirely by the coronavirus pandemic are
unlikely to come back, economists warn, setting up a massive need for career changes and retraining in
the United States.
The coronavirus pandemic has triggered permanent shifts in how and where people work. Businesses are
planning for a future where more people are working from home, traveling less for business, or replacing
workers with robots. All of these modifications mean many workers will not be able to do the same job
they did before the pandemic, even after much of the U.S. population gets vaccinated against the deadly
virus.
Microsoft founder-turned-philanthropist Bill Gates raised eyebrows in November when he predicted that
half of business travel and 30 percent of “days in the office” would go away forever. That forecast no
longer seems far-fetched. In a report coming out later this week that was previewed to The Washington
Post, the McKinsey Global Institute says that 20 percent of business travel won’t come back and about 20
percent of workers could end up working from home indefinitely. These shifts mean fewer jobs at hotels,
restaurants and downtown shops, in addition to ongoing automation of office support roles and some
factory jobs.
So there you have it. It will never be the same old normal again from the Before Times. It will be a New
Normal. Are we ready?

�Texas is in a catastrophic state. In one story that Craig heard, a family huddled together in front of their
open fireplace. During the night when the fire began to die down, the parents used furniture and picture
frames to keep themselves and their small children warm. There seems to be a lot of finger pointing going
on. President Biden immediately sent everything that Texas asked for (generators, bottled water etc), even
though the Governor and his minions continue to badmouth Democrats and Liberals. Tim Boyd, the
mayor of Colorado City, Texas, when asked for help by his constituents, said on FB ‘get off your lazy asses
and fix it for yourselves’. There was more but you don’t need to read it. He must have forgotten that ‘that
other guy’ was no longer President. He resigned after a FB uproar. I see major changes looming to Texas’
power grid.

�How did this freak winter storm happen in the south? Here’s a piece from the New York Times:

Much of the Pacific Northwest is blanketed in snow. Texas continues to endure frigid weather and
electricity outages. Another winter storm is spreading across much of the country. Today, snow or
freezing rain may fall on Washington, New York and Boston. To make sense of this week’s cold spell and
storms, I spoke with John Schwartz, a Times reporter who focuses on the climate.
Question: Let’s start with a simple question on some people’s minds — How do you think about recordlow temperatures hammering parts of the U.S. at the same time that we’re experiencing global warming?
John Schwartz: It does sound counterintuitive! Those who deny climate science love to declare that there’s
no such thing as climate change whenever the weather turns cold. But weather remains variable, and cold
weather in winter still happens, even if the overall warming trend means that winters are getting milder.

�Q: And is there any relationship between this week’s storms and climate change? I noticed that the
climate scientist Katharine Hayhoe uses the phrase “global weirding.” John: There’s interesting science
that suggests the effects of a warming world have something to do with these sudden bursts of Arctic cold,
as well. The cold air at the top of the world, the polar vortex, is usually held in place by the circulating jet
stream. The Northern Hemisphere’s warming appears to be weakening the jet stream, and when sudden
blasts of heat in the stratosphere punch into the vortex, that Arctic air can spill down into the middle
latitudes.
Q: Are there any other changing patterns of winter weather that may be connected to climate change?
John: A warming atmosphere can hold more moisture, so when you do get storms you can expect to see
heavier rain and snow. There’s also fascinating research that links a warming Arctic to increased
frequency of the broad range of extreme winter weather in parts of the United States. It’s known as
“warm-Arctic/cold-continents pattern,” a phenomenon that’s still being studied.
Q: What are the recent weather trends — during winter or not — where the evidence most strongly
suggests climate change is playing a role?John: In the United States, we’re seeing longer wildfire seasons
because of hotter, drier conditions, and our hurricanes are becoming more destructive in several ways,
including flooding and storm surge. It’s even worsening the misery of pollen season. We’ve always had
floods, fires and storms, but climate change adds oomph to many weather events. I realize I’m repeating
myself here, but scientists are still hashing out all of this. While the science underlying the links between
human emissions and climate change is rock solid, some of the particulars, such as whether climate change
will cause us to see more frequent blasts from the polar vortex, are still being debated. And that’s as it
should be.
So as well as everything else, 7M people in Texas are under a boil all drinking water advisory - although
how people are doing that during a severe power outage - oh wait, can we use the grill? I am being
flippant but people have died trying to keep warm. Starting the car and pumping up the heater is only a
good idea if you back the car out of the garage first. And here’s a nifty little tip, although, you should
check the tea lights first for harmful chemicals

�What is happening with the virus? Well, from CNN: Covid-19 variants are threatening to cause another

surge of infections in the US, making it more important than ever to continue practicing tried-and-true
safety measures. The good news is that the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines appear to protect against some of
the more concerning variants. The bad news is despite President Joe Biden recently saying that the US
would have enough vaccines for every American by the end of July, actually vaccinating all those people
will likely take longer. In another sobering development, the CDC reports US life expectancy dropped a
full year in the first half of 2020 — and even more for Black and Hispanic Americans. Perhaps
unsurprisingly, experts say that Covid-19 was a significant factor contributing to the decline.
And here’s this from Washington Post: Academic and industry researchers the world over have shifted

their focus to the coronavirus. But plenty of information remains unknown. The first-ever human
challenge trial for the coronavirus will try to fill in some blanks. In it, healthy volunteers will be exposed

�to the pathogen — an ethically tricky proposition, weighing the benefits of new knowledge against the
dangers participants face. On Wednesday, a British ethics body gave the green light for the trial to begin.
As many as 90 adults in the U.K. will be exposed in the first experiment.
Boy those 90 people are braver than me!
Oliver: Great Uncle Mal is the best story reader - and he’ll read me as many stories as I want.

�We’ll have the last of Venice tomorrow. This post is long enough already.

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                    <text>Day 343

by windoworks

Craig is about to head out on his normal early morning walk and the current temperature outside is -4F.
That is -20C. That is cold enough for him to wear a ski mask to protect his face. The roads are glazed with
ice. The top temperature here to day will be 22F (-5.5C). Ahhh Michigan!
Meanwhile in Texas, there is the possibility of another storm on Thursday/Friday. It was so cold that the
wind turbines froze. Here’s an interesting snippet from Heather Cox Richardson:

Most of Texas is on its own power grid, a decision made in the 1930s to keep it clear of federal regulation.
This means both that it avoids federal regulation and that it cannot import more electricity during periods
of high demand. Apparently, as temperatures began to drop, people turned up electric heaters and needed
more power than engineers had been told to design for, just as the ice shut down gas-fired plants and wind
turbines froze. Demand for natural gas spiked and created a shortage. With climate change expected to
intensify extremes of weather, the crisis in Texas indicates that our infrastructure will need to be
reinforced to meet conditions it was not designed for.
Wait? Is this help on the horizon? From a FB post:

The President approved federal help for Texas, LA, AL, KS and Ok as soon as their Governors requested it.
He did it without the need of him being praised! He sees no blue or red states. He sees and represents the
United States whether or not they voted for him!! This is what a real President does!!
Bill Gates (who predicted the global pandemic in a TED talk about 7 years ago) has a new book coming
out: “How To Avoid A Climate Disaster - the solutions we have and the breakthroughs we need”. I’m
pretty sure we should listen to him. And in line with that here’s this from Science Alert:

It's been nearly two decades since a coronavirus capable of wreaking havoc on our bodies threatened
global pandemic. Last year, that threat was made good with the emergence of a deadly new version,
dubbed SARS-CoV-2. With the world still reeling from the devastation of COVID-19, the question of if –
and when – we'll see yet another member of this family pop up in the near future has the attention of
researchers. Their findings should have us on high alert.
A recent investigation has employed machine learning to predict which mammals could host multiple
strains of coronavirus, allowing the pathogens to mix and piece together the makings of a next-gen
COVID.
The numbers hint at close to a dozen times more coronavirus-host associations than estimates based on
observations alone.

�Alarmingly, they also found more than 30 times the potential hosts that could harbour SARS-CoV-2 and
allow it to recombine into something uglier; and over 40 times the number of species previously suspected
to host a handful of coronavirus subgenera. Viruses regularly shuffle genes and recode their genome as
they infect hosts, chancing on clever new methods for unlocking cells, evading eviction from the immune
system, or even jumping to new animals, giving rise to what we call new species and strains.
Thanks in part to the amazingly robust immune systems, many bat species can harbour a number of
viruses comfortably for long periods, giving them all a chance to mix-and-match their genes.
From there, a leap into a human host simply requires a chance encounter, either directly or through an
intermediate host, such as a pangolin brought into civilisation for its meat.
So here we are. As awful and life changing as this pandemic continues to be - its not the worst scenario.
And all of us, mostly those of us living in wealthy countries, we have done this to ourselves. So many of us
have refused to accept the term ‘climate change’, never mind the current term ‘climate crisis’. A tweet
from Greta Thunberg:

A small piece of advice for humanity:
when you're in a hole - stop digging. A crisis created by lack of respect for nature will most likely not be
solved by taking that lack of respect to the next level…
Greta Thunberg is an 18 year old Swedish climate activist. In September 2019, Greta spoke to the General
Assembly of the United Nations. She said:

My message is that we'll be watching you. This is all wrong. I shouldn't be up here. I should be back in
school on the other side of the ocean. Yet, you all come to us young people for hope. How dare you! You
have stolen my dreams and my childhood with your empty words and yet I'm one of the lucky ones.
People are suffering. People are dying. Entire ecosystems are collapsing. We are in the beginning of a mass
extinction and all you can talk about is money and fairytales of eternal economic growth. How dare you!
For more than 30 years, the science has been crystal clear. How dare you continue to look away and come
here saying that you're doing enough when the politics and solutions needed are still nowhere in sight.
You say you hear us and that you understand the urgency, but no matter how sad and angry I am, I do not
want to believe that. Because if you really understood the situation and still kept on failing to act then you
would be evil and that I refuse to believe. The popular idea of cutting our emissions in half in 10 years
only gives us a 50 percent chance of staying below 1.5 degrees and the risk of setting off irreversible chain
reactions beyond human control.
Fifty percent may be acceptable to you, but those numbers do not include tipping points, most feedback
loops, additional warming hidden by toxic air pollution or the aspects of equity and climate justice. They
also rely on my generation sucking hundreds of billions of tons of your CO2 out of the air with

�technologies that barely exist. So a 50 percent risk is simply not acceptable to us, we who have to live with
the consequences. How dare you pretend that this can be solved with just business as usual and some
technical solutions? With today's emissions levels, that remaining CO2 budget will be entirely gone
within less than eight and a half years.
There will not be any solutions or plans presented in line with these figures here today, because these
numbers are too uncomfortable and you are still not mature enough to tell it like it is. You are failing us,
but the young people are starting to understand your betrayal. The eyes of all future generations are upon
you and if you choose to fail us, I say: We will never forgive you. We will not let you get away with this.
Right here, right now is where we draw the line. The world is waking up and change is coming, whether
you like it or not. Thank you.
I think that is a clear message and here we are in the first pandemic (there will probably be others) and if
we are honest - we did this to ourselves. Not only ourselves, but our children and our grandchildren and
on and on. How many science fiction films or TV series have you watched with the central premise that
the Earth has become unlivable. All those movies and series tell us that it’s all right - we’ll just find
another planet to live on. That’s irresponsible. Thats like saying if you trash the house you are currently
living in - that’s all right. You’ll just find another house to live in. We have to wake up right now. Some of
our worst fears are being realized. If you have steadfastly refused to believe in climate crisis (we passed
climate change some years ago) perhaps it is time to look at this with the long view. Years ago a family
member told me with great cheer - oh I don’t believe in climate change. My response was: if you do
something to help even if you don’t believe in it - what will you lose if it turns out not to be true? If you
do nothing and it turns to be true - what will you lose?
Perhaps you are saying: well Pamela, what can I do? I’m just one person. You can adjust the way you live
and consume, because remember the tiny snow trickle at the top of the mountain that gradually becomes
an avalanche? You can be part of that tiny trickle and then you can say to yourself: it might not be much,
but I’m doing what I can. This past year has taught us all so much about making do, growing food,
establishing rain gardens, eating in a more healthy and sustainable way, and much more. My neighbor,
who has always been a great cook, has begun to try lots more new recipes. Craig and I have begun taking
turns cooking dinner and sometimes cooking a meal together. Sometimes adversity draws us all closer
together and we begin to appreciate our family and friends so much more.
Now this is interesting. From News &amp; Guts:

The N.A.A.C.P. has filed a lawsuit in federal court against former president Donald Trump and his lawyer,
Rudy Giuliani. The suit, brought on behalf of Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-MS) claims the two violated a
19th century statute when they tried to prevent certification of the election on January 6th, according to
the New York Times.

�The lawsuit contends that Mr. Trump and Mr. Giuliani violated the Ku Klux Klan Act, an 1871 statute that
includes protections against violent conspiracies that interfered with Congress’s constitutional duties; the
suit also names the Proud Boys, the far-right nationalist group, and the Oath Keepers militia group. The
legal action accuses Mr. Trump, Mr. Giuliani and the two groups of conspiring to incite a violent riot at
the Capitol, with the goal of preventing Congress from certifying the election.
The suit contends that Mr. Thompson was forced to hide on the floor of the house gallery for three hours
and wear a gas mask on January 6 while hearing “threats of physical violence against any member who
attempted to proceed to approve the Electoral College ballot count.”
The suit also alleges Giuliani and Trump worked in collaboration with the Proud Boys and Oath Keepers
far-right extremist groups. Mr. Thompson told the Times that he would have not brought the suit if the
Senate had convicted Mr. Trump.
Politico spoke with the president of the N.A.A.C.P.:
“If we don’t put a check on the spread of domestic terrorism, it will consume this nation and transform it
to something that none of us recognize,” NAACP President Derrick Johnson said in an interview. “We
must, as a nation, prevent the spread of this type of boldness where [insurrectionists] will go to our U.S.
Capitol and seek an act of treason.”

��Oliver

�Next (in our long day in Venice) we took a ferry ride along the Grand Canal and the Giudecca Canal.

�Grand
Canal

�A villa on the Grand

�Canal

Ferry stop on the Giudecca
Canal

�The completed Redentore
footbridge

�People walking
across

�To the Giudecca
church

�To celebrate mass (no I didn’t walk across the bridge and go inside the church - Craig did,
of
course

�The 3rd canal regatta of the day: gondolas with two oars. It looked like very hard work for
the gondoliers
Yes there is still more to see on our last day in Venice. Stay warm, stay safe - and you know the rest.

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                    <text>New post on Stuff
Day 342

by windoworks

Good morning. If you are not familiar with this sign it says ‘Black Lives Matter’. I show you this as an
indication of how much snow we have had over the past few days. The above photo was taken yesterday
morning and we have had a couple of inches of more snow since then. From Washington Post:

A severe cold snap has turned the central and southern parts of the country into an extension of the
Arctic, with dangerously low temperatures not seen in decades and a blast of snow and ice which has shut
down population centers in multiple states.
The excessive cold has sent energy demand skyrocketing. In Texas, 2.8 million customers were without
electricity as of 1:30 p.m. Eastern amid the punishing cold, according to poweroutage.us.

�The mercury plummeted in the Lone Star State on Sunday night while it was blitzed by snow and ice,
causing nearly impossible driving conditions and hundreds of vehicle accidents. Officials have urged
residents not to travel, as social media videos proliferated of cars and trucks sliding down roads out of
control.
Houston’s Bush Intercontinental and Hobby airports were closed, while all flights out of Austin-Bergstrom
International Airport were also canceled Monday morning.
For the first time, the entire state of Texas was placed under a winter storm warning Sunday. These
warnings for hazardous amounts of ice and snow expanded Monday to cover all of Arkansas and most of
Louisiana, Mississippi, and western and northern Alabama, while extending northeast through much of
the Tennessee and Ohio valleys, and interior Northeast.
Now the amount of snow and the plunging cold temperatures are commonplace to Michiganders and most
of the Great Lakes states. We hunker down inside, those with snow plows clear our sidewalks and at some
point each day, everyone shovels their driveways and walks to the their front door. Our houses have
central heating of some sort and if you can afford it, people put all weather tires on their cars. In states
such as Texas, they have few grit trucks or snow plows and the ice has overpowered their electrical
utilities. The temperature inside the houses is 50F (10C) or below.
Now perhaps that doesn’t sound too cold, but we have discovered that since we had a new hot water tank
installed last year and a new furnace installed a week ago, our basement is 50F at best - and in midwinter,
that’s really cold. It also tells me that the old furnace used to bleed heat into the basement as the
temperature down there was usually in the low 60s. Its freezing doing the washing now.
So far this winter Grand Rapids has had a total of 35.5 inches of snow. Our winter average was 75 inches I’m not sure that is still the average.
Today is Fat Tuesday. Traditionally this is the last day before Lent, a period of 40 days of abstinence. This
is a Catholic tradition, and parishioners are expected to give up primarily a loved food item for Lent, such
as chocolate. I have a friend who, every year, gives up guilt. Fat Tuesday is the day you eat all the cream
and eggs and meat you are supposed to give up for Lent. In New Orleans, Mardi Gras (Fat Tuesday in
French) is the event of the year and floats are feverishly decorated for the big parade, complete with love
beads thrown out to the crowd. Where did Mardi Gras begin?

History Channel: A popular theory holds that Mardi Gras’ origins lie in ancient pagan celebrations of
spring and fertility, such as Saturnalia and Lupercalia. Some experts contend, however, that Mardi Grastype festivities popped up solely as a result of the Catholic Church’s discouragement of sex and meat

�during Lent. Church reformers may have helped to propagate the pagan rumors, these experts say, in the
hope of dissuading pre-Lenten hedonism.
Louisiana has been hit hard by the pandemic and the parades and the street parties have been canceled. So
the residents of New Orleans celebrated by making their houses a stationary float.

��And baking the customary and popular King Cakes. Each King Cake contains a tiny, plastic baby in it.
From Better Homes and Gardens: When a king cake is served at a Mardi Gras celebration, everyone wants

to know who was served the slice with the baby—but what does it mean if you find one? Tradition
dictates that finding the baby in your cake symbolizes luck and prosperity, and the finder becomes the
'king' or 'queen' of the evening.

�And in line with change in the pandemic forced upon us. Here is a piece from Craig Benjamin (my
husband), a professor at Grand Valley State University;

Transitioning from Face-to-Face (F2F) Teaching to ‘Zoom School’. For most of the summer I had planned
to teach my fall 2020 GVSU classes in hybrid format, and had structured all my syllabi based on the
assumption that half the students would attend class in person one day, and the other half another day.
Each of my three classes had approximately 20 students enrolled, so reducing the number of students in
class to only 10 meant we would be well spaced out. Of course we would all be masked, and I had also
planned to teach as many classes as possible outside, to further reduce the risk of infection. This new
format meant drastically cutting the content for each class, because I would have to repeat the same
material to both groups of 10 students, but this was relatively easy to do.
This was the plan right up to the last week of August. During that week a number of extraordinary Zoom
meetings of the University Academic Senate were held, and it was clear that everyone was very concerned
about resuming in person teaching. In the end, on literally the weekend before classes were due to
commence, the university administration agreed that anyone who wanted to switch their classes from F2F
to fully online could do so. Reluctantly I decided to do just that, and had to inform my students that
instead of meeting in person as we had been planning, we were going fully online. I say reluctantly

�because I was fairly certain this would result in a much less rewarding educational experience for both
students and myself, but I was to be proven wrong.
I quickly loaded all my PowerPoint lectures and readings into the course Blackboard sites, and informed
the students they would need to look at the lectures and do the readings before class. This meant we could
devote every 75-minute class period to group discussion. To make these discussions more meaningful I
retained the split class format, so would meet 10 students on Tuesday, and the other 10 on Thursday, and
each group would discuss the same content.
The brilliant technology of Zoom made all this possible. I would start class a few minutes early, and
welcome the students as they joined the meeting one by one. With only 11 faces on the screen we could
all see each other well, and we all kept our cameras and mikes on so that spontaneous and vigorous
discussions could occur, almost as they would have done if we were in class together. All my students are
in the Honors College - intelligent, deep critical thinkers, and articulate – and because we were all
determined to make these Zoom discussions work, they did. We quickly came to realize that we could
have almost as rewarding an educational experience, including establishing meaningful interpersonal
relationships, online as we would have had in the classroom.
So here we are deep into the second semester of the school year, and Zoom classes continue using the
same format. At the start of the fall semester I was skeptical about the ability of professors and students to
create online classes that could work almost as well as F2F classes, but I have been proven wrong. Indeed,
I have become a strong advocate for Zoom school and the online educational experience which, like so
many other changes brought about by the pandemic, is certain to expand enormously in the years ahead.
In a quick round up of other news: a wealthy conservative donor Fred Eshelman donated $2M to an
election fraud investigation fund. (Trump’s campaign and the Republican Party collected $255 million in
two months, saying the money would support legal challenges to an election marred by fraud). Now,
Eshelman wants his money back.
And, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said on Monday that the US Congress will establish an outside,
independent commission to review the “facts and causes” related to the deadly 6 January insurrection at
the US Capitol by supporters of Donald Trump in the waning days of his presidency.
Lastly, investigators from the World Health Organization (WHO) looking into the origins of coronavirus
in China have discovered signs the outbreak was much wider in Wuhan in December 2019 than
previously thought.

�Oliver has a little cold and is probably getting another molar breaking through. He always enjoys daycare
though.

Chalk adventures
After lunch we visited:

The Art Acamdemy of Venice (Accademia di Belle Arti di Venezia) was founded in 1750 at the request of
the Venetian Senate, who wanted the ‘City of Doges’ to have its own school of painting, sculpture and
architecture. Shortly, the Academy became a reference in the study of the visual arts and brought together
a team of brilliant teachers, including famous Italian painter Giambattista Tiepolo. The avant-garde Art
Academy of Venice was the first ever to start restoring ancient paintings at the end of the 18th century. In
1807, Napoleon Bonaparte, who had conquered the city ten years earlier, created the galleries of the Art
Acamemy to open the collections to the general public. On Napoleon’s orders, the Art Academy of Venice
together with the museum collections also moved to their current location.

�In 2004, the Art Academy was separated from the Gallerie dell’Accademia and transferred to another
building to make room for the expansion of the museum’s galleries. Over the years, the museum’s
collections have been enriched, thanks in part to donations and patronage from wealthy collectors. Today,
the Gallerie dell’Accademia is home to over 800 paintings and frescoes dating from the 14th to the 18th
centuries, including an invaluable collection of paintings by Italian masters.

�������More Venice adventures tomorrow.

Now you know.

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                    <text>Day 341.

by windoworks
Midwinter Michigan. Its been snowing on and off for days. We are now under another winter weather
advisory - snow, ice and wind chills - until lunchtime tomorrow. It seems as though it has been a few
years since this more normal winter and as it is probably our last winter in Michigan, Craig and I are quite
enjoying it.
This same storm is also affecting my brother in Campbell River on Vancouver Island, British Columbia.
We were comparing snow levels yesterday. He and his wife are staying in place. They have their son and
his family nearby and they are coparenting a dog together. Allan and Leith are unable to visit either of
their daughters and their families as the families are worried that they might infect their parents. He and I
were talking about the virus (my brother is a retired doctor) and he agrees with me - Covid is with us
forever, just like influenza. He suggested we would begin to be vaccinated annually, also just like the flu.
He also said that Canada is struggling to obtain enough supplies of the vaccines to vaccinate their
population and in that respect, he thought the US had done better. Isn’t that an interesting thought?
You know, just when you think you know almost everything about the virus and its variants - more
disturbing news comes along. I know you’re probably saying: don’t tell us Pamela! But I’m going to share
it anyway. That way, I think, we are all better prepared. First, a piece about the 3 variants we’ve all heard
of, from CNN:

Scientists are not surprised to see the coronavirus changing and evolving -- it's what viruses do, after all.
And with so much unchecked spread across the US and other parts of the world, the virus is getting plenty
of opportunity to do just that.Four of the new variants are especially worrisome. (Authors note: 4? 4? I
thought there was just 3.) What scientists most fear is that one will mutate to the point that it causes more
severe disease, bypasses the ability of tests to detect it or evades the protection provided by vaccination.
While some of the new variants appear to have changes that look like they could affect immune response,
it's only by a matter of degree. Governments are already reacting. Colombia banned flights from Brazil,
and Brazil banned flights from South Africa. It's almost certainly too late to stop the spread, and there's
some indication the mutations in these variants are arising independently and in multiple places.
Here's what's known about the top four.
B.1.1.7
At the top of the list for researchers in the US is the B.1.1.7 variant first seen in Britain. The CDC has
warned it could worsen the spread of the pandemic. It reports more than 300 cases in 28 states -- but those
are only the cases caught by genomic sequencing, which is hit and miss in the US. The mutations in the
variant help it enter cells more easily -- which means if someone, says, breathes in a lungful of air that has
virus particles in it, those particles are going to be more likely to infect some cells in the sinuses or lungs

�rather than bouncing off harmlessly. The worrisome changes enhance the spike protein that the virus uses
to attach to cells, meaning people are more likely to become infected by an exposure.
B.1.351
The variant first seen in South Africa called B.1.351 or 501Y.V2 was reported for the first time in the US
Thursday, in South Carolina. On Saturday, Maryland's governor announced a sample from someone in the
Baltimore area had also shown the characteristic mutation pattern of B.1.351. None of the three people
had any contact with one another and none had traveled recently. This suggests the variant has been
spreading undetected in the communities. It has a different pattern of mutations that causes more physical
alterations in the structure of the spike protein than B.1.1.7 does. One important mutation, called E484K,
appears to affect the receptor binding domain -- the part of the spike protein most important for attaching
to cells.
P.1
A variant suspected of fueling a resurgence of viral spread in Brazil turned up in Minnesota for the first
time in January. It was in a traveler from Brazil, so there's no indication yet of community spread.
This variant, called P.1, was found in 42% of specimens in one survey done in the Brazilian city of
Manaus, and Japanese officials found the variant in four travelers from Brazil.
"The emergence of this variant raises concerns of a potential increase in transmissibility or propensity for
SARS-CoV-2 re-infection of individuals," the CDC said. P.1 also carries the E484K mutation.
L452R
Finally, there's a variant seen in California, as well as a dozen other states. "We don't know yet what the
significance of that one is," said Armstrong. It also has a mutation in the receptor binding domain of the
spike protein. It is called L452R and while it's being found commonly, it's not yet clear if it's more
transmissible.
Any viral strain can become more common because of what's known as the founder effect. "The founder
effect is a matter of a virus being in the right place at the right time," Armstrong said. If a particular strain
happens to be circulating when transmission increases because of human behavior, that strain will ride
along and become more common not because it spreads more easily, but simply because it was there.
Now added to that (wait Pamela, there’s more?) it turns out scientists have found something else:

(CNN) Researchers said Sunday they have identified a batch of similar troubling mutations in coronavirus
samples circulating in the United States. They've not only drawn attention to them; they've come up with
a better shorthand for referring to them. They've named them after birds. The genetic stretch that is
mutated, or changed, is called 677. The various changes are so similar that the researchers think evolution
favors these particular variants. “In late January of 2021, our two independent SARS-CoV-2 genomic
surveillance programs, based at the University of New Mexico Health Sciences in Albuquerque, New

�Mexico and the Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center in Shreveport, Louisiana, each noticed
increasing numbers of … viruses carrying an S:Q677P mutation, and that this variant had increased in
frequency in samples collected in late 2020 to mid-January," the researchers wrote. They've identified
seven similar mutations at 677 .
One, called Robin 1, has turned up in more than 30 US states, predominating in the Midwest. A second
first appeared in a 2020 sample from Alabama and is named 'Robin 2' owing to its similarity to the
parental Robin 1 sub-lineage. It's mainly seen in the Southeast. One called Pelican was first seen in a
sample from Oregon, and has since turned up in 12 other states as well as Australia, Denmark, Sweden and
India. The remaining Q677H sub-lineages are named: Yellowhammer, detected mostly in the southeast
US; Bluebird, mostly in the northeast United States; Quail, mainly in the Southwest and Northeast; and
Mockingbird, mainly in the South-central and East coast states. The United States has barely studied the
genomic sequences of coronaviruses circulating, so if these variants have turned up so often in databases,
they are probably very prevalent, the researchers said. The appearance of so many similar mutations at the
same time is "remarkable.”
Well now, as they used to say in Australia: I need a cup of tea, a Bex (aspirin) and a good lie down (nap).
What’s really bothering, is that all these mutations are so much more easily spread, and some have more
serious consequences. It seems as though we just learn everything there is to learn about SARS-CoV-2 and
suddenly everything we thought we knew is tossed out the window and we’re running to catch up. But
may blessings fall on the overworked scientists all round the world who never stop researching,
correlating and forming testable theories and formulas, and never say ‘now we know everything’.
What the scientists do say is: keep masking, keep distancing, keep washing your hands, keep just to your
bubble. Apart from the vaccine, these are the only tools we have.
There was an uproar after Trump’s second Impeachment acquittal. Most of us are all standing round
asking ourselves why the Republicans would do this. Here’s an interesting piece from the New York
Times:

Purely as a matter of political self-interest, congressional Republicans had some good reasons to abandon
Donald Trump as the de facto leader of their party. Trump is unpopular with most Americans, and he has
been for his entire political career. He was able to win the presidency in 2016 only with help from some
unusual factors — including an unpopular opponent, intervention from both Russia and the F.B.I. director
and razor-thin wins in three swing states. Today, Trump is a defeated one-term president who never
cracked 47 percent of the vote, and political parties are usually happy to move on from presidents who
lose re-election.
So why didn’t Senate Republicans do so?
There are two important parts to the answer.

�The more obvious one is the short-term political danger for individual Republicans. Roughly 70 percent of
Republican voters continue to support Trump strongly, polls suggest. A similar share say they would be
less likely to vote for a Republican senator who voted to convict Trump, according to Li Zhou of Vox. For
Republican politicians, turning on Trump still brings a significant risk of being a career-ending move, as it
was for Jeff Flake, the former Arizona senator, and Jeff Sessions, the former attorney general. Of the seven
Republican senators who voted for conviction, only one — Lisa Murkowski of Alaska — faces re-election
next year. And the seven are already facing blowback in their home states.
The second part of the answer is more subtle but no less important.
The Republican Party of the past won elections by persuading most Americans that it would do a better
job than Democrats of running the country. Ronald Reagan, Richard Nixon and Dwight Eisenhower each
won at least 57 percent of the vote in their re-election campaigns. George W. Bush won 51 percent,
largely by appealing to swing voters on national security, education, immigration and other issues. A party
focused on rebuilding a national majority probably could not stay tethered to Trump. But the modern
Republican Party has found ways other than majority support to achieve its goals.
It benefits from a large built-in advantage in the Senate, which gives more power to rural and heavily
white states. The filibuster also helps Republicans more than it does Democrats. In the House and state
legislatures, both parties have gerrymandered, but Republicans have done more of it. In the courts,
Republicans have been more aggressive about putting judges on the bench and blocking Democratic
presidents from doing so. All of this helps explain Trump’s second acquittal. The Republican Party is in
the midst of the worst run that any party has endured — across American history — in the popular vote of
presidential elections, having lost seven of the past eight. Yet the party has had a pretty good few decades,
policy-wise. It has figured out how to succeed with minority support.
I still believe change is coming. The largest avalanche begins as a small trickle at the top of the mountain
and then gathers speed and mass as it descends - and nothing can stop it. How long will a profound change
to nationwide multiculturalism, gender equity and racial equity represented at all levels of society and
government take? Probably a century, was Craig’s answer. And are we the trickle of snow at the top of the
mountain? I sincerely hope so.
I think today is a 3 photo day for Oliver

��A hammer? You gave him a
hammer?

�Step one: stand on scooter.

�Although we had visited Venice twice before, we had never visited this museum:

The Peggy Guggenheim Collection is one of the most important museums of European and American art
of the twentieth century in Italy. It is located in Peggy Guggenheim’s former home, Palazzo Venier dei
Leoni, on the Grand Canal in Venice. The museum presents Peggy Guggenheim's personal collection,
masterpieces from the Hannelore B. and Rudolph B. Schulhof collection, a sculpture garden as well as
temporary exhibitions.

�It was already a hot day as we walked to the

�museum.

�The view from Peggy’s villa on the Grand
Canal.

�The view along the canal in the other direction - and the pole for the gondolas to tie
up.

��A Modigliani

�portrait

�Carved wooden
collection

In Peggy’s garden where she and her cats are buried.

And then it was lunchtime and we found a little cafe mostly catering to Venetians and we had a
wonderful lunch, of course. More of our day tomorrow.
Stay safe wherever you are.

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                    <text>Day 340.

by windoworks

��I had heard that the Magas were holding out for March 4. Everyone kept saying: why March 4? Here’s
why:

Why are QAnon followers waiting for Trump’s inauguration on March 4?
Many members of the so-called sovereign citizens believe that the United States turned into a corporation
after a law was enacted in 1871 and the 18th president of the US, Ulysses S Grant, was the last legal
commander-in-chief of the country. Some QAnon followers share the unfounded belief that any
amendments after the 16th Amendment were invalid because, according to them, there has been no
country known as the United States since it turned into a corporation.
Prior to 1937, US presidents were inaugurated on March 4 but was changed to January 20 by the 20th
amendment. The date has gained significance among “sovereign citizens” and QAnon, a fringe group that
has often claimed a threat of a “deep state” against Donald Trump. Michele Anne Tittler, one of the most
prominent voices of QAnon, had recently laid out a detailed plan in a TikTok video. Tittler claimed that
Trump will be sworn in as the 19th president of the United States on March 4 “under the restored
Republic.”
So there are many things I could say about yesterday. It snowed all day for one thing. At least 3 people
walked through my house and opened every cupboard, closet and door, for another thing. And oh, right.
The majority of Senate Republicans voted to acquit Trump - and Trump then crowed with delight and
justification. In light of all the rock solid evidence presented by the Impeachment Managers, the
Republicans decided to ignore all those hours of videos, police radio calls, tweets and personal experiences
and acquit Trump on the erroneous assumption that a retired elected official cannot be tried for
impeachment. This is blatantly untrue, and the Managers quoted at least 3 other retired elected officials
who were impeached. And here’s a cheering nugget:

Washington Post: Fulton County district attorney to scrutinize call Sen. Graham made to Ga. secretary of
state, person familiar with inquiry says. The Nov. 13 call, during which Georgia Secretary of State Brad
Raffensperger said Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) questioned him about how the state verifies mail votes,
will be looked at as part of a criminal inquiry into efforts to influence the election in the state. The
revelation comes as Graham is serving as a juror in former president Donald Trump’s impeachment trial
and advising his defense.
Advising his defense - no, there’s no impropriety or collusion there! Move along, nothing to see here.
The Impeachment Managers mounted a watertight case - there was no way to argue against it. So Trumps
lawyers presented the silliest, most amateur case known to man. In a proper court of law, their defense
would have been laughed out of court and the lawyers found in contempt for wasting the court’s time. So
what happened?

�White Supremacy won on the day. Over 80% of the current Senate are white. Remember yesterday I
talked about the comfort of the rut? Trump allows all those white, comfortable and righteous in their rut,
to not only stay in the rut, but try to force the White Supremacy rut on as many other people as possible.
We may see more unrest and insurrection attempts going forward. I think the moment for saying Trump
was acquitted, move on, is passed. There are huge movements afoot from organizations such as Move On,
to oust Trunpian Republicans and increase the black and brown quota in the US Senate.
In desperation, some states are changing voting laws and tightening gerrymandering of districts but it all
smacks of extreme fear of loss of white power.

Abraham Maslow
“In any given moment we have two options: to step forward into growth or step back into safety.”
And just for hope:

Steve Jobs
"The people who are crazy enough to think they can change the world are the ones who do."
I think the way has been paved for criminal charges against Trump in a large number of cases, but what
will be the future of the Republican Party is anyone’s guess. I would begin with getting rid of the term
‘Grand Old Party’, which really smacks of White Supremacy.
Yesterday, this happened in New Zealand:

WELLINGTON (Reuters) - New Zealand’s Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern on Sunday announced a threeday lockdown in the country’s biggest city Auckland, after three COVID-19 cases emerged, the first local
infections since late January.
Level 3 restrictions will require everyone to stay home except for essential shopping and essential work,
Ardern said, repeating the strict approach the country has taken over the past year in virtually eliminating
the pandemic.
“We have stamped out the virus before and we will do it again,” Ardern told a news conference in the
capital, Wellington.
New Zealand, which had gone more than two months without local infections before the January case, is
to start inoculating its 5 million people against the new coronavirus on Feb. 20, receiving the PfizerBioNTech vaccine earlier than anticipated.
Restrictions were raised to level 3 through Wednesday, shutting public venues and prohibiting gatherings
outside homes, except for weddings and funerals of up to 10 people. Schools will stay open for children of
essential workers but others were asked to stay home.

�We were alerted to this development by our youngest child texting our oldest in New Zealand and asking
if he was locked down again. So at this point, Craig and I are still in our self imposed lockdown; Asher is
locked down in Melbourne, Zar and Alva are locked down in Auckland and Elle and Terry are locked
down in Cornwall, England. Its never ending really.
Pardon? What about your house sale, I hear you say. Apparently there will be a ‘nice’ offer later today.
We’ll see.
Oliver

�Why does everyone photograph me when I’m

�eating?

�Oliver in GG’s garden.
Venice!

Constructing the Redentore walking bridge across the Giudecca
Canal.

���St
Marks

��St Marks Plaza

The Festa del Redentore is an event held in Venice the third Sunday of July where fireworks play an
important role. The Redentore began as a feast – held on the day of the Feast of the Most Holy Redeemer
– to give thanks for the end of the terrible plague of 1576, which killed 50,000 people,[1] including the
great painter Tiziano Vecellio (Titian). The Doge Alvise I Mocenigo promised to build a magnificent
church if the plague ended.[1] Andrea Palladio was commissioned, assisted by Da Ponte, to build a
majestic church on the Island of Giudecca. The church, known as Il Redentore, was consecrated in
1592,[2] and is one of the most important examples of Palladian religious architecture. After the
foundation stone was laid, a small wooden church was temporarily built, along with temporary bridge of
barges from the Zattere, so that the Doge Sebastian Venier could walk in procession as far as the
tabernacle. Afterwards, the Doge made a pilgrimage to the Church of Redentore every year. Wikipedia
Our third cruise ended in Venice in time for the Festival. The photos above were mostly taken by Craig on
one of his early morning walks. Venice does look its best (cleanest and quietest) early in the morning.
More Venice tomorrow.

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                    <text>Day 339. Saturday February 13. 141 sleeps to go.
by windoworks

I want to begin today with some excerpts from an opinion piece published yesterday in the New York
Times, by Maureen Dowd. Craig and I have been on 2 different cruises with Maureen, as part of a
lecturing tour available to some passengers. On our first cruise Maureen was nervous about lecturing as
she said her talents lay in writing. That first cruise we also met Carl Hulse, a close colleague of Maureen’s
and the chief Washington correspondent for The New York Times. Carl’s wife helped Maureen compose a
PowerPoint for her second lecture. Once she relaxed, Maureen lectured the same way she writes; funny,
self - deprecating, and full of anecdotes about every major politician you could think of. She had a close
friendship with George H Bush, although their political beliefs diverged. She always seems fearless in the
questions she asks, sometimes of dictators and autocrats. I could share some of her best anecdotes but
today I will just share her thoughts on Trump:

Trump’s Taste for Blood
If Republicans won’t convict, bring on the handcuffs. Everything bloodcurdling that happened at the
Capitol on Jan. 6 flowed from his bloodthirsty behavior. He had always been cruel and selfish, blowing
things up and reveling in the chaos, gloating in the wreckage. But it was only during his campaign that he
realized he had a nasty mob at his disposal. He had moved into a world that allowed him to exercise his
malice in an extraordinary way, and he loved it. He became his own Lee Atwater, doing the dirty stuff
right out in the open. He embraced the worst part of his party, the most racist, violent cohort.
But once Trump got into politics, he realized, with growing intoxication, that the more incendiary he was,
the more his fans would cheer. He found that he could really play with the emotions of the crowd, and
that turned him on. Now he had the chance to command a mob, so his words could be linked to their
actions. Trump never cared about law and order or the cops. He was thrilled that he could unleash his
mob on the Capitol and its guardians, with rioters smearing blood and feces and yelling Trump’s words
and going after his targets — Nancy Pelosi and Mike Pence.
The Democrats put on an excellent case, and they were right to impeach Trump. But if the Republicans
won’t convict him, then bring on the criminal charges. Republicans say that’s how it should be done when
someone is out of office, so let’s hope someone follows through on their suggestion. A few days ago,
prosecutors in Georgia opened an investigation into Trump’s efforts to overturn the election there.
Manhattan District Attorney Cy Vance could drag Trump into court on tax and fraud charges. Karl
Racine, the attorney general for D.C., has said that Trump could be charged for his role in inciting the riot.
Maybe a man who gloated as his crowds screamed “Lock her up!” will find that jurors reach a similar
conclusion about him.

�Carl Hulse on the left talking with the mic and Maureen sitting in the middle.

Today there is talk that a vote on Trump will be delayed as the Democrats may bring some witnesses.
(Update: witnesses have been called). Here’s this from Washington Post:

Donald Trump used popular resentment against elites as political rocket fuel to propel his unlikely 2016
presidential campaign, describing America’s economy and politics as “rigged” against the middle class and
railing against a “rigged system” of justice in favor of the powerful.
The impeachment managers argued this week that his acquittal would prove him right, pointing to the the
hundreds of Trump supporters arrested for their role in the deadly Jan. 6 Capitol riot
All of these people who have been arrested and charged, they're being held accountable for their actions,”
said Rep. Diana DeGette (D-Colo.). “Their leader, the man who incited them, must be held accountable as
well.”
I can’t begin to think about this trial coherently. It seems so obvious to me that Trump engineered and
orchestrated it all. It has caused great harm to citizens and the political system. I remember years ago
reading about how change is so uncomfortable. No matter how difficult our personal situation is, we settle
into it like a comfortable rut - familiar, expected and sometimes, even safe. Change occurs when we are
forcibly ejected from that rut, often against our wishes. We are all at sea, discombobulated. I think we can

�liken that to the intransigent Republicans. They know they should vote to convict Trump, but the path
beyond that conviction is so scary and so fraught with danger, they are willing to not only remain in their
rut, but defend it to the death.
And here’s a thought that may not have occurred to them - if Trump is brought up on criminal charges for
his part in the January 6 attempted coup - will other Republicans be named as complicit, aiding and
abetting? I could name a few right now. Sadly for the majority of Republicans, they’ve managed to quash
their consciences long ago. and here’s one last word:

Washington Post: A novel appeal to GOP senators about the consequences of acquittal.
If there is one quote that summed up the Democrats’ argument for conviction of Trump, it came Thursday
from Rep. Ted Lieu (D-Calif.).
The fact that Trump is no longer in office renders the biggest punishment of the impeachment process —
removal from office — moot. Beyond that, it’s about sanctioning him and preventing Trump from being
able to hold high office again.
But Lieu suggested that this wasn’t just about preventing Trump from running (and potentially winning)
again; he said it was instead about avoiding another situation such as this.
Another impeachment manager, Rep. Diana DeGette (D-Colo.), added later: “Impeachment is not to
punish, but to prevent. We are not here to punish Donald Trump. We are here to prevent the seeds of
hatred that he planted from bearing any more fruit.”
Now, the pandemic. Firstly, some new evidence about how that UK variant spread in the Melbourne
Airport hotel. An infected person used a nebulizer and the steam somehow escaped their hotel room and
infected others nearby. Well damn! They told us that the variants were far more easily spread!
New York Times

In a public health emergency, absolutism is a very tempting response: People should cease all behavior
that creates additional risk.
That instinct led to calls for gay men to stop having sex during the AIDS crisis. It has also spurred
campaigns for teen abstinence, to reduce sexually transmitted diseases and pregnancies. And to fight
obesity, people have been drawn to fads like the elimination of trans fats or carbohydrates.
These days, there is a new absolutist health fad: the discouragement — or even prohibition — of any
behavior that seems to increase the risk of coronavirus infection, even minutely.
People continue to scream at joggers, walkers and cyclists who are not wearing masks. The University of
California, Berkeley, this week banned outdoor exercise, masked or not, saying, “The risk is real.” The
University of Massachusetts Amherst has banned outdoor walks. It encouraged students to get exercise by
“accessing food and participating in twice-weekly Covid testing.” A related trend is “hygiene theater,” as

�Derek Thompson of The Atlantic described it: The New York City subway system closes every night, for
example, so that workers can perform a deep cleaning.
Telling Americans to wear masks when they’re unnecessary undermines efforts to persuade more people
to wear masks where they are vital. Remember: Americans are not doing a particularly good job of
wearing masks when they make a big difference, indoors and when people are close together outdoors.
Banning college students from outdoor walks won’t make them stay inside their dorm rooms for weeks on
end. But it probably will increase the chances that they surreptitiously gather indoors. And spending
money on deep cleaning leaves less money for safety measures that will protect people, like faster
vaccination. “Rules that are really more about showing that you’re doing something versus doing
something that’s actually effective” are counterproductive, Marcus told my colleague Ian Prasad Philbrick.
“Trust is the currency of public health.”
And from the US Department of Health and Human Services:

Glad that the COVID-19 vaccines are here? So am I. But I know it’s still important to mask up, stay at least
six feet apart from others, avoid crowds, and not gather inside with people I don’t live with – so we can
celebrate together again soon. #SlowTheSpread
Its Valentines Day tomorrow and here’s what President Biden and First Lady Jill Biden put on the White
House lawn (to be honest, I think the First Lady did it - the President’s been far too busy).

What a breathtaking change from the last administration!

�Oliver.

�Oliver and Alfie.

�This made me laugh.

Flashback: as we sailed away from Ravenna, Craig was asked if he would “talk” the ship into Venice, the
next morning. He would be up on the Bridge, broadcasting in the public spaces and the top deck of the
ship. Of course he said yes. So at 5am he left our cabin and was taken up to the Bridge. The Bridge was in
darkness as the crew watched the radar and took soundings from the channel. Craig talked quietly into a
microphone while struggling to see his notes and keep an eye on the screen below. Later he asked if we
could hear him and I answered ‘clearly’. I also told him that most passengers had their cameras on the top
deck and as he pointed out sights, we all ran from side to side of the ship to see the next thing he was
pointing out. It made me laugh.

First
light

�Into the
channel

�Sun
rising

�Venice

�Looking back along our

�path

Sailing very slowly past Piazza San
Marco

�Looking through a

�canal

Craig’s selfie on the
Bridge

�The screen he could watch.

We docked on the Giudecca Canal, a larger waterway. We docked there, almost in the heart of Venice
because our ship was so small. Any larger ships had to dock further out of Venice. Our ship had to sail
very, very slowly because there are strict rules about bow waves. Venice is built on water and is barely
above the waterline. We had two days and nights in Venice - so more tomorrow.
My post is late today because we had to be out of our house for 45 minutes while some prospective buyers
looked through it. They wanted to look at it before it goes on the market in late April. No, I don’t know
what they thought. Perhaps we’ll hear later.

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                    <text>Day 338.

by windoworks

In 27 days, I will have been writing this blogpost daily for a whole year. I have taught myself how to
research, to cite resources and to gratefully accept ideas, photos and links from my readers. I know some
of you, but there is a great number of you out there who read my posts. Not everyone reads them on the
day they are posted; not everyone reads them word for word. Some people cannot access them online and
so they are forwarded on by others. And some people read my post in countries I have never been to and
readers I have never met. Good morning. I see you all.
Last might this happened:

MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — Melbourne, Australia’s second-largest city, will begin its third lockdown
on Friday due to a rapidly spreading COVID-19 cluster centered on hotel quarantine.
The five-day lockdown will be enforced across Victoria state to prevent the virus spreading from the state
capital, Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews said.
The Australian Open tennis tournament will be allowed to continue but without spectators, he said.
Only international flights that were already in the air when the lockdown was announced will be allowed
to land at Melbourne Airport. Schools and many businesses will be closed. Residents are ordered to stay at
home except to exercise and for essential purposes.
A population of 6.5 million will be locked down from 11:59 p.m. until the same time on Wednesday
because of a contagious British variant of the virus first detected at a Melbourne Airport hotel that has
infected 13 people.
Andrews said the rate of spread demanded drastic action to avoid a new surge in Melbourne.
“The game has changed. This thing is not the 2020 virus. It is very different. It is much faster. It spreads
much more easily,” Andrews told reporters. “I am confident that this short, sharp circuit breaker will be
effective. We will be able to smother this.”
So once again, our youngest child, Asher, is locked down. In some ways I think being locked down and
then released only to be locked down again, might be worse. For Craig and I it has been 338 days of more
or less the same thing. I remember at the beginning, having a stand up argument with the day manager of
a grocery store. He said the company’s lawyers had told them they didn’t have to comply with the
restrictions. That was months and months and months ago. From the very beginning, Trader Joe’s
instituted carefully spaced lines outside, only allowing you in when a shopper left, always cleaning the
carts properly, and careful check out procedures. To the best of my knowledge, they are the only chain
store that has kept this up. We have a store in our neighborhood that sells jewelry, knick knacks, pottery
etc. It is an extremely popular store and there is always a very carefully spaced line outside with customers
patiently waiting their turn.

�I am beginning to believe that this virus will never go away. Here’s this report from Business Insider:

As the pandemic approaches its second year, the coronavirus has morphed into a tougher foe. Several
mutations that scientists have identified in rapidly spreading variants are particularly worrisome. They
raise concerns that these strains will be more contagious or be able to at least partly evade protection
provided by vaccines and by prior infections.
Let's be clear: No one knows how the next phase of the pandemic will play out. Is a new strain already
spreading undetected or lurking around the corner? How effective will these vaccines be in the long run?
And just when can we think about returning to schools and offices, or getting together with older relatives
again?
Some of the nation's top infectious-disease experts are hesitant to offer predictions.
The first axiom of infectious disease: Never underestimate your pathogen," Dr. Larry Corey, a virologist at
the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, told Insider. Despite this uncertainty, most scientists have
accepted an unfortunate truth: The coronavirus will likely be part of our lives forever, though the
pandemic phase will eventually end. Our best hope is for it to turn into a mild, flu-like illness rather than
a deadlier, long-term threat. Some of the most important unanswered questions hinge on what happens to
variants next, and how well vaccinations and immunity can keep pace.
Four other human coronaviruses are already endemic in our population, meaning they circulate
perpetually but don't hit pandemic-level peaks. For the most part, these viruses cause only mild symptoms
associated with common colds. Scientists had always feared a new coronavirus might come along that
would be deadlier but still highly transmissible.
Enter SARS-CoV-2.
"It's safe to say we're not going to eradicate it entirely," said Dr. Becky Smith, an infectious-disease
specialist at Duke Health. "Too many people in the world have it. It's too efficient at transmitting." The
virus is also zoonotic, meaning it can jump back and forth between animals and humans. Even if we
managed to eradicate SARS-CoV-2 in humans, animals could reintroduce a similar infection to our
population — perhaps with an even deadlier mutation.
To this day, smallpox is the only infectious disease that has ever been eradicated in humans. It has no
animal reservoir, so it must spread from human to human to survive. A recent study suggested that SARSCoV-2 would most likely become endemic within five to 10 years, eventually resembling a common cold
that infects people during childhood. That scenario hinges on the notion that pediatric cases will remain
mild. If a new mutation makes the virus deadlier in kids, coronavirus shots may become required for
young people, similar to vaccines for polio or measles. Still, Mike Osterholm, a leading infectious-disease
expert, said it would be nearly impossible to make a yearly coronavirus vaccine available to every person
on Earth. It is going to be with us forever," Osterholm, who directs of the Center for Infectious Disease
Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota, said of the virus. "It is something we can't eradicate
from humans."

�When the first vaccines from Pfizer and Moderna were authorized for emergency use last year, there was
real hope that they could crush the pandemic. The shots were over 90% effective — a stunning
achievement — and provided overwhelming protection against mild, moderate, and severe symptoms.
Now the goal for vaccines has become more modest: Blunt the worst outcomes, preventing deaths and
hospital stays.
"I've seen the language changing already from 'We're going to hit herd immunity' to 'Hey, we're going to
have something that is going to get us back to normal, from the perspective that our hospitals aren't going
to be overloaded,'" said Deborah Fuller, a microbiologist and vaccine researcher at the University of
Washington.
One thing is certain: The best defense against new variants is stopping transmission from person to person.
More widespread vaccinations could lend a hand. If we don't vaccinate the whole world, unvaccinated
people will keep circulating the virus — and the virus, in turn, will keep changing on its own terms.
Treatments for COVID-19 — especially in its early, mild stages — are elusive. That may remain the case
for quite a while. We still don't have good treatments for illnesses caused by many other viruses, including
polio, measles, mumps, and rubella. Instead, we rely on vaccinations to prevent them."This virus is
something that we're going to learn to live with, just as we do with influenza," Meissner said.
"What we really want to do is stop the hospitalizations, stop the deaths."
Well, now you know and its depressing. So, argue all you like about getting back to normal - that ship has
sailed long ago. This is the new normal and one day soon, our grandchildren won’t remember anything
else. They will accept it as normal.

�A sign at a Whole Foods store in Auckland New Zealand.

�So, the impeachment trial concludes today. The Impeachment Managers have mounted what they would
consider a watertight case. Some Republicans didn’t show up for Day Two (their mindset couldn’t deal
with the conundrum). Apparently a number of non- Trumper Republicans are holding meetings to
consider forming a 3rd political party. the Impeachment Managers made it clear: last time Trump was
given a free pass, the rationale was that he would never do that again. Not only did he do it again, he
escalated his seditious behavior. If they vote to acquit, Trump will see that as another free pass. He still has
not conceded the election, he is still referring to himself as number 45. I believe that an acquittal after all
those tweets, phone calls, and then video footage, will rip this nation apart. That would be an unspoken
acknowledgement that any sort of seditious , treasonous behavior by sitting or retired politicians or
persons in positions of responsibility would be okay - because no one will bring them to task for it.
Here in Michigan, Mike Shirley, the Republican Senate majority leader has called the January 6 event a
hoax. I made myself watch the videos that the managers presented, I listened to the police radioing for
help and telling their members to fall back because they were overrun, I watched and heard the
policeman jammed between two doors and screaming in pain, I’ve seen the body cam footage of hundreds
of crazy people shouting ‘push’ as they pushed together to get inside the Capitol building and I’ve seen the
insurrectionists in the Senate, rifling through private documents and stealing or photographing them,
saying ‘Ted Cruz would like this”. Don’t tell me that was a hoax. Don’t ever say that word to me again.
Zoe and Oliver have gone to Canberra to visit Craig’s sister and mother. My sister-in-law Kym said: he
never stops talking. Ah the mark of a true Benjamin.

�Riding his bike with Mum and Great Uncle Mal.

�It was a long day in Ravenna/Brisighella. In the evening, after a buffet dinner, we attended the third and
last Azamazing Evening of our three cruises. We were bussed back to the center of Ravenna and then we
walked to the Teatro Comunale Alighieri, that is the Ravenna Opera House, for a Jazz Concert.

�Dante’s

�tomb

The view from our opera box inside the Opera
House

�The captain introducing the
concert

��It was a famous Italian jazz orchestra with a two guests: and accordion player and a
clarinetist. It was a stunning concert and the highlight of the day.
Then it was back to the ship for champagne and jazz music as we boarded. Last port tomorrow.
Today will be a day for the history books. What a year we’ve had.

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                    <text>Day 337

by windoworks

Those chickens coming home to roost are multiplying. It was Day 2 of the impeachment trial, but we’ll get
to that in a moment. First, remember how the officials in Palm Beach county said that Trump could live
out his days at Mar-a-Lago? Well now, there’s been new developments:

While the U.S. Senate began its second impeachment trial of Donald Trump in Washington, D.C., on
Tuesday, local lawmakers in the town of Palm Beach, Fla., also gathered to consider the former president's
fate – specifically, whether to let him live full-time at his sprawling private club, Mar-a-Lago.
Trump bought Mar-a-Lago, a 126-room mansion, in the mid-1980s and in 1993 asked for the town's
approval to convert it into a private club. The town agreed, with a stipulation that members of the club
could not reside there for longer than three weeks each year.
Trump has flouted that rule on a number of occasions and in the 20 days since leaving the White House,
he has resided at Mar-a-Lago.
Objections to the former president's full-time residency at the club were presented by neighbors, with
whom Trump has had a number of disputes in the past. Before Trump became president, he had gotten on

�the wrong side of Palm Beach officials by installing a giant flag pole at the club that exceeded local height
limits. During his presidency, neighbors reportedly complained about traffic and blocked streets caused by
Trump's frequent trips to Mar-a-Lago.
On Tuesday, Reginald Stambaugh told the Council that many of his clients had purchased their properties
with the understanding that no club members would permanently reside at the site.
"This agreement assured my clients they would be able to live peacefully and enjoy the privacy afforded
others on the island," Stambaugh said. Another attorney representing a group calling itself Preserve Palm
Beach, expressed similar concerns over declining quality of life. "We feel that this issue threatens to make
Mar-a-Lago into a permanent beacon for his more rabid, lawless supporters."
I did read that Melania Trump had set up a post-White House office at Mar-a-Lago, which I am sure the
neighbors are not happy about. Melania wasn’t thrilled about living there either. She complained the
rooms were too small for their furniture, and (this was her sorest point), all the guests could walk past the
Trumps door any time of the day or night.
Okay, the trial. Here’s a quote from Congressman Ted Lieu (D- CA)

News &amp; Guts
“How did our exceptional country get to the point where a violent mob attacked our Capitol, murdering a
police officer, assaulting over 140 other officers? How did we get to the point where rioters desecrated,
defiled, and dishonored your Senate chamber? Where the very place in which you sit became a crime
scene, and where national guard troops still patrol outside wearing body armor? I’ll show you how we got
here. President Donald J. Trump ran out of non-violent options to maintain power. After his efforts and,
of course, and threatening officials failed, he turned to privately and publicly attacking members of his
own party. In the house and in the Senate.”
Yesterday, the Impeachment Managers ran an impressive prosecution. I watched some of it. Each speaker
interspersed their speech with clips and photos of tweets. Here’s a wrap up from CNN:

1. Trump is his own worst enemy: Yes, the House impeachment managers did a good job of making their
case. But in truth, Trump himself did a lot of the work for them. His tweets. His speeches. His media
interviews. There was just so much of it. And time after time, Trump left nothing to the imagination.
Trump's mouth -- and keyboard-typing fingers -- makes it hard for any Republican to suggest that this is
purely a partisan political proceeding without any "there" there. This wasn't the House impeachment
managers putting words in Trump's mouth. This was just him -- talking and tweeting and talking some
more.
2. Liz Cheney: A week after the Wyoming Republican survived a challenge to her leadership slot in the
House GOP, her words in explaining why she was voting to impeach Trump were used, again, by
Democrats to make the case for why he needed to be convicted. "The President of the United States

�summoned this mob, assembled the mob, and lit the flame of this attack," -- a direct quotation from
Cheney's statement of January 12. Her statement would allow Democrats to bash every single Republican
member with it. And they were right.
3. The House impeachment managers made an airtight case that Trump's most ardent backers always took
what he said literally. They believed him when he said the election was going to be rigged. They believed
him when he attacked the vote in Michigan. And they took him at his word when he told them on
January 6 they needed to fight to save democracy. Those who participated in the January 6 riot insisted
they were acting on the orders of their President.
4. In a mid-June 2020 Trump interview with Fox News' Chris Wallace, the President refused to commit to
a peaceful transfer of power if he lost. January 6 wasn't a one-off. This was the result of months of Trump
priming the pump, lying to his supporters about the election and its outcome. January 6 was the
culmination of all of those lies, not the starting point.
There is a lot of new footage being released during this trial. Most of it on the second day of the trial is
from Capitol security cameras. There is no sound, just endless footage of the insurrectionists breaking into
the building and then weird silent movie type footage of senators, house members and staff, all running
through the corridors trying to find somewhere safe to shelter, being urged on by police and security. The
other footage of insurrectionists being pushed back by police in riot gear is really disturbing, as flagpoles
and Perspex shields are thrown at police, and hefty punches are also thrown. The Republican senators
have to sit through this footage and try to shape the event as something other than what it so obviously
was. The evidence is even more than overwhelming that the January 6 attempted coup was carefully and
deliberately planned and promoted by a desperate man who had conclusively lost the election. I have read
reports that Trump is incandescent (not my word) with rage at the ineptitude of his lawyers. I cannot
imagine what Day 2 brought about for him. And at the same time there is a criminal case pending against
him in Georgia, as a result of his recorded hour long rant and threats to Brad Raffensperger, on the phone,
trying to bully him into overturning the electoral count in one county and find enough votes to allow him
to win Georgia.
I am amazed by Trumps actions. Every tweet, every speech, every interview, every phone call has been
recorded and kept. Even the phone calls he had with Putin - Trump ordered that they be off the record and they were, except for some notes taken by aides and now delivered safely into President Biden’s
hands. What did Putin and Trump discuss so secretly? We may never know - but President Biden does.
And now to an article on herd immunity from The Atlantic:

To be technical about it, a population reaches herd immunity when the average number of people infected
by a single sick person falls below one. Patient zero might infect another person, but that second person
can’t infect a third. This is what happens with measles, polio, and several other diseases for which vaccines

�have achieved herd immunity in the United States. A case might land here, but the spark never finds
much dry fuel. The outbreak never sustains itself. For COVID-19, the herd-immunity threshold is
estimated to be between 60 and 90 percent. That’s the proportion of people who need to have immunity
either from vaccination or from prior infection. In the U.S., the countdown to when enough people are
vaccinated to reach herd immunity has already begun.
A number of signs now point to a future in which the transmission of this virus cannot be contained
through herd immunity. COVID-19 will likely continue to circulate, to evolve, and to reinfect. In that
case, the goal of vaccination needs to be different. While COVID-19 vaccines are very good—even
unexpectedly good—at preventing disease, they are still unlikely to be good enough against transmission
of the virus, which is key to herd immunity. The role of COVID-19 vaccines may ultimately be more akin
to that of the flu shot: reducing hospitalizations and deaths by mitigating the disease’s severity. What does
this mean for the future of COVID-19? One possible scenario is that the disease could follow the path of
the four coronaviruses that cause common colds, which frequently reinfect people but rarely seriously.

So herd immunity is out and vaccinations may have to be annual. In the meantime, carry on as before:
masking, hand washing, distancing, quarantining when necessary and getting vaccinated when you can.

��At 9am this Saturday morning, the people who are interested in buying our house are coming to go
through. 9am in the morning! On Saturday morning! Oh well. Stay tuned for developments.
Brisighella. After a delicious gluten free (for me) lunch, we wandered around this town while we waited
for our bus to pick us up and take us back to the ship.

�����Photos 1,2 &amp; 3 are of the Donkeys Alley in Brisighella

VIA DEL BORGO OR DONKEYS ALLEY
This is a unique walkway, perched high above the street level: on one side it has tiny entrances to various
ancient homes (still lived in today) and opposite, on the street side, it has a long line of arched openings
which overlook the street beneath and give light. Built approximately around the 14th century, it was the
oldest defensive walkway of the village. At the beginning it was open and served as an outpost for the
guards but later, lost its military use, was covered and became home to many families. The alley was
mainly inhabited by the carters who used the walkway to transport the gypsum from the Monticino caves
with their donkeys (hence the name of the street). The stables were in front of the arches, while people
lived upstairs and the carts were kept below, at the street level, in large cart houses dug in the chalky rock.
Brisighella.org
There was one last event this day, but I will leave that till tomorrow.

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            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
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                <text>University Archives. COVID-19 Journaling Project</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="865293">
                <text>Grand Valley State University University Libraries. Special Collections and University Archives.</text>
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          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="865294">
                <text>&lt;a href="http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"&gt;In Copyright&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
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                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="865296">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="865297">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
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