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                    <text>Day 203
by windoworks

No, I didn’t watch the debate. If I had I would have considered that 90 minutes of my life I would never
get back - and at this time, every minute is precious. I have read the myriad of reports and it was (pretty
much as expected) a debacle. Trump has no idea of debate - and why would we expect this? The man
doesn’t read and usually struggles to complete a sentence. He also inadvertently (or perhaps on purpose)
gave the Proud Boys their new slogan. Because of course that what the leader of the free world would do.
And anyway, we’ve voted and they have received our ballots. Like Piglet said in one of my favorite
Winnie the Pooh stories: I have done all I can and it must be up to someone else now. And from one of
my favorite Sting songs:
I'll send an S.O.S. to the world
I'll send an S.O.S. to the world
I hope that someone gets my
I hope that someone gets my
I hope that someone gets my

�Message in a bottle, yeah
Message in a bottle, yeah
I feel like our votes are an S.O.S.
So what else is happening?
Crooked Media: Is That Hope?

MIT researchers say the compact fusion reactor they’re building is likely to work, which could be a huge
step forward in the fight against climate change.
A federal appeals court has upheld a six-day extension for counting absentee ballots in Wisconsin.
Gov. Gavin Newsom (D-CA) has signed a law allowing California to develop its own line of affordable
generic drugs.
Remember the US Postal Service debacle?

Washington Post
Some of the U.S. Postal Service's 630,000 workers are quietly resisting Postmaster General Louis DeJoy’s
changes, which came in the middle of a pandemic and a push to expand voting by mail. As the
controversial new procedures snarled post offices and stirred fears of how it would manage mail ballots,
the carriers, sorters and other workers began to bend the rules to make sure important mail was delivered
on time.Postal Service employees told The Post they feel a responsibility to counteract cost-cutting
changes implemented by their new boss, who they believe is politicizing the institution to serve President
Trump.
On everybody’s mind - when will we get a vaccine?

The Atlantic
A COVID-19-vaccine rollout could be chaotic—and a true logistical nightmare, our health reporter Sarah
Zhang warns in an essential new piece.
We caught up with Sarah to find out why—and hear the latest on the search for a vaccine.
The conversation that follows has been edited and condensed.
Caroline Mimbs Nyce: Why does this vaccine rollout have the potential to be such a headache?
Sarah Zhang: First, you have the challenge of getting what is very likely two doses of a vaccine to
hundreds of millions of Americans in the middle of a pandemic. And they’re not interchangeable. If you
get the first dose of one vaccine, you have to get that same vaccine as a second dose. So there’s gonna be a
lot of paperwork involved.
Second has to do with the specific vaccines that are furthest along in clinical trials right now. They use

�new technology called mRNA, which hasn’t been used in vaccines before. The downside is that the
technology is extremely fragile physically. One vaccine has to be kept at –94 degrees Fahrenheit, which
you’re just not gonna find in a regular doctor’s office.
All these decisions have been made to get the vaccine out faster. But the trade-off is that they make them
much harder to use in the field.
Caroline: You write in your piece that the first vaccine may not be the most important. Can you explain
what you mean by that?
Sarah: Imagine: How are you going to get a vaccine that needs to be stored at –94 degrees into a
developing country or a rural area? It seems pretty unlikely that that’s the vaccine that is going to be
widely used across the world.
In the beginning, speed is really important. But as we hopefully develop more vaccines, how easy it is to
use is going to be really important too.
Caroline: You’ve been cautioning readers to temper their expectations around a vaccine. What’s your
advice going into this winter?
Sarah: Be patient. There’s a lot of cautious optimism that some of the vaccines that are in clinical trials are
going to work.
It’s okay if some of them don’t; that’s the whole point of doing a trial. There will probably be news that
feels disappointing, but that’s just a part of the process.
The fact that there are literally dozens of vaccines in the pipeline means that it’s very likely we’re gonna
have one—or probably several—options. It’ll just take time, so we gotta hunker down, and wait for it.
And here’s the word from the frontline:

Washington Post
The CEO of Pfizer, Albert Bourla, talked to The Washington Post Magazine about the pressures of
creating a coronavirus vaccine. We asked him about safety concerns, the unprecedented timeline and
what he's considering in terms of pricing. He also spoke about the magnitude of the task — developing
and testing a vaccine while the world waits, hoping it will end a devastating pandemic. “What is at stake is
beyond imagination,” Bourla said.
You can read the full article for yourself.
In other, other news:

Fires are burning out of control in the Napa wine area
Disney is to lay off 28,000 workers as the pandemic hurts attendance at theme parks
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement's "sanctuary op" could start as soon as this week and would
expand to Denver, Philadelphia and other cities, according to three U.S. officials. The operation, which

�would come weeks before the presidential election, would bolster President Trump's law-and-order
campaign rhetoric.
Stats: Michigan had 1,117 new cases and 21 deaths since yesterday. Kent County had 72 new cases and 166
deaths in total. And here’s a depressing piece of news:

Washington Post
Trump on Monday dismissed criticism that his administration is failing to lead the country through (and
ultimately out of) the pandemic and to come up with a nationwide strategy for testing. Instead, Trump
boasted about rapid tests being distributed to nursing homes. But that deployment, too, has been plagued
with problems. State health officials say there has been poor communication, false results and a frustrating
lack of planning. All of that means the data we rely on to track the pandemic in the United States is
becoming less accurate.
So this is where we are. While other countries seem to have well laid plans for dealing with new
outbreaks, we lag behind. Our insistence on personal freedoms seems to hamper our ability to follow
guidelines which lead to suppression of the virus. What a number of Americans fail to realize is that their
insistence on personal freedom impinges on another’s personal freedom. I don’t think the Founding
Fathers visualized anything quite like this. Also, I find the well worn term Founding Fathers insulting.
Did anyone ask a woman’s opinion? Well stop me before I climb on that hobby horse.
No more leaf art but wool art instead.

�And now to Oliver:

��It finally happened. He climbed up to look out the window - and thank god it was shut!
Traveling home. Craig and I drove to the town of Brive and stayed overnight on our way back to Paris.

������Christmas was still in full swing in Brive - and those are chocolate Panetone in the bakery window. The
next day featured a dreadful drive through Paris traffic. We arrived at our airport hotel and this was the
sight that greeted us the next morning. It wasn’t fog, it was smog. A sad end to 6 months away.

As I have looked back over our 6 months in Europe, I am reminded of how much I loved it and what
pleasure it has given me to relive it through these photographs.
Today I’ll leave you with this:
Mashable.com

People totally forget that the GOP lost the midterms by 8 percent — roughly the same as Biden's
nationwide lead over Trump, the most stable lead in presidential polling history. Losing the midterms was
not good for the GOP. If they could have avoided that, they would have. They couldn’t avoid it. They lost.
Tomorrow then.

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                    <text>Day 204
by windoworks
This morning I offer a piece from my sister-in-law, Kym, who lives in Canberra, Australia. Canberra, the
capital city of the Australian Capital Territory, is a planned city. It became the Australian capital as it is in
the middle between Sydney New South Wales and Melbourne Victoria - both of which were vying to be
Australia’s capital city. The federal authorities bought the land from a local farmer and Canberra was built.
Here is her piece:
View from far away:

Living in Canberra – the capital of Australia, has proved to be a really lucky thing during this pandemic.
To date, we’ve only had a total of 113 cases of which 110 recovered and three, sadly died. After a dreadful
and tragic summer filled with anxiety and choking, eerily red colored smoke filling our skies, life finally
seemed to settle back to normal by February. Early in March, we all started to hear about this ‘strange’
virus affecting people overseas, but it never really occurred to us that it would become a big problem in
Australia.
As the months progressed, a sense of fear started to sink in as the doom and gloom of news reports made
us all realise that this was really serious and life-threatening. Watching TV reports from overseas was
terrifying as you saw hospitals overwhelmed with medical staff dying, refrigerated trucks being used for
temporary morgues in NY and mass graves being dug to cope with all the bodies.
It was absolutely terrifying, and we really started to worry particularly about our 88-year-old mum who
lives independently in a retirement village. The village locked down but was amazing and continued to
care for its residents with daily hot meals. We protected mum by not letting her see any of us in person
other than dropping off her groceries. Mum’s very positive, happy attitude, saw her through and she was
actually healthier than she’d been because she wasn’t pushing herself and rushing around. She really
missed seeing the great grandkids and the rest of us. By May, things were not too dire here, so we started
back doing family lunches and mum was thrilled.
I sing in and manage a choir which should have been celebrating it’s 30th anniversary this year. Our last
rehearsal was March 6th and at that stage because of talk about the virus, we agreed to have a break until
after Easter in April, as that’s all any of us thought was going to be needed to sort this strange virus out.
Little did we know then, that choirs would be classed as ‘dangerous’ and singing would not be allowed to
happen.
A sense of anxiety and panic seemed to invade all normally rational and sensible Australian people and
supermarkets became a battle ground with grown women having fights over toilet paper. There were
constant reports of basic grocery supplies being emptied off the shelves as soon as they were stocked. You
struggled to get flour, pasta, pasta sauce and toilet paper. Watching it all unfold on TV, we thought ‘what

�stupid people being this ridiculous and panic buying’. Unfortunately, you soon felt the need to do the
same thing as your supplies ran out and a bunker mentality and almost a survival of the fittest attitude,
seemed to infiltrate us all. Australians are normally very generous and are great at helping out a mate in
times of crisis but anxiety and panic can sadly change people for the worse.
It’s such a cliché to say it, but this year has been ‘surreal’ but it’s also turned out to be a year of reassessing
what’s important in life. Surprisingly it has ended up being quite a creative time for my choir and I have
worked really hard to keep us together. I have mastered Zoom rehearsals (something I had never heard
of), plus we have now created three virtual songs together which are nothing like singing together but
certainly so much better than not singing at all.
A slight anxiety about a second wave will probably always be there in the back of our minds but spring’s
warm weather has arrived encouraging us all outdoors – a much safer prospect when catching up with
friends. Living in our beautiful city has seen us all back to leading our normal lives albeit, socially
distanced and using hand sanitiser all the time. We haven’t had an active case for about three months
which means we are back to normal except for border closures but since we’re very content to stay put,
it’s not really affecting us.Life is good for us, except for the really sad fact that choirs are still not allowed
to start back. Who knew what a deadly group of people we were when we sing!!!
I am starting to see a recurring theme with all these ‘views from far away’ and that is that each of these
correspondents have talked about reassessing their lives and realizing what are the most important things.
I hope you are enjoying these glimpses into different lives as much as I am sharing them with you.

�Sorry - I thought we needed the laugh. Here’s a piece from CNN that I have held onto. This seems like a
good moment.

As 2020 slides into and probably infects 2021, try to take heart in one discomfiting fact: Things are most
likely never going "back to normal."
It has become a well-worn phrase our politicians, officials, experts, even family, like to lean on — an
ultimate, elusive prize.
Perhaps it's nostalgia for the world of January, a place where daily life more closely resembled our past
decades. Perhaps it's a bid to show control, to revert to a time when change was not so universally
imposed upon us.

�But January is long gone, and it's not coming back. And, psychologists will tell you, that's only bad if you
can't come to terms with it.
We are slowly learning if this year's changes are permanent. If work — for the lucky among us — will
remain from home. If we will visit the grocery store less but spend more. If we will find wearing a mask
on the metro to be just part of life. If shaking hands and embracing will become less common. If most of
your daily interactions will occur via video conference (rather than in person).
"Five years' change in six months" is a common slogan for the pandemic. The disruption has upended lives
in jobs lost and relatives who live alone or perhaps died without saying the right goodbyes
Yet permanently severing ties with January is not necessarily a bad thing, psychologists say. The danger
comes from hankering for normalcy again, rather than getting on with working out how to deal with
whatever is ahead.
"Politicians who pretend that 'normal' is just around the corner are fooling themselves or their followers,
or perhaps both," said Thomas Davenport, the president's distinguished professor of information
technology and management at Babson College in Wellesley, Massachusetts.
People who suffer tragedies eventually return to their previous happiness level," Davenport said via email.
"But I think that COVID-19 is a little different, because we keep expecting it will end soon. So there is no
need to permanently change your attitudes about it."
The human tendency to believe change is temporary and that the future will again resemble the past is
often called "normalcy bias."

�So here’s my last word on the first debate (why on earth would we want two more?)

Crooked Media
To the great astonishment of all spectators, President Trump made Tuesday’s presidential debate the least
watchable television experience since, well, the 2016 debates.
• Here’s what you may have been fortunate enough to miss: Trump repeatedly interrupted and spoke over

both Joe Biden and hapless moderator Chris Wallace to drown out any substantive discussion of his
failures with interjected lies and personal attacks. If we were to sum it up in five words, they’d be Joe
Biden’s: “Will you shut up, man?” The night was so chaotic that the Commission on Presidential Debates
has promised to add “additional tools to maintain order” in future debates. Mics that can be turned off?

�Stage trapdoor? Nickelodeon-style slime penalties? The American people demand answers.
• In the debate’s most horrific moment (and it’s a competitive field), Trump defied repeated prompts to
condemn white supremacy. Instead, Trump told the violent, far-right Proud Boys to “stand back and stand
by,” adding, “somebody’s got to do something about Antifa and the left.” The Proud Boys naturally
celebrated his comments on social media, interpreting them as a greenlight to “go fuck them up.”
Republicans attempting to sweep up the mess have weakly suggested that perhaps Trump misspoke;
Trump himself cleared everything up today by falsely claiming total ignorance of the Proud Boys, and
declining to denounce white supremacists again.
• Minutes after that rock bottom debate moment, Trump dug out a sub-basement by encouraging his
supporters to descend on polling places and “watch very carefully;” i.e., go hog wild with illegal voter
intimidation. The remark was part of a larger cascade of lies about mail-in voting and postal workers
dumping ballots in creeks, as Trump once again suggested that he would turn to the Supreme Court to
help him win a contested election. If only some third party, maybe a moderator of some kind, could have
told the millions of people watching that all of this was untrue. Ah, well.
Wool animal time:

Oliver

��Our first ever cruise. Craig was invited to be part of a group of professors lecturing to a group of travelers.
These passengers had paid extra to be part of a Scientific America lecture series with Insight Cruises. Craig
was contracted to lecture on Big History. I had no idea what to expect. I had friends who were veteran
cruisers and they told me I would love it. I wasn’t sure. To board the ship we flew to Hong Kong. This was
the first of many destinations I had never been to.
Just a note here - I have no photos of this cruise at all. Craig has photos but he suffered a computer virus
attack sometime last year and some photos were lost.

������Like all Insight Cruises, you usually arrive the day before the ship sails which allows time for a sightseeing
tour the next day before boarding begins. We drove around the city and then up to Victoria Peak for
wonderful views. In the 3rd photo you can see our ship at the wharf. Then it was back to the harbor and
onto a sampan for a trip around the harbor itself. From our sampan you can see the enormous (and
popular) floating restaurant. We boarded the ship mid afternoon and explored the Volendam. Here we are
on one of the decks. Our cabin was on Deck 4 just above the crews quarters. The last photo is of Hong
Kong as we sailed out of the harbor.
Here’s a poem to finish (thanks Mum)
If the mountain seems too big today
Then climb a hill instead
If the morning brings you sadness
It’s OK to stay in bed

�If the day ahead seems heavy
And your plans feel like a curse
There’s no shame in re-arranging,
Don’t make yourself feel worse
If a shower feels like needles
And a bath feels like you’ll drown
If you haven’t washed your hair in days,
Don’t throw away your crown
A day is not a lifetime
A rest is not defeat
Don’t think of it as failure,
Just a quiet, kind retreat
It’s OK to take a moment
From an anxious, fractured mind.
The world will not stop turning
While you get realigned.
The mountain will still be there
When you want to try again,
So climb it in your own time
….and love yourself til then.

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                    <text>Day 205
by windoworks
So unless you’ve been living in a cave in an unexplored island in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, you’ll
have heard the news: Trump and Melania have tested positive for Covid-19. Now a lot of Premiers and
Prime Ministers and so on have tested positive for the virus - and Boris Johnson was hospitalized and had
3 days in which the doctors thought it could go either way. But for months and months Trump has
continued to downplay the virus and mock everyone who wears a mask, including Tuesday night at the
debate when he mocked Joe Biden. Karma’s a bitch, ain’t it? Now while I feel vindicated that he and
Melania (birds of a feather) have succumbed to the virus, this puts us all in a tricky position. There are 31
days until the election and many, many people have voted already. My children have been speculating
about the succession. The only procedure that is certain, is that during the isolation period for Trump,
Mike Pence becomes president.However, Mike Pence was on the plane with Trump this week and
appeared with him a number of times. If Pence tests positive, then the Speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi,
becomes President. And as a precaution, she is isolated all ready.
Now the other worry is that Joe Biden may have contracted the virus from being on the same stage as
Trump on Tuesday night - and as we know, Trump never shut up. He blew enormous amounts of hot air
towards Biden for 90 insane minutes. So all in all, we are entering uncharted waters here, and Americans
don’t like uncharted waters. I can only imagine the frantic meetings (via zoom) that are being held right
now, right across the country. We have been teetering on the edge of a civil war for months. After
Trump’s calls this week to private armies such as the Proud Boys to stand by, his followers are ready to
repeat the intimidation they carried out on the early polling stations in Virginia.
Its time to dust off your copy of the Constitution and its 27 Amendments, and find out exactly who is
allowed to do what.
Here’s a reminder of the stats: US - Cases 7.31M +46,398 since yesterday. Deaths 208K +847 since
yesterday. All while Trump insisted it would ‘magically go away’ and ‘it’s just a cold’. 208K deaths, and
honestly, most if not all of those people (family members, friends) died alone in hospital - and it wasn’t an
easy death.
As I write this, the news is that Pence and his wife have both tested negative. We’ll wait and see. Here’s
some new thoughts on the virus spread from Crooked Media;

We might be able to get a better hold on coronavirus by looking at the variable k: a measure that looks at
whether the virus spreads steadily, or in large bursts. Up until now, we’ve been focused on R0, which
defines a pathogen’s average contagiousness, but that average smooths out variability in the way a virus
spreads. A growing number of studies suggest that a small percentage of infected people might account for
a huge percentage of coronavirus transmission, while many people barely transmit it at all. That

�imbalance—overdispersion—means that a few early superspreading events (or lack thereof) can lead to
dramatically different outcomes in otherwise similar countries, and underscores the need for cheap, rapid
tests to find infection clusters quickly. It also underscores the absolute lunacy of President Trump
continuing to hold packed superspreader rallies all over the country, including in Wisconsin this
weekend, where coronavirus rates are already fully out of control.
Its a terrible thing when you begin to believe your own lies.
From my friend Heathe on FaceBook:

It amazes me that there are "undecided voters" in America right now.
I honestly think Donald Trump could have had caged immigrant children shackled to his podium while he
personally performed a forced hysterectomy on a woman of color while Joe Biden stood at his podium
curing cancer with his presence and there would still be people in this country like "Gosh, I just don't
know who I'm going to vote for a month from now. It's such a tough decision…"
We really need to change the education system in this country to teach critical thinking skills instead of
cookie-cutter-curriculum designed to pass the ACT.
I think the following is the clearest explanation I’ve read so far:

New York Times
There is a theme that has run through President Trump’s entire re-election campaign: He is afraid that he
cannot beat Joe Biden.
It explains his extraordinary efforts last year to prevent Biden from becoming the nominee. And it
explains his more recent efforts to discredit the election. Rather than running against Biden, Trump now
seems to be running against democracy itself.
I think it’s useful to think of the 2020 Trump campaign in three distinct stages. The first was during the
run-up to the Democratic primaries, when Trump used the powers of the presidency to pressure at least
one foreign country, Ukraine, to smear Biden (an effort that led to impeachment). Trump took no similar
steps to damage Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren or Kamala Harris.
Why? Trump often acts on instinct, and he may have done so in this case. But he is also a voracious
consumer of polls, and polls consistently showed him faring worse in a hypothetical matchup against
Biden than against any other Democrat.
The second stage began after Biden clinched the nomination, and Trump doubled down on efforts to
damage him. He portrayed Biden as a corrupt old politician, not so different from Hillary Clinton, or a
closet socialist. It hasn’t worked. Biden’s lead over Trump has remained stable.That has led to the third
stage: Try to prevent a normal election.

�Trump, with help from other leading Republicans, has increased his efforts to make it difficult to vote. His
campaign has filed lawsuits in North Carolina, Pennsylvania and elsewhere to restrict voting by mail. (The
Times Magazine has a new investigation on this subject, including Mike Pence’s role.)
In recent weeks, Trump also began what seems like an obvious attempt at voter intimidation, encouraging
his supporters to show up at polling places, purportedly to prevent voter fraud, which almost never occurs.
Donald Trump Jr. has released a video calling for an “army for Trump’s election security operation.”
Tuesday’s debate was the apex of the strategy, at least for now. Trump refused to allow a normal debate,
constantly interrupting Biden. For voters, the result was a chaotic jumble. For Trump, it was one more
attempt to undermine the normal functioning of democracy.
There is still more than a month until Election Day — an eternity in politics. At this point, though, the
picture from the last year and a half is remarkably consistent.
Trump seems to believe he would lose a normal election to Biden. But in an abnormal election, with low
turnout and protracted fights over ballot eligibility, who knows what will happen? And if Trump does
lose, he is laying the groundwork to make the false claim that the election was rigged.
As my colleague Maggie Haberman put it yesterday, “People close to him are blunt that the president
knows he’s losing and is scared of it.”

�So, we’ll wait to see what develops. But Craig and I and many of our friends have already voted. Some
delivered their votes to the clerks office, and some like Craig and I, put them in a Dropbox. I know they

�received ours - I checked online. The staff read the barcode on your ballot envelope and enter it into the
system. You still have time to register and to vote.
Wool art

��Also, Oliver.

��Laughing while watching the Tuesday debate.
Flashback: we sailed for a day and a night and then docked at Ha Long Bay. Hạ Long Bay, in northeast

Vietnam, is known for its emerald waters and thousands of towering limestone islands topped by
rainforests. Junk boat tours and sea kayak expeditions take visitors past islands named for their shapes,
including Stone Dog and Teapot islets. The region is popular for scuba diving, rock climbing and hiking,
particularly in mountainous Cát Bà National Park.

Here are all the boats waiting to take us on a tour of Ha Long Bay.

����Ha Long Bay was amazing. I had seen it used as a location in several movies but nothing prepares you for
the sight of all those stone towers rising up from the water. We stopped at this beach for a snack and a
bathroom stop. More Ha Long Bay tomorrow.
I watched The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel yesterday and I had forgotten the famous line from it. It seems
appropriate today.

It will be all right in the end, and if it isn’t all right, then it isn’t the end.

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                    <text>Day 206
by windoworks

Is this the end of the world yet? The above quote was from a woman awarded the tinfoil hat for being far
right of the most conservative people on earth. No I don’t find it odd. Prominent Democrats listen to
scientists and doctors and follow their recommendations. It takes years of study to become a doctor or
scientist. You have to pass exams and you have to pass them with more than a passing grade. You have to
compete with other talented people to get into programs. You always have to do better at each level. And
even once you gain a prestigious position in an organization or a hospital, you have to continue to research
and keep up with new developments in your field. Hell, even your family doctor or dentist has to read
monthly publications in their field and attend ongoing training in new techniques and procedures.
Scientists and doctors never stop learning - and if they do, its time to retire and let a younger, more up to
date person take over.
It is sometimes disconcerting to meet an E.R. Doctor who looks like your 17 year old grandchild, but in
your heart you know they know all the new procedures and developments and they are your best chance.
So yesterday. It began with - the President and First Lady have tested positive. Then segued to - they are
showing mild symptoms. Next - the President has a fever, cough and nasal congestion. Later in the day, he
was flown to the Walter Reed Hospital in a ‘bout of extra caution’. But wait, he’d already been given a
dose of 2 antibodies in an experimental (read: untested) drug. He went to the hospital while he was still
able to walk (read: he didn’t want to leave the White House on a stretcher or in an ambulance). I don’t
think he’s doing so well.

�Democrat representatives and senators are doing a wonderful job in refraining from saying ‘we told you
so!’ And dancing up and down. Joe Biden gave a great press speech about this development and was, as
ever, gracious and kind - but hammered the need to wear a mask regardless of your political beliefs. He
concluded by telling us that we are Americans - we can get through this just as we have got through
everything else.
After the news had sunk in and journalists had begun investigating where and when Trump caught the
virus, shocking facts were exposed. I think the thing that bothers me the most is that the White House
knew that Hope Hicks had fallen ill on Wednesday afternoon and subsequently tested positive that
evening - and yet nothing was said and the President (by this time displaying minor symptoms) went
ahead with in person, unmasked and close quartered events on Thursday.
I would not wish the virus on anyone - but shame on you Mr President. I think this is known as all your
chickens coming home to roost.
Since this development, many Republicans have announced their positive diagnosis. I imagine there will
be more announced in the days ahead. Trump is not working from hospital as promised, and VP Pence has
already begun taking over duties. The White House is in chaos and like all of us, the rest of the world is
gobsmacked.
In another, totally unrelated development, through trickery and deception, a group brought a petition
before the Republican majority Supreme Court in Michigan to overturn the Governors’s Emergency
Powers. You know, the powers that have worked tirelessly for 7 months to keep Michiganders safe and for
which I am deeply grateful. The court ruled in their favor and the State of Emergency will expire in 21
days. This was 5,000+ residents in a state of 10M. Did the courts ask the other 10M of us what we thought
or even more important - was this what the overwhelming majority of Michiganders wanted?
Is this the end of the world as we know it? I don’t know about you but I have carried on, day after
identical day, keeping myself and my husband safe, following all recommendations and rules in the faint
hope that one day, this might become a routine virus that we take an annual vaccination for. That one
day, I will actually be able to climb on an airplane and fly safely to New Zealand and Australia, to visit my
sister before her memory leaves completely and meet my 14 month old grandson face to face before he
begins school at 5 years of age.
Do I expect everyone else to do their part to help this virus begin to subside? Hell yes. In case you were
laboring under some other misapprehension, there is only one inhabitable planet - and we’re on it and
we’re all in this together. Trump testing positive and falling ill shows conclusively that the virus doesn’t’
give a shit. If you don’t follow the rules, shame on you for endangering yourself, your loved ones and
every passing stranger.

�There are no photos or flashbacks this morning. Just today I don’t have the heart for it.
Is this the end of the world as we know it?

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                    <text>Day 207
by windoworks

Well here we are. Because the president has so degraded journalists and every news source except
FoxNews, and confabulated every event he has held from Day One and his inauguration, because he can’t
hear anything except flattery, questions are being asked. The main question is: is he really sick? Does he
really have COVID-19?
Yesterday morning an unidentified team of 9 people wearing white coats stood behind a man wearing a
white coat with the label Physician to the President of the United States, Dr Conley. He spoke for some
time and hedged on a number of questions. Because he didn’t answer truthfully and clearly and because
Mark Meadows came out later and described how ill the president was when they decided to send him to
Walter Reed, we now know nothing. No one (and believe me I’ve searched) no one knows anything
definitively.

�Of course we wonder when did he actually get sick? When did he know he was sick and contagious? If he
knew by Wednesday, why continue to hold events with no masks, close quarters, handshakes and hugs?
Perhaps I could understand it if he was meeting with Democrats, but these were his major funders and
supporters. Here’s a side story: 3 Republican Representatives who had traveled on Air Force One with a
possibly contagious president ( and who knows who else), then boarded a Delta flight to go home. Now
reports seem conflicting but evidently the Delta crew knew they had been in contact at least with Hope
Hicks and they still allowed them on the plane and didn’t mention it to the other passengers. Shame on
you, Delta Airlines.
So in a moment fraught with worry and fears for the long term outcome, we have an added stressor. But in
stark contrast, Joe Biden continues to be tested (perhaps every other day) and has committed to telling us
the truth about his test results. He has had his team start removing all attack ads against the president.
Because that’s the caliber of man he is. Is he perfect, you ask. No of course not. No perfect human exists,
although you might argue that some have come close. But Joe is truthful and believable and overall, kind.
We seem to be struggling with kind at this moment. Is it because kind is too hard and takes too much of
an effort? Is it easier to be mean and cruel? I don’t know the answers to these questions.
The senior Republicans seem to be dropping like flies at the moment. But their main theme seems to be
continuing to be self serving, selfish and careless. The party as a whole seems to operate on ‘what’s in it foe
me?’ Thats not a pretty picture. Apparently Mitch McConnell is determined to go ahead with the hearing
for Amy Whatsername for the Supreme Court on October 12 - even though 3 Republican committee
members have tested positive and are in isolation. I think Mitch might be missing the point here - testing
positive for the virus isn’t the end point. Some people have symptoms and some people get really sick and
oh that’s right - some 209,000 people have died in this country. And not to forget - they died alone in
hospital, fighting to breathe. If they were lucky, they had a nurse holding their hand as they died.
But Trump’s okay. If he really is sick, they’ve given him every drug and procedure at their disposal, never
mind the cost or if its not yet approved by the FDA. And here’s the shocker for me: I’ve had 3 covid tests.
The first 2 were covered by my expensive health insurance. The 3rd test which I had to have in order to
have cataract surgery, will cost me $68 because my health insurance won’t cover the whole cost. Have I
used up my Covid test allocation?
What about the election, I hear you ask. Because if Trump dies, what happens to all his votes? This is
another, ‘no one has any idea’ scenario. But here’s what’s in place already:

NPR
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., is warning Democrats that they must win the majority, not just of
the House of Representatives but a majority of each state delegation, in case the House is called upon to
decide the election in January.

�If the outcome of the election is not clear by Jan. 6, the decision goes to the House. But the vote is not as
straightforward as Democrats having the majority of seats overall. Each state would get a single vote,
which would be determined by the party that has the majority of members from that state.
Pelosi outlined the once far-fetched scenario in a letter to Democrats over the weekend. She called on her
members to shift money to House Democrats' fundraising arm, House Majority PAC, to help shore up
campaign funds in battleground districts.
"We cannot leave anything to chance. House Majority PAC is doing everything it can to win more
delegations for Democrats," Pelosi said in the letter, sent from her campaign email. "It's sad we have to
have to plan this way, but it's what we must do to ensure the election is not stolen."
And just in case you thought things weren’t teetering on insane:

New York Times
• The White House overruled the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and will allow cruise ships
to begin sailing again after Oct. 31, rather than February.
Because, as we all know, cruise ships are the safest place during a pandemic. Is this an opportunity to see
Cruise Ship Coronavirus Catastrophe 2 as we all enjoyed Cruise Ship Coronavirus Catastrophe 1 so much.
The citizens of Australia are still enjoying the ‘Dreadful Story of the Ruby Princess and how One Ship
caused a Superspreader Event across Australia‘. Stay tuned for the outcomes of the myriad court cases and
federal investigations going on right now.
Here’s something to consider:

�And

�Seems reasonable.
The return of Oliver

��Practicing for hiking? Don’t you love his hair? It has a mind of its own. Somehow its becoming his
trademark.
Flashback: more Ha Long Bay photos

This is a floating village - amazing.

�I think these were called Two Chickens

�A fisherwoman

��Ha Long Bay was every bit as magical as I thought it would be. Off to Da Nang tomorrow.
For better or worse, we’re all in this together.

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                    <text>Day 208
by windoworks
There is a Chinese saying which is mistakenly thought to be a blessing. Its not. Its a curse: May you live in

interesting times. The expression is always used ironically, with the clear implication that 'uninteresting
times', of peace and tranquillity, are more life-enhancing than interesting ones.

�New York Times
The sacrifices of many
Millions of Americans have gone months without seeing some of their closest relatives or their colleagues.
They have canceled weddings and graduations. They have said goodbye to dying loved ones by phone.
But when many of the nation’s political leaders gathered at the White House nine days ago to celebrate
the Supreme Court nomination of Amy Coney Barrett, they decided the pandemic rules that applied to

�everybody else didn’t apply to them.
Some of them assumed, wrongly, that because they had received a fast-response virus test when arriving at
the White House, they could not be infectious. Others simply chose not to think about the virus, it seems.
Instead, dozens of them sat, unmasked, within inches of one another. They shook hands, hugged and
kissed. After starting outdoors, the event moved indoors, where the participants continued to celebrate
like it was 2019.
There is now reason to believe that the gathering was a superspreader event for the coronavirus. The
president and the first lady are sick, as are two senators who attended, a former governor, the president of
the University of Notre Dame and multiple White House staff members, journalists and others.
And anyone infected at the White House that day may have later infected others.
Andrew Joseph of the health publication Stat wrote this weekend that the event at the White House
“offers a case study in what experts say has been the administration’s recklessness.”
Rebecca Ruiz of Mashable tweeted, in response to a photo of the indoor reception for Barrett: “I haven’t
hugged my parents since March 8 and they haven’t hugged their grandchildren since then either”.
David French of the conservative website The Dispatch, wrote, “What a breathtaking contrast to the way
so many millions of Americans have lived their lives.”
I have no words. I think I have used them all up, every word that described how monstrous Trump and
his minions and followers are. Every morning I wake up in COVIDLAND and think there can’t be
anything worse than yesterday and every morning there is. Trump wants to go back to the White House
because, as we all know, he knows better than the team of doctors caring for him.

�Washington Post
The episode continued what has been a days-long torrent of falsehoods, obfuscation, evasion, misdirection
and imprecision from those surrounding Trump as he faces the greatest threat to a president’s health in
decades. From the chief White House doctor to the president’s chief of staff, the inability to provide clear,
direct and consistent information about Trump’s condition has been widespread since the coronavirus
began rapidly circulating in the West Wing.
Any patient with Trump’s symptoms and treatment who wanted to be discharged from the hospital three
days after their admission would likely need to sign out against doctors’ orders because it would be so illadvised, said William Schaffner, a professor of infectious diseases at Vanderbilt University Medical School
And not only that - and I can’t believe I’m telling you this - yesterday he made 2 Secret Service agents
drive him out of the hospital to wave through the car window at his trusty little band of supporters. Now
2 Secret Service agents (swathed in PPE) will have to isolate for 14 days while being tested for the virus.
Dear God, will this never end?
29 days. Have you voted yet? This morning I read the Monday newsletter from Jim Talen, a Kent County
Commissioner. He told us how he and a colleague recounted the votes in 2 precincts after the August
Primary election. They did this to check on whether the counts were correct. He was careful to say that

�the ballots were anonymous and the two of them were strictly supervised by the County Clerk. Jim
reported that we can have absolute confidence that all ballots, in person and by mail, were correctly
counted and the system in Kent County works perfectly. So that’s a good thing. And in other news, 5 new
ballot drop boxes have been installed in the Grand Rapids area.
When I began this Pandemic Diary I imagined it would be about life in the pandemic. I never foresaw the
debacle that has ensued. I never imagined the rise of the Far Right White Militants with their heartless,
selfish aims. I believed the Trump supporters were misguided and as time went by they would see him for
who he is and move away. What I missed entirely (and listen up because this is important) is that they DO
see him for who he is, and they don’t care. At all. They believe he is sent by God to restore all their lost
privileges- you know, the real ability to denigrate anyone who doesn’t look like them. They want to be
the ascendant race in the world and they believe Trump will make that happen for them. It doesn’t matter
if they’re rich or poor, it just matters that they’re white - because they all know Jesus was blonde and blue
eyed. Which must have been a surprise to Mary and Joseph when he was born. And the underlying belief
must be that God is white. Of course he must be - and all his angels too. White is Best.
Here’s something I’ve held onto for days, but this seems the right moment.

�But as my Big Historian husband would tell you, that ship has already sailed. In the years to come humans
will look more and more alike - some shade of brown and probably with almond shaped eyes. The
evolutionary process has already begun. No matter how much you might want to turn back time, at this
point that’s only science fiction.
Deep breath. Oliver Time!

��Oliver on his tricycle. Look! He’s a little boy - where did the baby go?
So, Da Nang. Da Nang is a coastal city in central Vietnam known for its sandy beaches and history as a

French colonial port. It's a popular base for visiting the inland Bà Nà hills to the west of the city. Here the
hillside Hải Vân Pass has views of Da Nang Bay and the Marble Mountains. These 5 limestone outcrops
are topped with pagodas and hide caves containing Buddhist shrines. During the Vietnam War, what is
now the Da Nang International Airport was a major air base used by the South Vietnamese and United
States Air Forces.The base became one of the world's busiest aircraft hubs during the war,reaching an
average of 2,595 aircraft traffic operations daily, more than any other airport and airbase in the world at
that time.

��These 2 photos were taken on ‘China Beach’. China Beach was part of an R&amp;R area in Da Nang for
American troops during the Vietnam War. On our way there, our bus drove along a good road which was
one stretch of the landing strips at the old airport. The beach was beautiful white sand and the water was
warm.

�Here are US airport hangars. When the war ended, the American troops just walked out and left
everything behind. Perhaps these hangars are being used and perhaps not.

�The ornate Dragon Bridge over the Han River. More Da Nang tomorrow.
And I’ll leave you with this (would that it were true)

��</text>
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                    <text>Day 209: 28 days until the election
by windoworks
I am beginning to think I may be living in an episode of The Twilight Zone.

Last night, Trump overruled his fake doctors and returned to the White House. He tore off his mask and
said: Don’t be afraid of COVID.

�How insulting. How despicable. How depressing. I don’t need to list the dreadful facts of COVID but
perhaps we should take a quick look at today’s stats: in the US - Total cases 7.49M +42,222 new cases since
yesterday. Deaths 210K +425 new deaths since yesterday. Michigan - Total cases 143K +1,470 new cases
since yesterday. Deaths 7,141 +16 new deaths since yesterday. Kent County - Total cases 10,683 +179 new
cases since yesterday. Deaths 175 +0 new deaths since yesterday. .

�And speaking of Michigan, apparently the Michigan Supreme Court ruling re the Governor’s Executive
Powers wasn’t a ruling, it was an opinion. A federal court had asked for an opinion only. Now there are a
number of consequential dance moves to follow in this, but in the meantime, every Karen, Chad and
Trump believer out there has taken this (and Trump’s irresponsibility) to heart and is trying to barge into
stores etc without a mask, causing deep distress to business owners and other shoppers. But wait - all is not
lost. The Michigan Health Department has issued orders of its own, which mirror Gov Whitmer’s
Executive Orders and their orders come with actual punishment - 6 months jail time (where you’re
guaranteed a dose of COVID) or $200 fine or more - I think I saw $1000 written down in bold letters.
Meanwhile I think Crooked Media said what I am feeling best:

After causing a serious coronavirus outbreak within the White House and trying to cover it up, President
Trump has returned from the hospital while still contagious to a) remove his fucking mask and b) share his
big takeaway from the experience: COVID-19 is no big deal, actually.
• Trump announced he would leave Walter Reed with the monstrous message that dangerous

corticosteroids taken for coronavirus had left him with a youthful spring in his step, and shouldn’t be
feared: “Feeling really good! Don’t be afraid of Covid. Don’t let it dominate your life. We have developed,
under the Trump Administration, some really great drugs &amp; knowledge. I feel better than I did 20 years
ago!” Powerful words from a still-sick man receiving a level of care that most Americans can neither
access nor afford, for an illness that’s caused unimaginable suffering and grief for millions of families.
• The president’s insane return to the White House followed a weekend of recklessness, cover-ups, and
staged propaganda photos. On Sunday Trump went for a joyride to wave at the Proud Boys and QAnon
followers gathered outside Walter Reed, reportedly as a compromise after he demanded to be discharged
from the hospital. That plague parade photo-op put the Secret Service agents in Trump’s hermeticallysealed SUV at enormous risk, prompting an attending physician at Walter Reed to speak out on Twitter:
“Commanded by Trump to put their lives at risk for theater. This is insanity.”

�• On Sunday the White House casually explained that Conley’s briefings were meant to lift Trump’s

spirits, not provide the public with “facts.” Conley contended that he wasn’t “necessarily” involved in a
cover-up, he just “didn’t want to give any information that might steer the course of illness in another
direction.” (We must have missed when the FDA approved magical thinking as a coronavirus therapy;
that’s our bad.)
• The White House has also refused to disclose the total number of infected staffers, decided not to

conduct contact tracing, prohibited the CDC from doing so, and didn’t send an email to employees about
the outbreak until Sunday.
As Donald Trump enjoys the finest available medical care and conceals the full scale of the harm he’s
inflicted (and continues to inflict) behind the scenes, it’s impossible to imagine a more dangerous and
disrespectful message for him to give vulnerable and grieving Americans than “Don’t be afraid of COVID.”
There can be no coming back from that. 28 days.
28 days. 28 days. 28 days. Shall I keep going?
This morning I am truly at a loss for words - and I know you are sending me kind thoughts and saying
‘hang on in there’ . Hanging on in there is my only option. I have voted (and if you are an American I
hope you have a good voting plan). I have yard signs, and I write this blog. But every morning the world

�tilts a little more off its axis and I try to strengthen my grip. You know those dreams you have where
you’re suspended over a life threatening drop and you’re hanging on to a railing by your fingernails?
Yeah.

Oliver.

��“Reading”.
On Sunday we drove to Silver Lake for a picnic lunch (I’m getting very good at picnic lunches)

And nearby Lake Michigan. It was a wild and windy day:

���Da Nang

�����From the top: two views of the Guanyin Buddha; inside the Buddhist grotto; Da Nang view; fishing
coracles and boats.

��Best carved pumpkins I’ve seen yet. Remember, 28 days. My mother used to say to me: Pamela, rise about
it. I don’t think its working.

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                    <text>Day 210
by windoworks
This morning I offer a piece from a friend I met on our first ever cruise (the one I am posting at the
moment). Her name is Auli and she lives in Finland with her husband. Here is her ‘View from Far Away’.

There are 5.5 million inhabitants in Finland. In Helsinki (our capital where we live) there are over 600
000 inhabitants. Our population density is low which is good in this covid situation. The total number of
infections today (counting from January) is 10,929 infections and 346 deaths in Finland. All in all, we have
managed quite well so far - at least when compared to most of the other countries in Europe.
In March when the number of infections started to grow it was a shock to most of the people. Our
government made strict decisions. Schools, museums, theatres, swimming halls, libraries , restaurants etc.
were closed in the whole country. Also quite many shops were closed because there were no clients. Our
government also gave a recommendation to people to work remotely. Our maturity of digitalization is
high so many people started to work at home - and the transition was quick and smooth. In April we had
the metropolitan lockdown, i.e. one could come from the other parts of Finland only with serious reasons.
That was unbelievable : there were police and army on the roads stopping people on the borders of our
metropolitan county.
Our public healthcare system is very good but doctors were worried how the healthcare system can
handle the quickly increasing number of hospitalized patients. In spring the testing capacity was
insufficient and there were also problems to buy enough masks. Anyway our hospitals managed quite well
with those patients who needed normal and intensive care - nothing like we saw on TV how the situation
was e.g. in Italy.
Then the summer was a time to relax. The number of infections was very low. Libraries, restaurants etc.
were all opened. With my husband Juhani we met our relatives and friends and ate at restaurants. We
even attended a 100-year-birthday party in July (my uncle's wife). None of us (about 30 guests) got an
infection. We were happy and so was the birthday hero.
Now the situation is unfortunately getting worse. The number of infections has started to grow from
September and just today 6th of October it looks strongly that we are in the second wave. Many people
who got an infection now are in their twenties or thirties. We have got recommendations to use masks in
public transportation, in shops, museums etc. Moreover, there are strong covid infection spots also in
other parts of the country, not only in the metropolitan area. That differs from the situation in spring.
Very many people (like me) are now worried when the fall goes further and the winter starts - how severe
the covid situation will get. And some experts expect at least one more severe infection wave (namely the

�third one) coming in the spring. I and my husband Juhani try to walk a lot outside and get the fresh air to
keep us in good condition.
**************************************************************
It is always so interesting to read about other countries and how people are coping during the pandemic and somehow, comforting. We’re all in this together.

New York Times
Rational fear
“Don’t be afraid of Covid,” President Trump tweeted, on the same day that the White House outbreak
spread further and another several hundred Americans died from virus complications.
The president has survived Covid-19 so far, with help from more aggressive medical care than virtually
any other American would have received. But about 210,000 of his fellow citizens have not survived,
according to the official death count. The real toll, based on the number of excess deaths this year, is
probably closer to 275,000.

�Given Trump’s campaign to make the virus seem like a minor inconvenience, I think it’s worth taking a
minute this morning to take stock of the virus:
Only cancer and heart disease will kill more Americans this year than Covid. Already, the virus has killed
more than twice as many Americans as either strokes or Alzheimer’s disease, about four times as many as
diabetes and more than eight times as many as either gun violence or vehicle accidents.
Outbreaks are again increasing in the U.S. The number of new cases per day has risen more than 25
percent since mid-September. “Covid-19 is spreading again across most of the U.S., hammering rural
America and smaller cities and raising anxiety in New York,” Bloomberg News reported yesterday. The
outbreak connected to the White House is responsible for about 30 known cases so far — more than the
average daily number of new cases recently in all of Australia.
The virus is genuinely terrifying for thousands of people. In addition to the more than 200,000 deaths —
and all of the Americans mourning those deaths — many other people have spent weeks battling fatigue,
shortness of breath, cardiac problems and more.

Last night the news was broken that all but one of the Joint Chiefs of Staff were quarantining because one
of them tested positive. In case you weren’t sure, here’s Wikipedia:

The chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (CJCS) is the highest-ranking and most senior military officer in
the United States Armed Forces and is the principal military advisor to the president, the National
Security Council, the Homeland Security Council, and the secretary of defense. The chairman convenes
the meetings and coordinates the efforts of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS), an advisory body within the
Department of Defense comprising the chairman, the vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the chief

�of staff of the Army, the chief of naval operations, the chief of staff of the Air Force, the commandant of
the Marine Corps, and the chief of the National Guard Bureau.
You know that saying: it never rains but it pours? Yeah.
Crooked Media:

Meanwhile, as more people in the White House’s orbit fall ill, the administration has worked
systematically to make sure we never learn when Trump last tested negative, or how many people
contracted the virus from him or people at his superspreading events.
Stephen Miller has it. Nearly all of the Joint Chiefs of Staff are in quarantine after a Coast Guard admiral
tested positive. Trump’s Coast Guard aide Jayna McCarron has coronavirus, as does one of his active-duty
military valets and a third press office aide. New York Times reporter Michael Shear said his wife has now
tested positive: “The collateral damage is going to be pretty significant, I think.” White House employees
are rightly scared and angry; one source told Axios, “It's insane that he would return to the White House
and jeopardize his staff's health when we are still learning of new cases among senior staff. This place is a
cesspool.”
This morning I saw posts of a near deserted White House being disinfected by people wearing full Hazmat
gear. Meanwhile Trump is refusing to stay in the residence, wear a mask or stop tweeting. I would say I
am astonished but I think we passed astonished about 7 months ago. I cannot imagine how insulting his
proclamation of ‘COVID is nothing’ is to the thousands of bereaved people across the States. Somehow
Trump telling me not to be afraid of it, doesn’t make me any less worried.
And here’s a story to let you know its all around us, right now. I have been suffering with headaches
(which could be largely stress induced) and my friend has been going to a local clinic which specializes in
acupuncture, massage and Chinese medicines. On her recommendation I booked an appointment for later
today. However, last night I received a text from the practice which apologized profusely and said they
were canceling my appointment. A client had attended the clinic last Thursday who had tested positive
for COVID. They are all isolating and will contact me for a new appointment sometime soon. This clinic is
a few blocks from my house and my friend says they run a tight, sanitized, careful practice.
Here’s a new positive development:

���News &amp; Guts
A surprise winner from a rarely heard source, The Queen of England. Monday morning, Queen Elizabeth
released a statement in support of journalists:
The pandemic “has once again demonstrated what an important public service the established news media
provides… Having trusted, reliable sources of information, particularly at a time when there are so many
sources competing for our attention, is vital.”
I just thought I’d put that in today, the Queen is always very careful not to get involved with politics or
the news - so this statement is significant. And here’s another statement from Maureen Dowd, a journalist
at the New York Times:

When Trump walked through the doors, Walter Reed had a stellar reputation. As he walks out 72 hours
later, its reputation is in tatters. There's nothing Trump can't ruin.
Oh so true, Maureen. Yesterday Gov Whitmer held a press conference to talk about the mess the
Michigan Supreme Court has made, regarding the governor’s executive orders. Here’s the interesting thing
- thy didn’t rule against the governor, they stated that the 1945 ruling was incorrect. Wait, what? Do I
smell the distinctive odor of fear and dismay rising from every Republican politician, state or federal?
Could it be that they have all backed the wrong horse?
And through this, all of this, think of how historians will portray 2016 onwards in the years to come. It
won’t be pretty, it will be harsh, factual, well researched and unforgiving. It will be meticulously
documented and astounding to read. I can only imagine - remember, I’m married to an historian.
So, Oliver

��This mornings favorite. Zoe said: I turned my back for one moment, and he’s in my seat. Look at his face how clever am I?
Our next stop was Nha Trang. Nha Trang is a coastal resort city in southern Vietnam known for its

beaches, diving sites and offshore islands. Its main beach is a long, curving stretch along Tran Phu Street
backed by a promenade, hotels and seafood restaurants. Aerial cable cars cross over to Hòn Tre Island, and
the nature reserves of Hòn Mun and Hòn Tằm islands, reachable by boat, have coral reefs.

This was the market at the dock.

�We visited an embroidery business and this was one of our guides.

�Very busy downtown market in Nha Trang.

�And here’s its beautiful Main Beach. More Nha Trang tomorrow.
27 days.

There must be some kind of way outta here
Said the joker to the thief
There's too much confusion
I can't get no relief
Oh Jimi - you said it. 27 days. Stay safe, stay well and stay kind.

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                    <text>Day 211
by windoworks

��26 days! 26 days! 26 days!
Yesterday I watched Kent County Health Department’s Dr London report. At the beginning of the
pandemic, he would update us every day. Then it became every weekday, and lately, once or twice a
week. Last week he said our positivity rate (that is, the percentage of positive cases) was 3.3%. During
April and May, the positivity rate had fallen to just over 1% - which is very good. Last week he said that
we wouldn’t want it to climb up to 4% because that would mean the virus was spreading and there would
be a chance that our hospitals would be overwhelmed. Last night, talking to us (possibly from home) he
said our positivity rate had risen to 3.9%. And it isn’t even winter yet.
I didn’t watch the Vice Presidents debate. There is only so much anxiety, anger and fear I can tolerate. But
from what I have read this morning it appears that Pence has swallowed Trump’s fantasy world, hook, line
and sinker. He told whoppers during the debate, which is what happens when the truth will be
unpalatable to his followers. I don’t have Twitter but according to Craig, Pence was awarded 4 Pinocchios
for fibbing. And that fly that landed on Pence’s head? It has its own Twitter account now.
But more seriously, the Republican Party is in disarray and incumbents are being strongly challenged by
Democrats contenders. For a sitting Republican up for re-election, Trump leadership is a huge problem.
Here’s what they’re contending with:
Washington Post

The Trump presidency has presented scores of painful lessons on the limitations of the power of positive
thinking. Climate change continues to make fires, floods and hurricanes worse, even if Trump denies it
and his political appointees seek to erase mentions of it from government reports. Russia interfered in the
2016 election and the intelligence community agrees the Kremlin is trying once again to influence the
2020 campaign, but Trump struggles to accept that reality because, current and former aides say, he
believes that acknowledging the Kremlin’s support for his campaign would undermine his legitimacy. And
so on. But nothing captures the hubris of trying to spin the primal forces of nature into submission more
than the president’s response to the novel coronavirus.
Sen. John Cornyn (Tex.), a conservative in a tight race and close to GOP leaders, said, “I think the biggest
mistake people make in public life is not telling the truth, particularly in something with as much public
interest as here because you know the real story is going to come out.”
Vulnerable Republicans are beginning to distance themselves from President Trump’s dismissive response
to the coronavirus pandemic and his dramatic termination of negotiations with congressional Democrats
over federal economic relief, with the latest cracks carrying enormous implications for Trump and the
party with just four weeks until Election Day.
Facing a political reckoning as Trump’s support plummets and a possible blue tsunami looms, it is now

�conservatives and Trump allies who are showing flashes of discomfort with the president, straining to stay
in the good graces of his core voters without being wholly defined by an erratic incumbent
And all the while, more Pentagon officers are testing positive and Trump has moved back into the Oval
Office and is insisting he will start up rallies again. Fortunately, the commission in charge of presidential
debates has decided that the next debate this month will be a virtual town hall - and I’m assuming Trump
and Biden won’t be in the same room. As I typed this, a post came in from the Washington Post:

Trump says he won't participate in virtual debate format announced by organizers
The president said he just learned of the decision by the Commission on Presidential Debates that the
second debate, scheduled for next week, would be virtual and that he will not take part. “I’m not going to
waste my time on a virtual debate. That’s not what debating is all about," he said in an interview with
Maria Bartiromo on Fox Business.
The problem is that traditionally, the President of the United States was seen as the leader of the free
world. Actually those words seem meaningless now. The presidency is a position of great power and
control IF the president works with his advisors and others, like the Joint Chiefs. Trump has never worked
with others in his life. As a businessman (and that’s another blogpost, but not today), he was in charge. His
word was law. Why were we surprised when he approached the presidency the same way? Its all he
knows. I remember Craig saying don’t worry, there are checks and balances. Unfortunately, checks and
balances disappeared just under 4 years ago, and the only check has been the unending number of lawsuits
brought against him, by State Attorney-Generals and the UCLA. Our AG, Dana Nessel, once famously
said: I was prepared to take Trump to court - but I never imagined I would be doing that every single day.
Here’s some new information regarding the virus.
Livescience.com

The new coronavirus can linger on human skin much longer than flu viruses can, according to a new
study from researchers in Japan.
SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, remained viable on samples of human skin for about 9
hours, according to the study. In contrast, a strain of the influenza A virus (IAV) remained viable on
human skin for about 2 hours.
Fortunately, both viruses on skin were rapidly inactivated with hand sanitizer. The findings underscore
the importance of washing your hands or using sanitizer to prevent the spread of COVID-19.
At the same time, the CDC has released information that the aerosolized virus particles spread and remain
in the air in enclosed spaces for much longer than originally thought. This comes right on the heels of the
CDC’s proclamation that 6 feet apart is not far enough, especially indoors. However, search as I may, I can

�find nothing more than “more than 6 feet is better”. What? 8 feet? 10 feet? 12 feet? Its not enough to say 6
feet may not be far enough.
Words have been extremely scarce on vaccine development. At least one trial has halted because they
cannot secure enough black or brown participants. Apparently vaccine trials need people of all ethnicities
to be a successful measure, but when you think about it, its not the most reliable result to say: our vaccine
works 100% on white people but we have no idea about anyone else.

This made me laugh, but its bittersweet.
And finally, its Oliver time.

��He’s really into dinosaurs.
More Nha Trang. Craig reminded me that we had a very packed day excursion to Nha Trang.

Inside Lon Son Pagoda

�The Lon Son Pagoda with the Buddha above.

�The memorial for martyred Buddhist monks and nuns at the base of the White Buddha. 7 stucco likenesses
of Buddhist martyrs, monks and nuns who died protesting the repressive Ngo Dinh Diem regime in
southern Vietnam during the Vietnam War. Some of them immolated themselves and the white Buddha
was built to their memory in 1963.

�A reclining Buddha is an image that represents Buddha lying down and is a major iconographic theme in
Buddhist art. It represents the historical Buddha during his last illness, about to enter the parinirvana. In
Buddhism, parinirvana is commonly used to refer to nirvana-after-death, which occurs upon the death of
someone who has attained nirvana during his or her lifetime. Wikipedia.
So here we are. 26 days to the election and probably a week later until we know the result unless there is a
Blue Tsunami. I’ve done my part, have you?
This made me laugh - and hope.

��</text>
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                    <text>Day 212
by windoworks
We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure
domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the
Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United
States of America.

�And this:

�And really, thats all I’m going to say about the VP debate. But interestingly, after refusing to wear a mask
(against debate organizers rules) and having a hissy fit about the plexiglass safety shields, Pence has

�canceled his trip to Indiana? (can’t remember, don’t care) for no reason whatsoever. Could he be ill??
Voters want to know.
And this from The Atlantic: About that fly … “It symbolized the whole Pence vice presidency,” David

Frum argues. For the past four years, Pence has been “the man who pretended not to notice.”
I think we’ve reached this moment and I can safely say this: we’re going to hell in a hand basket. Oh what
does that mean, Pamela? It sounds so bad. Here’s what it means: To go to hell in a handbasket means to go

to one's doom, to deteriorate quickly, to proceed on a course to disaster.
Yep, I think we’re there. Yesterday an astoundingly upsetting and frightening thing came to light. The
FBI, State Police, the State Attorney-General and the 2 US Attorneys for Michigan arrested a total of 13
men who were planning a civil insurrection to overthrow the state government and their opening shot
was to kidnap and possibly murder Governor Gretchen Whitmer and her family. They had held gun
training sessions and tried to construct an anti personnel bomb with shrapnel, and they had checked out
the location of the abduction carefully and methodically. There is ongoing investigations with possible
further arrests.
As soon as the news broke, Joe Biden called Gov Whitmer to check that she was all right. So did Charlie
Baker, the Republican governor of Massachusetts, someone Gretchen didn’t know all that well, but he still
called to check on her. Did the COVID-19 Superspreader in the White House call? Or VP Pence? That
would be a resounding no - but Trump did, once again, castigate Gretchen for not thanking him for the
FBI. Boy, those drugs have really loosened his tenuous grip on reality.

David Holtz FB post

�In April Donald Trump publicly sided with armed militia, calling them "very good people" who stormed
our state capitol. "Liberate" Michigan, Trump tweeted at the time. By June right-wing extremists were
meeting and organizing to kidnap Gov. Whitmer and put her on "trial" for treason. Vote. Please vote.
And how’s that virus load going for him? I don’t think anyone’s actually seen him but he’s firing up
Twitter all night long (side effect of steroids in large doses - you can’t sleep at all but you’re convinced
you’re Superman) and he’s calling in to Fox News. He’s not sounding too great either - congested and
struggling to breathe. Remember how I told you that the virus can fill your lungs with a Jello like
substance? Yeah.

�Because he’s convinced anything virtual won’t be a real debate because they can (Shock! Horror!) cut off
your microphone if you start ranting and rambling. Plus, you won’t be able to infect your opponent so you
can level the playing field. Oh. Trumpy - that ship has sailed.
And from Crooked Media who always say it so well: On Thursday the Commission on Presidential

Debates announced that the October 15 town hall-style debate would be virtual, on account of Trump’s
continued status as (paraphrasing) a walking bucket of murder germs. Trump refused to participate in a
format in which he a) could be easily muted and b) couldn’t cough on his opponent, and announced he
would hold a superspreader rally instead. His campaign then called for the debate to be delayed altogether,
an idea the Biden campaign immediately rejected: “Trump's erratic behavior does not allow him to rewrite
the calendar, and pick new dates of his choosing.” After Trump backed out (cue Elizabeth Warren chicken
noises), Biden set up an ABC News town hall on October 15 to address voters on his own. The final debate
on October 22 is, for now, still on.
Its time for stats: US had a total of - Cases 7.64M +56,045 from yesterday. Deaths total 213K +928 new
deaths from yesterday. Michigan had a total of Cases 147K +1,417 from yesterday. Deaths total 7,194 +23
new deaths from yesterday. Kent County had a total of Cases 10,112 + 113 new cases from yesterday.
Deaths total 167 and the site continues to say no new deaths, although the total number keeps climbing
one death at a time.
In other news, a new hurricane is set to make touchdown as a Category 2 in Louisiana later today, 6 weeks
after the last one on the same trajectory. More people at the White House are testing positive, Trumps
‘doctors’ won’t release his scans or x-rays, and won’t tell us how long since he last tested negative. From
the Atlantic:

Meanwhile, the White House remains a Trump bubble. This week Trump’s “staff again seemed to cater
first to the president’s emotional needs, rather than the country’s interests or even his own health,” Peter
Nicholas reports.
I’m so exhausted by all this and I can’t imagine what tomorrow might bring - but at least we all have
Oliver to distract us:

��I’ll just climb up here on the coffee table ......... He should be really good at ballet stretches at the barre in
future.
Still Nha Trang

Fishing boats on the Cai River at Nha Trang.

�Po Nagar Cham Towers. Po Nagar is a Cham temple tower founded sometime before 781 C.E. and located

in the medieval principality of Kauthara, near modern Nha Trang in Vietnam. It is dedicated to Yan Po
Nagar, the goddess of the country, who came to be identified with the Hindu goddesses Bhagavati and
Mahishasuramardini, and who in Vietnamese is called Thiên Y Thánh Mẫu. Wikipedia.

��Po Nagar drummers

�Po Nagar dancers - with clay pots on their heads.
Tomorrow Ho Chi Minh City (formerly Hanoi).

�Craig and I Stand With ‘That Woman From Michigan’ .

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                    <text>Day 213: Saturday October 10
by windoworks
From a FaceBook post by Heather Cox Richardson:

On October 8, 2020, the President of the United States, Donald J. Trump, appears to be melting down.
Over the course of the day, he has called for the imprisonment of his Democratic opponent, Joe Biden, as
well as his own predecessor, President Barack Obama, and called Democratic vice presidential nominee
Kamala Harris a “monster” and a “communist.”
He released a video addressed to seniors, who are leaving him in droves, calling them "my favorite people
in the world," and speculated that he could continue to hold rallies as early as this weekend, before his
quarantine period is over. He called into the Fox News Channel twice, ranting. Of his bout with
coronavirus, he said: “I’m back because I’m a perfect physical specimen and I’m extremely young.”
He is erratic enough that tomorrow, the House will begin to consider a bill seeking to enforce the 25th
Amendment to the Constitution, designed to provide an exit ramp for a president who is experiencing
physical or mental impairments that make him unable to lead the nation. The bill, advanced by Speaker of
the House Nancy Pelosi, will not pass, but it will keep focus on what seems to be the president’s precarious
mental state.
The 25th Amendment. This is couched in heavily legal terms, but it says that for whatever reason (and
frankly that leaves it pretty wide open) , if the President is removed from office, then the Vice President
steps in.
NBC NEWS

WASHINGTON — House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., introduced legislation Friday that would create
a bipartisan commission to determine a sitting president’s ability to carry out the duties of the office.
At a press conference unveiling the legislation with its original author, Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., Pelosi
said the measure is not intended specifically for President Donald Trump, but she suggested he was the
impetus for it.
“This is not about President Trump. He will face the judgment of the voters, but he shows the need for us
to create a process for future presidents,” she said. "This legislation applies to future presidents, but we are
reminded of the necessity of action by the health of the current president."
The idea for the legislation stems from the 25th Amendment, which provides procedures for transferring
power to the vice president in case of the president's death, incapacitation, removal or resignation. The
amendment was ratified and approved in the wake of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. One
of its sections provides the vice president and the majority of either the Cabinet "or such other body as
Congress may by law provide" with a mechanism to transfer power from the president.

�The commission would consist of 16 members, chosen both by Democrats and Republicans, who are
medical experts or former high-ranking executive branch officials such as former members of a president’s
Cabinet. The 17th member, the chair, would be selected by the rest of the commission’s members.
I am watching events unfold with a jaded sense of disbelief. Trump seems to have descended to an
unbalanced hell of his own making. He is now ordering actions that are nonsensical. He ordered Bill Barr
to arrest Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton with no real idea of what imaginary crimes they might done.
His doctor has said that he has completed the COVID-19 treatment regime and Trump has taken this as a
sign that he can go out, maskless and begin his superspreader rallies again. However, in a radio interview
with Fox, his voice was raspy and he kept trying to clear his throat and coughing. And the one phrase that
really bothered me was ‘I’m extremely young’. Now Trump can boast that he’s a perfect physical specimen
and I’ll allow him that fantasy - but extremely young at 74? Well I must be a babe in arms then at 70. I
think that shows his mental unbalance perfectly.
In the meantime, Dana Nessel, the Attorney General of Michigan posted this:
NPR.ORG

Investigators found the men's mission is what white supremacist groups call "the Boogaloo," which Nessel
described as an uprising or a second civil war.
"This effort to have a mass uprising nationally is something that we should be very concerned about
because, again, it's not just a Michigan problem, this is an American problem."
FBI Director Christopher Wray in February announced that the threat posed racially motivated violent
extremists had reached a new "national threat priority."
Nessel said she concurs with that assessment and contends racist militia groups currently operating across
the country are taking advantage of the unrest that's been caused by the COVID-19 epidemic and the
Black Lives Matter movement.
“They're using it to recruit and to formulate plots," she charged.
Part of the recruitment effort took place during a protest at the state capitol over the summer where
militia members stood on the steps holding guns and rifles.
"I think that those protests were used actually as recruiting stations to add more members and to find
people that were angry with the governor, angry with the government, and frankly, I think encouraged
by the words of our president," Nessel said.
Joe Biden responded quickly to the news of the plot -

As a nation, we are at a crossroads. We have come to a point where, despite our shock, we are not
surprised that such a heinous plot was even conceived — a plot by Americans to blow up a bridge on
American soil, threaten the lives of police officers and other law enforcement officials, and kidnap an

�American leader, take her hostage, and stage a mock trial for treason. It’s the kind of twisted plot we
expect from ISIS, but now it’s here at home.
The words of a president matter. They can move markets. They can bring peace. They can bring war.
They can heal divisions or incite violence.
And here’s a takeout from Gretchen Whitmer’s opinion piece in the Washington Post:

But just moments later, President Trump’s campaign adviser, Jason Miller, appeared on national television
accusing me of fostering hatred.
I’m not going to waste my time arguing with the president. But I will always hold him accountable.
Because when our leaders speak, their words carry weight.
When our leaders encourage domestic terrorists, they legitimize their actions. When they stoke and
contribute to hate speech, they are complicit. And when a sitting president stands on a national stage
refusing to condemn white supremacists and hate groups, as President Trump did when he told the Proud
Boys to “stand back and stand by” during the first presidential debate, he is complicit. Hate groups heard
the president’s words not as a rebuke, but as a rallying cry.
So the country is in the hands of a crazy person who is struggling with a serious dose of the virus which is
not helped by his obesity, high blood pressure and high cholesterol count - and before you tell me that his
doctor says the last two are perfect - so are my blood pressure and cholesterol because of the medications I
take every day - just like Trump does. He doesn’t look so good, no hair dye, no tanning bed and no one left
around him because they’re all sick or quarantined. We will never know how long he was asymptomatic.
We will never know how many were infected through the White House, and how many more were
infected down the line. Democratic candidate Jamie Harrison who is running against Republican Lindsey
Graham, asked for him to have a Covid test before their debate. Graham refused - so no debate.

�Michigan Senate Majority Leader Mike Shirkey, R-Clarklake, was one of the people at a rally in East
Lansing this week, still protesting Gov Whitmer’s orders to keep us all safe. Almost immediately, a group
of strong Whitmer supporters did this outside the State House:

New York Times

�Yesterday’s arrests are the latest evidence that a small but meaningful number of Americans believe that
violence is the only answer to the country’s political divisions. “We’re seeing more and more citizens
expressing openness to violence as more and more partisan leaders engage in the kinds of dehumanizing
rhetoric that paves the way for taking violent action,” Lee Drutman, one of the political scientists who
oversaw the YouGov poll, told me.
Since May, more than 50 people have driven vehicles into peaceful protesters. Armed protesters shut
down the Michigan legislature in May. Armed groups on the left and right have done battle in Oregon and
Wisconsin. Extremists have attacked journalists, including an instance in Brooklyn on Wednesday night.
And top Republican politicians have encouraged violence in ways no prominent Democrat has. Greg
Gianforte, a Republican congressman now running to be Montana’s governor, pleaded guilty to assaulting
a reporter who asked a question he didn’t like in 2017.

24 days. I’m just exhausted by this. It never stops. I’m pretty sure that the person leading this country is
insane and his minions encourage his insanity for their own financial gain. I feel as though each of us is

�standing on an ice floe which day by day, gets smaller and smaller. When I began writing this post I
thought is would be about the virus, but gradually it has morphed into a document chronicling the gradual
dissolution of the United States. It doesn’t feel at all United to me. Perhaps, more realistically it should just
be the the States. I could list all the egregious actions going on in a large number of States as the
incumbent Republicans try desperately to hold on to their voter base, but you would lose interest after the
first 4 bullet points and accuse me of writing fiction. Last night, a helicopter buzzed over Grand Rapids for
2 hours or so. FaceBook filled up with local citizens complaining about the noise (which Craig and I were
completely unaware of). Just a few posts said ‘rather helicopters than gang fights and terrorists with guns’
and gradually the people posting said “ well yes, I suppose thats right’.
24 days. If you think Trump is off the rails now, just wait. He’ll have to be marched out of the White
House under guard if Biden wins. 24 days. Vote. Vote in such enormous numbers that there can be no
mistake.

��“And he’s starting his run with the ball. The crowd goes wild - is the batsman out? Yes! Is the resounding
cry. (Cricket)
French architecture in Ho Chi Minh City. The French invaded Vietnam in 1857 and claimed it as French
Indochina. After the French left, Vietnam was divided into North and South Vietnam in 1954. For much
more information, check out Wikipedia.

Ho Chi Minh statue and the Hotel de Ville behind.

�Inside the French train station

�Notre Dame de Saigon

�Saigon Opera House.

�Saigon Post Office. These buildings were are clustered together in the center of the city. Each building had
been lovingly maintained but odd to see in a Vietnam city.

�I can relate to this! Remember 24 days. Stay safe.

�</text>
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                    <text>Day 214
by windoworks
So, Trump has been declared no longer contagious (when did he contract the virus?) by the “doctor” and
he has taken that as a sign to begin holding strictly unregulated rallies while continuing to post
extraordinary assertions on Twitter. His fans are very excited because he has rallied from death’s door to
lead them to his promised land - again. The thing is, Trump will promise anything if he thinks it will win
him a second term.
Meanwhile Joe Biden and Kamala Harris continue to hold safe, strictly regulated town halls and stump
speeches while the Republican misinformation service continues to throw all kinds of ridiculous
allegations against them. I suppose that when you decide to stand for any sort of office, you must
recognize that your opponents will find all kinds of scurrilous trash to broadcast about you, and that’s a
risk you’re prepared to take.
And the virus. It is gradually dawning on everyone that the world is now experiencing a resurgence. In
France the cases are rising again, and Paris has shut down bars etc., in an attempt to bring the daily
numbers down. Britain is seeing a dramatic rise in cases while Boris Johnson is hesitating on shutting the
country down again. There is also an ongoing discussion about how fit he is to govern after his
hospitalization 6 months ago with Covid-19. Plus, the Scots have had enough and want to hold another
referendum about detaching Scotland from the United Kingdom and returning to the European Union.
New York Times

More than one million new coronavirus cases in three days.
The world recorded the highest total ever in such short span, a reflection of resurgences in Europe and the
U.S. and uninterrupted outbreaks in India, Brazil and other countries.
The number of new cases is growing faster than ever worldwide, according to a Times database.
Boris has yet to unveil his plan for Brexit - and times up at the end of this month. In New Zealand, the
level dropped to Level One last Wednesday which means life returned to almost normal except for
traveling out of New Zealand. In Australia cases are almost nonexistent in all states except New South
Wales and Victoria. Our son Asher, who is still locked down in Melbourne continues to be cheerful but I
assume its becoming an effort. In Sydney, Oliver came home at lunchtime on Friday from daycare because
he had a temperature and was unhappy. Zoe couldn’t get in to see her own doctor, so she took him to the
nearby hospital ER. Because he had a temperature they were put into a room with a bed while they waited
to be seen. The nurse came in dressed in a Hazmat suit and tested Oliver for Covid (which he didn’t have).
So Oliver is cranky and teary, very tired and very thirsty - all regular virus symptoms. While Oliver really
loves daycare, it does seem a hothouse for all kinds of viruses.

�This morning I came across this in my daily research scan:

��These are real cruise ships. They’re being broken down for scrap metal as yet another casualty of the novel
coronavirus pandemic, which has docked ships across the globe.
After the Michigan Supreme Court overturned Gov Whitmer’s State of Emergency regulations, the
Michigan State Health Department took over - and they’re stricter with stronger penalties.

They’re asking businesses to facilitate customers signing in so that they have reliable contact tracing
sources. The Republicans are not happy. Awww. Careful what you wish for.
And Crooked Media says it so well:
• The U.S. reported 56,000 new confirmed coronavirus cases on Thursday, the highest daily increase since

mid-August. In technical epidemiology terms, this is what is known as “the wrong direction.”
• The White House reportedly blocked a CDC order that would have required everyone to wear masks on

all forms of public and commercial transportation. In technical epidemiology terms, this is what is known
as “the type of shit that sent us in the wrong direction.”
The reason why Lindsey Graham refused to be tested for the virus is not because he cares about the debate
with his opponent but because, if it turns out that he is positive, he wouldn’t be able to chair the Senate
committee for Amy Whatsherface’s confirmation to the Supreme Court. And oh, here’s another tidbit after the debacle (read superspreader) in the Rose Garden where a possibly already contagious Trump
introduced Amy to the party faithful, her children went back to school and uh oh! Spread the virus there.

�Perhaps its time for a little education on cause and effect. Oh that’s right. No one who is a faithful
Republican believes in Science. Because facts are so depressing, aren’t they?
On Friday morning we visited Meijer Gardens. We thought the quick pass through the enclosed entrance
would be worth it. Now I am glad that we went, but the number of people pushing past us or standing still
in the middle of the walkway - almost all maskless - was disturbing, so we won’t go back for a while. We
walked around the boardwalk and looked out over the wetlands.

Here are a group of swans landing on the water.

�It is a chilly morning, so I rugged up.

��Pointing is his new big thing.
Our next stop in Ho Chi Minh City was the former palace. Evidently Ho Ch Minh refused to live there,
but had a stilt house built for himself in the grounds.

The Cabinet Room.

�Craig and the gate. In the final stages of the war, a North Vietnamese tank came crashing through the
gates and this symbolized the end of the war.

�The preserved tank.

�Palace communications room
More Ho Chi Minh City tomorrow
Its 23 days to the election. In the manner of Tsunamis, the voter water has drawn back, leaving Trump
and the Republicans flopping on the sand. And far in the distance, they can hear hear the roar of the
returning enormous Blue Tsunami. Make it happen, my tribe.

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                    <text>Day 215
by windoworks
Some trans Tasman flights will begin on October 16, one way between New Zealand and Australia. There
are conditions - at this point New Zealanders would have to fly from the South Island only. Australians
are not allowed to fly to New Zealand. When New Zealanders return home, they will have to quarantine
for 14 days and be tested.
In Melbourne, there is a slight lifting of restrictions. My son and his housemate were permitted to have a
picnic on Sunday with 2 members of another household within their 5 km circle. When you look at the
statistics for Australia, yesterdays total cases was 27,286 and 20,295 of those total cases were in the state of
Victoria. Total deaths for Australia: 898 and 810 of those deaths were in Victoria. You can see why all
states in Australia closed their borders. Borders around Victoria may still be closed but the large majority
of cases and deaths have occurred in the city of Melbourne. Every exit from the city is closed with army
personnel patrolling them. The city has done a great job of containing the outbreak amid growing unrest
from a section of the community. The Premier of Victoria is prepared to be voted out of office for his strict
lockdown actions.
Here’s a sign from Sydney:

�Meanwhile from ClickonDetroit

�As of Sunday, data shows that Michigan currently has an infection rate of 1.12 -- meaning each person
infected with COVID-19 is infecting 1.12 other people. The state’s infection rate had improved
throughout August after increasing in July, but began to increase again throughout September. Covid Act
Now considers an infection rate “critical” if it surpasses 1.4. Michigan’s current infection rate of 1.12 is
considered “high," and is contributing to the state’s worsened risk status for virus spread.
Another factor contributing to Michigan’s high risk status is the number of new COVID-19 cases recorded
each day per every 100,000 people. On Sunday, Covid Act Now reports that Michigan is recording 11.7
new COVID-19 cases each day per every 100,000 residents -- a number that the research group considers
“high.” Any number higher than 1 is considered “medium” and anything above 10 is considered “high." A
state has reached “critical” standing if it reports more than 25 daily new cases per every 100,000 residents.
Michigan is currently experiencing its largest spike in COVID-19 cases since the beginning of the
pandemic. On Saturday, the state reported a total of 134,656 confirmed virus cases, recording an increase
of 1,522 new cases since Friday -- the highest single-day increase since April 7. As of Saturday, the state’s
7-day moving average of new cases reached 1,020. This is the first time Michigan has recorded a 7-day
moving average above 1,000 since April 17.

���Did Trump have the coronavirus? We’ll never know. The White House medical team seemed to have set
aside the Hippocratic Oath all doctors are supposed to take and chosen instead to follow Trump’s lead.
Trump is again setting out for rallies and meetings, declaring loudly: I am immune. Again - we’ll never
know. He is promising a vaccine for all before the Election Day on November 3. But most of us know that
any vaccine delivered that early will not have had anything like complete testing. I am not an anti-vaxxer
but even I would not be willing have an early vaccine administered to me.
And here’s a thought I have - he’s on a fairly strong dose of steroids. Here’s some of the side effects:
Difficulty sleeping
High blood pressure
Increased appetite, weight gain
Insomnia
Lower resistance to infection
Muscle weakness
Nervousness, restlessness
Stomach irritation or bleeding
Sudden mood swings
There are other side effects as well but these seemed the most pertinent.

�On a completely different subject here’s this:
Washington Post

�Think about the changes we have accepted in our own lives in response to the pandemic. We have agreed
to isolate ourselves for long stretches. We have worked, attended meetings and had deeply personal
conversations by talking to our laptops. We’ve taken online courses and have seen doctors and therapists
using telemedicine. In a month, companies changed policies that would normally have taken them years
to revise. Overnight, cities turned avenues into pedestrian walkways and sidewalks into cafes. Attitudes
toward people previously ignored or overlooked are shifting, as can been seen in the newly adopted phrase
“essential workers.” And governments have opened up their coffers in ways that were once unimaginable
and could lead to much greater willingness to invest in the future. The pandemic has made so many —
nations and individuals — turn inward and become selfish.
Its up to us now, which way we go forward. Should we continue to make positive changes in the world, in
OUR world, or should we turn inward and become selfish. I can only say that I know what path I will
choose. Some time ago I watched all of the Handmaids Tale on TV. Margaret Atwood wrote the book in
1985 and many critics found it to be implausible. In the last 4 years I have seen numerous references to
the book and TV series as being all too plausible right now. If you have never read it, the book explores
themes of subjugated women in a patriarchal society and the various means by which these women resist
and attempt to gain individuality and independence. In 2019, Atwood published the sequel: The
Testaments. The novel is set 15 years after the events of The Handmaid's Tale. I think that what I liked
most about it was that it showed how any dystopian society will ultimately crumble from the inside.
And here’s one change that has already happened:
New York Times

Online orders have surged for retailers in the pandemic, as curbside pickup helps Americans satisfy their
desire to hop in a car and drive to the store. What started as a coronavirus stopgap is likely to have a
permanent impact on the way people shop.
Speaking of which, this afternoon Craig and I will drive over to the Penzeys store to pick up my curbside
order of herbs and spices. And I am waiting for my order of assorted English teabags to be delivered in the
next few days.

�Here’s Oliver back at daycare surrounded by his favorite toys.

�Our last photos from Ho Chi Minh City -

The Reception Room in the Palace with an incredible lacquer landscape

�In the Vietnam National Museum - a triumphant mural.

��This museum was a popular place for bridal photos.

�Saigon parking. On to Cambodia tomorrow

���22 days. Rise up and vote as if your life depends on it.

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                    <text>Day 216: exactly 3 weeks to Election Day
by windoworks
There are more and more mornings where I don’t know where to begin. I once wrote that subconsciously,
all my life, I had wanted to live in the United States. I looked at magazines with girls wearing plaid skirts
and Bobby socks and matching sweaters and I wanted to be that girl. Then as John Lennon sang: Life is
what happens when you’re busy making other plans. 18 years ago Craig was offered a tenure track
position at Grand Valley State University and we sold the house and all our possessions, packed 2 suitcases
each and shipped 54 boxes of Craig’s books, said goodbye to the children and our family, and moved to
Grand Rapids Michigan.
My sister wrote: at last, one of the Smyth girls lives in the States. She and her husband had moved here
after their wedding and were never returning to New Zealand - but then my mother became terminally ill
and my sister was a nurse.......... but that’s another story for another day.
Although the first few weeks here were hard without family and friends, I soon settled in and began to get
involved in the neighborhood and then the city and so on. I even became friends with our local
policeman, who one memorable day, rolled down his car window and called across the street: Hello Miss
Pamela, How are you? I felt at home.
I was not stupid. I knew there were inequalities and barely concealed racism and poverty. There are many
stories of my experiences I could relate here - but today is not that day.
When Trump was elected in 2016, we were living in the south of France. We woke in the morning to the
news. French strangers offered commiserations (and free desserts) when they realized we were Americans.
In the area we lived in for 2 months, politics existed but farming and living comfortably within your
means was more important. It may be very different in the French cities, but the countryside lets those in
the big cities get on with it.
We returned home at the beginning of 2017 and everything gradually began to change. What bothered
me the most was the anger. And it was anger aimed at people like me, because I was “liberal”. In these past
4 years I have felt like a bystander watching something catastrophic unfold - you know its a train wreck
but you can’t look away. I finally understood what was happening the other day, after Trump made 2
secret service men take him for a drive while he was still in hospital and contagious. Trump is the
President of the United States and he uses his unlimited power to get anything he wants. If he says: take
me out for a drive, that’s exactly what the secret service men had to do - they had no choice. There is no
one in the world who can say no to Trump. No one.
So here we are. You’ll be glad to know that in places overseas we are regarded as the most entertaining
reality show on TV. How nice it is that we are able to provide such light relief to the rest of the world. But

�its not just a TV show to those of us living here. I have actually said to friends - please don’t tell me you’re
a Republican. If you do, I simply can’t be your friend. The new dreadful items that appear in my news feed
are so unbelievable I have difficulty grasping them. Here’s an example: Republicans have set up fake
absentee ballot collection boxes in California, so people can put their ballots in there and by inference,
help the Republicans win the presidency. Wait, what? Do they have safety stickers saying: only
Democratic ballots, please? In Texas the Republican Governor removed all ballot drop boxes except one
per county, and some counties cover 2000 square miles. A judge blocked this, but then 3 Republican lower
court judges blocked his block. In our city, they have put 24 hour cameras on each Dropbox and they clear
the boxes twice a day. They have received our ballots - I checked online.
What bothers me the most, is that none of this is done surreptitiously. Its all done in plain sight with the
smiling face which says clearly: we can and you can’t stop us. I’ll admit that when I first moved here, I
knew there was a very ugly underside to America, I wasn’t that naive. But gradually over the past 4 years,
a truly unpalatable view of America has emerged where there are fewer and fewer checks and balances.
This morning I read this:

Washington Post
Roughly half of Trump supporters agreed with the statement: “Once our government leaders and the
authorities condemn the dangerous elements in our society, it will be the duty of every patriotic citizen to
help stomp out the rot that is poisoning our country from within,” which Altemeyer and Dean
characterize as “practically a Nazi cheer.”
And meanwhile the virus continues to infect more and more people, both here and across the world.
Businesses are failing, people are homeless and starving and hospitals are struggling to keep up. In the US Coronavirus Cases: 8,038,391. Deaths: 220,021. In Michigan - Coronavirus Cases: 136,465. Deaths: 6,898.
In Kent County - Coronavirus Cases: 10,636. Deaths: 169. It is getting harder and harder to obtain daily
statistics. Using the Kent County Health Dept site (the only updated site I could find) tells me that there
was an increase of 1,810 new cases from yesterday in Michigan and an increase of new cases from
yesterday of (wait for it) 235 new cases in Kent County. Is this the second or the third surge? I forget.
Oliver at daycare - they used toy cars to paint with on ‘roads’.

��Once again, there are 21 days until the election. What will happen? No one knows. In the meantime, do
your bit to keep us all safe. Wear your mask, physically distance yourself (at least 6 feet and preferably
more) from others and wash your hands, all day long.
21 days. 21 days. 21 days. 21 days. 21 days...........................

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                    <text>Day 217
by windoworks
Its 7:26am, pitch dark and 44F. The statistics in Michigan are rising. The charts I usually use have not been
updated for 2 days - which makes their numbers meaningless. In Kent County we continue to see an
average of 120 new cases per day. I’m not sure what is causing this rise. Some K-12 schools are back in a
hybrid face-to-face system near us and their regime is strictly enforced. There have been few outbreaks in
these schools. There have been more outbreaks at colleges - you can control university students to a
certain level, but after lectures finish for the day, it is harder to supervise students.

Here’s an excellent breakdown of the virus from new scientist.com

A team from the Covid Symptom Study has split the disease into six types:
1 Flu-like symptoms, no fever
Headache, loss of smell, cough, sore throat and aches and pains, but no fever. Around 1.5 per cent of this
group will go on to require breathing support in hospital.
2 Flu-like symptoms with fever
Similar to group 1, plus a loss of appetite and fever.
3 Gastrointestinal

�Diarrhoea alongside loss of smell and appetite, headache, sore throat and chest pain. Typically, no cough.
4 Fatigue
This cluster is considered more severe than the previous three, as 8.6 per cent require breathing support.
Fatigue accompanies headache, loss of smell, cough, chest pain and fever.
5 Confusion
Another severe category. People experience confusion in addition to symptoms listed in cluster four.
Around 10 per cent will require breathing support.
6 Abdominal and respiratory
Considered the most severe cluster, because almost half will require hospitalisation, and around a fifth will
need breathing support. Symptoms include headache, fever, loss of smell and appetite, cough, sore throat
and chest pain, along with shortness of breath, diarrhoea and abdominal pain, muscle pain, confusion and
fatigue.
Here’s a link the study’s own diagram - https://covid.joinzoe.com/earlysymptomsdiscoveries
In other virus related news, scientists have recorded at least one case of reinfection.
Science Alert

COVID-19 patients may experience more severe symptoms the second time they are infected, according to
research released Tuesday confirming it is possible to catch the potentially deadly disease more than once.
A study published in The Lancet Infectious Diseases journal charts the first confirmed case of COVID-19
reinfection in the United States - the country worst hit by the pandemic - and indicates that exposure to
the virus may not guarantee future immunity.
The patient, a 25-year-old Nevada man, was infected with two distinct variants of SARS-CoV-2, the virus
that causes COVID-19, within a 48-day time frame.
The second infection was more severe than the first, resulting in the patient being hospitalised with
oxygen support.
The paper noted four other cases of reinfection confirmed globally, with one patient each in Belgium, the
Netherlands, Hong Kong and Ecuador.
Experts said the prospect of reinfection could have a profound impact on how the world battles through
the pandemic.
This morning the news was that a second person in the US had contracted the virus for the second time.
There’s talk at the White House that herd immunity might be the answer - because hey, doing almost
nothing to help hasn’t worked so well, so why not take it down a notch?

Washington Post
Allowing the coronavirus to spread unchecked in an attempt to reach herd immunity is “simply
unethical,” the head of the World Health Organization said on Monday, noting it would mean

�“unnecessary infections, suffering and death.” But the idea, which the NIH chief calls “dangerous” and
“fringe,” has found an audience inside the White House and at least one state capitol, appalling top
scientists.
And all the while, Trump is out rallying (oh I’m sorry, campaigning) again. From the ‘pull no punches’
Crooked Media:

Hoarsely addressing a packed, largely maskless crowd in Florida on Monday night, Donald Trump finally
hit on that perfect blend of pandemic recklessness and predatory sense of entitlement that suburban moms
go crazy for: “I feel so powerful. I’ll walk into that audience. I’ll walk in there, I’ll kiss everyone in that
audience. I’ll kiss the guys and the beautiful women—everybody.” In a sign of how well things are going
for Trump since his diagnosis, he has a rally planned in Iowa this week and surrogates scheduled to
campaign in Georgia, Nebraska, and Ohio—traditionally red states where he’s been bleeding support.
Remember the many vaccine trials? Here’s another hiccup from Crooked Media :

Eli Lilly has paused clinical trials of its coronavirus antibody treatment, and Johnson &amp; Johnson has paused
trials of its vaccine candidate due to safety concerns.
Which means that some volunteers got sick and they have to determine the cause. Vaccines take years to
develop safely and even then they’re not foolproof. Each year when we get our flu shot, the drug company
promises that if you do get the flu, it won’t be as bad as if you didn’t have your flu shot. Cold comfort.
In the meantime, the trials of the ‘kidnap Whitmer and put her on trial for treason’ protagonists have
begun in Grand Rapids. It had been reported that the militia members involved had also discussed
kidnapping Governor Ralph Northam, the Democratic governor of Virginia. Whitmer thanked everyone
involved in the surveillance and arrests but apparently forgot to grovel at Trump’s feet - nobody can
explain why he thought that was justified.

From the Washington Post, quoted from the trial: Here’s the reality: President Trump called upon his
supporters to ‘LIBERATE VIRGINIA’ in April — just like Michigan. In fact, the President regularly
encourages violence against those who disagree with him. The rhetoric coming out of this White House
has serious and potentially deadly consequences. It must stop.
So, as always, Oliver,

��After Vietnam we sailed on to Cambodia. Our first stop was a fishing village near Sihanoukville.

Despite being the country's premier sea side destination, after decades of war and upheaval the town and
its infrastructure remain very much disjointed and architecturally unimpressive. Infrastructure problems
persist, in particular related to water and power supply, while international standard health facilities
remain limited. Sihanoukville also faces challenges related to crime, security, and safety with the city
frequently being the focus of scandals linked to serious organized crime, petty crime, and corruption.
Wikipedia

Fishermen playing cards

�This fishing village is largely on the water - one side of the dock is where their boats dock and on the
other side, their small dwellings.

�Making underwater repairs to a fishing boat.

�Drying the fish. This was one of the poorest places I have ever visited, but the people seemed happy,
perhaps because they were paid to allow us to visit them.
Its 8:34am, cloudy skies and 43F. So, same old, same old. 20 days to the election but who knows how long
until someone is declared a winner. The virus is surging again and we are still sheltering in place.
Remember: MASK UP!

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                    <text>Day 218: 19 days to the election.
by windoworks

Two days ago, my mother-in-law (who reads my posts) was talking with a group of friends and the topic
switched to ‘When did America stop being great?’ I wonder how we would all answer that. In my mind
there is no question that America began its slide away from greatness when Trump began campaigning in
2015. We all laughed at his onscreen antics and we were sure that each new disturbing statement would
signal the end of his presidency hopes. Remember ‘I could shoot someone on 5th Avenue and they would
still love me’? The problem was, and is, we - the reasonable people of the world, the ones who try to
always engage ethics and morals in our everyday life - we couldn’t (and still don’t) really understand his
followers. And that’s our problem: we keep expecting Trump, his Republicans and his followers to

�suddenly become real, normal humans who try to do their best every day. Its never going to happen.
That’s a hard pill to swallow. These people are who they are. As far as I can tell, they have no rules to live
by. They really are the epitome of “anything goes” and “whatever helps you get to the top”.
So once we all accept that, life becomes easier. It much easier to live, day by day, knowing that these
people, encouraged by Trump, will do anything and everything to stay on top. There is no depth to their
actions, no bottom of the pit. So the trick is to live in as responsible and ethical way as you possibly can,
and make sure you do everything in your power to change the person and his group in charge. I think we
all forget that politicians are voted into power by us. Their power is given to them to work for us. If we do
not like or approve of the way they are using that power, we can (shock!) vote them out and vote in

someone else in their place. When a candidate tells us: I will do my best for you if you elect me - they
should be held to that promise. Otherwise, find someone else.
Its not that we should expect our representatives to be perfect. I always remember this: every person puts
their underwear on, one leg at a time. Politician are just people who chose a career in politics instead of
being a teacher or a plumber. Here’s this cheering news from Crooked Media:

In total, about 15 million Americans have already voted in early. In North Carolina, nearly one-in-five
voters who cast early ballots didn't vote in 2016.
So, 19 days. Meanwhile, Trump continues to hold rallies. and here’s a roundup of his craziness also from
Crooked Media:
• There’s simply no need for the media to help Trump spread misinformation when he’s so prolific on his

own. On Tuesday night, the president inserted himself into the controversy over the California
Republican Party’s fake and illegal ballot drop boxes in counties with competitive House races with a fullthroated endorsement of election fraud: “You mean only Democrats are allowed to do this? But haven’t
the Dems been doing this for years? See you in court. Fight hard Republicans!” On Tuesday Trump also
retweeted a next-level deranged QAnon conspiracy theory that the Obama administration staged Osama
Bin Laden’s death and had a Navy SEAL team killed, so it seems like things are going well for him.
• The good news is that however irresponsibly the media, the president, or a pack of GOP senators
behaves, everything hinges on what the rest of us do in the next three weeks. We can choose to ignore the
polls, take nothing for granted, and share the information that matters—and we must.

�The above is funny and awful at the same time. So this leads us on to the virus, from New York Times:

The autumn wave of the coronavirus has reached a dangerous new stage. The number of new daily cases
has risen almost 50 percent in the U.S. over the past month. The situation is even worse in Europe.
For the first time since late March, the per capita number of new cases in Europe exceeds the number in
the U.S.
“The virus is everywhere in France,” the French president, Emmanuel Macron, said yesterday, while
imposing a nighttime curfew in major cities.

�The almost deserted Jardin des Tuileries in the middle of Paris.

The onset of cooler weather, which is driving more people indoors, seems to be playing a big role. And
many people seem to have grown tired of pandemic restrictions, leading politicians — in both Europe and
the U.S. — to lift restrictions prematurely.
But the pandemic hasn’t gone away. While treatments are getting better, many people are still dying —
including almost 6,000 in India over the past week, 5,000 in the U.S., 1,700 in Iran, 850 in Spain and about
600 in both Britain and France. A widely available vaccine is still months away, even if the current
research trials go well.
Amid all of this bad news, it’s worth keeping in mind that some countries continue to fight the virus
successfully. The per capita rate of new cases in Canada is less than half as high as it is in the U.S. In
Australia and much of Africa and Asia, the rate remains near zero.
In many places where case counts are rising, political leaders are reluctant to impose new lockdowns,
because the public is tired of them. But that creates something of a Catch-22: The most reliable way to
reverse big outbreaks of this virus has been through strict crackdowns.
And here’s that new idea from the White House. From Crooked Media:

The White House has reportedly embraced a declaration by a group of scientists arguing for a herd
immunity strategy—a fringe position that horrifies most epidemiologists. That approach would call for
authorities to allow the coronavirus to spread freely among young healthy people, who famously have no

�misgivings about potential long-term neurological damage and other symptoms, and/or death. The
declaration, which top administration officials reportedly support, has medical signatories which include
names like Dr. I.P. Freely, Dr. Person Fakename, and Dr. Johnny Bananas. Meanwhile, new coronavirus
cases have been trending upwards in 39 states, 36,051 people were hospitalized as of Tuesday evening, and
Trump continues to shout dangerous misinformation at unmasked crowds on a nightly basis.
His behavior encourages this:

Crooked Media: A Wisconsin judge has blocked an order from Gov. Tony Evers (D-WI) limiting bar and
restaurant capacity. Elsewhere in Wisconsin, a bar owner who hosted an interview with Donald Trump,
Jr., and is now in the ICU with coronavirus would like to punch the president.
As would we all. I’m reminded of a favorite saying: you hold him and I’ll hit him. The virus is still here
and now its surging again. Pay attention. Don’t become a superspreader and don’t allow yourself to
become a victim. And to emphasize how serious it is, from NPR’s New Normal: • The New York

Philharmonic has canceled all of its scheduled concerts through next June. It’s the first time in the
orchestra's 178-year history that it has canceled an entire season.
If that won’t make you sit up and take notice - nothing will.
Oliver at daycare.

�Sihanoukville. Next we visited the markets.

�A monk walking through the market

�Market produce

�Shellfish.
Next we visited Ochheuteal Beach. it was a lovely beach but very disconcerting with signs which said
something like - children may be used as sex slaves here, please report to authorities. There were also signs
warning about pickpockets.

��More Sihanoukville tomorrow.
As the weather cools and the virus surges, we must remember to wear masks outside the home, wash our
hands carefully and stand well back from everyone. We can do this. I’m counting on you.

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                    <text>Day 219: 18 days to the election
by windoworks

So here we are. After I finish writing this post this morning, Craig and I are going to the grocery store to
buy some food that we don’t need right now but will need in 18 days time. And before you ask, read my
post. Remember that boat we were all trying to keep our balance on? There might be a storm lurking on
the horizon - in 18 days time, if not before. If the winds increase.

“We are prepared. Every polling place will have a direct line to the AG office and to local law
enforcement — who can be on the ground immediately. What I’d say to those listening to the president is,
follow the advice of the president of the United States at your own legal peril."
Michigan AG Dana Nessel
Whoever said that before? Whoever felt the need?
New York Times

�In rural Iowa, Laura Hubka, the Democratic chair of Howard County, recently took out a concealed-carry
gun permit after signs for Democratic candidates in her region were vandalized with bullet holes and she
was personally threatened, she said.
In central Wisconsin, Tom Stepanek’s wife sat him down last month at the kitchen table and warned him
that the president might not accept a peaceful transfer of power if he lost in November. “Are you sure you
want to be doing this?” she asked her husband, who is the chair of the Waushara County Democrats and
had also been threatened. “You’re going to be a target here,” she told him.
In Pennsylvania, Elizabeth Burdick, a Trump supporter who owns a gun store with her husband in redhued Mercer County, said, “Sales have been crazy.”
“People are afraid,” she said. “They’re afraid of what’s going to happen” after the election if Joseph R.

Biden Jr., the Democratic nominee, wins.
With polls showing the president behind Mr. Biden nationally and in key states, Mr. Trump has
descended into rants about perceived enemies, both inside and outside his administration, triggering in his
staunchest supporters such fears for the outcome — possibly a “stolen” election, maybe a coup by the far
left — that he is emboldening them to disrupt the voting process, according to national security experts
and law enforcement officials.
So now you know why we’re carefully stocking our cupboards, just in case.

�In Georgia the machines recording voters stopped working. Investigators found that a cable had be
severed. People waited in long lines for it to be fixed so they could continue to vote. But wait, didn’t this
happen before at a previous election?

�Washington Post

With less than three weeks to go before Nov. 3, roughly 15 million Americans have already voted in the
fall election, reflecting an extraordinary level of participation despite barriers erected by the coronavirus
pandemic — and setting a trajectory that could result in the majority of voters casting ballots before
Election Day for the first time in U.S. history.
In Georgia this week, voters waited as long as 11 hours to cast their ballots on the first day of early voting.
In North Carolina, nearly 1 in 5 of roughly 500,000 who have returned mail ballots so far did not vote in
the last presidential election. In Michigan, more than 1 million people — roughly one-fourth of total
turnout in 2016 — have already voted.
The picture is so stark that election officials around the country are reporting record early turnout, much
of it in person, meaning that more results could be available on election night than previously thought.
So far, much of the early voting appears to be driven by heightened enthusiasm among Democrats. Of the
roughly 3.5 million voters who have cast ballots in six states that provide partisan breakdowns, registered
Democrats outnumber Republicans by roughly 2 to 1, according to a Washington Post analysis of data in
Florida, Iowa, Maine, Kentucky, North Carolina and Pennsylvania.
Additionally, those who have voted include disproportionate numbers of Black voters and women,
according to state data — groups that favor former vice president Joe Biden over President Trump in
recent polls.
Dozens of voters who have shown up on their states’ first day of early voting over the past several weeks
have described a desire to cast their ballots at the first possible moment as a statement against the
president.
And now to the virus. Craig listens to the news on the radio every morning when he’s making breakfast.
This morning one of the headlines was the big increase in cases this week in Kent County. A bigger
increase than in the counties that encompass Detroit. We live in Kent County.

Crooked Media
The U.S. is now experiencing its third surge of coronavirus hospitalizations (though we cunningly avoided
a second wave of infections by simply never making it out of the first wave). The worst spikes are ravaging
the midwest and northern plains—North Dakota hospitals are near capacity, and Wisconsin, where
Trump is scheduled to hold a superspreading rally this weekend, opened a field hospital on Wednesday.
The worsening outbreaks have already had a measurable economic impact: new unemployment claims
rose to 898,000 last week, the highest level since late August.
Stats: yesterday the US had 64,000 new cases in one day, Michigan had 2,030 new cases in one day and
Kent County had 200 new cases in one day. I’ll just let those numbers sink in.

�Here’s a comparison between the 14th century Plague and the 2020 Coronavirus
Washington Post:

FLORENCE — When the new disease first arrived, little was clear beyond the fact that it killed with
terrifying speed. Near-certain death trailed the first symptoms by four days or less. The doctors were
helpless. This city was soon overwhelmed with corpses. Workers in church yards dug pits down to the
water table, layering bodies and dirt, more bodies and dirt.
One writer of the time compared the mass graves to “lasagna.”
Seven centuries later, the plague in Europe stands as an example of a pandemic at its worst — what
happens when so many people die so quickly that some foresee the end of the human race. Few places
were hit harder than Florence, whose population in 1348 was cut by at least a third and possibly far more.
We had figured a trip to Florence might provide some comforting perspective on modern times — a
chance to dwell on a period that was patently deadlier and more fear-inducing than the coronavirus
pandemic. But instead, as we spoke with historians and searched for the plague’s lasting marks, what stood
out most were the similarities, 672 years apart.
Theirs was a mysterious bacteria spreading at a time when people didn’t yet understand disease
transmission; ours, a novel virus infiltrating a world that prides itself on its medical knowledge. But in
both cases, the first instinct was to close borders to try to keep the disease at bay. When that didn’t work,
officials called for strict rules — but only some people paid attention. All the while, there was a
proliferation of conspiracy theories. Many tried to blame the disease on outsiders or minorities — in
medieval Europe, often Jews.
“Much has changed since the 1340s,” author John Kelly wrote in his book on the plague, “but not human
nature.”
Then like now, people were divided over how to face the threat. Some in Florence shut themselves inside
their homes and lived in isolation, according to a detailed account from 14th-century writer and poet
Giovanni Boccaccio. Others ventured out in public, armed with herbs and spices intended to purify the air
— a medieval version of HVAC filters and masks. Still others were cavalier about the disease and went
about their lives socializing, drinking heavily, “satisfying their appetites by any means available,”
Boccaccio wrote.
Nobody was safe, and isolation scarcely worked as a safeguard in a dense city. But the people who
gathered in groups courted greater risk. Marchionne di Coppo Stefani, a wealthy Florentine, wrote of
daring dinner parties in which a host would gather 10 friends, with plans to reconvene again the next
night.
At the next dinner, Stefani said, sometimes “two or three were missing.”
Lippi said that before the coronavirus pandemic, she had studied the plague with the “distance of a
historian.” But she thought about the pits of plague victims in March, when hundreds were dying of
covid-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus, in Italy every day, when crematoriums couldn’t

�keep up, and when military trucks were called into the city of Bergamo to haul away the dead.
“It’s a very close connection,” she said.
So it seems human behavior never changes and we don’t learn from history. We didn’t even learn from
the global flu epidemic in 1918-1920. And an update on a possible vaccine? Not before the end of
November possibly. There goes that carrot that Trump was dangling in front of his voters.
Oliver

��Black finger paint and glitter. What more could a little boy want?
Sihanoukville. Our last visit was to Wat Krom Buddhist Temple.

Pagoda closeup

�More pagodas

�Painting of the faithful.

�Reclining buddha with monks

�Standing monk statues

�And back to the ship after a busy day. On to Thailand tomorrow.
Its the start of another day here in Covid Central. If only we had someone in charge at the top, leading us,
who could issue orders for restrictions, PPE manufacture, unemployment benefits etc. Oh that’s right. We
have Trump. If I keep myself safe, will you keep yourself safe too?

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                    <text>Day 220: Saturday October 17. And 17 days to
the election.
by windoworks

Covid Travel

�Guides

This was an example of one stop voting for New Zealanders. Last night in New Zealand, this happened:

�Washington Post
CHRISTCHURCH, New Zealand — New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern was headed for a
runaway reelection victory on Saturday after widespread praise for leading a successful battle against the
coronavirus pandemic.
Her government’s response to outbreaks of the coronavirus— including some of the strictest lockdowns
and border controls in the world — is attributed to achieving some of the lowest death rates in the world
with just 25 recorded fatalities.
We will not take your support for granted and I promise you we will be a party that governs for every
New Zealander,” Ardern said. “And governing for every New Zealander has never been more important,”
she said, noting “we are living in a polarized world where more and more people are losing the ability to
see each other’s point of view.”
Her embrace of international cooperation and pan-national issues, including climate change, earned her
the nickname “the anti-Trump” among her supporters.

�Did you notice the death toll in New Zealand due to Covid-19? 25. Now I know there’s many mitigating
circumstances such as global location (at the bottom of the world); 3 small islands; socialist government
etc. but the biggest difference is this: the person in charge sat down on video and explained at the onset,
carefully and clearly, what the actions were going to be and why the government was taking them. She
said clearly: we are all in this together and I will always listen to you and explain every next step and why
it is necessary - so you will know and understand. Their first lockdown was hard, very hard, and yet most
New Zealanders cooperated without too much grumbling. Of course it helped that the police did their job
and policed the lockdown and arrested anyone who was blatantly non compliant.
All I have heard here for months (8 months actually) is, oh we couldn’t do that here, Pamela. Its a
transgression of our rights. And that’s true. The right to hold onto an enormous amount of freedom at a
huge cost to yourself, and all the other people near and dear to you. Sometimes the greater good overrides
the personal freedom.
So here we are. Yesterday the new daily case count in the US rose to 70,451, and 909 people died. 909
mothers and fathers, and sons and daughters and aunts and uncles and grandfathers and grandmothers and
babies and toddlers and best friends and choir members and church attendees and party holders and jail
inmates and front line workers. Each one of the 218K who have died since March was important and left
behind a hole where they used to be. But that’s okay, because your personal freedom overrides my desire
to keep living.
And let me just remind you - this is the middle of October. They are predicting the worst months will be
January and February. That’s when numbers will rise exponentially, because the numbers now are
alarming but not as bad as what is to come.
You can tell I’m depressed and fed up and I’m betting that a lot of you are too.
In political news, Trump and Biden held competing virtual town halls. The worst comment made about
Biden’s town hall was a comparison to Fred (Mr) Rogers. On the other hand Washington Post

The town hall shows how deeply in denial Trump remains about coronavirus
Wisconsin reported more than 4,000 new cases of the coronavirus on Thursday, a record high. With
medical facilities running low on intensive-care beds, authorities just opened a field hospital on the
Wisconsin State Fairgrounds. Soon, it will be able to treat more than 500 patients. “We know that this is
going to get worse before it gets better,” the head of the state’s health department, Andrea Palm, warned
during a Thursday afternoon briefing.
A few hours later, during an NBC town hall in Miami, President Trump declared: “What we’ve done has
been amazing, and we have done an amazing job, and it’s rounding the corner.”

�More than 63,500 new cases were reported in the United States on Thursday, the highest number since
July. “Forty-four states and the District of Columbia have higher caseloads than in mid-September,” Joel
Achenbach and Jacqueline Dupree report. “During the past week, at least 20 states have set record sevenday averages for infections, and a dozen have hit record hospitalization rates. … The cumulative number
of cases in the United States since the start of the pandemic is likely to surpass 8 million on Friday.”
Sadly, the president is wrong. The contagion is not in its last throes. Nor is this a regional crisis isolated to
the Midwest. This is a national emergency.
One of the 8 million is the president himself. But Trump’s three-day hospitalization this month has not
seemed to chasten or humble him. He downplayed the severity of his own illness, just as he publicly
downplayed the lethality of the virus in the spring. Questioned by NBC’s Savannah Guthrie, the president
declined to say whether he had taken a coronavirus test on the day of the first presidential debate, as
required by the rules.
Here’s what Chris Christie said this week:

Washington Post
Former New Jersey GOP governor Chris Christie released a statement Thursday saying he was “wrong”
not to wear a mask, both during the Sept. 26 Rose Garden ceremony at which Trump announced Amy
Coney Barrett as his Supreme Court nominee and in multiple debate preparation sessions with the
president. “I believed that when I entered the White House grounds, that I had entered a safe zone, due to
the testing that I and many others underwent every day,” Christie wrote. “I hope that my experience
shows my fellow citizens that you should follow CDC guidelines in public no matter where you are and
wear a mask to protect yourself and others.”
Christie contracted covid-19 and spent seven days isolated in the ICU of a New Jersey hospital. Now he is
back home and convalescing. “It is something to take very seriously,” Christie said in the statement. “The
ramifications are wildly random and potentially deadly. No one should be happy to get the virus and no
one should be cavalier about being infected or infecting others. Every public official, regardless of party or
position, should advocate for every American to wear a mask in public, appropriately socially distance and
to wash your hands frequently every day”.

�By Friday (yesterday) more than 22M Americans had voted, either by mail or in person. I don’t pay
attention to the polls, I just vote and hope for the best. If Biden wins decisively, there could be a light at
the end of the tunnel. If Trump wins, there will be no limit to his self serving behavior. And whoever
wins, there may be civil unrest. My hope is that Biden wins and the insane Trumpers say: Bugger! Oh
okay. And they take their guns and slogans and hate and just go home.
Yesterday our daughter asked us if we had built our panic room yet. She was joking and of course we’re
not building one, but its a thought that brings you up sharp. One of my neighbors is concerned that the
election will result in a new civil war - and this is a calm, reasonable person.

�What exactly is the 2nd Amendment?

A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and
bear Arms, shall not be infringed.
This doesn’t exactly say that everyone can own a gun and it doesn’t refer to any type of automatic
weapons either. Their militia had rifles that had to be reloaded with gunpowder each time they were

�fired, so any advanced weaponry wasn’t included in the amendment. There is much more I could say
about the Constitution and the Amendments but that would be unAmerican.

��Laughing - probably at his mother. And the ever present runny nose.
Bangkok. It took us about 2 hours to drive from the port to the city of Bangkok. Added to that, there were
active student demonstrations occurring against the then Prime Minister and so our day’s itinerary was
hastily reorganized.

Our first stop was the Royal Palace. The Grand Palace (Thai: พระบรมมหาราชวัง, RTGS: Phra Borom Maha

Ratcha Wang is a complex of buildings at the heart of Bangkok, Thailand. The palace has been the official
residence of the Kings of Siam (and later Thailand) since 1782. The king, his court, and his royal
government were based on the grounds of the palace until 1925. King Bhumibol Adulyadej (Rama IX),
resided at the Chitralada Royal Villa and his successor King Vajiralongkorn (Rama X) at the Amphorn
Sathan Residential Hall, both in the Dusit Palace, but the Grand Palace is still used for official events.
Several royal ceremonies and state functions are held within the walls of the palace every year. The palace
is one of the most popular tourist attractions in Thailand. Wikipedia.
In the above photo, people are lighting incense prayer sticks.

�Craig and I in the palace grounds.

�So if you know Craig, you know he is wearing shorts. Shorts were not allowed in the Royal Palace and so
he had to hire some colorful Siamese pants for the duration of our visit. You’ll note I was wearing an ankle
length dress.

�Some golden pagodas of the palace.
Another day is here. 17 days to the election. Numbers of ill people are climbing. Lets keep us all safe.

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                    <text>Day 221. 16 days to the election.
by windoworks
And it's whispered that soon, If we all call the tune
Then the piper will lead us to reason
And a new day will dawn
For those who stand long
And the forests will echo with laughter
So appropriate. Do you recognize it?
I liked this next thing:

The New York Times

Less than three weeks before the election, some Republican lawmakers are beginning to publicly distance
themselves from the president in a rush to re-establish their reputations and political brands. Senator Ted
Cruz warned of a “Republican blood bath of Watergate proportions,” and Senator Lindsey Graham, one of
the president’s most vocal allies, predicted the president could very well lose the White House. They’re

�pictured on Capitol Hill this week. Mr. Trump’s cabinet also fears a November loss: Cabinet departments
are scrambling to push through dozens of new regulations that will affect the lives of millions of people.
Separately, Women’s March protesters took to the streets in Washington on Saturday, galvanized by their
opposition to Mr. Trump and his nomination of Judge Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court. The
march was met with a counterprotest in support of Judge Barrett.
But not just protesting in Washington DC. There were protests all over the country and the overriding
message was: We are women and we are not happy - and we vote!
While serving on the Senate Judiciary Committee that interviewed Amy Whatshername for a position on
SCOTUS, one of the sitting members (and I’m sorry I don’t remember who, but I’m guessing he’s a
Democrat) said to the other committee members: Remember, just because you can, doesn’t mean you
should. I think that describes Republican politics accurately: Just because we can. Now I can’t post this to
this post, but here’s a link you shouldn’t miss: https://t.co/eoxT07d7QB https://t.couU5mRDGsXE
Its Don’t Throw Away Your Shot with Joe Biden and Kamala Harris and the Hamilton cast under this
heading: voting is your opportunity to be in the room where it happens. Its on Twitter, see if you can
follow the links or find it.
Meanwhile in New Zealand:

��New York Times.

Three years ago, Jacinda Ardern was a last-minute choice to lead New Zealand’s Labour Party. On
Saturday, the prime minister cruised to re-election.
After managing the responses to the 2019 Christchurch terrorist attacks and the White Island volcano
eruption, and implementing a “go hard, go early,” approach that has effectively stamped out the pandemic
from her country — all while navigating the birth of her first child — Ms. Ardern has become a global
standard-bearer for a compassionate brand of progressive politics.
“We will govern as we campaigned — positively,” Ms. Ardern said in her acceptance speech, adding: “We
will build back better from the Covid crisis. This is our opportunity.”
Is this a sign? Should we hope? In case you didn’t know (although I think I have mentioned it before) I am
a New Zealander. I was born there and wherever else I live or travel to in the world, I will always be a
New Zealander. And to cap Saturdays election triumph, the All Blacks (don’t look at me, I didn’t name
them) won the second rugby game in the Bledisloe Cup series against Australia’s Wallabies 27 - 7. And
think about this: over 40,000 New Zealand fans were seated in the stands, cheering them on.
Meanwhile over here with Trump who is holding superspreader rallies back to back this weekend and
into next week, he said this:
Crooked Media: • The president refused to condemn the antisemitic, violence-prone cult of QAnon, in a

brilliant pivot from his days-long refusal to condemn white supremacy. Trump instead both amplified and
encouraged the conspiracy theory’s central premise: “What I do hear about it is they are very strongly
against pedophilia. I agree with that. I do agree with that.” Trump also shrugged off his retweet of the
berserk conspiracy theory that the Obama administration had a SEAL team killed, prompting this
pushback from NBC’s Savannah Guthrie: “I don’t get that. You’re the president. You’re not, like,
someone’s crazy uncle.” (Mary Trump begs to differ.)
Who is QAnon, I hear you say?

The Atlantic
The pro-Trump conspiracy theory, which holds in part that global elites are secretly abusing children,
isn’t going away. Here are three things to consider as you think about QAnon’s rise to prominence:
• QAnon could emerge as a new American religion. At its core, the group is a rejection of Enlightenment
values.
• Followers of the group leverage the Instagram aesthetic to spread their message.
• Reddit did manage to squash its presence. But that isn’t necessarily hopeful news. That approach may
have kept QAnon out of one corner of the internet, but QAnon still spread into the real world.

�I think they’re an even crazier bunch than Trumpers, but far more dangerous - and they even have a
candidate on the ticket, for the Senate I think. At their heart though, each of these groups just want to
divide and conquer. Its all about power.
Oliver.

��Crushing the obstacle course at daycare.
Bangkok. Still at the Palace.

Large statues at the palace

�The original royal residence - obviously we weren’t allowed inside.

�More pagoda spires.

�The Royal Palace soldiers.
This morning there are a total of 8.14M cases in the US. On Thursday the US total was just under 8M, so
that shows just how fast the case numbers are rising. In Michigan we have a total of 144,897 cases and in
Kent County our case total stands at 11,448 with over 100 new cases each day. Everyone is telling us to
keep going, wear a mask, wash your hands and stand over 6 feet apart. Not everyone is listening.
Where did that verse at the top come from? Yes you guessed it - Stairway to Heaven by Led Zeppelin.
See you tomorrow.

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                    <text>Day 222
by windoworks
Today’s lyrics -seemed appropriate. Who sang this?
Is this the real life?
Is this just fantasy?
Caught in a landslide,
No escape from reality.

�Crooked Media

The first step towards making future elections fairer is winning this one in a landslide. Take this reminder
from Biden campaign manager Jen O'Malley Dillon that national polls don’t tell the real story, and that
this election is closer than it looks. Nothing is written, everything is on the line, and we’ve got 15 days
left. When you wake up on November 4, how will you have spent them?
More than 28.1M Americans have voted already - by mail, by ballot dropbox and by early walk in voting.
This is an unprecedented number. In the meantime, both parties continue to campaign - Trump in person
and with few safety restrictions and Biden, carefully with strict safety measures. There is just over 2 weeks
to go.
The Detroit News

Muskegon — President Donald Trump tried to tie Democratic rival Joe Biden to the radical left of his
party and told his supporters to "watch those ballots"during a Saturday rally attended by thousands of
people outside an airport hangar in Muskegon.
The Republican president also insisted that Gov. Gretchen Whitmer needs to relax more COVID-19
restrictions, even though the Michigan Supreme Court already invalidated her emergency executive
orders because the 1945 law she relied on was unconstitutional. She has since had her state Department of
Health and Human Services issue new epidemic orders to wear masks and limit the capacities of
businesses.
“You’ve got to get your governor to open up her state." Trump said to cheering. "And get your schools
open. … The schools have to be open.”
Michigan's schools have been given the option of holding in-person classes or holding courses online.
Many larger school districts have chosen to go with online courses, while others have done in-person
classes or a mixture of online or in-person classes.
In response to Trump's statement, the crowd started chanting about the first-term Democratic governor:
"Lock her up, lock her up, lock her up."
At another point, Trump raised concerns about the handling of the upcoming election by Whitmer and
Attorney General Dana Nessel, another Democrat. He said Whitmer and Nessel are in charge of the ballots
in the state.
But Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson, another Democrat, is Michigan's top election official. In May, the
president threatened federal funding for Michigan and erroneously said Benson planned to send absentee
ballots to all voters, when the Detroit Democrat instead sent voters applications for the ballots ahead of
the elections.
"So how the hell do I put my political and our country’s political life in the hands of a pure partisan like
that?" Trump said. "So you’ve got to watch it. Watch those ballots. Watch what’s going."
"Law enforcement is watching," he added.

�The chants in Muskegon also came after federal and state authorities charged 14 men over an alleged plot
to kidnap Whitmer, storm the Michigan Capitol and potentially start a civil war.
Lt. Gov. Garlin Gilchrist II turned the moment into a campaign pitch.
"We have a choice between two types of presidents in this election: @JoeBiden, a deeply caring human,
who called @gretchenwhitmer to check in after the kidnapping plot. Or this guy — a superspreader of
hate and divisiveness…," Gilchrist tweeted.
To Trump, Governor Whitmer responded:

NPR.ORG
Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, who the FBI says was targeted in a foiled kidnapping plot, on Sunday
accused President Trump of fanning the flames of domestic terrorism when he didn't put a stop to chants
of "lock her up!" that erupted the day before during a rally in her home state.
"It's incredibly disturbing that the president of the United States, 10 days after a plot to kidnap, put me on
trial and execute me — 10 days after that was uncovered — the president is at it again and inspiring and
incentivizing and inciting this kind of domestic terrorism," she said on NBC's Meet the Press.
"It's got to end. It is dangerous not just for me and my family but for public servants everywhere who are
doing their jobs and trying to protect their fellow Americans," the Democrat Whitmer said, urging people
on both sides of the aisle to "call this out and bring the heat down."
Of course you know that ‘divide and conquer’ is Trump’s entire toolbox and the rest of sane America has
begun to watch all this as a creepy type of sideshow - a little distraction from everyday Covid life. People
keep asking on FaceBook ‘How do we persuade Trump voters to switch and vote for Biden?’ And the short
answer every time is - you can’t, so don’t bother. All this and the dire forecasts of what might happen once
November 3 is over are becoming too much to contemplate, so we’re all beginning to worry that this
current surge is the second virus wave. So far, the predictions made by the experts (you remember,
the scientists) have been reasonably accurate. It seems this is the onset of the second wave (although some
might argue that we never left the first wave) and although it seems troubling now, the real surge will be
in January and February. So, in case you were wondering what is happening in other parts of the world:

DM news
France reported 29,837 new cases on Sunday, slightly down from the record 32,400 logged the day before.
A strict night-time curfew went into effect in Paris and eight other cities on Saturday evening, running
from 9 p.m.
The United Kingdom remains Europe's worst-affected area in terms of deaths, accounting for almost onefifth of deaths on the continent. The British government continues to struggle to fight the outbreak, with
local officials resisting attempts by ministers to impose restrictions by region.
Italy The virus has hit the country's parliament, with 20 lawmakers in Italy's Chamber of Deputies testing
postive for COVID-19. Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte is due to announce further measures later on

�Sunday.
Slovakia plans to test everyone in the country over the age of 10 for the virus this month – twice. It was
not immediately clear whether testing will be voluntary or mandatory.
Slovenia, meanwhile, has suspended its contact tracing efforts citing the country's swelling caseload. The
country's public health body said the number of cases was so high that it was unable to successfully
conduct tracing of those who test positive.
Germany wants to address the decline of its city centers, an issue that has been exacerbated by the
pandemic. Online shopping has experienced tremendous growth and is now even more of a threat to
traditional retailers due to social distancing rules and ongoing virus fears.
The Netherlands has hit a new record of daily infections.
Ireland will bring in "decisive" nationwide COVID-19 restrictions on Monday but will stop short of
reintroducing the kind of lockdown imposed earlier this year.
After hitting a new daily record on Friday, Switzerland is implementing new strict measures to combat the
spread of the virus.
Israel will reduce some lockdown restrictions from Sunday. Residents will be allowed to travel more than
one kilometer (about 0.6 miles) from their homes. Beaches, national parks, and children's nurseries are
expected to re-open as well.
Saudi Arabia has allowed people within the kingdom to pray at the Al-Haram Mosque in Mecca, one of
the holiest sites for Muslims. The mosque was closed to the public for nearly seven months over
coronavirus concerns.
Australia's second-largest city, Melbourne, has loosened lockdown restrictions as new and active COVID19 continue to decline. From Sunday, residents will no longer face strict limits on the time they can spend
away from their homes for education or recreation.
Previous restrictions stopped them from traveling more than 5 kilometers (3 miles) from home, but the
limit has been extended to 25 kilometers (15 miles).
And here’s a family anecdote. My brother-in-law who lives in the Australian Capitol Territory, was given
a ticket to see his football team play an important game - but in Brisbane, Queensland.

I went up to Brisbane for the Preliminary Final. Canberra Airport was very empty and the security check
was very friendly and relaxed. Everyone on the flight was encouraged to wear masks and did, though
there were a number of people that only covered their mouths.
On arrival at Brisbane we were greeted by a guard of honour of about 30 police and Australian Defense
Force personnel whose only function seemed to be to form a corridor and direct us to the tables where we
presented our Pass and proof of identity (Luckily I got a reminder from Qantas to get a Queensland Border
Declaration Pass which I did online)
The Hotel beside the one I was staying in that we were told was full when we tried to book me there

�originally, was obviously code for it is being used as a quarantine hotel, as there was a large police
presence out the front.
Oliver at daycare:

��Yesterday we drove out to Kirk Park. It was mid morning and raining and there was almost no one else
there. We walked through the woods to the point where they have closed the trail due to unstable dunes.

��And then we walked down to shore - or what’s left of it.

��Walking back to the car, we passed the stairs to the lookout.

��Flashback: Still Bangkok

Crazy busy streets and those overhead power lines bothered me.

�The Bangkok Canal

�The Flower Market on Valentines Day eve

�So after a very long and extremely hot day, our guide rushed us to the flower market and then deserted us.
The path through was very narrow and we were beset by Thai people frantically buying flowers for
Valentines Day. We had another 2 - 2.5 hour drive back to the ship, where we ran to the restaurant just in
time before closing, to get some food. I am glad I saw Bangkok, but I don’t need to see it again.
Here are calming, beautiful fall colors.

��Did you guess right? Of course it was from Bohemian Rhapsody and it was sung by Freddie Mercury.
You know the drill. 15 days.

�</text>
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                    <text>Day 223 – 2 weeks today.
by windoworks
This isn’t really about today but it seems relevant - who is it?

Mother, mother
There's too many of you crying
Brother, brother, brother
There's far too many of you dying
You know we've got to find a way
To bring some lovin' here today
Cases are climbing. Trump is totally out of control and spreading fantastic amounts of dangerous
misinformation. Cases are climbing. And America is angry. One side is angry with the president for
getting us into this never ending mess. The other side is angry because Trump told them they should be
angry. It reminds me of those hypnotism shows - you know the ones where the hypnotist makes a
volunteer bark like a dog. Trump’s the hypnotist and his followers are barking like dogs.
So here’s the statistics- get ready. US new cases yesterday: 64,164. Total cases: 8.26M. New deaths
yesterday: 517. Total deaths: 220K. Michigan new cases yesterday: 4,718. Total cases: 164K. New deaths
yesterday: 41. Total deaths: 7,364. Kent County: new cases yesterday: 314. Total cases: 11,762. New deaths
yesterday: 3. Total deaths: 174.
I don’t have any words left for this. Here’s words from others.

The Hill
• We do have vaccines and therapeutics coming down the pike, but when you actually look at the time
period for that, the next six to 12 weeks are going to be the darkest of the entire pandemic,” Michael
Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of
Minnesota, said.
• Osterholm said the U.S. is suffering from a messaging problem due to the lack of a “lead” voice to guide
Americans through the pandemic.
Boy is that a polite way of saying that Trump is a shithead.

�Crooked Media
• Trump’s latest public display of animosity followed a candid 60 Minutes interview in which Fauci
acknowledged that the White House had blocked him from appearing on “many, many, many shows” to
talk about the pandemic, said he wasn’t at all surprised that Trump had contracted coronavirus, and
described the harassment and death threats his family has endured since Trump and the right-wing media
made him into an enemy. After guiding the country through health crises under six administrations, Fauci
now requires a security detail when he and his wife go for a walk.
Remember the barking dogs? Here’s one of their new leaders.

Washington Post
Scott Atlas, a neuroradiologist whose commentary on Fox News led President Trump to recruit him to the
White House, consolidated his power over the government’s pandemic response.
Atlas shot down attempts to expand testing. He openly feuded with other doctors on the coronavirus task
force and succeeded in largely sidelining them. He advanced fringe theories, such as that social distancing
and mask-wearing were meaningless and would not have changed the course of the virus in several hardhit areas. And he advocated allowing infections to spread naturally among most of the population while
protecting the most vulnerable and those in nursing homes until the United States reaches herd immunity,
which experts say would cause excess deaths, according to three current and former senior administration
officials.
Atlas also cultivated Trump’s affection with his public assertions that the pandemic is nearly over, despite
death and infection counts showing otherwise, and his willingness to tell the public that a vaccine could
be developed before the Nov. 3 election, despite clear indications of a slower timetable. The result has

�been a U.S. response increasingly plagued by distrust, infighting and lethargy, just as experts predict
coronavirus cases could surge this winter and deaths could reach 400,000 by year’s end.

��Sometimes a picture really is worth a thousand words.

�So here we are. The case numbers are climbing. Hospitals are on the verge of being overwhelmed. There’s
no vaccine in sight. Democratic mayors and governors are threatened by domestic terrorists (we passed
right wing extremists about May this year), its 3 minutes to midnight and the Orange Devil (sorry Wendy)
and his minions are dancing with thoughtless abandon. I can’t believe this is my country. I can’t believe
that I spent 7 years and hours of study to become an American citizen for this to be the state of the nation.
Here’s one item of many that I learned:

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their
Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.
— That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from
the consent of the governed, — That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these
ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its
foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to
effect their Safety and Happiness.
Say that out loud and then think about it. Those governing us are supposed to secure those rights for us.
You and me. And all those 220K who died. This morning I watched a clip of Ana Navarro on The View.
Whoopi Goldberg asked her what she had been doing and Ana described how someone who worked in
her house brought the virus in and 16 people became ill, 3 of them in hospital, including her strong fit
husband. She said she had spent the weekend (after her husband came home and was much better),
thinking about all those people who drop a loved one off at the ER and then never see them again. 220K.
Its staggering.

�One of the things I miss the most is Oliver. Although my daughter makes a superhuman effort every day
to FaceTime us, its wonderful but not quite the same. I have not seen any of my family members in the

�flesh since the beginning of September last year - I’ve just realized that was over a year ago. Pause for
tears.

��Who knows?
Once upon a time I heard Carl Hulse, of the New York Times say: you can’t wash the Trump stench off
once its attached to you. Its worse than skunk odor.

Washington Post
Assuming President Trump loses his reelection bid in a few weeks, the soon-to-be alumni of the Trump
administration, who were warned that association with Trump would mar their careers and corrode their
character, are now "hoping the Trump presidency isn’t a disqualifying blemish on their resumes or Google
footprint as the door revolves the other way and they seek to land, once again, in the private sector,” The
Post reports.
They should think more about atoning for the betrayal of their country than trying to escape the
consequences of enabling a liar, racist and wannabe authoritarian. There are practical reasons for
employers outside the right-wing bubble to reject not only those who were the face of the administration
but also those who labored behind the scenes.
Members of this administration probably acquired bad habits (ignoring gross misconduct, lying for their
boss, etc.), practiced a great deal of willful ignorance and rationalized unethical conduct. The
administration, aside from its corruption and moral rot, was also grossly incompetent in its day-to-day
operations.
Wear a mask for me. Wear one for your mother or your father or your siblings or your cousins, aunts,
uncles, grandparents. Wear a mask for your neighbors, your friends, your coworkers, the passengers on
your bus - for any passing stranger. No vaccine, no miracle cure, just physically distancing, hand washing
and masks.

�Oh - it was Marvin Gaye and What’s Goin’ On.

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                    <text>Day 224
by windoworks
Some days ago, some official in Australia said that they thought that Australians would not be allowed to
leave the country until the end of 2021. So. The borders between the US, Canada and Mexico will remain
closed for anther month and the way the case numbers are climbing, I think that will be extended
indefinitely.
Crooked Media

The Trump administration coronavirus strategy now openly consists of nothing but denial, debunked
pseudoscience, and the total abandonment of Americans to unnecessary infections and deaths. We have
just under two weeks to make sure that approach comes to a hard stop in January, and we cannot fuck this
up.
Yesterday I was talking to my counselor who has relocated temporarily with her family to New York
State, somewhere in a cabin in the woods. She told me that mask wearing is automatic in New York State everybody wears one and no one questions it.

�In case your French is shaky, he said: I wish that the virus villain disappears.
Yesterday I read that if Trump loses the election, he will trade his freedom for a quiet handover to Biden,
because his survival is all he cares about. By yesterday evening, 33 million Americans had voted - and it
could be more. Trump continues to hold an average of 3 rallies a day, crisscrossing the country. Melania
has withdrawn from campaigning citing a persistent covid cough. It seems she didn’t get the gold star
treatment regime.

�My counselor also told me that she was speaking to a friend at Spectrum Health who said not only were
they gearing up for a surge in serious cases, they had formed a game plan for civil unrest after the election.
Good to know. Never imagined living in a potentially war torn country was on my bucket list.
Yesterday Ottawa County Health Department put to a post which noted an alarming rise in cases among
adult residents. At the bottom of their post was this. Now I know its long, but it is clear rules to live by:

Public health is concerned about misinformation related to the severity of COVID-19 and the communitywide spread of the virus.
Clarification Needed and Messages to Emphasize:
• COVID-19 is real and very prevalent in Ottawa County. It affects all of us even if you may not feel sick.
You could still be a carrier of the virus and get others sick.
• COVID-19 can result in serious long-term complications, hospitalizations and even death, especially to
those who may already have health complications and the elderly. Scientists are still researching the longterm impacts on health, even in those who were healthy or had mild illness.
• Life is not back to normal yet. We are still in a pandemic. We cannot go about our normal lives as if the
virus does not exist. Extreme caution needs to happen among us all especially when at school, work, places
of worship and anywhere within the community. This includes wearing a mask, limiting gatherings and
avoiding crowds as mandated by the state. Families should have a plan in place if schools or businesses
may have limitations or restrictions.
• Public health decisions and actions are data-driven and not based on the political landscape. Data are
gathered and analyzed by state and local epidemiologists, medical directors and other public health
officials to inform mitigation strategies.
• Social media posts aren't always reliable sources for health information. Seek the facts from scientific
research and the expertise of medical and public health officials.
• It takes all the disease prevention measures working together by all of us to slow the spread of the virus frequently washing hands and disinfecting surfaces, wearing a mask, keeping a physical distance from
others and staying home when you do not feel well.
• Testing more people for COVID-19 does not inflate the numbers or make the situation seem worse.
Testing is a critical tool to identify where the virus is spreading to contain it through isolation and
quarantine and to prevent others from getting infected. Find testing sites in Ottawa County: English I
Spanish.
• Contact tracing is not an infringement on your rights or an act of the government getting involved in
your privacy. It is a critical tool-and time-tested tool-that goes back more than 120 years to identify those
who have been infected and who they may have possibly infected. This public health-community
partnership action is needed to contain the virus, and prevent further disease spread and keep our
community safe. Help by connecting us with those who may have been exposed.
• Asking you to wear a mask is not against the law. It is good infection prevention and practiced routinely
in health care settings. Michigan law imposes on state and local health departments a duty to continually

�and diligently endeavor to prevent disease, prolong life and promote public health. Even with Governor
Whitmer's emergency powers removed, as provided in MCL 333.2253, the Michigan Department of
Health and Human Service director's emergency procedures are not limited to the Public Health Code.
Wearing a mask and physical distancing are needful measures when we don’t have pharmaceutical
interventions (a vaccine or a medicine).
This morning West Michigan Education Department issued a warning that schools may have to close
again and revert to all online teaching. Of course this is not the best way for children to learn and socialize
but it is the only way to keep everyone safe. This could last until at least June/July next year.
October is traditionally the spooky month and Halloween is always a big deal. I know there have been
discussions locally about how to do the candy walk safely. For Craig and I there will be no decorations and
no candy. We will not turn our porch light on. I just couldn’t think how to do it safely, for me or for the
children.

��And this:

The fly has

�voted.

�Oliver watching his meal cook. Yesterday he was reading a book with us when he saw a crocodile on the
page. He immediately did this movement that us adults took a few minutes to recognize - the big snapping
jaws of a crocodile. Wow! Daycare is amazing. Oh and they made spooky cookies this week. Yes - the
under twos.
I had forgotten that we stayed overnight at the dock in Thailand. After the first day spent exploring
Bangkok, the second day featured a visit to the Nong Nooch Village with Tropical Orchid Gardens, a
cultural show and to finish, an Elephant Show.

Thai dancers.

�A Thai Kickboxing demonstration

�A mock battle with elephants. More Nong Nooch tomorrow.
So here we are. The election is just 13 days away. The virus is surging all across the world. All we can do is
keep ourselves safe. And vote.

�See you tomorrow.

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                    <text>Day 225
by windoworks
So here we are. 12 days to the election. Some mornings I don’t know where to start. President Obama gave
a powerful stump speech in Philadelphia - and when the camera pulled back, it showed everyone parked
in their cars (safely) listening and beeping their car horns in appreciation. It was the new definition of a
car rally.
Meanwhile, from a friend living in Florida:

I received the following threat to my private email address, with my name and home address…
“We are in possession of all your information You are currently registered as a Democrat and we know
this because we have gained access into the entire voting infrastructure. You will vote for Trump on
Election Day or we will come after you. Change your party affiliation to Republican to let us know you
received our message and will comply. We will know which candidate you voted for. I would take this
seriously if I were you.” They end with my home address. Anyone have any suggestions where to send
this to and whether the FBI should be informed or local election offices…
Well that seemed scary - and then this came out on the Web:

Crooked Media: A number of voters in Florida and Alaska have received threatening emails warning them
to “Vote Trump or else!” from the nominal email address “info@officialproudboys.com.” The Proud Boys
denied any involvement, and the Department of Homeland Security has concluded that the emails were in
fact an Iranian campaign to create the appearance of a serious security breach, and undermine confidence
in the integrity of the election.
And how about this: • In homegrown chaos, a man in Maryland has been arrested for threatening to

kidnap and kill Joe Biden and Kamala Harris, in the logical conclusion of the right-wing kidnapping craze
that’s sweeping the nation. At polling places around the country, Trump supporters have been gathering
to hold disruptive, confrontational rallies, and harass early voters from just beyond the legal buffer
distance. In Miami, a uniformed police officer entered an early polling location wearing a Trump mask, an
act that the chair of the Miami-Dade Democratic Party correctly deemed to be “city-funded voter
intimidation.” Crooked Media
But its all right because as Helen Reddy famously sang:

I am woman, hear me roar
In numbers too big to ignore

�Trump thought he could appeal to suburban women by scaring them with Biden sending low income
colored families to live on their wealthy, white privileged streets. But the Ladies Who Lunch/Wine have a
very strong idea of what they want - and it isn’t Trump. Here’s the Atlantic headline:

A century after winning suffrage, women voters will choose the next American president.
And just in case you’re wondering - that’s women, women of all religions, sexual preferences, ethnicities,
income groups. Women all across America, women with a lot more sense and compassion. Brave women
and frightened women. Women refusing to be intimidated. Women who break the glass ceiling and
women who keep the home fires burning. Women, all of us, who are often underestimated. Women who
despise Melania and who adore Jill and who are immensely proud of Kamala. Women who keep reaching
for the stars no matter what.
I am woman - hear me roar!
And all the while, the virus is growing, every day. From Crooked Media:
• The U.S. reported more than 60,300 confirmed new coronavirus cases on Tuesday, suggesting we’re in a

phase of exponential case growth, according to former FDA chief Scott Gottlieb. We’re likely two or three
weeks behind Europe, where a second wave of outbreaks has quickly spiraled out of control—to the point
where Ireland has announced a six-week nationwide lockdown, and other countries have imposed new
curfews and mask mandates.
• Because many Americans spent all summer breathing on each other at motorcycle rallies/White House

ragers, we’ve rolled into fall with a much higher case baseline than Europe, and the surge here could be
substantially worse. (U-S-A!) The toll has already been worse than the official numbers suggest: A new
CDC analysis found that the pandemic has caused 300,000 deaths in the U.S., including fatalities that were
an indirect result of the virus. That report came out on Tuesday. On Wednesday, a reporter asked Donald
Trump if there was anything he would have done differently in his handling of the pandemic. His answer:
“Not much.”
• In lieu of the many steps the Trump administration could be taking to slow our national descent into
hell, we’re stuck with this shit: The White House has been considering slashing funding for coronavirus
relief in the Democratic-led cities that Trump has dubbed “anarchist jurisdictions.” Those cities could also
be denied funding for HIV treatment, hearing screenings for newborns, and housing for people in
addiction recovery, among other programs that serve some of the poorest and sickest Americans, all for
the sake of some ineffective campaign propaganda, and post-election revenge.

�Some days the expression Oh My God! Just doesn’t seem to cover it. There are 12 days left. Tonight is the
last presidential debate. The moderator will have the capability to mute both Trump and Biden’s
microphones. That should work well. Am I going to watch it? No. I probably could on YouTube as we
only have wifi streaming, but honestly I’d rather watch a cricket match and I can’t stand cricket. Also, as
of yesterday, more than 40M Americans have already voted. In 2016, 138M Americans voted altogether.
The numbers keep rising at an astonishing rate. It makes me wonder how many will have voted by the
end of Election Day? And in some states, the vote in ballots can be counted up to 9 days after the polls
close. One good thing from this election - far more people are realizing that voting matters.
So Oliver, who yesterday said Hi! When he saw me on FaceTime. Who had learned to walk backwards.
And who said Bye Bye and ‘blew me a kiss’ at the end of our talk.

�Strawberries, all over his face as well as all in his tummy.
After the stage show, we went outside to the arena for the Elephant Show.

�����I am always wary of animal shows but these elephants seemed well fed, well cared for and happy. You
could buy an elephant painted t-shirt if you wanted and at the end of the show the baby elephants came
over to the audience looking for peanuts.
And to finish today’s blog - this is Trump Tower in Chicago where someone posted this:

�12 days to who knows what?

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                    <text>Day 226 -11 days to the election
by windoworks
Its 11 days out from the election. People are voting early in droves.
Washington Post:

More than 47 million Americans have already voted in the 2020 election, surpassing the total number of
early ballots cast in 2016. The record for most early ballots cast was set with 12 days to go until Election
Day. Tens of millions more votes are expected, a sign that highly enthusiastic voters are adapting to an
election taking place during a pandemic.
Also from Washington Post:

The line is a barrier. It stretches along sidewalks, around corners and through parking lots, zigging one
way and zagging back the other. It is a daunting impediment to those who cannot wait. A reminder of this
nation’s long history of voting hurdles. Protection against a deadly virus and a defiant response to those
who have sought to deny the most basic right in a democracy.
The line is an inspiration. The crowd moves with shared purpose. Strangers hand out water bottles. A
woman sways to gospel music. Lawn chairs are pulled out and pizzas ordered. Red, white and blue are the
colors of the day.
The line is a promise. Hours of standing, six feet apart, a few steps at a time, for the chance to make a
choice. One person, one vote. A right first granted to White, male landowners in 1776, then claimed
through political and violent struggle by women, Native, Black and Latino Americans and naturalized
citizens.
All now have a place in the line.
This was a very interesting long article with photos of people lining up and zigzagging through parking
lots, lining up across fields and lining up along many city blocks. I tried to save the photos but they are
copyrighted and were too fuzzy to be of use.
11 days out.
Here’s all I want to share about the final debate between Biden and Trump:

New York Times
I understand you may be tired of hearing about President Trump’s untruths. I’m tired of writing about
them. They hardly qualify as surprising anymore.
But it’s impossible to analyze a debate filled with untruths without first acknowledging them. They
undermine an event meant to highlight differences between candidates. They undermine democracy. To

�ignore them is to miss the biggest story: a president trying to construct his own reality.
How are voters supposed to choose between, say, two different health care plans if one candidate makes
up stories about both plans?
No previous president has behaved this way. Democrats often accused George W. Bush of lying, and
Republicans accused Barack Obama of lying. And both men made questionable statements and statements
that later proved untrue. But when they proved untrue, Bush and Obama stopped making the claims.
Trump just keeps making them.
11 days out.
So I know you’re tired of virus news but here are the latest stats because I think we all need to pay
attention and keep ourselves safe.
US: yesterday saw 75,049 new cases, bringing us to a total of 8.46M. New deaths: 828 (although some
sources say deaths climbed over 1000 yesterday). Total deaths: 223K. Michigan saw 2,245 new cases and a
total of 170K. Deaths: 45 and a total of 7,465 deaths. This death number brings Michigan to one and a half
Ford Theaters capacity. Kent County: 162 new cases for a total of 13,168 and 2 new deaths bringing our
total to 182. The Kent County stats are from a different source today. Meanwhile in Europe:

Washington Post
Britain, France, Germany, Spain and the Czech Republic are all facing calls for national lockdowns after
Ireland implemented one this week. That such economically devastating, often deeply unpopular
measures are being considered is a sign of Europe's desperation in the face of a massive winter outbreak.
And locally, many states are desperately calling for medical workers from other states to come and help
them with the onslaught of new cases. Rural areas where hospitals have closed due to inadequate funding
and staffing have been especially hard hit. And virus fatigue has hit everyone. West Michigan Schools
Superintendents have said that if students fail to wear masks they will close all schools down. Craig and
his classes are trying a new system - first half of class is the lecture to the whole class and the second half
is discussion with the whole class. A more ‘normal’ routine but online.

Washington Post
It should not be a partisan moment and, yet, he has made it that way to deflect from his administration's
inability to get their arms around it,” Whitmer told Chuck Todd. “People are dying. People are out of
work. People are looking for help just putting food on the table. And there is no relief in sight. Our
numbers keep getting worse. And that is the sad, hard truth of this moment. We should have acted as
though we were in a war, but not a war with one another, a war with a virus. And this virus doesn't care
what side of the aisle you vote on. This virus is still a very real threat to all of us.”

�Now I know this sounds strange, but Craig and I are seriously discussing staying indoors during the
Election Day and perhaps for a few days afterwards. In recent days there have been gunshots recorded in
streets near us and during the pandemic there have been 27 murders in Grand Rapids. And this article was
upsetting:

The Atlantic
Hail Trump, hail our people, hail victory!”
So declared the alt-right leader Richard Spencer to the crowd of white nationalists gathered in
Washington, D.C., one week after the 2016 presidential election. His audience responded with cheers and
Nazi salutes. As a video journalist for The Atlantic, I captured exclusive footage of this chilling moment. In
the days after Spencer’s speech, the footage would be viewed nearly 50 million times on Facebook and
YouTube, and broadcast on dozens of television networks. It revealed something crucial: The alt-right
wasn’t some cool, new brand of conservativism, but a fundamentally violent movement, and its
followers—emboldened by President Donald Trump—saw a once-in-a-generation opportunity to bring
racism, anti-Semitism, and conspiracism mainstream.
Four years later, displays of white nationalism have become more brazen, more violent, and, at times,
deadly. Extremist forms of racist rhetoric have migrated from the dark corners of the web to mainstream
American politics and the world’s biggest social-media platforms.
11 days out.
Do we need Oliver now? Yesterday he was very tired and grumpy but when we said goodbye, he waved
and then took his pacifier out and ‘blew’ us kisses sitting on his mothers lap.

��Flashback: so along with the stage show and the elephant show, Nong Nooch boasts a fantastic tropical
garden to wander through.

���I had forgotten that while we were enjoying the gardens, a keeper brought a tiger out and chained it to
this platform. I don’t think the tourist on the left has noticed. Off to Koh Samui tomorrow.
11 days out.

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            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="840845">
                <text>Benjamin, Pamela</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="840846">
                <text>2020-10-23</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="840847">
                <text>Day 226</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="840848">
                <text>Daily journal entry of Pamela Benjamin, spouse of GVSU history professor, Craig Benjamin, during the COVID-19 pandemic. Originally self-published on WordPress.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="840849">
                <text>COVID-19 pandemic, 2019-2020</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="840850">
                <text>Epidemics</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="840851">
                <text>Grand Valley State University</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="840852">
                <text>Grand Rapids (Mich.)</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="840853">
                <text>Personal narratives</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="840854">
                <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="840855">
                <text>Grand Valley State University University Libraries. Special Collections and University Archives.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="840856">
                <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>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="840857">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="840858">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="840859">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
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