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                    <text>Day 347

by windoworks

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

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

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

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

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

What is herd immunity? When most of a population is immune to an infectious disease, this provides
indirect protection—or herd immunity (also called herd protection)—to those who are not immune to the
disease. For example, if 80% of a population is immune to a virus, four out of every five people who
encounter someone with the disease won’t get sick (and won’t spread the disease any further). In this way,
the spread of infectious diseases is kept under control. Depending how contagious an infection is, usually
50% to 90% of a population needs immunity to achieve herd immunity. Remember: When the
coronavirus that causes COVID-19 first started to spread, virtually nobody was immune.
Measles, mumps, polio, and chickenpox are examples of infectious diseases that were once very common
but are now rare in the U.S. because vaccines helped to establish herd immunity. We sometimes see
outbreaks of vaccine-preventable diseases in communities with lower vaccine coverage because they don’t
have herd protection. (The 2019 measles outbreak at Disneyland is an example.)
Why is getting infected with SARS-CoV-2 to “get it over with” not a good idea? COVID-19 carries a much
higher risk of severe disease and even death. The death rate for COVID-19 is unknown, but current data
suggest it is 10 times higher than for the flu. It’s higher still among vulnerable groups like the elderly and
people with weakened immune systems. Quicker is not always better, as we have seen in previous
epidemics with high mortality rates, such as the 1918 Flu pandemic.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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                    <text>Day 248.

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

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

�And this means you, too.

Now from Washington Post:

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

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

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

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

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

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

��And then coming into downtown along Monroe:

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

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

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                    <text>Day 349

by windoworks

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

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

�A moment of
silence

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

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

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

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

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

Happy
shoppers

�Copenhagen old city is an ornate

�area

�The Royal Copenhagen china

�store

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

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

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

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                    <text>Day 350.

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

�What else? Yes, the virus

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

�Flashback: So we sailed from Copenhagen to Scotland.

Coming up the fiord to
Invergordon.

�North Sea oil
rigs

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

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

�</text>
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                    <text>Day 351

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

�5. Take a fake commute.

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

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

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

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

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

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

Inverness
Castle

�The Old High

�Church

�Shopping while Craig climbed up to the

�castle

The view of Inverness from the
top.

�Pipers piping us out as we left the dock.

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

�</text>
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                    <text>Day 352.

by windoworks

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

�visitors center was delicious.

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

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

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

Stirling
Castle

�View from the
battlements

�The Great

�Hall

Beautiful gardens inside the
walls

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

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

��See you tomorrow.

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

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

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

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

�Edinburgh is a city of different street

�levels

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

�Waiting for the Tattoo to
begin

�Getting the sick person out
safely

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

�Scotland the Brave. I
cried.

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

�drummers
behind.

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

�fireworks and laser
show.

�The big

�finish

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

���See you tomorrow.

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                    <text>Day 354.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

�Me walking in Fairplains Cemetary
Oliver.

�Thats all for today.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

�Walking to morning

�tea

�Through the
trees

Tea shop and
museum

�Beautiful stove for warming the

�room

�A waterfall
stop

Wild country.

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

�Contemplating the lake with Great Uncle Drew.

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

�</text>
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                    <text>Day 356

by windoworks

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

�Ice on the Black River at South
Haven

�Looking south from South
Haven

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

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

�Sticker fun

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

�Iceland has lots of rivers, streams waterfalls

�etc

Wild
country

����Our ship.

See you tomorrow.

�</text>
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                    <text>Day 357

by windoworks

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

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

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

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

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

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

�Sea

Another whale watching
boat

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

��Waiting, waiting,
waiting.

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

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

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                    <text>Day 358

by windoworks

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

�The

�memorial

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

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

�trolls.

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

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

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

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                    <text>Day 359

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

�He climbed up the steep
hills.

��Wildflowers

�Fishermen

�A map of where Isafjordur is
located

�House with tin
roof

�The
museum

�Our ship anchored offshore.

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

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

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

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

�Ahhh, Texas!

Across Europe this is happening:

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

���More Iceland tomorrow.

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                    <text>Day 361. 4 more days until its a whole year.
by windoworks

It’s Sunday morning and its sunny. Soon I will make us a picnic lunch and we will drive north for an
outing. Craig is on his way to Trader Joe’s for the Sunday morning Senior hour. There’s a phrase I never
thought I’d say.
Eastown is adjacent to the city of East Grand Rapids and this weekend the high school switched to online
learning at least until Tuesday. By Friday evening the outbreak had grown to 24 students, some of whom
are on the boys varsity basketball team. Further down the page was this disturbing note, from WoodTV8:

At the start of the week, the state was tracking 123 coronavirus outbreaks tied to K-12 schools, colleges
and universities, 29 of which had been reported in the last seven days.
Now, of course, everyone will scream at Governor Whitmer because she lifted the restrictions on face to
face teaching for K-12. Which makes a change from them all screaming at her to lift restrictions. At some
point, regardless of the restrictions, lifted or not, people have to decide what is safest for them and their
families. I have seen articles reporting parents are saying thanks but no thanks to in person classes. I think
we have to follow the rules but be ready to go back if there’s another outbreak. And the rules are still:

�wear a mask and keep distancing. Tomorrow is our second dose appointment. But even though we’ll be
fully vaccinated we will still be wearing masks and distancing.
And here’s some troubling news - people aren’t getting tested for 2 reasons: 1. They think because the
vaccine is here they don’t need to get tested and 2. They don’t want to get tested because they want to
continue to go to work and not have to isolate. I can’t even express how worrying that is. Remember I told
you that Zoe’s office insists that you get tested if you have a cough or runny nose - and you work from
home. Obviously that won’t work in the service industry, but if you think you might have the virus and
you go to work at a factory or restaurant etc., then you are spreading the virus to your colleagues.

New York Times: A more contagious coronavirus variant first discovered in the U.K. is spreading fast in
the U.S., even as the overall number of cases is leveling off there. One analysis suggests the possibly more
lethal British variant, known as B.1.1.7, accounts for more than 20 percent of new U.S. cases as of this
week. Still, experts note that the low total case counts in states with a high share of B.1.1.7 are an
encouraging sign. Some state officials have continued to lift restrictions steadily, despite worry over
variants and warnings from top federal health officials, like Dr. Anthony Fauci, that doing so could be
premature. On Friday, he said that the country had plateaued at between 60,000 and 70,000 new cases per
day, and he warned that the U.S. could be headed for yet another surge in cases.
More than 30 power plants in Texas that failed in February, also failed in a 2011 winter storm - and then
failed to make the upgrades to prevent another failure. And consumers are receiving enormous power
bills. I couldn’t understand this until Craig explained that the consumers signed a contract to get
extraordinarily cheap electricity during normal climate conditions. However, (and this part I really don’t
understand) during the ice/snow storm, the hourly cost of electricity shot up to $9 an hour. So Griddy, the
power company, bills at cheap wholesale rates - except during a once-in-ten-years storm. Here’s a better
explanation than mine:

Washington Post: Ahead of the storms, the Electric Reliability Council of Texas, which manages about 90
percent of the state’s electric load, underestimated how much power it would need. Because Texas is the
only state in the Lower 48 that operates an independent electric grid, it could not receive help from
neighboring states. Supply could not keep up with demand, leading the Public Utility Commission of
Texas, which regulates Texas utility rates, to raise energy prices in an emergency meeting Monday.On the
same day, the wholesale price of electricity spiked more than 10,000 percent, leaving many Texans with
dizzying bills in the wake of the storms — ranging from four digits to one for more than $17,000.The
state’s unregulated market allows customers to pick their utility providers, with some offering plans that
allow users to pay wholesale prices for power. Variable plans can be attractive to customers in better
weather, when the bill may be lower than fixed-rate ones. Customers can shift their usage to the cheapest

�periods, such as nights. But when the wholesale price increases, the variable plan becomes the worst
option.
Many Texans are paying the bill and then switching to a fixed rate utility company. Meanwhile in
Jackson, Mississippi, clean water is the issue:

CNN: Thousands of Jackson residents have gone weeks without water access, after a winter storm hit the
area in February. The storm, which also affected Texas and Louisiana, caused 80 water breaks throughout
the city, which has been on a boil-water advisory since February 23.
The city is now seeking $47 million from the state to improve water infrastructure, it announced
Thursday. The pipes in the city are over 100 years old, Mayor Chokwe Antar Lumumba said earlier in the
week, and water issues such as this one have become a common occurrence in the city.
The Senate approved the amended stimulus bill (American Rescue Plan) which returns to the House for
the final vote: what was approved?

�Iceland. Next we docked in Reykjavik for 2 days. Our first day we joined the Golden Circle Tour and our
first stop was at the Olfus steam power station which heats all the buildings in the Olfus area.

�Then we went on to Bláskógabyggð This is a tourist attraction with thermal pools, geysers etc. We ate
lunch there first.

���And then we drove to a waterfall

���And then, we visited Thingvellir National Park which was the site of the Alþiing, the annual parliament

of Iceland from 930 CE until the last session held at Þingvellir in 1798 CE. Since 1881, the parliament has
been located within Alþingishúsið in Reykjavik. Þingvellir is now a national park in the municipality of
Bláskógabyggð in southwestern Iceland, about 40 km northeast of Iceland's capital, Reykjavík. Þingvellir is
a site of historical, cultural, and geological significance, and is one of the most popular tourist destinations
in Iceland. The park lies in a rift valley that marks the crest of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge and the boundary
between the North American and Eurasian tectonic plates. To its south lies Þingvallavatn, the largest
natural lake in Iceland. Wikipedia.

�Walking in the rift between the North American and Eurasian tectonic

�plates.

�What a wonderful spot to hold an annual parliament.
Day 2 in Reykjavik tomorrow.
Oliver

��See you tomorrow.

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                    <text>Day 362

by windoworks
This morning I read a report on Harry and Meghan’s interview with Oprah. When we watched the latest
season of The Crown last year, it dealt with the troubled marriage of Charles and Diana. When it aired,
there were cries from the British press saying ‘its a dramatic representation! It wasn’t that bad!’ After
reading the 10 takeaways from the Oprah interview, I realized that the treatment of Meghan was exactly
the same as the way the Family treated Diana - with almost the same consequences, but this time Harry
left with Meghan. One remark stood out for me: an unnamed Royal family member asked Meghan or
Harry, just how dark will the baby’s skin be? This was before Archie was born. Archie doesn’t have the
title of Prince, although all William’s children do.
In this day and age, I have to wonder what the overall purpose of a royal family is. The British Royal
Family seem to cost Britain money in return for some charity work. I don’t feel strongly about this either
way, but when history repeats itself, you have to wonder. I have no idea what Harry and Meghan will do
to support themselves but they strike me as a resourceful couple. When they married I thought: at last,
this is step forward and may lead to more integration. Ah well.
In September 2016, Craig and I lived in Brandon, a small town in north east England, for about a month. It
was about 4 months after the successful campaign and national vote to leave the European Union dubbed
Brexit. You had to wonder what was the motivation to leave a larger governing body that gave a great deal
of commerce to Britain. In the end, I think it was a combination of racial prejudice and a yearning for a
time when Britain owned and ruled half the world. Craig had his hair cut at a one man salon in Brandon
and the owner told Craig that he and his friends had made a terrible mistake. They thought voting for
Brexit would make all the immigrant Poles return to Poland. (I am still astounded by this belief). There is
a large population of Polish people in Brandon and in Britain. The mothers of Brandon would walk their
children to school in their separate groups but the moment the children ran into the school grounds, they
appeared to all play together.
In London, most of the hotel maids, shop workers, restaurant staff etc are all Polish or Russian or Eastern
European, and I think its the same in most of the other big cities. With the final Brexit agreement being in
place at the end of 2020, I think Britain has lost far more than it gained. Many of the financial
establishments have left London and moved to Amsterdam; there is no open border between Britain and
the Continent ; the Republic of Ireland remains in the EU while Northern Ireland remains part of the
United Kingdom. Scotland continues to think about becoming a republic and rejoining the EU; and
meanwhile Wales is leaning towards leaving the United Kingdom and declaring independence. Before
Brexit, Wales relied on the EU for much of its financial stability.

�Its International Women’s Day and here’s a quote from the former President of Ireland and Chair of The
Elders, Mary Robinson:
“One lesson I've learned is that Covid has exacerbated existing inequalities and shown the intersectionality
between them, which in turn has made people feel more empathy and compassion for those worse-off,
which actually, gives me hope," she said.
And here’s something to jog your memory:

��Today Craig and I will get our second dose of the Pfizer vaccine. Then in 2 weeks time, we will be as
protected as possible from the Corona virus. How long will it last? No one seems to know. And here’s
another item to know - Russian hackers have been spreading misinformation online about the Pfizer,
Moderna and Johnson &amp; Johnson vaccines in order to elevate the Russian Sputnik vaccine. So check all
sources online.
From CNN: The US could be in the “eye of the hurricane,” according to one expert, instead of riding a

steady pandemic decline. Cases have stopped dropping and are now plateauing at very high numbers, with
the country averaging roughly 60,000 new cases daily in the past week. Loosened restrictions and mass
spring break events right around the corner could spell serious danger. Plus, the B.1.1.7 variant, first found
in the UK, could fuel more infections over the next six to 14 weeks. It’s also important to note that the
pandemic is still tough in a lot of places. Brazil just recorded its highest number of coronavirus cases in
two months, with 80,000 new infections in a single day.
When I look at the statistics for Michigan and Kent County, Michigan numbers are still slowly rising and
Kent County is between rising and plateauing. Scientists are warning there could be another surge.
In other news from Washington Post:

N.Y. State Senate leader urges Gov. Andrew Cuomo to resign amid allegations of sexual harassment and
other controversies. In a statement Sunday afternoon, State Senate Majority Leader Andrea StewartCousins (D) said there was a need “to govern without daily distraction,” citing allegations of sexual
harassment and a toxic work environment in Cuomo’s office, as well as an ongoing controversy about his
administration’s handling of nursing home death data during the pandemic. In a separate statement, State
Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie said he shares Stewart-Cousins’s sentiment “regarding the Governor’s
ability to continue to lead this state.”
The statements by his fellow Democratic officials signaled a perilous turn for Cuomo, who earlier Sunday
reiterated his refusal to step down.
And in a small country, far, far away:

Washington Post:At least 17 people were killed and hundreds injured Sunday as four massive explosions at
a military camp shook Equatorial Guinea’s largest city, authorities said. The blasts Sunday afternoon in the
port city of Bata sent giant plumes of smoke into the air and destroyed dozens of buildings. Images
broadcast on state-run television showed injured residents fleeing. Some seemed to be carrying bodies of
the dead.
The Health Ministry said it had confirmed 17 dead and 420 injured. A doctor in Bata, a former capital, told
the state-run TVGE television network that at least 20 were dead.
In a statement read by TVGE’s broadcasters, President Teodoro Obiang Nguema called the incident an
“accident” and blamed it on the “negligence” of those tasked with guarding stores of dynamite and

�munitions. He ordered an investigation and asked the international community for help in rebuilding
parts of the city that had been destroyed.
Equatorial Guinea is a small and impoverished country wedged between Gabon and Cameroon on Africa’s
Atlantic coast. It’s divided into two parts: the mainland, home to Bata, and an island called Bioko, about
150 miles to the northwest, where the capital Malabo is located.
Our next day in Reykjavik was a free one for Craig and I, and we made our way into the city center. We
passed this house:

Höfði is a house in Reykjavík, Iceland, best known as the location for the 1986 Reykjavík
Summit meeting of President Ronald Reagan of the United States and General Secretary
Mikhail Gorbachev of the Soviet Union. This meeting was a important step towards ending of
the Cold War. Within the building, the flags of the United States and the Soviet Union are
cross-hung to commemorate the meeting. Wikipedia. Authors note: I think that statue is
Mikhail
Gorbachev.

�The Settlement Exhibition Reykjavík 871±2 is an exhibition on the settlement of Reykjavík,
Iceland, created by the Reykjavik City Museum. The exhibition is based on the archaeological
excavation of the ruin of one of the first houses in Iceland and findings from other excavations
in the city centre.
Wikipedia

�The focus of the exhibition is the remains of a hall from the Settlement Age which was
excavated in 2001. The hall was inhabited from c. 930–1000. North of the hall are two pieces
of turf, remnants of a wall which was clearly built before 871±2, hence the name of the
exhibition. Such precise data dating is possible because a major volcanic eruption from the
Torfajökull area spread tephra across the region and this can be dated via glacial ice in
Greenland. The hall is among the oldest human-made structures so far found in Iceland. Also
on display are objects from the Viking Age found in central Reykjavík and the island of Viðey.
Wikipedia

�This was part of the settlement underneath the
building.

�Me shopping at the Reykjavik artists
market.

�Hallgrímskirkja is a Lutheran (Church of Iceland) parish church in Reykjavík, Iceland. At 74.5

�metres (244 ft) high, it is the largest church in Iceland and among the tallest structures in the
country. The church is named after the Icelandic poet and clergyman Hallgrímur Pétursson
(1614–1674), author of the Passion
Hymns.

�Inside

�Hallgrimskirkja

�Standing at the end of Skólavörðustígur street and in front of Hallgrímskirkja church is one of
the best-known landmarks in Reykjavik, the statue of Leifur Eiríksson. Leifur is probably the
best known hero of Viking age Iceland, the first European to arrive in America: Leifur’s voyage
to America in the year 1000 preceded the Christopher Columbus’ voyage by roughly half a

�millennia.

�Another Icelandic adventure tomorrow.
Oliver:

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                    <text>Day 363

by windoworks
Yesterday we had our second Pfizer vaccine dose. Late last night our arms began to hurt. This morning
mine seems to hurt less than last night. I’ll just wait and see what happens today. Then, in an amazing and
exciting move, the CDC finally published an article explaining what does it mean when you’re fully
vaccinated (2 weeks after your 2nd shot):
Washington Post

The CDC today released clear guidance about what people can and cannot do after we're fully vaccinated,
which means we can finally answer (with confidence) many of the “can I do this?” questions we've
received in recent months.
Here are the new guidelines:
• You can hang out indoors with other fully vaccinated people without wearing a mask.
• You can gather indoors with unvaccinated people from one other household without masks, unless
someone in that household is at increased risk for severe covid-19 illness.
• If you came into contact with someone who has covid-19, you don't need to quarantine or get tested
unless you have symptoms. This one doesn't apply to people who live in a group setting (e.g. correctional
facility, assisted living, etc.)
Fully vaccinated = Two weeks after second Pfizer/Moderna shot and two weeks after the J&amp;J shot.
The CDC also pointed out the things that haven't changed, and you should assume anything that isn't
covered in the list above falls into the “guidance hasn't changed” bucket.
“I am 71 and fully vaccinated, and flying to visit my grandkids in an adjacent state. Can I have dinner
inside with them and/or sit in the kitchen with my daughter and visit without putting them at risk?” —
Laura in Washington
This falls under the second rule — yes, you can visit another household without needing to mask up, or
worry that you are putting them or yourself in covid jeopardy.
If someone in your daughter's home is at high-risk for serious covid illness, you need to revert back to the
old guidelines. For example, does anyone in that home have a heart condition? Obesity? Does anyone
smoke? Four in 10 adults in the U.S. are at high risk because of age or underlying condition.
Does a vaccinated individual still have to follow state guidelines when entering one state from another
state? Do they need to be tested beforehand and/or be quarantined after arriving?” —Meme in
Massachusetts
The blanket advice here is that anything that isn't covered by those three points up top should still adhere
to previous guidance. In this case, state rules still apply (wearing masks in public, what to do when you
arrive, etc.) and the CDC also noted specifically that the old travel guidance still applies to vaccinated
people.

�This leaves me breathless. Its a tantalizing glimpse of almost normal life. Vaccination rates are ramping up.
When we drove into the Kent County Health Dept Coronavirus Vaccination spot yesterday, there was the
same busy comings and goings as last time. Once again, the process worked like clockwork, except this
time, we were allowed to be vaccinated, one after the other, with the same nurse. He put that shot in my
arm so fast I didn’t feel a thing, but Craig struggled to relax his muscles enough. We sat for the requisite 10
minutes and then drove home. While sitting in the waiting area, I had to stop myself from crying with
relief - we made it to the second shot and they had more than enough vaccine doses for all. Its still 2 days
away from a full year of the pandemic and there are 3 vaccines available in the US. Here’s a few words
from Crooked Media about the American Rescue Plan:

With its tens of billions of dollars to fund vaccine distribution and coronavirus testing and tracing, the bill
is also a crushing defeat for coronavirus. The U.S. administered an average of 2.2 million vaccine doses per
day over the last week (up from around 900,000 doses per day when Biden took office), and the resources
that President Biden will sign off on later this week will further accelerate the rollout. Not a bad 54th
week of March! Biden will deliver a primetime address on Thursday to mark the anniversary of the
coronavirus crisis, and (presumably) take a bit of a victory lap.
Just a side note here: a handful of Republican Representatives signed off on this bill in the House and NOT
ONE REPUBLICAN voted for it in the Senate. Not one. Why, I hear you ask. Because apparently,
although the they talk about helping their constituents, they don’t really mean it. I can’t think of a single
reason for not voting to approve this bill, except Socialism - and tell that to the millions of desperate
Americans. But honestly, I think the best example of a Republican hand on the wheel is Texas: where
millions lost power and water; some still have no running water and some residents have power bills far
beyond their means. And their Governor told them: open up and throw away your masks! Will President
Biden have to rescue them again as he did a couple of weeks ago?
Remember those unfortunate people who survived Covid but continue to have health issues? From The
Atlantic:

Known as COVID long-haulers, these patients suffer from symptoms such as severe fatigue and brain fog
long after their initial infection.
1. The condition resembles a variety of known ailments.

It shares similarities with autoimmune disorders, dysautonomia, and more—all poorly
understood conditions that, evidence suggests, can be triggered by the body’s response to
infections.
2. Breathwork looks like a promising part of treatment.

Long-COVID patients appear to breathe “shallowly through their mouths and into their
upper chest.” When Mount Sinai introduced a breathwork program, everyone in the pilot

�program reported improvement in symptoms like shortness of breath and fatigue after a
week.
3. This story might be bigger than COVID-19.

“I wouldn’t be surprised if people are walking about with long Epstein-Barr virus, or long
influenza,” one expert said.
Many researchers spoken with believed that the race to understand long COVID will
advance our understanding of chronic conditions that follow infection, transforming
medicine in the process.
Well that’s interesting. In other news, the Harry &amp; Meghan interview raised an enormous outcry in the
British Press. It appears that the British monarchy have lived in some fear of the press and have tried to
maintain a relationship with specially catered press events. In this day and age, I fail to see any reason for
pandering to the press and every reason to open up, be honest and move forward into this century. From
Washington Post:

The interview represents a new inflection point in the global racial reckoning of the past year. While
uncountable numbers of institutions have been owning up to their own ugly histories with racism, the
British monarchy’s confrontation holds particular significance. That Meghan, an actress-turned-duchess
whose nuptials were a national celebration, wasn’t immune to racism raises questions about how pervasive
those sentiments still are within the royal family. This is a ruling dynasty of a country that traded enslaved
Africans for more than two centuries — and the interview revealed the ways that anti-Black attitudes
might be lingering.
The couple also told Oprah that the British tabloids had published their location in Canada at one point, a
breach that sparked particular concern given that the palace had refused to pay for security for their son,
Archie Mountbatten-Windsor. Shortly after he was born, the couple’s son was compared to a chimp by a
BBC radio host, who later apologized.
That last statement is pretty shocking. I hope the BBC host was fired. To make a remark like that on
national television and have it aired shows just how much negative and destructive power the British
media holds. I am reminded of one of my mother’s favorite sayings: if you can’t say something nice, then
say nothing at all.
Craig and I are watching (I might have mentioned this before) The Great British Menu. The season we are
currently watching celebrates the 70 year anniversary of D Day. The banquet will be in St Paul’s
Cathedral (really? A church?). We watch the weekly area competition and I have enjoyed the extra judges
brought in on Fridays. They are all either veterans or people associated with the Second World War. It
seems to me that Britain is stuck in their past glory days and unable to move forward into the future.
Perhaps their position in the future is unsure to them. I really don’t know - I’m just guessing here, but I

�have to say that when a portion of your population yearns for a return to the ‘good old days’, you have a
problem.
In Australia, really angry women are beginning to speak out loudly about the prevalent male attitude to
women - in business, in government and in general. I think the men in power ignore (or denigrate)
women at their peril. To use one of my favorite expressions: I can hear those chickens wings flapping as
they come home to roost. There is always a price for bad behavior - perhaps not as soon as people would
like, but it always arrives, sooner or later.
As I write this morning, Iceland has recently suffered an earthquake swarm.

Severe Weather Europe
Iceland earthquake swarm from http://www.severe-weather.eu
2 days ago — ONGOING EARTHQUAKE SWARM. The current earthquake swarm began on February
24th. Earthquake swarm in Iceland continues, now with over 20.000 earthquakes detected since the start,
facing an even higher eruption risk in the next few days.
We left Iceland after our time in Reykjavik, and sailed on to Esturoy in the Faroe Islands.

Eysturoy (pronounced ['estroi] meaning 'East Island' is a region and the second-largest of the Faroe Islands
in the North Atlantic, both in size and population. The north, north-east, and south-east coasts of the
island have been identified as an Important Bird Area by BirdLife International because of their
significance as seabird breeding sites, especially for Manx shearwaters (2500 pairs), European storm petrels
(500 pairs) and black guillemots (300 pairs). Wikipedia

�Craig and I signed up to go on a bird spotting cruise. It was freezing cold, of
course.

�In the summer the local sheep farmers bring their small flocks out by boat to graze on the
steep slopes. Sometimes when they return to collect them in the fall, there are less sheep.
Some have fallen off the slope and
drowned.

�High cliffs are a great bird breeding
ground

�We’re going out that

�way?

�Its so
narrow!

�We saw lots and lots of birds but it was very hard to photograph them, especially the ones
flying above the cliffs.
Oliver

�Making gingerbread cookies with raisins

�Its a weirdly warmer day. Go out and enjoy the sunshine while it lasts.

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                    <text>Day 364

by windoworks
Washington Post: In the weeks before the World Health Organization labeled the coronavirus outbreak a
pandemic, a flurry of emails alerted scientists to a cluster of cases in China. Those cases ticked up — and
then exploded. An underestimated pathogen became the viral tsunami that smothered the world.

And here we are. One whole year. Never in my wildest dreams.

The Atlantic: Everything was normal, until it wasn’t. Last March, we scrambled home, used coffee mugs
left on our desks, our worlds shrinking without time for a proper goodbye.

�In the days, weeks, and months that followed, our “new normal” became just that. Now, a year later, our
brains are both grieving and forgetting the lives we once lived.
• We are still grieving our Last Good Days. “For me, it’s the last time I swam in the ocean,” our senior
editor Julie Beck writes. “The way we turn those memories over and over is a symptom of grief.”
• And forgetting what normal was. “I can’t stop noticing all the things I’m forgetting,” Ellen Cushing
writes in her essay on how the late-stage pandemic is messing with our brains. “Sometimes I grasp at a
word or a name.”
Here’s what I thought one year ago today:

March 10: Last night Governor Whitmer declared a State of Emergency with 2 confirmed cases in
Michigan. She said our main objective is to slow the spread of the virus down.
This is what was posted:

Temporary requirement to suspend activities that are not necessary to sustain or protect life. The novel
coronavirus (COVID-19) is a respiratory disease that can result in serious illness or death. It is caused by a
new strain of coronavirus not previously identified in humans and easily spread from person to person.
Older adults and those with chronic health conditions are at particular risk, and there is an increased risk
of rapid spread of COVID-19 among persons in close proximity to one another. There is currently no
approved vaccine or antiviral treatment for this disease.
Months later, Governor Whitmer, Dr Joneigh Khaldun and a senior advisor, sat at a virtual Roundtable
and talked about that Executive Order. Dr J said she had been following the progress of the virus overseas
since December and when the 2 cases presented in Michigan she asked Governor Whitmer to shut the
state down. The senior advisor said he was overwhelmed by the implications of such an order and they
discussed this for hours. In the end, they agreed that it was the only action to take.

March 11: Pandemic Diary. Its time to think about our lives in a completely different way - and in a way
thats what its all about, our lives. Everyone doing their best to not put themselves, their families and their
friends in harms way. Grand Valley State University is closed and Craig considers this means he is home
for the summer.
So here we are at my Day One. I’ll keep you updated.
At this point it was almost just a scary adventure - something to watch on TV or read in a book, but not
real. How could it be real?

March 12: Yesterday Broadway New York closed, Disneyland, Disneyworld and Disney Cruises have all
closed down. Last night Governor Whitmer closed all Michigan schools effective this Monday. The US has
a crucial shortage of test kits. There is so much misinformation out there, starting from the top down, that

�a section of the community are refusing to take this threat seriously. Its hard for me to look at the
desperate situation in Italy where they have effectively closed the whole country to try and combat the
overwhelming numbers of sick people, and then consider the federal response here. I think it comes down
to each organization making its own best choice for its members or employees.
The streets near our house are very quiet as more people are staying home. This is a whole new way of
living for the foreseeable future.
As European countries slammed their borders shut and ordered everyone to remain inside their
apartments or houses, the threat of this virus became more real. In our state, we had a stockpile of 300 test
kits - a laughable number. Dr J had been writing protocols and issuing instructions on hospital readiness
and best practices since December 2019.

March 13: Everything around us is closing, is closed or has very limited customers. In the supermarkets
yesterday the shelves were seriously depleted and the lines for the checkout were 30 minutes at least.
Yesterday the Administration declared a National Emergency but the Senate has yet to consider the bill
offering relief with sick leave etc. Kent County (where we live) had 4 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday
afternoon and although the Governor had restricted gatherings in our state to 250 people or less, Kent
County announced restricting it to 100 people or less.
Experts (and they really ARE experts) are predicting that this may last for 4 months or more. This changes
life as we know it.
I could never have imagined just how changed our lives would be or how long that change would last and
how that would utterly change my concept of ‘normal’.

March 14: Outside my tv room window it is amazingly quiet. Our dog, Miss Murphy Brown, sits at the
window and gazes out but the only thing she sees is the occasional bird. Yesterday Craig moved the
double bird feeder to outside this window so I could watch the birds too. I have taken to waking at 3am. I
wake from a deep sleep and for a moment I think it is like any other middle of the night and then I
remember its not. It takes some time for me to go back to sleep. Last night I wondered if we had enough
cheese or bread or eggs and in the coming days would we be able to shop for them. I read online that
college students on Spring Break have flocked to Miami Florida and are partying like there’s no tomorrow.
In Austin Texas life continues as normal - no one has taken any precautions. In other states you have to
line up for the grocery store and every sporting, entertainment, bar etc are closed.
On March 15 2020, the US recorded 702 new cases; one week later on March 22 2020, 8,554 new cases.
March 9 2021, the US recorded 55,631 new cases. The total number of US cases to March 9 2021 are
29.2M. The recorded deaths in the US to yesterday March 9 is 527,000. At the height of the worst surge
(there have been 3 surges so far) on January 8 2021, 300,619 new cases were recorded.

�By December, Pfizer, the first of the experimental vaccines was ready to be approved. Now, with Pfizer,
Modern and Johnson &amp; Johnson vaccines all approved and the Biden Administration ramping up dispersal
in the US, there is a tiny light at the end of the tunnel. This morning 1 in 10 Americans have been
vaccinated so far - and the vaccinations are ramping up. I cannot express my feelings about having been
vaccinated with the first dose and then 4 weeks later, the booster. We have to wait until Monday March
22 to be classified as fully vaccinated and then that tiny light glows brighter. We are cautiously thinking
of what we might be able to do.
Iceland cruise: After Esturoy we sailed on to the Shetland Islands and Lerwick. Lerwick is a name with

roots in Old Norse and its local descendant, Norn, which was spoken in Shetland until the mid-19th
century. The name "Lerwick" means bay of clay. Evidence of human settlement in the Lerwick area dates
back to the Neolithic (4000–2500 BCE) and the Bronze Age (2500–800 BCE) known from
paleoenvironmental records for human activity and the recovery of artefacts, including a stone axe head
submerged in Bressay Sound. Iron Age (800 BCE – CE 800) settlement is known at the Broch of Clickimin,
which was constructed as early as 400 BCE. Wikipedia.

Sailing into Lerwick

�Craig and I split up and went on different tours.

�We stopped at this bay to watch seals in the water. There’s one at the far end of the bay in

�the shallows - hard to
see.

Jarlshof is the best known prehistoric archaeological site in Shetland, Scotland. It lies in
Sumburgh, Mainland, Shetland and has been described as "one of the most remarkable
archaeological sites ever excavated in the British Isles".It contains remains dating from 2500
BCE up to the 17th century CE. Wikipedia
The remains at Jarlshof represent thousands of years of human occupation, and can be seen as a microcosm
of Shetland history. Other than the Old House of Sumburgh, the site remained largely hidden until a
storm in the late 19th century washed away part of the shore, and revealed evidence of these ancient
buildings. Formal archaeological excavation started in 1925 and Bronze Age relics were soon discovered.
Jarlshof was one of two broch sites which were the first to be excavated using modern scientific
techniques between 1949–52. Although the deposits within the broch had been badly disturbed by earlier
attempts, this work revealed a complex sequence of construction from different periods. Buildings on the
site include the remains of a Bronze Age smithy, an Iron Age broch and roundhouses, a complex of Pictish
wheelhouses, a Viking longhouse, and a mediaeval farmhouse. No further excavations have been
undertaken since the early 1950s and no radiocarbon dating has been attempted. Wikipedia

����Jarlshof covered a huge area and that’s only what they’ve uncovered. To get there, our bus had to stop and
wait while a plane landed on the airport runway which runs across the road. There was one toilet in the
nearby hotel and they only let us in, one at a time. On the way back we stopped a tiny hamlet with two
Shetland wool shops - of course I bought a very expensive hand knitted jacket. Craig’s Shetland adventure
tomorrow.
Oliver

��See you tomorrow.

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                    <text>Day 365. An entire year!
by windoworks

I can’t believe it. A whole year. In the beginning, I wrote this blog as if any day now, the pandemic would
be over. I remember the women’s club I belonged to delaying face to face activities for 3 months,
absolutely certain that the pandemic would be over by then. As each deadline neared, the delay moved
another 3 months and so on.
It is hard to keep things in chronological order. In the summer of 2020, there were restriction easing and
some activities resumed. Craig and I chose to not participate in most things and continued to mask up and
be cautious. During the summer months, Craig became a dedicated gardener. We watched weekly
episodes of Gardeners World, an English gardening show and thus informed, Craig set about establishing a
meadow in our back garden. In between, he painted the entire exterior of the house, changing it from all
white with grey trim to white on the ground floor and red on the second floor and grey trim.
Occasionally friends and neighbors sat over 6 feet apart on our front porch and we chatted - with no
beverages or food, unless the visitor brought it with them. In the middle of the year, the sewer backed up
into our basement and we had a plumber come and clear out all the drains. The sewerage smell persisted
in the basement for days. Soon after that, the hot water heater died, and the same team came back to
install a new one. This necessitated a team climbing on the roof and pushing a protective sleeve down one
of our the chimneys which connected to the steam outlet from the heater. A new drainpipe was laid across
the basement floor as well.
Next, Craig painted the upstairs bathroom, the kitchen and his study, so that all rooms in the house have
been repainted.
I would not allow him to paint the dormers in the roof, so we employed the young men who had
repainted our neighbor’s house and they did a good job. I had also grown very tired of constantly opening
and closing the chain link gate on the driveway to get the car in or out of the garage, so we paid our
neighbor TJ to build us a handsome garden fence along the side of the driveway. Lumber was just
beginning to be scarce and he had to hunt all over Grand Rapids for what he needed. (I love that fence and
gate, so much easier in the winter). Craig landscaped the garden side of the fence and replaced the back
paver path with a wider gravel one.
In September I had my first cataract surgery and by the middle of October, both eyes were done and I was
coming to terms with only having to wear reading glasses. I bought my first pair of regular sunglasses in 40
years.
And gradually we fell into a daily routine. After breakfast I write my blogpost while Craig goes for his
morning walk. Once college recommenced at the end of August, Craig taught 3 days a week online. As fall

�then winter loomed, cases began to rise and Craig became the designated shopper, as advised. We try to
walk together most days. Sometimes we make a longer outing north to Spring Lake or Muskegon State
Park, or south to Saugatuck or South Haven. We always take a picnic lunch which we eat in the car,
usually while gazing at Lake Michigan. In the summer we had driven out very early on Sunday morning
to swim in Lake Michigan a couple of times, but the beach had almost disappeared altogether so we didn’t
tarry.
We celebrated Halloween inside our house with no porch light shining and no decorations - that is to say,
we didn’t celebrate it. Thanksgiving was the next big event and we celebrated by ourselves with a roasted
chicken and homemade pumpkin pie. Our celebration was that we had eluded Covid to that point. We
had been talking about returning to Australia to live for some time over the pandemic. At first we thought
we would stay 4 more years until Craig retired at 70. But then we thought about going sooner. We chose
October, and then brought it forward to August and finally we decided on early July. Craig submitted his
letter of retirement to the university, effective May 4 and the day after Thanksgiving, Craig purchased our
plane tickets online for July 5.
Our next big thing was to find a new home for Miss Murphy Brown. A friend of mine facilitated this in
just over a week, and Murphy went off to live with a family of four and another doodle. As I write this, it
seems as though she has been gone for years. The family were very kind and at first they sent lots of
photos. In the end I wrote (via my friend) and said thank you so much but no more photos - it makes it
too hard.
Next Christmas arrived and on Christmas Eve, for the very last time we drove over to East Grand Rapids
to see the luminaries lining the streets. They had outdone themselves. Hundreds and hundreds of
luminaries and the house decorations were spectacular. I guess when you’re locked down, you make a
really big effort. Christmas Day was quiet with just the two of us but it was nice.
Then, in January, old neighbors expressed an interest in our house. It didn’t work out but we ended up
employing another friend who is a realtor - much sooner than we had thought. Almost immediately we
had an interest in our house from a client in Birmingham on the East side of the state. To cut a long story
short, if it all goes through, we close on April 5 and then we rent the house back from the owners until
the end of June.
But of course, in January, the furnace began to die and so a team of furnace workers came in and took
most of one day and part of the next to get it all installed and working properly and take away our old
furnace. We are nursing the washer, dryer and fridge along till we leave. And I bet you think that’s all.
No. After the inspector came he retrieved the radon monitor and said we needed radon mitigation. So,
tomorrow, a team will be in the basement for 4 hours installing a very complicated system under the
basement floors which will accumulate the radon emissions and vent them safely well above the roofline.

�We had the appraiser from Quicken Loans, and the city inspector who signed off on the furnace
installation. We’re looking at houses online in an area west of Sydney, and we’re looking at new cars. We
have employed an international moving team and we are slowly divesting ourselves of things we don’t
wish to keep. As I write this there are 16.5 weeks until we leave and it seems to be passing by faster.
New Zealand and Australia closed their borders on March 19 2020 to all international travelers and
instigated quarantine rules for returning citizens. Both countries established weekly quotas in line with
available rooms in quarantine facilities. As time passed, the regulations for quarantine were adjusted - two
Covid tests at first, then three and possibly four. In the beginning, quarantine was free but then both
countries realized that the cost to the national budget was prohibitive and a quarantine fee was
established. In Australia (which has devoted a long section to quarantine rules etc) the fee is $3000 AUS
for one adult and an extra $1000 for a partner. The cost in New Zealand is similar but there is talk of
increasing it. We are returning as repatriating citizens. We have no idea whether we will be required to
quarantine.
I never imagined I would experience something like this. Its hard to come to terms with the fact that we
have been doing this routine for an entire year. And it isn’t over. There is a growing light at the end of the
tunnel, but I don’t think life will ever be quite the same again. Will we always be looking over our
shoulders, waiting for the next big thing to arrive? Will we ever reengage with society in a truly free and
easy way? Its just too hard to imagine. Baby’s steps, Pamela, Baby steps.
And Oliver, because you’ll all shout at me otherwise.

��Putting the diaper on the doll. He then patted it.

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                    <text>Day 366.

by windoworks
Well you knew I’d keep writing, didn’t you? People ask me how long I will keep writing this blogpost.
Initially I said until the pandemic is over, but really, who can tell when that will be?

Washington Post
One year ago Thursday, the scale of the coronavirus pandemic in the United States became obvious. The
country only had a few hundred known cases at the time, but that was misleading. With limited testing, it
was spreading widely and quickly without detection. By the end of March, hundreds of people were dying
of covid-19, the disease caused by the virus, each day.
So, one day after one whole year, here are some statistics for yesterday. US: 29.3M recorded cases, 530,000
recorded deaths. Worldwide: 119M recorded cases, 2.63M recorded deaths. Michigan: 665,000 recorded
cases and 16,712 recorded deaths. At some point the numbers become meaningless.
From NPR: More than 500,000 people have died in the U.S. from COVID-19 since the pandemic hit this

country and the world just over a year ago. NPR is remembering some of those who lost their lives by
listening to the music they loved and hearing their stories. We're calling our tribute Songs Of
Remembrance.
Craig had been listening to this series during the day and had told me about it. One Sunday I was sitting in
the car while Craig went into the deserted Honors College office to print something or collect something I forget. Anyway I turned on the radio and heard Merle Haggard singing Silver Wings. A young woman
talked about her father, a crop dusting pilot, and how the two of them were crazy Merle Haggard fans. She
thought they had attended 50 of his concerts together. She is married and lives far from her parents.
When her father was in the ICU and dying from Covid, her mother FaceTimed her and her brother. She
talked to her father, reminding him of their adventures together. While she talked, his heart rate
increased and thats how she knew he could hear her. She ended by saying: you can go now, Dad, its okay.
Five minutes after the call ended, her father died. NPR interspersed Silver Wings throughout the story.

Silver wings shining in the sunlight
Roaring engines headed somewhere in flight
They're taking you away and leaving me lonely
Silver wings slowly fading out of sight
Each of these stories of someone lost is powerful and heartrending. Each story is just one of the more than
500,000 dead.

�Here’s an article from NPR about that first day:

On that day in the United States,March 11, 2020, the pandemic future arrived all at once. The coronavirus
— which had already sparked lockdowns in China and Italy — had become a major concern in the U.S.
The first case in the U.S. was announced on Jan. 21 in Everett, Wash. On Jan. 30, the World Health
Organization declared a global health emergency.
Some schools in the U.S. had already closed, affecting about 850,000 students. And some Americans were
trying to figure out whether to cancel the expensive cruises they had booked. The CDC had issued
guidance on getting tested for the virus, but it was hard to figure out where such tests might be available.
In a Senate committee hearing, Dr Fauci, the director of the U.S. National Institute of Allergy and
Infectious Diseases, explained that the U.S. was seeing more cases from both community spread and
international travel. "I can say we will see more cases, and things will get worse than they are right now,"
Fauci said. "How much worse we'll get will depend on our ability to do two things: to contain the influx of
people who are infected coming from the outside, and the ability to contain and mitigate within our own
country."
The virus had by then infected more than 1,000 people in 40 states. At least 31 people in the U.S. had died
from COVID-19, most of them in Washington state. "Bottom line," Fauci said, "it's going to get worse."
In Geneva, the WHO was holding a briefing. Eight countries, including the U.S., now had more than
1,000 cases. "In the past two weeks, the number of cases of COVID-19 outside China has increased 13-fold,
and the number of affected countries has tripled," said WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom
Ghebreyesus. "WHO has been assessing this outbreak around the clock and we are deeply concerned both
by the alarming levels of spread and severity, and by the alarming levels of inaction," he said."We have
therefore made the assessment that COVID-19 can be characterized as a pandemic."
Shortly after 9 p.m. ET, Tom Hanks posted a photo to Instagram of a surgical glove in a trash can, along
with an announcement: He and his wife, actress Rita Wilson, were sick with the coronavirus.
"We felt a bit tired, like we had colds, and some body aches. Rita had some chills that came and went.
Slight fevers too," he wrote. The two were in Australia for preproduction on a film starring Hanks.
"Well, now. What to do next?" Hanks continued. "The Medical Officials have protocols that must be
followed. We Hanks' will be tested, observed, and isolated for as long as public health and safety requires.
Not much more to it than a one-day-at-a-time approach, no?"
Its strange to look back at that first day. For me, it was a ‘nothing will ever be the same again’ moment and so far, I haven’t been proved wrong. But, as I said yesterday, there is light at the end of the tunnel. It
glimmers enticingly. Yesterday President Biden did this:

�CNN: President Biden signed into law the sweeping $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief package yesterday,
putting to rest months of Congressional rancor and debate. Americans could start seeing those muchawaited $1,400 stimulus payments as early as this weekend. In addition to direct payments, the package’s
key measures are predicted to slash the poverty rate by about a third through enhanced food stamp
benefits, housing and unemployment assistance, and reliable streams of income for struggling families and
workers. The bill passed with no Republican support, and now Congressional Democrats are settling in for
a period of internal clashes as they take on the next big items on Biden’s agenda, from shoring up
infrastructure to tackling the climate crisis and immigration issues.
Did you notice that the bill passed with NO REPUBLICAN SUPPORT? Here’s my message to all those
Republican voters and QAnon supporters:

�You can’t scream about socialism and erosion of rights and then accept a check based on a socialist
principle. Send it back. I’m sure the Biden administration will find a use for the money. but its not really
these checks. Its that this bill recognizes poverty and race inequalities and it is a massive first step. Of
course, in Michigan where the Whitmer administration previously received $5 billion aid from the federal

�government, the Republican majority is holding back $2 billion while they try to force Governor
Whitmer to their will. I don’t have any words about this.
Last night President Biden spoke to the nation. Here is one part of his speech from Washington Post :

Along with the call for people to do what’s needed to meet the goal for normalcy, Biden had some
surprisingly stern words for skeptics of government scientists and their proposed mitigation techniques.
With some states moving away from mask mandates and many Americans — especially Republicans —
still resisting even voluntary masking, Biden labeled it the “easiest thing to do to save lives,” sounding a bit
exasperated while adding “sometimes it divides us.”
“We need to remember the government isn’t some foreign force in a distant capital,” Biden said. “No, it’s
us, all of us, we the people. For you and I, that America thrives when we give our hearts, we turn our
hands to common purpose.”
Flashback: while I went on the Jarlshof tour, Graig went on an expedition. Mousa is a small island in

Shetland, Scotland, uninhabited since the nineteenth century. The island is known for the Broch of
Mousa, an Iron Age round tower, and is designated as a Special Protection Area for storm-petrel breeding
colonies. Wikipedia

����After our tours we met at the quay at Lerwick and wandered around the town.

��“Shetland” is a Scottish crime drama television series, made by ITV Studios for BBC One and
first broadcast on 10 March 2013. The series stars Douglas Henshall as Jimmy Pérez, a
detective inspector working for the Shetland police. This is Jimmy Perez’s house. They were
filming, but it was Sunday and we didn’t see Douglas Henshaw. Oh
well.

��Walking back to the wharf to tender back to our ship.

And just like that, our Iceland cruise was over. We sailed back to Copenhagen, disembarked and caught
the flight out to Philadelphia and then Grand Rapids. As I write, there is concern that the over 20,000
earthquake swarm in Iceland may be leading to a major eruption.
Oliver and Zoe have driven up the coast to a Family Reunion. It is 3 days of Benjamin/Frew madness and
maybe we will be able to attend next year after 19 years absence.

��Yes, indeed, tomorrow. Still writing.

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                    <text>Day 367. Saturday March 13
by windoworks

I have decided to stop counting sleeps left but from Monday onwards I will post a week countdown.

It is the weirdest thing. Craig and I were discussing it this morning. After an entire year of wearing masks
(in stores, in crowded streets, in the house when a tradesperson is inside), washing my hands for 20
seconds or thereabouts, wiping down groceries, packages and mail, talking to neighbors on the phone or at
a safe distance outside - in 9 more days we will be fully vaccinated and gradually our lifestyle will change.
Will I ever shake a person’s hand again? No. Will I hug friends? Probably not for some time. Will I go
inside a clothing store and try on clothes? I don’t think so, not yet.

�And yet, there is a slowly growing sense of freedom. Two days ago Whoopi Goldberg got her first vaccine
shot. She was very scared and had to make herself do it. But now, she said: I feel free! I know exactly what
you mean, Whoopi. But baby steps. Here’s an article from the Wall Street Journal which gives some clear
guidelines:

1.Is it OK for vaccinated people to meet with other vaccinated people?
The CDC guidelines and experts agree that once fully vaccinated—at least two weeks after your second
dose of the Pfizer or Moderna vaccines or the single Johnson &amp; Johnson shot—it’s safe to meet indoors
with other fully vaccinated people without masks or distancing.
Gathering with other vaccinated people is “scientifically very safe,” says Paul E. Sax, clinical director of
the division of infectious diseases at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston. Nothing is 100% effective
but “gathering with other vaccinated people is pretty darn close,” he says.
2.Can a fully vaccinated family meet with unvaccinated people indoors without masks?
The CDC guidelines say yes, they can, as long as the unvaccinated people are from one household and
have no risk factors that put them at risk of developing severe Covid-19.
Gregory Poland, director of the Mayo Vaccine Research Group in Rochester, Minn. says this could be
potentially risky because unvaccinated people may not disclose their medical risks and may not even be
aware they have any. There’s not a lot of data of vaccine efficacy among people who are very elderly, on
chemotherapy, or immunocompromised, he notes.
3. What is the latest on whether vaccinated people can spread the virus to unvaccinated people?
Recent studies found that vaccination reduced asymptomatic infection more than 80% when compared to
unvaccinated individuals and nasal viral loads are low and potentially noninfectious, says Dr. Gandhi. But
other experts say the evidence is preliminary and more conclusive evidence is needed. And new variants
raise additional questions about vaccine effectiveness.
4.What activities should I prioritize after I get vaccinated?
Schedule any routine medical and health appointments that you’ve been putting off, Dr. Wen says. Get
your colonoscopy, mammogram or dental cleaning. Schedule an elective surgery. “Anything like that you
should resume because you are well protected,” says Dr. Wen.
5.What about travel?
The CDC guidelines didn’t update travel recommendations. Once you are vaccinated, traveling is lower
risk, says Dr. Wen, as is staying at a hotel or going to restaurants, so long as you follow safety protocols.
But continue to be cautious about how you meet with people once you arrive at your destination, she says,
particularly if they aren’t vaccinated or live in an area that has high transmission rates.
6. Which activities are lower and higher risk, even after vaccination?
Vaccinated individuals can feel comfortable when doing quiet indoor activities where people are generally

�still required to be masked and distanced, such as visiting an uncrowded museum, says Dr. Sax. Outdoor
activities are even safer.
Higher-risk situations include indoor dining, bars, gyms and houses of worship, where people are singing
and talking. “We don’t want to push the limits of what the vaccines can do before case numbers drop,”
says Dr. Sax. He and his physician wife are both fully vaccinated but won’t dine in restaurants until case
numbers and hospitalizations are significantly lower, he says.
So there you are. What else is happening in the world? In Auckland, New Zealand, the Americas Cup
Challenge is underway. From my oldest son Zar, who lives in Auckland: The boats are astonishing they’re foiling yachts so “fly” on foils while the hull remains out of the water. Yesterday during the races
they were doing 78 kmh (over 48 miles an hour).

The hull never touches the water. Instead the boat races on foils.

From Washington Post: The $1,400 stimulus payments are starting to post to some bank accounts, a day

after Biden signed the $1.9 trillion legislation.

From Crooked Media: It’s not as if everyone will be able to get jabbed on May 1, but there’s good reason to

think that Biden’s goal of vaccinating a huge swath of the country that month is within reach. The U.S.
currently administers over two-million doses per day, and vaccine manufacturers are still on schedule to
scale up production over the next few weeks. If states can keep pace with the increased supply, something
like two-thirds of adults could already be vaccinated by May. Alaska has already opened up shots to all,

�Michigan announced that it will follow suit on April 5, and Wisconsin has committed to the May 1
deadline.
And also: At least a dozen New York Democrats in Congress, including Reps. Jerry Nadler and Alexandria

Ocasio-Cortez, Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, and even Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer have called on
Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D-NY) to resign. On Friday, Cuomo once again refused, and blamed “cancel
culture” for his current pickle.
Remember the attempt to overthrow the government on January 6? Here’s what’s been happening from
Washington Post:

U.S. prosecutors on Friday sketched out the gargantuan scope of the investigation in the Jan. 6 Capitol
breach, asking for courts to delay most cases by at least two months after being pressed by a handful of
defendants and some judges to speed up trials and plea offers.
“The investigation and prosecution of the Capitol Attack will likely be one of the largest in American
history, both in terms of the number of defendants prosecuted and the nature and volume of the
evidence,” the U.S. attorney’s office in D.C. wrote in morning court filings in seeking a delay before
turning over evidence to defendants.

Charges have been brought against 312 people and are expected against at least 100 more, according to
court officials and prosecutors.

�Investigators have executed more than 900 electronic and physical search warrants, and amassed more
than 15,000 hours of law enforcement surveillance and body-camera video, 1,600 electronic devices and
210,000 tips, prosecutors said.
With the volume of cases and evidence only growing, “the unusual complexity of the Capitol Attack
investigation warrants” postponement, Assistant U.S. Attorney Kathryn L. Rakoczy and others wrote in a
filing Friday involving “key figure” Caldwell, who is charged with eight other alleged associates of the
right-wing, anti-government Oath Keepers group. Moving too fast will make prosecution “impossible, or
result in a miscarriage of justice,” Rakoczy said.

More than 100 federal prosecutors are working full or part-time on cases — including 30 detailed from
U.S. attorney offices around the country — with some prosecutors and judges handling seven cases or
more apiece.In a sign of the probe’s vast scope, several unsealed search warrants have requested subject’s
records dating to Nov. 1 — about Election Day — and at least one Feb. 25 warrant sought all of one
individual’s Facebook account information dating to Sept. 1. Magistrates have authorized the FBI to search
such information for all relevant material to be copied and retained while sealing the rest pending further
court order or potential use to authenticate evidence at trial.
By the way, the man who sat in her chair in Nancy Pelosi’s office and put his feet up on the desk has
complained at trial: its not fair! Sadly for him, this is what fairness looks like.

�I am between travelogues at present but there will be another one soon. Meanwhile, Oliver has been
having a wonderful time on his beach vacation.

��Thanks for all the kind words. See you tomorrow.

�</text>
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                    <text>Day 368

by windoworks

Its the first sign of Spring and beyond that, Summer. On Friday, the radon mitigation was done at our
house. It took 4 hours and wasn’t anywhere as noisy as the furnace installation had been.

�The pipe goes down into the clay soil below and then up to the

�outside.

�And goes up next to the drainpipe and the gas is released above the roofline. The fat bit is a
fan that is pumping the gas up and then out.
The man who did this job said our reading of 4 was quite low, he usually works in basements with

readings of 20s, 30s and above. This mitigation system should bring the readings down to 1 or below.

Every Saturday Craig’s early morning walk is to Reeds Lake in East Grand Rapids. Last week there were
people fishing on the thick ice cover, which stretched across the whole lake. Yesterday, the ice was gone
and Reeds Lake was mostly open water.

Then we went to Saugatuck and Oval Beach for a drive and a picnic lunch. Two weeks ago the ice was a
long way out into the lake. Yesterday it was slowly beginning to melt and break up. It was a lovely day,
cold and sunny.

�The brown is hard ice with sand on the top.

Perhaps in April, when we are fully vaccinated (you have to wait for 2 weeks after your second dose to be
fully vaccinated - I don’t know why) we will buy take out lunches for our lakeside picnics. Perhaps.
Suddenly the world is full of possibilities. I’m not sure I’m ready for them.
There are many people who think they will continue to wear a mask, possibly forever. Mostly they are
people with social anxiety or disfiguring scars, or nervous tics etc. and for them, being outside or in stores
with a mask on is a liberating experience. The other day, Craig and I were talking about someone he
interacted with in a store and he said: she was happy, I saw her smiling. I said to him - but wasn’t she
wearing a mask? And he replied: yes, of course, but I could see by her eyes that she was smiling. And there
you have it. After an entire year, we can communicate our feelings in spite of the mask.
In the beginning, Governor Whitmer would speak at the podium with other speakers carefully spaced out
and not masked. Next, she and all the other speakers would be masked until it was their turn to speak, and
then they would put their mask in their pocket and not put it back on until they had finished speaking.
And then there was the memorable day when Governor Whitmer and all the other speakers, kept their
masks on for the whole event. The only person not wearing their mask was the sign language speaker.
Apparently deaf people have to be able to see the signer’s entire face to understand what they are saying.

�Like Rudy Giuliani who did such a strong commendable job for New York after 9/11 and then seemed to
morph into someone we didn’t recognize, except perhaps as a cartoon villain, Governor Andrew Cuomo is
displaying the same change. While we all admired his ‘take no prisoners’ attitude with the virus, Trump
and the careful responsibility for the State of New York, we are all astounded by the revelations of
inappropriate behavior and toxicity in his office. He has denied all charges, but as the accusations increase,
it seems more likely there is some truth in them. And why are we surprised? It is one thing to rise to the
occasion in a catastrophic emergency, it is another to change a lifetimes behavior. I am not judging, I will
wait and see what turns up.
Today I begin a travelogue that I did not go on. Craig went on an Archeological Tour Company tour to
Mongolia as a guide/lecturer in June 2017. He flew in at 2am to Ulaanbaatar from Beijing. Ulaanbaatar is

the capital of Mongolia. It’s in the Tuul River valley, bordering the Bogd Khan Uul National Park.
Originally a nomadic Buddhist center, it became a permanent site in the 18th century. Soviet control in
the 20th century led to a religious purge. Soviet-era buildings, museums within surviving monasteries, and
a vibrant conjunction of traditional and 21st-century lifestyles typify the modern city. ― Google

This is the view from Craig’s hotel room. There is a theme park below the hotel and if you

�look carefully at the center of the hills just above the roofline of the buildings, you can see
the face of Ghinggis Khan.

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                    <text>Day 369. 16 weeks until we leave the US for Australia.
by windoworks

Over the weekend, a friend of mine and her husband, both fully vaccinated; their daughter and her
husband, both fully vaccinated as essential workers and their two sons, both tested negative, had an early
St Patrick’s Day lunch together. What a treat! And what wonderful smiles on all their faces. Can you see
that small, glimmering light at the end of the tunnel?
So now the question becomes, how long does the vaccination last? Here’s some up to date information
from the CDC:

• We know that COVID-19 vaccines are effective at preventing COVID-19 disease, especially severe
illness and death.
- We’re still learning how effective the vaccines are against variants of the virus that causes COVID-19.
Early data show the vaccines may work against some variants but could be less effective against others.
• We know that other prevention steps help stop the spread of COVID-19, and that these steps are still
important, even as vaccines are being distributed.
- We’re still learning how well COVID-19 vaccines keep people from spreading the disease.
- Early data show that the vaccines may help keep people from spreading COVID-19, but we are learning
more as more people get vaccinated.
• We’re still learning how long COVID-19 vaccines can protect people.
• As we know more, CDC will continue to update our recommendations for both vaccinated and
unvaccinated people.

�Well, I know its not much, but it’s something. I know we’re all longing for this to be over - but it isn’t.

CNN: What was nice about the Before Times was that, for most people, social interactions and outings
could be carefree. We miss them, and that's a big reason why we long for the pandemic to end. But when
life stabilizes in the new, new normal, how will we really feel about resuming activities we used to do —
like dining out or shaking hands?
The world isn't fully safe yet, but vaccinated people whose states have reopened to some extent may find
themselves in a strange, nerve-wracking environment. What was familiar no longer seems as familiar. For
close to a year now, we've had messages of not being with others, to be distant … then the idea that, 'Oh,
there's ways that we can be with others and it's OK' — that's new information to reconcile. So, it's

�understandable that it feels different, at least, if not anxiety-provoking or stressful. Anxiety can serve as a
warning about situations we should pay attention to and be careful with. These are the experiences and
places that may cause apprehension as the world reopens, and the tips for handling them.
Eye contact
If you've been social distancing at home, it's likely the only people you have made eye contact with lately
are your housemates, cashiers at stores and coworkers through a screen. Eye contact is the easiest
interaction to start with because it reintroduces us to connecting and showing we care.
Being among crowds
If you recently have watched a movie filmed before the pandemic, chances are any crowd scenes looked a
little peculiar. While we're still far off from large gatherings, you may soon find yourself in increasingly
close quarters in grocery stores or on mass transportation.
How big of a circle do you need to feel safe in a crowd?' Most people will say, 'I need some space in front
of me or on my sides.’
Once you've decided how much space you need, strategically use your elbows or legs or an object — like a
shopping bag or grocery cart — to create it. When you need people to respect your boundaries, kindly tell
them, "I just need a little more space."
Shaking hands and hugging
In the pandemic's early days, whether to shake hands was a topic of debate. Now, people mostly just don't.
Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, strongly
advised breaking with this age-old cultural norm — for good. As people meet more frequently, if you
encounter someone who extends a hand, the germ factor may cause you to instinctually recoil. If in this
moment you feel anxious, waving or bumping elbows instead is OK.
Cosmetic and spa services
Imagine this: The pandemic is finally over, and you would just love to unwind with a massage. There is
only one problem, though: Cosmetic and spa services may not feel so relaxing even on the downhill side of
a pandemic. Asking the business what precautions they have taken — and going somewhere else if they
don't meet your standards — is OK.
Going back to work
Those of us who are still working from home have been able to do our own thing in terms of how and
where we work. We haven't had to worry about encountering people and the risk of Covid-19.
When returning to the office, what may be scariest is the loss of control over your health bubble and
routine. You may no longer be used to ironing your clothes, being visible below your shoulders and
interacting in person. What you can do is accept that the transition will be scary, disruptive and slow.

�Focus on being prepared for what you can control, which includes carrying hand sanitizer and wearing a
mask.
Overall, cut yourself a break. Those of us who have been staying in for most of the pandemic may feel
strange and anxious about readapting to society, but we're in the same boat and can safely help one
another through it.

And we’re still not at the After Times: So before we all run out and yell: Woo hoo! Its over! Here’s this:

CNN: We're not out of the woods yet. Though daily new cases of Covid-19 in the US have dropped since
January, case numbers over the past week still averaged more than 50,000 per day. That puts the nation in

�a vulnerable position to experience another surge, says Dr. Anthony Fauci -- which is precisely what is
happening in Europe. The good news is that people in the US are getting vaccinated relatively quickly.
The bad news is that highly contagious variants are still a threat. Until then, the US shouldn't be easing
restrictions before Covid-19 case numbers fall to at least below 10,000 per day, Fauci has said.
Which leads us to this:

New York Times
• Most of Italy entered a new lockdown today. Cases have risen over the past three weeks, driven by the
spread of the variant first found in Britain and a slow vaccination campaign.
• Faith leaders in the U.S. are coaxing their congregations to get vaccinated.
• Dr. Anthony Fauci called on Donald Trump to urge his supporters to get a vaccine “for your health, the
health of your family and the health of the country.” Many Republicans are hesitant to get the vaccine,
polls show.
• The virus has extinguished a centuries-old tribe in the Amazon. The last member of the Juma people died
from Covid last month.
Over the weekend, a quarantine hotel security worker in Sydney, Australia, tested positive for the virus,
even though he had received his first dose of the vaccine some days before. This is depressing news, as are
the reports written by incoming Australians put into 14 days quarantine in a wildly varying quality of
hotels. I keep telling myself that if I can do one whole year isolated in my house, then I can do 14 days in
whatever hotel room I end up locked in to.
Mongolia. On Day 2 Craig and the group were driven 30 miles out of UlaanBaatar to visit 2 sites. First:

�A huge monument to Chinggis Khan. He is depicted staring out towards Eastern Steppe

�where he came
from.

You can climb up inside the horse and come out on the horses head, and look up at his face
towering above you. Of course Craig did it.
Then to a monument to a great Turkic leader who died around 725. Tonyukuk one of the leaders of the
second Turkic empire..

�Turkic leaders were buried somewhere unknown but a year after their death, monuments

�like this were erected for them. This is Tonyukuk’s
monument.

�The stones are called Balbals and they represent the great warriors Tonyukuk killed in his

�lifetime. There are hundreds of them and they stretch for miles in both directions.
More Mongolia tomorrow.

Oliver on his way home from his very first weekend spent at the seaside.

��Today I’ll leave you with this:

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                    <text>Day 370.

by windoworks
I don’t know about you but daylight saving time drives me crazy. My body clock takes about a week to
acclimatize, and then I forget about it until daylight savings ends. FaceTime calls to Australia have to be
readjusted to a different time difference between our two countries and all daily routine is thrown out the
window. There must have been a reason for it in the first place - and here’s what I found.

New Zealand entomologist George Hudson first proposed modern DST. His shift-work job gave him
leisure time to collect insects and led him to value after-hours daylight. In 1895, he presented a paper to
the Wellington Philosophical Society proposing a two-hour daylight-saving shift, and considerable
interest was expressed in Christchurch; he followed up with an 1898 paper. Port Arthur, Ontario, Canada
was the first city in the world to enact DST, on July 1, 1908. Wikipedia
It began because he wanted more time to collect insects? Grrrr.
In Australia all hell is breaking loose. Women are incensed, enraged, indignant and long ignored. ‘Enough
is enough’ is their rallying cry!

�NPR
Tens of thousands of people marched across Australia on Monday to protest sexual violence, harassment,
and gender inequality in the country after a wave of sexual assault allegations tied to Parliament.
Participants wore all black. Many women held signs that said, "Enough is enough." In Melbourne,
marchers carried a list of names of women killed by men since 2008.
The March4Justice demonstrations, which were scheduled for at least 47 locations across Australia on
Monday, come as the government has been reckoning with allegations of supporting a "boy's club"
misogynist culture following recent claims.
Victoria's Minister for Women Gabrielle Williams said it showed women were no longer willing to be
silent about the way sexual violence affects their lives.
"What we're seeing now is the community sending a message that they're ready to have this conversation
publicly. More than ready, they're eager to have the conversation now," she said.
Virus news: in Europe vaccinations have stalled because of a). An apparently unfounded fear of blood clots
from the AstraZeneca vaccine and b). A decision to haggle for the lowest price per dose. From the New
York Times:

�Europe put a big emphasis on negotiating a low price for vaccine doses. Israeli officials, by contrast, were
willing to pay a premium to receive doses quickly. Israel has paid around $25 per Pfizer dose, and the U.S.
pays about $20 per dose. The E.U. pays from $15 to $19. The discounted price became another reason that
Europe had to wait in line behind other countries. Even in purely economic terms, the trade-off will
probably be a bad one: Each $1 saved per vaccine dose might ultimately add up to $1 billion — a rounding
error in a trading bloc with a nearly $20 trillion annual economic output. A single additional lockdown,
like the one Italy announced this week, could wipe out any savings. “The price difference is
macroeconomically irrelevant,” Münchau writes. The E.U. “tried to lock in a perceived short-term price
advantage at the expense of everything else.”
On the plus side:

The Atlantic: Some (relatively) good news: Scientists are able to monitor mutations like never before. “We
are now living through the first pandemic in human history where scientists can sequence fast and
furiously enough to track a novel virus’s evolution in real time—and to act decisively on that
information,” Sarah Zhang reports.
And from Crooked Media, who always express things so colorfully:

President Biden kicked off the administration’s “Help is Here” campaign on Monday, announcing the twin
goals of administering 100 million vaccine doses and distributing 100 million relief checks over the next
10 days: “Shots in arms and money in pockets.” Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris, First Lady Jill Biden,
and Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff will be traveling across the country this week to promote various
benefits of the American Rescue Plan, and hopefully boost national Doug Emhoff awareness.
For those of you saying who? Who is Doug Emhoff? He is the first ever US Second Gentleman - he is
married to Vice President Kamala Harris.

At the same time, the White House is set to unveil a $1.5 billion “Help is Here But If You Don’t Take It
We Are All Fucked” PR campaign (real name pending), aimed both at persuading vaccine-hesitant
Americans to get the jab, and educating the jab-curious on where and how they can access it. The Biden
administration will recruit celebrities and trusted local officials to target three key groups: Young people,
people of color, and conservatives.
Some people have expressed fears of side effects from the vaccine. There are two things to say about that.
Firstly, who knows? Its true that all the COVID-19 vaccines are experimental. It normally takes years for
drugs to be developed, tested and then approved. The American Food and Drug Administration people
take their job very seriously and the Trump Administration did pour money into vaccine development so
that the usual hurdles of investment and staff salaries were overcome. I imagine the drug companies
worked 24/7 to produce the current approved vaccines. The vaccines were all tested in large blind studies,

�which is the best way to test a drugs efficacy. A blind study (I think I might have told you this before) is
one where half the subjects are given the drug and the other half receive a placebo which is a substance
that has no therapeutic effect, but used as a control in testing new drugs. In a blind study, only the heads
of the project know who received what. Because the entire development and testing were so accelerated,
there was no time to discover and plan for long term effects.
Secondly, for myself, I take 5 prescription drugs, a steroid nasal spray and an asthma inhaler daily. Every
single one of these tablets, nasal spray and inhaler have a list of side effects. The ads on TV for many drugs
say: may cause these side effects or death. And yet, millions of Americans take these drugs because they
offer relief for a life affecting ailment. The Covid-19 vaccines offer strong protection from the virus and
almost all of the variants - and in an ongoing global pandemic, I’ll take my chances.
Here’s a very interesting discovery from CNN: The American Red Cross reports about 1 in 5 blood

donations from unvaccinated people have Covid-19 antibodies, meaning those donors had likely been
infected with the coronavirus at some point. Do they still use the donated blood, I wonder?
We have less than a week to go until we are fully vaccinated. Yesterday I was talking to my neighbor on
her front porch and she opened her front door to fetch something and she said: do you want to come
inside? I was tempted (it was freezing standing outside to chat) but I said: not yet - but soon, maybe.
Michigan is opening up vaccinations to all residents aged 16+ on April 5 - less than 3 weeks away.
Two little lights at the end of the tunnel from Crooked Media:

Coca-Cola and Home Depot have come out in opposition to Republican voter suppression bills in Georgia,
under sustained pressure from civil rights groups. Yo-Yo Ma gave an impromptu concert after receiving
his second vaccine dose on Saturday, as the U.S. continued to shatter daily vaccination records.
In another step towards selling the house, yesterday Craig called the bank and canceled the April
mortgage payment as theoretically the sale will have gone through by then. The bank was helpful and
said- we can reestablish your payments easily if things fall through. Okay.
Flashback: Day 3 in Mongolia.
We flew to Western Mongolia to the town of Moron and for the next 10 days we drove across the Steppe
in 5 Russian 4 wheel drive vehicles. First, on Day 3:

�We visited areas where deer stones had been erected by ancient peoples 5000 years ago.

�Scholars are uncertain but the depiction of flying deer/stags on many of these large upright
stones suggest that these people thought that after death, their souls would be taken up to
the realm of the Sky God, Tengeri, by the flying deer. You can just make out the flying deer
at the top of the
stone.

In some cases there were tombs near to the stones – but in other places no tombs have
been found. This is the remains of a
tomb.

�One deer stone featured the face of a woman, the only stone to have

�this.

While we were there, there was a once in a decade storm: wind, rain and dust. The storm
knocked out power in Western Mongolia for a week, which meant no power for phone
charging, gas pumping, no hot water etc. This was a catastrophe for much of Mongolia, and
our guides and drivers had to improvise.
More Mongolian adventures tomorrow.
And now Oliver.

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