Flew into Las Vegas from Oaxaca the end of September to spend a few days with my oldest son, Greg. Always a big treat. My old U.S. Samsung flip phone was on it’s last legs and Greg couldn’t get ahold of me when I landed so he decided I needed an iPhone so he bought me one. I can even text on it like all the kids all over the world. I have a Mexican phone and a Thai phone for local calls but I keep the U.S. number/phone just in case I get a court order to appear for something…or my kids can reach me in an emergency! :)) Otherwise I use video-skype on my computer that I travel with. Come to think of it I also have a WiFi skype phone when I don’t have my computer with me! With my cameras and phones and computer, it’s now called “Flashpacking” Instead of backpacking!
Bob flew in to Las Vegas from Thailand while I was in Vegas…was fun listening to all the banter between the two of them. Then we both flew to Portland where we are ensconsed in our middle son’s (Doug) rental house in Salem where he has been for the last few months trying to earn some money so he can go back to Thailand. His Thai wife, Luk, was here with him for a couple months but her tourist visa ran out so she is back in Thailand waiting for him to return in November.
Otherwise lots of errands like the accountant, bank, doc, pharmacy, going through stuff at the Azalea St. house to give to Doug and other stuff to set aside to take down to Oaxaca. Took my little computer to the Apple store for some more memory and re-install of the OS which I hope clears up some of the goofy stuff it has been doing. Toyota is dead so guess we will just store it at the farm until Doug can arrange to have a new motor put in it. Took the little ’94 Lexus in for a rehab so it ought to serve us well while each of us is in Oregon in the future for visits.
Got my Thai visa at the Thai consolate…very easy and quick…1 year multi-entry…good thing Bob was with me cause we used his retirement visa as a back-up to prove that I was going to Thailand as a tourist to visit family. Cost me $175 but is better than going across the border every 15 days or flying in and out every 30 days. You’d think they would make it easier for tourists to go spend money but they are trying to keep out the backpackers who they don’t like very much and who don’t spend much money.
Bob saw his mom for her 90th Bday…we will go up to Portland again next Sunday for a family get together again with her and the rest of the family.
Josh, after a visit from his wife, Amy, this last week, has informed us that they have agreed to go their separate ways. He seemed quite relieved and was actually pretty chipper. Think the worst of the bad feeling was the shock a couple months ago when she left Hong Kong and told him she didn’t think it would work. We are relieved a decision has been made.
When I get back to the States from Asia next spring I’m going to drive some more stuff down to Oaxaca. Have looked at so many cars I am now thoroughly confused and can’t even remember the first ones I looked at. :(( As of now it looks like the Toyota Rav4. Nice highway driving but hardy enough for Oaxaca potholed mountain roads.
Bob and I both leave on Nov 1…he back to his house south of Pattya in Thailand and me for Hong Kong to see son Josh. Doug will leave for Thailand first or second week of November so he will be there by the time I leave Hong Kong for Thailand. So I will see him and Luk on the island of Koh Samui.
There is a huge couchsurfing get-together in Istanbul in May but I just realized I might not be able to make it. My MEX visa is up June 16 and I think they said I needed to come in 30 days before to renew…or whatever it is they make you do. So if I am going to fly back to Oregon, pick up the car, and get down to Oaxaca by the beginning of May, I’ll have to leave Asia about 2-3 weeks before that….in April sometime. I’m thinking out loud here. March and April is hot in Thailand so maybe I’ll roam around Turkey and Syria before flying back to the States. Unless I’m sick of being on the road by that time.
So we have a few friends to visit still and some phone calling to do and should be good to go by Nov 1.
We have been waking up way too early. Maybe just good prep for the impending time change/jet lag. 😦
“For the past nine months, ever since a certain somebody seized the White House, conservative pundits have dominated the ranks of nonfiction. There have been plenty of golden oldies, such as Bill O’Reilly (“A Bold Fresh Piece of Humanity”), Ann Coulter (“Guilty”), Bernard Goldberg (“A Slobbering Love Affair”) and Joe Scarborough (“The Last Best Hope”). But it’s the relative newcomers — Glenn Beck, Mark Levin, Dick Morris and Michelle Malkin — who’ve put a stranglehold on the top 10.
It would be easy enough, and rather predictable, to lament this state of affairs and to find in it evidence of an anemic literary culture, a dangerously aggrieved minority, or at the very least the diabolical efficacy of bulk sales.
But such liberal cant totally misses the point. Having spent the past two weeks in what I might call a spiritual communion with these authors, I can assure you that these texts are not the psychotic, fact-challenged rants of the mad, but carefully crafted metafictions in which the mundane terrors of cultural dislocation are recast as riveting epics of paranoia.
As such, they fit into a long literary tradition, one that extends from the rhapsodic delusions of “Don Quixote” to the airborne toxic events of Don DeLillo, from the surreal prophecy of Revelations to the post-apocalyptic visions of Cormac McCarthy’s “The Road.” Though written in different eras and wildly divergent styles, these works are all about the incursion of sinister forces on an unsuspecting populace.
Which brings us back to Beck and Co. Rather than accepting the standard narrative — that a disillusioned electorate rejected eight years of conservative mismanagement in favor of a pragmatic (and frankly wonky) Democrat with an inspirational pedigree — they have created a vivid “counternarrative” in which the events of November 2008 represent a coup d’état. Actually, Malkin regards the arrangement as an oligarchy, while Levin goes all in with nascent totalitarianism. Either way, you get the point. The point is danger, urgency, what we in the fiction biz call “stakes.'” It goes on.
I might be out in left field (so to speak) but reading this article, I was imagining how similar the paranoia on the far right is to the paranoia on the far left. Hmmm. Newt Gingrich’s goal was to foment the “cultural equivalent of civil war” (as stated by Robert Reich in On Reason.
I am wondering if what we have in Obama is another Czar Nicholas II…(who introduced the original glastnost and freed the serfs and we know what happened to both Nicholas and President Lincoln.)
In those days in Russia gradual reform was seen by the revolutionaries on the left as leaving people satisfied with the status quo…wanting society to coil like an overtightened spring so that when it popped, it would break. The Bolsheviks got what they wished for after they assassinated Nicholas II and the rest is history.
In the 1960’s, 100 years after Nicholas II, the revolutionaries in the U.S. thought they had their chance but failed. Now we have revolution coming from the right that is spawning violence that makes the the radical leftist Weathermen look like babes. I am reminded what the Russian anarchist Bakunin said about revolutionary change…that revolutionary change must not come from authoritarian methods but libertarian ones.
It feels like now in the U.S. the liberals are caught in no man’s land and change is being co-opted by the far right, most often by voice and pen but increasingly by violence precipitated by a feeling of cultural displacement by a liberal black president and could result in a disastrous 2012 election. Alaska has had a separatist movement going for years which Palin and her husband has been implicated in supporting. Palin anyone?
But don’t make the mistake of thinking this is something only recent. It has been fomenting since the Continental Congress and the Civil War which we are essentially still fighting. Rep Joe Wilson from South Carolina who called Obama a liar (he was wrong) during his speech to Congress is a secessionist and one of only seven Republicans to go against their own party and vote to keep the Dixie Rebel flag flying over the South Carolina capitol. So much for reconstruction.
A farmer, my own father who I loved dearly, used to read really scary far right wing literature to the eternal embarrassment of my mother who wouldn’t let him read the stuff in the house so he had to sit outside. As a small girl I would ride with him in his pick-up truck as he made the rounds…whispering in low tones with his farmer friends who were all members of a national far right-wing farmer group that I can’t remember the name of. I used to hear him say that if the “govment” ever came to his house he would shoot the hell out of them. And then I worked for state government for 10 years.
No one talks about the Ku Klux Klan anymore, but their off-shoots like the White Aryan supremacist survivalists and their militias have been digging shelters and stockpiling arms for years. Kirk Lyons attended Pete Peters’ 1992 gathering at Estes Park, Colorado that is widely credited with giving birth to the militia movement. At the session, he led discussions on how to establish common-law courts throughout the country.
Rep Joe Wilson is director of a North Carolina legal organization called the CAUSE Foundation, (whose initials ostensibly stand for Canada, Australia, United States and Europe — everywhere that white people are established) describes itself as a defender of unpopular causes and the powerless: “I will always support the rights of radicals,’’ Lyons has said. “The more radical they are, the more they need to be supported for their rights. If you take away their rights, we’re all losers.’’ So then we have a yokel who shows up at a Health Reform town hall presided over by Obama with a side-arm in full view strapped to his leg. And the gun lobby buying off the Congress left and right. Who the hell needs an MK47 to hunt?
Actually, Lyons himself is a white separatist who sneers at the current American system. “Democracy in America is a farce and a failure, ’’he once wrote.” It has led us to the brink of a police state.’’ Words that could easily have come from the radical left.
One of these, Tom Metzger, precipitated a hate crime in 1988 when a 28 year old Ethiopian student and father, Mulugheta Serew, who went to the US to attend college, was killed with a baseball bat in Portland, Oregon by three racist skinheads who were members of a group known as East Side White Pride and White Aryan Resistance (WAR). Seraw’s father and son, represented at no cost by the Southern Poverty Law Center and the Anti-Defamation League, successfully filed a civil lawsuit against the killers and Tom Metzger, head of WAR, and his son John, holding them liable for the murder for a total of $12.5 million. Meanwhile Metzger said the skinheads did a “civic duty” by killing Seraw. More in “In God’s Country: The Patriot Movement and the Pacific Northwest” Then we have the bombing in Oklahoma, murder of abortion doctors, the stand-off by the Freemen in Montana etc.etc.
On the other hand, Glenn Greenwald,, in Salon.com on the same day as the NY Times booklist article was written, maintains that trying to destroy the presidency of the opposite party is not unprecedented.
“To see that, just look at what that movement’s leading figures said and did during the Clinton years. In 1994, Jesse Helms, then-Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, claimed that “just about every military man” believes Clinton is unqualified to be Commander-in-Chief and then warned/threatened him not to venture onto military bases in the South: “Mr. Clinton better watch out if he comes down here. He better have a bodyguard.” The Wall St. Journal called for a Special Prosecutor to investigate the possible “murder” of Vince Foster. Clinton was relentlessly accused by leading right-wing voices of being a murderer, a serial rapist, and a drug trafficker. Tens of millions of dollars and barrels of media ink were expended investigating “Whitewater,” a “scandal” which, to this day, virtually nobody can even define. When Clinton tried to kill Osama bin Laden, they accused him of “wagging the dog” — trying to distract the country from the truly important matters at hand (his sex scandal). And, of course, the GOP ultimately impeached him over that sex scandal — in the process issuing a lengthy legal brief with footnotes detailing his sex acts (cigars and sex talk), publicly speculating about (and demanding examinations of) the unique “distinguishing” spots on his penis, and using leading right-wing organs to disseminate innuendo that he had an abandoned, out-of-wedlock child. More intense and constant attacks on a President’s “legitimacy” are difficult to imagine.
This is why I have very mixed feelings about the protests of conservatives such as David Frum or Andrew Sullivan that the conservative movement has been supposedly “hijacked” by extremists and crazies. On the one hand, this is true. But when was it different? Rush Limbaugh didn’t just magically appear in the last twelve months. He — along with people like James Dobson, Pat Robertson, Bill Kristol and Jesse Helms — have been leaders of that party for decades. Republicans spent the 1990s wallowing in Ken Starr’s sex report, “Angry White Male” militias, black U.N. helicopters, Vince Foster’s murder, Clinton’s Mena drug runway, Monica’s semen-stained dress, Hillary’s lesbianism, “wag the dog” theories, and all sorts of efforts to personally humiliate Clinton and destroy the legitimacy of his presidency using the most paranoid, reality-detached, and scurrilous attacks. And the crazed conspiracy-mongers in that movement became even more prominent during the Bush years. Frum himself — now parading around as the Serious Adult conservative — wrote, along with uber-extremist Richard Perle, one of the most deranged and reality-detached books of the last two decades, and before that, celebrated George W. Bush, his former boss, as “The Right Man.'”
But those folks (with the exception of Pat Robertson (who I believe got the ball rolling with the populist Christian fundamentalist sector) were inside-the-beltway hacks. How many people read their books? I argue now that the difference is that the radio and TV pundits are reaching far more people (Rush with 7 million listeners) who are personally affected by the economic downturn, are and have been feeling culturally displaced and have a real stake in the outcome of a threatening Black presidency. (Who really cared about Clinton’s sperm on that blue dress.) We really should be ignoring them which I think is the point Greenwald is trying to make. But I blame the mainstream media for hopping on the ratings train and giving air time and even more influence to these people who are essentially media personalities on an ego and money trip.
What upsets me, is that these far right “pundits” are using hate speech that, wittingly or unwittingly, foments hatred and violence. No different than yelling “fire” in a crowded theater. They should be held responsible for the violence that I believe they have precipitated already. Some have salient ideas that without the inflammatory name-calling (Obama is a Hitler and a communist) could result in rational discourse. But we have radio and TV ratings to tend to. We have to entertain and cater to a basically uninformed and civically illiterate populace.
So the revolutionaries and anarchists don’t have to do anything but sit back and watch society coil like an overtightened spring so that when it pops, it will break.
Heaven forbid we should have a cool rational wonky president trying to reform a system with his hands tied behind his back by lobbyists, corporations and financial institutions with their billions. And to make it worse the Supreme Court is about to rule that a corporation is an individual. They are about to grant corporations the right to spend unlimited amounts of money to attack political candidates right up until an election, which would destroy the very fabric of our voting structure…such as it is.
I have no doubt whatsoever that Obama expected this kind of opposition. We are a very resilient society and ultimately I have to trust that we will find our way through this.
But Obama is becoming Blacker by the day. I just hope he makes it to the end of his term. The alternative gives me shivers.
The LA Times has an opinion piece this morning entitled “What Mexico Really Needs From Obama” written by John M. Ackerman who is a professor at the Institute for Legal Research at the National Autonomous University of Mexico and a columnist for Proceso magazine and La Jornada newspaper.
From my observations of Mexico AND the U.S. he is right on on all accounts. In other words Obama should focus on helping Mexico reform it’s institutions and rule of law instead of supplying weapons to fight the drug cartels. “Only 15% of the funds in the $1.4-billion Merida Initiative signed by President Bush last year,” says Ackerman, “is earmarked for “institution building and rule of law.” If Obama hopes to contribute to long-term solutions, he should dramatically increase this percentage in future aid packages.”
“The Obama administration seems to be unaware of these deeper institutional issues. During her recent trip to Mexico, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton didn’t push Calderon on corruption control, human rights, freedom of the press, institutional reform or political reconciliation. She also went out of her way to cater to conservative constituencies. Her visit to Mexico’s principal basilica implied a nod to Calderon’s efforts to narrow the traditional separation between church and state. Her choice to travel to the city of Monterrey, home to the most powerful members of Mexico’s corporate oligarchy, also sent a clear signal about the priorities of the U.S. government.”
President Obama should not focus exclusively on short-term military goals during his visit to Mexico this week. The violence there, which has taken the lives of 10,000 Mexicans over the last two years, must be stopped. But the helicopters, weapons scanners and listening devices that have been the cornerstone of promised U.S. support will only go so far. The real solution lies in effective institution-building.
It does no good to capture drug kingpins if they don’t go to jail. During 2008, only one out of every 10 suspects arrested in Mexico for drug offenses was convicted, according to official statistics. In Chihuahua, one of the bloodiest states in the country, only 1,621 out of the 5,674 suspects arrested over the last 12 months have even had to stand trial, because of the weakness of the prosecutors’ cases.
RealTruth.org/Corruption_at_the_Top
Almost a decade ago, the U.N. special rapporteur on the independence of judges and lawyers, Param Cumaraswamy, discovered fundamental problems of inequality and inefficiency with Mexico’s system of criminal justice. Today, the grim picture he painted has changed little. Mexico’s jails remain full of petty thieves while serious criminals with money and connections roam the streets.
Last year, Mexico passed a major constitutional reform that would introduce oral trials — to replace trials conducted only through written documents — and transform the role of government prosecutors. The goals are to reduce case backlogs by speeding up trials, to prevent corruption by increasing transparency and to improve criminal investigations by dropping the requirement that prosecutors issue a preliminary judgment on the culpability of suspects. With this latter change, prosecutors would be able to dedicate themselves exclusively to investigating cases and avoid conflicts of interests. But the authorities have dragged their feet on implementation. Congress has delayed passing all of the necessary follow-up legislation, and the commission created by the reform, with representatives from the executive, judiciary and legislative branches, has not convened.
Corruption at the top all the way to the bottom. Nothing will change until the institutions and rule of law are reformed. The problem is they are all on the take and no one wants to give that up.
Best article yet on the financial crisis. Tells it like it all came down…in great detail. I can see it all now.
Rollingstone.com
The Big Takeover
The global economic crisis isn’t about money – it’s about power. How Wall Street insiders are using the bailout to stage a revolution
MATT TAIBBI
Posted Mar 19, 2009 12:49 PM
“As complex as all the finances are, the politics aren’t hard to follow. By creating an urgent crisis that can only be solved by those fluent in a language too complex for ordinary people to understand, the Wall Street crowd has turned the vast majority of Americans into non-participants in their own political future.
There is a reason it used to be a crime in the Confederate states to teach a slave to read: Literacy is power. [Italics mine]
In the age of the CDS and CDO, most of us are financial illiterates. By making an already too-complex economy even more complex, Wall Street has used the crisis to effect a historic, revolutionary change in our political system — transforming a democracy into a two-tiered state, one with plugged-in financial bureaucrats above and clueless customers below.”
Greenwald, in Salon.com, describes how the Obama administration has passed the loyalty test when it allowed Charles W. Freeman Jr. to step away Tuesday from an appointment to chair the National Intelligence Council — which oversees the production of reports that represent the view of the nation’s 16 intelligence agencies. Grrrrrrr!
Says Greenwald: “In the U.S., you can advocate torture, illegal spying, and completely optional though murderous wars and be appointed to the highest positions. But you can’t, apparently, criticize Israeli actions too much or question whether America’s blind support for Israel should be re-examined.”
Freeman later said in an email, referring to what he called “the Israel Lobby:” “The aim of this Lobby is control of the policy process through the exercise of a veto over the appointment of people who dispute the wisdom of its views.” One result of this, he said, is “the inability of the American public to discuss, or the government to consider, any option for US policies in the Middle East opposed by the ruling faction in Israeli politics.”
I’ll bet anything this recipe came from an Irish sheep camp much like my father’s. The recipe’s originator, Jim Lahey of the Sullivan Street Bakery in New York ought to give you a hint.
The easiest bread recipe ever
By Gail Jokerst
February 18, 2009 edition Christian Science Monitor
Every so often a recipe crosses my path that is too good to keep to myself. If it’s straightforward to prepare and success follows, I spread the word to food-loving friends from Boston to California. Which is exactly what happened recently after I tasted a memorable rustic bread at my sister-in-law Ruth’s home in Wisconsin. With just four ingredients – flour, water, salt, and a measly 1/4 teaspoon of yeast – it could certainly be classified as basic. But it was also remarkable for its flavor, textures, and the unusual method used to make it. Moist and chewy inside with a crisp crust that shattered when I bit into it, the bread reminded me of the best Italian and French loaves I’ve bought from big-city bakeries. Only this creation came from my sister-in-law’s oven, her Dutch oven to be precise.
No-Knead bread
3 cups all-purpose flour
1/4 teaspoon granular yeast
1-3/4 teaspoons salt
1-1/2 cups plus 2 tablespoons water
Cornmeal for sprinkling
Combine flour, yeast, and salt in a large bowl. Stir in water till the mixture is blended. The dough will be loose and wet. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and let the dough rise at room temperature 12 to 19 hours– the longer the better.
Flour a work surface and turnout the dough on it. Flour your hands and sprinkle the top of the dough lightly with flour. Turn the dough over on itself a couple times and then let it rest 15 minutes. Form the dough into a ball using as little flour as possible. The dough will seem somewhat fluid but it will form a ball. (It’s tempting to use a lot of flour here but don’t. The dough should stay moist.)
Place the dough seam-side down on a smooth-surfaced towel sprinkled with cornmeal. Lightly dust the top of the dough with flour or cornmeal, then cover it. Let the dough rise till doubled (about 2 or 3 hours).
At least a half hour before the dough has finished rising, place a Dutch oven with a lid in the oven and preheat the oven to 450 degrees F. Remove the pot from the oven and carefully turn over the dough and place it in the Dutch oven. Then shake the pot to distribute the dough evenly. Replace the lid and bake for 30 minutes. Remove the lid and bake another 10 to 15 minutes or until the top is golden and the loaf sounds hollow when tapped.
– Adapted from The New York Times
Cont from Christian Science Monitor:
When Ruth was ready to make this loaf, I kept her company in the kitchen as she measured the ingredients into a bowl. Then I watched as she mixed them all together to form a shaggy mass that did not appear to have a promising future. Unlike most bread doughs, which are kneaded till satiny, this dough was neither smooth to the touch nor kneaded. In fact, it was stickier than any dough either of us had ever handled.
Although tempted to add more flour and yeast, we resisted the urge to obey years of bread-baking instincts and faithfully followed the remaining directions. We let the dough rise overnight as instructed. Then we formed it into a ball, waited while it rose again, and baked it inside a steaming-hot Dutch oven.
When we lifted the lid 30 minutes later, we were amazed to see a gorgeous, golden round loaf sporting professional looking splits across the crown. In another 10 minutes, we pulled the boule from the oven and listened to the crust crackle as it cooled on the counter. Read More
“On Thursday, Sept. 18, 2008, the astonished leadership of the U.S. Congress was told in a private session by the chairman of the Federal Reserve that the American economy was in grave danger of a complete meltdown within a matter of days. “There was literally a pause in that room where the oxygen left,” says Sen. Christopher Dodd (D-Conn.). (more »)