Tuesday, July 10, 2018

Deadly Algae Blooms? -- Alexa, Tell My Children to Shut Up -- SCOTUS Leaning So Far Right It's Almost Horizontal

Is this women in danger of algae exposure?


The Finger Lakes in New York and Utah Lake in Utah, both of which are used for recreational purposes, experienced an unusual number of blooms in the past couple of years, Mr. Stumpf said. An algae bloom in 2014 in Lake Erie in Ohio left 500,000 people without drinking water for three days.
NYT

the next time you turn on your tap,
but sure to check for any crap
that's soupy and green,
because that will mean
your faucet's a great booby trap.


This is new territory for families. For the first time, children who are too young to distinguish fantasy from reality are engaging with devices powered by artificial intelligence. Many see smart speakers as magical, imbue them with human traits and boss them around like a Marine drill sergeant, according to several new studies in the past year.
WSJ


for those who are still in a diaper,
Alexa is like the Pied Piper.
a magical sprite
with no wrong or right,
she's making our babies more hyper!



President Trump’s choice of Judge Brett M. Kavanaugh to replace retiring Supreme Court Justice Anthony M. Kennedy is intended to move what is already one of history’s most conservative courts to even more consistent right-of-center outcomes.
Washington Post

Supreme Courts that lean to the right
are common as bats in the night.
the liberal view
has got very few
adherents that put up a fight. 
The Orange County Register.


reporters with too many friends
play middle against both the ends.
it isn't their job
to please the vast mob
of citizens who hate sharp pens.



Monday, July 9, 2018

Is Trump Opposed to Breast Feeding? -- Wrist Watches are for Fashion, Not Telling Time -- Twitter Removes 70 Million Phony Accounts.




A resolution to encourage breast-feeding was expected to be approved quickly and easily by the hundreds of government delegates who gathered this spring in Geneva for the United Nations-affiliated World Health Assembly . . . Then the United States delegation, embracing the interests of infant formula manufacturers, upended the deliberations . . . they turned to threats, according to diplomats and government officials who took part in the discussions.
NYT


a child who is fed from the breast
considers himself very blessed.
a formula lad
may turn out quite bad.
(perhaps that's why Trump turned out pest.)



With an extensive collection at his disposal, Mr. Lamdin sometimes switches watches multiple times a day, and he doesn’t pause to set each one. It’s more accurate just to check his phone . . . . . .“One does not wear a vintage watch to tell the time. You wear a vintage watch to experience the passage of time,” declared Mr. Lamdin, obliquely referring to an older watch’s potential to accrue value over the years.
WSJ

The Timex I carry with me
keeps time to a certain degree.
But mostly I wear
the thing to compare
with friends who are not broke as me.



SAN FRANCISCO — Twitter’s shares tanked on Monday following a Washington Post article that the company suspended more than 70 million accounts in May and June — a clean-up of the platform that may affect user growth.
Washington Post


my stock options for that damn Twitter
were not gold, though they may glitter.
my broker I shot,
my banker is not
saying much more than a titter.



Big Brother China -- No Swimsuits at the Miss America Pageant? -- Can NATO Survive Trump?



With millions of cameras and billions of lines of code, China is building a high-tech authoritarian future. Beijing is embracing technologies like facial recognition and artificial intelligence to identify and track 1.4 billion people. It wants to assemble a vast and unprecedented national surveillance system, with crucial help from its thriving technology industry.
NYT

In China they know who you are,
though you're not a big movie star.
Technology tops
the way that the cops
can find you from near and afar.


Nearly half of Miss America’s board has quit or been forced to resign in the wake of the organization’s decision to eliminate the swimsuit competition from the contest, and 22 state pageant leaders are seeking to oust Chairwoman Gretchen Carlson over concerns about the pageant’s new direction.
WSJ

Of course I am for women's rights.
I'm glad when they're scaling the heights.
But I cannot fake
distaste for cheesecake
when swimsuits at what is at stake.



European Council President Donald Tusk warned European leaders last month that judging by Trump’s language, allies could no longer assume that NATO would endure.
Washington Post


One day Mr. Putin asked Trump
if NATO he might want to dump.
The Trumpster replied
"It's time they subside;
onto your bandwagon I'll jump!



Sunday, July 8, 2018

Taking the Train to Red Wing: A 1959 Childhood Travelogue

Train station. Red Wing, Minnesota.


In 1959 both Alaska and Hawaii were finally granted statehood, and my mother decided to take my 2 sisters and I on a train ride from our home in Minneapolis down to Red Wing in Goodhue County. The two events have no bearing on each other that I know of, but history has a strange way of getting tangled up in even the most mundane lives -- and I've wondered if the national euphoria felt by the nation at this completion of a great pioneering work (or highway robbery, as some revisionist historians have it) didn't rub off a little on mom, making her a bit more hopeful that the trip she was contemplating would not end in a complete shambles.  She wanted to visit the pottery stores which made the town famous among the artsy-craftsy set, and since she had a firm prejudice against babysitters in her home we children had to come along willy-nilly. I remember she was looking for a large ceramic sauerkraut crock -- not to ferment cabbage in, but to set out on the front porch with cattails poking out of it. 

She planned the trip well in advance, asking her friends Jean Brandt and Rose Ciatti to come along as well. When they both backed out at the last minute, her sunny demeanor became somewhat tarnished, and her inborn Cassandra tendencies began to emerge.

"Oh Jean!" I well remember her crying into the phone on our kitchen wall, "you mean I'll have to keep an eye on the kids all by myself? I was hoping you'd help out to keep them from . . . " here she glanced my way, not in a very friendly manner, and apparently modified her words "from becoming bored." When she hung up she released a gusty sigh. She took another long, considering look at me -- and it was as if I could see right into her mind.

"Is this little brakmaker going to cost me a fortune in broken pottery?" I could hear her think. For I was a known felon when it came to stacking tea cups perilously high, until they fell in a smash like the walls of Jericho. I also liked to throw the good dinner plates up in the air and catch them behind my back as I had seen Fatty Arbuckle do in an old silent film. 

Dad egged her on, the fat toad.

"You mean to take them kids down on the train all that way? I dunno what you're thinking of, Ev. They'll drive you crazy and get lost and fall in the river or somethin'." Thanks for that vote of confidence, father dear.

On the appointed day mom got us all dressed up as if we were going to Mass. Back when Eisenhower ran things, going on a trip meant dressing up -- not throwing on some dirty jeans and grabbing a grubby backpack. My navy blue dress pants were way too short -- I was beginning to sprout up like bindweed and there hadn't been time to buy new ones. My tan Buster Browns were buffed to a fare-thee-well. It was considered 'cute' for boys to wear bright argyle socks back then, and so I had on a pair that screamed at the eyes. My white shirt had about a pound of starch invested in it so the collar felt like sandpaper. I had mislaid my belt somewhere, so was obliged to wear galluses with monkeys on them. The hated red bow tie was wound around my throat, and I took along a green hairy sport coat that apparently was made of dyed twine. If mom had stuck a fez on my head I could have passed for a Munchkin from the Land of Oz.     

We took a taxi to the train station downtown. Steam and diesel fumes swirled about us as we boarded the Great Northern car to stow our baggage overhead and settle into the threadbare velvet seats with bright white doily antimacassars draped over each one. 

With a juddering crash we got underway, sailing past the Mississippi and endless fields of corn and wheat. At that age I was not much of a plein air enthusiast, so quickly grew bored. I wandered up and down the train car aisle, sticking my nose into where it didn't belong, ruffling some old biddies who were jealously guarding their copies of the Ladies Home Journal from prying eyes. 

Then I discovered the water cooler at the end of the car, with the paper cone dispenser. I'd never seen anything like it before. Marveling at the great ingenuity it took to invent such a wonder, I began pulling them out one by one until I had nearly fifty -- at which point some officious conductor intruded on my study and gruffly told me to return to my seat. I took the paper cones with me.

As my sisters and I argued and shrieked over ownership of the paper cones, grabbing each other by the arm and fending off blows like prize fighters, my mother sadly shook her head. Calamity was approaching fast, her body language clearly indicated. She managed to keep her temper, tranquilizing us with a bag of CornNuts. She must have had that bag in her purse since before her honeymoon, since the kernels were nearly impossible to grind and chew -- it was like eating gravel. And let me just here state for the record that Sue Ellen unfairly wound up with all of the paper cones in her sole possession -- out of which she made coolie hats for her damn collection of Barbie dolls. That's when it began to dawn on me that girls get the best of everything. I haven't much changed my mind since.

When we arrived in Red Wing and got off the train, mom huddled us together for an anxious pep talk. We were not to talk to strangers, wander off, and especially NOT TOUCH ANY OF THE PRETTY THINGS IN THE SHOPS.

She said this all in a chipper, upbeat voice -- but her eyes betrayed her. They were already deeply sunken in despair. There was no way our clumsy little hands could be kept from fragile and expensive boneware. She and dad would have to get a second mortgage on the house to pay off the imminent damages.  

I suppose you're preparing yourself now to read all about our slapstick shennanigans in the pottery shops -- and laugh yourself sick at the immense amount of damage done by myself and siblings.

Well, fuhgeddaboudit. We behaved ourselves just fine. I became fascinated by the jolly Toby mugs on display. But I could read the price tags, so didn't bother to ask if I could have one. I had to wait another fifty years until I found one at the Provo Deseret Industries store -- in the exact image of W.C. Fields. I use it to keep pencils in.

 Mom got her sauerkraut crock and we had grilled cheese sandwiches with french fries for lunch -- then got back on the train and came home without further incident.

The neighborhood ladies were waiting for mom as soon as we got back. They were licking their lips to hear about the disaster. What had those fiendish Torkildson children done now? When mom told them the trip had been peaceful and productive and the riot squad had not been called out even once, they were thoroughly disappointed and trooped back to their homes in a squalid, heavy-handed manner. 

I don't think mom ever got over that trip. For once in her harried life everything had gone as planned. For a lapsed Catholic with a deep tint of Calvinism, this was a crime that would have to be paid for in the future. And it's certain that never again did the Torkildson children travel so quietly and behave so well when the family went on vacations or just out to Anoka for Halloween pumpkins. Just a sampling:
I got my index finger stuck in the ashtray that was built into the back of the front seat -- dad had to drive to the nearest auto mechanic so he could take it to pieces to free my digit, and charge dad an unholy amount.
I had captured a bumblebee in a glass jar and surreptitiously brought it along on a drive out to Aunt Ruby's in Edina. It was raining, the windows were up, and I decided to open the jar to see how my new pet was getting along. The rest I will leave to the reader's imagination.
And there was the time my dumb sister Sue Ellen dared me to squirt a long stream of mustard into my mouth and swallow it while we were at a drive-in out in New Brighton. I took the dare, waiting until we were just a block from home to spew it all back up again. Sisters are really dumb, you know that? 

Belly Dancing Phone Talk SCOTUS



“In many cases, we lack the nuance, subtlety and grace of Egyptians,” said Diana Esposito, a Harvard graduate from New York who came to Egypt in 2008 on a Fulbright scholarship and stayed to pursue a career in belly dance.
NYT


a scholar who came to the Nile
discovered that people would smile
at her snaky hips
but not learned quips;
pedants cannot make such a pile.



A 2016 Yale School of Management study found people can assess others’ emotions most accurately when communicating solely via voice—far better than written or computer-spoken words, and even better than video chatting. And if you’re in it for the speed alone, you can probably speak twice as fast as you can type.
WSJ


the voice is a marvelous thing;
it makes our emotions take wing.
but getting a text
can leave me so vexed
I'd rather receive a bee sting.




Advocates on both sides of the political spectrum say judicial views on religion are certain to figure into a fierce confirmation fight, no matter whom the president chooses.
Washington Post


I think it exceedingly odd
that candidates must talk of God
when church and the state
must never conflate,
lest one or the other maraud.




An Email to my Minneapolis Freind Jim

This is me nowadays


Hey there, Jim;

It’s always good to hear from you.
Sounds like your daughter-in-law is making the beau coup bucks with her writing. Congrats. Were that I could pick up a few piastres with my scribblings. The only money I make writing is ghosting articles for my son Adam to place in Forbes and Huffington Post. It galls me to see my work under another person’s name, but the money is too good to give up. It’s the funds I use to take my kids out to eat once in a while. I read someplace, I don’t remember where, that eating out creates some of the pleasantest and longest lasting family memories. I think it was a NYT article -- or maybe even an Ensign piece. My memory is sadly decayed these days.

I won’t even begin on my health nowadays. Rashes. Dispepsia. Lack of focus. Insomnia. Shortness of breath. Ad infinitum. The best plan is just to roll with the punches, I guess. Thank goodness my Medicare kicks in this coming September.

I will mention that lately I have an inexplicable craving for tuna fish. In fact, I’m having it for breakfast this morning. I drained a can, put it in a bowl, and added all sorts of exotic things to it -- lemongrass, shrimp paste, lime juice, Tabasco sauce, and dill pickle relish. I’m letting it marinate a bit and then will have it with buttered toast. My mouth is watering as I write about it!

I have received many kind words from journalists from my NYT profile -- and one sour note. Dan Kelly, who for many years edited my poetry for the St Paul Pioneer Press, and who I truly can call a mentor, was very put out that he was not mentioned in the NYT article. He has even complained about it on his blog! There’s nothing I can do about it. I mentioned him many times during my interview with the NYT reporter, but she chose not to include his name in the final posting.

You and Joanne seem to like to roam around like vagabonds, visiting family and friends. I, on the other hand, have not been any further than Salt Lake City for the past four years. And that was a stretch for me. I tire and bore easily when on the road; give me my recliner and a good book or Netflix movie at home and I’m as happy as a clam. The downside is that I’m certainly spending too much time by myself -- although I almost never feel lonely or abandoned or anything like it, I have noticed I’m talking to myself more often. I go out early every morning to the Provo Rec Center for an aquatic aerobics class, where I have made some new friends that I’ve had over for some Thai dinners. But otherwise I’m holed up in my snug little apartment, avoiding the heat and sun, writing and reading to my heart’s content. I’m not a shut-in by any means, but I’m certainly turning into a hermit!

Well, I can smell that marinated tuna fish just waiting for me. Better go and demolish it before it stinks up the apartment too much.

Yer pal,  Tim

Friday, July 6, 2018

Cremation



But alkaline hydrolysis has an unsettling component that cremation lacks: The body’s tissues and organs dissolve into a syrupy liquid that is treated like wastewater; in effect, most of the body is liquified and goes down the drain.
Deseret News

There was an old man lived in Orem
who said "When I'm dead, in a jorum
just pour my remains,
but not down the drains;
that's totally lacking decorum!"



Owls and Satyrs

But wild beasts of the desert shall lie there; and their houses shall be full of doleful creatures; and owls shall dwell there, and satyrs shall dance there.
Second Nephi. Chapter Twenty-Three. Verse 21.

The Latter Days, with many howls,
produces satyrs and bleak owls.
They toil all night to bring down prey;
they dance their hollow lives away.
No one is safe from their caprice;
they bring but strife, and never peace.
Wild beasts they are, though dressed up fine;
inflamed with lust and greed and wine.
So shun their doleful desert haunts
and come to Christ despite the taunts.
To frisk with satyrs may seem merry;
it grows not faith, but something hairy. 


Have you read my profile in the New York Times yet?  Please click here:

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/06/25/reader-center/newsroom-poet-laureate-limericks.html



Thursday, July 5, 2018

Scott Pruitt

Scott Pruitt, President Trump’s administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, resigned after facing months of allegations over legal and ethical violations.
NYT

the head of the EPA, Scott,
did travel in luxury bought
by taxpayer dough
so he had to go
way back to his Panhandle rot.


the boss of the EPA quit
today in a terrible snit.
he cried "It's no crime
to spend all my time
with lobbyists and profit split!" 



another one bites the dust -- he
used EPA dough for his spree.
Scott Pruitt, by name,
has now got great fame
for all of his duplicity.



Endless Red Tape The American Cheese Surplus Looks Like Anyone Can Run for President These Days




Others have been stymied by the Military Entrance Processing Command, which has rejected some of the applicants and kept others in limbo for months by requesting ever more detailed medical documentation. Other advocates said the Sparta members’ experiences probably reflected the overall picture for transgender enlistment.
NYT

the government loves to so drape
all outsiders with long red tape
until they despair
of treatment that's fair
and dress themselves in deep black crape.



Cheese makers that rely on foreign sales are suffering as China and Mexico raise tariffs on U.S. mozzarella and provolone.
WSJ

when selling a sweet provolone
our farmers are left all alone --
in China and south
of the border it's drouth
for curds and whey we have home-grown.


Michael Avenatti, the lawyer who emerged as national figure by representing adult-film star Stormy Daniels, is weighing a challenge to President Trump in 2020.
Washington Post

I think that I'll run for exec
of this here fine country, by heck!
it seems that the job
attracts ev'ry slob -- 
with money and a turkey neck.