Wednesday, February 5, 2020

China Prescribes Buffalo Horn for the Coronavirus.

Image result for chinese dragon"

As it races to treat patients infected with the new coronavirus, the Chinese government is seeing potential in a cocktail of antiviral drugs. It is also recommending the Peaceful Palace Bovine Pill, a traditional Chinese medicine made with the gallstone of cattle, buffalo horn, jasmine and pearl.
Sui-Lee Wee. NYT. 

When you're feeling seedy and you don't know what to do,
take a little rhino horn to keep away the flu.
Over there in China all the doctors recommend
jello from a donkey hide infused with urine blend.
Penis tea (from deer, of course) with bits of ground up pearl
will make Coronavirus start to wither up and curl.
Cocklebur emulsion will soon have you in the pink;
along with ginkgo seedlings and perhaps the kitchen sink.
Take cinnabar for palsy, and for cramps and sneezing fits.
Try a bite of seahorse when your body's on the fritz.
Those Chinese doctors know their stuff, when fungus you require;
otherwise I'd have to say their treatments are too dire.

A better world is coming

Image result for book of mormon

Wherefore, whoso believeth in God might with surety hope for a better world . . . 
Ether 12:4

A better world is coming, I can feel it in my bones.
Proclaimed by all of nature, even to the very stones.
Belief in God is spreading, though old Scratch still rages on.
A surer hope arises, like an effervescent dawn.
Strengthen my belief, O Lord, and help me when I stumble;
my world becomes a fitter place when I stay sharp yet humble.

Tuesday, February 4, 2020

The Iowa Caucus Gremlins.



. . . the Iowa precinct caucus system broke down . . .
Hours passed as the Iowa Democratic Party struggled to reconcile conflicting numbers from the nearly 1,700 precincts.
In the absence of results in real time, it was anybody's guess who was winning. By the time the results are reported, perhaps on Tuesday, they could be subject to challenge or questions from one or another of the campaigns . . .
by Dan Balz. Washington Post.

Out where all the corn turns green,
there was quite an awful scene.
Democrats toiled through the night
to make caucus numbers right.

But the more they toiled away,
farther off the numbers stray.
Till at last with sorrow deep
ev'ryone falls fast asleep.

Hackers did not cause this mess,
but if I might take a guess,
I would say that gremlins threw
 spanners into this miscue.

Somehow imps did infiltrate
all the meetings in the state.
Sabotaging bylaws with
claws that tore out all the pith.

Hopping up and down with glee
they caused great perplexity,
making folding chairs collapse
and defacing precinct maps.

Disenfranchising hush-hush,
they turned voter rolls to mush.
While the farmers all got in,
not so those with darker skin.

With the process in retreat,
Iowa must face defeat.
Never more will they stand tall
as candidates must come to call.

In the White House, with sly grins,
Trump proclaims that no one wins.
(And when it comes to gremlins -- look,
I am sure Trump wrote the book!)









Not Make-Believe

Image result for book of mormon

“Satan, or Lucifer, or the father of lies—call him what you will—is real, the very personification of evil. His motives are in every case malicious, and he convulses at the appearance of redeeming light, at the very thought of truth. …"
Jeffrey R. Holland.

Seek the light and truth to hold,
otherwise that one of old,
lurking in a cold dead place,
all your joy will soon erase.
Know your heart and soul will crack
under his malign attack;
that is why each day I need
on my knees for help to plead!

Monday, February 3, 2020

Freddy the Firefly.

Image result for firefly"



A survey of 49 of the world’s firefly experts, published Monday in the journal BioScience, has identified the most serious threats to the animals. Habitat loss, in almost all of the regions surveyed, is a problem. Other threats include artificial light, which disturbs their mating rituals; pesticides, which can harm the insects or their invertebrate prey; and water pollution, for species that have an aquatic stage.  Ben Guarino. Washington Post.
There was a little firefly, and Freddy was his name.
He landed in the darkened fields, displaying a cold flame.
He turned it off and on all night, in hopes of finding love.
Cuz it was lonely sitting there on some old dull foxglove.
But fields where he could find a mate and be a snuggle bug
were growing rarer than a Gabbeh woven Persian rug.
And poisons sprayed upon the air by farmers round about
interfered with pheromones, and gave the females gout.
But at last he spied a glow that floated lazy past,
and this prevented Freddy from remaining too downcast.
For he was sure it was a firefly of female form;
the kind that he could mate with if no others joined his swarm.
And so in hot pursuit he went, to trail the swinging light,
and planned how he would woo her when he caught her in mid-flight.
But when he came up to the little minx, twas all in vain --
he'd been misled by flashlight, as he hit the window pane.
 Poor Freddy now, just like the moth, flies round the porch light, sad --
hoping against hope that he may still find his dryad!

The Electric Car

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Super Bowl ads featuring electric vehicles used to be rare. But this year, at least three car companies — GM, Porsche, and Audi — ran flashy commercials for new plug-in models. It’s a sign that a shift is underway as automakers try to persuade a skeptical public that electric vehicles really are the future.
Brad Plumer & Nadja Popovich. NYT. 



It's time we had electric cars the public will pursue.
So this is what I think the manufacturers should do.
Buy up all the oilfields and then plug 'em tight as hell.
Then snap up all convenience stores, and no gas let 'em sell.

But that is only one part of my master plan to force
motorists to buy electric cars -- or get a horse.
The chassis must be stylish and the inside so deluxe
that drivers will imagine that they own a million bucks.

Get some super models to recline upon the hood;
that is advertising that all men have understood.
Somehow get the President to pose behind the wheel
of one electric auto  -- you will hear the rednecks squeal.

Offer those who buy a new electrical jalopy
calendars and key chains -- and perhaps a pet okapi.
But now I come to think of it, with so much sacrifice,
is the human race exactly worth the vexing price?

Mailed to the White House Today.






Sunday, February 2, 2020

In China Secrets Dwell Secure



At critical turning points, Chinese authorities put secrecy and order ahead of openly confronting the growing coronavirus crisis and risking public alarm or political embarrassment.
Chris Buckley & Steven Lee Meyers. NYT.

In China secrets dwell secure
because they're always kept obscure.
The public has no right to know
if it will rain or it will snow.

No need for citizens to fret
about coronavirus threat.
By keeping people unaware
the government shows splendid care.

And if the Great Wall tumbles down
or rivers flood and people drown,
it's kinder to all those concerned
to have the news concealed and burned.

The truth may set all people free,
but Xi Jinping would disagree.
He plays 'em close up to his vest --
but, after all, he must know best.

In Beijing doctors do not warn
their patients; it would be like porn.
Disgraceful to spread news of plague!
Tis best to keep things very vague.

So if you want the latest news
from China, I suggest you use
a source outside the country, since
in China all the truth is mince.


The Pollsters



Iowans typically finalize their choice late in the campaign, often deciding in the days before the caucuses occur. The late-breaking nature of the state’s political culture lends the poll outsized influence, with the power to fuel a last-minute surge in the state or can be an early dirge for candidates struggling.
(Lisa Lerer; Jonathan Martin; Michael M. Grynbaum. NYT)

In the land of Iowa the pollsters reigned supreme.
They cataloged opinions for a massive data stream.
No politician running for an office dared neglect
the findings of this powerful and conscientious sect.

They call you in the shower and they call you when in bed.
They call you at the office and when you're about to wed.
Who you will be voting for -- that is their standard quest.
They want a ready answer, and I wouldn't try to jest.

Perfection is their watchword; aberrations ain't allowed.
They tolerate no error while they grill the corny crowd.
But yet it happened one fine day a pollster made a gaffe,
and either missed a coma or perhaps a paragraph.

When this was discovered, there was consternation wide.
In Des Moines the pollsters lost their prestige and their pride.
They cancelled further phone calls and they let go all their staff,
and all because one operator made a little gaffe.

Today among the corn stalks in the Iowa hinterland,
there's not a single pollster left to question or demand.
They've gone to greener pastures, or they maybe are extinct.
Anyhow, you won't be bothered at your next precinct.

And now you know the story of the pollster's sad demise,
of the consequences and the moral it implies.
Don't be a nosy parker or buttinski on the phone.
Minding your own bizness is how happiness is grown.






Saturday, February 1, 2020

Photo Essay: Calf Liver Curry.




This is what I had in the fridge tonight.
So I decided to make liver curry, with rice.
And serve it to anybody who came by
 the Community Room at 6 p.m.



I haven't cooked liver in a long time.
Forgot to let it stay half-froze so it would slice easy.
Trying to cut thawed liver is like cutting a large
garden slug.



I added the fried liver to the curry gravy for
just the last five minutes before
serving. You let liver cook
too long and it turns into
shoe leather.


A la Carte. Rice. Muffins. Kimchi. Curry.


Good old Bernie -- she'll eat anything I make.



These two had seconds.


At 6:45 I wheeled the cart out of the 
Community Room, so we could
set up for Church at ten
tomorrow.