Saturday, July 04, 2026

SATURDAY 9

 On Saturdays I take a break from the heavy stuff and have some fun…

Unfamiliar with Connie Francis' version of this song? Hear it here.

1) Irving Berlin's lyrics celebrate our mountains, prairies, and oceans. Which of these geographical features is nearest your home?

How about an earthquake fault in my backyard? I always wanted to put up a sign that said “Diana’s Fault”

2) Berlin donated his royalties from "God Bless America" to the Girl Scouts and Boy Scouts of America. Were you ever a Scout?
Yes, Cub Scout (My mother was Den Mother)
 
3) While this week's song has been recorded many times, we're concentrating on Connie Francis' 1959 version. It was never intended to be a hit, released as the B-side to her popular "Among My Souvenirs." But it took off when it was played at school rallies and patriotic events. Do you know all the lyrics to "God Bless America?" Could you sing along with Connie?
Let me put this way, when we were supposed to give a six grade concert I was told to mouth the words.

4) After she wrote her autobiography, Connie said she wanted Valerie Bertinelli to play her in the movie. Even though Valerie isn't known for her singing, Connie liked that they were both Italian-American and 5'5". If we made a movie of your life, who should play you?
Caroline Cossey

5) Connie had a passionate romance with Bobby Darin, and their relationship is included in the Broadway show about Bobby's life, Just In Time. While Connie expressed her support for the production, she never saw the show because hip problems made flying difficult. How about you? Are you dealing with any aches or pains today?
 Going to a cookout this after noon… It is going to be HOT! 

At the end of the NH dock
6) The Fourth of July means we're in the middle of summer. Are you careful about applying sunscreen?

I hide in the shade.

7) More beer is purchased for the 4th of July than any other holiday. What beverage will be served with your July 4th meal?

Ice tea. I make it half and half tea and lemonade.
 
8) Emergency rooms expect an increase over the July 4th holiday. The most common causes are sports injuries (like jammed wrists and wrenched knees) and the unwise use of home fireworks. Have you been to the ER or Urgent Care during 2026?


Nope.
In New Hampshire fireworks are legal and when we had a our lake cottage we would just pull up a lawn chair and watch the fireworks around the lake.

9) New York is home to Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest every year on the 4th. Will hot dogs be consumed in your household this weekend?
Nope… burgers! Cheeseburgers with pepperjack cheese, lettuce, tomato, onion with mayo. With potato salad and a tomato salad.

Friday, July 03, 2026

A System Of Checks And Balances

[Political Analysis]

How did a system of over 250 years go so horribly wrong in such a short time? The system's failure was systematic. The collapse was not instantaneous but gradual, kind of like boiling a frog in a pot. You don't realize the water is getting hot until it is already too late.

I believe it all started from day one:

"We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America."

Decades later, President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal and the creation of Social Security sent conservatives into a tizzy. As the presidency and Congress oscillated back and forth between conservatives advocating for less government and liberals aiming to provide for the "general welfare," these two foundational philosophies remained deeply at odds. Ultimately, it was Alexander Hamilton’s views that pervaded. Hamilton argued that the General Welfare Clause grants Congress a separate, broad power to tax and spend for national purposes, as long as it benefits the country as a whole, rather than being restricted strictly to its other enumerated powers. Meanwhile, conservatives maintained their rallying cry: less government!

In the 1950s, 60s, and early 70s, conservatives began plotting their strategy. One of the places where this plan is thought to have come into being was at California's Bohemian Grove, where old money and new money converged. It is believed that the blueprint for the Reagan administration was forged there. These get-togethers were dominated by Wall Street bankers, industrial CEOs, legacy media barons, and traditional Republicans like Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, and George H.W. Bush. Power was consolidated through corporate boards, Ivy League networks, and quiet, behind-the-scenes handshakes.

Once in office, Reagan went to work dismantling the unions. However, many of the conservatives' grand plans were stymied by the courts. Ever since then, Republicans broke with tradition; instead of appointing politically neutral judges, they began intentionally appointing jurists who leaned hard to the right.

Meanwhile, a technological revolution took place: the dawn of the World Wide Web. Suddenly, the lunatic down the street could easily talk to the lunatic on the other side of the country.

In times of economic stress, the conditions for revolution become ripe. We saw it in the 1890s, the 1930s, and we see it today as the economy fractures into what is now called a "K-shaped" economy. Back in the 1890s, the public targeted the ultra-wealthy as "Robber Barons." By the 1930s, in his famous 1936 Democratic National Convention speech, President Franklin D. Roosevelt re-baptized them as "economic dynasties" and "economic royalists."
Then, the Supreme Court threw its own two cents into the fire. With the landmark Citizens United v. FEC decision, the Court took the reins entirely off of campaign donations. The doors were blown wide open, and the dark money flowed.

The culmination of this long-game strategy came down to the judiciary. When conservative Justice Antonin Scalia passed away unexpectedly in February 2016, Senate Republicans broke traditional norms and refused to hold confirmation hearings for a replacement, arguing that it was too close to the November election. Yet, as soon as Donald Trump won, they quickly placed Neil Gorsuch on the bench in April 2017.

The hypocrisy became absolute when liberal Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg passed away on September 18, 2020—just 46 days before the next election. Instead of waiting for the voters, the Senate rammed through the appointment of Amy Coney Barrett in just weeks. With that, they successfully secured a captured, ultra-right-wing court.

But winning elections through a hyper-radicalized base was never a guarantee. To lock in permanent minority rule, they turned to aggressive gerrymandering, shifting district boundaries so precisely that the ruling party faced virtually no risk of losing power.

However, faced with Trump's polarizing reputation, strategists knew they needed to do more to guarantee victory. They set out to secure their wins by making it intentionally harder for marginalized communities to vote. The result is a modern incarnation of the Jim Crow "Poll Tax." By pushing for strict identification requirements, they have forced voters to produce documents like a passport (which costs $165 for a new application) or a birth certificate (which requires a notarized fee to obtain). For a low-income worker, these are not administrative safeguards; they are financial barriers to democracy.

For years, we have watched a spineless Republican Congress that is terrified of standing up to Trump, though a brave few are finally starting to show glimpses of a backbone. The public is beginning to see the deep structural corruption surrounding this administration—from the blatant buying of presidential pardons to rampant insider trading.

Consequently, Trump’s poll numbers are sinking, and he is getting desperate. He was impeached twice before but survived conviction in a loyal Senate. Now, the political landscape is shifting, and he and his cronies are visibly worried.

In their desperation, the administration's inner circle is testing the absolute limits of executive power. DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin and border czar Tom Homan have floated the terrifying idea of deploying armed ICE agents or military troops directly to polling places on Election Day. They justify this authoritarian overreach with unproven claims of mass noncitizen voting and the supposed need to stop "leftist terrorists." The true tragedy of our degraded system is that, knowing the nature of this administration, such a catastrophic abuse of power is entirely possible.

Will we wake up on November 4th to the dawn of an authoritarian regime?

The modern plutocrats want to preserve their "champagne wishes and caviar dreams" at any cost, regardless of what happens to the American republic. The water is boiling, the kitchen is quiet, and the feast is served.

Frog's legs, anybody?

[/Political Analysis]

So Tell Me...

On this holiday weekend, stop and think for a moment about the direction our country is heading.
 

If the Constitution says one thing, can you write a law to do something other than what the Constitution says?

I think we would all say no... the Constitution is the ultimate authority. Then how come...
Trump's 'hero' justice offers roadmap after Supreme Court rejects birthright order
Speaker Mike Johnson, Sens. Rand Paul, Mike Lee and Tom Cotton are already weighing legislation and constitutional amendments
By Elaine Mallon Fox News
Published July 2, 2026
 
 
 President Donald Trump lost his Supreme Court bid to restrict birthright citizenship through executive order, but one of his own appointees may have handed Republicans a blueprint for pursuing much of the same goal through Congress.

Voting with the 6-3 majority, Justice Brett Kavanaugh agreed that Executive Order 14160, which restricts automatic citizenship to people born to U.S. citizens or permanent residents, couldn't take effect. But in a concurring opinion, he also pointed to a different path forward. Kavanaugh argued the court should have resolved the case under federal law rather than the Constitution, laying out a potential legislative path for Congress to pursue changes to birthright citizenship.
Okay, here is a justice of the Supreme Court saying to pass a law to override the Constitution. Meanwhile, a riskier solution is being offered: amend the Constitution. That is scary! That opens the path for all types of evil things.
 Kavanaugh said Trump couldn't use an executive order to change a law Congress had already passed, but instead suggested Congress could rewrite the law to limit birthright citizenship for children born to parents who are in the country illegally or temporarily.

"Congress could — consistent with the Fourteenth Amendment—amend §1401(a) or otherwise enact new legislation establishing exceptions to birthright citizenship for children born to foreign citizens unlawfully or temporarily in the country," he wrote.
I imagine that most people reading this are not lawyers, but tell me, do you see any wiggle room in this?
All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.
I don't know about you, but that is pretty straightforward. I don't see any "ifs," "ands," or "buts," nor any "howevers," "except for," or any other qualifiers. There is just no wiggle room. It says what it says: "all persons"!
 
The qualifier that says "subject to the jurisdiction thereof" is undeniably true for all undocumented immigrants. The very fact that they are sitting in detention facilities proves that they are subject to the authority of ICE and CBP.

The other option is the Constitutional amendment route, and I find that to be the scary part. They want to pass an amendment limiting the Constitutional rights we now have! Think about that.

Once you have a Constitutional Convention, the floodgates are opened... I can see a party trying to stick in an amendment to limit abortions! I can see an amendment limiting our rights as trans people! After all, if they opened the convention to limit immigrants' rights, what's to stop them from adding to their list of "evil things"? It could become a vehicle for highly polarizing social issues.

They need 38 states to pass an amendment and 34 to call a convention... and they already have 23 solid Republican states!
 

Thursday, July 02, 2026

Another Steps Up For Us.

Banning care does not give us the opportunity to answer important questions.

My heart always cheers up when I see an ally step up for us. This is from the medical website STAT:
Here’s what happens when political pressure overrides scientific standards
By Kavitha RanganathanJune 29, 2026
Ranganathan is an associate professor at Harvard Medical School and plastic surgeon at Mass General Brigham.


I am a plastic surgeon who rebuilds faces after car accidents, helps cancer patients breathe, and restores infants’ ability to eat and smile. Yet what draws the most notice is my work transforming masculine features into feminine ones, and vice versa.

I am an outsider to the LGBTQIA+ community. I grew up in a conservative household in which discussions on sex and gender were taboo. But in residency, I saw patients in clinic every Monday with my attending, a cisgender, white, heterosexual male at least 60 years old, who had been providing surgical gender-affirming care for over 25 years. I saw how vulnerable the patients were, trapped in their bodies. I felt the weight they woke up with every day, trying to blend into the surrounding world of instantaneous judgements. And I saw the life-changing impact that surgery had.
When we speak up, people think we have an axe to grind, but when allies speak up, they speak from the heart.
Recently, however, there has been a fork in the road. While organizations like the American Academy of Pediatrics and American Medical Association have staunchly and vocally supported transgender patients and their right to health care, the American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS) has chosen a different path. In February, ASPS, a society for which I previously served on the Board of Directors, issued a “Position Statement on Gender Surgery for Children and Adolescents,” which argued against providing gender-affirming surgical care to anyone under the age of 19. The statement helped support the Trump administration’s continuing fight against gender-affirming care for adults and teenagers.
Their recommendations are wrong too! Limiting surgeries to only a "few" hospitals just creates more hoops to jump through.
Instead of calling for an outright ban, ASPS could propose ways to promote research that can genuinely protect trans youth, who are indeed vulnerable.

For instance, ASPS could have recommended that gender-affirming care to adolescents is provided only at regional centers of excellence to standardize care using strict selection criteria.

Another approach is to recommend providing gender-affirming care under research protocols that prioritize long-term data collection.
This is a knee-jerk reaction to political pressure! So we can't have surgery until 19? But the age of legal adulthood is 18!
The reality of my job today is that I can see a young girl in my clinic for breast augmentation in preparation for her sweet 16 and be prosecuted for doing the same operation on a 19-year-old with gender dysphoria. My personal opinion is that any elective operation done on a child requires absolute care, multidisciplinary collaboration, and honest conversations with families. The government’s opinion shouldn’t infringe on autonomy.

For those framing this issue in the context of patient safety, the ASPS has not banned one of plastic surgery’s highest mortality procedures. For the Brazilian butt lift, the operation with the highest mortality rate of any aesthetic procedure in plastic surgery, the ASPS put together a task force that came up with recommendations to improve safety. The operation was never banned.
Don't forget that there is absolutely no problem with doing gender-conforming surgery on week-old intersex babies! There have only been a few surgeries on minors, and most were breast reduction surgeries for cisgender youth, which just get lumped in with us.
Banning care does not give us the opportunity to answer important questions.

Even worse, physician groups betraying the public’s trust out of fear of government retaliation has permanent consequences, especially when the government’s actions have since been deemed unconstitutional. Individual plastic surgeons like me have united to demand answers from the ASPS in an effort to uphold our responsibility to all patients. When we stray from standards on one issue, our patients won’t be able to trust us on any issue.
But this is a politcial "gotcha" the Republicans think that we can offset Trump... that they think that in the 2026 and the 2028 elections we can sway enough votes away form the Democrats, The Republicans don't realy care about us one way or another... we are just a wedge issue for them.

Sorry Donald!

It is time to pay up! The Supreme Court said no way are there going to touch the case! Pay up on what... In a five million dollar law by the woman the jury found that Trump attacked in the dressing room at department store dressing room.


Advice columnist E. Jean Carroll asked a judge Tuesday to require President Donald Trump to pay her $5 million from a jury verdict that concluded Trump sexually abused her in the 1990s and defamed her after she publicly described the attack in 2019.

Lawyers for Carroll filed papers in Manhattan federal court to say Trump is unjustly trying to further delay release of the money after the Supreme Court refused Monday to hear an appeal of the 2023 civil jury verdict.

[...]

"To date, Carroll has agreed to each of Defendant's many requests to delay the payment he owes her. Given the extraordinary lengths he has taken to avoid such payments and that each of those efforts has been denied in full, that cooperation ends today. It is time for him to pay Carroll," they wrote.
Pay up Donald!

How They Ruined Milk

[Essay]

I’m a milk snob, I admit it. I like unhomogenized milk. First, I am not talking about raw milk or non-pasteurized milk. No, what I am talking about is milk that is pasteurized but not homogenized. You know, the kind with the cream floating on top, like they used to deliver in the old days… back when I was a kid.

The bottle would sit in a box on the front porch, and I would check it on my way home from school. I’d open the lid and hope for a bottle of chocolate milk! What changed, besides buying it at the grocery store now, is that all milk is uniform today. There are what, three or four major brands? And they all sell only homogenized milk.

To homogenize milk, they blast the cream through a nozzle that turns it into a fine mist. It becomes so fine that you can’t distinctively taste the cream in the milk anymore.

Fortunately, there is a farm store near me. They have a large orchard, but inside the store, they also sell produce from other local farms. Their milk comes from a farm up in the Litchfield Hills and is pasteurized. When I buy it, the cream sits right on top, so you just have to give it two shakes before pouring. That’s all it takes—two shakes. You can truly taste and feel the cream. It is richer and, well, creamier.

But nowadays, you have no choice unless you drive out of your way.

I also get thick-cut bacon from a local farm at this store. I grab their store-made cookies, like chocolate chip or oatmeal-raisin, and ice cream that also comes from the farms up in the Litchfield Hills. When corn is in season, I get it from a local stand, picked fresh that morning.

In my younger days, I used to hang out with friends who owned farms. Many times, I sat on a friend's back deck, picking off the woodchucks that were eating the corn. At another friend's place, I used to hang out at his roadside stand, chatting or watching a Red Sox game. That’s why I like shopping at farm stands. 

It supports local farmers rather than some giant conglomerate.

They made milk like they do with the ticky-tacky and uniform, the same, no differences... all homogenized. 

Oh, and one other thing. When you make hot chocolate with this milk and let it sit for a bit, the cream floats to the top. But it's chocolate cream! Mmm…

[/Essay]