Readers, Welcome to my blog (formerly Birds, Blooms, Books, etc). I'm entering a new decade taking on the challenge of moving from Maryland after living there 46 years and learning about my new home here in New England in the Live Free or Die state - New Hampshire. Join me as a write this new chapter of my life.

Monday, June 15, 2026

Three Great Pieces from The Contrarian

 

Confirming Blanche Might Finish Off Republicans’ Careers

How voting to promote the Epstein cover-up architect could play out.

Senate Republicans who vote to confirm Todd Blanche for attorney general should take heed: They will be haunted for the rest of their careers (some of which may very well end with the midterms) by the courageous survivors of Jeffrey Epstein’s monstrous crimes.

CNN reported that last week 19 Epstein victims “responded to The New York Times’s reporting that Blanche and other senior officials participated in Situation Room meetings to discuss how to respond to growing pressure for more transparency as the issue became a public relations crisis for the administration.” The survivors’ statement read in part:

We are deeply disturbed to learn that so many senior members of the administration gathered in the Situation Room to discuss the release of the Epstein files as a reputational problem, rather than an opportunity to pursue investigative leads and try to figure out what actually happened.

Read the rest here  

A Concept of a Plan for an Iran Deal 

What happened — and did — not so far?

Sunday night, Donald Trump announced an Iran ceasefire deal had been reached. In the days to come, we will learn more, but it will be critical to keep an eye on what is NOT in this memorandum and to understand the ceasefire will not curtail, let alone end, Iran’s nuclear weapons program.

Council on Foreign Relations Middle East expert Steven Cook told me that his initial impression of the announcement “is that there is nothing in the agreement on which President Trump can actually claim ‘victory.’” He noted, “Even if there is a return to freedom of navigation in the strait, it is merely a return to the Feb. 27 status quo.” Though we are supposedly going to sit down to talk about the Iranian nuclear program, Cook pointed out, “that is what we were doing before he launched the war.” He asked, “Why did he fight this war? Strategically, the president achieved nothing.”

Read the rest HERE

You Removed the Name — and the Curse — of Donald

Inside our Kennedy Center and slush fund successes: Publisher's Roundup 71

You did it, Contrarians. Out of all the over 300 legal cases and matters that your paid subscriptions have helped make possible, few have garnered more attention than our fights to remove Donald Trump’s name from the Kennedy Center and to stop his $1.8 billion slush fund. Now both are finally happening — and that’s good news for our democracy.

Let’s start with the Kennedy Center, where this happened in the wee hours early on Saturday:

A worker removes a letter from Donald Trump's name from the wall of the Kennedy Center on Saturday. (Cliff Owen/AP)

The removal of Trump’s name was thanks to our client, Rep. Joyce Beatty (D-OH), to my colleagues at Democracy Defenders Action, to our co-counsel Washington Litigation Group — and to your paid subscriptions, which help fuel my and my colleagues’ pro-democracy litigation.

Read the rest HERE

Saturday, June 13, 2026

Ice Cream and Sunset


First ice cream of the summer season.  We went to Wade's Place in Claremont.  I ordered a carmel sundae with Moosetracks ice cream.  I didn't realize it would be so big.  Dan had a malted chocolate milk shake and helped me eat this sundae.  It was delicious.

On our way home we realized the sky was on fire.

We drove to a cemetery with a great view of Mt. Ascutney in the background.








When we got home and I took this photo from our back yard.


 

Friday, June 12, 2026

Can You Take This Action, Please?

 This comes from Americans of Conscience.

Action 2: Time-sensitive: Oppose unconstitutional involvement in voting by the U.S. Postal Service before July 2.

Time to complete: 15 minutes

Join the 74 Americans of Conscience who have completed this action by checking the tally box!

I took this action!

The 30-day window to submit a comment closes July 2. The U.S. Postal Service has proposed a new rule that attempts to give the USPS unconstitutional oversight of elections in line with a recent unlawful presidential executive order already being challenged by voting rights advocates in at least four lawsuits. It would require each state to create a list of voters eligible to vote in federal elections and assign a unique ballot barcode to each voter. The USPS would then refuse to deliver ballots to anyone not on the list.

Send an email with a unique comment opposing this proposed new rule: PCFederalRegister@usps.gov, using the subject line “Ballot Mail.” Email comments must contain your name and physical address (you cannot comment anonymously).

Alternate: Send a letter with a unique comment opposing this proposed new rule:
Director, Product Classification
U.S. Postal Service
475 L’Enfant Plaza SW, Room 4446
Washington, DC 20260-5015


I sent off an email objecting to this proposed rule.

Will you consider doing the same or write a letter?