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.

Thursday, May 22, 2025

From Indivisible

Watching this short video is eye opening. 



Spotlight

ADOPT AN INSTITUTION 

From Timothy Snyder’s On Tyranny (2017):


“It is institutions that help us to preserve decency. They need our help as well. Do not speak of "our institutions" unless you make them yours by acting on their behalf. Institutions do not protect themselves. They fall one after the other unless each is defended from the beginning. (Bolded, mine.) So choose an institution you care about - a court, a newspaper, a law, a labor union — and take its side. 


We tend to assume that institutions will automatically maintain themselves against even the most direct attacks. This was the very mistake that some German Jews made about Hitler and the Nazis after they had formed a government. On February 2, 1933, for example, a leading newspaper for German Jews published an editorial expressing this mislaid trust:

‘We do not subscribe to the view that Mr. Hitler and his friends, now finally in possession of the power they have so long desired, will implement the proposals circulating in [Nazi newspapers]; they will not suddenly deprive German Jews of their constitutional rights, nor enclose them in ghettos, nor subject them to the jealous and murderous impulses of the mob. They cannot do this because a number of crucial factors hold powers in check….. and they clearly do not want to go down that road. When one acts as a European power, the whole atmosphere tends towards ethical reflection upon one's better self and away from revisiting one's earlier oppositional posture’” (pp. 24-26).

Reading the excerpt above is a little surreal, isn’t it? I hear echoes of the voices of so many Republican MoC’s who have, since the traitor’s first term, denied the destructive aims of their leader. 

But the point is, while every institution is under attack, please consider picking just one - your favorite, or the one you consider most important, or the least defended - pick that ONE and work at defending it. Letters to the editor, calls to your MoC’s, financial contributions to worthy organizations that will defend your one institution. 

If you can do this, it will help. But don’t take our word for it. Here’s what Chenoweth and Stephan (2011) say,

“…High levels of participation in resistance campaigns can activate numerous mechanisms that improve the odds of success. Such mobilization is not always manifested in the form of mass rallies and street demonstrations but rather can manifest in numerous forms of social, political, and economic noncooperation. The tactical advantage of high levels of diverse participation explain – in large part – the historical success of nonviolent campaigns” (p.31). 


See John Lithgow read Twenty Lessons on Tyranny, by Timothy Snyder here:

20 Lessons on Tyranny: by Timothy Snyder / read by John Lithgow

10:27 minutes

Wednesday, May 21, 2025

I was away

 Nephew on Dan’s side of the family got married on Saturday at a lovely venue. 

Bally Spring Inn in Barto, PA.

The wedding party used the house to get ready and the barn below had been converted to space for the reception and accommodations.  We stayed in a lower level room.

Here's the nephew.

And here's the new Mrs. Brown surrounding by the rest of us who are also Mrs. Brown. My sisters in law on on each end and the wife of another nephew is 2nd from left. That leaves me second from right.

We drove down a few days early to meet friends at a BnB outside of Lancaster: The E.J. Bowman House.

Here's the second course of breakfast the first morning.  First course was strawberry shortcake.




What the house once looked like.


We spent a lot of time in this parlor.  Everything about the place was super comfortable.


There was even this puzzle waiting to be done.  Janet and I obliged and completed it.


Dan noticed the table - my puzzle table is the same style!


Though we have plenty of covered bridges to see here at home we took a tour of 5 in the area.  It got us out in the countryside to see the Amish farms.







I also got to swing by the house my dad called home in Lancaster (below) and the house my mother grew up in and the one I visited where my maternal grandparents moved to (too dark by that time for photos) outside of Lancaster.



It was nice to experience the summer temperatures.  We've returned to cool ones.  As I write this on Monday evening, it's in the 40s with windchill of 32º.  

Monday, May 19, 2025

Appalling

 

Why white South Africans are migrants the Trump adminstration can love

Brown or Black immigrants? Invaders. White ones? Refugees. It's no surprise from Musk and Trump.

the flag of south africa is flying high in the sky

By Shalise Manza Young

Among the many terrible, horrible, no-good things the Trump administration has done since re-taking office in January is firing as many Black federal employees who have risen up the management ladder as possible.

The firings are abrupt and without cause, and because media writ large are reporting on the firehose of scandals and stupid decisions coming daily, many of these firings have received little to no coverage.

But if those dismissals, along with the constant refrain of blaming DEI—nearly always code for Black—for pretty much everything are a wink to the racism that undergirds the MAGA base, last week the administration put its “white is right” values on display so obviously they might as well be written in neon lights worthy of the Vegas strip.

Earlier this week, Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau welcomed 59 Afrikaner farmers to the United States, meeting with the group in a hangar at Dulles International Airport after they touched down in a government-chartered plane.

Afrikaners are white South Africans who some, including Elon Musk, a South African, claim are facing unfair treatment in their home country. With Musk’s encouragement, the administration termed them refugees and expedited their arrival.

Trump has shut off resettlement programs for refugees from other countries, but white South Africans got the green light. Not anyone trying to flee Sudan, where a second genocide has begun just 20 years after the last. Not Palestinians, who are being bombed and who are starving. Not those seeking to escape Nicolas Maduro’s violent regime in Venezuela.

White South Africans got red-carpet treatment as Trump’s administration ended the protected status for Afghan refugees living here—Afghans who risked their lives helping American troops—shamefully breaking the promise made to those who allied with the United States and who will be in grave danger if they are returned to Afghanistan.

White South Africans were treated like dignitaries arriving for a state visit while Hispanic and Muslim people who are here legally are kidnapped by mask-wearing thugs and sent to a gulag in El Salvador or a deplorable prison in Louisiana where they are deprived of crucial medicines.

White South Africans get special treatment while non-white immigrants and migrants are called “invaders” and “vermin.”

White South Africans were embraced months after Haitians who influenced the revitalization of a dying Ohio factory town dealt with bomb threats after the future vice president baselessly accused them of eating their neighbors’ pets.

Seeing a pattern?

Just as JD Vance’s stories about the Haitians in Springfield, Ohio, were lies, so, too, is Musk’s assertion that Afrikaner farmers are facing “white genocide.”

Afrikaners, the descendants of the Dutch colonizers who ran the South African government for hundreds of years and installed the apartheid system—the strict stratification of races that ensured all power rested in the white minority while Black Africans were stripped of all human rights—are a minority in South Africa.

Apartheid ended 30 years ago, and Black South Africans have had full civil rights restored, but inequality persists. It’s not much different from Black people in the United States: When you deprive a group of opportunities for generations and don’t actively try to make them whole, they’ll always be behind, particularly economically.

And just as many white Americans throw temper tantrums when anyone makes an attempt to level the playing field for Blacks, so, too, do many white South Africans.

Despite making up just 7% of the population, white farmers own 70% of the commercial farmland in the country. The South African government has approved seizing land without compensation, but that hasn’t happened yet.

That hasn’t stopped Musk, who has openly supported far-right racist groups and threw Nazi salutes from the dais at Trump’s Nuremburg rally (sorry, post-inaugural party), from claiming that it’s reverse racism to attempt to give Black South Africans ownership of their native land and some political figures are “actively promoting white genocide.”

There is no evidence that white farmers are being targeted. The South African government has firmly denied that intentional harm is being done to whites, and even Afrikaner-led groups say there’s no truth to either claim.

But when a rich boy raised in apartheid South Africa in a family so devoted to the cause that his maternal grandparents moved there from Canada to be part of it gets together with Trump, who has long shown racist tendencies, reality goes out the window and a solution without a problem is devised.

And thus, a deputy secretary of state went to Dulles to greet the Afrikaners with open arms. Asked by a reporter why this group of people had been granted refugee status and not others from war-torn lands facing oppression or famine, Landau said, “They [can] be assimilated easily into our country.”

As subtle as the neon lights on the Vegas strip.

Shalise Manza Young was most recently a columnist at Yahoo Sports, focusing on the intersection of race, gender and culture in sports. The Associated Press Sports Editors named her one of the 10 best columnists in the country in 2020. She has also written for the Boston Globe and Providence Journal. Find her on Bluesky @shalisemyoung.


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