Thursday, March 20, 2025

A Productive Day

I think it is pretty cool that you all were so pleased about our house sale. We all need some happy stories, some small reason to celebrate. Thank you for your comments. 

I messaged our buyer about the appointment with the lawyer. It seems as if her family is all pulling together on this. Her uncle donated a shower. She has a kitchen from her grandmother's house. I told her that we had some insulation for her to go into the cubicle where the shower fits. 

It is such a win-win situation: she gets a house, and we got full asking price. It is a happy story, and it makes me glad every time that I think of it. 

It was interesting that today, we got an email from the wife of the man who was so interested in the house. I think they were angling to negotiate the price. She is a realtor and offered her services to sell the house. It was a pleasure to be able to say that the house was sold. 

We also showed our apartment today. I've spent the last two days cleaning. This is a view from the living room thru the dining room. There is a balcony out the french doors. The bathroom is to the left. 


To the right, there is a small room that can be used for an office, a pantry, storage, whatever. 

It is a two bedroom. This is the main bedroom. It's a big room. Across the hall, there is a smaller bedroom, probably 8 x 12. 

We showed it today, and the woman was interesting. She walked into the bathroom and said, "Well. There's not a lot of storage here." I pointed out that it is a large bathroom and plenty of room to have storage if she wants to buy some sort of cabinet. She supposed that she could do that. She took in the living room, and made no comment on the vaulted ceiling with the beam. What she focused on was the gas heater. "Does that have to be there?" she wanted to know. Tim looked at her and said, "Well...yes." It's where the gas is run. 

She wasn't happy about the stairs. She has a bad back. She wasn't sure her baker's rack could be brought up the stairs. It was 32 inches wide. How wide were the steps? (Good grief, the baker's rack could be rotated. The stairs have plenty of head room!) Who mowed the lawn? (The tenants. We noted that the previous tenant had spoken with the downstairs tenant and a deal was struck.) "So I'd have to talk to him?" (Yes.) Did we have a mower here? (Yes.) Was the previous tenant leaving because of George downstairs? (Answer: No. She adopted a child and needed more space.) 

She waffled around helplessly. She liked the garage with electric opener. She was unhappy that there was no washer hookup in the apartment. (We have a free washer and dryer for tenant use in the basement.) She asked what utilities were included, and we told her: Electric, gas, sewage, water, and garbage. She stood there with her notepad and said, "So...I would just have to get the internet?" We told her yes.  

She said, "Well...I don't know. I have to talk to my children. I'm not allowed to make decisions without talking to them first." I took all this in and found it fascinating that a 62 year old woman would say such a thing. I mean, I've got kids. I can't imagine being that dependent on them. I wouldn't want to be. They wouldn't want me to be that needy. (Actually, they would not put up with it.) 

I could tell that she was used to the world revolving around her, and tenants like that are exhausting. Complain, complain, complain. 

I said, "Well, you look around. I know that there are things that you are unhappy with here, but it's a pretty spacious place for a two bedroom. It's not perfect, but it is a nice place." 

Tim and I walked back home in the rain. I said, "I'm not sure she's what we want." We had a call from another person last night. A tenant talked to us about a possibly renting to her nephew and his wife, moving back from Washington State to take a job locally.  It is the first time that we've rented an apartment without advertising, so that part is interesting. 

The rest of our day was free. We loaded up and headed for the new house. It is a great thing to be able to focus on the new build full time, not trying to divide our time between the renovation and the new house. Luxurious, actually. Today we installed the gas line. Tomorrow we will hook up my new stove and test the hot water heater. 

We checked on the under sink cabinet the Amish built for us. (Levi's nephew, actually). That job is completed. We will be picking it up tomorrow. We stopped in to have coffee with Levi and Mattie. Tim had a homemade cinnamon roll. David showed me horses in his picture book. His father made him an ice sled model to hook to his little toy horse and he's quite pleased with that. 

Before we left their house, we made a barter. Levi built me a chicken coop. We will pay him $200, and throw in a couple pounds of lead and an old 150 gallon oil tank that he will cut in two and use as animal troughs. 

Yesterday was spring. Sunny with temperatures in the 70s. 


Today, on the first day of spring, it was windy as heck, and you could feel the temperature dropping by the hour. We turned the heat back on for the cats. We are back home now and the wind isn't dying down. I worry about the pine trees behind our neighbor's house. 

Late Edit: Is anyone else having problems replying to comments? 

Wednesday, March 19, 2025

Done Deal

 Today, we met up with the young mother and her father, and her little boy. I could tell that the father liked the house a lot. I kind of felt as if they needed time to talk, but they initiated the conversation right away. We all sat around the living room and discussed it. The practicalities. What we could do to help. What we could not do. What she could do. What she could not do. 

After all the cards were laid on the table, I was surprised when Tim laid out a plan that worked for everyone. 

We all mulled it over, and everyone thought it was a fine idea. I said, "Well...I guess that the only thing left to do is make it legal. We'll talk to our lawyer tomorrow." 

It turns out that their lawyer and our lawyer is the same lawyer. 

I said, "I think that we all need to be present to sit down and talk with Ken, for your protection, and for our protection too. We need to make absolutely sure that we are on the same page." 

And the woman said, "Make the appointment. No matter what time. I will be there."

So... today we sold a house, a young mother bought one, and a little boy loved his new loft bed. 


Tuesday, March 18, 2025

Entertaining Myself.

 Just for giggles, I responded to a truck for sale. It was a very new truck, a luxury model, all the bells and whistles. The pictures were listed under one name, but interestingly enough the email address featured another name altogether. 

They were asking $3700.

Any hindend could see that was a scam. But this hindend was looking for a laugh. FAFO. So. I did. 

I responded to the ad with a question: 'Where is this truck located?'

I received a response. 

Hi

Thanks for the email!The 2004 Chevrolet Silverado 2500 are available, price is $3,700  . Transmission: Automatic 4 speed ,mileage 123,370 , engine 6.0 gas Console, map lights, extendable folding rear view mirrors and sliding rear window.  Optional 17" factory rims with low milage Cooper tires. Folding side mirrors and roof top running lights. Great condition truck with low miles set to work for you and keep you comfortable. New Kenwood stereo and CD player pushes great sound through the factory Bose speakers.

This Truck belonged to my husband who unfortunately died, this it's the only reason for selling. Let me know if you are interested in buying them and I'll send you more details. A local pick is available if not, shipping isn't a problem. I can send some extra pics if you wish.

Because I do love a good laugh, I responded. 

Once again, I replied, "Where is this truck located?"


Hi again  
After my husband's funeral, I moved to my parents home in Billings, Mt, got a job here. The truck are already here in Billings and the transaction will be done through eBay. They will handle the payment and paper exchange. The truck are ready to be delivered in case a pick up is not possible. You will have free delivery (got a shipping voucher through them) and 5 days to test and inspect it before I receive any money.Attached you can find more pictures!

Thanks 

Of course I wasn't clicking on any attachments, but because I still loving a laugh, I responded: 

Well, no. We'd probably just fly out to get it. We've got relatives not far from there. It would be a nice visit and we could drive back. Address please? 

 Hi again  
 
If you want to buy it, please reply with your full name, shipping address and phone #. I will forward your details to eBay and they will contact you with all the info on how to purchase it.

Thanks 

Please note that this email address was already flagged as spam and I was enjoying myself: 

Surely you don't expect me to give you money for a truck before we have seen it, right?

And once again Mary Johnson responded with her same old tired reply:

 Hi again  
 
If you want to buy it, please reply with your full name, shipping address and phone #. I will forward your details to eBay and they will contact you with all the info on how to purchase it.

Thanks 


So...because this hindend was getting tired of games, I replied once more. 

But...if I fly there to see the truck before giving you the money, why does ebay need to be involved at all? I have relatives in Montana and could combine the trip with a chance to visit family. Bottom line: I wish to look the truck over before giving you the money. I have never heard of ebay working like this. Ebay provides a site for a seller to post things, but it is the seller who ships. Plus, I saw this ad on facebook marketplace, which is different from ebay. 

I guess Mary Johnson did not want to sell her truck. She has not responded for some time now. 

RUDE!!!

But anyway, I did actually get something done today. We were up at the crack of dawn (well...sort of...) and we scrubbed and spiffed up the apartment. I should take a picture of it. I washed windows and scrubbed walls, pulled out appliances and got underneath. I refreshed the floors. Tim touched up the paint. Tomorrow morning, the carpet cleaners are coming in at 9. I'll wipe down the oven while they're doing their thing. Tim is going to put a coat of polyurethane on the cupboards. I've got 4 more windows to wash. Then the apartment will be move in ready, which is good news, because the prospective tenant wants to see it Wednesday morning. 

The woman who wants the rehab so badly is coming to the house with her father tomorrow. Her bank has said she will need a co-signer, but she said her dad is quite excited to see the house, so that sounds promising. 

I told her about the furniture. She was excited about that, too and is coming over to our house to see it after she's done with her father. I told her to bring along her little boy too. 

She's so hopeful, and that touches both our hearts. I would love to see this work out. 

Weight and See

When you are eating healthy and steadily losing weight, it is very soul satisfying to step on the scale and discover that you've achieved a milestone. Today, once again, I got up and discovered myself to be closer but still not quite under that. Just ounces away...but not there. 

A1C is at fault for this big change. 

The doctor is pushing hard to begin medication. When they call, they always push for that. "The doctor has reviewed your numbers and she wants..." and I always say, "Listen, I am not trying to be recalcitrant here but the thing is, I want to try to lower things naturally." They always try to say, "Everyone who takes this loses weight..." as if that is going to lure me over to the dark side. They talk about damage to organs, kidneys and eyes mostly. 

My A1C was never a problem until my knee made exercising more and more difficult. Right now, I am managing only a third of the steps I used to do. So. While I can't exercise more, I can watch my diet. 

Reading carefully about things, I begin my day with a high protein breakfast. Two hard boiled eggs, one avocado, one slice of wheat bread slathered with peanut butter, and plain yogurt with blueberries along with my coffee. That's what the diabetic diets all have in common - a high protein breakfast. 

While that sounds like a huge breakfast (and if feels like a huge breakfast), what it does is holds me comfortably until supper. I skip lunch all together, which is supposedly a big no no, but it seems to be working for me. Supper is a huge salad. That holds me until morning. 

When I went in for my last appointment, they were quite surprised at the weight loss. The nurse called it a 'significant' weight loss and noted that on my chart. I felt as if I had made my point, that they would see that I am dead serious about making this change. 

I continued on with my new healthy diet, and keeping myself just as active as possible given the knee situation. 

But when I took my glucose readings in, again, I got the call. "The doctor has reviewed your numbers and..." 

And I said very plainly, "No. I think I have demonstrated a strong willingness to change my lifestyle. I've got an A1C test coming up in April. I've got a knee replacement in May. We are going to see how those things shake out and then we will talk about whether medication is needed. I think it is fair." 

They are not happy with me. 

I feel badly about it, but I'm also seeing amazing things happen. I've dropped a pant size. Two pretty shirts that I bought last year were a bit too snug. This year they fit perfectly. Tim says he can see the weight loss. No one else has commented on it, so I can't tell if he's just saying that to be nice. But...I have lost a pant size. My old favorite jeans are now my 'work pants' and I wear them with a belt. So...maybe he can tell. Maybe the rest of the world just doesn't watch my ass the way he does. Dunno. 

My next doctor visit is April 3rd. If the nurse called my last weight loss 'significant', she will be happier yet with this one. This weight loss is greater than the last. 

 I always make Tim a supper, but I stick to my salad. He wanders out into the livingroom after supper eating a bag of potato chips. Or a ding dong. Or a bowl of ice cream. Sometimes he walks down to the Tim Horton's to get a donut. Sometimes he does multiple things. Sometimes multiple times. All in the same night. (This proves to me that life is not fair.)

I have been surprisingly untempted by this. Not sure why. But a couple nights ago, he was eating chocolate. The bag was on the coffee table, and every so often he helped himself. I was finishing a book and I found myself craving a chocolate. 

Just one. 

One wasn't going to kill me, right? 

So, I had one.

And then...I discovered that it wasn't nearly as good as I thought it would be, which was very interesting.

I'm not sure where all this is headed, and I'm anxious to get that next A1C. If nothing more, the new weight loss should prove to them that I mean business. By the time that appointment rolls around, surely, surely I will have ducked under that milestone weight. 

I really hate feeling like I'm a problem patient, but really, inside me there's this determination to avoid medication if I don't have to take it. 

I think that is fair. 



Sunday, March 16, 2025

Long one

 The news has been awful this weekend, and I have no patience whatsoever with people who try to put tell me what what is happening is a good thing. Focus on some teeny little piece of things and defend that while ignoring the rest of the shitshow. I just do not have the patience for it. 

We have a president who is taking control of the legislative, the executive, and the judicial branches of our government. It is unprecedented and it is wrong in the most fundamentally dangerous way. 

I found it hilarious that he is threatening to take Greenland from Denmark, using force if necessary, but then this week he has asked Denmark to increase their egg import to the US. Denmark (to their credit) replied saying that they would continue to do business with their loyal and trusted partners, but they did not expect to have extra eggs to sell to the US. Hurrah for Denmark.

Canada continues to go toe to toe with him. Hurrah for them as well. 


Time for a little Robert Reich. He doesn't mince words. He doesn't sugarcoat it. But he finds reasons to remain optimistic.

 Friends,

It seems as if the horrendous Trump news doesn’t end — and it doesn’t. We’ve barely endured just over seven weeks of his scourge and every day brings new awfulness.
But the worse it gets, the more Trump, Musk, and the rest of the oligarchy reveal themselves. And the more they reveal themselves — the more they abuse their wealth and power, side with Putin, trample civil liberties, and ride roughshod over the Constitution — the stronger the backlash against them will be.
Here’s this week’s summary of 10 reasons for very modest optimism.
1. The Trump slump is worsening.
The first reason for very modest optimism is the current bad economic news. Americans voted for Trump because they thought he’d fix the economy. Many are now suffering buyer’s remorse.
On Monday, in retaliation for Trump’s tariffs on Chinese imports, China began imposing tariffs on a range of American farm products, including a 15 percent levy on chicken, wheat, and corn. This is already beginning to hurt the Farm Belt — mostly Republican states and Trump voters.
On Wednesday, after Trump’s 25 percent tariffs on all aluminum and steel imported into the U.S. went into effect, the European Union announced retaliatory tariffs on about $28 billion worth of products, including beef and whiskey — also mostly produced by Republican states (think Kentucky bourbon). Europe is also slapping tariffs on Harley-Davidson motorcycles, made in the Rust Belt.
In response this morning, Trump threatened a 200 percent tariff on all alcoholic products from EU member states. As a result, Trump voters — largely working-class — will be paying more.
Canada also announced new tariffs on about $21 billion worth of U.S. products.
What does this all mean for the economy?
In a Fox News interview that aired Sunday, Trump did not rule out the possibility that his policies would cause a recession. That possibility is growing by the day.
The stock market has continued to plummet. Yesterday, the S&P 500 fell 1.4 percent; the index is now down 10.1 percent from its peak reached less than one month ago and in a “correction” — Wall Street slang for when an index falls 10 percent or more from its peak and when investors worried about a sell-off gathering steam.
Other major indexes, including the Russell 2000 and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite, were already in correction territory.
The rest of the economy isn’t far behind.
Last Friday’s jobs report showed employers adding 151,000 jobs in February — half as many as in November and December. Leisure and hospitality jobs have declined in the past two months, suggesting that consumers are pulling back on discretionary spending.
The labor force participation rate also fell 0.2 percentage points, to 62.4 percent, mostly due to declining employment among men. The number of workers employed part-time who wanted but couldn’t get full-time work increased by 460,000 to 4.9 million, the most since spring 2021.
CEOs’ assessment of American business conditions is the lowest since the spring of 2020. The New York Times monthly consumer survey finds households feeling gloomy about their year-ahead financial situations.
The Federal Reserve Bank of New York reported Monday that Americans are increasingly worried about the state of their finances. The perceived probability of missing a minimum debt payment over the next three months climbed to its highest level since April 2020, when the economy was in a Covid-19-related freefall.
Egg prices, an emerging symbol of America’s affordability crisis, jumped 10.4 percent last month after a big rise in January.
2. Trump’s support continues to tank.
The consequence of all this for Trump’s political support? It’s tanking. In the latest Emerson national poll, 46 percent of voters say his policies are making the economy worse rather than better, while 28 percent say the opposite (the rest had no opinion).
In a new CNN/SSRS poll, almost three-quarters of Americans view the current economic conditions in the U.S. as poor, 51 percent of the public say they think Trump’s policies have worsened economic conditions, and just 28 percent say that his policies have improved things.
In the same poll, the share of Americans saying they expect the economy to be in bad shape a year from now is up 7 points since January, just before Trump took office.
Fifty-five percent of Americans surveyed say they fear Trump’s cuts to federal programs will negatively affect the economy, and just over 50 percent say that they will negatively affect their own families or local communities.
In a new YouGov poll, 48 percent of Americans think the economy is getting worse, up from 37 percent at the start of Trump's second term. Forty-seven percent expect higher inflation in six months — more than twice the share six months ago.
In the latest Quinnipiac poll, 54 percent disapprove of Trump’s handling of the economy; only 41 percent approve.
In a new CNN poll, 56 percent of voters disapprove of Trump’s handling of the economy — higher than at any point during his first term. In addition, 61 percent disapprove of tariffs.
I don’t have huge trust in polls but when all major polls show the same thing, there’s reason to believe them.
3. Musk’s claimed savings don’t exist, and his businesses are going down the toilet.
Musk continues to claim big savings from his DOGE effort to take a chainsaw to government. But so far, the actual savings have proven to be tiny.
Soon there will be no way to tell, because Musk and DOGE have just stopped providing identifying details about the cuts — so there’s no way to fact-check them. Not only is this a major step backward from Musk’s promise that he’d be “maximally transparent,” but also it makes his claims of savings nothing but unverifiable propaganda.
DOGE has refused to answer Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests from journalists and watchdog groups. On Monday, though, a federal judge ruled that DOGE is likely subject to the FOIA — a win for journalists, watchdogs, and researchers who have demanded greater transparency. On Thursday, another judge ordered Musk and DOGE to turn over records and answer questions in response to a legal complaint filed by Democratic state attorneys general.
Meanwhile, Musk’s growing political power and his shift to the political hard right are damaging his businesses.
Consumers are boycotting Tesla. More than a dozen violent or destructive acts have been directed at Tesla facilities. Tesla’s stock has fallen by more than 35 percent since Trump’s inauguration; it’s down 50 percent since December.
Musk is so alarmed by this that he got Trump to hold a White House promotional event for Tesla this week — where Trump essentially read a Tesla sales pitch and lied that consumer boycotts are “illegal.”
In Germany, sales of Teslas plummeted 76 percent in February compared with a year earlier, according to figures released Wednesday.
Antipathy to Musk is also denting sales of his Starlink satellite internet business.
Musk raised alarms this past weekend when he wrote on X that Ukraine’s front line “would collapse” against Russian forces if Starlink were shut off.
Radoslaw Sikorski, Poland’s foreign minister, suggested that his country “will be forced to look for other suppliers” if Starlink is “unreliable.” Musk later told Sikorski to “be quiet, small man.”
Andrius Kubilius, the European Union commissioner overseeing defense and space, talked of quickly replacing Starlink if necessary.
Italy is having second thoughts about awarding a $1.6 billion contract to Starlink.
Over the past week, shares in Eutelsat — the French rival to Starlink — have more than tripled.
4. The FBI is moving to criminalize groups like Habitat for Humanity for receiving grants from the Environmental Protection Agency under the Biden administration.
I’m including this as a reason for optimism because it so clearly demonstrates just how absurd and extreme the Trump regime has become.
On Wednesday, Citibank revealed in a court filing that it was told to freeze Habitat for Humanity’s bank accounts, at the FBI’s request. The reason? The FBI alleges that the group is involved in “possible criminal violations,” including “conspiracy to defraud the United States.”
Habitat for Humanity, you may recall, is the group that builds low-income houses in America’s communities. Jimmy Carter worked with them for decades. What did they do to earn the FBI’s ire? They received a climate grant from the Biden administration’s EPA.
Other nonprofits also being targeted by the FBI for receiving climate grants include the Appalachian Community Capital Corporation, the Coalition for Green Capital, and the DC Green Bank.
Yet these groups’ applications for government grants for environmental work were fully reviewed and accepted by the Biden administration’s EPA.
This is not fraud. It’s targeted harassment. And it will be viewed that way by most Americans.
5. Trump’s “beautiful bill” is stranded.
Trump apparently believes that fees from his tariffs when added to savings from Musk’s budget cuts will enable him to finance another large tax cut mainly for big corporations and the wealthy.
Even if he’s correct (which seems extremely doubtful), those tariff fees are financed by American consumers who will be paying higher prices for imports and who’ll also be losing services because of Musk’s cuts. They are are largely working-class Trump voters. Talk about reverse Robin Hood.
Meanwhile, Republicans in control of the House and Senate are divided over the size of spending reductions that should accompany their pending tax cuts, which budgetary yardstick they use, and whether a debt-ceiling increase should be attached.
The Senate still hasn’t agreed to the House strategy to pass one bill that would address the fiscal matters along with border security, after months of debate over whether to split Trump’s priorities into two or even three party-line bills.
Until these questions are resolved with an agreement between House and Senate Republicans, Congress can’t unlock the door to the fast-track “reconciliation” process that circumvents Senate Democrats. And until they unlock that door — which could take weeks or months — Trump’s “one big, beautiful bill” is stranded.
6. Bernie is rallying the Democrats
On Friday night, Bernie Sanders drew a crowd of 4,000 in Kenosha, Wisconsin, in what he calls his “Stop Oligarchy Tour.” On Saturday morning, another 2,600 in Altoona, Wisconsin, a town of less than 10,000 residents. Then 9,000 in suburban Detroit, where United Auto Workers President Shawn Fain introduced him.
Each stop has been in a swing House district represented by a Republican.
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez will join Bernie on the road in the coming weeks. She’s also planning solo appearances in Republican-held congressional districts in Pennsylvania and New York and other districts where Republicans have declined to hold in-person town halls because they might face protests.
Elizabeth Warren and Greg Casar headlined a 3,500-person rally in Austin, Texas — the heart of Musk’s business empire.
Tim Walz and many House Democrats will host town halls in GOP districts where their Republican congressmen are avoiding town halls.
Bernie is showing Democratic lawmakers and prospective candidates how hungry Americans are for a strong counteroffensive against Trump and Musk — in contrast to Democratic political operative James Carville’s suggestion that Democrats “roll over and play dead,” and Minority Leader Chuck Schumer’s willingness to surrender to Republicans on the budget resolution.
7. A coalition of 21 Democratic attorneys general has sued Trump, and the federal courts are becoming even more active in stopping him.
On Thursday — two days after the Education Department fired more than 1,300 workers, purging people who administer grants and track student achievement across America — a coalition of Democratic attorneys general sued the Trump regime, saying that the dismissals were “illegal and unconstitutional.”
The coalition is seeking a court order to stop what it calls “policies to dismantle” the department.
Meanwhile, Judge Beryl Howell of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia condemned Trump’s executive order punishing law firms that have had Democratic clients, such as special counsel Jack Smith — denying their attorneys access to federal buildings and stripping them of government contracts.
On Thursday, U.S. District Judge William Alsup ordered federal agencies to rehire tens of thousands of probationary employees who have been fired by Trump. Judge Alsup described the mass firings as a “sham” strategy by Trump’s Office of Personnel Management to sidestep legal requirements for reducing the federal workforce.
Alsup ordered that probationary employees across DOD, Treasury, Energy, Interior, Agriculture, and the VA be hired back “immediately.” Alsup also lashed out at the Justice Department over its handling of the case, saying Trump lawyers were hiding the facts about who directed the mass firings.
Another federal judge has blocked the deportation of Columbia University graduate student Mahmoud Khalil, whose green card was voided by the Trump regime and was then imprisoned for his political views.
8. Oligarchs are revealing themselves for who they really are.
This week further revealed how the American oligarchy is using their wealth to curry favor with Trump. Some examples:
Jeff Bezos has decided to stream all seven seasons of Trump’s former reality show, “The Apprentice,” on Amazon Prime. Trump was an executive producer and is likely to receive royalties from the agreement. He even plugged the deal on Truth Social.
Bezos’s Amazon is also paying $40 million for a documentary about the life of Melania Trump. According to The Wall Street Journal, she’s set to make $28 million from the deal.
Bezos has also washed his Washington Post clean of any op-eds critical of Trump (leading to the resignation of some of its top opinion writers, such as Ruth Marcus) and refuses to carry ads critical of Trump.
Meanwhile, Musk, the wealthiest person in the world, who spent more than $250 million to help elect Trump, is donating an additional $100 million to help further Trump’s agenda.
9. Other nations are uniting against Trump, and the global right is losing ground.
It’s also become apparent this week that Trump is, ironically, the great unifier of Europe. Trump’s policies have helped leaders who were struggling with stagnant economies and rightwing opponents. Facing down American tariffs and drawing together to confront an ally that is behaving more like an adversary has proved to be good politics.
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s whirlwind of diplomacy — trying to marshal a European peacekeeping force for Ukraine while also working to salvage the alliance with Washington — has won him praise across Britain’s political spectrum. Starmer’s poll numbers have bounced back from what was a dismal first six months in government.
In Mexico, President Claudia Sheinbaum has won praise and stratospheric poll numbers for her coolheaded handling of Trump’s tariffs. Mark Carney, a former central banker, was catapulted to the leadership of Canada’s Liberal Party with 86 percent of the vote on the belief that he can manage a trade war with the United States.
Carney’s party, which lagged the Conservatives by double digits under the premiership of Justin Trudeau, has recently closed the gap, putting the Liberals within striking distance of a victory in an election that Carney is expected to call soon. The Conservative leader, Pierre Poilievre, has struggled to regain momentum, and Liberals have been quick to paint him as a Canadian Trump.
10. Americans will soon feel the effects of the Trump-Musk chainsaw.
Most Americans don’t care terribly much that government workers are being axed, but they do care about government services being axed. They’re about to feel those effects very soon. This is also cause for modest optimism because the sooner most people feel those effects, the stronger will be the backlash against the Trump regime. Consider, for example:
— Weather. The National Weather Service produces lifesaving forecasts, but Trump is cutting 20 percent of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration — hobbling weather forecasts.
— Food stamps. Millions of poor families, many in red states, rely on Supplemental Nutrition Assistance — food stamps — to have enough to eat. The Trump regime is making substantial cuts and wants states to make up the difference. Most red states cannot.
— Veterans benefits. Over 9 million veterans depend on benefits from the Veterans Administration. But Trump’s cuts at the VA have disrupted medical treatment, ended studies involving experimental treatments, forced some facilities to fire support staff, and created uncertainty amid the mass cancellation of hundreds of VA contracts. The VA serves a constituency courted heavily by Republicans. Veterans, including Republican-leaning vet groups, are fighting back against Trump’s VA cuts.
— Measles. With lower rates of vaccination against measles and a vaccine skeptic at the helm at HHS, we’re witnessing significant measles outbreaks in Texas and New Mexico that have infected more than 250 people — many of them unvaccinated school-age children — and claimed two lives; a flu season that led to record numbers of hospitalizations; and the potential for a bird flu epidemic.
— Tuberculosis. Americans are vulnerable to communicable diseases that exist in other nations, such as tuberculosis, which kills more people worldwide than any other infectious disease. But since Trump ordered the freeze on USAID, the entire system of finding and treating TB has collapsed in dozens of countries across Africa and Asia.
— Education. On Tuesday, Trump and Musk fired half the Education Department, purging people who administer grants and track student achievement across America. Education cuts will hurt red states in particular: States that voted for Trump last November, on average, use more federal funding in their education apportions than states that voted for former Vice President Harris.
— Social Security. More than 100 million Americans depend on Social Security. But Musk’s DOGE is now combing through Social Security databases to flag suspicious payments. Musk describes Social Security as rife with fraud and repeats the conspiracy theory that Democrats have used it as a “gigantic magnet to attract illegal immigrants and have them stay in the country.” Earlier this month, he referred to Social Security as “the biggest Ponzi scheme of all time.”
This week, DOGE tried to eliminate Social Security’s phone customer service, only to scrap the plan after massive public backlash (although DOGE is still cutting phone options for direct deposit changes).
I offer you these reasons for very modest hope not because I want you to deny the awfulness of what’s occurring, but because I want you to see we are not necessarily doomed. Not all is lost. There are reasons to believe that the vast majority of Americans are catching on. And if that’s the case, the scourge will be over. We may even be stronger for having gone through it.


 We had an interesting day here, weather wise. Tornado warnings for most of the afternoon, thunderstorms, Our neighbor (the red house - and yes, it is a two story) has huge pine trees in her back yard, three of them, easily 60 feet tall. The wind made one snap in half. 
 That 25 foot section crashed down on to another neighbor's trampoline, and really, 
it was fortunate. If the tree had fallen the other way, it would have landed on a house. 

Anyway, a thunderstorm came through and knocked power out for 3 hours. 

It was kind of nice to enjoy the quiet. 

We showed the house again today. The couple seemed enthusiastic about it, and said we'd be hearing from them. We'll see. She was excited because they have everything they need to put the kitchen in. They bought their grandmother's kitchen cupboards when she replaced her kitchen. 

I meant to show you this:

This is the copper fender for the fireplace that Tim found in the basement just a couple days ago. He was pleased. It is pretty. It will prettier yet when it is shined up. 

Another happy thing? My tomatoes are germinating. 

Tomorrow, we will got up to Grand Valley to work on the new house. Tim is running to Titusville. I will use the time to start assembling my flower garden at the front of the house. I will be moving stone and bricks, and planting bulbs that will not bloom until next spring. I'm looking forward to it. It seems almost relaxing to be able to work on just one project: the new house. 

Saturday, March 15, 2025

Ides of March.

 

https://taskandpurpose.com/news/arlington-cemetery-scrubs-website-dei/

In other breaking news, 
the entire human race flagged in DEI purge 
because of the 'homo' in homo sapiens.


Mail your postcards for the Ides of March: 

Donald Trump

White House

1600 Pennsylvania Ave NW

Washington, DC 20500


We had two more potential buyers come through. One was, surprisingly, the woman who tried to argue with me that our 'starting point' was too high. I knew that it wasn't. She wanted to come by with her contractor. She seemed interested, and her contractor did not give much away, although they both got excited about the pocket doors. For the first time, she noted the hardwood floors. She was very tickled by them. So. Who knows. 

The young woman came, the one that was so interested in the house. She's a single mom of a six year old. She's living with her grandmother right now.  She's a smart girl. Her company recognized that, and paid for her to get her metallurgist certificate. She loves her job. 

She also loves the house. She wanted the house badly. She has been looking but houses are going for quite amazingly high prices at the moment. Pricewise, she knows that she needs a fixer upper, and she's been looking but she's been getting pretty discouraged. There are a lot of fixer uppers on the market that almost seem to be tearer downers. I've seen the ads, myself. "TLC needed," they say. 

I looked at her and I saw me 27 years ago. 

I was cooking supper when Tim wandered out into the kitchen. He said, "I can't stop thinking about her. I hope she gets the house." 

"I know it," I said. 

Later that night, I messaged her and said, "You know if your dad or whoever wants to see the place, you should bring him by. He's in the business, so an extra set of eyes wouldn't hurt. It would probably make him feel better."

"That's actually a great idea," she said. "I have to change a wheel bearing in my car, but that shouldn't take too long."

Tim laughed when I told him. He does love a strong woman and 28 years ago, he took a chance on one.  A single woman with three kids in a very rough place. He aggravates me mightily at times, and vice versa, I suppose, but we've been pretty lucky. 

I said, "You know, we know we're downsizing. William doesn't want his loft bedroom set upstairs. We could offer that to her boy, if they don't have furniture." It's a very nice set with a desk and a dresser and book shelf. 

Tim nodded in a considering way. 

"We have the bedroom set in the room next to his that we're not taking." We also have the sofa and loveseat in the library, too. I began to take pretty serious inventory. We already know that the kids are not at all interested in anything that we have so we've got a lot to get rid of.

I wonder what will happen next. 

This was my giggle for the day: https://www.upworthy.com/funny-obituary-sick-man-ex1


Friday, March 14, 2025

Selling Points

We had two parties come and look at the house today. One was a husband and wife who came, saw, and said they'd be in touch. The other guy came. Walked through in a thoughtful way. He liked the pocket doors. I explained to him what our thoughts had been on the kitchen. He listened quietly. He ran his hand over the gas fireplace and marveled over the copper fender that Tim had discovered that very day down in the basement. We went upstairs and he was glad to see the completed drywall. He was thrilled with the rough wiring. He is rough wiring a house right now and he is not having fun. 

I left him go up into the attic by himself to save my knee. 

He came down and we stood in the bathroom. He looked at the clawfoot tub. He said, "I'd probably pull this, actually. Tenants tend to overfill them. It just makes an awful mess." 

"You'd rent it then?"

"Yeah," he said. "That's what we had intended..." 

He walked down in the basement. By that time, Tim was done with the couple so he was able to give the man the highlights.  New hot water heater. New forced air furnace. New duct work replaced old radiators which no longer worked. 

He and Tim stood outside talking. He said, "Do you know how old the roof is?" Tim said, "Yes. That was the first thing we did was replace the roof. New sheeting too." 

The man said, "Let me get my phone. I want to take my wife through." She is a local realtor in town. 

We sat in the living room as he took his wife through a virtual tour. We heard snippets of his conversation. "Foundation's great. New furnace and hot water heater. Yeah. Heat upstairs. The rough wiring is all done." He went upstairs, still talking. "The staircase is great." 

He was upstairs for quite a while. 

We waited in the livingroom. He went outside and walked around the house. Tim said, "He's really pleased with the hardiebacker board siding."  He stood in the back yard talking for several more minutes. 

Finally, he came back in. 

He said, "So...I imagine that you're wanting to move on this quickly."

I said, "We've got someone coming tomorrow who seems pretty serious, so no, we're not going to rush." 

It was the truth. A woman loves the house, has done renovation work before, was talking to her bank about how to finance it that day, was taking a half day off work to come tour the house Friday. 

"So...no..." I continued. "We're comfortable waiting to see what happens. What we're not willing to do is start negotiating a price at this point. We had a woman who felt our starting point was too high and began telling me how much it would cost to finish up the house. I didn't debate it with her, but we're not desperate, and we know how much work we've put into it too." 

He said, "You're right. Your price is very fair. The rough wiring...I'm doing that in my house right now. I hate it..." Tim said, "Yeah. It takes forever." He said, "My house was all knob and tube." Tim said, "So was this. It's gone now." The guy gestured up at the lights in coffered ceiling. "I don't imagine that you changed these out." Tim said, "Yes. That's been replaced." The man looked surprised. "It has?" (Tim did it through the exterior walls when he was working on the front porch and the second story bedroom floor above the livingroom.)

The man said, "We are very, very interested in this house," and "I want to come back this weekend and bring our contractor with me. She's from down state and couldn't come today. I want my wife to see it too. Is that possible?" 

We agreed to it. I told him his wife had my number, and that they could call whenever they wanted to set it up. He looked around and then he said the thing that Tim had said five years before. "You know, I really don't think this is a rental. This is a beautiful house. I think it would have to be a flip." 

So, I don't know what is going to happen for sure. But we seem to have one solid, another potential solid, as well as two brothers who flip houses who are discussing it, and another flipper who is in Florida but wants to see it when he gets back. 

It looks very promising at this point, but we're not counting chickens before they are hatched. 

Someone wondered why we were working so hard. It's like this. We've been doing this for almost 20 years now. We started this during the last recession. We bought our first house for $1500. It was awful. Unlivable. Holes in the floor. It's a two unit rental now, and never sits empty. That investment has paid itself off many times over the last 15 years. 

But Tim sees houses and he knows. He absolutely knows what makes a house good. Those are the houses that we flip. We have bought some doozies. It was a couple years of hard work, on each of them, minimally, but we've always, always made big money off the sale of these houses. He has the knack. 

I strongly argued against this last purchase because I simply did not want to start another big project. I mean, we knew that he wanted to build a retirement home. He'd already bought the property. All this rehab was going to do was to delay our plan for the new house. 

But Tim wanted one more last big deal before riding off into the sunset. He argued his point and did not back down. I gave in. 

When Tim bought this last house, the very first thing we had to do was to make it weather tight, so windows and a new roof were the first priority. That was quite an undertaking. It was a hoarder's house, and it was every bit as bad as the houses you see on reality television, so once it was sealed up against the elements, we spent months hoeing it out. We found treasure though, so we had to go through it carefully. Only then could we start working on the place. 

Then Tim got sick. And then he got sick again, very sick, so that delayed our work. 

And after years of trying to arrange it, we had someone to pour concrete for the new house. Amazingly, we were able to get someone to dig the basement as well. When the stars align like that, you have to move on it, because it may be years before it happens again. 

Again, the rehab went on hold. 

And then Tim got cancer. 

Another delay.

Long story short, we ended up having the rehab for far longer than we'd ever expected. Five years. The insurance company gave us a year's extension because of Tim's health problems but they told us that they would not insure an empty house for any longer than that, so we had a deadline to have the rehab done by November, which really put the pressure on, especially since we knew I was having a knee replacement in May. 

And we had all this stuff we wanted to do on the new house but couldn't because of the deadline, and shit started getting tense, and then I had my big ol' hissy fit, and...well...

That's what happened. 

PS: Everyone get remember to get their post cards mailed out on the 15th! 

A Productive Day

I think it is pretty cool that you all were so pleased about our house sale. We all need some happy stories, some small reason to celebrate....