Monday,
December 9, 2019
My
favored candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination was Kamala
Harris. I envisioned her shredding President Lump on the debate stage and
I am disappointed that she will not have the opportunity. I am also
almost equally disappointed how quickly some folks resorted to identity
politics to explain her lack of success. https://www.nytimes.com/2019/12/08/us/politics/kamala-harris-black-women.html
There
is no evidence that her candidacy failed because of race. There is no
evidence that her candidacy failed because of gender. There have only
been fact-free contentions that she could not succeed because of the ingrained
misogyny and racism of our society. Yes, misogyny and racism corrupt our
public and private lives in myriad ways. However, Hillary Clinton
outpolled her opponent by almost 3 million votes and Barack Obama got more
votes for the presidency than anyone else before or after.
Kamala
Harris's candidacy failed because she ran a lousy campaign. Money dried
up, endorsements dried up because her popular support dried up, not the other
way around. After her rollicking kickoff rally in Oakland and the
riveting moment in the first debate picturing her being bused to school, she
seemed to have little more to say that interested African Americans, women or
the public at large. https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/what-happened-to-the-kamala-harris-campaign/
She
struggled with her past image as a tough prosecutor and waffled on the central
issue of health insurance. Not gender, not race, but politics beat
her.
.
. .
It
wasn't just politics that annoyed me this weekend. On Saturday, I was
unable to finish the crossword puzzle, leaving about 1/3 undone, a major
defeat. A critical factor was not recognizing CHIBA as a Japanese seaport
and you want know why? "It is the 14th most populated city in
Japan." Can you name the 14th most populated city in France?
How about Italy or England? Are you kidding? Oh, yes. San
Francisco, California.
Usually, I respect
the New York Times as the newspaper of record, dubious crossword answers
aside. Its studied seriousness makes it hard to hard to ignore or
refute. However, as Boldness is my middle name, I venture forth to
question its judgment in an area that I, too, have developed expertise --
cookies.
Last week, it
published "12 Stunning Cookies That Will Impress Everyone You
Know." https://nyti.ms/382kznM Today, it explained
how this project came to pass. https://www.nytimes.com/2019/12/04/reader-center/holiday-cookies.html
It claimed that it
turned to the "Babe Ruth of Cookies" to conceive and develop the
recipes. Well, I'm sorry, but the Sultan of Sweets had a feeble batting
average in this game. Of the 12 cookies, only one is a real chocolate
cookie, Gingery Brownie Crinkle Cookies, containing cocoa powder, bittersweet
chocolate pieces and bittersweet chocolate chips. Another merely drizzles
chocolate on the finished product, Peanut Shortbread with Honeycomb; one coats
its thin cylinder shape with white, milk or dark chocolate, Homemade Pocky; one
offers Nutella, the hazelnut cocoa spread, as an optional filling in its
Thumbprint cookie. This does not amount to a major league performance.
This
great country was built on chocolate chip cookies and now, as so many of our
institutions are being besieged, we must cherish what made us great.
Don't give up the chip!
.
. .
The
headline in print is "Warren Discloses $1.9 Million in Earnings as
Consultant." Gasp! That shameless pseudo-progressive lining
her pockets while the rest of us struggled. One detail, though. It
took 30 years for her to earn this much, translating into $63,333 a year not
quite a boondoggle when looked at that way.
This afternoon,
riding on the subway after lunch with Max the Wonder Boy Emeritus, I received a
telephone call on my mobile telephone that I was unable to answer. It
originated in White Pigeon, Michigan, population 1,522 in the 2010
census.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_Pigeon,_Michigan
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_Pigeon,_Michigan
While
I don’t have Senator Lindsay Graham to attest to my veracity, I ask you to
believe that I have no conscious connection to anyone or anything in White
Pigeon, Michigan. I am reminded of Henry David Thoreau's reaction to news
that a new cross-country telegraph line had been installed: "We are in
great haste to construct a magnetic telegraph from Maine to Texas; but Maine
and Texas, it may be, have nothing important to communicate."
Wednesday, December
11, 2019
Rabbi
Lauren Grabelle Herrmann on the president's plan to identify Jews as
a nation: "Jewish identity defined by a person who regularly engages
in anti-Semitic tropes must be especially suspect."
.
. .
Cindy Wilkinson, our favorite Steel Magnolia, submits this
surprising bundle of information about the most expensive rental locations in
the country. https://www.rentcafe.com/blog/rental-market/market-snapshots/americas-most-expensive-zip-codes-2019/
The Holy Land dominates the list; Battery Park City, Tribeca and
the grounds surrounding Palazzo di Gotthelf are in the top slots. Only 4
of the 50 most expensive locations are not in New York or California.
. . .
I admit to having trouble with year-end "Best of"
lists. Books, movies, television shows, recordings. They basically
add up to show how out of touch I am and remind me that I don't care very much
about making up the deficits. However, let's consider the list of the best
local restaurant dishes. https://www.nytimes.com/2019/12/10/dining/best-restaurant-dishes-in-nyc-pete-wells.html
Normally, specially recommended dishes are bound to evoke crowds,
over-priced menus and long waits for reservations. To the credit of Pete
Wells, the New York Times restaurant critic, this list bends towards
modest establishments, where your level of satisfaction might exceed the depletion
of your wallet. Bon appétit.
Thursday, December 12, 2019
Frank Sinatra's 104th birthday.
. . .
Jared Jushner, noted problemsolver, has an op-ed in today's
paper. "In
signing Wednesday’s executive order the president makes clear that such
anti-Semitic hate isn’t to be tolerated at home, either, except in
Charlottesville, Virginia." Or something to that effect.
.
. .
I am reading The Color of Law, by Richard Rothstein, which
argues that law and governmental policy supported the casual prejudice,
self-selection and demographics which resulted in the segregation that we
experience today, residentially, educationally and economically. It is a
companion to Ira Katznelson's When Affirmative Action Was White.
Allow me to offer a telling quote from Rothstein. "We
don't hesitate to acknowledge that Jews in Eastern Europe were forced to live
in ghettos where opportunity was limited and leaving was difficult or
impossible. Yet when we encounter similar neighborhoods in this country,
we now delicately refer to them as the inner city, yet everyone knows
what we mean. (When affluent whites gentrify the same geographic areas,
we don't characterize those whites as inner city families.)"
Friday, December 13, 2019
Harold Gotthelf's birthday < Frank Sinatra's.
. . .
The British electorate has spoken. Instead of merely making the United Kingdom unlivable for Jews, it will be unlivable for everyone.
. . .
The British electorate has spoken. Instead of merely making the United Kingdom unlivable for Jews, it will be unlivable for everyone.
. . .
"Clad in black
suits, white shirts and black ties, hundreds of lawyers forced their way into
the Lahore [Pakistan] cardiology hospital, smashing windows and damaging
equipment." In spite of or because of the arrival of the police,
three patients died. "Some of the lawyers involved in Wednesday’s
attack said they were moved to act by a viral video by one of the doctors, who
mocked and ridiculed them through reciting poetry and belittling remarks." Don't go near those Pakistani lawyers with iambic
pentameter. They are tough dudes.
No comments:
Post a Comment