Thanksgiving 2024

Happy Thanksgiving, wherever you are and however it is for you, this day.  For me, it will start as usual at my coffee place, Caribou Coffee, city centre in Woodbury MN.  Later a family gathering here in town.  I have lots of Thanksgiving Days under my belt, so I know they are no ‘cookie cutter’, one to another, year after year, person after person.  I wish you and yours a good day.

My community anchor is the coffee shop, where I’ve been such a regular for 24 years now that they ask “where’s Dick?” if I don’t materialize somewhere around 6 a.m.

I sit alone, by choice.  Next to my table is a large conference table.  Most every Friday, a group of guys appear, one by one.  They’ve been meeting for years, never more than a half dozen, often less, but the gathering seems important to them.  I gather they’re connected by religion, but faith is seldom the focus: the topic du jour is pot luck.  They are friends who enjoy each others company and have for years.

Being next door neighbor, “eavesdropping” is unavoidable.  I take no notes!

A couple of Fridays ago, only one of the group showed up.  I saw him pretty intensely engaged with a sheet of paper, drawing something.  It is below.  I just asked if I could see it, and when I did, could he send me a copy, and then I asked if I could I use it here.  Permission granted.

The image has been useful for me to take a reflective look at myself, and rather than going into that personal reflection, I offer the same opportunity to you at this reflective holiday, as a particularly intense year nears its end, with a more uncertain than normal future ahead, in the near and longer term.

What the artist had to say about the illustration is below, in its entirety.  Some time later, I’ll add my own comment later, at this space.

Have a good ending to 2024.

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Mike H Nov 15, 2024: Dick. Here’s the image I shared with you the other day. It has a duplicity meaning: the light beam, or energy, could be seen as coming out or going in. And the cloud represents the fog surrounding our lives with our God-given talents and life’s purpose shining out on others. I had the energy we draw from our faith in mind when I sketched it. 

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Those in the Twin Cities area of Mpls-St Paul: Friday 11/29 7-9 p.m. Channel 2 rerun of TPT’s very interesting program on the News “Broadcast Wars” among Twin Cities television news stations from the advent of television in the 1940s to the 1980s.  I watched the program last night.  It was extremely interesting.

About mid-December I’ll offer some personal thoughts on politics generally.  There have been (Nov 20 and 22) posts on miscellaneous topics, and there will be similar miscellaneous posts later.  Check back once in awhile.

Lyle and Spencer

Today is the Visitation for Lyle Root, age 91, a friend I’ve known since the 1960s.  I’ll be there.  Lyle has a very long history in his church and community – but I’ll probably see few folks who I know,  It’s part of aging.  How I knew Lyle isn’t even in the obit; most of our contemporaries have passed on.

Lyle was a unique individual.  As stated in his obituary, his “journey on this earth was one marked by his dedication to his community and his profound kindness towards others.

Here’s a 2017 photo I took of him at home in Anoka.  It catches the essence of Lyle Root.  I think splitting wood was a hobby for Lyle.  He lived in town, and he was proud of his wood pile.  It was about the time of this photo that the dilemmas of age were starting to catch up with Lyle.

Lyle Root Summer 2017

My context with Lyle was through teacher union work.  He was President of the Anoka-Hennepin Education Association in 1972, the year collective bargaining became part of the vocabulary for Minnesota teachers.  I  was President-elect, and an early crisis was having to replace the Executive Director of the local union, already a large local.  It was Lyle who asked me to take the job for six months…which then continued for 27 years.  It was an event one doesn’t forget.  I last saw him in person about a year ago, still his upbeat self in a local nursing home.

So, how about Spencer, who shares this post with Lyle?

Spencer is my grandson, now six years a Marine.

Lyle was a very proud Marine veteran who’ll be buried with military honors tomorrow.  For years he had a Marine flag on his property.  I won’t be surprised if I see it at Church today.

Lyle died on Nov. 13.  Spencer was home on leave from Nov. 8, hunting with his Dad, and we saw him for an early Thanksgiving on Nov. 17.  Monday the 11th I joined the local Veterans for Peace for its annual Armistice Day event.  I have long believed that there is no such thing as ‘coincidence’ – everything has its place and time in each of our lives.  That Lyle died when Spencer was home is not coincidental to me, though they never knew each other.

Vets for Peace #27 bell-ringers at 11 a.m. November 11, 2024, remembering The eleventh hour on the eleventh day of the eleventh month of 1918, the cessation of WWI.  Photo is at the Victory Memorial at 44th and Victory Memorial Drive (Washburn Ave N) in Minneapolis.  Stop by there if in the area.

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At the early Thanksgiving dinner last Sunday, Spence gave me his Marine Unit Patch (below),  He joined the Marines program before his senior year in high school, and went on active duty after graduation from the rigorous boot camp in San Diego October 2018.  I was honored to be there.  He’s finished his first tour, re-upped for a second, and at the end of the second, apparently, will come a mandatory assignment training future Marines..  (Any of us who have ever been military know a little about basic training, and NCO’s!  Apparently that’s Spencers next step,)

 

Of course I asked what the acronym on the patch meant (Spencer’s specialty is repair/maintenance on aircraft like c-130s).  The patch is his unit and the letters mean Collateral Duty Quality Assuring Representative.

I see no contradiction at all in being proud of Spencer and his service, now six years; or of affirming Lyle’s pride of service; and my affinity for the philosophy of Veterans for Peace, even though I think the issue of war is complex, not amenable to quick or easy judgements.

In memory of Lyle, and with respect for Spencer, Semper Fidelis.

Spencer, Dick, and Spencer’s Mon and Dick’s daughter Joni, Nov. 17, 2024

Last note I have from Lyle a couple of years ago: Lyle Root 2019

French-Canadian

My Dad was 100% French-Canadian.  He never called himself that, but that’s what he was: his entire ancestry came from over 300 years in what he used to call “lower Canada”, which is today’s Quebec.

Recently a Canadian cousin, originally from Saskatchewan and most of his adult life in Montreal, and I, had a back and forth about the matter of persons of French in America ancestry call themselves.  With his permission, I’m basically simply going to replay the two or three e-mails discussing the  topic.  To begin, but not further elaborated on here, I had written about Judson LaMoure, an illustrious ND pioneer who spent much of his life as a merchant in the border town of Neche ND, and grew up in an English speaking section of Quebec.  The article about LaMoure is here, if you’re interested.

The dialogue (all on Nov. 18, 2024):

from Remi: The descendants of the French colonists who settled in the St Lawrence River Valley called themselves Canadiens by 1700. Almost all the French speaking Canadians who settled in the American Midwest called themselves Canadiens. Others called them French Canadians. When my grandmother spoke French, she referred to French Canadians as Canadiens, including her relatives in the USA. Until the British invasion the Acadians considered themselves French, not Canadien. They had a separate identity and dialect. When some of them came to Lower Canada, they were rapidly assimilated by the Canadiens and completely lost their Acadian identity. I am sure that the Acadians who settled in Louisiana first called themselves Acadians. I think that almost all Métis in the West are descendants of Canadiens. There are Métis in the Maritime provinces who are descendants of Acadians. There are pockets of Acadians in Maine who still speak French. Today French Canadian usually refers to Francophones in Canada like me, born outside of Quebec who are descendants of Canadiens. I suppose that today someone outside of Canada could call Quebecois and Acadians French Canadian (but not the hundreds of thousands of Francophones from Europe, Haiti and Africa who live mainly in Montreal). I see that some of the descendants of Canadiens in the United States call themselves French Canadian. Jacques Kerouac, who only learned English when he went to school called himself a Canadien Français, but his mother called herself a Canadienne.

from Dick: As I think I told you, my 23andMe DNA declares me 100% German&French& Netherlands, Northwest European.  When I was first getting at my project, I hoped I’d have some indigenous blood.  You’ve said I do, and I’m glad, but apparently it’s just a touch back to the early 1600s, 14 or more generations back.   I’ll have to drag out my neanderthal percentage, whatever that means:  (It says I have more than 89% of the total sample, less than 2%, 307 variants.  Do I get a prize!?)  Long and short, I’m a white man, which doesn’t make me particularly proud these days.


from Remi: Mine is mostly French and German and 2 per cent indigenous. By the way, I have never heard of an Acadian calling themselve French Canadian. When someone asked about my nationality at school, I said half French and half German. For a very  long time the anglophones considered Canadian to be associated only with the “dirty French Canadians”. No one called themselves Canadian until the Second World War except French Canadians. When they buried soldiers in Europe someone thought, perhaps they should be called Canadians and not British subjects. The first person to get a passport with citizenship referred to as Canadian was the Prime Minister of Canada in 1946. My grandmother called French Canadians Canadiens in both English and French.


from Dick: Until I started doing Chez Nous, I never heard Dad refer to himself or any of his relatives as French.   He would mention Lower Canada and not much else.  A very likely reason was that he had to repeat first grade because he couldn’t speak English and this was in Grafton.  It was humiliating.  He was fond of telling the story of when Grandma and Grandpa went to visit relatives in Quebec in 1925, and Grandpa, who was last to migrate in 1894, greeted his brother in French.  His brother said, in French, “this man cannot be my brother.  He does not speak French!”  For some reason, Dad had real affection for William Henry Drummond’s book “The Habitant”, especially the story “How Bateese Came Home”.  I found the book in the UofMinnesota Library and reprinted that story in ChezNous.  https://thoughtstowardsabetterworld.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/CN-NVJ-505-544020.pdf scroll down to page 537.

We went to Quebec in 1982 and for Dad it was like dying and going to Heaven.  It was his first trip.  He was 74.   He had the same reaction to some authentic pea soup at a French-Canadian picnic.  In 1991, he asked me to drive him to visit cousins in Ste Elisabeth area who I think he’d never met.
If you look at the Chez Nous index, you’ll find quite a few short articles written by Dad, Henry Bernard.  https://fahfminn.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/Chez-Nous-NVJ-1979-2002-v.-2-col-Jul-8-2016.pdf

from Remi: Very interesting. I read some of your dad’s stories. We read Drummond in school but I didn’t like him because I thought he made fun of French Canadians – our huge families and happy go lucky simple spirit. I am curious about your grandfather. If his son, your father could not speak English until he went to school (like my father), then surely your grandfather spoke French when he met his brother.


from Dick: I think I forgot to comment about Grandpa and the French language.

Of course, I don’t know, but I was 17 when he died, so I did know him, but only in English.
He was born in 1872, and was in his 20s when he came to North Dakota.  Before ND he had spent some time as a lumberjack in New Hampshire, and at Thetford Mines QC.  His brother came to Dakota about 6 years before he did.
I’m sure he didn’t lose his language, but I’m guessing he put the French in the background, and it was more a matter of translating his 1925 memories of French, into more or less understandable Quebec French.  As you know, dialect creeps into language.  I’m always amused by the captioning of cajun English!

The Conversation continued, Nov. 21:


from Remi:  The term ‘Franco Americain’ was first used by the Canadien elite in New England in 1901 as an inclusive term to unite Canadiens and Acadians in the U.S. Simple Canadiens never used this term. David Vermette wrote he  never heard this term in his youth. See his article ‘Where did the term Franco American come from’. Since there were no Acadians in the Mid West there was no need for this term.  ‘Franco American’  came into general use when people no longer spoke French. Before that they were always ‘Canadien’.

Around 1700 the descendants of the French colonists in the St. Lawrence Valley began calling themselves Canadien, meaning French people who live in America. In 1760 when English American colonists invaded Canada many Canadiens shared their hatred of the British and some joined them in their revolutionary fight south of the border. The term French Canadian was a racist term coined by Lord Durham when he came to Canada in 1839 to make a report on the Patriotes and all of the people of Lower Canada who had failed in their attempt to create a French speaking republic in America. He called them “a people with no literature and no history” who must be assimilated.

Canadiens immigrants to the U.S. were unique because they thought of themselves as American before they came. “The French Canadian is as American as someone born in Boston” said civil war hero Edmond Mallet. George Kenngott, who edited a book on Lowell Mass. wrote  “The French Canadians objected to being called ‘foreigners, and counted themselves as Americans”. The American politician Henry Cabot Lodge, in a speech on immigration said “the French of Canada are one of the oldest settlements on this continent. They have been in a broad sense, Americans for generations, and their coming to the United States is merely a movement across an imaginary line from one part of America to another.”

I have spoken to Acadians in the Maritime provinces, the Magdalen Islands and Cajuns in Louisiana. They all speak with an identical accent and in an identical manner.

In the broad sense of the term Franco American includes not just US Americans but everyone in Canada also, since they are
Americans too.

from Dick: This is all very interesting to me.

My Dad was 100% French descended from people from Lower Canada in the rural area to the south of Quebec City.  He had a Master’s degree and was well read, but we never lived anywhere with any French-Canadian population.
He never had anything to say about this until I started to explore my roots at age 40, and thence went all in, with Chez Nous, and he and I traveled to Quebec in 1982, specifically St. Henri Bellechasse (Levis) plus Montreal and Quebec City (staying in dormitories at McGill and Laval).
I’m sure it was not easy out on the prairie for the migrant Canadiens.  I vividly remember a sentence in a pioneer memory from Walsh County (Grafton area) in the old days.  The writer was F-C, and said her mother admonished the kids to “never trust an Indian or a Norwegian”.  I’m pretty sure this kind of suspicion and distrust crossed ethnic boundaries for others as well, especially considering language and religion differences.

U. S. Department of Education

Since 1980, the U.S. Department of Education has been a Cabinet level position.

On November 16, Heather Cox Richardson in her Letters from an American presented an outstanding overview of the Department and its history.

I would highly recommend everyone read it, particularly those with any past, present or future relationship to education.

Best I can gather from the internet, about 70 million Americans are under 18 years of age.  That is about 20% of the nations population who cannot vote, and are subject to the good or bad judgement of whoever makes the political decisions relating to school, including those who opt for private or home school options.   This includes children of pre-school age, and a significant percentage of high school seniors who have not yet turned 18 (I turned 18 on May 4, 1958, a high school senior, for example).

In the cited article, I especially noted May 5, 1980, which is when the U.S. Department of Education came to be.  This was in the administration of President Jimmy Carter.

For some unremembered reason, in January of 1980, I was part of a group of Minnesota Education Association professional staff who went to D.C., and were at a briefing in the Cabinet Room of the White House.  My recollection is that there were fewer than 10 of us, I only recall for certain Kenn Pratt, who is the one who took the below photo of me at the approximate spot reserved for Press, even today.

Dick Bernard, January, 1980 White House, Washington DC

The Department of Education, as Heather’s Letter points out, has great importance to this country; it has also been under assault, and probably will be again.

The adage is “to be fore-warned is to be fore-armed”.  Read carefully, and spread this post widely.  It will help you to know what you’re talking about.  This is one of those situations where the young people without power, need the help of those who have the capability of helping.

PS: In January, 1980, my staff assignment was to the Anoka-Hennepin Education Association.  In later assignments in various locales, I watched the conflicts over education policy play out in assorted ways in assorted places.

In 2006, as part of a group working on a program on Family-School-Community Partnerships, I wrote a brief (2-page) piece on “Community” in the context of school.  If you wish, here it is: Community by Dick Bernard 2006

COMMENTS:

from Mary Ellen: Thanks, Dick!

Just to add a bit from my personal experience.

In the 1980s, those of us in foreign language education used the publication of ´A Nation at Risk’ as a call to expanding and improving public school programs in foreign languages. I think a Conressman named Paul Simon led that movement, and he was quite successful.
The district where I taught (ISD196) viewed the publication as a wake-up call.
This is also a wake-up call. The response will be the important part…as you said.
I also think it is important to acknowledge that parents of handicapped children (whether physically or mentally) often cannot choose private education because those schools do not have the staff and resources to deal with their special needs. Asking why not is most revealing!

from Joni: Today’s [Nov 20] announcement of his nominee for Dept of Ed is further evidence of his unfitness for office.  I’m just disgusted.

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MN Senate District 47

I’ve lived at this address for 24 years, so the name and boundaries of my state legislative district have changed several  times.  The district in 2000 changed in 2002, again in 2012, again in 2022.  We’re suburban so the general boundaries include most of our city, now 83,000.  Total eligible voters this year in the Senate District was over 59,000, 28,098 on my side; the rest on the other.

All House members are up for election every two years, as are all Federal Congresspersons.

In my district, incumbent Amanda Hemmingsen-Jaeger (DFL) got 60.62% of the vote, almost exactly half of the eligible votes.  In the adjoining district incumbent Ethan Cha (DFL) also was reelected with 54% of the vote, 46% of the eligible voters.  Amanda impressed me a great deal – a hard-working young legislator.  I had less reason to interact with Ethan, but he was impressive as well.  He took his job seriously.  Representing groups of people is very hard and unappreciated work.  Sen. Nicole Mitchell was not up for election in 2024.)

Our incumbent 4th District Congresswoman Betty McCollum (DFL) was reelected with 67% of the vote; Incumbent U.S. Senator Amy Klobuchar (DFL) was reelected with 56% of the statewide vote.   Kamala Harris won the Minnesota Presidential vote 51-47%.

(All the numbers cited are from the MNVotes website.).

There will be endless slicing and dicing of the votes and what this all means.  Long and short, two years from now there will another such election.  You have two years to prepare.  Best to begin preparing now.

My local elections went as I wished, and I congratulate both Amanda and Ethan for their successful campaigns.  They represented us very well.

Some random observations from an old guy who reached voting age (21) 63 years ago.  These are observations, not criticisms, for consideration.  They are not in any order, and simply food for thought and discussion.

  1.  Were I not politically active, odds are I wouldn’t have known who was running for local office.  We received only one political mailing in our mailbox this year and that was so unusually produced I almost didn’t even look at it.  Again, this is just an observation.
  2. I did watch the League of Women Voters sessions.  They were useful to get a sense of who the candidates were, but much too short to get any substantive notions of where candidates stood on issues, and why.
  3. I saw few lawn signs for candidates.  I’m mostly interested in whether there are some out…it’s a small signal of individual interest.
  4. I appreciated the couple of informal fundraisers held by the local party.  It was a good chance to get a feel of the local DFL.
  5. There was not a single door knock this year from anybody; no fliers left at the door.  Again, just an observation.  No phone calls that I was aware of, but typically we don’t answer phone numbers we don’t recognize, (but we  do listen to messages if left, brief and clear).
  6. Until recent years, there was a local community newspaper that invited and received letters to the editor with varying viewpoints.  It was a valuable communications resource, gone now, probably never to return but missed.  Perhaps the new on-line newspaper for Woodbury will devise some method for community conversation through such letters.
  7. There ought to be some strategy to make a bit more informal contact with we elder DFL members.  We are loyal, but we need some specific attention since many folks are perhaps like me, and aren’t much into things like Facebook, or Tim Tok, etc.  There truly are more ways to communicate less these days.  I make this strictly as an observation.
  8. I don’t use social media any more.   Social media is a favorite for misinformation  and disinformation.  It is useful in networks among people who know each other personally.  I think often of the old ‘telephone tree’ system that we used to use: I call ten…..  It is ancient history, but variations would still work.
  9. There is a desperate need for more Civic Education.  The default seems to be to blame education, but I beg to differ.  Education is a public function (and this includes private and home schools).   Schools are constrained by laws and policies, and too many kids are very ignorant about even the most basic facts about government, and I think some of this is intentional.  Many adults are almost illiterate about the bare basics, such as who their representatives even are.
  10. I mentally tune out of any media advertising.  Maybe it is just me, but advertising of most any sort is a complete turnoff.  If you live in a communty, you know reputation
  11. I liked a lot the Coffee and Conversation gatherings and attended when I could.  These were casual, open to whoever came, usually a dozen or less, usually open agenda, in an open space, an hour or so.  Several times legislators dropped by, and not only from our district.  The sessions were very good means to connect with other real human beings.  Note: Zoom has been the rage since Covid.  It has serious limitations.  Personal contact is important, at least occasionally.
  12. I am very much aware that my time for activism is past; on the other hand, I’m not dead yet!  The DFL needs to implement strategies for at least keeping connected with people like myself.  This doesn’t have to be – indeed, it shouldn’t be – intense or highly organized, but it should exist.
  13. I think I’m a relatively large financial contributor to campaigns, but there is a cost to this…swarms of solicitations came, all emergency, of course.  I understand there is a need.  Etc.  Etc.  But there must be some way to moderate this.
  14. It’s important to get to know legislators.  On the other hand it is impossible for any legislator to get to know everyone personally; nor is it possible to succeed as a legislator if unable to work with persons with other ideas.
  15. I have no problems with some unseen “party” strategizing – a necessary but impossible task these days of many special interest groups with specific agendas.
  16. In the end analysis, the voters individually and collective wear the halos or the dunce camp – this includes the masses who don’t vote at all or have no excuses.  In the end, we get exactly what we deserve.

I offer these ideas for your consideration.

COMMENTS:  My intention with this post is to encourage thinking and dialogue.  

from Norman:  Thanks, Dick.

Interestingly, I have some similar observations and comments including about our local state house race in 40B [generally parts of Roseville, Shoreview and St. Anthony – St. Paul area].
Yes, seniors seem to be kind of ignored by the powers that be in the DFL especially when it comes to deciding not to get senior aka veteran DFLer input regarding positions on various social issues that most voters have little if any interest in as they those issues are really not where they live.  Yet, the DFL let alone the Democratic Party are both seen by too many voters as placing their primary interest and focus on such issues as transgender, LBGTQ rights, gay marriage and so on as if those issues are the primary concern of the two parties.
Those issues are not where most voter live and while their proponents are welcome to reside under our rainbow covered large tent, they do not need to be put on a pedestal under that large canvas as many voters perceive and as easily exploited by the GOP/MAGA types.
In terms of HD40B, the campaign seemed to be very disorganized and inconsistent even though the DFL endorsed candidate, Curtis Johnson, won easily in an open safe seat.
People complained of never receiving their PCR reimbursement forms documenting their contributions to the campaign even after being promised that the forms would be in the mail the next day.  Note: we sent in a contribution but never received an acknowledgement that it had been received although we had already used the PCR deal for 2024 much earlier.
There did not seem to be any organized effort to get signs set up around the district even though the opponent had his signs all over the district.
I requested a sign several times but never received on until a North Metro chapter colleague told me that someone had dropped several off at her house.  She brought one over to our house.  I asked the campaign whether I should trash the sign or if it would be picked up.  I was told that it would be picked up but so far it has not, been retrieved.
Granted, it was considered to be a safe district so perhaps the campaign was not very worried about what the result would be and did not put much time in organizing much of a campaign but…

Remembering

Three of us were conversing on-line about politics and it led to our sharing some of our background.  We came from differing backgrounds from several states with some facts in common, some not.  It occurred to me that what we talked about might be useful to others who might have similar curiosity about their own background and how their political beliefs evolved.  What follows is for anyone who might be interested.  We are two men and one woman and we are all in the senior citizen category.  There is no ‘rocket science’ in our writing – just a conversation remembering….  Perhaps an idea for you.

Here is a small gallery of photos of Berlin ND about 1910.: Berlin ND early pre-1910001  The photos were taken atop the local grain elevator.  When I did the family history, I learned that Berlins largest census population in any decade was the first, in 1910: 137 people.  Below is my grandparents their first child, and visitors and their farm about 1907:  (Grandma is holding Lucina at right, Fred is at center.  Fred’s Dad from Wisconsin is second from right, and his younger brother at far left.  Grandma’s sister is second from left.  Behind them is the land of the farmstead I describe.  The photographer is looking north.  Here’s an aerial map of that same farmstead today.  Berlin is about 4 1/2 miles to the southwest.

Busch farm summer 1907. From right: Rosa and Lucina, Wilhelm, Ferd, and Frank Busch and Lena Berning

Dick Nov 6

Back in the day, 1905, when my grandparents, age 25 and 21, took land about 5 miles from just birthed Berlin ND, many farms were being settled and little towns founded in ND.  Much of this happened about 1900-1910, most farms were 160 acres, four to the section, with many kids, whether wanted or not.

Fast forward to today, truly small farms have essentially disappeared.  One of my uncle’s lifelong neighbors apparently aspired to and probably achieved his goal of owning 36 sections (144 quarters) of farmland: a corporate farm on steroids.   When land came available, he bought it.

In a sense, ND is a rich man’s playground now, federal farm policy supports, etc. are sacrosanct, including for corporate farms.

When I had the responsibility of selling my Uncle’s ND property (three quarters), I carved out for purchase 63 acres of pasture and farmstead for a young farm family seeking a rural environment to raise their family and to raise a few Angus.  The young family seem to be still at it, living in the house occupied for years by my uncle and Aunt; their three youngsters bringing life to the old farm..

Meanwhile, in a sense the prairie is slowly reverting to buffalo prairie.   Farms are much larger operations and require fewer people.  There are a few kids rattling around who travel miles to a consolidated school, when in the old days, there was almost a one-room school per section of land.  What population growth there is, is confined to larger communities, like Fargo-Moorhead and a few others.  There is no need for a downtown Berlin, or any other small town, now.

Jeff, Nov. 6

In the election, the people (the volks) have spoken, indeed.  in the ag business for many years, I enjoyed my rural business partners and colleagues. Many were Democrats prior to the mid 2000’s, or at least the old moderate Democrats (a la Colin Peterson perhaps?  Earl Pomeroy?)  Many were good old boy’s partial to Coors Light and steak and potatoes, and you didn’t discuss politics…they probably didn’t completely trust me as a city slicker and trader/dealer…. but I have always been uncomfortable with the millennial old rural virtue/urban decadence and immorality that has become more pronounced of late.   I have gotten to say they are “the salt of the earth” in a snarky way. As if the rest of us in the suburbs and cities are just fops and rentiers…..besides transsexual illegal aliens getting government assistance while stealing cats and dogs for dinner and will be certainly be dragged out of girl’s locker rooms and off the playing fields forever right?  Huzzah!

Gramee, Nov 6

I’ve been a “big city girl” all my life. Visited some family farms in ND and Iowa over time. Got more and more interested in them as I got older. Now, I’m old!

My farm ancestry was far from typical, if such a thing as typical. But Dick’s remembrance about selling farmland popped up a lot of memories about my ancestry.

My mother’s North Dakota family was not politically committed, far as I know. Gramma’s ancestors were farmers in Illinois. I don’t know much about them. I was very close to my city-slicker maternal grandparents, who lived in (wait for it!) Fargo, ND.

My father’s parents were diehard, North Dakota Republicans. Grampa but mostly Gramma (far as I could tell, since Grampa was a man of few words) were diehard Methodists. She was actively involved in their community. Especially when they moved from the farm into town. Among other things, she was the church organist and a WCTU member.

Grampa had some chutzpa re money. He crop-farmed hard. Eventually added a silver fox farm. Bought land and businesses “in town.” He and my father clashed pretty much from the get-go. Mostly in the field, less often in their home. He served in the ND legislature as a representative.

A few years before Grampa died, my father and his new wife moved from the Twin Cities to Gramma and Grampa’s North Dakota town, where he set up a new dental practice. I assume this was a way for him to suck up to grampa’s money. But when Grampa died, he left his twin daughters (my father’s sisters) the best two-thirds of the farm, and gifted my father with the far end of the farm that included a low-land swamp. Also, very little money. My father’s sister and brother-in-law took over Grampa’s silver fox farm.

My father’s SW Iowa grandfather was apparently an active, radical Republican. Great-Gramma was a twin who was born in Scotland. I would LOVE to know how that came about, but too little curiosity, too late. They both died before I was born. A trusted, older family member confided to me as a certainty that he was part of the KKK. She had a vague memory of being with him at a Klan meeting as a child. Important to note that SW Iowa was/is part of the “Bible Belt.”

My ND aunts and uncles were almost certainly Republicans, but of a less rigid/aggressive type. Uncle One was a career military officer. He was posted in the Deep South long enough to become a mostly-but-not-entirely-vocal racist. This 10-year-old kid argued with him about that at the dinner table one night. Kinda gutsy, because I was a little bit afraid of him. He and my aunt returned to ND when he retired. Uncle Two was a salesman/realtor and Town Mayor.

I grew up among a collective of Republicans. And one staunch Democratic friend of my mother. None of that either a good nor bad thing, but definitely a thing! I’ve been amazed in recent years to learn that a couple of cousins from the ND bunch are staunch Dems.

My parents were Republicans. I think my mother followed my father into that altogether-different-from-now GOP (Grand Old Party).  Dad and Mom quietly worked on me to embrace being a Republican. For example, in my first voting, my father sent to me in the literal plain, brown wrapper a copy of “A Choice, Not an Echo” in the mail with no enclosed note. I was not Democratically political until sometime in my 30s. Black sheep. Baaaaaa!

And how did I become such a bleeding-heart Dem? I schlogged along as a RINO for my early adult life. Worked on a few Republican campaigns in St. Louis Park, e.g., school board, mayor, state rep. Joined a small, VERY progressive church community in Burnsville (my home at that time). Had a literal epiphany about justice and peace and love and all that stuff. Sucked it up into my core, turned my back on the GOP, and never looked back. Until recently, with eyebrows knitted while trying to understand what has happened to our country.

And there, gentlemen, you have it.

Dick, Nov 7

I very much appreciate this reminiscence.

I can’t say for certain my bunch’s politics, since they didn’t talk about it much.  I would guess conservative would suffice, which would mean Republican.  Grandparents got an annual Christmas card from William Langer, long-time ND Senator and apparently on the Fascist fringe in the good old days.  Grandpa worried about the Communists in the Joe McCarthy era.  One of my dad’s relatives was a ND State Senator, I believe Democrat.

Grandpa Busch had pretensions about being a cut above ordinary in farming, but the Great Depression hurt them badly.  In my Oct 29 blog,  my story is about part of his experience.  He may have had a flirtation with the non-partisan league earlier.

North Dakota is an odd place, generally, politically.  For several years both U.S. Senators, Kent Conrad and Byron Dorgan, were Democrats, as was the only Representative Earl Pomeroy.

Earlier William Guy was Governor for a long time and a very active Democrat, followed by Art Link, another Dem.  I know a former Agriculture Commissioner in ND, a farmer from my mom’s area.  He was and is a strong Democrat.

But for now, anyway, ND is deep red….

So, what led to my being a liberal, as I describe myself, a moderate, pragmatic Democrat who speaks from his heart in matters of family, justice and peace.

I wasn’t active politically in college. I was too young to vote in 1960, and graduated in 1961.

What made the difference for me, I’m certain, was my young wife’s critical illness which consumed our entire short marriage and ended with her death from kidney disease in 1965.  She was 22 and I had just turned 25.  In sundry ways I learned first-hand about what community means in real terms, about public welfare to pay massive medical bills, about helping networks, and on and on and on.  Our son is now 60 years old, so my experience is long and very personal.

Jeff, Nov 7

My maternal side emigrated here in the 1850-1885 period, all to the area around Fond Du Lac Wisconsin.  They had farms on very hilly land, not very great stuff….so by the time the first generation came around a lot of them were out of farming, and working in skilled trades, laboring, and retail businesses.

All were Germans, coming from Pomerania (conservative Lutherans) and the Rhineland/Swiss border area (mixed Catholic and Lutheran) .  I have no understanding of that early generation. My grandfather came of age just before WWI was nearly over (mom born in 1917), I knew him as a retired crabby old guy in the late 50s and 60s.  He was partial to whiskey and stories were that whiskey didn’t bring out the best in him, i.e. spousal abuse. By the Depression, times were very tough for them.  Living in town, he did get a job with the Chicago Northwestern as a railroad worker on the trains that moved mostly between Milwaukee and Manitowoc, sometimes further north.  Union job, they both were thankful to FDR for keeping them and their family alive (Hoover was not a good name in that house) …so that side and my mom were FDR Democrats.  She voted that way up till Alzheimers claimed her.

Dad’s side were Italians from Piemonte part of Italy…north of Turin, foothills of the Alps….lots of emigrants from that specific area ended up in the mining areas of Upper Michigan …. both the Keweenaw copper areas, and the Gogebic iron mining areas.  The earliest ones 1870s and 80s, did start mining, but by the early1900s most of them had moved on to be small businesspeople, then by the next generation same and professional areas as well.

My grandfather on dad’s side, passed well before I was born but I have never seen a photo of him in which he didn’t have a 3-piece suit and a tie …and a pocket watch with its gold chain. He and his brother owned an Italian bakery. So typical petit bourgeois small businessmen…and I have to assume solid Republicans ….

Dad was the eldest, born in 1914, wanted to go to OCS out of high school (1932) and a military officer career, Grandpa and Grandma , being from Italy and naturally biased against the military as a life, didn’t want any of that and he used connections with the Italian consul in Chicago to land my dad a  job with a big and growing Italian cheese company …he started on the line and quickly was managing areas of the plant and plant managing so moving across Wisconsin and Upper Michigan every 2 years.  He was a typical Eisenhower Republican, so I think up till 1996 mom and dad cancelled each other out…. he served as a small-town public contributor with stints as officers and members of the School Board, Chamber of Commerce and other civic organizations (as did Mom…Women’s Club, Ladies Aid Society, PTO etc.)    My dad switched to Dem in 1996 in Clinton’s 2nd term, I think the 1994 genesis of ugly

Republicanism (Newt Gingrich et. al.)  turned him off, Bush wasn’t his cup of tea.

So …my background is small town, no American farming to speak of….and split between moderate Dem and Moderate GOP when I am not in despair and considering moving to Ireland, I would describe myself as center left.  I am solid left on social/cultural issues, and moderate on $$ issues (neither party gives a hoot about deficits and debt and eventually with a declining population, climate change, and misinformation rampant it will catch up with us)

Dick, Nov 7

I find this most fascinating.  Very briefly filling in some personal blanks.

My Dad is 100% French-Canadian, his people – mothers’ side – first came to the St. Paul-St. Anthony area in early 1850s, the last about 1864.  Thence to Dakota Territory in 1878 about where Grafton ND is today.  His Dad emigrated from Quebec in early 1890s.

The French were in North America before Plymouth Rock (1620).  My first F-C ancestor came in 1618 – Jean Nicolet, prominent in Wisconsin History.  Mother of his first child was my earliest NA ancestor, a Nipising woman.  He’s sometimes described as one of the first in Wisconsin.  The line has been traced and verifiable and I think 18 generation back.

My Mom was 100% German American.  Her forebears came from northwest Germany, then called Westfalia and Hanover, near today’s Netherlands.

They settled in far southwest Wisconsin in the 1840s, a few miles from Dubuque Iowa, and not much farther from Galena Illinois.  The last emigrant came to the U.S. about 1870, about the time of the dream of the Second Reich in Germany, and all that follows.

This side came to south central ND in 1905 in the land rush of the early 1900s.  Several came west, not all stayed.

Mom and Dad were American born, but most of their earlier kin were native German or 1stgeneration U.S.

I’m sure theirs was not an easy lot.  And there were stories of failure and success.

Jeff, Nov 9

Just looking at Ancestry today…Great Great Grandma Wilhelmina got on a ship in Hamburg in 1868 with her husband Karl and 2 kids, a 3-year-old girl (great grandma Augusta) and an infant son.  Karl up and died overnight on the first day…buried at sea.  Wilhelmina made it to Milwaukee and worked for a while, then remarried and ended up in Sheboygan WI.   The family lore was that a day after the burial at sea, she went to the ship’s captain and asked for most of her dead husband’s passage fare back, to which the German captain said “nicht ein pfennig”…. not one penny back explaining you pay to get on the ship….no money back if you don’t make it to the destination.

Wilhelmina born in 1832, the daughter of Christian and Helena.  Their town was Schonwald Pomerania …. today it is called Debina and is in Poland, just west of the city of Gdynia. (I have the entry from the parish record of the marriage in 1831….it says the town was Protestant, but there were 2 Catholics, making up 0.7% of the population.  I think it is a holiday area nowadays as it is near the beach on the Baltic Sea.  A description of the village today dates it back to at least 1495, it was “owned” by hereditary aristocracy well into the early 20th century.  Small village that with its economy controlled by aristocrats who bought and sold the land and the village, It is pretty obvious why younger folks looked to migrate somewhere…either to larger cities in Germany, or to the USA that’s for sure.

There is also has description of the area in late WW2, apparently there was a German air base nearby, the Red Army “liberated” the area.  What looks like a local historian account describes how women and girls tried to flee as the Russians came in, hiding in woods or getting out, as it described rape and assault was common…3000 Russian soldiers bunked in town for a while, when the war ended, they handed the village over to Poland and the name got changed to Debina.

COMMENT 

From Norm:  Regarding your assignment [not an assignment, rather an invitation] below that appears to be a request for a reflection or two on my background including growing up in a strong DFL family on a marginal farm in north central Minnesota, the following homework is brought to class.  My mom was a public-school teacher so I will try to respond consistently with her standards and expectations in mind.😀😁

I grew up in a strong DFL family as I noted with both parents having lived through the Great Depression and somewhat affected by that experience. Parades, conventions, campaigns including church diners and putting up signs in a large senate district and so on were a bit part of our family life when growing up.
My dad left high school following the tenth grade as did many of his age peers did at that time to work and to help with the family expenses. His father and my grandfather, Hanson, had come from Norway but the latter died not long after I was born so I never knew him. Dad worked hard to buy a small farm with good land for raising hay and cattle. He operated a small insurance agency and later served in the Minnesota state senate for eighteen years when it was still considered to be non-partisan albeit with a liberal and a conservative caucus aka similar to a DFL and the GOP caucus that we know today.
Mom was a city girl growing up in Robbinsdale and going to the U of M with assistance from one of the New Deal FDR facilitated programs to become the first in her family to earn a college degree. She earned a degree in Home Economics because “that is where the jobs were” as she would always tell us, but her real interest was in English and writing. She was hired as a schoolteacher in Cromwell by eh school board that was chaired by my Dad a single man interested in public education. her mother had come from Norway at age 21 and always spoke with a strong Norwegian accent as well.
Our family was a very political family aka a very DFL oriented family involved in the local DFL activities including Labor Day parades in nearby Cloquet when Dad was in the state senate.  His campaign committees were always essentially just his family and immediate relatives.
Dad always had the support of the labor unions in nearby Cloquet and the three wood product companies located there. Note:  While those three companies were the major area employees at that time, they have since all been sold and the unions either broken or no longer in place.  Technology has also reduced the number of employees needed as well.
Mom and dad always believed in public education and made it possible for my two brothers and me to receive college degrees.  We all received advanced degrees on our own later in life in business and in law.
One of my brothers made a career out of the USAF retiring as a full bird.  He has become an avid GOP and MAGA supporter.  Our little brother is less outspoken regarding his political views, but I think that he tends to vote GOP as well.
My own views of the political world are centrist DFL in nature. I have no time for the extreme far left views aka “poor us ain’t it just awful” crap on social issues found in too many members of our great coalition party as focusing on the merits or lack of the merits of those viewpoints on the far edge makes it hard for Democrats to win elections as was just proven once again in the non-contest between Trump and Harris for the office of the POTUS.
While that result clearly showed that Harris and the Democratic Party were clearly out of step with the voters, it did not change or modify in any way my strong belief in the centrist policies of the Democratic Party.
On the other hand, just as Trump has remade the Republican party into an isolationist,  ideologue based, authoritarian government desired party, we may well have to redesign the coalition known as the Democratic Party in order to be taken seriously by the voters in the future.
It is disappointing to me to have to accept that reality but then again, the sole purpose of a political party is to be a vehicle for winning elections with good voter support for its ideals and public policy platforms.
Absolutely, the purpose of a political party is clearly nothing more and nothing less than that!
it sure as hell is not or at least should not be seen as a way of putting the “poor us ain’t it just awful” crappers in the drivers and the front seats as has often been the case with the DFL and Democratic Parties or at least as perceived as such as was the case in 2024 by too many voters.

Armistice Day

Today is Armistice Day.  The U.S. media report it as Veterans Day; in England it is Remembrance Day.

All are the same,  At the 11th hour on the 11th day of the 11th month of 1918, hostilities officially ceased, ending WWI.

There were hopes and dreams that we would move beyond war, but as we know peace is not guaranteed.  And WWII can be said to have been birthed by the humiliation of Germany at the end of WWI.

Thus by the midpoint of the 20th century millions of persons were dead; countries essentially destroyed, on and on.  And, of course, WWII didn’t end war; neither did successor wars of various kinds in various places, including in our own country, among ourselves.  And on this Armistice Day conflicts rage in various places.  As the song lyric goes “when will we ever learn?

The commemoration I attended today was at the Victory Memorial in North Minneapolis , 44th and Victory (Washburn) Ave N.  It is a very impressive monument, deserving a visit.  I’d guess there were 40 or so of us there.  Vets for Peace Ch 27 did the annual ringing of the bells – 11 repetitions.

As it happens, perhaps intentionally by initial design, at precisely 11 a.m. the monument itself cast its shadow down the sidewalk at right.

War and Peace is probably an eternal quandary among humans.  A reality seldom approached; often encouraged.

Today’s commemoration came less than a week after a nation divided voted for national leaders in the U.S.  Russia’s invasion of Ukraine two years ago still rages; Israel/Gaza, on and on.  “Peace Now” has a good ring for me, but it is not quite so easy to achieve as to declare, as WWI and all the others prove.  There are plenty of power hungry people ready to exploit the human emotions of fear and loathing.  Best we can do, probably, is to witness to peace by our own lives.

Today’s event was quiet but nonetheless profound.

I’m glad I chose to go.

POSTNOTE:

This morning long-time friend Michael Knox sent this about his dream of a U.S. Peace Memorial.

Please take a moment to look at this, and consider donating.  I’m one of the founding members, and the initiative has been in progress for near 20 years.  Take time to learn about it.  And consider contributing to it.

POSTNOTE 2 Nov. 12: The matter of Russia/Ukraine, Jews/Palestinian specifically; Yemen, Sudan….

How to deal with the issue of Ukraine is a quandary for the anti-war crowd, which is essentially the Veterans for Peace membership and emphasis.  This is not a routine matter, given the presumptions of how the next President of the U.S. will deal with the matter.

Just for a little context,  if you’re interested, here’s the first post I did about the pending Russian invasion of Ukraine mid-February, 2022.

Paradoxically, eight years earlier, in 2014, I did a post referring to both Ukraine and Gaza.  You can read that here.

Most recently, September 13, I was privileged to be at the Optimist Club in Roseville, where a group of visiting students from Ukraine reported on their recent visit to the United States – a break from the tension in their country.  Twice previously, in the summer of 2022 and 2023, I was similarly privileged to be at gatherings of two other groups of Ukrainian students.  For all of these kids, in the past two years, what is happening in their country is not something casual.  It’s more than just a sound bite.

“Peace now” has a powerful ring to it, but it is not quite as simple as it seems.  I vividly recall the TV images of Russian tanks gathering near the border of Ukraine in the winter of 2022.  I recall the earlier encroachments by Russia into an independent Ukraine in the times of Crimea and 2014.  There are all sorts of ‘yah, buts’ on every side of every conflict, of course.

The non-violence answer is not simple.

I remember a Nobel Peace Prize Festival at Augsburg College some years back where Dr. Joe Schwartzberg, a personal hero of mine, and I were in the display area for students attending the festival.   I don’t recall the specific year, but this particular day our neighbor was the local representative of the Gandhi Institute for Nonviolence.

We were discussing non-violence, and of course we thought we were among friends with our colleague from the Gandhi Institute.   The man set us back, posing a question: what if you were charged with defending your property and someone threatened to take it from you by force?  What would you do?

We were rendered more or less speechless.  The nonviolent answer would be to give up; the more reasonable answer is to defend.

I don’t remember the exact year, nor the name of our colleague friend representing the institute.  But I’ll never forget the conversation, and it applies as much today as it did then.

 

 

Family Photo

UPDATE Nov. 16 2024:  Please read this paragraph, and the last comment from me on this page as well.  This post originally was published on Nov. 9.  Subsequent there have been many comments.  I would encourage you to read the comments, including the links included.  I’ve read them all.  In addition are these posts from the past few days: Armistice Day (Nov. 11); Remembering (Nov. 12) and Senate District 47 (Nov. 14).  I will continue to post as usual, but will likely not send out any notice of new posts until the New Year.  Stop by once in awhile, if interested. [As of 11:48 p.m. CST Thursday Nov 14, 2024: Kamala Harris vote count is 73,169,047.  Updated data from CNN.com]  Have a good Thanksgiving and Christmas as this most unusual and uncertain year in American history winds down.

*

Nov. 5, 2024, Presidential Election was the family photograph of the United States of America.

The photo represents who we, the people,  are at this point in our history.  By now you know the picture conveyed by over 142 million citizens marking their ballot for President of the United States.  The whole world knows who we are and where we stand.  At the very least the picture is bewildering.

Nearly 70 million of us didn’t agree.  Below is the latest vote total for Kamala Harris and Tim Walz (as of Friday morning Nov. 8, 2024 from CNN).  I simply want to emphasize that there are tens of millions of us who did not agree with the outcome of Nov. 5.  Yes, we lost.  But don’t count us out.  Kamala and Tim did an incredible job.  Joe Biden and Kamala Harris still have over 80 days in office.

(The winning number was about 4 million votes greater.  The number were eligible, but didn’t vote at all, was nearly 100 million.)

As you have already noted, Kamala Harris, Tim Walz and Joe Biden have graciously conceded.  We’ll proceed as we had for all of U.S. history until the last four years of chaos.  I have heard not a single report of any voting fraud this year.  Doubtless there were some isolated incidents, but not many.

There is much more election data available from many sources, of course.  For Minnesotans, here’s the report on local races.

For the moment, I’ll simply stand by my own earlier recommendation to vote Harris/Walz and any Democrats this 2024 round.  I think Kamala and Tim ran a superb campaign, and I was a strong supporter of Joe Biden, even after the debate problem.  They all brought a positive tone and accomplishments to government.

I encourage a careful read of Army Talk 64 and careful attention to the nuclear bomb in our midst Project 2025.  Now is not the time to be silent.

Can Fascism happen here?  Here’s what I wrote on July 15, 2016, after the first day of the Republican National Convention.  At the time I knew almost nothing about DJT.  I had never (and still have never) seen a single episode of The Apprentice, and knew only that he had no public service experience at all.

Christian Nationalism: I would urge you to take the time to read this long article from Vanity Fair Oct 2024. Thanks to Kathy for this.   The title is “Bad Faith”, and is about the Evangelical Religious Right, the Catholic Church, and Christian Nationalism Vanity Fair Bad Faith Oct 24. Readers know I’m lifelong Catholic and you’ll find me in church on Sunday morning.  Most Americans aren’t Catholic.   So, what, in my opinion, does “Catholic” mean in this context?  It certainly doesn’t mean the people in the pews.  The church as I define it here is the hierarchy of the United States church, mostly Bishops and Cardinals, who are almost all white men, mostly old, never married, who are the messengers and bottlenecks to communication about belief and faith, holders of power and authority.  This church is no democracy (except of course no one can be forced to join or remain in, or even contribute).  Hierarchy (and by extension Priest) selection is directed from Rome and depends on the administration (Pope) in charge at the time of their appointment. The current movie “Conclave” is an excellent primer, and while based on a novel, seems to reflect a very possible future reality.  It is important to understand this, since the “church” is obviously a major player in all things relating to government in this country – all legal, of course.  (Jim, in on-line comments below, offers a few more interesting observations, as does Larry.)

COMMENTS (check for more at end.  The first comments came before I published the above post):  

from Dick: there are eight comments at the Election Day post.  I wholeheartedly recommend any and all posts from Heather Cox Richardson (Letters from an American) and Joyce Vance (Civil Discourse).  (Linked are posts from both after midnight Nov. 9, 2024.)  There are other very credible sources as well.  I refer to them from time to time here.  Check them out.

from Fred:  My conservative friend Bill sent a fairly mild jibe at me yesterday. He ended it with “Are you still there?”  I wrote a reply:

I’m still here and as, of the morning, so is [my spouse] and my neighbor. His Harris/Walz lawn sign is still in plain view. So that’s three of us. We have had messages of condolence from friends in Australia and Finland. That was nice.
In the big picture, the election seems more than a setback for progressivism in the US. It is a game changer. I would argue that US Progressive movement that started with labor and farmer revolts in late 1800s and continued to grow, eventually captured the dormant Democratic party at the century’s turn. Note: I’m not including the former Confederacy here; Progressivism never darkened the doorstep of the Deep South and Bible Belt.
Clearly there were high points and low points during the 20th century, but the Dems maintained progressive ideals with success. Moderate Republican administrations didn’t much bother with them. But Nixon’s Southern Strategy marked a change later codified and modernized by Reagan. That move locked down southern conservative support for the foreseeable future and linked it with moderate GOP leaders. Trumpism harkens back to the Jim Crow South and encouraged militant Christians to rally against the secular state. White men marginalized by the liberal culture climbed on board early on. They understood that the target of the Make America Great Again folks was mid-20th Century America, when everyone, particularly racial minorities and women, knew their place.
Meanwhile post-WWII Dems from Kennedy/Johnson (LBJ is an anomaly, a southern Dem conservative with liberal policies) maintained a modernizing progressivism that underpinned the Carter, Clinton, Obama and Biden years. But instead of broadening their natural base, Dems became advocates for every splinter movement and demographic with an ax to grind. They saw it as their duty to help out the downtrodden and even found more groups to save: LBQGT, Black Lives Matter, policing the police, suing local and state governments for financial redress and my least favorite: paying off college student loans. Kind of like when the Wall Street debacle threatened mega-banks deemed too big to fail. A progressive bail out of the collegiate-debtor class made sense to Biden, but not to tens of millions of the blue collar Americans.
Guess it is time to turn over the government to Trump, Musk, RFK, Bannon and the Murdocks. What could go wrong.


from David, responding to Fred:  As Fred and I have discussed many, many times, there is an element of the MAGAs who are flat out racists. Trump gave them license to come out of the shadows. However, I’m not ready to believe that half the US population is ready to head to Walmart the next time there’s a sale on Tiki torches.

 I have a friend who is a poster boy for the low-information voter. I suspected he was a Trump supporter but never really discussed politics. We were on a long hike Wednesday and he admitted that he voted for Trump and hoped that wouldn’t affect our friendship. His main reason for voting Trump was how the economy impacted him personally. Being retired on a fixed pension, he feels the pain of inflation and believes that Trump at least talked about his plight. He’s a strong Catholic who is uncomfortable with transgender issues. He can’t understand why Democrats are so hellbent on things like drag queen story hours in public libraries or using terms like, “pregnant people.” The toxic news environment has turned him off of pretty much all news, Fox included. He wasn’t even aware of Trump’s “they eat cats and dogs” comments but agreed that it’s a ridiculous thing to be talking about instead of the real issues surrounding immigration.
The Democrats need to take a hard look at how they can reach out to folks who were supporters and now reject them.

from James, about Democracy’s future:

Unfortunately, the history of democracy has never been secure.  The Greek democratic states lasted 300 years or less; The Roman republic held on for 350 years but the last 40 years were of one triumvirate after another.  Our democracy has been around for 236
years, a bit short, but not unusually so.  So an end to our democracy shouldn’t be too much of a surprise.  And it ends as the others
with a “strong man”: Alexander the Great, Julius Caesar,  though Trump really isn’t in their league.  But who knows what follows
an elderly Trump; the Vance dictatorship?
We can, of course, try to recover but history isn’t on our side…


Carol responding to a post “I blame the media“: Haven’t read this, but… the finger-pointing folks are really lining up.  Not nearly enough finger-pointing at the VOTERS, however… who made the choice to be uninformed and vindictive and self-centered, and to follow a despicable cult leader.  (At some point, anyway, they still had choice.)  It’s not really the job of the media or anyone else to knock these people down and spoon-feed them.  All sorts of information was out there at their fingertips.  Whether they chose to care about facts is on them.  They follow someone who literally lies every time he speaks, but then they get their undies all in a bundle because Harris once said she was against fracking, then changed her mind.  Because she can’t show receipts from when she worked at a McDonald’s many years ago.  Etc.

This country has gotten so fat-assed lazy and irresponsible.  Only caring about guns, drugs, and who can “entertain” them the best.  It’s nice that Harris got endorsements and appearances from all those big-name celebrities.  But it shouldn’t matter whether someone named “Bad Bunny” tells you who to vote for.  (I suppose soon they will need to compete for the Santa Claus endorsement.)
We’re a spoiled rotten, entitled country – devoid of any understanding of history or critical thinking – that is certain nothing really bad will happen to us.  And it’s pretty clear by now that nothing is going to change until we get knocked down and run over.  But by then, will we be unable to even get back up.
But if you really need to find something to blame, blame the educational system.  Blame a mentality that despises educated people.  Blame a mindset that thinks truth is suspect and lying is hysterical.  And blame a society that still thinks having a penis – and the size of it – determines your value.
BLAME THE VOTERS.

More comments below


from Kathy: “The end” from Neal Gabler, Nov. 6, 2024: Neal Gabler

from Carole: Thank you. Also listen to Bubba on X talk about the importance of values and good character.  (Dick. This is excellent, about 5 minutes, over a million views.)

from Judy: Thank you for this piece.  I could never imagined an outcome like this.  I am reminded that in the 1950’s when I was in HS in Duluth our school principal would not allow “Negros” to attend.  If they lived in our district and a few did they were sent to another HS.  I fear Tues reminded us we are returning to such an era………….

from Brian: Later today I’m flying off to Berlin to see some great credit union friends.  I met them while I was in Bolivia working with credit unions. I love languages and really enjoy speaking German.   Well, you know Germany’s story:  they survived Hitler; and I sure hope we survive Trump!  Scheiße!  I really enjoy your posts, thanks so much!!

from Sue: I am persuaded that, after running a brilliant campaign and working like a slave to win over the country, Kamala Harris ran smack into Western civilizations’ entrenched patriarchy. She could not get elected because she is a woman. End of story.  And from Joyce: I absolutely agree; it’s the misogyny. Even women can be misogynistic; my own mother, who despised women in positions of power, and often told me that anything a woman could do a man could do better, was a perfect example.

from Donna: I have not read your newest post but have listened to Jon Stewart’s show with Heather Cox, an historian and thought you might find some hope in this recent filmed interview of Jon Stewart’s Weekly Show Podcast  .

from Sandy: Thanks for all your words of wisdom about the election!  We were devastated for sure and I guess we were surprised that so many Americans voted for a convicted Con Man and Felon.  What he wants to do to this country is very scary and troubling for sure.  I dont think the people that voted for him really thought he would do things he plans to do.  We will have to hopefully put in some guardrails and hopefully before Biden leaves he and congress will take some much needed steps.  Take care and my dad would be so heartbroken with this Trump victory for sure

 

from Remi:

I have never been so glad to be a Canadian.
NORTH AMERICA’S CITY LIVABILITY INDEX
1 – Vancouver, 2 – Calgary, 3 – Toronto, 4 – Montreal
“Canada’s strengths are its public services, particularly its healthcare and education systems, which consistently earn top scores. The country is also more stable politically and has less violence than does its southern neighbor.” (The Economist)
WHICH IS THE MOST EDUCATED COUNTRY IN THE WORLD?
According to ISCED (UNESCO), Canada is the most educated country in the world. 63% percent of the country’s adults have completed higher education.

Dave, Nov. 16: Predicting the Fure, Nw York Times: NYT Adam Grant Nov 12 24

Dick Nov. 14, 2024:
 I published the Election Day post right before 10 p.m. Central Time on Nov. 5, just before the polls closed on the west coast.  The Family Photo post (this one) I published on Nov. 9, after the Presidential Election results were called for DJT.  I mention these times only to point out that I wanted my opinion on the court before the counting of votes began, and after the winner was declared.  It is just my opinion, and matters only to me.  The final comment, above, came yesterday.

The last e-mail of today brought this column of Heather Cox Richardson.  (Donna’s response, above, has a link to a long video interview/conversation between professor Richardson and Jon Stewart.  The interview is very well worth your time.)

I am visualizing this time in U.S. history as like being in the eye of an immense hurricane, larger than anything we’ve ever experienced.  Like a real hurricane, if it hits, it’s too late to prepare.  It won’t discriminate between good people and bad people.  We’re neighbors, everywhere.  You just don’t know.  If it hits your neighbor, it will hit you, too.

Today we’re all going about our normal business, sun is shining and nice day here.  We know there is something going on, but we’ve got 67 days until inauguration.  Let the good times roll.  Then comes the hurricane, or maybe it will fizzle.  Or maybe your house will evade it, or maybe not.  We don’t prepare by pretending it’s no problem.  Let the buyer beware.
If you wish, take the time these coming weeks to browse my little writing from 2008-09 called Uncomfortable Essays to the Peace and Justice Community.  It’s accessible here.  It’s over 40 pages, divided into two or three page “chapters”.

The people have spoken, and it only the people who are accountable for what happens in the coming two years.

Election Day

First commentaries: Letters from an American 11:18 p.m; Civil Discourse, 11:19 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2024.

The contents of this post were written before polls opened on Nov. 5.  A post on the results will follow within a couple of weeks, likely before Thanksgiving.  I’d invite anyone to include their own observations in the followup.

I have no idea what the results will be.  The general theme has become quite clear over time: one philosophy is oriented to the past; the other to the challenges and promise of a better future.  (I’m from the past, and cast my ballot for the future.).

About all I’ll say, going into tomorrow, is that I’ve never seen such a stark contrast in vision; one looks back; the other looks ahead.

The photos below represent my visioning going in.

On the good old days side: a few days ago a relative sent a picture of the last remnant of a blacksmith shop in a tiny North Dakota town.  Blacksmith was an absolutely essential rural business.

All that was left of the shop, opened over 100 years earlier, was what you see in the second photo. Indeed, most of these small towns have barely survived.  I know.  I came from them.  The shop itself (first photo) came with the founding of the town about 1905, and is shown in 2010, over 100 years later.  Such is how life goes.  The persons who worked in this blacksmith shop had a hand in building a future unknown to them at the time.  They are all gone.

Blacksmith shop Berlin ND Sep 2010

Remains of the blacksmith shop pictured above, October 2024

We know what was.

The future, of course, is ahead.

120 years ago, the people who worked in and were customers at the blacksmith shop could hardly imagine our world of 2024.  Similarly, we now have to image 120 years from now….  We, especially the youth, have no choice but to look, and live, forward.

I choose to symbolize the future through a new book I just learned about two weeks ago at the annual breakfast of Fresh Energy, an organization you should know about.

The cover of this new and hopeful book, by Ayana Elizabeth Johnson, just published in September, is below. PBS interview with the author is here.  The book is readily available and well worth your time.  It speaks to the younger generation which will inherit what we leave behind.

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I have done three other posts in the last few days if you wish. The Great Depression begins; Watching Congress October 31, 2000; and Community.

COMMENTS (more at end);

from Jim: Good one, Dick!  Best wishes in the aftermath.

from Ruth: Very disappointed that Trump was elected President and Republicans got the Senate.  Very depressing for the world and allies like Canada.  Very bad for Ukraine.

from Joan: I’m sickened and so disheartened by the results, I can’t believe it.

 

Community

These are tense days.  Here are a couple of recent e-mails from friends.

Dr. Virgil Benoit and I have been friends for many years.  His work life was as a professor of French, and his passion was his French-Canadian heritage. Like me, he’s retired now,   He’s been part of this list for a long time.

Recently he sent a note and a photo of some of his work in retirement, the fruits of a community garden in rural Red lake Falls-Huot Minnesota, near the Old Crossing & Treaty County Park.

Here is the photo, and the accompanying note.

“The Oxbow Foundation has given over 4 tons of garden produce to food shelves in over a forty-mile radius of its gardens. It manages three gardens which have vegetables of the most requested. We also manage a kitchen of a commercial category.

We hope that a more acceptable sense of community will happen, a greater sense than we have today.”

Today, Molly, another long-time friend, sent along the following to her own list.

Hi Friends,

As the stress of this election season continues, I remembered this prayer, introduced with a bit of background about its style.

Circle prayer is sometimes known as ‘Caim’ prayer; this is from Irish Gaelic meaning ‘protection’ .

Circle prayers are notable for three characteristics: 

            –First, they are simple and easy to remember. 

            –Second, they seek God’s blessing upon daily life. 

            –Thirdly they usually invoke the Trinity. 

Caim prayers and popular forms of praying were suppressed after the Norman Conquest –which tried to mandate Latinate prayers. So circle prayers moved to the margins, and stayed the everyday religious language of ordinary people. 

This is a night prayer, by David Adan, in the style of old Celtic Caim prayers:

Circle me Lord
Keep protection near 

And danger afar

Circle me Lord
Keep hope within 

Keep doubt without 

Circle me Lord 

Keep light near

And darkness afar 

Circle me Lord 

Keep peace within 

Keep evil out

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