Some Monday Reads

 If Tennessee legislative dipshits have it their way, women having abortions could pay for them with their lives.

These whack jobs don't even hide it anymore.

____________________________




Sunday Etc.

 Separation of church and state is one of the things that has made the United States such a great country.  However, Christian reconstructionists (aka "nationalists") are trying like hell to undermine this.



Saturday Etc.

 All nine of the deceased in the Lake Tahoe avalanche have been found and recovered.  The reporter/anchor of this video mispronounces Verdi, Nevada.  It is pronounced VER-die.



__________________________





Some Friday Reads

 The USSC today told Trump to go pound sand regarding tariffs, but that hasn't stopped Metamucillini from trying to do an end run around the decision.

So, will Trump refund the money he owes to the American people?  Doubtful.

_______________________________________

Some Wednesday Reads

 The worst avalanche in modern California history happened yesterday when at least eight, and likely nine, skiers on a backcountry outing were killed.  Six people survived the ordeal.

There has been a shit ton of snow hitting the region.  In southern Oregon, after weeks of little or no snow, we who live here have been hit with an onslaught, but whether it makes up for the dry spell remains to be seen.  Most of February was unseasonably warm here.

Snip from the article about the Tahoe tragedy:

The skiers, including four guides, had been finishing up a three-day backcountry expedition in a rugged but popular recreational area near Castle Peak. The six survivors were able to use a combination of emergency beacons and iPhone S.O.S. functions to contact rescuers, who braved treacherous conditions to reach them.

Two of the six survivors were taken to a hospital for treatment after being evacuated, Nevada County officials said in a news conference. One has since been released, and the other is still being treated with non-life-threatening injuries.

Searchers were unable to remove the bodies of the eight confirmed dead, officials said, and it was unclear on Wednesday when they might be able to return, with more significant snowfall in the forecast through the weekend.


Report:


From the NYT:


Multiple skiers who died after being caught in the avalanche were members of the Sugar Bowl Academy community, a private boarding school and ski club near Donner Summit, according to school officials, who said they were not releasing names out of respect for the families affected.

Obituary: Jesse Jackson

 Longtime civil rights leader and sometime presidential candidate Rev. Jesse Jackson, Sr.,  died early today at the age of 84.  He was also the founder of the Rainbow Coalition and Operation P.U.S.H., later consolidated,  and was heavily involved in Chicago issues.



Jackson was known as a very good orator.  My mother loved his speeches back when he was running for president in 1984 and in 1988.  He didn't have a reasonable shot at the nomination either time, but he made his mark.

As a young man, he was an associate of Martin Luther King, Jr.; however, there was some controversy over claims he made over the day King was assassinated in Memphis in 1968.  He, like King and other associates,  was at the Loraine Hotel at the time of the murder.  

Jackson's cause of death wasn't disclosed, but he had been afflicted with progressive supranuclear palsy, a neurological disorder.  He had been diagnosed with Parkinson's prior, but it wasn't the cause of his health issues.

Snip:

Jackson was born Oct. 8, 1941, in a tiny house in Greenville, S.C., where he began his lifelong work fighting for civil rights.


While visiting home for Christmas break during his freshman year at the University of Illinois, Jackson needed to borrow a book but couldn't get it from the town's white-only library. Six months later, on July 16, 1960, he and seven other students held a sit-in at the library and were arrested for protesting. After his experience as a member of the "Greenville Eight," Jackson transferred to North Carolina Agricultural & Technical College, a historically Black school in Greensboro, N.C.

His burgeoning activism would bring him in 1965 to march alongside Martin Luther King Jr. and others in Selma, Ala., answering King's call for supporters of a local voting rights campaign. Jackson became a close ally of King — eventually leaving his graduate studies at the Chicago Theological Seminary to join King's Southern Christian Leadership Conference. He became the Chicago coordinator and a year later, in 1967, the national leader of the SCLC's Operation Breadbasket, which was dedicated to improving the economic conditions of Black communities in the U.S.  

_________________________



Featured Post

The End of an Era

 Two days ago, Annette Dionne, the last of the world-famous Dionne quintuplets, the first quints born who all survived and, I believe the ON...