Saturday, July 11, 2020

Broken records

The United States broke another record for daily rates of confirmed infections - for the seventh time in 11 days.
New US cases surpass 68,000/day while the WHO reports 228,102 new cases.

The number of COVID-19 cases in South Africa has risen to 250,687 – more than a quarter of a million. Infections continue to surge around the country, including villages around here.

News blues…

Follow the money? Major US corporations and companies linked to Trump associates got business loans. Payroll Protection Program funds went, instead, to Trump pals and not to the protection of tax-paying, working people. Yet another case of Trump being Trump?

Republicans agree to work together to force Trump from office in November.  (8:36 mins)
***
The Lincoln Project, The MAGA Church.   (1.08 mins)
Sarah Cooper does:

Meanwhile, back at the ranch…

After three days of warnings about the impending once-a-decade weather system, it came … and it went! (Our immediate area got off lightly in comparison to the hail storms that hit close by.)

For the first time in a week, I ventured out for a quick walk around the neighborhood. By the time I arrived back home, daylight had turned to twilight and thunder drummed in the distance.
Soon, a smattering of hail the size of marbles fell, followed by sheets of rain.
I signed with relief: at least the rain would extinguish smoldering embers from fires that had raged last night.
I had been working on my laptop, my back to the picture window, when I’d heard rustling and cracking.
Alarmed, I wondered if my abuser had returned?
Instead, when I looked out the window, I saw walls of flame shooting high into the air.
Smoke-laden wind gusted, and flames danced as I dialed frantically to alert someone, anyone, that our house could ignite.
Where were the darned fire trucks and fire fighters?
The flames receed.

I reached our new security services providers who explained that the “fire brigade” was occupied with other fires - one in Mpophemeni and two more in the adjacent village. They’d attend to this fire as time allowed.

Frantic, I knew that if the tinder-dry trees surrounding the house ignited, the house could ignite.
I needed to “liberate” my mother.
For, somehow, she and her two domestic workers have evolved a convoluted night-time sequence that locks my mother and her seven pampered mongrels inside overnight and liberates them early next morning.
Anyone paying attention to the details would realize that the complicated mass of keys and locks and procedures involved means that my mother cannot quickly evacuate the building in an emergency. She forgets she has a set of keys and she awaits the workers to unlock the doors.
I’ve worried about and tried to alert her to the dangers.
I successfully addressed her habit of lighting a candle at night by purchasing and placing a small fire extinguisher next to her bed.
But a small extinguisher cannot handle a conflagration. “Besides,” she’d laughed, “I can’t remember how to use it.”
Naturally, she pooh-poohs my concerns.

As the fire raged outside, I roused one domestic worker and we unlocked my mother’s doors and burglar guards.
Tellingly, my mother, surrounded by dogs and happily watching TV, had been blissfully unaware of the fire. This, even as she watched the security monitor display billowing smoke. She’d judged it fog.

After the flames receded, we locked up my mother and her dogs, again … and went to bed.
Takeaways?
1) I’ve lived away for so long, I’d forgotten that “veld fires” are a feature of South African winters, indeed, burning is part of Africa’s natural ecology. (As a child growing up in a rural area, I’d loved joining informal firefighting crews armed with wet sacks to beat back flames.)
2) I’ve become accustomed to life in California where fire trucks and fire fighters are the solution to fires.
3) “veld” and brush fires are a far cry from the infamous climate-change-related wildfires that, over the past decade, have burned hundreds of thousands of acres of rural California.
4) And, this household needs a plan everyone can buy into that ensures my mother is safe at night – and easily liberated.


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Friday, July 10, 2020

Load shedding

Covid-19 has forced the temporary closure of two local banks, the police station, a government clinic, even a (private) hospital in our village to allow for deep sanitizing before reopening.
Looks as if the last 15 weeks were a rehearsal for the start of the real drama….

Checking my cell phone for news while at the courthouse today (story below), I learned that, after 4 months of uninterrupted supply of electricity, Eskom's load shedding was imminent.
Eskom is South Africa’s State-owned Enterprise/parastatal that generates 95 percent of southern Africa’s energy: about 45 percent is consumed in South Africa and the rest exported to Botswana, eSwatini, Lesotho, Mozambique, Namibia, Zambia, and Zimbabwe.
Load shedding a la South Africa, the interruption of supply to avoid excessive load on electricity generating plants, is supposed to be the measure of last resort to prevent the country-wide collapse of the power system and to balance the energy grid.
Seventy-seven percent of South Africa's energy needs come directly from coal with 81 percent of all coal consumed domestically going to the production of electricity. (Fun fact: Eskom emits at least 42 percent of South Africa's total greenhouse gas emissions.)
Chronic power shortages began in 2007.
Eskom has blamed everything from diesel shortages, inclement weather, wet coal, no coal, malfunctioning turbines, employee problems, and "unexplained incidents". But the root causes are gross mismanagement and rampant corruption. (Two huge new power stations—Medupi and Kusile—are years behind schedule and billions of dollars over budget.)
So far, the tally for lost revenue stands at more than ZAR72 billion, with an additional ZAR716 million spent by businesses on backup generators.
Small business owners in South Africa report load shedding was the number one challenge they faced in Q1 of 2019. At least 40 percent of small businesses lost more than 20 percent of their revenue during that period.
While short duration outages occurred in the last four months, none were defined as load shedding. Perhaps Covid-19 discouraged it – at least until today.
Imagine: hospitals without power during a pandemic.

News blues…

University of the Witwatersrand Professor Shabir Madhi said airborne transmission of Covid-19 is a reality and has been underestimated… and that this explains the rapid rate at which the coronavirus is being transmitted.
Madhi warned that it is now more important than ever for everyone to wear masks.
***
Dr. Anthony Fauci, the [US’s] top infectious disease expert, said Thursday that the country was not doing well as cases of the coronavirus continue to surge nationwide, and he placed some of the blame on a divisive culture that has politicized efforts to fight the pandemic.
***
And, The Unclear on the Concept Award goes to:
Republican Senator Del Marsh of Alabama said he’s “not concerned” about the current spike in cases of the coronavirus in that state.
“Quite honestly, I want to see more people, because we start reaching an immunity as more people have it and get through it. … I don’t want any deaths — as few as possible… So those people who are susceptible to the disease, especially those with preexisting conditions, elderly population, those folks, we need to do all we can to protect them. But I’m not concerned. I want to make sure that everybody can receive care. And right now we have, to my knowledge as of today, we still have ample beds.”
Someone should mention to Del Marsh that his “knowledge as of today” is faulty.
A recent study by the Spanish government and the country’s leading epidemiologists… found that just 5 percent of those tested across the country maintained antibodies to the virus.

Moreover, with 60,000-and-climbing new cases per day in the US,
Health experts cautioned that it was too early to predict a continuing trend from only a few days of data. But the rising pace of deaths … followed weeks of mounting cases … and suggested an end to the country’s nearly three-month period of declines in daily counts of virus deaths.
***
Daily Maverick webinars


***
A new MeidasTouch ad, Creepy.

Meanwhile, back at the ranch…

Assisted by a member of the new security provider team, I went to court to apply for a Protection Order against my harasser.
We arrived before 9am…and departed at 2:15pm.
We arrived prepared with paperwork and audio recordings, passed through security and the Covid testing station (temperature taken, hands sanitized, tracing document signed) passed paperwork on to administrators, and … waited… and waited… and waited – of course, wearing masks the whole time.
One of two magistrates was out quarantined with suspected Covid exposure.
I’d been warned that a Protection Order may not be granted, that I must present a convincing case. As it turned out, instead of a formal sit-down with the magistrate, I chatted briefly with him in the hallway when he told me he’d reviewed the documentation and granted the Order.
Relief!
Next step: police or security personnel will find the perp – not easy – and hand deliver paperwork to him. (I suggested they seek him in the illegal shebeen!)
Court date: August 5.
Three weeks away.
I’d allowed myself to fantasize about a window seat in a half-empty repatriation flight – via Amsterdam – to San Francisco.
I guess that ain’t happenin’…
But, I shed some of the load I'd been carry about threats to my life.


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Thursday, July 9, 2020

Pestilence, thunderstorm, and a locust

I was tempted to comment on how the surging global pandemic plays into biblical prophecies - water to blood, frogs, boils, locusts, pestilence, etc. That, however, would be in poor taste under the circumstances, and likely brand me a Bible-based conspiracy theorist.
The coming storm, however, has “DISASTER MANAGEMENT TEAMS ON HIGH ALERT AS INTENSE COLD FRONT SET TO AFFECT PARTS OF KZN.”
KZN MEC for Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs (Cogta) Sipho Hlomuka has placed disaster management teams on alert across the province following a warning from the South African Weather Service. The warning indicates that an intense cold front could hit parts of the province on Thursday going into the weekend.
The cold front is expected to bring the possibility of heavy rains, flooding, gale-force winds and snowfall in high-lying areas. Hlomuka has urged residents across the province to exercise caution as the expected change in weather conditions could pose a serious risk to human life.
“We are appealing to residents to take this warning seriously and to put in place the necessary measures to protect themselves and their families. Teachers and parents are requested to ensure that learners utilise safe routes on their commute to and back from school,” said Hlomuka.
"As a province, we take this weather alert seriously and we will be monitoring the situation, especially in areas that we know are prone to localised flooding. We are urging all motorists to be extra vigilant as roads can become slippery. We call for extra caution when crossing bridges, especially in low-lying areas, and we also urge residents to avoid crossing rivers. Those residing in low-lying areas are urged to seek shelter on higher ground”.
Meanwhile, the country struggles to keep up with Covid cases  … and the occasional locust flitting about in this garden gives one pause. (Perhaps these are stragglers from the devasting locust swarms plaguing East Africa?)

Covid-19 has the upper hand, with confirmed cases soaring:
  • July 9 - worldwide: 12,041,500 confirmed infections; 549,470 deaths
         July 2 - worldwide: 10,729,340 confirmed infections; 517,055 deaths
  • July 9 – US: 3,054,800 infections; 132,300 deaths
         July 2 – US: 2,688,250 infections; 128,104 deaths
  • July 9 - SA: 224,665 infections; 3,602 deaths
         July 2 - SA: 159,333 infections; 2,749 deaths
[Predictions suggest] that Gauteng, a province of 15 million people, will overtake the southern tip of the country as the centre of the crisis. Numbers here are now set to breach total infections of 70,000, and the epidemic has reached the point where almost everyone knows someone who has Covid-19.
Total official deaths are still low at 403, but doctors have told Daily Maverick that classification of deaths may mean the numbers are higher, as this Medical Research Council report revealed at the end of June.
And within the province, the Covid-19 centre in Johannesburg had a total of almost 32,000 cases by 7 July, with recoveries at about one in three. Both Soweto and the inner city are chalking up big numbers of infections, showing that the coronavirus has moved from suburb to township.
Doctor says, “There are no more beds…
We have probably by this week run out of capacity to treat people. And it makes you feel useless as a doctor to have to say that to someone. But there’s nothing else we can do. … What you can do as an individual is protect your neighbour, friends and colleagues by staying away from them, keeping your mask on and washing your hands. There’s not much else you can do other than that, really.

News blues…

The US is tearing apart with Trump versus health scientists , US surpassing records with 59,000 confirmed Covid cases in one day

Map to track coronavirus’ global spread 
***
The Lincoln Project’s new ad, Names  names names…. Their promo:
Don’t ever forget who enabled Donald Trump.
Donald Trump wrecked the Republican Party and then he wrecked this nation.
Most Republican senators stood by and said nothing while he did it. Many of them enabled it. Some of them made it worse.
Remember their names: Mitch McConnell. Lindsey Graham. Thom Tillis. Cory Gardner. Martha McSally. Ted Cruz. Joni Ernst. Marco Rubio. Susan Collins. John Cornyn. Jim Inhofe. Mike Rounds. Steve Daines. Tom Cotton.
For The Lincoln Project, stopping Trump is just half the battle.
Any of these Republicans could have stepped up. They could have held the President accountable. They could have spoken the truth. They could have voted for his removal.
But, every time they had a choice between America or Trump: they chose Trump.
We’re never going to forget it. We know you won’t, either.
They too must be defeated.
We’re putting this ad up in their home states, so their voters know their cowardice and betrayals.

Meanwhile, back at the ranch…

Setting up a new security system provides unexpected opportunities to gauge one’s new service provider.
After the new provider’s technician switched the hardware yesterday, I forgot to test the system. After nightfall, upon attempting to arm the security system, we discovered the exterior system was disconnected. The technician had switched the interior but not the exterior system.
I called the new provider and we discussed, first, setting two guards on the property overnight. That, however, would provoke anxiety in my elderly mother who has access to the CCTV monitor. (She’d see unfamiliar faces and be unsure if they’d were guards or potential perps.)
Ultimately, we agreed the guards would patrol outside property as part of their regular neighborhood duties.
This resulted in regular security vehicle drivebys with bright white zig zag lights flashing and an even brighter spotlight raking the property at regular intervals.
Hmmm.
Moreover, my mother was too anxious to sleep. She reports staying awake all night, eyes glued to the CCTV.
The new security provider arrived early this morning to connect the exterior system.
As of now, all appears well.


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Wednesday, July 8, 2020

A cold wind gonna blow

South Africans brace for an onslaught of cold and wet weather – potentially “the most eventful winter weekend in Southern Africa in many years.”
It’s expected sometime tomorrow although temperatures have already dropped – albeit not yet low enough to cover plants overnight.

News blues…

Whispers, the latest Lincoln Project ad targets Donald Trump’s core vulnerabilities: his narcissistic paranoia, fear of not being adored, and his obsession with sycophantic displays of loyalty. The Lincoln Project’s promotional material for Whispers:
Donald Trump is sinking in the polls. He's tried to ignore COVID-19 and the Russian bounty scandal, but he can’t ignore the whispers.
Now the sharks are circling and his staff keeps leaking to the press about how mentally weak and physically weak he is, how he can’t focus, and why he hides in a bunker when it matters most.
Their whispers are only going to get bolder and louder before November.
This is just what a few of them would say on the record.
  • "We are witnessing the consequences of three years without mature leadership.”
            —Former Secretary of Defense James Mattis, The Atlantic, June 3, 2020
  • “Remained stunningly uninformed on how to run the White House.”
              —Former National Security Advisor John Bolton, The Room Where it Happened
  • “An idiot.”
               —Former White House Chief of Staff John Kelly to Bob Woodward, Fear: Trump in the White House
  • “A racist, misogynist, and bigot.”
                —Former Assistant to the President Omarosa Manigault Newman, Unhinged
  • “A f***ing moron.”
                —Former Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, NBC News, Oct. 4, 2017
In an interview, Trump is asked how he responds to people “wounding” him. He explains, “I unwound myself.” 

Meanwhile, back at the ranch…

I paid ZAR15 (US $0.88) to a roadside vendor for 20kgs of “kraal manure” to use as compost amendment. (FYI: a “kraal” is a traditional African enclosure for cattle, goats, and sheep.) A year ago, the last thing on my mind was poop…or a pandemic… or Lockdown.
***
What’s known as a Temporary Restraining Order (TRO) in the US is known, in South Africa, as a Protection Order (of Section 2(1) of the Protection from Harassment Act).
Today, our newly hired security services provider team dropped by to process the paperwork, reconfigure the security system hardware, and help me fill out and prepare documentation to apply for a Protection Order against further death threats.
My impression is Protection Orders are not a slam dunk. Perhaps that explains why South Africa has “the highest number of cases of violence against women in the world… [and] one in four men [having] committed sexual crimes.
I’ll approach the court on Friday, armed with Form 2 – 11 pages that include application, information regarding acts of harassment, particulars of respondent, and information regarding urgency of application – along with a description of the episode and my email correspondence with the US Consulate in SA.
The Consulate can’t/won’t do much as “it is a civil matter” but suggests I file a police report and “insist on opening charges against your abuser.”
The use of “insist” is instructive.
I doubt more insistence would have moved either the police or the former security services provider any closer toward warning, never mind charging, my abuser.
Both gave the impression they couldn’t have cared less – and intended to spend no time on trivial threats of death and great bodily harm.


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Tuesday, July 7, 2020

How did we get here?*

Covid-19 has the world in turmoil. How did we get to almost half a million dead and 12 million infected - and the world’s wealthiest country racking up a quarter of those cases, 3 million?
The strangest part?
While running errands today, I noticed that most people on the streets don’t wear masks - not even “chin covers”!

News blues…

I began following the work of The Lincoln Project last May when I wrote:
To the extent that I appreciate The Lincoln Project’s sense of humor, dedication to principle, and growing list of succinct ads, I declare myself an “Honorary” Lincoln Project Republican. (Read the post about the context of “honorary.”) 
Some views presented in The Lincoln Project’s ads are antithetical to my views and I don’t post them. Politico, however, published a thoughtful article by Joanna Weiss, “What the Lincoln Project Ad Makers Get About Voters (and What Dems Don’t)”. Excerpts:
…How has one renegade super PAC managed to trigger Trump and his allies so thoroughly? Part of it is surely frustration that a group of Republicans would issue a full-throated endorsement of Joe Biden. Part of it is skill: the Lincoln Project ads are slick, quick and filled with damning quotes and unflattering photos. But part of it might just be that Republicans are better at this than Democrats. Trump may sense that these ads are especially dangerous because they pack an emotional punch, using imagery designed to provoke anxiety, anger and fear—aimed at the very voters who were driven to him by those same feelings in 2016. And history, even science, suggests that might in fact be the case—that Republicans have a knack for scaring the hell out of people, and that makes for some potent ads.
…Research shows there’s a reason these ads could be effective with Republicans voters: Conservatives are an especially fear-prone group. In a 2008 paper in the journal Science, researchers subjected a group of adults with strong political beliefs to a set of startling noises and graphic images. Those with the strongest physical reactions were more likely to support capital punishment, defense spending and the war in Iraq. A 2011 paper in the journal Cell found a correlation between conservative leanings and the size of the right amygdala, the portion of the brain that processes emotions in response to fearful stimuli. In her book Irony and Outrage, University of Delaware professor Dannagal Young points out that liberals and conservatives respond differently to entertainment rhetoric: Liberals have a higher tolerance for open-ended ambiguity, while conservatives look for closure and want problems to be solved.
Read Joanna Weiss’thoughtful article.

Meanwhile, back at the ranch…

Yesterday’s post addressed obsessions one can develop during Lockdown. I also described someone else’s obsession: to snuff me out! 
Amazed at the lack of effective action by our private security company and the police, I penned an article about the experience for a local weekly newspaper that will be published in next week’s (print) edition:
Justice, South African style
I was recently verbally abused, and life and limb threatened, by my 87-year-old mother’s domestic worker’s son, a 40-year-old child-man. This, because, drunk again, he acted out his anger at being legally dislodged, two years ago, from mother’s Merrivale property. He’d squatted there for six months, drunk, unemployed, rent-free, and with full board, lodging, and laundry service.
He stood outside the upper gate and I recorded on my cell phone his obscenity- and death threat-laden harangue while I waited for our private security services provider and SAPS.
Both arrived within half an hour of my call. Then things got interesting. Both were a sharp contrast to what occurs in my home state, California.
For the last several years, I have spent several months each year in Merrivale caring for my fragile mother. This year, I was due to return to California on 21 May, four days before George Floyd was murdered by police in Minneapolis.
Lockdown prevents me from returning to the US where, concurrent with the pandemic, massive protests rage against police violence.
Police violence, and protesting police violence, is nothing new in the US. I’ve experienced several convulsive protests: Rodney King (1991), Oscar Grant (2009), Eric Garner (2014), and too many similar killings – few of which have resulted in police officer convictions. America, the can-do country, armed to the teeth, believes in going beyond the call of law-enforcement’s duty to crack down on resisting arrest, civil dissent, or, depending on the color of your skin, on nothing much at all.
I am more anarchist than law-and-order uber alles. Nevertheless, words, deeds, and actions contrary to a human’s and a society’s rights must be recognized effectively.
A drunk, abusive, and life-threatening perpetrator should be listened to as intently as a sober victim. Should not the benefit of the doubt, however, be afforded the victim when the abuser, a convicted rapist, publicly threatens rape, mayhem, even murder?
Apparently not in this section of KwaZulu Natal.
Both security service provider and SAPS listened to my abuser, encouraged him to pull up his britches, then prepared to drive away with nary a word to me. I had to wave them down to learn that 1) I could make a police report if I wished – at the police station, but 2) “Covid”, the officer implied, prevented the generation of a police report.
Then, both private security and SAPS drove off, leaving my abuser to continue his foul harangue outside my gate.
Would I have preferred he was physically beaten, handcuffed, a knee held to this neck?
Not at all. But perhaps he could have been placed in a vehicle – or a cell – until he sobered up?
Instead, at sunset, he returned, even more drunk, to the lower gate – opposite my bedroom window – and began a more graphic series of threats (also recorded on my cell phone).
I’ve heard nothing further from the private security firm nor SAPS.
I have, however, cancelled my account with that private security firm. I‘ve engaged a more proactive team that is working with me to apply for a restraining order.
Do I expect a miracle? No. But recognition of my rights as a human would be nice.
Thoughts? (email raisingsandradio – at – gmail.com)

* Listen to Talking Heads, Once in a Lifetime. 


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Monday, July 6, 2020

Obsessions, cont’d

Obsessions have their place during a pandemic. I've addressed a smattering of mine in earlier posts. Some obsessions have lessened (battery charge level graphs), some are lessening (making compost), and one is in the first stages of development.
I admit a growing obession with my personal safety.
This, because someone else’s growing obsession is to “shoot” me, “kill” me, and perpetrate great bodily harm.
More on this below, but first – a developing, harmless, obsession:
  • June 25: sunrise 6:52am; sunset 5:08pm
  • June 30: sunrise: 6:53am; sunset: 5:10pm
  • July 1: sunrise: 6:53am; sunset: 5:11pm
  • July 5: sunrise: 6:53am; sunset: 5:12 pm
  • July 6: sunrise: 6:53am; sunset: 5:12 pm
Every few days we add a minute more of daylight yet sunrise time remains constant.
Why?
Broad explanation: Instead of a perfectly-circular orbit, Earth's orbit around the Sun is slightly elliptical… The combination of Earth's elliptical orbit and the tilt of its axis results in the Sun taking different paths across the sky at slightly different speeds each day. This gives us different sunrise and sunset times each day.
In the southern hemisphere,
“We may have reached our shortest day, but unfortunately it will be a few more weeks before our mornings get any brighter. In fact, sunrise will shift slightly later (by a couple of minutes) and it won’t be until well into July that the trend will shift. (See a deeper explanation with illustration.) 

News blues…

Nothing much new happening in the news. Infection rates go up. Income and employment rates go down.
Trump and other leaders appear as confused as ever – to the chagrin of health workers and scientists agog but seemingly powerless.

The Lincoln Project continues to churn out ads: Historic 

Meanwhile, back at the ranch…

Context: My mother owned/ran a country hotel for 60 years. She was forced to sell when industry moved in. She purchased a large house 50 miles away (much higher elevation) and brought along two long-term domestic workers.
One domestic worker has a 40-year-old ne’er-do-well son who, in the past, was convicted of and served prison time for rape.
Two years ago, while I was in California, that domestic worker persuaded my mother to allow the son to move onto the property.
My mother agreed.
He’d been here six months – lounging around, drinking, not working - when I arrived from California.
One morning, he was so drunk by 11am that he had to sidle along the walls of the house to stay upright.
Next day, I told him to leave.
It took a lawyer’s letter and several days to evict him (while the domestic worker repeatedly asked my mother to reconsider).

Fast forward: Last week, as I mixed compost outside, a drunk passed along the road, shouting obscenities directed at me by name.
I figured it was the son, still smarting over his ouster. Still jobless. Still supported by his mother (he’s fathered children he does not support).

Yesterday morning, the drunk showed up outside the upper gate. For more than an hour he stood there and harangued: “you Susan, you’re in danger: I’m going to shoot you; I’m going to [perform lewd sex acts upon] you” … on and on. I recorded much of it on my cell phone.
Even my usually passive mother paid attention, albeit wishy-washy.
I called our security services provider and the police.
Both arrived (a miracle the police actually arrived).
Neither did anything beyond suggest he stop yelling.
Police said they couldn’t do anything about the incident because of “Covid”.
Security services took my name.
Both drove away, leaving the perp still shouting.

On advice of a friend, I called a different security services provider that also runs a citizens’ task force in the neighborhood. We discussed how to get a restraining order. It’s tough: Lockdown affects courts’ open hours.

Last night, dark, 5:45pm, the drunk showed up again, this time at the lower gate that’s opposite my bedroom.
Yet more, and more explicit, threatens against my life and limb. All recorded.

A woman came from the local shebeen and chased him back there (his antics call attention to, therefore endanger, her business).
(A shebeen is an illegal “bush” pub that sells cheap, potent alcoholic bevs.)
The new security service put two watchmen in the neighborhood. Apparently, my incident is one of several, most of which involve invasion of property and crop and animal theft.
The next few days will be… interesting….

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Sunday, July 5, 2020

Day of rest

Fifteen Sundays and counting....
Late summer, to autumn/fall, into winter and Lockdown continues….
According to President Cyril Ramaphosa, South Africa “won't be moving back to Levels 4 or 5 of the lockdown despite the rapid increase of COVID-19 infections. [Instead, he’s] calling on South Africans to protect themselves through social distancing, washing of hands and wearing masks.”

News blues…

Same old Trump.
And same old cronyism comorbid with the other virus raging through the White House – denial, lying, deflection  – as Trump’s trade adviser and Whackjob Peter Navarro rants Whackadoodle-itude.
***

Meanwhile, back at the ranch…

Ah, Sunday. A day of rest.
I’ll take it!
And I'll mix more compost!


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