News blues…
Rats abandoning ship as Sen. Mitch McConnell suggests the Republican Senators…
do whatever it takes to salvage their campaigns ahead of what could be a devastating election for the Republican party. McConnell has become so concerned over Republicans losing control of the Senate that he has signaled to vulnerable GOP senators in tough races that they could distance themselves from the President if they feel it is necessary…. [This] forces them to walk a tightrope.
"These vulnerable senators can't afford to explicitly repudiate Trump," said one senior Republican on Capitol Hill. "They just need to show they are independent on issues important in their states."
Trump’s Self-Inflicted Wound: Losing Swing Voters As He Plays to His Base The president’s support among bedrock Republicans is almost certainly not enough to win him a second term in the White House, as even some G.O.P. leaders concede.
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To poach, or not to poach?
In May, news reported a
…
wildlife catastrophe unfolding in Africa with closure of safari tourism (an industry worth almost $30 billion a year and employing almost four million people) due to the coronavirus pandemic, decimating the industry, and leading to an increase in poaching. Experts and rangers on the ground say they are seeing a surge in poaching as thousands of unemployed people dependent on the industry turn to wild animals for food. They also fear an upsurge in more organised poaching of endangered species.
August 1, news reports South African rhino poaching halves in six months thanks to Covid-19 lockdown
South Africa has for years battled a scourge of rhino poaching fueled by insatiable demand for their horns in Asia - China and Vietnam - where the horn is coveted as a traditional medicine, an aphrodisiac or a status symbol.During the first six months of the year, 166 rhino were poached in South Africa, compared with 316 in the first half of 2019. That’s a drop of 53 percent in the first six months of 2020 as restrictions and disruption to international flights hinder poachers.
I’m confused. Animals other than rhinos are still being poached?
Healthy futures anyone?
Taken-for-granted items in your pantry: “The 'deadly food' we all eat” - BBC REEL (3:25 mins)
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The Lincoln Project :
Wake up (6 mins)
We will vote (1:00 min)
A must see ad: Nationalist Geographic (0:55 mins)
Sarah Cooper: How to tick tock (0:13 mins)
Meanwhile, back at the ranch…
I was scheduled to return to California on May 21, but the pandemic and subsequent lockdown put an end to commercial flights.
Overly bureaucratized repatriation flights were occasionally available, but high-tailing it out of SA and abandoning my fragile, 87-year-old mother didn’t feel like a viable option. Moreover, repat flight reservations and routes were confusing. If I could get to Johannesburg (required a permit for the 6-hour trip by car), a flight would dump me in, say Istanbul or Doha – cost in the vicinity of US$2,500.00 (ZAR41,250). I’d still have to find a flight to New York – then the world’s Covid-19 epicenter – or Chicago, followed by a domestic flight to San Francisco.
I was smart to stay put.
Today, travelers who opted for repat flights find themselves in a quandary: Americans stranded abroad as the coronavirus spread took a lifeline offered by the State Department: We'll fly you home, but you have to pay us back.
… the main method of payment for State-chartered repatriation flights was promissory notes, without anything more than an estimate of how much it might cost. Most of the people repatriated, especially in the beginning of the department's efforts, were handed blank documents which they had to sign before they got on the plane, promising to pay back the government when billed.Some Americans had to use passports as collateral for loans — but months later, they're still waiting for a bill, so their passports are invalid. Others signed promissory notes agreeing to pay an eventual bill they're still waiting for, and dreading a price tag that for a family of four could weigh in at $10,000.Since the pandemic began, State has flown home about 100,000 U.S. citizens from nearly 150 countries, at a cost to the agency of $196 million, which it must collect from passengers. Of that sum, about $8 million comes from direct loans secured with a passport.
Hmmm, sounds like health care in America.
Health care has never been easily available or affordable in America. President Obama tried to address that.
Along came Trump. In the middle of a pandemic, he has been battering at the Affordable Care Act, aka Obamacare.
Who does that?
And why?
My guess?
Then president Obama – for years accused by then-birther Trump of not being eligible for the presidency as not born in America – made fun of notoriously thin-skinned The Donald at the White House Correspondents dinner back in 2011.
This clip is a bit “inside the beltway” for non-Americans but worth watching: Barack Obama mocks Trump at the White House correspondents' dinner. (3:57)
Ah, the good ole days!
I miss Obama. Smart. Funny. Intelligent. Elegant. Happily married family man.
Decent Americans are out there still, plenty of them/us. Step up, you guys. We the People need you!