On one of my recent walks on the W&OD Trail, I noticed
a woman spreading what looked like seed from a pouch she was carrying onto the
base of an electricity pole.
I asked, “Are you feeding the birds?”
She said she always carries food for them and went on her
way.
Well, when I saw it was raw rice, I was a little dubious.
But it turns out that birds can indeed digest uncooked rice, so some of our
feathered friends got quite the feast.
I actually had a couple of other contenders for my Gratitude
Monday post yesterday. One was the African elephant that Texas GOPs trotted
out over the weekend for some convention they were holding.
The elephant peed on the venue floor. And—let me say this—evidently
elephants have capacious bladders.
My gratitude for today is that the Kleptocrat’s name has
been removed from the Kennedy Center—including from the wall of the building
itself.
A federal judge, Christopher Cooper, ruled last month, in a
suit brought by ex-officio Kennedy Center board member, Rep. Joyce Beatty
(D-OH), that the center was given its name by Congress and only Congress can
change the name. (It was his handpicked stooge board that renamed the center in
December. A day later, he declared himself surprised, even as workers installed
the clearly planned letters on the wall.) He set 2359 on Friday as the deadline
for the name being off everything—the website, marketing materials, employee email
signature blocks and the building. The Kleptocrat’s KC stooges dithered around
for a couple of weeks, then filed a motion to stay, which the judge denied.
So I joined tens of thousands of online viewers Friday, (as
well as scores on site) watching as workers erected scaffolding for the deed.
Credit: Rahmat Gul, AP
There
was a break late afternoon as a storm moved through the city, right around the
time the stooges filed an appeal, claiming for the first time that amended
center bylaws now state that the center only receives funds if the Kleptocrat’s
name remains; if it’s ever removed, the money stops.
Well, that didn’t hold, but they still missed the midnight
deadline. So they filed another motion requesting a 24-hour stay, because the
dog ate their homework. The judge granted them until noon on Saturday to get ‘er
done.
Around 0330, the workers completed the scaffolding, but
then spent time pulling up gigantic tarps to completely shield them from view.
Credit: Tasos Katopodis, Getty
Word
on the street is that the delay to the wee small hours, and the tarps, were
solely to spare the Kleptocrat the humiliation of having the world rejoice at
seeing his name come off, letter by letter. But Cliff Owen of AP got this shot
of the P popping out:
And Joyce Beatty stayed throughout the night to witness.
Credit: Cliff Owen, AP
The tarps are still up. It’s more than possible that the
Kleptocrat is hoping for more court filings to overturn the decision—that it’ll
go to SCOTUS, and they may find some way to twist “Congress gave it the name,
only Congress can change the name” into “yeah, it’s okay.” And, of course,
there was the birthday circus yesterday at the Building Formerly Known as The
White House.
Credit: Alex Wrobiewski, AFP via Getty
UPDATE: Per @MusicologyDuck on Bluesky, those door-like indentations have been formalized:
Credit: Musicology Duck
But for now, I’m grateful for Rep. Beatty, for Judge
Cooper, for those workers (who I hope got overtime for working through the
night), for everyone involved in this exquisite rebuke to the Kleptocrat’s
imperial ambitions. And on his birthday weekend.
Somewhat hidden in this week’s headlines about the
Kleptocrat being roundly booed (and falling asleep) at Game 3 of the NBA finals,
him declaring that he “love[s] the inflation” and him getting pissed off that
Iran’s not behaving like Republicans in Congress and therefore resuming war
crimes was news that America’s farmers are struggling.
He flew to Wisconsin last Friday to rally the racists, where
he had to mock up a “panel” of others so he could sit instead of stand at a
podium. Then he threw a hissy fit when sitting in a mocked-up barn being
interviewed Meet the Press; Kristen Welker kept asking for evidence of his
insane claims about rigged elections past and present, so he ripped off his
mic, stomped on it and then stormed out with a parting, “Thank you, darling.”
During the “panel”, he announced that he’s going to hawk up
another few billions of taxpayer money to help farmers over “the bump” of
tariff-tanked soybean sales to China, climate-change-induced drought and
escalating fuel prices and fertilizer shortages due to the Iran war. He’ll
probably eventually come through with it because the mid-term election is in
five months.
Even so—farm bankruptcies are skyrocketing and so are food
costs for us, the consumers. It’s not a pretty picture.
So my earworm for today is Nanci Griffith’s “Trouble in the
Fields”. Sadly, it’s as true today as it was when she wrote it during the farm
crisis in 1987.
I was out in the back yard the other day and realized to my
horror that I had left a stack of empty planters right side up. That meant that
it was full of soupy, fetid water and probably about 12 squillion mosquito
larvae.
I upended them & unhoused three slugs and this guy:
I dispatched the slugs and set the amphibian on some
leaves. Much healthier environment for him.
A couple of months ago, I
noted in passing that LIDL had the lowest
price on milk (of three grocery chains), by a dollar. It was
$1.67 per half gallon.
A week or so ago, I noticed
that they’d raised the price to $1.87.
(Yeah—you do have to watch out for cartons damaged in shipping.)
Huh, I thought. But inflation,
fuel cost increases—I guess 11% is…well, it just is.
So I checked out the other
three stores.
Trader Joe’s; actually, no
change from March:
But Wegmans is charging almost
as much for a half gallon as they are for a full gallon:
They’re now up there with Giant:
(Giant was ahead of the game--$3.29 back in March.)
Folks, I do not know what’s going on, but that delta
between LIDL and the other is eye-watering.
Around the early part of June, my mind turns to one of the
more momentous events of the 20th Century: the invasion of Normandy
beaches. D-Day. It was an extraordinary endeavor of infinite complexity, both
militarily and logistically. And before the day of computers and networking.
Take that, AI.
In terms of human costs, about 4400 Allied soldiers died on
6 June 1944; German deaths are estimated between 4000 and 9000. You can get a
glimpse of that at the three military cemeteries within a few kilometers of one
another near Omaha Beach: Colleville-sur-mer,
American; Bayeux,
British; and La
Cambe, German. I’ve walked them all, several times.
The American cemetery is situated on the bluff above Omaha
Beach. You can stand at the edge and look down on the scene of the
slaughter. And wonder how the hell they ever made it up to where you are.
The graves are marked with white marble crosses, with the occasional Star of
David interspersed. It’s quiet, usually, except for the wind. More than 9300
men lie there—not all fallen at Normandy, but congregated there in the
fellowship of death.
The British cemetery, run by the Commonwealth War Graves
Commission, is in the heart of Bayeux, the town they took on 7 June. The
headstones are like those at all CWGC graveyards—identically-sized slabs of
white marble engraved with the soldier’s name, regiment and date of
death (if known; otherwise a cross and “known but to God”
inscribed); a centrally-located Cross of Sacrifice (tall marble cross
with a sword inset), and a Stone of Remembrance, inscribed “Their
Name Liveth Forevermore”. More than 4000 Brits, Commonwealth, Poles,
French and others lie there.
La Cambe is outside Bayeux; you get to it down a quiet road
that seems to have no other purpose but to lead you to the dead. The cemetery
is maintained by the Volksbund Deutsche Kriegsgräberfürsorge, the
German counterpart to the CWGC. It’s not as large space-wise as the two Allied
graveyards. That’s because when you look at the inscriptions on the black metal
markers set into the earth, you see there are often two to five men buried in a
single spot. Plus, there are the nearly 300 known and unknown under
the central mound. More than 21,000 men lie there.
(I need to digitize the photos I took of Bayeux and La
Cambe; apologies.)
The thing that struck me almost from the first in these
three cemeteries was the ages on the markers—you almost never see anyone who’d
reached 24. Most were in the 19-22-year age range. When you’d expect them to be
in college, or working their first jobs.
I’ve often wondered what the world lost through those early
deaths. What music never was composed? What scientific breakthroughs never
made? What civic gains, feats of sportsmanship, family enrichment just
disappeared from the future in June 1944?
That, of course, is in addition to the
anguish and sorrow that engulfed their families.
Parents, siblings, wives, children—bereft and left alone to sort
out a world gone mad. No one to repair the gutter or fix the bike; to guide
a grandchild’s hands tying a bow knot; to comfort a friend; to surprise a lover
with flowers.
It had to be done—it always seems to need doing. Especially
since we see the resurgence of fascism and totalitarianism all around us. But
take a few moments this week to think on those lives cut short in Normandy 75
years ago. The boys of D-Day who put their lives on the line for their
generation and those that followed.
And so, for today’s earworm we’re having something that
soldiers on both sides would have been listening to.
The song we know as “Lili Marlene” originated as a poem in
the First World War (the one that was supposed to end all wars), written by a
Hamburg schoolteacher conscripted into the German army, Hans Leip. It was set
to music by Norbert Schultze in 1938 and recorded by a German singer, Lale
Andersen, in 1939.
The gist of the piece is a lonely soldier on watch, missing
his girlfriend. Pretty universal—I expect there was some Greek song around 520
BCE that expresses the same thoughts.
The song pretty much went nowhere until in 1941 German
troops occupied Belgrade, in Yugoslavia, and needed recordings to broadcast
over Radio Belgrade. Andersen’s “Lili Marlene” was one of the few discs the
station had, so it got played a lot. And soldiers loved it.
But Reich propaganda minister Josef Goebbels loathed it. It
wasn’t sufficiently martial—no proper German soldiers had time to miss their
girlfriends or be anything but aggressively victorious. (He'd get along so well with Kegsbreath.) Besides, Andersen hung
around with Jewish artists, which was not the done thing.
Still—soldiers within range of Radio Belgrade demanded more
“Lili Marlene”. It expanded coverage to North Africa, where the British Eighth
Army took it up. By the time Allied forces landed on the Normandy beaches in
1944, it was on everyone’s playlist, and a standard for Marlene Dietrich’s USO
performances. Vera Lynn also covered it.
(It's kind of interesting that a song with a male soldier's
narrative seems only to have been covered by female singers.)