Gal from everywhere has landed in Florida. This is my random diary, open for you, darling, talking about culture shock, money gigs, politics, pop, and simply . . . BEING HERE. XOXOXO
Thursday, December 27, 2018
#2019 . . . me and my Gemini twin
Dear You!
The new year is coming soon and predictions abound! Twitter hashtags dedicated to 2019 abound too. But predictions, like astrology, can't be trusted. And even if playing with our "sign" identities is diverting, it is also sometimes disturbing. For example, what if you share a sun sign with Hitler? What if you are checking out your sign's predictions for 2019 and you realize these possibilities are supposed to apply to Charles Manson too?
I am a Gemini.
Marilyn Monroe was a Gemini.
Kanye West is a Gemini.
Prince was a Gemini.
Tupac was a Gemini.
Angelina Jolie is a Gemini.
And President Donald J. Trump is a Gemini.
Wait, let me retype that last entry in a way my twin would appreciate.
AND PRESIDENT DONALD J. TRUMP IS A GEMINI!!!!!!
Gotta own your twin, fellow- Gemini. While I pretend I am the adored Tupac-style Gemini, I
tend to erase the other reflections in the mirror.
Anyway, back to predictions for 2019. This one is for ME and DONALD! (Compliments of Free Will Astrology.com . . . . Rob B's stuff is always fun . . . check it out).
"The world's full of people who have stopped listening to themselves," wrote mythologist Joseph Campbell. It's imperative that you NOT be one of those folks. 2019 should be the Year of Listening Deeply to Yourself. That means being on high alert for your inner inklings, your unconscious longings, and the still, small voice at the heart of your destiny. If you do that, you'll discover I'm right when I say that you're smarter than you realize.
Now, think about the above. As if DONALD and I don't spend plenty of time listening to ourselves, our ultimate, trusted sources.
Good luck to you all in 2019! And look out for Geminis . . .
https://nylon.com/articles/geminis-low-key-psychopaths-zodiac
Love,
Joyce
Tuesday, December 25, 2018
Why are people texting me on CHRISTMAS?????
Dear Reindeer . . .
I hope you are enjoying your day off after a very busy night. Here is my day so far:
During my morning coffee + OJ + smooth cigarette ritual, I half-listened to the news about our government shutdown and other dramas. Our President is on tape griping about my fellow Democrats because they/we are resisting his silly "Wall" project; that was his Christmas message. And of course he tossed in the witch-hunt complaint. He signed off with something like this: "So the country is really a mess and I hope you have a merry Christmas." The quote is not 100% on, but you get the point.
Then, after my beach workout while enjoying my delicious sushi lunch (preferable to that turkey option), my fabulous Google Smart Phone started pinging away. Yes, text messages. Of course it is good to hear from people, but texting is like WORK to me. It isn't fluent or full like typing an old school blog entry, email or other document. It is not as efficient as a voice-call. And it's a holiday anyway, so SPEAK!!!!
Considering these two events, I would be very grateful if you could answer these two questions for me (tell your boss the answers will act as my gifts for Xmas 2019):
1. Why is my President such a jerk?
2. Why are people texting on CHRISTMAS?????
Get back to me whenever you like. And don't text.
I wish you well during these strange days and hope your species survives our ridiculous, oh-so-human fuck-ups.
I love you . . .
XO
Joyce to the World
Sunday, November 4, 2018
6 months later . . . feeling feline!
Dear you -
November, 2018. Since last writing, the family property at Inlet Beach was sold/closed for a good chunk of change. Then, as resident and former protector of that land, I had 45 days to make a move. The real estate agent was far from inventive and rather vague, so I won't address that drama. (The whole selling and buying process was torturous and sad.) To sum it up, I just did not want to own a big, stupid house/yard and be saddled with tasks and upkeep. So, I purchased a condo on 30A in Seagrove Beach, just about 8 miles from the former home. The 8 miles influenced my decision.
The decision also involved my cat clan. First, there is/was Vivo, the totally socialized fur baby who adopted me. She could not return to simply being a neighborhood cat. No one followed through on possible adoption promises. Even the oh-so-righteous animal protection organization (Alaqua) in Freeport could not take one more cat. ONE more fucking cat. Seriously. They advertise themselves as Eden. Lies. Anyway, Vivo came with me and is now a condo cat, litter box and all. The remaining wilder ones (Dinky, Flash, Noche and Grover - an alpha male who was not a regular in my zone but dropped by now and then) are still on the land, the now not manicured, trashed land the new owners are ignoring as they wait for a profitable offer. And that is why the close locale, 8 miles from here to there, mattered. They gotta eat! And drink!
I now do the "8 miles to and 8 miles from" dance every day. I am the trespassing cat handmaiden. (I hope the "neighbors" feel slightly shitty and petty for not taking on what would be an easy task for them.) Sometimes, I see one or two of those felines and say hello! They understand I don't live in the house. They also understand I won't abandon them. Close enough to give them more time in Eden.
Yes, of course, the commitment aggravates me. And it is odd to be held captive by creatures in order to save them from captivity. However, it also feels rather liberating to save what others fear, the wild things who are never sorry for themselves (D. H. Lawrence, I think).
See the photo above. Many are unsettled by a stare like that. Hard to turn this dominant entity into a "pet". But oh man, I LOVE that look and whenever I feel a bit outside of the "human herd" here in the Panhandle, I try to be what I see in those eyes.
Six months later. Comfortably exiled with Vivo. Often bored and often longing for the unbelievably colorful and risky life lived in my cities far away. However, I also appreciate the fact that all that property bullshit is over and I am free to . . .
Let the ellipsis speak. Today, my focus is simply to get over the FLU and keep tackling Vivo's FLEA issue. Oh, the random things we pick up as we move through life.
Love,
Joyce
PS - Oh, did I forget to talk about Hurricane Michael? I am tired of talking about Michael, especially since NOTHING happened to me and so many others who just will not shut up about how awful it was to lose power for two days. Seriously. Check the carnage to the east and shut the hell up. Obviously, 30A and I survived. I refused to evacuate (yet another law broken) and witnessed the winds, felt a fear that was justified!
XO
Wednesday, July 4, 2018
Independence Day means you can testify! Truth . . . unchained.
Happy 4th of July to dear you,
I am in the midst of selling the precious property here at Inlet Beach and moving on to another . . . place. Hard to call it home since it cannot match the space, the wild beauty of this last gorgeous acre in a now exploited, paved zone. But I know not to look back. Lots of quotations on this topic . . .
On the one hand, there is the future-focused "let it go" mantra:
And on the other hand, there is the learn from the past kind of mantra:
I am thinking about these messages because I am not only letting go of my lovely land here, I am also cranking out a comedic memoir about various adventures working, surviving and gypsying around the USA. These reflections are very American. We can invent and reinvent; we (economy allowing) can spin our pasts into pleasing tales. We can (with consequences, of course) live our truths.
So, as summer sizzles and I see the moving date approaching, I write little stories about how I got here. And by making the reflection fun, I am freeing myself from grief. Moving on. Independence. Happy 4th. And amen to Johnny Depp's words. However, I would definitely have replaced "shit" with the F bomb.
Love,
Joyce
Oh, and if you care to read the first sections of this little book, here you go:
Joyce
Fleming
PLAY MONEY
A
record of endless gigs and tiny rebellions
I escaped from the "heart of Dixie" decades
ago. Yet here I am . . . back home in
the Florida Panhandle. Cliche wisdom
might claim we can't go home again. We
often do. Pop movies frequently focus on
this theme. But my story is not a
romantic tale like Sweet Home Alabama
or Hope Floats. What brought me home is/was work, not a
career, but survival. This is my story,
moving back from now to then, a happy, confessional of a multifarious soul
journeying through zip codes and gigs as dancer, actress, waitress, secretary,
fitness instructor, paralegal, professor, and retail renegade.
June, 2018
I just got written up by Ted, my
manager at the local JZPeppy, for dropping the F bomb at work. Sixty-three years old, and I am now a retail
criminal. A part-time, underpaid,
over-qualified retail criminal with a wicked mouth, sitting in a windowless
mall office being cross-examined.
"This is a very serious
matter, Joyce. Tell me your version of what happened."
"Ted, the customer should
mind his own business. I was ranting about the president and racist policies
while cleaning up the shoe department. Oh, by the way, why does that zone
always look like a crime scene? Anyway,
I was ranting to a co-worker and not to a f****** customer. I had no idea he could hear me."
"You just did it again."
"What did I just do
again?"
"You cursed."
"I don't put curses on
people. I'm not a witch."
"No. I mean your language."
At this point, Ted is staring at something over my
head. He would prefer not to look at the
source of this cursing.
"Oh. You mean I
said f*** again."
"Yes. And stop
saying that. Please. Joyce.
Stop."
Meanwhile, passive and slightly puffy Kalli is taking notes,
recording the conversation for human resources.
I wonder if she is spelling out the F bomb or using asterisks. But I digress . . .
"OK, Ted. So
what do you want me to do? What will
calm our unhappy custy?"
"I have to write you up and send a report to
Corporate."
"So, what does that mean? Am I fired?"
"Not this time.
But we are watching you."
Yes, they are watching me at JZPeppy. Frankly my dear, I don't give a f***.
I started working here during the Christmas holiday season
in 2015. At that time, I was finishing
up a rather grim semester teaching composition and literature at a local state
college. Let’s call it Gulf Shores State Advanced High School (GSSAHS). As expected, my time there as an adjunct had
been less than exciting. Spoiled by
teaching at more vibrant colleges in Chicago and St. Petersburg, Florida (more
on that later), this experience was like walking through mud one day and a mine
field another day. Department
full-timers were simple, sweet folks, but followed a rather dull pedagogical
model. And some of these folks (the not
so sweet ones) had a problem with my “passion” and tendencies to ignore rubrics
and standardized writing assignments.
So, in the fall of 2015, I opted out and signed on as a sales associate
with JZPeppy.
Ted hired me to work in the shoe department. Why shoes seemed right for me has never been
clear. What was clear at the time was
the fact that nobody wanted to deal with that part of the store. The job involved lots of boxes, boxes, boxes,
and feet, feet, feet. The department
literally stank. Of course, I
encountered many fun customers and serving them was easy. This was not brain surgery. However, there were also the others, those
who brought their bad attitudes and unhinged children with them to shop. Flashback to memorable run-in of this type:
I am mumbling to myself amid piles of mismatched shoes on a
busy Sunday shift. “Why would anyone put
a stiletto heel in a Nike box? This is
purgatory. Oh, no, here we go, an angry
mother and restless child are entering the department.”
Mom: “Don’t touch
anything.”
Child: “Why?”
Mom: “Because these
shoes are dirty.”
Child: “Then why are
you trying them on?”
Mom: “Don’t sass me.”
Child: “I want ice
cream.”
Mom: “They don’t sell
that here.”
Child: “I feel
sick. I think I’m going to puke.”
Mom: “Well, use that
box over there.”
Really? Did she just
advise the kid to vomit in my merchandise?
I have to intervene.
Me: “Hello. Should I show you where the restroom is?”
Mom: “Are you asking me
to leave the shoe department?”
Me: “No. I just overheard your child say he felt
nauseous.”
Mom: “You need to
help me find shoes and leave him alone.”
I have nothing to say in response. I simply stare at her. This non-response always infuriates customers
who are looking for a fight.
Mom: “Where is your
boss? I want to speak to a manager!”
The random manager on duty (not Ted) is consulted. Customer is mollified by gifts of $10 off
coupons and promises of a reprimand to the cold bitch in the shoe department
who, obviously, hates children.
This reprimand did not take the form of a “write up” (I
still don’t know what that is), but it took the form of Zen advice. “Joyce, please be more mindful.”
Well, at least I had been mindful enough not to drop an F
bomb.
*****************
I am still serving time at JZPeppy on weekends. The dollars pay some bills and allow me to play
here in the family home in Inlet Beach, the grand old property I have been
caring for since my move here in 2013.
That move was prompted by my Dad’s death and another gig-related comedy. Stay tuned for that revelation.
November,
2012
Late autumn in St. Petersburg, Florida, is stunning. The heavy summer heat is gone; the air is
clear; the water sparkles; loud American tourists are replaced by chilled
Canadians and Europeans. My last fall
there was neither chilled nor sparkling.
I went all in to stand strong against assholes in academia! Admittedly, this battle was one of my tiny
rebellions that changed my work status and location.
I worked for the local state college in St. Pete since my
arrival there in 2003. Hired as a
composition adjunct, I had plenty of work and taught courses at the main campus
(in the center of the Pinellas County peninsula, a short bus ride away from my
downtown dwelling) and the new extension campus in town. All instructors faced a mutual challenge in
this zone: a (sometimes large) segment
of the student population lacked curiosity and thought reading was unnecessary.
Imagine you are teaching a Composition I class and the day’s
project is to write a response to an essay in the textbook. You assume the students have prepared by
reading that essay before class. You
learn quickly not to assume this. When
the response writing assignment is announced, you will hear “But I didn’t read
the essay” like a choral ode filling the room.
You will attempt to adjust. Adapt
or die. You will then say “In the
future, always prepare for class by reading assigned material. Today, we will read the material
together. Bob, start us off with the
opening on page 67.”
Bob doesn’t respond.
You repeat the request.
“Bob, start us off with the opening on page 67.”
Bob mumbles: “I
didn’t bring my book.”
It gets worse after this.
You will hear about allergies preventing reading, bad
girlfriends/boyfriends who steal textbooks and sell them for drug money, and,
yes, you will also hear about the dog that eats anything related to
academia. You will continue to adapt and
accommodate. Or you will do what I did
one November day in response to similar nonsense. You will speak the unfiltered truth.
“Seriously, I am so over listening to this lazy bull****. To those who read the material, stay and
we’ll get something done. To the rest of
you, class dismissed. Course
dismissed. Semester dismissed. Don’t come back. I’ll give you a B as a final grade just so I
don’t have to see you ever again. Good
luck! Enjoy your futures at Burger
King!”
Silence plus dropped jaws.
Then, mass exodos with threats of going to the Dean . . . or
whoever my boss is.
The two prepared, smart students are embarrassed and know
this little explosion will hurt me more than the “customers” I dismissed. This was my third strike, my third incident
involving . . . honesty.
Strike one involved a tech employee who demanded I abandon
my work at an office computer before class because he needed to update some
widget. I said “no”. He said “you have to.” And I stomped off to teach. I opened the session by describing what had
just happened and addressed my favorite students in the class directly. These two dudes were always prepared,
curious, and bad ass. One, let’s call
him Vito, worked as a rent collector and body guard. He packed heat. The other , let’s call him Hulk, was simply
huge, the size of your average NFL linebacker, and he always wore brass
knuckles on his right hand (taking them off to type or write essays in class,
of course). After my little
recollection, Vito and Hulk stood and asked my permission to “get some
water”. Of course I agreed and of course
I knew exactly where they were headed and what they would do. My heroes headed to the adjunct office and
cornered tech-dude, preventing his exit.
They just blocked the door eyeing him. Tech-dude was trapped for half an
hour.
The next morning, I arrived on campus and my Department
Chair gave me the lecture of the century.
Tech-dude was traumatized. How
had I dared to use my students as mafia hitmen?
I apologized and signed something and went about my business. Tech-dude avoided me from that point on.
Strike two involved the Bill of Rights. I taught a
Composition II course focusing on arguments.
Topics were always current and political. Spring 2012, many students
were thinking about the upcoming Presidential election, the one that resulted
in Obama’s second term. However, there
was this one guy who just couldn’t stay current. He was still enraged about the 2008 contest,
the one where Sara Palin ran as the Republican vice presidential
candidate. Obsessed with Sara’s supposed
crimes against democracy, Enraged Guy wrote an argument targeting her words.
The problem here is he was not actually citing her words. Enraged Guy confused a Saturday Night Live sketch with reality. In one of those sketches, an actor posing as
Sara stated “And I can see Russia from my house”. No.
Sara did not say that. An actor
did. Enraged Guy also cited a comment
she really did make about using our Second Amendments rights (guns baby) to
protect ourselves from . . . liberals (?) He managed to screw this up too
because he said she had prompted us to use our “Fifth Amendment” rights (not
exactly about guns baby). He was reading
this in front of the class and I had to correct him on both goofy errors. He was deeply insulted. After class, we had a little chat:
Enraged guy: “I don’t
appreciate the way you put me on the spot.”
Me: “Your content
contained two ridiculous errors. As a
Democrat and a liberal, I really can’t have you making my party look bad. If you are going to speak out against any
conservative, you better be accurate. We
can’t afford that kind of idiocy now.”
Enraged guy: “Those
were just typos.”
Me: “Oh hell no.”
Enraged guy: “I am
filing a complaint against you.”
Me: “Go ahead. Just make sure you show them the original
copy of this paper, the original with the idiotic errors in it.”
The complaint was filed.
I found out Enraged Guy was the son of some rather powerful local
people. They asked I be banned from
teaching. This didn’t happen, but I was
warned I would be watched. (Were there audio-cameras in those
classrooms? This foreshadows future fun
at JZPeppy.)
Back to this gorgeous autumn, 2012, the season of strike
three. My dear old Dad died in October
and this loss shifted the way I viewed everything. I knew future work assignments hinged on my
being on the chain. Losing Dad made me
realize I needed to get permanently off
the chain. Life is short. I can teach anywhere. We have a beach house in the Panhandle of
Florida that needs to be cared for, lived in, and Mom wants to stay in the
Birmingham house. I will move home. I will live in the Inlet Beach house as
caretaker and chain-breaker. Bring on
the lawnmowers, shovels, and tacky straw hats.
The city girl is headed to the Redneck Riviera.
Monday, May 28, 2018
Wild things . . .
Dear You:
Memorial Day in Inlet Beach and subtropical storm Alberto is slamming. Rain rain rain. I am "hunkered down" and enjoying Wifi and TV now, anticipating power outages in my current "rehearsing tragedies" state of mind. However, this is nothing. See the news about flooding in Maryland. One little town is submerged. Rain rain rain.
About the insect photo, these beasts typically plague this part of the country in May/June. In my time here I have suffered a bite or two and endured swelling, itching, and throbbing. These lady flies (the males don't attack) are killer. Google yellow fly bite images and be amazed! This season, the creatures are everywhere and I have six bites on my legs/ankles. With the swelling, I no longer have distinct calves and ankles. I now have cankles. I also have a repressed warrior persona. One of these lovelies attached herself to my clothes and came into the cottage with me. Panic ensued. Then I shifted into cool, predator mode. I stood still, waiting for my guest to head to a window or land on my delicious cankles. I was setting a trap. For some reason she avoided my tasty flesh and settled on a living room chair, easy target. Blam. I smashed her. With my bare hand. Without remorse. I think I let out some kind of war cry.
And speaking of war, in Trumpland attacks on journalism, free speech (ongoing drama re: NFL players/citizens forced to stand for the national anthem), and facts continue. And his fan base is not budging. Trump's approval rating is actually rising! Swelling. Like a yellow fly bite. Annoying me and making me itch. And I cannot smash them in self-defense or know they will disappear in a few weeks.
Itchy.
A strange calm settles outside. A break in the rain. But storm warnings continue. Kind of like life. Calm is merely a break between dramas, autocratic presidents with bad hair, and insect invasions.
Transcend the itch and carry on darlings!
Happy Memorial Day to all the real warriors, past, present, and future!
Love,
Joyce
Saturday, March 17, 2018
The basics . . . the loss of food, shelter, and joy during the Trump Reign
Dear you:
March Madness now refers to politics in America.
Every week, huge shocks to the system, compliments of President Donald, put us on the cliche emotional roller coaster. Last night, the Don's pressure to take down critics (enemies of the people he would say) worked again. McCabe, an FBI veteran, is fired two days before his retirement date. Pension lost. Paradise gained for the Insane Clown in the Oval Office.
I do not understand what motivates those who adore this dude in chief. Rationalizations take the forms of "I don't care about his past, his lies, or his racism. He's getting things done. The economy is doing great. More jobs!"
Well, yes, he is getting many destructive things done. And whether we want to assign the racist designation to Don or not, massive evidence shows he is supported by "them". (I don't need to provide the noun for that pronoun, do I?) He is indeed their white president. This is not news. Spend five minutes on Twitter. But what hit me today, amid the firings of talented people and the storm of Stormy Daniels (more on that later), I encountered this story:
https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/companies/here-are-the-nearly-100-winn-dixie-stores-that-are-closing/ar-BBKizM9
Many of these stores are in southern neighborhoods in Alabama, Georgia and Florida. Many of these stores are also part of the pedestrian scene; locals can walk there. Where will they go now? The appearance of Dollar General stores down here can't cover the loss. DG doesn't sell "fresh" anything. And the stores themselves are depressing, staffed by workers who are just passing through. (I can't blame them for that.) Winn Dixie often is staffed by full-timers or part-timers who have worked there for years and give a damn. I sometimes shop at the one near me, located at the end of Front Beach Road just to the east. The young manager knows the brand of cigarettes I smoke. Ellen, the cool cashier, talks to me about caring for neighborhood cats. (We are both suckers for the partially socialized felines who need food and love.) The old dude who bags my groceries knows I do not need help to my car and get pissed off when asked if I need assistance. When I cash-out with my sunglasses on, they all know I am not in a chatty mood. These people are surviving the closures; this site is staying open. But I know they hurt, feeling slightly complicit like Titanic survivors.
Businesses fail. I get it. But something creepy is happening. Access to food, affordable housing and employment: Bye now. And yet I hear Donald and his fans repeat over and over that things are now great again in America. That is some bullshit, my friends.
But on the horizon, I see somebody who just might be able to dethrone Trump. Stormy Daniels wants to talk and she is suing him about a bogus agreement requiring her silence (in return for some Trump-chump-change). She's got a hot lawyer. And Trump is reacting. He actually is scared to name her in the latest Tweets. It is possible that out of all the citizens who have tried to restrain Trump and stop the carnage, an adult film star may be the one to get it done. Perfect. Show biz. Good luck sister!
Happy St. Patrick's Day. We need the intervention of saints now, for real.
Stay strong. Endure. The Clown Regime can't last forever . . .
XO
Joyce
Saturday, February 24, 2018
2 + 2 = 4
Dear you:
Months passed. New Year arrives. 2018. The number looks beautiful. Every year since the calculated new century hit the calendars looks beautiful. The curve of the "2" instead of the blunt "1". Then there is the lovely feeling of "2". Songs say it: "It Takes Two", "Tea for Two", etc. And then there is the Orwellian theme of power erasing empirical truths featuring that number. We remember that moment, at least from the latest film version, where power tells people 2 + 2 = 5; however, the last shot shows the hero carving 2 + 2 = 4 into a cafe tabletop. Someone will encounter that good math message and realize they are not alone. The truth still stands.
Good news everybody! In spite of continual attempts by "power" in the "real" world, good math still stands.
2 + 2 = 4
Student survivors from the latest slaughter in a school do the good math: AK15s (?) are weapons of war. Ban them.
Texas wind farm owners do the good math: This clean energy industry creates more jobs than our President's beloved "clean" coal and . . . well, collecting wind doesn't annihilate the land.
Math. And then poetry.
The Prez still loves to quote song lyrics (he calls it a "poem") made famous by Al Wilson. "The Snake" is being twisted to serve an anti-immigrant movement. More bad math. (I am really mixing metaphors here, but you get it.)
This Business Insider article responds to Donald's bad math and bad spin:
http://www.businessinsider.com/trump-the-snake-poem-2016-9
Well, at least he is messing with a pop song and not a classic piece of actual poetry. Donald needs to think about Shelley's poem. I wonder if this could help him do "good math"?
I met a traveller from an antique land
Who said: Two vast and trunkless legs of stone
Stand in the desert. Near them on the sand,
Half sunk, a shatter'd visage lies, whose frown
And wrinkled lip and sneer of cold command
Tell that its sculptor well those passions read
Which yet survive, stamp'd on these lifeless things,
The hand that mock'd them and the heart that fed.
And on the pedestal these words appear:
"My name is Ozymandias, king of kings:
Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!"
Nothing beside remains: round the decay
Of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare,
The lone and level sands stretch far away.
HAPPY NEW YEAR!
2018
Beautiful . . . in spite of bad math.
XO
Months passed. New Year arrives. 2018. The number looks beautiful. Every year since the calculated new century hit the calendars looks beautiful. The curve of the "2" instead of the blunt "1". Then there is the lovely feeling of "2". Songs say it: "It Takes Two", "Tea for Two", etc. And then there is the Orwellian theme of power erasing empirical truths featuring that number. We remember that moment, at least from the latest film version, where power tells people 2 + 2 = 5; however, the last shot shows the hero carving 2 + 2 = 4 into a cafe tabletop. Someone will encounter that good math message and realize they are not alone. The truth still stands.
Good news everybody! In spite of continual attempts by "power" in the "real" world, good math still stands.
2 + 2 = 4
Student survivors from the latest slaughter in a school do the good math: AK15s (?) are weapons of war. Ban them.
Texas wind farm owners do the good math: This clean energy industry creates more jobs than our President's beloved "clean" coal and . . . well, collecting wind doesn't annihilate the land.
Math. And then poetry.
The Prez still loves to quote song lyrics (he calls it a "poem") made famous by Al Wilson. "The Snake" is being twisted to serve an anti-immigrant movement. More bad math. (I am really mixing metaphors here, but you get it.)
This Business Insider article responds to Donald's bad math and bad spin:
http://www.businessinsider.com/trump-the-snake-poem-2016-9
Well, at least he is messing with a pop song and not a classic piece of actual poetry. Donald needs to think about Shelley's poem. I wonder if this could help him do "good math"?
I met a traveller from an antique land
Who said: Two vast and trunkless legs of stone
Stand in the desert. Near them on the sand,
Half sunk, a shatter'd visage lies, whose frown
And wrinkled lip and sneer of cold command
Tell that its sculptor well those passions read
Which yet survive, stamp'd on these lifeless things,
The hand that mock'd them and the heart that fed.
And on the pedestal these words appear:
"My name is Ozymandias, king of kings:
Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!"
Nothing beside remains: round the decay
Of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare,
The lone and level sands stretch far away.
HAPPY NEW YEAR!
2018
Beautiful . . . in spite of bad math.
XO
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