Aruba

Aruba
aloe factory
"Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world: indeed, it's the only thing that ever has." Margaret Mead

Our greatest glory is not in never falling but in rising every time we fall--confucius

"The world is a book, and those who do not travel read only one page." anon

A man is but the product of his thoughts--what he thinks, he becomes. Gandhi


I am only one, but still I am one.
I cannot do everything,
but still I can do something;
and because I cannot do everything,
I will not refuse to do something that I can do. edward everett hale
Doom to you who legislate evil, who make laws that make victims -- laws that make misery for the poor, that rob my destitute people of dignity, exploiting defenseless widows, taking advantage of homeless children. What will you have to say on Judgment Day, when Doomsday arrives out of the blue? Who will you get to help you? What good will your money do you? (Isaiah 10:1-3, The Message)

There is nothing in the world more beautiful than the forest clothed to its very hollows in snow. It is the still ecstasy of nature, wherein every spray, every blade of grass, every spire of reed, every intricacy of twig, is clad w/radiance. william sharp

I think no matter how old or infirm I may become, I will always plant a large garden in the spring. Who can resist the feelings of hope and joy that one gets from participating in nature's rebirth? edward giobbi

Let us be grateful to people who make us happy; they are the charming gardeners who make our souls blossom. marcel proust

I am only one, but still I am one.I cannot do everything,but still I can do something;and because I cannot do everything,I will not refuse to do something that I can do. edward everett hale




Thursday, January 27, 2011

screw the educators

"Gov. Snyder has called on all of us to work collaboratively," said Doug Pratt, MEA's director of public affairs. "But these attacks seem like 'business as usual' in Lansing. Attacking public employees isn't productive and won't lead to meaningful education reform. We are offering solutions to help the entire state--and we hope lawmakers will, too."

Here's an overview of some of the bills introduced to date:

  • Senate Bill 0007 would prohibit public employers from paying more than 80 percent of the total cost of the medical benefit plans (including medical, dental, and optical) for employees. Public employers with health savings account plans could pay up to 90 percent of the cost. The implementation date in the bill is Jan. 1, 2013, and any contracts in effect at that time would be honored until the expiration date of the contract. The legislation would apply to all union employees, non-union employees, and elected officials covered by the public employer’s medical benefit plans. The sponsor is Sen. Mark Jansen, R- Gaines Township. This measure may require a change to the state constitution, which has been introduced as Senate Joint Resolution C, also sponsored by Jansen.

  • Senate Joint Resolution B would place a constitutional revision before voters to cut public employee pay by 5 percent and freeze that rate for three years. The resolution will require a 2/3 majority vote in each chamber. Sen. John Pappageorge, R-Troy, is the sponsor.

  • House Bill 4052 would amend the Public Employment Relations Act (PERA) to prohibit public employees or their unions from using any school facilities or equipment for union activities. The sponsor is Rep. Al Pscholka, R-Stevensville.

  • House Bill 4054 would amend PERA to allow public schools and other governmental entities to create a "Right to Work Zone" by a vote of the governing body. The sponsor is Rep. Marty Knollenberg, R-Troy.

  • Â House Bill 4059 would prohibit release time for union officers or bargaining representatives to conduct union business if the release time is paid for by the public employer. Knollenberg is the sponsor.

  • House Bill 4128 would prohibit a department, board, or commission from setting a rule or standard on workplace ergonomics. The sponsor is Rep. Bradford Jacobsen, R-Oxford.

  • House Bill 4139 would require public employers to conduct beneficiary eligibility audits to determine whether dependents covered by public employees' health insurance plans are eligible for benefits. The sponsor is Rep. Tim Melton, D-Auburn Hills.

  • House Bill 4140 would create a state-run health insurance plan for public employees. This proposal would cost $870 million to set up and would not guarantee any savings. Melton is the sponsor.

  • House Bill 4141 would create a new state commission of political appointees to study consolidation of non-instructional services in all public schools. Based on the recommendations, the state could then order service consolidation. Melton is the sponsor.

  • House Bill 4142 would amend tenure law. Probationary teachers rated ineffective would not earn tenure. Tenured teachers rated "ineffective" for two consecutive years may have to serve another four-year probationary period. Melton is the sponsor.

In addition to these so-called "reforms," Rep. Tom McMillin, R-Rochester Hills, introduced House Bill 4019 to remove the cap on the number of university-authorized public charter academies. The current cap is 150. The bill would also remove the restriction on how many charter schools any one university could authorize.

MEA strongly encourages lawmakers to review the association's A+ Agenda (available online at www.mea.org/A+), which features multiple proven strategies to improve student and school achievement and increase accountability for all in public education.

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Jan 2011

In 1970 the ratio of top 100 corporate CEO's and the average worker's pay was 40 to 1. Bt 2007 it was 1723 to 1.

17.7 million of 22 million to pass anti-gay marriage legislation in CA was contributed by 59000 Mormon families, God love them all.

The White Nationalist Community attempts to hide racism. Visit site and maybe find song lyrics "A Warrior Does Not Return Without Blood on his Axe, The arrival of lower races has begun. . ."

"They're sluts (unmarried teen parents). In my parents day and age, they were sent away, they were shunned, they were called what they are." Colorado State Rep Larry Liston at a GOP lunch.

check to verify


Dogs are our link to paradise. They don't know evil or jealousy or discontent. To sit with a dog on a hillside on a glorious afternoon is to be back in Eden, where doing nothing was not boring--it was peace. Milan Kundera

If you pick up a starving dog and make him prosperous, he will not bite you; that is the principal difference between a dog and a man. Mark Twain

Friday, January 14, 2011

Michigan farm news paper

the jan 15 issue is again a good example of groups/people for cuts except for them. the front page laments the reorganization of the college of ag and natural resources since ag is SO important. other cuts of course are ok. however, one of the letters to the editor did point this out--surprising that it was printed. according to mr stroven "the people of this country have spoken up against out-of-control gov spending. yet you act like any other special interest group in thinking that everyone else should take a spending cut, but yours is too important. . . . farm bureau has become just another spoke in the wheel of promoting big gov socialism." mr stroven has "never participated in the farm bill welfare system of farm subsidies" and has never gone to bed hungry.

nice that he points out the tendency of many to want $ only for themselves.

same issue: US court of appeals in san francisco issued a ruling"that puts on hold a judge's order to dig up 256 acres of biotech sugar beet seedlings. biotech beets are grown on 1.3 million acres in 10 states. the judge said the usda improperly granted permission for the beets to be planted because a detailed environmental review was not conducted". on the same p 1, there is an article about the usda releasing biotech alfalfa environmental impact statement.

oh great, another biotech grain for us all to have put in our foods.

but the best from the back page: "Weed resistance is a growing problem. and regardless of where you farm and what weed control product you use, a single herbicide mode-of-action is simply no longer adequate to protect your yields and long-term profitability."

from the folks at roundup.

feeling better already, aren't you?

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Recent events

An adult would face a problem that seems to involve them, perhaps, with the statement, "I'm sorry that that happened and feel extremely unhappy if I in any way contributed to the tragedy. My condolences go out to all those involved, those hurt or killed and to their families."

The child says, "Everyone is responsible for his/her own actions and no blame should be coming my way".

An adult faces a problem; a child says I didn't do anything.

Which is the former governor?



Assuming guns don't kill, only people do, then what do words do? Do they incite actions? Can they incite actions? If not, why can someone be charged with inciting a riot? Can we do and say WHATEVER we want? Or can only some people do that? Are pictures capable of calling people to action? Crosshairs on a spot or face sounds/appears ominous. If that not a threat of some sort? Can I publish something similar, put it out for everyone to see, and NOT get in trouble?
Couching speeches and posts in the language of guns, hunting, and killing certainly does create a certain image in my mind that okays violence. Wasn't that the idea?


To the beat of This is cardinal country or a similar cheer:

This is cross hair country
We've got you in our sights
But you don't have to worry
It's only my political might. (or Just be out of town tonight or It's only my political right.)

2011 thoughts

There is more to life than increasing its speed. mahatma gandhi

There is a quality to being alone that is incredibly precious. Life rushes back into the void, richer, more vivid, fuller than before. anne morrow lindbergh

Take rest; a field that has rested gives a bountiful crop. ovid

Happiness is a butterfly, which, when pursued, is always just beyond your grasp, but which, if you will sit down quietly, may alight upon you. nathaniel hawthorne

Every now and then go away, have a little relaxation. For when you come back to your work, your judgment will be surer. leonardo da vinci

Friday, January 7, 2011

my answer to medications

you are absolutely right. i will stop the heart meds for heart and migraines, meds for arthritis and ask the benevolent god -- christian god of course, white christian god--to heal me. i will grow back the replaced expensive hips (paid ...for by my evil insurance) which cause problems going through the security at airports-which is my fault for poor genetics. i hope other family members also experience this problem so they can understand the wonderfulness of positive thought--we can make it right if we try hard enough, positive thought waves. remember bad heart and bad joints run in the family. prepare to experience pain and death with no treatment. mental problems? Scientology and positive thought can address that like for the post delivery issues some mothers face; hurt in a car accident? (probably your fault anyway) just imagine those healing vibes and you will be okay, if not get a self instruction book and fix it yourself or i can help you - dissecting is always fun. lost a job - your fault. don't work - something odd there. single--well we know what that problem is. post traumatic stress? patient heal thyself. child of an illegal? damn you go back to your own country -- with all the rest of us. won't the rest of the world be surprised when we get on a boat and go back where we belong? done something illegal or suspected of it? automatically guilty--let's waterboard everyone. the end always justifies the means. war is kind especially since our country is always right. don't go to the correct church, synagogue, temple,etc -- may your soul rot in hell. hungry? your fault so go without; you are responsible. hard hearted? no. this is the way it must be. yes i agree NO to everything except if it's for me. mother used to say this little poem which is SO right for the times.

god bless me and my wife, my son john, us four and no more.

my mission statement for the future:

therefore, ask nothing of me, no help, no advice, no assistance. you take care of yourself and keep out of my way and the righteous way of corporations and capitalism, god bless them all. i will not accept any pension government or otherwise or social security or medicare or medicaid or go to the VA or food stamps or public assistance or help from the food bank or from church pantries, or work under the table, or accept $ for taking care of someone, or use any subsided service like transportation or schools, etc since that would make me a hypocrite. i will kill my own food, plant my garden, raise sheep to make my clothes, forge my tools, make my own energy, create my own income, defend my property and family, establish my own church, get rid of those who get in my way economically, socially or otherwise, etc.

i shall ignore any biblical references to loving others, forgiving, helping, healing,tithing, finding the missing sheep when 99 are already safe, turning over the tables of the money lenders, taking care of mothers (crucifixion scene), giving bread not a stone, etc. I shall sleep soundly since i am pure and without fault or blame. i will cast stones because i am not part of any problem; couldn't be. it's not MY fault.


*
Donna Hart oops left out the son and his wife in the poem. easy to do since females are so worthless and discrimination against them is not protected by the constitution (dear mr scalia)


you know, now that i'm an "ordained minister" i think my church name could be "the righteous way". has a ring to it. i'll keep thinking--must be a good capitalistic way to sucker my congregation no how about church of righteous sleep

#

the rich

average income of people earning more than $50 million rose from 91 million in 2008 to 519 million in 2009 -- utterly preposterous!

in 1974 the wealthiest 1% of americans earned 9% of nation's total income; in 2007 they got 23.5% -- and now with corporations in control we can be assured they'll earn more

elections

So was the november 2010 election worth 4 billion dollars.

average cost to win a House campaign was 1.09 million

average cost to win a Senate seat was 8.28 million

McCain spent 38.8 in his primary and general election

god help us all--what could such $ been better used for? do not tell me military

Thursday, January 6, 2011

end of DTE articles

Well it finally happened that I got angry enough to say good by to being the chair of the Genesee County MG newsletter. Not that it wasn't fun to write articles; it was. I enjoyed reading magazines and choosing topics that I thought might be interesting. But in 2009 I believe I did at least 7 of the 12 months; 2010 wasn't a lot better although some new people did help out. Getting volunteers was a struggle nay a battle of wits and wills. Too many not interested; too many saying "I'll help" but then not doing it. Guess who did? In October at a meeting a passed a sign up sheet for 2011. I was doing January; 1 person signed. No way in hell was I doing the other 10. At the spring awards dinner, my name was skipped over surely no accident since it was listed. Time to move on and be like everyone else--do as little as possible.

Here are the things I did for January. All months for 2 years are available on line at the county extension site:

feature article:

The Oct/Nov 2010 issue of Organic Gardening had a feature article “Celestial Gardening” which caught my attention when I happened to see a reference to Stella Natura, a calendar/manual which I had received as a birthday gift but had only skimmed. I started reading “for real” and then checked some on line reference sites.
The article summarizes a visit to the 140 acre Threefold Farm in NY, the site recognized as the beginning of BD (biodynamics) gardening. The farm was established “in 1926 by followers of Rudolf Steiner, the founder of biodynamic agriculture, and has been cultivated that way” ever since. The author visited the Pfeiffer Center, named for Ehrenfried Pfeiffer, who spent 17 years on the land researching BD growing methods. He had run a BD farm in Holland and worked in Switzerland with the founder Steiner before coming to the US in the 1930’s. BD agriculture was born out of 8 lectures he gave in 1924 when, European farmers, concerned with the effects of chemical fertilizers on their soil and on the quality of the food they were producing, asked Steiner to help them develop the kind of farming methods that would combine a scientific understanding of the world with recognition of the spirit in nature and humanity. BD is a worldview that Steiner called anthroposophy, a modern path of human development based on clear, disciplined thinking and exact phenomenological observation. . . The farm is seen as a whole, self-sustaining, living organism that can become a solution to contemporary challenges. . . The mission statement of the Threefold Educational Foundation is “to establish, conduct, operate and maintain conferences, programs of research and adult education in all fields of human endeavor emphasizing the principles and methods enunciated by Rudolf Steiner.” (from www.threefold.org and www.pfeiffercenter.org)
Pfeiffer met J. I. Rodale and in the 30’s and 40’s they worked and did research only 2 hrs apart. Both men sought an alternative to chemical based agriculture; in fact, “Rodale funded some of Pfeiffer’s early experiments, including one in which mice fed an organic diet were found to be less irritable and have fewer digestion problems than those on conventional chemically raised feed.” Pfeiffer’s book The Earth’s Face and Human Destiny was published by Rodale in 1947 and Pfeiffer wrote articles for Rodale’s Organic Gardening magazine. (p. 40)
The Pfeiffer Center offers training programs for BD growers, weekend workshops, a program teaching local school children about gardening, and has a Researcher in Residence program. The most recent was Frank Chester, an artist, sculptor, and geometrician.
The article includes 4 ways to create a BD backyard:
1. Follow a celestial garden calendar. “The idea that the moon and stars subtly influence plant growth is a cornerstone of BD.” The Stella Natura calendar follows the moon through the constellations and suggests “optimal times to work with a plant’s roots, leaves, flowers, or fruit.” (p. 40)
2. Mist with a manure or silica preparation. The Center uses the manure spray in early spring to promote root growth and the silica later in spring and summer to help leaves take up sunlight.
3. Try BD seed.
4. Learn more—at the Pfeiffer Center of course. The Center includes the Threefold Education Center which offers programs based on the work of Steiner, the farm, and the Threefold Café serving in season garden produce. The center sounds interesting, worth even a day visit if you happen to be in the area.

My Stella Natura Working with Cosmic Rhythms calendar explains how to use the calendar and its codes, and includes an interesting article for each month. Contributors “challenge us to consider how we can change our lives to accommodate the needs of all our fellow human beings”, describe the earth seen from the moon, summarize the visibility of the planet in 2011, inform “us of the unintended effects of genetic manipulation in animals”, etc. (Editor’s letter) All are interesting and probably thought provoking since the philosophy expressed might seem unusual to many people. In many ways the calendar seems to me to be like a person plus plant horoscope. The symbols for root, leaf, flower and fruit are specified for each day so the gardener knows that the moon is present in a constellation beneficial to that specific part of the plant. (p.13) Shaded areas for the day suggest times to avoid for seed sowing, and brackets suggest when planets are in constellations that enhance that part of the plant. (It might be interesting to do a comparison of the Stella Natura and the Farmer’s Almanac too.)

gardener to gardener articles:

I’ve never participated in an online workshop until this summer. Design a Work of Art with Your Garden was offered in August by Smart Gardening Online. The speaker, Derek Fell, architect and gardener designer, was knowledgeable and interesting, and was able to cover quite a bit in his hour. I expected the info to be more on how to create an artistic garden but was pleasantly surprised when in fact he discussed gardens of impressionistic painters. Having visited Giverny, I knew what a beautiful place that is; but Fell had photos of various seasons, times of the year I haven’t experienced in Giverny. Renoir’s garden near Nice was shown, Cezanne’s family estate near Aix discussed, and some of Van Gogh’s St. Remy palette presented. Fell showed how the artist used or was influenced by the colors, patterns, landscape of his particular garden or yard and how each artist changed, rearranged, or recreated his own venue. Renoir or more probably his gardener composted and was an organic gardener; Cezanne is often called a master of the greens; Monet supposedly said “I paint what I see, remember, feel”. Mr. Fell did spend quite a bit of time telling what theories of color each artist used or preferred along with specific flowers used, many available here. It was a wonderful first webinar experience.

If you’d like info and advice on storing seeds, finegardening.com has several videos on line related to gathering and storing seed.

Last summer I again did a little experimenting and had the usual set of successes and failures. I tried cutting and putting bottle corks, real and fake “cork”, under flower pots as protective feet. Actually it wasn’t that hard to cut slices evenly and both types worked. I put cheap solar lights at the ends of some garden rows ostensibly to keep deer away to see if the lights deterred them. I’m not sure; there were nearly no deer tracks in the garden this year but maybe there were fewer deer. The garden, however, was quite pretty at night. Milk gallon jugs with stones inside hung from the corn did not stop the raccoons from getting most of the corn. I tried growing seedlings in paper egg cartons, in egg shell halves in cartons, and in a plastic cupcake container that I didn’t want to toss since it was not recyclable. The plants did start to grow but since they were within reach of a beagle, I gave up after several dog investigations. The tomato in a bag experiment had a similar demise. I did find putting paper towel rolls on the wheel barrow handles works quickly and well if there are slivers as long as the dog doesn’t pull them off. Putting gloves over the handles as I’ve read as a suggestion is not a good idea unless exercise chasing the beagle or dog playtime is needed; actually even keeping gloves in pockets seems to be a bad idea with my dog, or having zippers, hats, innersoles, small tools, etc.

The MDOT Wildflowers of Michigan brochure I picked up this summer was certainly nicely done.

The Birds & Blooms April/May 2010 issue had a page showing how to make newspaper pots for seedlings. This could be an easy way to prepare for spring planting when you are doing nothing much, if that happens, during the winter months. The article suggested cutting a newspaper sheet in fourths, rolling a fourth around a container, etc. I decided to experiment and used the Joann’s ad which was a good size for the 3 containers I tried. The article suggested a spice jar so I tried that, a pint jar and a store jelly jar. I found folding the top edge first and sliding one end under the other worked best; I could slide the jar into my paper cylinder and then fold the bottom and tape. The only negative so far is how to store them since they don’t really stack well. See page 11 of the issue for more ideas on using newspapers.

If you happen to get in the Vail, Colorado area you might enjoy a trip to the Betty Ford Alpine Gardens (www.bettyfordalpinegardens.org). The garden tries “to promote public understanding, appreciation and protection of the flora of the Rocky Mountains and other mountain regions around the world” and hopes “to be recognized as the foremost authority on high altitude plants in natural and cultivated landscapes…”

For some reason I was checking something that lead me to Michigan Agricultural Statistics 2009-2010 and impressed by the list of products for which Michigan was first in the U.S.: dry black, cranberry and small red beans; blueberries; tart cherries; cucumbers for pickles; geraniums-seed and cuttings; Niagara grapes; hostas; impatiens in flats and baskets; basket begonias; basket New Guinea impatiens; flats and baskets of petunias; potted Easter lilies; and squash.

2 other areas are always done too, thymely tips and question and answer. They are on line. I'm sure the rest of the year's articles will be great since they won't be mine.

Monday, January 3, 2011

new year

What inanities exist so far? How about nailpolish at Meijer's that says liquid made in US, filled in China. So it's cheaper to make it here, ship it, fill little glass bottles in China and then ship it back? Stupidity. Seems a company with US workers could do it here. Try to buy NOTHING from China and check all labels especially food and pet supplies. Notice that many places now say "Distributed by"? Aldi's is a good example but also others, even major brands. I try NOT to buy those items.



Farm Bureau paper is full of articles supporting 2 opposite sides of issues or being in favor of something that obviously benefits 1 side while ignoring related negative issues. For cutting spending but for insuring that side roads are blacktopped/maintained so farm products can get to main highways. I don't need "good" roads to get out if I am prepared with good vehicle or plow so why should farmers expect it for them? Didn't use to have great roads but the milk truck got down our road, maybe with farmer helping plowing/shoveling the roads. Get out and do it farmer boy. Getting soft? Grab your shovel if you have too but don't put wasted $ in roads. Why farm supports? Seems the farm lobby wants them to continue but if we let the market decide, wanted/needed products will survive. Pull that $; isn't that like a bank bailout which so many didn't want? Let everyone raise his/her own food. No room for a cow? Guess you didn't plan correctly and it's your own fault. NO to subsidies. Page 5 in the Dec 15, 2010 Michigan Farm News:

"...In making decisions regarding regulations for food safety, we must keep in mind a balance
between risk and over-regulation that hinders entrepreneurial opportunities". (LET business
rule?) "We believe local roads should receive a higher priority" than primary systems.
WAIT! Primary roads are major roads. Why shouldn't they get the main attention? I chose
to live on a gravel road so it is my responsibility to be able to get to a main road isn't it?

Here's a good one for all people with drug allergies: p. 5 still "The limitation or elimination of
animal antibiotic use from the livestock industry will have negative economic and animal
health consequences". Shoot 'em up farmers; it's an economic issue but not a human health
issue.



I sure love how the Republicans worked to block the 9-11 health bill. But maybe they were correct. Why should 1 group have special privileges when they are now promising to dismantle the health care bill? NO ONE needs health care do they? If someone can't even afford to purchase it--check the prices for a reality check--it must be his/her fault. Bad choices no doubt. Lost a job? Your own fault; bad choices.

Alternatives to this crisis? Let's blame something/someone else. Forget the cost of wars (only 59% of 2010 budget); that's money well spent. Got it--too many illegals, too many Muslims, too many on assistance, too many lazy people.....too many people who we don't like. It HAS to be someone else's fault, never the person in the mirror. What is the greatest commandment? To love. . . . . . . . Oh that's right, churches don't cover that anymore do they?