Nov 022025
 

Yesterday, the radio opera was “Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg” by Wagner. It is his only comedy – and it’s a comedy not just because it’s a sweet love story with a happy ending. It’s also about musical pedants who fall apart if any composer does anything new – and there are many in every generation (there’s a book called “Lexicon of Musical Invective, originally published in the 1950s IIRC to record every awful thing that was said about great composers, starting with Mozart and Beethoven. It’s full of doozies – an has to keep getting reissued because the pedants just keep coming.) Historically, the meistersingers were not professional composers, but a guild of tradesmen and craftsmen who were dedicated hobbyist composers. Hans Sachs (an actual historical person) was a cobbler, for instance, and Beckmesser was the town clerk. Beckmesser is the quintessential pedant, and Wagner lets him have it every time he is on stage. I always feel for the singer who has to play that part. One has to be really smart yo play that stupid, and really self confident to withstand that much embarrassment. Hans Sachs, on the other hand, is the teacher that everyone wishes they had had in every subject. I have seen this opera once, on television, not in person, and James Morris sang Hans Sachs and really made the whole thing worth watching – all five hours. I recorded it on VCR – yeah, it was a while ago. Off to see Virgil; will of course check in.

From The Root. With the regime acting like a demolition crew and loving it, it can be easy to forget there are still plenty of good people in the world. Like Sabrina. And like I expect Riley will grow up to be.

OK, this from Democratic Underground is not good news. It is in fact not news at all. It’s just for fun.

Also from the Root, I’m calling this good news. It dates back a long time, but it was certainly news to both McCullough and Smith.

From a local TV station via The Smile, I never expected to find something like this in my own back yard. Although I probably should have. I too remember Nick Venetucci and his wife Bambi – if you weren’t inspired by them you needed your vitals checked. It should not be surprising that someone was inspired enough by him to go the distance for kids, particularly disabled kids, at Hallowe’en.

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Oct 312025
 

Yesterday, The Mango Menace’s announcement on Wednesday that he would resume nuclear testing hit my inbox big time. I assume it hit the inboxes of y’all equally, so I’ll leave it there. And I had to stay up a bit late, but by golly, I finished that sweater.

A lot of us already don’t buy anything on Black Friday. This extension of that proposed by Black Enterprise may require a little more planning – but some situations call for desperate measures. There may be good reasons why some people cannot take part, but I hope all will at least consider participating.

In my experience, sure-fire solutions are virtually never things that anyone can do. This one from The Root would appear to come closer than most, but there still might be a learning curve. But I think it is well worth sharing anyway. At least it doesn’t require being a genius.

Well, as long as I already have two articles from black sources, I may as well go three for three. From The Root: The Mango Monster said something this week which implied he might be thinking about using the reserve after all – but in addition to being a chronic liar, he has been so spaced out this week that there’s really no point in even listening to him, let alone forming an opinion on what he might do from what he says. As to what starving people might do – well, two words – Jean Valjean.

Mrs. Betty Bowers Guest Video

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Oct 272025
 

Yesterday, I hardly knew what to do with myself – it was the first Sunday in a very long time when I didn’t have Trimette over andalso didn’t go see Virgil. I did aome knitting (I am on track to wear the sweater next Sunday to see Virgil, and I intend to stay on track – ahead of track if I can.) Otherwise it was pretty normal – at least as much as anything can be normal in our current national chaos.

Almost anyone could have thought of this, but it appears to be only Ursula at Politizoom who actually did, as far as I can tell (feel free to correct me if I am wrong). And I’ll bet she is absolutely right.

 

Steve Schmidt can speak for himself. He doesn’t always speak for me – but this time he does. See what you think.

This article from The Nation is both hopeful and helpful, although it’s not for the physically unfit or the faint of heart. It’s also not new – it was archived 8 months ago. But successful resistance doesn’t really change much over time (probably because the actions of tyrants don’t change much over time. The last thing a tyrant is would be is an original thinker.)

Guest video from Really American. It’s about 10 minutes, which is long for here, but not really that long.

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Oct 262025
 

Yesterday, the radio opera was “The Pearl Fishers” by Bizet (who is more famous for “Carmen”). Carmen overshadows it, but it is performed occasionally. It contains an absolutely gorgeous duet for the tenor and the baritone which is frequently recorded and sung in concert, though. When the Met presented it on a Saturday with Matthew Polenzani (a tenor who is very popular and therefore had sung the duet a fair amount prior to playing the role) and the host asked him about the duet, he pointed out that until doing the full opera he had no idea that everything he was singing in it was a lie (and he is correct in that. But it’s still gorgeous.) The plot relies heavily on coincidence (not unusual in opera) and ends with massive destruction of property but no loss of life (both unusual in opera.) Not much of it rises to the standard of the duet, but it is still all very listenable. It’s also pretty short – barely two hours. I think I mentioned that my local station, which is public radio but not affiliated with NPR, couldn’t afford the second half of the summer broadcasts – especially after the federal funding loss – but what they decided to do was to play a recorded complete opera every week until the Met starts again. The announcer who owns a huge collection of recordings is not as old as I am, but is old enough that they may, like mine, all be on vinyl. Because The Pearl Fishers is short, when it was over and I went back to local, the opera he picked for today was still going – and I didn’t recognize it. Heck, I didn’t even recognize the language at first. My first guess was Russian, but I couldn’t exclude Czech – enough popular operas were written by Czech composers that it’s not all that unlikely. But as I heard more, I realized it was German and almost certainly Wagner; I thought I recognized the sword motif from the Ring Cycle. But when did a tenor have such a long monologue, followed by input from a bass and maybe a mezzo soprano? Maybe Lohengrin? And then I heard the tenor address the soprano as “Elsa.” Yup. It was Lohengrin. Sorry/not sorry about the “stream of consciousness” there. It seemed like a good opportunity to demonstrate that not only do I not know everything, I don’t even know as much as I think I know. The WFMT will be broadcasting Lohengrin from Bayreuth in three weeks, so I’ll get my chance to hear the whole thing (not for the first time either.)

I saved this from Democratic Underground for Sunday, so it’s not brand new. But it’s definitely good. I hope it catches on elsewhere.

This from The 19th is about a good response to a very bad situation. I’m sorry about the situation – but glad that at least something is being done.

This is from Wonkette Thursday, which I thought close enough to Sunday to hold. Even my Mom bought into the theory that if you tax rich people “too much” they’ll just move away. I guess this tax isn’t “too much” – whatever that means. (My feeling about that theory was always “Good riddance” anyway.)

Yes, four links. But can we ever have too much good news? This is from Wolves and Sheep and was written by Chris Bowers. It is neither complete not graven in stone, but as far as it goes, it looks good.

Marsh Family – “The Randy Duke of York”

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Oct 252025
 

Yesterday, I was very tired out, and yesterday’s thread wasn’t posted. It is now. Also, Trinette came by after her work day ended. She is going home over the weekend, so isn’t available for Sunday. I told her to watch out for ICE agents. Also, it took a bit longer than usual, but my ballot has been received and counted- I got the emails confirming that. And the Social Security COLA will be 2.8% for 2026 (assuming we still have Social Security then.) If you receive Social Security, you probably already know that.

I don’t know about everything every First Lady has done, even just in my lifetime, but I know enough to know that First Ladies are generally not idle trophy wives. I didn’t know how much of their history happened in the East Wing. I doubt whether anyone, least of all Melanoma Melania, cares whether she has an office space. But I do care whether other First Ladies, even some Republican ones, have office space, and about their accomplishments. Someone needs to tell the Mango Menace that he doesn’t need a ballroom – he has more ball room than he could ever possibly need, in his pants.

There are always multiple stories in the Morning Memo, san this is no exception. The headliner concerns what the Nectarine Napoleon is up to in Latin America, and that is not getting a lot of coverage yet, although it appears to be escalating. But there is more, including snippets about Jamie Raskin and Jeff Merkley, so you may want to read on.

Apparently the ICEstapo isn’t gestapo-y enough for the Cantaloupe Caligula. He wants to build one with for more jurisdiction and scope.

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Oct 202025
 

Yesterday, I was exhausted so slept in. But here’s what I know about the projection project:

This link goes to an Act Blue page with a couple of pix of physical posters. I haven’t yet found pix of any projections..

And here’s what I know about No Kings Day: the initial total participation nationwide was estimated at over 7 million. On the spot estimates are kind of rough, so that may change. I did the math, and to meet the three and a half percent rulr, we would need just under 12 million nationwide. Some events did over perform. Theres a little town in Colorado with 500 population which brought out 150 people. That’s 30%, and impressive.

As for the No Kings Day signs – they were many unique, all creative, and some surprising. Meidas Touch complied a Top 40 List, which needs four links because Substack can only post up to 10 images in one article. I found a couple at Steve Schmidt’s The Warning that made me smile – one said “There will be hell toupée” and the other “They’re eating the Checks, They’re eating the balances.

Here’s Meidas Touch, in reverse order because it was presented as a countdown.
Meidas 31-40
Meidas 21-30
Meidas 11-20
Meidas 1-10\

And here’s Steve Schmidt’s

If you think you have to be brave to go out and protest when you are white – think for a minute about how brave you have to be to go out and protest when you are Black. Or LatinX. The Root shared a list of Black celebrities who took part (not all were physically present, and I get that – but f the regime decides it wants to find them, it will.) I expect Jasmine Crockett will surprise no one.

I enjoy Jeff Tiedrich quotes when I run into them, but generally don’t go to his site. This time I did for his massive, mostly pictorial report on No Kings – and I don’t think I’ll need to tell you which publication referred me.

This is not a “No Kings” report. Harry Litman thinks it might be possible for the State of New York to overturn the commutation of George Santos’s sentence, and I see his point. Unfrotunately, that does not nexesssarily mean it would be easy.

There is less than usual in this about The Week Ahead, and more about last week. But the section on Abrego Garcia caught my eye – and hopefully it will illuminate not just this week but also future court cases – depending on how it is decided, which of course reflects and depends on judicial ethics.

One piece of last-minute good news which shouldn’t have to wait for Sunday.

I clicked the arong button and posted this last night, but am leaving it – it’s long and took more time than usual to put together.

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Oct 202025
 

Yesterday, I saw Virgil. There was a brand new deck to play cribbage with, and he seemed more mentally with it than the last two times – not that I expect it to last, but it’s nice that temporary remissions can happen. I hope I didn’t scare anyone by posting so late. First I overstayed the visiting time, and then after putting my drivers license in my jeans pocket, when I got to the car, I couldn’t find it. So I had to go back – and two other staff got involved, and then it was in my pocket after all. Needless to say, I felt like an idiot. And then I thought I’d mail my ballot at the main post office, and discovered I can’t reach the box from the drive-through. So I did what I should have done in the first place – when I got home, I emptied the mailbox of all junk mail and put the ballot in it for pickup (When I do that, I always put at least one return address label from on of the veterans groups with patriotic somewhere on the envelope so some MAGAt won’t “lose” it, and that seems to work.  And then getting home was quite a detour. If it had all taken any longer, I’d have been illegal – I’m not licensed to drive after dark. But I did get home while I could still see. Also, I got this email from Steve Schmidt: “Tomorrow night, we lock in projection angles and test locations. We’ll paint buildings with Stephen Miller’s face and the line: “Fascism ain’t pretty.” We’ll make sure Trump, Miller, and their staff can’t avoid it—in windows, on walls, across plazas.” (That would actually be last night. I just didn’t see it till Sunday morning.) By the time you read this it should be all over DC. As I type, I’m looking forward to reading about it. (It was actually a fundraising email, so there wasn’t a link to the full letter.  But I will stay on tt.)

Wonkette brings you a cautionary tale on using AI. Yes, I know this blog’s readers are far less likely than, say, Republicans to be taken in by AI “hallucinations.” But I’ll bet you didn’t know that:
“[A] study by researchers at OpenAI explained that hallucinations are inevitable with large language models due to, well, math. Even when they’re trained on perfect data. The researchers wrote in their paper, “Like students facing hard exam questions, large language models sometimes guess when uncertain, producing plausible yet incorrect statements instead of admitting uncertainty.”
I certainly didn’t. Neither did anyone at Wonkette, until they accidentally triggered one. And it’s a doozy. It keeps getting worse (and funnier) through the entire article. (And the comments are epic.)

From  The Root. This was not what I expected from the headline, . I expected domestic violence and inability to get a restraining order with teeth. But no. And I’m not sure which is sadder.

An investigation from Pro Publica. It wasn’t paywalled, but there was a large ugly popup, so I just archived it. It isn’t pretty – but Pro Publica does solid work with its investigations, and stands behind them.

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Oct 192025
 

Yesterday, the radio opera was “Louise” by by Gustave Charpentier. He didn’t call it an opera, but rather a “musical novel,” the “verismo” school was getting started at that time, and composers and librettists wanted to flag their work as different. I had heard of it for many years, but never actually heard it before. Placido Domingo recorded it in 1976 and Beverly Sills in 1977 and I missed both. Not a lot actually happens in it – just parents who want to prevent their daughter marrying the man who loves her (and she him) so they can keep her at home. But the music is pretty. Off to see Virgil now and will check in when I get home.

I’m always particularly happy to see a good news story which involves a veteran – there are so many of us who are living through various kinds of bad news. This guy is even a Texan.

This is sweet – such a small thing – wearing costumes to work – can provide so much joy to so many children. (This was actually a week ago Thursday.)

Matthew was in very critical condition and was not 100% expected to get out of the hospital alive – let alone this fast.

Call me sentimental. I’m guilty as charged.

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