Or, as it seems to me…
Usually I write my letters from the bucolic setting of the cottage, on quiet Sunday evenings. Tonight, however, I am sitting in the Odyssey offices and my fingers got itchy for the keyboard and my mind needed the stretching that comes from putting words to digital paper.
It will be Halloween tomorrow night and I will likely be in the city, surrounded by a borough’s worth of children [and adults] dressed for trick or treat. I vaguely remember being a child and working Bryant Avenue for a bag full of treats – I didn’t have any tricks up my sleeve. There is something joyfully innocent in all the ruckus that comes with kids and Halloween. Huge amounts of sweets will be given out and dentists all over the land will gleefully rub their hands together at the thoughts of the cavities coming. One woman in North Dakota plans to hand out “fat letters” to obese children. Now that’s a bummer.
It is definitely turning nippy here in New York. We went from a string of impossibly beautiful days to a string of days when the weather could best be described as: eh. Which mostly describes my mood: eh.
I just passed over the headlines a while ago. Sebelius has gently self-flagellated in front of Congress, apologizing for the blunders that have brought a harsh spotlight on the Affordable Healthcare Act, aka Obamacare. She may be forced to resign though so far the President hasn’t demanded a head on a platter. While she was apologizing the President was defending up in Boston while that state’s former Governor Mitt Romney went on record as blasting AHA once again.
The NSA [National Security Agency] is defending itself even as the revelations of what it’s been doing keep getting bigger. Seems they are interested in everyone from Angela Merkel down to you and me. Sir Martin Sorrell, head of WPP, one of the biggest ad agencies groups in the world, has gone on record on NPR as saying that all of this has damaged “Brand America,” which it has. Not irreparably, but damaged none the less, so Sorrell says.
Facebook, of the screwed up IPO, has rebounded and is now trading far above its original price point, making early investors finally happy. Stocks, in general, are up, if down slightly today. Happy we have avoided a shut down, the markets are ignoring that this is just a temporary fix and we have kicked the budget can down the road a bit – to past Christmas at least.
Vladimir Putin is, according to Forbes, the most powerful man in the world. The President of the U.S. is number two. Does this prove that it’s good to be the dictator? I believe Angela Merkel of Germany is the fifth most powerful person in the world despite the fact she couldn’t keep the NSA from spying on her cell phone conversations.
We have had a lot of embarrassments lately, haven’t we? I mean the very public, very bad, simply awful debut of the website of the AHA [Obamacare] and all this spying that the NSA has been doing, exposed by Snowden, who is holed up in Russia with the world’s most powerful man.
There’s good news. Our deficit is DOWN to $680 billion! Down to 680 billion. We’re doing something right, I guess.
While the budget deficit is down, gun deaths went up again as six more people died in a North Carolina shooting today. It appears to have been a custody dispute gone really wrong. About 10,000 people have died from gunshot wounds since the Newtown massacre nearly a year ago. It’s a drumbeat that just won’t stop.
And that’s sort of the way it is today, October 30th. A bit like the constant line from the Laurel and Hardy movies: now that’s another fine mess you’ve gotten me into! We move from mess to mess right now and it would be possible to get pretty discouraged from all of it. But what else to do?
Vote! It’s Election Day next Tuesday. Time to make your voice heard!
Letter From New York 04 14 15 Working to see with tourist’s eyes…
April 14, 2015All around me the city of New York is thrumming, filled with the sounds of a city growing, being alive. Sitting in the office of a friend doing some work for him, the street below is filled with the clatter and the clanging of building.
This morning, as I was waking and sipping my first cup of coffee, I decided that I wanted to look at the world a little differently, as if I was a tourist in spots that were well known to me, to keep my eyes and ears open for new sensations and experiences.
Walking to the subway, I noticed the play of grey light on the sidewalk, through a cloudy sky that was hinting of rain, which didn’t seem to want to come.
There is a plastic milk box between what was the Radio Shack store and the upscale mart for sports shoes. Every day there is someone sitting on that box, begging. But it’s often a different person and today it was someone I’ve never seen before. I wonder if it is first come, first seated or do they change shifts during the day?
Certainly, it’s been an interesting day out there in the world. I’ve attempted to keep up with the world while I’ve been hunched over my laptop, doing research for my friend/colleague Todd Broder.
I have discovered that we haven’t discovered any other life in the hundred thousand galaxies we have been searching. We thought that if some civilization had advanced enough that it could have a galaxy wide imprint, we might be able to detect them but no such luck. But there are more than a billion galaxies out there and a hundred thousand is just a small fraction of the possibilities.
It is also noted today that it’s Equal Pay Day though it remains to be seen if employers will step up to achieve equal pay for equal work for women. But we have a day to mark the effort to that goal.
And also today is the 150th Anniversary of the shooting of Abraham Lincoln at Ford’s Theatre by John Wilkes Booth, the first assassination of an American President but not the last.
150 years – an amazing amount of time and a huge chunk of American history has happened since then. The Republic wasn’t yet a hundred years old when Lincoln died.
The somber visage of Lincoln stares out at us from those haunting photographs, a window into a time long gone and just beginning to be chronicled by photography.
In Washington, Obama wants to set Cuba free by lifting its designation as a state sponsoring terrorism. If that happens, the floodgates will open. There was also a story of how ubiquitous the American flag has become in Havana, flying everywhere and on t-shirts and painted on jeans.
Currently at the Acela Club in New York, there was a huge delegation of important people heading out on the 6:00 Acela to Washington. There were police guarding the doors and the group and then they slipped out and down to the train. One was a military figure from some European nation. Everyone seemed to be paying a great deal of attention to him.
A great deal of attention is also being paid to what is happening on the first steps taken on the campaign trail. Hillary has driven to Iowa and is doing her listening. Paul Rand is back from a five state tour and Marco Rubio is facing scrutiny about his immigration and tax stands. No news of Ted Cruz today.
Today Space X successfully sent another capsule toward the space station, carrying supplies. Its first stage attempted once again to land on a platform at sea. It hit the platform but too hard.
Still, to me, it’s a step forward. Have to admire Elon Musk and his steadfastness to his vision.
The markets today seemed to do well though Google will likely face anti-trust charges in Europe.
The world in the Middle East is still very complicated. A drone attack killed a leading Yemeni Al Qaeda cleric. Russia is planning on selling missiles to Iran. Iraq’s PM was in Washington, where he got some money and a warning that Iranians in Iraq should be reporting to Baghdad.
And now I am going to go out into the streets of New York and do my best to keep my eyes open and see what I can see, with open eyes. I am off to get a martini and a bite to eat, while I continue reading a very good book, “The End of Life Book Club.”
Tags:Abraham Lincoln, Acela Club, Broadway, Cuba, Elon Musk, Equal Pay Day, Ford's Theater, Google, Mat, Mat Tombers, Mathew Tombers, New York, Obama, Space X, The End of Life Book Club, Todd Broder, Yemen
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