Saturday, May 16, 2026
1990 Eugene Stoner and Mikhail Kalashnikov, the creators of the M16 rifle and the AK-47 rifle respectively, meet in Washington, D.C.
2004 Day of Mourning at Bykivnia forest, just outside of Kyiv, Ukraine where during 1930/ early 1940s, bolsheviks executed over 100,000 Ukrainian civilians
2017 I started using CPAP; stopped a few years ago b/c frequent pit stops
2025 Moody's Ratings lowered the United States' credit rating from Aaa to Aa1, citing the government's rising debt, widening deficits, and increased interest payments.
In bed by 9, awake at 3:45, up at 4:15; 0430 108/71/57 113 204.8; 59/77/56, cloudy & overnight & early, mostly sunny day.
Morning meds at 7:50 a.m., half dose of Bisoprolol at 4:45 a.m.
Opening the blinds on the window by my recliner, at 5:50, I see an exceptionally gray, rainy morning. A nuthatch and a chickadee are busy with their first (?) morning feeding, but otherwise the feeders aren't attracting much attention, at least until the reliable cardinals show up for some safflower seeds to start their day. For some reason, a thought of Robert Schuller and his 'Chrystal Cathedral' television show "The Hour of Power" flashes through my head, his always smiling face, always confident voice, his academic doctoral robes, and "This is the day the Lord has made, rejoice and be glad in it!" from Psalm 118. It's hard for me to believe that I ever watched Robert Schuller on any kind of regular basis, but perhaps I did because I remember him so clearly. I fully suspect that he was primarily a huckster, like the other TV evangelists, good at raising millions of dollars and building huge churches and huge followings. His first assignment after ordination in the Dutch Reformed Church was in Riverdale, IL, the blue-collar town where a great many people bought their first homes, side-by-side townhouses with their own back yards where they could grow gardens. My sister Kitty and her husband bought thier first home there, followed by my Mom and Dad doing the same. Riverdale is where they all lived when my Mom died in 1973. Schuller. By that time, Schuller had long-since moved to Garden Grove in northern Orange County, California. It was either a brilliant idea of how to bring the Gospel to more lost lambs or inspired hucksterism in how to break into an emerging market when Schuller opened his first church in the Orange Drive-In Theater, letting auto-oriented Californians attend church without getting out of their cars. When he got into televangelism, it was even better: people could 'go to church' with getting into their cars. All they had to do was turn on their TVs to "The Hour of Power" and Schuller could beg for money from people who never set foot in his church. When we wonder how it is that so many millions of people fall for the "happy horseshit" put forth by Donald Trump and believe him to be a messenger sent by God, all we have to do is to remember Robert Schuller, Jimmy Swaggart, Oral Roberts, Pat Robertson, Jim and Tammy Faye Baker, Jerry Falwell, and Joel Osteen. They all illustrate the truth of what my former spouse used to say frequently: "People are such dopes."
The Seven Good Years, by Etgar Keret. I'm reading this collection of short stories and enjoying it very much. It's the second collection of his stories that I've read, the first being titled "The Bus Driver Who Wanted To Be God." I started it only this morning and I'm quickly through almost 60% of it, a quick read. I just finished "My Lamented Sister," a story he published 20 years ago in Tablet Magazine about his Orthodox older sister, and how her religious identity complicated her relationship with Keret, who was a secular Jew, very secular.. It reminded me at least a little bit of my relationship with my own sister who was, until the last years of her life, a practicing Catholic, a Eurcharistic minister, active in her parish life, in the St. Vincent de Paul Society, and a regular volunteer at the meal program at Andre House, a ministry to the homeless in downtown Phoenix. Her Catholicism derived from her upbringing and her inherent goodness, rather than vice versa and it never interfered with her relationships with non-believers, unlike the rigors of Orthodox Judaism. The story made me wonder again though about what it is that leads or pulls people into religious groups with beliefs and pracrices that separate them so much from those who don't share them, the "infidels" and "unbelievers." Of course, my own upbringing was something like that, with Catholic schooling rather than public schools, dating only Catholic girls, staying away from non-Catholic religious institutions , including the YMCA, other churches, synagogues, etc.
The Seven Good Years's title refers to the years between the birth of Kerit's son Lev and the death of his father from cancer. I wrote in these pages very recently that the years when Sarah and Andy were little were the happiest years of my life so I was drawn pretty strongly to this book simply by its title. I really enjoy Keret's writing, much of which is very funny and all of which is clear, easy reading, even in translation from Hebrew. One of the stories is titled "Shit Happens" and relates how older brother read the manuscript of his first short story, praised it highly, asked if he had another copy, and then used the second copy of pick up his pet dog's shit and deposited it in a trash container. It was very funny to read and reminded me of a self-portrait I painted many years ago, stored in the basement of our home outside of Saukville, retrieved it later and discovered an ineradicable stain from mouse droppings on it, which seemed somehow meaningful to me.
I sat on the patio for half an hour or so this evening, gazing on all the pleasing greenery and listening to the birds. The only bird songs and calls I could recognize were from crows, cardinals, and mourning doves, but I turned on the Merlin app for 5 minutes and it identified: brown-headed cowbirds, rufous-sided towhees, red-bellied woodpeckers, least flycatchers, Swainson thrushes, blue jays, chickadees, goldfinches, and robins. I have seen a rufous-sided towhee once in my life, serendipitously during a witness interview in New Haven, CN. I have never seen a Swainson's thrush or least flycatcher.













