Monday, February 23, 2026
1945 US Marines raised the flag of the United States on top of Mt. Suribachi, Iwo Jima. Pulitzer Prize-winning photo by Joe Rosenthal later becomes iconic, inspiring the Marine Corps War Memorial sculpture
1954 First mass inoculation against polio with the Jonas Salk vaccine took place at Arsenal Elementary School in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
1967 Noam Chomsky's anti-Vietnam war essay "The Responsibility of Intellectuals" was published by the New York Review of Books
1971 US Army officer William Calley confessed & implicated Captain Medina during his trial for the My Lai Massacre
2025 The Israel Defense Forces deploy tanks into the West Bank for the first time since 2002, declaring that the 40,000 Palestinians who fled refugee camps in the region cannot return
In bed at 9, awake at 4:15, and up at 4:35. 19/-1/25/18. The wind blows at 18 mph from 345° NNW, with gusts up to 31 mph.
Morning meds and 2nd half-dose of Bisoprolol heart med at 7:15 a.m.
Jesus of Nazareth, Francis of Assisi, Theo of Golden, and the Levi Boys of Hamilton, GA. There is a story in this morning's New York Times about the supposed bones of Francis of Assisi, now on public display at the large basilica erected in his name in the hilltop town of Assisi in Umbria, which Geri and I visited more than 20 years ago. Francis has long been my favorite Catholic saint, though I've never quite been sure why. He was certainly a wierdo by today's standards, and probably by any standards. He had a great and deep belief in God, the God of the Catholic Church, the church of Jesus. He also had a great and deep love of the natural world as God's creation, the world he depicted in his Canticle of the Sun. Like Jesus, he also lived a life of austerity, indeed seemingly more austere than Jesus, who attended weddings and ate with sinners. But as I read Allen Levi's memoir The Last Sweet Mile, I was mindful that both the author and his brother, Gary, a model we are told for Theo of Golden, were lifelong bachelors, like Francis and (supposedly) Jesus. Also, all 4 of them were great and deep believers in God. It's not clear, to me at least, what kind of God Jesus himself believed in, but his followers, Francis, Allen, and Gary, believed in a Christian God. What, if anything, are we to make of the fact that none of these guys ever married? Personally, I have also harbored a suspicion that Jesus was married before he started his 'public life' around age 30, and that his wife died, perhaps in childbirth. All Jewish men of his era were expected to marry, to go forth and multiply. Just as a matter of social probabilities, it is surely more probable than not that Jesus was married long before his 30th year. If so, why did he never remarry? Why did Francis, the son of a wealthy textile merchant, never marry? Why did both Allen and Gary Levi never marry, while their sisters did? It seems to me to be a fair question, one worthy of some thought, and some stabs at possible answers. No only did none of them ever marry; neither did any of them seem to have a girlfriend or a lover, at least none that is referred to in writings about them. (Unless we consider a lot of speculation, unsupported by evidence, of Jesus's relationship with Mary Magdalene or 'the disciple whom Jesus loved.'[John 13:23, 19:26, and 20:1]). If I recall correctly, in one of the chapters in Theo of Golden, Theo refers to a saying: "A man who loves all women, loves no woman. A man who loves one woman, loves all women," or something like that. Why is it that men who are held up as holiness incarnate and God-filled, like Jesus and Francis and Gary Levi have no room in their lives for a partnering woman? Gay? Incels? So God-obsessed they leave no room for a partner? Repelled or disgusted by sex? Whazupwidat? What are we to think of the Catholic Church's adherence to priestly celibacy???








