Economic woes, as personal financial crises, concern over children's education and well being, and personal health worries have driven far too many in the nation to the brink.
So, enjoy the roses from Lana and a diversion about tomatoes. The analysis piece of this post comes later.
the crop report
Growing tomatoes is a big deal when you grow up in Indiana.
Bless her heart, my mom set out tomato plants every year but I am hard pressed to remember there ever being a bounty of the summer fruit. We ended up buying them from farmers and growers or were gifted them by neighbors who had more luck.
Luck changed when Lana entered my life. Her mother was a master gardener, and it must be in the genes. Lana has lamented that living on a hill side on a ridge affords precious little flat ground. So she has taken to what I call the Frank Phillippi school of tomato growing.
The crop is distributed in pots. My pal Frank amazed me decades ago when he was living in an apartment in Georgetown with a tiny balcony and a couple of sunny windows where he introduced his tomatoes in pots technique.A few years later when he owned a home in Alexandria, but with limited sunny garden space, he upped his game by putting the pots in wagons and moving them into the sun.
People from Indiana will swear the best tomatoes and corn are their province. They are indeed joys of an Indiana summer, but we've found excellent corn and tomatoes here in the California Republic.
If you are a long time reader you will recall we've experimented with our tomato crops. We've sheltered them in visquine "huts," wrapped them in plastic, and have tried raised beds. This summer it's pots, in sunny and warm zones on the back hill and at the back of the house.
I'm a devotee of the San Marzano and yellow varieties.
Lana is not overly fond of tomatoes, except in cooking, but she put out a variety this year and they seem to be flourishing. She complains that she's not growing enough to "put them up" or can them as she did when she gardened Indiana's flat land.
Another favorite is the cherry tomato. And again she's got a prolific pot. Next year though, she's got designs on a piece of the hillside where flowers may make way for a new tomato bed. "They need to be in the ground," she insists. That means some ground work, flattening, perhaps roto tilling and soil amending will be on the fall and winter do list.
a mask-less confab
Generations hence will find this time fraught with lunacy and perhaps inexplicable behavior.
In unpacking how we got to a Trump, they will learn he is the poster boy for a fractured culture where self indulgence and entertainment challenged thoughtfulness and a common good.
There were some during the Spanish Influenza pandemic in 1918 who refused to wear masks. There were super spreader events even then.
Xenophobes, nationalists and white supremacists have always been with us, but usually marginalized by an intelligent society and a conscientious political code.
Science has had its doubters forever, but for most of our history the ignorant have lacked political power.
Conspiracy theories probably began with the dawn of humankind.
What makes this time different is the ubiquitous hum of media, mass and social, and combined with the intellectual decline of the nation. It is exacerbated by the tectonics of media economics that has left us with fewer gate keepers, fact checkers, time tested aggregators, trusted delivery systems, and the rise of the importance of opinion. We forget everyone has one. The value of opinion was once commensurate with the quality of a life experience, training and education. Now blowhards make their living bloviating and sad, weak, easily led, ill informed people, challenged with thinking, allow others tell them what to think.
And so we have Trump, and now Q.
textures and shapes
battling Q's
I would not be surprised to learn that Steve Bannon is somehow a godfather to the Q silliness. It fit's his MO of cultivating fringe and marginalized and intelligence challenged demographics.He may have nothing to do with it. Maybe Bill Maher was not joking when a couple of years ago he admitted to being Q.
I'm sorry, if you think there is a shred of credibility in any of the QAnon goofiness, you have just relinquished your privilege to speak about anything other than fairy tales, and cleaning out horse stables.
a true Q?
If you are interested in intrigue about the idea of the letter Q, then do a little reading about the Q source used in Biblical criticism and scholarship.For some 120 years scholars and theologians have discussed, debated and studied what is called the Q source-a compendium of statements and thoughts attributed to Jesus, the radical, reformist rabbi for whom Christianity owes its origins. Some hypothesize these thoughts of Christ were drawn from the faiths early oral tradition and thus explains how and why some of the Gospels are similar.
The research, scholarship and debate is fascinating and endlessly more stimulating that thinking Donald Trump is the savior of the world, doing battle with pedophiles, the deep state and aliens.
I've been saying for almost 4 years, Trumpism is fascism, and authoritarianism. Some of you Trumpists and/or QAnon devotees may read this as Trump is the Anti-Christ. I'm not saying that. But believe it if it will help you come to your senses.
Jesus might get a kick out of that.
Stay safe. Take care of each other.
See you down the trail.
Reading your posts is an education.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the kind words Steve
DeleteLove your rustic garden. Beautiful roses Lana. Best Indiana summer thang? The Cicadas are back and have a lot to say after 17 years.
ReplyDeleteThat sound is hypnotic, one of the real great rhythms of summer in the homeland.
DeleteAlas the squirrels have driven me out of the gardening gig but your memories have me blushing cherry red. In the immortal words of Guy Clark:
ReplyDelete"Only two things money can't buy
That's true love and homegrown tomatoes."
Amen! Wish you share some of the crop.
DeleteI haven't heard anyone use the word "Visqueen" in forever. My dad used it a lot for projects around the house years ago. You probably have better non-Midwestern tomatoes than they do in another warm place--Florida. Dad swears they don't have the soil for them there. Carry on.
ReplyDeleteShall do.
DeleteWe've grown tomatoes in pots for years, usually cherry. But this year we got a different breed which produces larger fruit.
ReplyDeleteHow's your crop this year?
Delete