header 1
header 2
header 3

Message Forum - GENERAL

Welcome to the Bethesda Chevy Chase High School Message Forum.

The message forum is an ongoing dialogue between classmates. There are no items, topics, subtopics, etc.

Forums work when people participate - so don't be bashful! Click the "Post Message" button to add your entry to the forum.


 
go to bottom 
  Post Message
  
    Prior Page
 Page  
Next Page      

03/15/23 01:56 PM #16512    

 

Jack Mallory

Helen is spot on! An ibis, with crab in its mouth, doing a very funny walk! Here it is again: 


03/16/23 07:17 AM #16513    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Thanks Helen and Jack for identifying the Ibis for me. I love the funny walks it does. Love, Joanie


03/16/23 02:29 PM #16514    

 

Jack Mallory

Last pix from the trip. Sunrise on Pavilion Key where we camped before 12 mile paddle back to Everglades City. Farthest I've EVER paddled in a single day! 



 


 


03/17/23 11:08 AM #16515    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Jack, you are fit to do those 12 miles. Wow. Great last pic too. Love joanie

03/17/23 02:46 PM #16516    

 

John Smeby

Jack, Gov. DeSantis and all residents of the great free state of Florida would like to thank you for making this wonderful state your vacation destination. Tourism and personal freedom draw people from around the world to this state and it allows us to continue not paying state income tax and other great benefits as residents. To include not paying real estate taxes as a 100% P&T disabled veteran. And the abundance of nature is everywhere. All of the nature, birds and animal pictures you have taken can be seen where I live. You and all  B-CC HS class mates are welcome anyrime!! So thank you again for supporting the free state of Florida. Hope you wore sunsecreen canoeing in the Keys!


03/17/23 05:21 PM #16517    

 

Jack Mallory

John, my trip to the Everglades was wonderful. I deeply appreciate the efforts of the National Park Service to provide and protect this national resource for all Americans.

As to supporting the free state of Florida, I'm just glad I taught and my kids went to school in a state where I could teach and they could learn about systemic racism and the deep historic connections between slavery and our nation's past and present. Freedom includes, of necessity, the right to teach and learn controversial and discomforting concepts. Even in the free state of Florida. 

​Peter Mathiessen's Shadow Country does a great job making the connections between the Civil War, racism, capitalism, and the late 19th and early 20th Century history of the free state of Florida. But it might not be allowed on school library shelves there these days. 


03/18/23 09:11 AM #16518    

 

Jack Mallory

And today in the free state of Florida, and elsewhere . . . 
 


 


03/18/23 11:42 AM #16519    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Jack, you are spot on. It's wonderful to enjoy the trip to the everglades but let's not forget that unfortunately the racist times in the Florida past are being continued by Governor Desantis banning books like the Diary of Ann Frank, etc. It's important to learn about the past so as not to repeat it. The Holocaust, and slavery happened, etc. Also, Desantis' attack on gays and transgender folks is awful.. Love, Joanie

03/18/23 01:05 PM #16520    

 

Joan Ruggles (Young)

Oh wow, I was unaware that, to his credit, Mr DeSantis has caused the great influx of tourism to the state of Florida. I guess before his arrival, it was a sleepy, unknown vacation destination. And what a great idea of his for making the state free of income tax! I can understand your admiration for him. I also just learned of another freedom being bestowed upon the citizens of Florida. Girls in any grade below 6th grade cannot discuss in school if they begin their menstrual period. As a former girl, I can assure you that without an explanation of what was happening to my body, I would have been terrified. But the "free" girls of Florida get to experience that thrill! Hooray Mr DeSantis!

 


03/18/23 04:55 PM #16521    

 

Jack Mallory

But Joanie, if we let teachers talk about the Holocaust it's likely to make anti-semites feel UNCOMFORTABLE! It might make a Nazi feel GUILTY! We can't have that, can we? Better to just not look too closely at the past, it might tell us things about the present we'd rather not know.


03/18/23 08:37 PM #16522    

 

Jack Mallory

But politics aside, as it was for those days in the 'Glades. Returned to find both eagles in residence, one and usually both visible sitting low in the nest. The expert eagle watching lady who I very occasionally see there told me today that they appear to have been sitting an egg or eggs for a couple of weeks, through these two big snow storms. Yeah!

 


03/19/23 11:38 AM #16523    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Joan, thanks for your deep understanding of the lack of tourism in Florida pre Desantis, and for sharing with us that you were once a girl. I was once a girl too. I feel ok to confide that with all of you. How wonderful to know that getting your period below 6th grade or under is prohibited from discussion. It is banned like books are. Love, Joanie. Love the eagle shot Jack.

03/19/23 02:45 PM #16524    

 

Stephen Hatchett

If only DeSantis were just a stupid creep.  Unfortunately IMHO he's a clever, evil, creep who cares not what damage he does or what real harm to the next generations will follow in his wake; he really only cares about promoting himself.  Its a characteristic you can smell from California.  My summers on a ranch in Colorado bring to mind an expression I heard there for people like DeSantis -- "Lower than whale shit!".

I applaud low taxes provided the things most worth conserving -- our natural world -- are conserved, and provided the next generations get the best and broadest educations, and provided that one way or another ALL  people get the help they need to make the most of their potentials.

Now, back to the natural world.  Jack, I don't think you mentioned or pictured manatees on your everglades trip.  Are they there, or is, perhaps, their natural food, seagrass etc., missing in the mangroves etc?  At least they would be relatively safe from boat propellers there.


03/19/23 06:24 PM #16525    

 

Jack Mallory

Stephen, our guides said that often manatees were audible at night from our chickee sleeping platforms--deep breathing, like a cross between panting and sighing. They aren't very visible during the day--don't move fast enough to create a wake that you'd notice, and just coming, occasionally, barely to the surface. But I guess they're considered threatened rather than endangered. 

It is supposed that, like many at-risk species, they vote Democratic to encourage environmental regulation and sustainable tourism. 
 


03/22/23 02:21 PM #16526    

 

Jack Mallory

Spring is coming. Low 50s, and behind the house yesterday and today, mallards, mergansers, and Pileated Woodpecker work. Holes big enough to put your fist in  

 

 i


03/23/23 03:05 PM #16527    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Jack for sure Spring is coming. Today in Maryland I just got in from a walk and it actually felt warm enough to be a summer day. Well, I am not going to complain. Its nice and bright out. Like your pictures as always Jack. Love, Joanie


03/24/23 01:11 PM #16528    

 

Jack Mallory

A beautiful spring morning, with somebody sitting deep in the nest. 


 


03/25/23 09:54 PM #16529    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Wow, that sunset is beautiful. Love seeing the eagle too in the nest. Love, Joanie

03/26/23 01:52 PM #16530    

 

Joan Ruggles (Young)

Hey Jay, this kinda gives a whole new meaning to your favorite moniker for Trump Bat Shit Crazy!


03/28/23 10:59 AM #16531    

 

Jack Mallory

From the Congressman that represents the city in which yesterday's mass murder of children and adults occurred. 

"The very atmosphere of firearms anywhere and everywhere restrains evil interference - they deserve a place of honor with all that's good.” Well, maybe not.

 


03/29/23 12:11 PM #16532    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Hi Jack, when that congressman from Tennessee was asked about his thoughts post the Tennessee school massacre, he said there is nothing to be done about the accessibility of guns. Re that picture of him with his family holding AR 15's at Christmas time, he said, he has the right to his guns. A reporter asked him, how can he protect his own daughter and he said, "we home school." Then he said I know everyone can't do that. He also mumbled about mental health as the solution.. As one of the mom's who lost her precious son at the Sandy hook massacre said, yes mental health needs to be addressed, but it's getting the actual guns that kill off the streets. The second amendment isn't about civilians having AR 15's, the weapons of war. She said we need to pass strong gun safety laws throughout the country. It's banning assault weapons. Most people in the US are in favor of that but tragically so many of the republican representatives are fine with the status quo. There have been 10 mass killings already this year I believe. 10,000 Americans have died already from guns. It breaks my heart and all our hearts for all the fallen, including the most recent 3 nine year olds. They showed one of the nine year old child's picture. She was smiling and happy and precious. I don't know her but I wanted to hug her She should still be here with her family and she and all the other fallen should still be here, not gone forever. Hearts and prayers just don't cut it Love, Joanie

03/29/23 03:54 PM #16533    

 

Stephen Hatchett

That Tennesee congressman is lower than (*^*&*(%.   He actually said his "thoughts and prayers" were with the victims and their families.  What he did not say is what makes him so low.  He did not say anything about "thoughts and prayers" for the NEXT victims.  He will do NOTHING to prevent their deaths and the  -- well "heartbreak" is not nearly a powerful enough word -- of their loved ones.  That makes him more evil than the next shooter.  He is much more powerful,  and has a (well maybe not) more functional mind than the next shooter.  


03/30/23 07:53 AM #16534    

 

Jack Mallory

More news from the Free State of Florida!

 

"This month, an elementary school in St. Petersburg, Fla., stopped showing a 1998 Disney movie about Ruby Bridges, the 6-year-old Black girl who integrated a public elementary school in New Orleans in 1960, because of a complaint lodged by a single parent who said she feared the film might teach children that white people hate Black people . . . "

God forbid American kids should be taught in American schools about a young American hero.

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/03/29/opinion/florida-school-disney-ruby-bridges.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare


03/30/23 09:04 AM #16535    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Jack, and yet another authoritarian move in Florida. They don't want the kids to learn about injustice and about not being judged by the color of your skin. (As Martin Luther King said) . Learning these things they say could make a child feel guilty and accused of being a hater they say. In reality, the banners are uncomfortable even acknowledging there is a black history. Love, Joanie

03/31/23 08:26 AM #16536    

 

Jay Shackford

Daily Comment

An American Tragedy, Act III

The indictment of the former President by a Manhattan grand jury begins a perilous new phase in the Trump saga.

By David Remnick

 

March 30, 2023Former President Donald Trump, twice impeached, yet impervious to shame, was indicted Thursday on criminal charges related to the payment of hush money to a porn star. There was a time in American history, almost impossible to recollect now, when such a sentence, such a plot point, would have been beyond our imagining. That has not been the case for a very long time.

 

In early 2016, the ascent of such a clownish demagogue, a sleazy real-estate hustler who had only begun to reveal the full depths of his bigotry and authoritarian impulses, was a laugh line. At the time of his last State of the Union address, Barack Obama gave an airily confident interview to Matt Lauer, of NBC, asserting that the “overwhelming majority” of the electorate would see through Trump’s “simplistic solutions and scapegoating” and elect Hillary Clinton. Lauer pressed Obama: “In no part of your mind and brain can you imagine Donald Trump standing up one day and delivering the State of the Union address?”

Obama found that funny. “Well,” he said through laughter, “I can imagine it in a ‘Saturday Night’ skit.”

Some months later, as Trump pulled closer to Hillary Clinton in the polls, editors at The New Yorker assigned Evan Osnos, who had reported on the reactionary forces and militias supporting Trump, to do a long, speculative article on the unthinkable. The piece, headlined “President Trump’s First Term,” was at once a serious inquiry, full of interviews with wise heads in both political parties, and an editorial stunt. It ran along with a photomontage of Trump standing in the Oval Office and staring serenely out high windows at the winter landscape. The reaction among readers was one of alarm, as if by envisioning a Trump Presidency we had somehow increased its possibility.

In fact, Osnos approached his task with sobriety and care. “After more than a year of candidate Trump, Americans are almost desensitized to each new failing exhumed from his past—the losing schemes and cheapskate cruelties, the discrimination and misogyny—much as they are to the daily indecencies of the present: the malice toward a grieving mother, the hidden tax records, the birther fiction and other lies,” he wrote. “But where, in all that, is much talk of the future? By mid-September, Trump was in the final sprint of his campaign, having narrowed the gap behind Clinton in the popular vote from nine points, in August, to reach a virtual tie. His victory is no longer the stuff of dark comedy or fan fiction. It is fair to ask: What would he actually be like as a President?”

Osnos accurately anticipated Trump’s agenda on policies from immigration to taxes, and, in many ways, he glimpsed the darkness of Trump’s character and intentions, but he could not (and no one could) fully anticipate all that lay ahead: the lunacy, the incompetence, the daily scandals and deceptions, the mob-like criminality, the impeachments and Capitol insurrection––or, now, what is sure to be a prolonged season of criminal indictments, first in New York and, quite likely, in Georgia and Washington, D.C.

With this indictment, we have entered a new act in the saga, one in which Trump contemplates turning a potential perp walk into a campaign opportunity. Who else could envision fingerprints, a mugshot, and cuffs as tools in an effort to “consolidate the base”?

Trump reacted to the indictment––which he called “Political Persecution and Election Interference at the highest level in history”––by lashing out at President Biden and “Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg, who was hand-picked and funded by George Soros.” Recently, Trump characterized Bragg, who is Black, as a “racist” and called him a “degenerate psychopath” and “human scum.”

Trump’s closest opponent in the race for the Republican Presidential nomination, Governor Ron DeSantis, of Florida, responded with an ardent defense of the American justice system and a muted call to let the courts do their work. No, he did not. For fear of offending the Trump base that he hopes to inherit, DeSantis said, “The weaponization of the legal system to advance a political agenda turns the rule of law on its head. It is un-American. The Soros-backed Manhattan District Attorney has consistently bent the law. . . .” etc. (It is good to know that Trump and DeSantis, who have come to despise each other, can at least agree on one of the most persistent of all contemporary antisemitic tropes, the all-powerful perfidy of George Soros.) DeSantis also assured the American people that should Trump fail to appear in Manhattan for arraignment, he would not extradite him from Mar-a-Lago. Trump has yet to express his appreciation.

We haven’t been given access to the New York indictment––those papers remain sealed––but it is quite likely that potential criminal charges stemming from Trump’s role in the Capitol insurrection and election-law tampering in Georgia will be more straightforward and compelling. Some legal experts have said that the New York case is weaker, more complicated, than the others. We shall see.

What we do know is that the former President will do and say anything to turn these cases to his advantage; he will attempt to burnish his image as savior and martyr of the maga millions; he will do and say anything to deepen his bond with voters who, as he tells them day after day, are the victims of élites in the media, the universities, the courts, and beyond. And, as he proved on January 6, 2021, Trump is prepared to foment violence and civil strife so long as it furthers his interests. Faced with prosecution, he recently threatened the prospect of “death and destruction.”

Trump is, if anything, more unhinged than he was in his final days in the White House. At the recent cpac convention his speech had a quality of wildness that made the ranting nativism of his 2016 inaugural seem as mild as the murmurings of Martin Van Buren or Warren G. Harding. As you read, remember this is the leading candidate for the Republican nomination:

The sinister forces trying to kill America have done everything they can to stop me, to silence you, and to turn this nation into a socialist dumping ground for criminals, junkies, Marxists, thugs, radicals, and dangerous refugees that no other country wants. No other country wants them. If those opposing us succeed, our once beautiful U.S.A. will be a failed country that no one will even recognize. A lawless, open borders, crime-ridden, filthy, communist nightmare. That’s what it’s going and that’s where it’s going. . . . That’s why I’m standing before you, because we are going to finish what we started. We started something that was a miracle. We’re going to complete the mission. We’re going to see this battle through to ultimate victory.

The indictment in New York will deepen the conviction among some loyalists that Trump is a victim of the “deep state” and even more deserving of their devotions than before. Trump, of course, does not care what bonfire he lights. “For those who have been wronged and betrayed,” he said recently, “I am your retribution.” Trump is practically promising trouble. Any judge who encounters him in court––in New York or beyond––will be hard-pressed to prevent the former President from issuing threats of violence.

So, yes, many of Trump’s most ardent supporters will be enraged by this indictment and any others. There is no telling if that will lead to trouble in the streets. But will it win Trump back the Presidency? Will his getting arrested in the middle of a national campaign really win back suburban voters and independents who voted for him in 2016 but abandoned him in 2020 for Joe Biden? How many voters will say, in effect, Yes, I was deeply embarrassed and ashamed by the spectacle of January 6th, but now having seen Donald Trump in the dock and hearing the resonant phrases “porn star,” “catch and kill,” and “hush money”––much less “incitement to insurrection” and “election fraud”––I am summoned back to the maga fold? Once more, the American political imagination reels and the stakes for American democracy could not be higher. 


go to top 
  Post Message
  
    Prior Page
 Page  
Next Page