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Message Forum - GENERAL

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06/06/26 07:45 AM #19127    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Love the photos Jack...they are great! Thank you. Love, Joanie


06/06/26 11:05 AM #19128    

 

Jack Mallory

Looking in my window this morning:


06/06/26 10:11 PM #19129    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Jack, that owl might have scared me if I saw it looking into my window. You sure captured it in all ite owlness. You really take amazing photos. Love, Joanie


06/08/26 12:46 PM #19130    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

There is no limit to the lowest point Trump will go to make his point. He likes the idea of giving billions (the slush fund) to allies like the Jan 6 ers, who he pardoned in full,  some of whom beat up cops. When asked by the Meet the Press interviewer, would he want the money to go even to those who beat up cops, he said, they are dirty cops that were defending the Capitol...The sooner he is no longer in power the better. He is an authoritarian dictator who craves power and wants only to pad his own pocket. He cares nothing about the wellbeing of the American people. Ok...I'm depressing everyone again...try to escape in Nature or something...Love, Joanie

 


06/09/26 07:32 AM #19131    

 

Jack Mallory

You're right on, Joanie. "Dirty cops," "crooked cops." Doing their job, protecting our Capitol. No evidence offered to support his attacks, just a foul smear. I don't know anyone more anti-Trump than my buddy John, 28 years on the Metropolitan Police Department, and this is the reason why. 

Here--focus on this!

 

 

 


06/12/26 06:30 PM #19132    

 

Robert Hall

Enjoying the live feed of the removal of Trump's name from the Kennedy Center. Too bad a thunderstorm slowed down the job.

06/13/26 02:51 PM #19133    

 

Jack Mallory

And it looks like the administration managed to get the actual removal of "Trump" kept behind canvas, so the news couldn't focus on it! But removed it will be. 

********

This swan was a football field away, with a maxed out zoom lens and fuzzy digital zoom on top of that. But the feisty swan made it a great shot!



 


06/14/26 10:43 PM #19134    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

yes, I think the Trump name was removed at 3am in the morning...bottom line its gone as it should be...Another great photo Jack..Love, Joanei


06/15/26 01:13 PM #19135    

 

Joan Ruggles (Young)

Iran gave the felon the birthday present he was dying for. He can say there’s a DEAL.  Before you put on your party hats, Iran says they’ve agreed to something that is a humiliation to the US. They will meet in Geneva on Friday to sign a” memorandum of understanding.”  Does that sound like a “DEAL”. No mention was made by either side of nuclear weapons. Iran will retain control over the straits of Hormuz regardless of the felon’s “herewith” order to the contrary. 

He is desperate, DESPERATE to get out of this unpopular war he started and he will now pretend that he has prevailed. The US and the world are worse off than before this war. American soldiers are dead. Many Iranian men, women and children are dead and the world has lost forever the control of the flow of oil from the Middle East. The felon is also DESPERATE to avoid a deal that looks like the one Obama made and which he withdrew from. Sadly he will certainly end up with a “deal” far worse than the one Obama negotiated…….if any deal ever appears. The felon wants out and will not look back. Sad!


06/16/26 03:27 PM #19136    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

What Joan just said....Love, Joanie


06/16/26 09:56 PM #19137    

 

Jack Mallory

Just think of it as a "brave, new squeeze," guys. Makes all the blood go away.

*******


06/17/26 06:43 AM #19138    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Wow, Jack, such a beautiful animal. We have deer behind our deer fence in our lower back yard. They get to eat up the forest but our native garden is safe. Love, Joanie


06/17/26 07:13 PM #19139    

 

Jack Mallory

At the very beginning of the war in Iran, nearly 200 elementary school children and their teachers were killed in a double-tap American missile strike--consecutive hits designed to kill rescuers responding to the first attack. 

"Mistakes are made," Trump says. Not a word of regret for our mistakes, not a word of sorrow or condolence. 

Many of my recollections of war are horrific. Those memories and my grievous reactions to them tell me I'm human, with a sense of morality, a sense of the value of life and of my complicity in the tragedies of war. 

Our President, and anyone who can toss off the deaths of children and adults with "mistakes are made," will not suffer as those with open eyes and honest minds will suffer. I take some small comfort in believing that suffering is the price some of us pay for being more completely human. 

 


06/18/26 09:56 PM #19140    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Jack, thanks for your post. It is very honest and very moving. Yes, the casual way Trump dismisses the deaths of so many school children and so many others who died in the Iran war is not surprising.. He cares only for himself and for his own enrichment. Its tragic of all the lives lost. Love, Joanie


06/25/26 06:22 AM #19141    

 

Jack Mallory

I'm back in NH, "my" herons are back on the Contoocook.

********

And today!



But nature isn't always gorgeous (unless you're another Dobson Fly!


06/26/26 01:00 PM #19142    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Thanks Jack.  Love the photos, love Joanie❤️


06/27/26 11:22 AM #19143    

 

Glen Hirose

Jack, beautiful images of Blue Heron

               9 Dinosaurs With Feathers - A-Z Animals

    Hard to believe they were remotely related


06/28/26 07:44 PM #19144    

 

Jack Mallory

Just for variety's sake . . . 


 

A baby snapper. About the size of half a grapefruit. 


07/02/26 08:40 PM #19145    

 

Jay Shackford

 

Staying out of jail the Trump way

“I was the Hunted, and now I’m the Hunter”

By David Remnick/Editor/The New Yorker

In 1996, Joan Didion unholstered the X-Acto knife that was her pen and went to work on Bob Woodward. In a register of pitiless irony, she quoted Woodward’s earnest explanations of his journalistic methods—the difference between “background” and “deep background,” his “eight file drawers” of documents for a book on the Supreme Court. She was unimpressed. “These are books in which measurable cerebral activity is virtually absent,” Didion wrote. In the end, she determined that Woodward was engaged in the writing of “political pornography.”

This was unfair, at best a category error. What Didion failed to note was that Woodward was a reporter, not a scholar or a belletrist, and that before he was thirty he, with his Washington Post partner, Carl Bernstein, had unearthed the predations of the Watergate scandal—hardly the work of stenographers in thrall to power. It brought down the Presidency of Richard Nixon. Journalism is a first rough draft of history, as they say, and scholarship, which feeds on journalism and so much more, plays by another clock. Robert A. Caro began the research for his multivolume biography of Lyndon B. Johnson half a century ago.

Maggie Haberman, a reporter of impressive energy, began her career at the New York tabloids and joined the Times in 2015. She has been on the Trump beat since the Donald was a real-estate guy hustling for attention in the columns of Liz Smith and Cindy Adams. As “Confidence Man,” Haberman’s first book about Trump, from 2022, made clear, he is a man of immutable character. “He has had only a handful of moves throughout his entire adult life,” she wrote. The “quick lie,” the “shift of blame,” the “outburst of rage,” the abuse of loyalists, a “raft of old grievances,” a “refusal to be shamed.”

Trump’s political reflexes could have been anticipated. Talking to Playboy, in 1990, he praised the Chinese leaders who ordered troops to slaughter pro-democracy demonstrators in Tiananmen Square. “They were vicious, they were horrible, but they put it down with strength,” he said. “That shows you the power of strength. Our country is right now perceived as weak.” This is the same guy who, thirty years later, asked the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Mark Milley, why he couldn’t confront street protesters with force and “shoot them in the legs or something.”

Now, as the country lurches glumly toward its two-hundred-and-fiftieth anniversary, Haberman has collaborated with another Times reporter, Jonathan Swan, on “Regime Change,” a vivid, rigorous, and unavoidably depressing chronicle of the first year of Trump’s second term in the White House. Part of the high-wire act of such books is that the authors and their publishers work at unaccustomed speed to provide the end product with a history-as-it-is-happening varnish. The results are usually as perishable as week-old bananas.

“Regime Change” is exceptional. It transcends its genre. Although some of the material is familiar from the Times and other sources and from Trump’s relentless self-exposure, the book is packed with news that will stay news. One late-breaking example among many: Haberman and Swan provide an astonishing account of Benjamin Netanyahu’s trip, just four months ago, to the White House Situation Room, where the Israeli Prime Minister persuaded Trump to join him in what would be a strategic catastrophe. Netanyahu assured the President that together they would topple the Iranian regime and end its nuclear ambitions before it ever had a chance to close the Strait of Hormuz. Haberman and Swan report that the Secretary of State called Netanyahu’s plan “bullshit.” The C.I.A. director declared it “farcical.” Whatever. “Sounds good to me, the President told the Prime Minister.” Everyone fell into line. Well played, sir!

This is reporting of consequence, and it puts to rest the knowing online critique of these beat reporters that to get their scoops they engage in “bothsidesism” or dampen their coverage in exchange for access. “Regime Change” is particularly strong on the Administration’s colossal financial corruption, its heedless destruction of invaluable agencies such as U.S.A.I.D., and the sordid and unhinged nature of Trump and the culture over which he presides. Haberman and Swan contend that Trump ran in 2024 for one reason above all: “This was about staying out of prison.” After facing multiple indictments, impeachments, and criminal convictions, Trump returned to the White House with retribution on his mind: “I was the hunted, and now I’m the hunter.”

The atmosphere in Trump’s White House is reminiscent of the Kremlin in Armando Iannucci’s 2017 movie, “The Death of Stalin.” The autocrat delights in humiliating so many people, not least tech billionaires, including Jeff Bezos and Mark Zuckerberg, who once opposed him. The description of Trump’s White House is of a decadent court and a king addicted to vengeance and flattery. Trump employs one aide, a young woman named Natalie Harp, who follows him around all day, handing him glowing notices from the right-wing press and occasionally sending him adoring letters (“You are all that matters to me”). Even this brings him no joy. When Elon Musk, who raised some three hundred million dollars for Trump’s campaign, blasts the President over his budget bill, Trump says, “They always leave me. They always do this. This is why I can’t have friends.” He instructs Harp to bring him his phone. He calls Musk twice. Both times, he gets voice mail.

We have always known that Trump is a narcissist. Haberman and Swan make clear the dimensions of his malady. During Trump’s hush-money trial in New York, he heard that a mentally ill man, “consumed by conspiracy theories,” had set himself on fire in a park nearby. “Do you think he did it for me?” Trump asked an aide. “Let’s tell people that he did it for me.” In an interview with the authors, Trump says that he was pleased to learn from an unnamed historian that, considering the reach of his arsenal and armed forces, he is far more powerful than Genghis Khan, Alexander the Great, or Joseph Stalin. The historian in question, the authors discover, is Gary Player’s caddy. Trump is a damaged man unleashing daily damage on the country. He spends his nights alone, rage-posting on Truth Social. His wastebasket overflows with “empty potato chip bags, Starburst wrappers, and ice cream cartons.”

As July 4th approaches, the water in the Reflecting Pool—refurbished by Trump’s “pool guy” with a no-bid contract—turns green with algae. It is a dismal time in the capital. Haberman and Swan have done admirable work, but one reads the final pages of “Regime Change” hoping that their next book is the story of transition, from the era of Trump to one of democratic renewal. That chapter cannot come soon enough. 

Published in the print edition of the July 6 & 13, 2026, issue, with the headline “A Disaster Foretold.”

 


07/03/26 04:06 PM #19146    

 

Jack Mallory

I've been reading that for several days, Jay. Very much worth the anger and fear for our county that their description of Trump and his thugs creates. 
 

I was given hope yesterday by the actions a veteran for democracy has taken to protest.


https://www.newsweek.com/who-is-jason-watson-air-force-major-arrested-after-protesting-trump-impeachment-12149604


07/04/26 01:39 PM #19147    

 

Jack Mallory

Some days it's herons, some days snappers, today it's Odocoilius virginianus, the White-tailed deer. 
 




07/05/26 09:35 AM #19148    

 

Jay Shackford

Separate and Unequal

 

We are becoming two societies, separate and unequal—one wealthy and seemingly entitled to whatever it wants and the other poor, increasingly middle class, powerless and struggling to survive paycheck to paycheck.  

 

Thrown into the mix is a 21st-century form of racism that used to be partly hidden as dog whistles and behind a conveniently ignored curtain and now is overt and in the open with masked white nationalists marching through the streets of the nation’s capital and riding its subways that is in many respects no different from the KKK holding lynchings during the Jim Crow era in the South decades ago.  

 

The contrasts between America’s promise and what we have become couldn’t be clearer.  

 

  • President Trump holding a brutal cage fight on the White House lawn to celebrate the nation’s 250th birthday where attendees hurled racist insults against former First Lady Michelle Obama and nobody (that’s right, nobody) uttered any outrage; 
  • Compare that to the opening of Barack Obama’s Presidential Library on the south side of Chicago where Michelle grew up and where joy and optimism ruled the day and the promise of America was on full display.  

 

The contrast is stark and undeniable.  

 

(For historical buffs, the lede came from the Kerner Commission Report on the racial violence that erupted in Detroit, Newark and other major cities during the summer of 1967. The commission concluded: “America is becoming two societies — one white and the other black; separate and unequal.” Appointed by LBJ, Kerner was the Governor of Illinois.)  

 


07/05/26 09:50 AM #19149    

 

Jack Mallory

Jay spares us the image of the lone black woman on the Metro, surrounded by masked members of the racist Patriotic Front who, afraid to show their faces, marched through DC carrying Confederate flags. The photo has gone viral, but originates with Reuters, I believe. 

No statement from the President, condemning this travesty on our national holiday. 
 


 


07/05/26 07:53 PM #19150    

 

Jay Shackford

Hey Jack -- Can you send me that picture by email.  I don't know how to copy and paste photos from our message board.  That picture tells the story. Want to send out to my other groups.  Believe I first saw it in the NYT.  thanks, Jay


07/05/26 08:57 PM #19151    

 

Jack Mallory

Check email, Jay 


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