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Rick Kinnaird

Archives for May 2023

Day 847 – Picking a Bone with The Mrs. Maisel Critic

May 16, 2023 by Rick Kinnaird 5 Comments

Bird Up

Sunday, March  14, 2023

There’s a lot of important stuff to talk about, but I defer all that until I finish flossing this craw.

I read a review of “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel” that was critical because in that person’s opinion the show was a throwback to a kind of “Leave It To Beaver” goody goody where everything works out. As evidence, the critic said that two people who divorce would not still be in love and supporting each other. The show in this person’s opinion was not real world.

Really? That’s the best this person could do?

What he or she missed was the underlying theme that women have to struggle to be recognized and paid equally.

It’s a great show and the person who wrote that review was looking to complain.

Bird Down

Pooh on them, him or her.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Day 843 – Liar, Insulting, Despicable

May 10, 2023 by Rick Kinnaird 2 Comments

Wednesday, May 10, 2023

Okay, quick quiz, “Who does the above title apply to?”

a. George Santos

b. Donald Trump

c. Ron DeSantis

d. Clarence Thomas

e. Nikkie Haley

f. Lindsey Graham

g. Peter Navarro

h. Eric Trump

I. Rudy Giuliani

j. Marjorie Taylor Greene

k. Lauren Boebert

l. Jim Jordan

m. Kevin McCarthy

n. Matt Gaetz

o. All of the above?

Lindsey Graham said recently that the Republican Party has a “deep bench” and indeed they do, but a deep bench of what? The above list is only partial of the Republican Party’s list of election deniers, Holocaust deniers, vaccine deniers, women killer advocates (excuse me, “anti-abortionists”), Jan 6th deniers, and pro: nazi hang outers, jew haters, women haters, and gun violence advocates.

Now, we could argue if each person on the list is all three of the characteristics listed in the title and whether my descriptions are too raw for some people’s taste, but there is little denying that in this “deep bench”, each person on the list has some of the characteristics and qualities I have listed.

But the person I was thinking of when I wrote the above title was – The Donald. Remember when he was called that. It’s about the time he assaulted Ms Carroll. Some will argue he wasn’t found guilty of rape, and I would say to those folks, “Look at the jury’s charge sheet.”  He was found to have maliciously defamed her, to have sexually assaulted her. Rape, twenty years later, would be hard to prove, but the behavior described was not, hence the sexual assault charge sticking. In fact, does anyone believe he did not act in the way Carroll and two other women described? Or the dozen or so other women who have recounted similar encounters?

I include for your edification the jury’s charging sheet. It’s a doozy. Some will say the jury was a bunch of men hating Democrats, etc. But the fact is it was a jury of mostly men. The make up was across all political lines. In fact, one of the jurors listens to some right wing radio podcast. The lawyer defending Trump asked the jurors to put aside their political beliefs and listen to the facts. Unfortunately, for him, they did.

The other astonishing thing was it only took the jury two and a half hours to reach a unanimous verdict. Most courtroom pros expected days of deliberation. It seems that none of the jurors believed Trump. Imagine that!

Here’s the facts, described in the charging sheet.

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Day 840 – Treasures and Tidal Waves

May 9, 2023 by Rick Kinnaird 3 Comments

The Kid in Tut’s Tomb

Sunday, May 7, 2023

I have been reading Howard Carter’s writing on the discovery of King Tut’s tomb. He poked a hole through the wall to the tomb’s antechamber and shown a candle to let the light in. “What do you see?” he was asked.

“Wonderful things,” was the reply. But that isn’t the whole story. There is a backstory as well. Six years of searching and turning up bits and pieces. Being ready to give up and then on one of the last days finding a step. But that is not where I want to delve. Let us go back to the light of the candle and the wonderful things in Carter’s description. There is in his portrayal one of awe and reverence, of coming face to face with events that happened thousands of years before. It is as if time had no meaning. There was a momentary interruption. The people left the tomb, dropping some leaves and flowers on the floor. And then, moments later, to be discovered by Carter. 

His description is one of stunned awe and a sense of reverence as the archaeologist comes face to face with the reality of his discovery. He wrote that nothing prepared him for this.

His account: 

The decisive moment had arrived. With trembling hands I made a tiny breach in the upper left-hand corner. Darkness and blank space, as far as an iron testing-rod could reach, showed that, whatever, lay beyond was empty, and not filled like the passage, we had just cleared. Candle tests were applied as a precaution against possible, foul gases, and then, widening the hole a little, I inserted the candle and peered in, Lord Canarvan, Lady Evelyn and Callendar standing anxiously beside me to hear the verdict. At first I could see nothing, the hot air escaping from the chamber causing the candle flame to flicker, but presently, as my eyes grew accustomed to the light, details of the room within emerged slowly from the mist, strange animals, statues, and gold – everywhere the glint of gold. For the moment – an eternity, it must’ve seem to the others standing by – I was struck dumb with amazement, and when Lord Carnarvon, unable to stand the suspense any longer, inquired anxiously, “Can you see anything?” it was all I could do to get out the words, “Yes, wonderful things.” Then, widening the hole, a little further, so that we both could see, we inserted an electric torch.

Howard Carter, “The Tomb of Tutankhamen”, (1972) c1954 page 35. Originally published in three volumes 1923, 1927, 1933

Chris Naunton writes in his book, “Searching for The Lost Tombs of Egypt” of a similar experience when he was invited to glimpse KV 63 before the items were removed and catalogued. The year was 2006. It was the Italian Archaeological Mission to Luxor directed by Dr. Francesco Tiradritte that invited him.

 I stood with the others at the bottom of the shaft, a few meters away from the material itself, and gawped, rooted to the spot. … I wasn’t conscious of having stood back, but I obviously had, too nervous, reverent even, to get any closer. It was like meeting an ancient past I had until then known only from a distance …

Chris Naunton, “Searching For The Lost Tombs of Egypt”, (2018), page 31

This reminds me of accounts I have read of people when facing a tidal wave. They stand in awe of the massive wall of water rushing at them. There is no attempt to run because there is no time or place to run to. The sight is overwhelming and truly awful as in “filled with awe.”  Yes it is different in a terrifying way, but it is a moment where time has little meaning.

Both Howard Carter and Chris Naunton got to experience that timelessness, that momentary experience where everything stopped, or at least slowed down. Athletes may experience that moment too. Reaching for that ball, making that shot, or that block. It’s a split second if that, but everything happens on instinct and muscle memory. In that instant, everything vanishes, but the one thing.

I spoke with Steve Strachan. He was the fullback for Boston in the game where Doug Flutie in the closing seconds threw a Hail-Mary 55 yard pass that won the game. He told me how he had been high-lowed by two of the Miami players as he went downfield for the ball. He watched the ball sail over head. He saw the player make the catch and fall down in the end-zone. He told me he looked into that player’s eyes. They locked eyes, “and for that split second, that second and a half, we were the only two players on the field that knew we had won the game.”

Instances of time interrupted, or stopped. A momentary interruption in our perception of the changing normal progression of events we call time. Where that progression has little or no meaning. The people walked out of the tomb, sealing it forever. Then others walked in and picked up where the mourners had left off.

The wide receiver who made the famous catch as time expired in the Colorado Michigan game at Michigan said the oddest thing was when he stood up and heard the silence of 102,000 people in that stadium.

Gary Gait when he made the leap over the crease from behind the goal to shovel pass the shot in the NCAA Lacrosse Championship said that the oddest thing was the silence as everyone was watching the replay to understand what he had done.

Tut

Moments in time – halted, slowed, interrupted. I’ve experienced a few in my lifetime. Nothing like what I recounted here, but for me, they were special. Not that anyone else knew, but for that split second – time stopped. The world went away and I acted, and experienced, that unique sense of awe.

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Day 839 – Grooming – not Kids, but Justices

May 7, 2023 by Rick Kinnaird 1 Comment

One Day

Saturday, May 6, 2023

The revelations about Clarence Thomas’ financial entanglements and that of his wife have revealed that the group of wealthy people who call themselves conservatives have been grooming young people for years to be conservative court justices. They are targeted in their first year of law school and kept track of throughout their career. These people give them money, take care of their logistical and financial needs and these people make sure that these lawyers and soon to be judges don’t stray from the doctrines they want adopted. One of the things these conservatives wanted to do was to over turn Roe. What is not clear to me is why. Most of what wealthy want is to not pay taxes and to be given government hand out in the form of exceptions in the tax code for the stuff they buy. That I can understand under the premise that they are better off holding onto their money than giving it to some politician who will just waste it on things like taking care of the poor.

On Chris Hayes’ show last night they showed a painting from Harlan Crow’s Adirondack estate. Pictured was Crow, Thomas, a lawyer who helped Trump, the guy who headed up the Federalist Society and got billions funneled to him for his grooming operations and the buying and approving of justices, and lastly was the Attorney General of Georgia. Thomas was shown tilting back holding a long fat cigar. Also in this segment it was revealed that Ginnie Thomas was given an extra $25K for her non-existent job at a foundation that doesn’t exist. This on top of something like one hundred thousand.

And Another

One of the tenents of conservatism is the idea of being left alone, and “Don’t Tread On Me.” Ha. They don’t want to step on you, they want to steamroller and flatten you. I get the idea of holding onto your money and not wanting to pay taxes. Even wanting tax breaks and handouts. That’s all part of enriching one’s self. But where does the cruelty of overturning Roe come in? 

Filed Under: Uncategorized

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Rick Kinnaird
I’m Rick Kinnaird, a writer of fictional adventure and travel. That means I write stories about things that never happened in places I’ve never been. This way facts don’t get in the way.

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