Niall Carter: Have you heard today's news? Our dear William has been dubbed "The Prince of Pegging"!
Sheffield Souter: I don't suppose that's a hamlet in Wales?
Niall: No, but it may be a direct route to Uppingham.
*guffaws all around*
This is a virtual cafe where all ideas are entertained all facts discerned, all topics discussed. And just because the proprietor has a passion for Christ, books, and the Acoustic guitar, that doesn't mean you can't veer wildly off into different subjects. So, come in, have a coffee (imported especially from Verble's finca in El Salvador), and talk about whatever you want.
Niall Carter: Have you heard today's news? Our dear William has been dubbed "The Prince of Pegging"!
Sheffield Souter: I don't suppose that's a hamlet in Wales?
Niall: No, but it may be a direct route to Uppingham.
*guffaws all around*
Poem from a notebook dated 2022-0727
Write?
Hell, guys, I write
every damn day -
Now, writin' good,
that's another matter
entirely.
Then: reworked as a haiku:
Write? Hell, guys, I write
Every damn day. Now, write good?
Whole other matter.
MR
2022-0727
1: Gas prices are going down faster than yer MOM!
2: Not fast enough then, eh?
White Fragility: Why It's So Hard for White People to Talk About Racism
Robin DiAngelo
2018
Beacon Press, Boston
Most will say this is an "important" book. It's an important topic, but I would have liked for the book to have delved more deeply into the historical origins for the institutionalized racism that permeates every level of this society.
Yes, it is understandable that the beneficiaries of such a structure will find it difficult to speak of it with any true objectivity; but most of the book is quite repetitive about the simple fact that white people simply CAN'T, without much constructive insights as to how they CAN. The author runs seminars for this, apparently, and perhaps a walk-through of the seminar that she gives might have helped.
I was, however, very impressed by her articulation of the difference between prejudice and racism. Whether other people hold to this idea, I don't know, but I'd like to adapt it: Prejudice is just that: pre-judging someone before getting to know them, while "racism - like sexism and other forms of oppression - occurs when a racial group's prejudice is backed by legal authority and institutional control." (p. 21)
Also: "People of color may also hold prejudices and discriminate against white people, but they lack the social and institutional power that transforms their prejudice and discrimination into racism" (p. 22)
That's powerful! That is a fantastic breakdown of the intrinsic power imbalance that is entrenched into the entire American system: something that White People are desperately trying to maintain even while it's crumbling under its own weight.
All in all ... definitely a book worth reading and discussing.
So, what'd'ya do for the 4th of July weekend?
I wrote five songs, two short stories, and an outline for the novel I'll be doing in November for NanoWrimo.
Really? That's awesome!
Nah, I'm kidding. I helped my wife refinish the kitchen cabinets.
Oh. Well, that's also cool, I guess.
The Adventures of Jake and Coco
A photo of Jake (Miniature Pinscher) and Coco (Chihuahua/Italian Greyhound mix)
Coco: OK, Jake, tell everyone the Spanish I taught you.
Jake [happily]: SOY TONTO!
Coco: And what does that mean?
Jake: I'm a good boy!
Coco: Si, Jake, siiiiii...