SWAP BOT
1.Where were you 3 hours ago? Under the covers.
2.Have you ever eaten a crayon? No. As a Kindergartener I did sample Play-Doh and found it salty, but I never consumed a crayon.
3.Is there anything pink within 10 feet of you? Yes. The padded envelope my Posh cosmetics arrived in. I plan to reuse it if I mail this book I'm reading to my aunt.
4.When is the last time you went to the mall? Two weeks ago. I had lunch with Nancy at The Olive Garden and picked up a new ceiling fan at Sears. (Now I have to call Cute Handyman and get the sucker installed.)
5.Are you wearing socks right now? Nope.
6.When was the last time you drove out of town? That would be never because I don't drive.
7.Have you been to the movies in the last 5 days? No.
8.What was the last thing you had to drink? Water. Cool, clear water.
9.What are you wearing right now? An oversized Elvis t-shirt and underpants.
10.Do you wash your car or let the car wash do it? No car
11.Last food that you ate? I had a piece of cheese.
12.Where were you last week at this time? I don't recall
13.Have you bought any clothing items in the last week? Nope. I nearly bought a blouse from ThredUp because I have $9.80 credit. But just because I have a credit doesn't mean I have to spend it right now.
14.When is the last time you ran? I ran across the busy street last week so I could catch the yellow light. I am old and fat and it was hot. I was not happy about finding myself in this predicament.
15.What's the last sporting event you watched? I watched my Cubs come from behind to beat the Reds, 8-7. It was a shocking game. At one point, we were down by 5 runs. But, as our manager Joe Maddon says, "We like the fight."
There's a woman whose blog I
visit occasionally as part of Saturday 9. I know Bud wants his venerable meme
to survive, if not thrive, and since I took the mantle of "Samantha
Winters," I've tried to make sure everyone who plays is happy, or at least
not UNhappy.
Anyway, this weekend, she posted
something that really disturbed me. Not because of her political inclinations.
I've long ago given up trying to understand how evangelicals can support a
thrice-married, self-proclaimed "pussy grabber" who knowingly lied
about President Obama's birth certificate. She and I will have to agree to
disagree. (Though she is a proud "Cat Lady" and rescuer, so there has
to be a heart in there somewhere!)
No, this was
about Walter Cronkite. "Uncle Walter." She wrote that today's news
media is "hard to digest when you know a
lot of it is fake news. There are no Walter Cronkites anymore. 😞."
This woman is certainly old enough to know about
Vietnam. To know about Walter Cronkite's famous 1968 editorial denouncing long-standing
U.S. policy. He said the President was lying to us, and told America that the
war was simply not winnable.
Back in those
days, we weren't conservatives or liberals. We were Hawks or Doves. And the
Hawks sharpened their talons and took off after Walter Cronkite. They didn't
use terms like "fake news" because they were more nuanced. They said
his reporting was "slanted." But the message was the same -- if you
don't just accept what the President says you are wrong, unpatriotic,
prejudiced. You are using your media platform to sway Americans to your agenda.
Except, of
course, that Walter Cronkite was telling the truth. Just as CNN, NBC, CBS, ABC,
"the failed NY Times" and the Washington Post are telling the truth
about Donald Trump.
So, Madam, there are Walter Cronkites out there. Reporters and
newscasters who risk their reputations and sometimes their lives to speak truth
to power.
In his 2017
documentary, filmmaker Ken Burns says some Americans just want to forget about
Vietnam. It was so sad, so divisive, so violent. I guess this
blogger is one of those people. After all, as a retiree, she was born in the
1950s. She must have been cognizant when Cronkite gave his editorial. She must
have known boys who served -- boys who are now old men or who, sadly, were
deprived of the opportunity to live to old age.
It's convenient to always believe your POTUS is telling you the truth. It's
easier to dismiss dissident voices as "fake news." But it's perilous.
We should know that by now.