A Couple of Random Thoughts

I’ve started falling back on the “well, taylor swift wrote/produced 2 albums in the past 9 months, certainly I can at least vacuum” lro@LRo70 science doesn’t care what you think. Manhattan, NY instagram.com/larryrowe1/

As 2020 winds down towards the Winter Solstice, President Trump is no longer the focus of the world’s attention, two, two!, Covid-19 vaccines are their way – faster than expected and faster than usual because of the same Trump – and President-elect Biden is still making noises that suggest he is serious about both diversity and climate change. Even though the pandemic is raging across the country out of control, hope for an end to this bad trip is coming back.

With everybody stuck at home, the only reason to put up holiday decorations is for ourselves; nobody will see our tree and the carefully displayed decorations but us and that gives the tree and the other decorations a certain purity.

I saw one of my favorite houses on the Noah Trevor Daily Social Distancing Show a couple of days ago and I was thrilled. He was Zooming with an actor I only know from television and the actor was in the house (on the first floor by the fishpond, I think). I worked as a carpenter for the owner and designer Allyn Morris, on a house down the street, and was in the house almost every day for several months and it was sensational. It took my breath away every time I walked in which was Morris’s plan. The street view was an almost blank facade but, when you entered, you were standing on a landing in front of a two-story glass wall facing the Glendale Freeway with the San Gabriels behind. For a long time, Morris got very little recognition but, now, he is getting much-deserved credit. It turns out that the actor is the new owner and the house looked great behind the owner. If you are at all interested in architecture, check it out here: The A.E. Morris Residence | Crosby Doe Associates, Inc.

If you’re looking for an interesting read and are still not bored with politics, I suggest What It Takes, The Way to the White House, a book about the 1988 Presidential Election, by Richard Ben Cramer written in a sort of breathless Tom Wolfe style. It is fascinating (although very long at over a thousand pages and very dense). The book follows each of the major candidates, George “Poppy” Herbert Walker Bush who, you may remember, won and Bob Dole on the Republican side; Michael Dukakis, Joe Biden, Dick Gephardt, and Gary Hart – with a cameo by Jesse Jackson – on the Democratic side as they run for the presidency but it also traces their roots sometimes all the way back to their grandparents. The book is fascinating not only because of the various candidates and not only because so many of today’s problems existed in the 80s in a nascent form, but because Cramer often presents information in a way that I haven’t thought about before.

As Bush starts to run for the Senate, he has a set of advisers who call themselves the Gee-6 who Cramer describes: The name was a tip-off: it was a play on the G-, the Group of Seven – Prime Ministers and Presidents who’d meet, from time to time, for photos and to decide what the dollar should be worth, what to do about oil, how the civilized world would fight terrorism, that kind of thing. It was the U.S., Japan, Germany Britain, France, Italy, maybe Canada was in there…pretty much everybody who can make a decent car. The meetings, the group photo, were meant to convey to the world’s unwashed that the Free World big boys, the guys with the twelve-inch GNPs bulging in their pants, were all agreed how the game should be played.

I’ve never thought of the Group of Seven that way, that arbitrary and dictatorial, before. I’ve sort of thought – and thought is the wrong word here, not much thinking was going on, mostly just taking in what I been told – was a benevolent organization keeping the world on track. And, of course, that is true…with the addition of for the benefit of the rich countries making the rules. One of the things that I’ve become much more aware of during the year of staying home is how the rules and regulations we are told is good for the commonweal are self-seving to the rule makers.

One of the signs that the Republicans really know that Biden has won is that they are now worried about the National Debt when the talk turns to giving survival money to people who are out of work, destitute, and hungry. It was not a problem when Congress and the President gave themselves a big tax cut, but giving broke, starving, people money, we are now being told, is not good for the country.

4 thoughts on “A Couple of Random Thoughts

  1. Only to be picky I’d like to point out, ref your line 1, that Trump was NEVER the focus of the world’s attention–a vital fact emphasised by your wonderful lead photo. Sure, he attracted all too many headlines but the attention of the world’s people was always focussed on matters of far greater need, as in say food or health, or of interest, that is books, movies, celebs or (your own example) architecture. In my own last visit to the US I found he was never, to my relief, the topic of conversation. Agreed, his malign influence prevailed over national and even international events–so praise be he’s been kicked off the stage–but though he successfully manipulated the news that’s not to say ‘the world’, the real world, cared or even noticed.

  2. Love love love the house and I could live in it. Interesting read this morning as I wait on hold for GoDaddy support to fix my client’s website before I get on a plane during a pandemic to pick up a friend who collapsed with a heart attack in the Salt Lake City airport while transiting through.

    I am so grateful for your posts and your book recommendations. Your initial description of “…over a thousand pages and dense.” is off putting but your further excerpts just the opposite.

    The revelation about the G7 puts some focus on my day.

    “See you soon.”

    Keep writing and keep posting.

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