After the flood

I was a little apprehensive about posting photos of our new condo. I remember, decades ago, getting an email from a coworker bragging on his (opulently furnished) new place; I wasn’t able to appreciate the interior design on its merits, I was too busy wondering exactly how much more money the guy got paid than I did, to afford such a lavish place. But posting the gallery was just a convenient way to share our happiness with family and friends!

Karmic payback came last week. The living room captured in those ‘Our New Lair’ photographs is no more. The water and mold remediation guys made sure of that.

Wall with wall missing
Not pictured: a beer can in the walls so old it had a pull tab.
Crown Moulding Missing from Wall
Turns out this crown moulding is not available for purchase new, at least that I can find.

I’m starting to wonder if I was right to drag my heels on home ownership all these years. Nobody tells you about the time you’ll spend scrutinizing badly-designed web sites looking for stuff like… Concord Dentil Crown Moulding with a 5 3/4 inch face.

Prose and cons: 7 Predictions

In the wake of the 2016 Presidential election, I’m struggling to come to terms with the results. Part of that struggle has been to face up clearly to what is likely to come down the road. Here, I’m advancing seven predictions for the future, along with mitigating factors, counter-propositions and related implications. I hope I’m proven wrong, folks. (But I won’t be.)

PREDICTION ONE: Roe v Wade will be overturned by the Trumpist SCJ.
But hold on: In many red states, access to abortion is already limited. If Roe falls, then state law controls; abortion will remain safe and available in blue state strongholds.
Bottom line: Women and families making low incomes in red states will be disproportionately impacted.

PREDICTION TWO: Federal recognition of gay marriage will be overturned by the Trumpist SCJ.
But hold on: Gay marriage will remain legal and equal in blue strongholds. Red states will limit or reject gay marriage outright.
I’m asking: Millenials overwhelmingly reject anti-gay rhetoric. Will they vote in 2018 and 2020?

PREDICTION THREE:  Trumpism won’t bring back jobs lost to globalization and automation.
But hold on: Eventually, people will agree that the real winners of this election were billionaires and corporations, and we’ll have a genuine appetite for reforms in the way we tax and charter our would-be corporate masters.
Yeah, hold on that holding on: The need for decent-paying middle-class jobs is urgent. Taxes don’t create jobs. And automation is encroaching even on the service sector.
Implication: We need a solid safety net, for people just barely hanging on.
Reality check: The party taking power wants to privatize and shrink our existing safety net. The people have chosen to award that party control of all three branches of government.
As ever: The rich will do fine. The poor will be offered minimum wage jobs and told to be grateful they get that.

PREDICTION FOUR: Taxes will go down for the super wealthy, up for everyone else. Single parents will not be allowed to file as heads of household. Struggling people will be disproportionately penalized.
Yeah, but: Fixing tax code just requires passing legislation.
About that: Passing legislation requires winning the House, Presidency, and a supermajority in the Senate.

PREDICTION FIVE: US Healthcare costs, only just now slowing, will surge. Free of oversight, big pharma continues to soak US market.
Related: People with insurance from jobs will receive more lean benefit packages to offset costs and will pay more for meds.
Once again: People with disabilities, chronic ailments, low income families will be disproportionately affected.

PREDICTION SIX: Human impact on environment will continue unmodulated. Rising waters will threaten low-lying communities and in twenty years redraw the map of coastal America.
Yeah, but: Neither major party is serious about taking America green.

PREDICTION SEVEN: Capital will flee to the nation-state with the most stable form of governance. China and Russia will prosper and gain allies and financial muscle.

That’s the future I see. I’m not conceding anything; in two years, I’ll be voting for representatives who stand against Trumpism, and if a majority of Americans joined me, the far right agenda being advanced right now would only do minor harm to our country. If indifference and apathy hold sway, I’m afraid things will only continue to get worse. We have complicated problems to solve; they will require complex solutions.

Three for Tuesday

Book number one (Witch in Morning) is complete. Prior to publication I’ll need to revise the manuscript to reflect what I’ve learned writing book number two (Thief in Long Shadow), for which a complete draft is now extant (and in the hands of a dear friend who happens to be a superb writer.) I didn’t expect to kick off book number three (Tea with Demon and Duchess) so quickly, and without finalizing the prior two books first, but something is happening. The words are coming unbidden now, and demanding precedence over everything else in my life.

Yay?

[note: post edited on 8-1-2014 to reflect the final names of novels in the series.]

Riding the Lightning

I’ve stopped posting with any sort of regularity; my efforts this month are mostly focused on getting the second Northern Arcadian novel, THIEF, finished. I should have a draft finished in a month or so, and I’ll be back puttering around in these parts soon.

Gone Fishing

Once upon a time in America, people (mostly men) could take an afternoon or even a full day off from work with only the declaration (usually scrawled on a strategically placed note) ‘Gone Fishing!’ I don’t know anyone who’s ever ‘Gone Fishing!’ on impulse, dusty Stuckee’s merchandise and Cracker Barrel t-shirts to the contrary.

I missed my Friday post. Consider this my ‘Gone Fishing’ sign, scrawled in magic marker and stuck to the door of this web site.

(Be back on Monday.)

Patriots Day 2013

Two explosive devices detonated in Boston today. I went to university in Boston; the city schooled me. I fell in love, got robbed, and even did a little growing up. I lived too close to Kenmore Square to enjoy Patriots Day much. The crowds always stayed amiable, but the crush could get intense, even in usually deserted locales like Charlie’s Diner and Nemo’s Pizza, a few doors down from Store 24.

I don’t understand why anyone would lob bombs in the midst of all that happiness. I don’t care what cause or creed is invoked by the perpetrators; nothing can justify the murder and maiming of innocents.

No blog post tonight. My imagination (and heart) is in Boston.