BIDEN’S SELF FULFILLING PROPHECIES

Biden hadn’t been in office more than a couple of weeks when his pessimistic predictions began. “The virus is going to get worse before it gets better,” he said on Jan 21, 2021.  Sure enough, it did. One year later, he announced he would be sending out free virus testing kits and N29 respirator/ masks to all Americans.  They arrived here in our town around the 2nd week in March, 2022. By then,  new cases had plummeted, so the costly distribution of  kits and masks were no longer needed.  Biden’s passive,  self fulfilling prophecies fail the American public.

Biden's self fulfilling prophecies don't help.
BIDEN’S SELF FULFILLING PROPHOCIES are pessimistic and unproductive.

On August 18, 2021  he stated that “chaos was inevitable in the withdrawal from Afghanistan.”  He surely was right about that. Especially when he pulled the plug so quickly that thousands of Afghans  and numerous American service men lost their lives. . Just a little bit of foresight, and a gradual withdrawal, would have made all the difference.

In February, 2022,  Biden said inflation was going to get worse.  He was right. It has.  He also predicted it would taper off soon.  It hasn’t.  Why would it, when so many people in America received stimulus checks they didn’t really need? And even for those who did need the money,  it paid them more to stay home than to go back to work.  Printing unearned money  can only be paid back in one way: inflation.

He also predicted Russia would invade Ukraine.  It did, especially after he showed his hand and promised that no US troops would ever be on the ground there. He continues to encourage the Russian aggression by assuring them there will never be a NATO supported  no fly zone over Ukraine.  Is that how you play poker?

On March 9, he predicted gas prices would rise.   They have. Like about 58%.  I guess he thinks that’s okay because after all “I told you so.”  That’s not good enough.  How about doing something to increase oil production here in the US. What about fossil fuels to the rescue? Why not wait until we’re back on our feet before pursuing “clean energy.”

Three days ago, on March 25, he announced , ‘there are going to be food shortages.”  Going to be?  Like, we don’t already have food shortages?  How many of you have tried to buy saltine crackers, canned soups, and hundreds of other items, only to be greeted with empty shelves?   But now, it’s apparently going to be OK, because Biden  gave us a heads up.  So how will consumers react to that last warning?  For those who can afford it, they will stock up on anything that will keep: flour coffee, meat, baby formula, just to name a few.  All of which will drive up demand and increase prices even more.

I don’t understand how the Biden Administration’s dire warnings are doing much of anything to solve  problems.  A pessimistic, passive approach is not what America needs right now.  We need a leader who not only foresees the problems , but figures out how to keep them from getting worse.

A BLATANT CASE OF ELDER ABUSE

You’ve probably read about it by now.  The 87 year old woman who was shoved to the ground by a twenty something.  Before she lost consciousness and died, she said she had never been hit so hard in her life.  If you’re over eighty, you know that younger people sometimes get frustrated when you move too slow.  But, like it or not, they try to show some patience.  Especially if they’re your kids or someone who knows you well. But in a big city like New York, strangers aren’t as tolerant.  The cruelty shown to Barbara Maier Gustern which resulted in her death  was a blatant case of elder abuse.

A blatant case of elder abuse occured on March 15 in NYC
A BLATANT CASE OF ELDER ABUSE took place in NYC when this octogenarian was shoved to her death.

As we age, we aren’t as agile as we once were.  Arthritis may slow us down, and require the use of a cane or walker.  Hearing is often impaired, so we may not be aware of someone standing close by—especially if our eyesight is dimming. I’m trying to imagine what happened in this bizarre episode.  Marie was apparently waiting for a cab when she was attacked by 27 year old Lauren Pazienza.  Perhaps Lauren stood behind Marie, and– determined to catch the next cab– simply wanted her out of the way. Or, Marie, not seeing too well, might have gotten confused and  stepped in front of her. It could have aroused the same emotions as road rage.  Let’s call it street rage.

Would the perpetrator have shoved a tall young man who stood in her way?  Of course not.  But the aged are fragile, vulnerable, and therefore often treated rudely.  In our small town, I’m often touched by the kindness of strangers who stop to open doors or help if they see me struggling with a package.  But in a big city, it’s a different story.  People shove each other when getting on buses and subways.  They fight over clothes on a bargain counter. It’s no wonder the elderly are sometimes despised and disdained. Or killed..

The shoving death of Marie Gustern was a blatant case of elder abuse.

LAZY BANK SERVICE HITS NEW LOW

The dreaded income tax season has finally arrived.  Only a month left to get your act together, and figure how much you owe (or maybe get a refund).  Along about the end of January, we start receiving the various forms that we need to complete our tax statement for good old Uncle Sam..   You must report all of your income from various sources because if you don’t, it could trigger an audit.  When you get to be our age, the pile of papers is fairly thick because of separate pensions, social security, annuities, CD’s,  bank accounts, etc..  This year, our tax man found that we were missing a statement from one of our banks. That seemed like a fairly simple problem to solve.  Just call and ask for another print out. Right?  Wrong! We found that lazy bank service had hit a new low.

Lazy bank service hits new low. They only send out mail once a week.
LAZY BANK SERVICE HITS NEW LOW. They only send out mail once a week.

The trouble starts when you call the bank branch where you do your business.  You expect to speak with someone who is employed there, and probably knows you pretty well after all these years. But the person answering doesn’t know you, because she’s responding from a  remote call center in Indianapolis or some other distant city.  It takes her awhile to find your account, after suspiciously asking for your pin number, date of birth, SS number, legal name, address, phone numbers and maybe even the hospital where you were born.  Finally, she agrees to transfer the call to your local bank branch.

You breathe a sigh of relief.  You know the branch manager, assistant, and several of the clerks.  Surely Janice or Mary or Tom or whomever will find the information and print out another statement.  But the person who answers doesn’t remember you. She asks you to  repeat all of the above information.  For awhile, she draws a blank.  Doesn’t see your name. .  Finally, when you start to show some agitation, she manages to find your account, and the information your accountant needs.

You ask her nicely .”Could you just print out that form again, and e mail it to me?”

She responds, “ No, we can’t e mail confidential information. But we can get that form out to you in a couple of weeks..”

Trouble is, you’d like to get the tax return finished before you leave for vacation.

“Why the long wait?” You ask .” How hard is it to print out a form on a computer and slip it in the mail.?”

“It’s not that hard to print it out,” she replies in a sugary sweet voice. “But the mail only goes out once a week, and it just went out today.”

In my mind, I’m picturing the location of that  bank.  Directly across the street, in a large parking lot, is a bright blue  USPS post office box, where the mail is picked up six days a week.   I want to ask the lady why someone can’t get up off their  duff and drop the needed form in the box, which she can see from her desk.  But I know when I’m licked.  No one at this facility is going to budge from their comfy  work space to do a long time, supposedly valued customer, a simple  favor.

Lazy bank customer service has hit a new low.

LETTER FROM POLAND

We have a neighbor whose son lives in Poland.  He is a successful businessman who was in the process of opening a Bed and Breakfast.  Instead, he has welcomed three families into that facility.  After hearing about his efforts to help the refugees from Ukraine, we sent a contribution to his website.  You can do the same by clicking on https://naklofoundation.org/donate/

I’m taking the liberty of sharing his letter here on my blog with the hope that it will inspire others to contribute.

 

Tue, Mar 15, 2022 10:42 p

Dear Lucia:

The money arrived. Very kind of you and so much appreciated.

Your generosity is helping us to establish some sort of normalcy for women and children from three families from the Kolomyja area in the western part of the country who are our current guests.

The response has been overwhelming, with more than 230 friends, and friends of friends from 31 U.S. states and nine countries having contributed. Former colleagues from newspapers that litter my professional trail, old high school chums, friends from the hemp industry and several fellow innkeepers are among those who have so kindly responded.

Many people have asked me why we’re sheltering refugees.

First, Marzenna, my wife, was a refugee from communist Poland in the 1980s. She and her brother were hosted by a lovely German family for nearly two years after they defected but before they were cleared for passage to the USA. She knows the feeling of being untethered from your home country, and is forever grateful to those German hosts. So it’s a way of moral repayment for her. (As our guests have always agreed, she is the most caring hostess.)

From a very practical point of view, we are set up as a hospitality destination, which we had prepared for reopening this summer as the covid pandemic dies down. We are doing it because we can. I like to think most people in our position would do the same. If you’ve seen the news reports, you know that many Poles are. More than 1 million Ukrainian refugees have now entered through Poland’s eastern border with Ukraine. As I write, they continue to be welcomed as they cross the border and as they arrive at cities and towns all over the country. For now, virtually all of those who have found shelter have found it in private homes and apartments.

As the Polish government goes about establishing emergency programs that will provide some funding, allow Ukrainian refugees to take jobs and clear other bureaucratic hurdles, the desperately needed immediate support has so far come from regular citizens, volunteers, NGOs and local units of government. Our local parish has been highly effective in assisting those who have arrived in our area.

Letter from poland
LETTER FROM POLAND: You can help the Naklo Foundation @ https://naklofoundation.org/donate/

You’ll see Liliana, at age 7-months now the youngest member of our household, in the photo attached. She brings a welcome lightness when we all gather at mealtime. Thank you for helping Liliana and all other guests from Ukraine who may pass our way.

With warmest regards,

Kehrt

 

For helping us to spread the word, thanks to:
Allan Lengel at Deadline Detroit
Maryann Struman and Elissa Welle at the Detroit Free Press
Marie Osborne at WJR Detroit
Mark Bennett at the Terre Haute Tribune-Star

The Nakło Foundation

Nakło 74,  Lelów
42-235 Poland
tel: (48) 602-33-66-85

CRACKER SHORTAGE? MAKE YOUR OWN!

Of all the crazy shortages we’re having during this pandemic, it’s with plain old saltine crackers.  You can get other crackers.  Triscuits, Townhouse, Ritz.  But boxes of  Nabisco Saltines are scarce as hens teeth.  Even the cheaper  copycats from Kroger and Meijer are sold out. I’ve tried to figure it out.  They say it has to do with “supply chain issues” and other such things.  But I have a feeling there’s just an overwhelming demand.  We’re eating more meals at home, and crackers fill a lot of needs.  Bread replacement. Soup Accompaniment. Between meal snacks.  The list goes on and on.  What to do during a cracker shortage?  Make your own!

Cracker shortage? Make Your Own! They're inexpensive.
SALTINE CRACKER SHORTAGE? Make our own! Homemade crackers are inexpensive.

I went online to see if there were any recipes for cracker making.  It turns out there are lots.  All of them call for flour, which could be a problem in the future.  Did you know that wheat is going to be in short supply?  Seems we used to buy 30%  of it from Russia and the Ukraine, and it looks like that ship has sailed.   Our own farmers are struggling with droughts, flooding, and the skyrocketing  cost of fertilizer, so American  wheat is going to be expensive.   

Personally, I’m stocking up on flour and yeast–just in case.  As I’ve mentioned before, I lived through the rationing of many staple food items during the WW2 years in the 40’s.  If the Ukraine war with Russia continues, there could be days when we have to make our own bread or crackers. Actually, the cracker shortage began before the war, so it may go on for a long time.

Yesterday, I decided to make my very first batch of saltines.  The recipes online called for different ingredients.  All started with flour, but the similarities ended there.  The leavening agents varied –yeast, baking powder, baking soda.

I decided to start with the simplest recipe of all, which had few  ingredients.  The important thing I learned is that you must roll the dough out as thin as possible. Roll it too thick, and you end up with something more like hard tack than crackers.  Thinner is better, and produces more crackers. . Try this recipe, and if you don’t like it, there are lots of others available online.

SALTINE CRACKERS

Ingredients:

4 cups all purpose flour

1 tablespoon baking powder

¼ cup butter or margarine

1 1/3 cups milk

Salt for sprinkling

1 egg white mixed with 1 Tablespoon water in separate bowl

Directions:

Mix together flour and baking powder. Cut butter into flour mixture until it forms coarse crumbs. Add milk, and knead to form a ball.  Divide dough in 4 parts and roll out paper thin on a floured surface.  Cut the dough into squares.  Place on ungreased cookie sheet and prick all with a fork. Brush with the egg wash and sprinkle with salt. Bake at 325 about 15 or 20 minutes, or until golden brown.

Once the crackers have cooled, store them in airtight containers to keep them fresh.

Saltine cracker shortage?  Make your own!

DEJA VU: WW2 CHILDHOOD MEMORIES

Most Americans have no childhood memories of living in a nation at war.  Worries of  being bombed, killed, or captured never cast a shadow over their growing-up years. Yes, we’ve sent our young men overseas  to fight in many foreign wars, but the threat of it occurring here in the United States never entered their minds.  But if you’re in your 80’s or 90’s, it’s DEJA VU:   WW2  childhood memories come back to haunt us during the war in Ukraine..

DEJA VU: World War 2 childhood memories come back to haunt us.
DEJA VU: WW2 Childhood Memories haunt us as refugees flee from Ukraine War with Russia.

This is how it felt to a 5 year old girl, when we heard America  had entered World War II.  I remember my father standing in front of the radio, jiggling the change in his pocket.  My mother cried in the kitchen as she mashed the potatoes.  My older siblings sat quietly, while I danced around the living room, blissfully unaware of the horrors that lay ahead for our country.  Daddy had four children, so he wasn’t drafted.  But my uncle only had three kids, and he had  to go in the army. He stopped by our house the night before he left, and the grown ups  drank a lot of  beer.  That was a year or so into the war, when they were running out of able bodied men to fight the Axis powers..

Many things were rationed, including gas.  We walked to school or into town.  Our old Chevie was used only for going to Church, or to drive my father back and forth to work.  You got tokens for rationed items like coffee and sugar.  I didn’t have real ice cream until I was ten years old.  Grandpa was a farmer, so we had more red meat on the table than our neighbors.  Still, we ate a lot of Spam. Nobody complained about any of these sacrifices.  We were willing to do anything it took to provide our army with whatever they needed to defeat the Axis.

There was fear in the air, although our parents put on a brave front.  If a freight train rumbled through town at night, I awakened with  anxiety,  sure  that the Germans were marching into town..  Secretly, I assembled a first aid kit with band aids and iodine and cloth bandages, in case a bomb dropped on our city. We had air raid sirens and blackouts and other activities to prepare us for a foreign invasion.  Walking home from school, you saw blue and gold stars hanging in front windows.  Sometimes, you heard  a mother crying with a telegram in her hand, while neighbors gathered round to comfort. Meanwhile, children in Europe actually were being bombed, maimed, killed and starved in the horrors of war.

When you spend the first years of your life under the cloud of war, you  never really forget. . What will the children of Ukraine remember, and how will they ever recover from the terrors they’ve endured while fleeing for their lives and struggling to survive as refugees in a foreign land.

Now I look at my grandchildren and wonder how it will affect their outlook on life. First, they’ve endured years of isolation due to the  Covid pandemic..  Now, they’re seeing Ukraine children  crammed onto trains, and kissing their fathers good bye. Perhaps we grandparents understand what they’re going through, more than their own parents, who grew up in a country that  felt peaceful and safe.

DÉJÀ VU:  WW2 Childhood  memories come back to haunt us.

BIDEN’S MASKS A LITTLE TOO LATE

As Omicron cases skyrocketed throughout the country, we heard that the government would send virus test kits to everyone in the United States. Not sure how they compiled that list, but I applied for ours over the internet.  I think that was a few months back, when our county was in the red. Meaning, we had over 200 cases  per 100,000 residents, each week.  Actually, we had closer to  400 cases . So we needed those tests right away.  But we just got them a couple of weeks ago.  Then, they announced they were going to distribute N95 surgical masks throughout the US via pharmacies and grocery stores.  Unfortunately,  Biden’s masks were a little too late.

Biden's Masks Came a little too late. Nobody needs them now.
BIDEN’S MASKS CAME A LITTLE TOO LATE. Mandates have been lifted, and these free N95 respirators are uncomfortable.

Our county Covid cases have plummeted in the past week or so, and the governor has lifted all mask mandates.  Therefore , when I walked into Walgreens and saw a stacks of N95 “respirators” on a shelf near the door, I assumed they were trying to get rid of them.  Especially since there was a big sign that said “FREE N95 masks.”  There were about 25 respirators/ masks in each package.

I put one package in my cart, figuring there would be some glitch at the checkout.  Do pharmacies ever give anything away?  “As these really free?”  I asked the cashier.  “Yes,” she said proudly, “those are Biden’s masks.”

Ironically, most people have stopped wearing masks while shopping, since the government has told us it’s okay.  However, I decided to try one during my next shopping trip.   And let me tell you, they are not user friendly. Instead of hooking  behind your ear, the two elastic straps must go over your head, and fit tightly. Thereby destroying any carefully blow dried hairdo.  Appearance and comfort must be sacrificed for air tight protection .  Which means you will seldom see anyone wearing them, even though they didn’t cost a penny. However, I would have been more than willing to wear an N95 respirator two years ago.

According to the CDC , we’ re only entitled to 3 free N95  respirators.    But now, nobody wants to wear them at all.    Which may be why the drug stores are giving them away in packs of 25.  Biden’s masks came a little too late.