Showing posts with label Fifty. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fifty. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 2, 2025

Voyager 1 soon to be one light day away from earth

Somehow, no matter how exasperated RantWoman is getting about modern life, this craft travelling out into the universe beyond the reach of earth's sun, based on persistent technology and clever insightful engineering from 50 years ago fills RantWoman with hope and a sense of SOMETHING sustainable.


NEW RECORD! Voyager 1 Breaks the Cosmic Barrier: soon to be one light day away from earth

Friday, December 27, 2024

Eagle S Seized by Finland for Severing Cables Between Finland & Estonia


For readers who are not total shipping nerds, some key points:

--The Baltic sea is full of undersea power and communications cables as well as pipelines.

--There have been a series of anchor drags and other ways to damage these vital pieces of infrastructure.

--The cable drags can be partially explained by vessel age and poor maintenance, but geopolitics also enters the picture.

This YouTube channel is a massive resource for shipping and maritime vocabulary.

Thursday, November 23, 2017

Happy Thanksgiving with Alice's Restaurant - Original 1967 Recording

Retroactive retrospective: Holy Cow! This song is 50 years old this year! And much in it is so much more innocent than today's news.




Friday, May 20, 2016

Star Trek turns 50!

Random Meditations in appreciation of the 50th anniversary of the original Star Trek, dating simultaneously 400 years in the future and from the hoary mists of history BT, Before Television, at least in the RantFamily household.

Insignias for Kirk, Spock, Scotty, Dr. McCoy


These are the voyages of the Star Ship Enterprise. Its five-year mission is to boldly go where no man has gone before.

Or woman?
RantWoman never did understand why Lt. Uhura had to wear that miniskirt, but being underdressed never seemed to get in the way of her duties.


Yep. The 24th century was colored Black and White at the RantFamily household, just like previous centuries

Wikipedia on Star Trek the Original Series


Star Trek the Original Series

RantWoman peculiarly neither wants to travel 50 years back in time nor hundreds of years forward on the Star Trek story line; RantWoman simply wants to mark this anniversary.


Tuesday, May 17, 2016

Electric Dylan 50 years on, with ukulele? and Pinball?

One of RantWoman's info streams informs RantWoman that today is the 50th anniversary of the performance where Bob Dylan shocked, shocked the world and his fan base by....playing half of his show with an electric backup band.

In honor of this occasion, an item about an upcoming Seattle area show, minus blindness tourism about whether photos are tagged and other meditations about how the news looks to people who use screen readers:
Dylan to play at Chateau Ste. Michel in June 2016

Understand, at the time of Dylan's most famous electric performance,  RantWoman was not yet 5. RantWoman and RantBrother had probably already broken each other in but RantWoman was probably still getting used to Little Sister toddlerhood. The Rant Family with  our RantFamily eye problem heritage was still living, 3 kids , 2 parents, and a lot of the time one or another aunt as well in a two-bedroom apartment. In other words, things were a little tight though the Rant Family was on the verge of moving into a Real House.

This also was an era when RantMom regarded television as a vast mind-rotting cultural wasteland and did not permit it in her household. In other words this pivotal moment in US cultural pantheon passed the Rant Family by completely, only to be velcroed into the timeline long after the fact.

That would be one problem.

Another problem would be that RantWoman wants to celebrate this anniversary in a highly eccentric way.

First, a link that might or might not take one to some actual Dylan tracks though not necessarily Dylan doing Born to be Wild.

A streaming option that may or may not yield Born to be Wild
The blindness tourism element of posting this link: RantWoman is tired. RantWoman is the sort of cultural relic who still thinks music should come out of phonographs or cassette players and who has not worked very hard to wrap her brain around this streaming stuff. So RantWoman has done only cursory checking of this site to see about accessibility. It showed up in a search engine. The home page did not send RantWoman's screen reader into a tailspin. RantWoman is not saying anything beyond that.

How, thanks to the Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain, a cultural phenomenon having almost NOTHING to do with Dylan, we walk back from Born to be Wild arranged for Ukulele orchestra to "Sure Plays a Mean Pinball!"




Whoa, whoa wait. WHY the Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain? And why PINBALL?




Forget about the Ukuleles and for that matter the Brits too. They are an artifact of a different mental excursion. The pinball wizard is more on point, on point as in:

One of RantWoman's college roommates was blind.

Blind Roommate was REALLY into Bob Dylan, so into Dylan that at the time she won, she was the first woman ever to win a Bob Dylan sound-alike contest at Folk City in NY city.

Blind Roommate also regularly beat RantWoman at pinball.

RantWoman thinks summers doing programs at the NJ school for the blind were part of
what gave Blind Roommate the skills of blindness and guts to go to our shared alma mater. We do not know where Blind Roommate's  capacity to beat RantWoman at pinball came from. We humbly honor the point even though RantWoman could officially see, if one does not count double vision, spherical  aberration from thick glasses, and negligible hand-eye coordination.

Here RantWoman is going to leave a further giant long literary ellipsis under all the other forthright and challenging reasons the 50th anniversary of Dylan going Electric summoned the Pinball Wizard. Instead, Happy Fiftieth Electric Anniversary. Now play us out, Mr. tambourine Man.





Monday, February 2, 2015

Sea of Change Film - Walking Into Trouble: Shared Streets Design concept as implemented in England

Over the past several months RantWoman has received inquiries about blind people and a street design apparently becoming popular at least among traffic planners in Europe called "Shared Streets."

The positive spin on shared streets is about removing curbs and fixed crossing areas.

The brutal reality: the design's origianl creator from HOlland intended the design be used only on low-speed, low-traffic areas and all over Britain it is being implemented where there are both  high speeds and heavy traffic. The results for blind people are HUGE loss of independent mobility.

RantWoman has heard mention of possible projects based on this design in Redmond, Bremerton, and Olympia.

RantWoman is grateful a link for this video showed up in her Tweet stream. It is pretty damning!

Sunday, September 7, 2014

Tim Hawkins- Old Rock Star Songs

Tim Hawkins suggests ways to adapt major artists' lyrics to reflect realities of aging. 

Parody frequently makes RantWoman smile even if slightly uncomfortable in places. Enough said!   Cope!


Monday, August 11, 2014

Complaint? compliant?

Complaint? Compliant?

 Dear Department of Licensing and all global entities of surveillance.

RantWoman has dutifully taken note of insistence on her WA state ID that she needed to march down and replace said ID before her most recent birthday.

 The first attempt: RantWoman dropped by an office in downtown Seattle wile on the way to somewhere else. There was a line out the door and halfway up the alley. New ID not gonna happen within RantWoman’s time window.

 The next time, RantWoman visited the Departmetn of Licensing first thing in RantWoman’s morning. RantWoman explained to a friendly human that all RantWoman wanted to do was renew an ID. RantWoman got directed ahead of the rest of the queue to…STICKER SHOCK!

$45 to authenticate RantWoman’s identity???? Look, if you want to steal RantWoman’s identity, you deserve the drama that comes with it! But $45 to achieve a little plastic token of identification. RantWoman dutifully handed over debit card and signed required signature. Then RantWoman was directed to wait until called for picture taking.

 RantWoman waited and waited, not terribly long actually. But the fun was only beginning. The faitful public servant staffing the photosection wanted to achieve two goals besides mere photographs of RantWoman:

 --She wanted a photograph without glasses glare.
--She wanted a photo with both of RantWoman’s eyes open.

 Ah-ha-ha-ha-ha!

 --Almost every photo of RantWoman ever since … (RantWoman started wearing glasses at age 2) has glasses glare in it. RantWoman thinks if her last ID picture does not have glasses glare, probably it was because RantWoman may not have been wearing her glasses due to swelling caused by medical procedures. RantWoman considers herself lucky that picture does not seem to show any “My doctor got paid to do that to me” bruising. But that picture is an anomaly! RantWoman is going to be wearing her glasses as long as they do ANY kind of good at all and the NORM for RantWoman is glasses glare. So Departmenet of Licensing please COPE!

 --If glasses glare is a fact of life around RantWoman, having eyes reliably open is NOT. RantWoman’s eyes get itchy and start to hurt if RantWoman keeps her eyes open too long or tries too hard to focus for very long. Not even paid medical professionals at RantWoman’s eye care provider’s office can keep RantWoman’s eyes open to their satisfaction without really extreme measures. So the sincere functionary has not a prayer.

 Well the sincere functionary tried. And tried. And tried to achieve something “compliant.”. Rantwoman is unclear how many attempts there were but it was too many. Finally the sincere functionary agreed to send in what she had. “But you might get a letter asking you to come back in for a retake.”

 Okayyyy, but if RantWoman gets such a letter, someone is going to get a slightly eited version of this blog post salted somehow with the words “reasonable accommodation!”

 Word!

 Sincerely,
RantWoman.

 

#privacy ?

 

 

 

Thursday, July 3, 2014

50th Anniversary of Civil Rights Act Celebration: July 10, NWAAM

RantWoman heartily and enthusiastically endorses this event and plans to attend. RantWoman also invites readers who interested in What the Heck is RantWoman ranting about THIS TIme to please scroll all the way to the bottom...

 
50th Anniversary of the Civil Rights Act 1964
Northwest African-American Museum
2300 S Massachusetts St, Seattle
Thursday, July 10, 2014, 5:00-8:00 pm
 
Rev. Dr. Samuel B. McKinney
Keynote Speaker

Pat Wright and the Total Experience Gospel Choir +  Draz, Nyaj & Si Young
Panel of Speakers
Larry Gossett
George Northcroft
Bob Santos
Judge LeRoy McCullough
Rev. Dr. Phyllis Beaumonte
Claudia Kauffman
Bobby Alexander
Moderator: Enrique Cerna

Sponsors:
Seattle Human Rights Commission
Seattle Office for Civil Rights
Seattle Women’s Commission
WA ST Black Christian Clergy
WA Christian Leaders Coalition
WA ST Commission on
African American Affairs
Seattle Urban League
Department of Labor—Women’s Bureau
Loren Miller Bar Association
CANOES
Church Council of Greater Seattle
Muckleshoot Indian Tribe
The Black Heritage Society of WA
Northwest African American Museum
Councilmember Bruce Harrell
WA ST Human Rights Commission
Seattle-King Co. NAACP
U.S. Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission
Real Change
 
Okay, now, what could RantWoman POSSIBLY find to grumble about?
1. RantWoman apologizes for the lack of graphics. RantWoman received the announcement as a PDF and did not take the time to pull out some nice pictures for the blog.
 
2. The pdf contains print that is TOO SMALL to be read easily if one posts the flyer ans RantWoman is wont to do among a bunch of neighbors who are probably interested but do not necessarily see much better than RantWoman does. RantWoman grumbled the other day to receive an announcement that also had only small print but did come in HTNL so RantWoman MIGHT have had the option of enlarging, that is if she had been any less likely to lecture the other info provider than she is this one.
 
3. RantWoman does not recognize ALL the names on the lists here and does reckon that some organization names also serve people with disabilities. RantWoman also spends a LOT of time meditating about matters of privilege and the overlapping and intersecting of various strands of struggle. And RantWoman notes that several Disability rights organizations also invited themselves to an analogous celebration in our nation's capital. But where are some organizations that specifically speak of people with disabilities, like in the organization name?
 
4. And there is more, whole vast swaths of our community RantWoman wishes were represented...
 
But enough! Come to the Event!

Thursday, April 10, 2014

Disability Rights to be part of Civil Rights Summit at LBJ Library

Important Announcement from American Council of the Blind Policy Advocate Eric Bridges

From: Eric Bridges
Sent: Tuesday, April 08, 2014 10:50 AM
Subject:Discussion of Disability Rights to be Part of Civil Rights Summit at LBJ Library

Last week the disability community was dismayed to learn that a summit to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the signing of the Civil Rights Act would not include us. The letter below was crafted to communicate our deep concerns with the LBJ Library that issues pertaining to disability would not
be discussed. Here it is.

April 4, 2014

Mark Updegrove
Director of LBJ Presidential Library

Dear Mr. Updegrove:

The National Disability Leadership Alliance (NDLA) is a national cross-disability coalition that represents the authentic voice of people with disabilities. NDLA is led by 14 national organizations run by people with disabilities with identifiable grassroots constituencies around thecountry.

In 2015, NDLA, as well as disability organizations and people with disabilities around the country will celebrate the 25th anniversary of the signing of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) by President George H.W. Bush.  The ADA is considered the key civil rights legislation that protects and empowers 52 million people with disabilities living in the United States.  Yet, unlike the other groups, people with disabilities have been excluded from meaningful participation in the LBJ Civil Rights Summit, which celebrates the 50th Anniversary of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

Though the disability community has landmark civil rights protections, people with disabilities still face unnecessary segregation in institutions, discrimination in housing at a rate higher than any other minority group, exclusion from transportation initiatives, and legalized subminimum wage earnings.    On a day-to-day basis individuals with disabilities and disability organizations fight against these injustices through public awareness, advocacy, direct action, legislation, and litigation. 

In many ways, the disability experience reflects the experience of other marginalized groups (people of color, women, immigrants, the LGBTQ Community) that have won civil rights protections but continue to fight today for the enforcement and implementation of those rights.

When asked by the media about this omission, you wrote, "There is little lingering legislative debate about ADA-it is unquestionably the law of the land. The Summit is tackling the issues that are directly relevant to the bills signed by LBJ or that are still open civil rights issues legislatively." 

Your comment fails to recognize ADA litigation across the United States aimed toward enforcing the Olmstead Supreme Court Decision which ruled that the unnecessary institutionalization of people with disabilities is a form of discrimination.  The comment fails to recognize efforts in New York City to make all taxis accessible so that New Yorkers with disabilities will have transportation options equal to taxi users without disabilities.  The comment fails to recognize legislative efforts to
eliminate Section 14c of the Fair Labor Standards Act, which legalizes subminimum wage for people with disabilities.  Perhaps most damaging, the comment delegates the disability community to outsider status.  The community is no stranger to outsider status, but it is deplorable to be positioned there by members of the civil rights community.

As with the other civil and human rights included in the LBJ Summit, the disability rights movement was motivated by movement that led to the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.  We have a saying, "Nothing About Us Without Us."  With this in mind, we implore the Summit to include disability rights advocates as speakers at the Civil Rights Summit.

Sincerely,

The National Disability Leadership Alliance

The National Disability Leadership Alliance:  NDLA is a coalition led by 14 national organizations run by people with disabilities with identifiable grassroots constituencies around the country. The steering committee of NDLA includes ADAPT, the American Association of People with Disabilities, the American Council of the Blind, the Autistic Self Advocacy Network, the Hearing Loss Association of America, Little People of America, the National Association of the Deaf, the National Coalition of Mental Health Consumer Survivor Organizations, the National Council on Independent Living, the National Federation of the Blind, Not Dead Yet, Self Advocates Becoming Empowered, and the United Spinal Association.


After the letter was sent Mr. Updegrove communicated with NDLA that he was receiving pressure from other minority groups that weren't going to be included. After much hand-ringing, I am pleased to report that Lex Frieden, who played an integral role in the development, passage and implementation of the Americans with Disabilities Act, (ADA) has been invited and accepted to speak on a panel discussion on social justice at 2:05pm central, Thursday April 10th immediately following the keynote speech by President Barack Obama.  Lex will join former Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin; humanitarian Maria Shriver; athlete and philanthropist David Robinson; and businessman  Steve Stoute on the panel.  Lex will talk about the linkage of the ADA with the Civil Rights Act of 1964, why disability rights are civil rights and how the discrimination faced by people with disabilities is similar to that faced by people of color, women and LGBT individuals.

Lex will emphasize how important community integration is to the over 50 million people with disabilities living in the US today. Under immense national pressure from disability rights advocates to include disability rights as part of the Civil Rights Summit celebrating the Civil Rights Act of 1964, Mark Updegrove, Director of the LBJ Library and main organizer of the Summit personally reached out to Lex Frieden and invited him to participate on the social justice panel as a civil and disability rights activist.

This panel like the rest of the Summit will be live streamed. Stay tuned for information on how to watch it live.

Eric
Eric Bridges
American Council of the Blind
Director of External Relations and Policy
ebridges@acb.org
Learn more about us at www.acb.org <http://www.acb.org/>
Follow us on Twitter at @acbnational
Like us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/AmericanCounciloftheBlindOfficial

Saturday, January 25, 2014

Different Views column: Macular Degeneration

From time to time people ask RantWoman things about eye conditions other than her own. RantWoman tries to be nice, but her first reaction frequently is "you can use the search engine of your choice as well as RantWoman can." RantWoman realizes that many people older and even also the same age or younger than RantWoman actually do not like search engines. This is why we also use alternative methods....

But RantWoman, what are good search terms? I don't WANT all 18 gazuillion petabytes per second of information zinging around the interwebs dumped out all over my desk.

Here is a nice article about macular degeneration. The article is nice to RantWoman's eye in that it contains LOTS of basic terminology and some symptoms of the condition. If you are suffering these symptoms, please consult an ophthalmologist. Don't just self-diagnose or even take RantWoman's word for it. Ask someone who gets paid to know what he or she is doing. But if you just need search terms to get started.

And if you want to show you are interested in RantWoman's opinions or are trying to figure out things to ask a loved one about things they might be experiencing, a really nice way to do that is to ask about RantWoman's experience. RantWoman is not modest and SOMETIMES likes talking about herself. Plus RantWoman enjoys hearing about other people's interests so RantWoman can sometimes phrase questions in terms of something the person does all the time. Well, sometimes.

January 2014      Macular Degeneration

Crash, and the glass full of water fell to the floor.  "I thought the glass was farther from me," Richard said as he started to clean up the mess.  After the same thing occurred again, he decided he  better move his hand very slowly until he felt the glass, when sitting at the table.

One day at work he noticed the printed lines on the document he was working on were not straight as they should be.  That afternoon while driving home he found the center line in the middle of the road was crooked and not straight.  "Who painted this line?  I wonder what his problem was," he mused.
A few weeks later at Richard's annual eye checkup the doctor said, "You have early Macular Degeneration."

Macular degeneration effects up to 10 million Americans and is so commonly associated with aging that it is known as "age related macular degeneration," or AMD.
AMD is the leading cause of vision loss in those older than age 50.  Itoccurs due to a deterioration of the macula, a tiny spot in the centralportion of the retina, comprised of millions of light-sensing cells that help produce central vision. As we age, these light-sensitive photoreceptors in the
macula may become thin, worn or damaged and covered with tiny hyaline
deposits known as drusen. This can cause objects directly in front of you to
appear blurry and lack in detail. When looking at a face, an AMD patient may
only see the ears clearly- the face is a blur.

Dry macular degeneration occurs because of a thinning in the tissues in the
macula and a dysfunction in the light- sensitive cells. This initially
produces subtle vision loss, such as a fuzzy appearance of objects and
eventually blank spots over the eye's central vision.

Wet macular degeneration is characterized by the development of abnormal
blood vessels in the area between your  retina and a layer of supporting
tissues behind it. As these blood vessels leak fluid, they damage retinal
cells. Over the course of time scar tissue forms creating a blind spot in
the center of your vision. Although wet AMD occurs in only about 10 percent
of cases, it's responsible for nearly 90 percent of severe vision loss from this disease.

Age and heredity appear to be the main cause, although gender and race
appear to play a role. Women are more likely than men to get AMD and it
affects about one in nine Caucasians between ages 65 to 74 and approximately
one in four older than age 75 but is uncommon in Asians, African-Americans,
and American Indians.

Some risk factors are Long-term exposure to ultraviolet light, low blood
levels of minerals and antioxidant vitamins, such as A, C and E, cigarette smoking,
heart disease, high cholesterol and other circulatory problems. A diet rich
in partially hydrogenated fats, such as those found in margarine and many
snack foods may also play a part.

AMD develops gradually and painlessly. In dry AMD, one may notice a gradual
haziness in vision, colors appear to be more dim, a blind spot in the center
of the visual field, and printed words become increasingly blurry. In
advanced cases, faces and printed words may become hard to recognize

In wet AMD you may notice visual distortions, such as straight lines
appearing wavy, and sudden decreased central vision

There are steps you can take that may increase your chances of preventing
AMD or slow its advancement.  A diet rich in fruits, vegetables and other
foods containing antioxidant vitamins A, C and E is believed to help prevent
AMD. Good sources of these nutrients include deep green, yellow and orange
vegetables such as cabbage, broccoli, chard, spinach, squash, cantaloupe, mango and sweet potatoes.
Some researchers also suspect that food containing lutein and zeaxanthin
found in high concentrations in egg yolks, corn and spinach may be
beneficial. Many experts recommend at least five servings of vegetables each
day. Some research suggests that zinc-rich foods such as fish and legumes
may also offer a protective effect.

In a study published in the October 2001 issue of Archives of Ophthalmology, researchers found that people at high risk of developing advanced stages ofAMD lowered their risk by about 25 percent when they consumed a daily supplement rich invitamins C and E, beta-carotene and zinc.
Orange, yellow, or amber-tinted sun glasses can filter out both ultraviolet and blue lightthat may damage your retina.  Smokers are two to three times more likely to develop AMD compared to non-smokers.

Early detection of macular degeneration is the key to preventing serious vision loss. If you're older than age 50, yearly eye exams are recommended, especially if you have a family history of AMD. Eye exams are very important for they can detect early changes in your vision that may otherwise be difficult to detect.

Ernie Jones
Author of Onesimus the Run /away Slave
Encouraging The blind
Greater love hath no man then this

Saturday, December 21, 2013

Next time you're about to Hippie Hate....

RantWoman finds this item deeply amusing. People have heaped all sorts of hippie-themed opprobrium on RantWoman so she is especially grateful to laugh very hard about this item. Warning contains references to sex and drugs and rock and roll.

Friday, November 22, 2013

Missed When Gone; Misfits with Guns, Metro

RantWoman is playing this wonderful Irish Gaelic version of "The Cups Song / You're gonna miss me when I'm Gone" in honor of the 50th anniversary of the Kennedy assassination? The kennedys are Irish after all and keeping Irish Gaelic alive is awesome no matter who does it.

The Cup Song - 'You're Gonna Miss Me When I'm Gone'

Um, no. It's nice the Cups Song showed up in RantWoman's media stream on the fiftieth anniversary of the Kennedy Assassination. But RantWoman is not really playing the Cups Song for the Kennedy Assassination.

RantWoman was two, probably still in diapers and learning to wear glasses when Kennedy was assassinated. RantWoman is doing the historical walkback along with everyone else. RantWoman is grateful the radio walkback included meetings with A Phillip Randolph and Cong. John Lewis, a speech before a Mexican American group in Dallas, and an excursion to visit Lee Harvey Oswald's days as a misfit in Minsk before he joined the ranks of the maladjusted with guns, an interview with the police officer handcuffed to Oswald when Oswald was shot.

A friend old enough to remember and to remember even her very Republican family being transfixed went with RantWoman on a telephone tour of the sights and smells of other searing circumstances: fierce hurricanes, the city of NY after 9/11, all the tear gas dumped in downtown Seattle during WTO. So RantWoman is not really thinking of the Kennedy Assassination. For both local public and personal reasons, RantWoman is thinking ahead a few days to the anniversary of two awful bus events years and awhole continent apart.

The first, as far as RantWoman knows in words, never mind RantWoman feeling a punch in the gut from hundreds of miles away, was all unfavorable physics and lousy visibility and Blind Roommate, 5 feet tall, crossing the street in front of a bus at dusk. Apparently, according to Blind Roommate's parents, unfavorable physics and perhaps engineering issues had occurred before in the same location, but there was no single malevolent actor attached to the tragedy. So now we just play the Cups Song, though if it were in Turkish, that might better fit Blind Roommate and her family.

The other bus episode on RantWoman's mind is the year a gunman fatally shot a bus driver on Seattle's Aurora Bridge and then shot himself. The bus plunged off the bridge and fatally injured another passenger.

Readers who need the full trauma spelled out are invited to use their own search engines, but here are some sample links:

History Link
http://www.historylink.org/index.cfm?DisplayPage=output.cfm&File_Id=734


A nice sarcastic blog post
http://stalkingseattle.blogspot.com/2012/06/aurora-bridge-bus-shooting.html

The New York Times
http://www.nytimes.com/1998/11/29/us/seattle-shooting-and-bus-crash-investigated-as-murder-suicide.html


As long as we are on the subject of misfits with guns and Metro drivers, a couple links from events a few months ago:

http://www.seattlepi.com/local/article/Metro-bus-driver-shot-in-downtown-Seattle-4725721.php

http://seattletimes.com/html/localnews/2021599613_busshootingxml.html

Maybe it's not fair to rate bus drivers getting shot at by passengers right up there in memorial importance with the assassination of a President, but there are more bus drivers to shoot at than Presidents and it's still WAY too easy for misfits and the mentally ill to buy guns. So for today, play the Cups Song again for everyone who needs to be remembered, remember, and try to think about ways to keep mentally ill people from getting guns.

Saturday, August 24, 2013

March on Washington, 50 and counting

RantWoman has been trying for a few days to corral some reflections about the 50th Anniversary of the famous March on Washington where Martin Luther King  delivered his I have a dream speech.

For visuals of the original March, RantWoman thinks one could do worse than this wonderful Cosby show episode.
http://www.tv.com/shows/the-cosby-show/the-march-6849/

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0547087/

Alas, at this point, RantWoman is stuck on some personal family reflections. A RantWoman eye, fog and blur snapshot of the March on Washington for Jobs Peace and Freedom


Look world, if you are not interested in wandering through RantWoman's mental attic and psychic amusement park, please feel free to look for much better quality reflections on this year's march and themes, you could do a lot worse than the hashtag #realizethedream.
Here for instance is an item with multiple further links by Martin Luther King speechwriter Vincent Harding.
http://www.afsc.org/friends/realizing-dream-conversation-vincent-harding


If you linger, thank you for your attention.

1963 March on Washington for Jobs, Peace, Freedom
The Rant Family lived in Gunnison CO. RantDad was a college music professor. RantWoman was a toddler, probably still in diapers. RantBrother was an even more toddly toddler Little Sister was not on the scene yet.. The RantFamily was nowhere near getting our first television; RantWoman will ask RantMom whether she remembers ANYTHING from media about the March; RantWoman suspects not, although "Hello Americans, this is Paul Harvey" looms as a possibility..

RantWoman either just had or was about to have her first eye surgery. RantWoman would get her first pair of glasses on Halloween; RantMom says the surgery alone did not seem to make much difference but once RantWoman got glasses, RantWoman was so taken that RantMom would have to pry the glasses off RantWoman's face for things like naps.


1973 A 10-year anniversary march?
RantWoman has NO idea whether there was a 10-year anniversary march. The RantFamily lived in MT. By then the RantFamily had progressed to our second or third television, and maybe even a color one.
RantWoman spent the summer babysitting for a Future Broadcaster who was the exact same age--to the day--as Little Sister. RantWoman thinks the TV at Future Broadcaster's house was color. It was the summer of the Watergate hearings. MAJOR bordom factor that even color TV could not improve. Future Broadcaster spent the summer staging gameshows. Seventh Grade loomed on the horizon for RantWoman.


1983 20th anniversary, March for Jobs, Peace Freedom
http://www.irehr.org/about-irehr/irehr-impact/itemlist/tag/March%20on%20Washington%20for%20Jobs,%20Peace%20and%20Freedom
RantWoman was living in our nation's capital, "selling the nuclear freeze door to door" for a now long-defunct organization with a proud history called SANE, exploring her visions of social betterment, having inner and out dialogues about feminism, racism, and more forms of deep peacemaking than lobbying against the MX missile.

Somewhere over the summer RantWoman signed up to volunteer for something at the 20th Anniversary March. RantWoman remembers that the day of the March was hot and steamy as our nation's capital all too often is. RantWoman remembers helping instruct charter bus drivers about where to park in some park on the S side of the Potomac about midway down the Mall. RantWoman remembers that protest garb was WAY less Sunday best that the pictures RantWoman has seen of the original march. RantWoman has NO memory of hearing any speeches. RantWoman has a yellow and blue T-shirt in her moldering collection of protest T-shirts from the March. Somehow RantWoman still finds it inspiring to have the T-shirt.


2013 50th Anniversary March for Jobs, Peace, Freedom.
Hey WAIT A MINUTE! Where did those 30 years go? Never mind.

RantWoman's preferred media streem will be Twitter, especially if her Android tablet of experimentation and exasperation decides to work properly.

RantWoman now lives in Seattle, Martin Luther King County, just off Martin Luther King Way S, formerly known as Empire Way S. RantWoman is leaving further research and free association about the significance of said name changes to her readers.
RantWoman keeps the spirit of the march alive, among other ways,...talking with RantMom about the Bus, #kcmetrobus. RantMom moved to Seattle and decided urban traffic would be TOO MUCH and quit driving. RantMom sometimes does not realize that African Americans of her age probably still remember segregation and RantMom is less suave about negotiating the world of the "courtesy section" than RantWoman would wish anyway. Can readers imagine the opportunities for, um, dialogue?

Seventh grade looms on the horizon--for Irrepressible Nephew. RantWoman dabbled in reflections on feminism and racism and then got distracted by the tale of RantWoman's first and possibly last effort to take Irrepressible Nephew to any kind of march. Just when Irrepressible Nephew was at a size where Wonder Auntie could still carry him at least a few feet,

it came to be time for Seattle's annual Martin Luther King Day march. Irrepressible Nephew had a friend, the daughter of one of Little Sister's co-workers. Friend, her mother, and her grandmother agreed to meet RantWoman and Irrepressible Nephew at the start of the march. Irrepressible Nephew was decidedly unimpressed; RantWoman quickly realized it would have been better to prep the kid at least a little first. The march set out. Irrepressible Nephew quickly started making bored noises. Walk a few feet with friend and her entourage. More bored noises. And so on for several blocks.

Finally, the march was about to crest the final hill where Irrepressible Nephew had a sense of being able easily to walk home. Irrepressible Nephew announced he would go no further. He wanted to go home and watch Kim Possible. He laid down on the sidewalk and WOULD NOT MOVE. That is Irrepressible Nephew staged a sit-down strike to get out of a march commemorating the birth of a famous African American civil rights leader and organizer of sit-ins in order to...go home and watch a TV show about a female superhero. It was all RantWoman could do to maintain some kind of Sensible Auntie visage and avoid cracking up as we headed back to Irrepressible Nephew's house.

RantWoman missed last week's Seattle commemorative march. It was not because RantWoman went to #hempfest But RantWoman presents the endpoint of the march.

RantWoman would LIKE to go look for some meaningful art verbiage because RantWoman would really like to understand why a great civil rights leader with a truly prophetic voice got memorialized in Seattle with something that looks to RantWoman like the aliens have landed.


Seattle Martin Luther King Memorial monument



A search string for some videos off historylink

http://www.history.com/topics/martin-luther-king-jr/videos#condoleeza-rice-remembers-mlk

in honor of RantWoman's fascination with Condolezza Rice.

Saturday, April 20, 2013

Letter from the Birmingham Jail turns 50

Who knew? This is the 50th anniversary of Martin Luther king's Letter from the Birmingham Jail:

http://forusa.org/blogs/billscheurer/christian-churches-together-response-martin-luther-king-jrs-letter-birmingham

Definitely several layers of links to put on RantWoman's Mean to read list.

Monday, October 22, 2012

Levitation

RantWoman and RantMom dined together last night.

One occasion was the RantBrother's 50th birthday. Another was the 50th anniversary of the Cuban Missile Crisis. Guess which one was a bigger deal to RantMom!

RantWoman has been thinking of anniversaries today just in time for a 45th anniversary to leap into mind.

http://wagingnonviolence.org/2012/10/the-day-they-levitated-the-pentagon/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+WagingNonviolence+%28Waging+Nonviolence%29

RantWoman is especially deeply amused by the detail that those organizing this spectacle were able to secure a permit by scaling back their plans: instead of levitating the Pentagon 300 feet, the group only committed to three feet.

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

RantMom Teacher

RantWoman is deeply touched.

The RantParents RantMom and RantDad, may he rest in peace, met as smooching schoolteachers in Absaroke MT lo several decades ago. RantMom taught Science and Home Economics; RantDad taught music and English. This data is intended to students identify the couple but RantMom is a bit of an internet novice and RantWoman is reluctant to diminish her electronic privacy with her full name.



Anyway, RantWoman is deeply touched: the Absaroke MT class of 1962 is holding its 50th reunion and one of the classmates called RantMom up recently to invite her to attend. Bear in mind, RantMOm quit public school teaching in 1961 shortly before giving birth to RantWoman. RantWoman is wondering whehter any of the students remember RantMom being pregnant. What was RantMom like as a teacher? What do you remember most from your classes with her? RantWoman is especially intrigued by the question, what was it like to have RantMom for a teacher while the future RantWoman was busy kicking her in the stomach?

RantWoman will definitely encourage RantMom to send in greetings and reminiscences. On the off chance that anyone from this reunion reads this blog and recognizes their teacher, RantWoman would greatly enjoy reminiscences left as comments.

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

UnChristmas UnBirthday Holiday Procrastination Party

It’s an Un-Christmas, Un-Birthday
Finally Getting Around to Admitting I’m 50
Holiday Procrastination Party.

You and anyone you want to bring are invited.

Wednesday December 28, 2011
4:30-8:30 pm
University Friends Meeting,
4001 9th Avenue NE, 98105

I will supply popcorn, spiced cider and other beverages.
I hope my guests will supply:

--potluck supper, 6 pm: leftovers are fine with me

--singing! There is a piano and some song books. Other instruments welcome. I know lots of people from different parts of my life who like to sing. Enough said

--confessions and exclamations about something you have not gotten around to this month, this year, this lifetime.

Ice-breaker Theme: Been There. Done That. Got the T-shirt.
Please wear a favorite T-shirt and be prepared to tell and listen to T-Shirt tales.

Children are welcome. Singing and storytelling are intended to be all-ages. Children might also want to bring a small item to amuse themselves.

Please DO NOT Bring Alcoholic beverages!

I just want to have a party and gifts are NOT required! However I have not gotten around to letting others help celebrate a half century of my life and I am definitely old enough to be persnickety. If people want to offer gifts for the occasion I am shamelessly offering clear instructions about things I want / need.

-- If you want to spend less than $5, I would love to have bulk spices or favorite salsa, teas or chocolate, in increments costing $5 or less. I also need some new mugs and have not gotten around to checking out options at Goodwill.

--If you want to spend $5-10, I really need a couple items that cost more than this but I would be happy to help people collaborate.

--If you want to spend $10 or more or want a tax deduction, please write a check to the UFM Building Fund.

Look, I know the party starts during work hours for some people. It’s cold and dark and wintry and some people in my life turn into pumpkins early. This party will likely include guests interested in digital inclusion, accessibility, language access, walkability and pedestrian life, transportation, social services, health care reform, and a host of other topics. So tell the boss it’s networking, and if you are the boss…

There is parking on the north side of the building. There is also a paid lot on the east side of 9th Ave NE, slightly north of the Friends Meeting

Send a note if you need more detailed walking directions from nearby bus stops than you can get off the trip planner

The ACCESS stop is on 9th Avenue NE near the level section of the entryway that is most wheelchair accessible.

Monday, November 28, 2011

The Glamourous Life of the Work at Home Set

RantWoman is unsure whether her readers will be amused by this account of the glamourous life of the work at home set. Still, it rattling away at the keyboard sounds like more fun than some "shoulds" on RantWoman's mind. More to the point, rriting this blog post is actually going to wind up on the critical path of some things RantWoman needs to get done today. That is one reason RantWoman is even permitting her ever-wandering mind to digress in the directions it wants to digress to.

An especially soggy day in the life of RantWoman.
Wake up the first time. Use the bathroom. Wash the Queen of Spades' water dish and refill. Wash and dry her food dish and deliver her morning half scoop of cat crunchies.

Go back to bed until public radio wakes RantWoman up again. Wake up to sound of Queen of Spades retching. The Queen of Spades gets embarrassed about her digestive distress and RantWoman feels obliged to murmur reassuringly when it happens. RantWoman is also peculiarly grateful when the Queen of Spades at least pukes someplace where RantWoman can easily find and clean up the results.

Use the bathroom again and clean up after the Queen of Spades.

Do RantWoman's morning stretching and strength training routine.

Throw an old denim jumper over RantWoman's sleepwear, slipper socks and indoor sandals on RantWoman's feet. Today's commute is from kitchen to desk so sartorial standards and footwear are fine for now.

Sit down at computer. Computer monitor is ailing so RantWoman's reboot / startup rituals are a dance worthy of another post.

A container of oatmeal from the batch RantWoman cooked a couple days ago from the fridge for breakfast with tea, vitamins.

Start through two streams of email. Delete the obvious spam.

Read a couple items from other people who have experienced in vision loss. Be soothed or something that other people are distressed by the same issues vexing RantWoman. Write Thank you eamil to list for solidarity.

Have a couple rounds of hiss and swat with the Queen of Spades. The Queen of Spades is really good at patrolling from RantWoman's desk for pigeons who DARE to land on her window ledge, but today the Queen of Spades is mainly interested in sleeping next to the warm air stream from the computer fan. This would be fine but she sometimes gets territorial about RantWoman's hands and the keyboard.

Take phone call from Little Sister. Today is one of the mornings when the Rant Sisters can phone fairly freely. Little Sister is being preremptorily fluttered about holidays but for a welcome change made RantWoman laugh hard a couple times.

Go back to email.

Succumb to temptation to try to collaborate with retailer's sweepstake exercise. Find so many reasons to be frustrated that RantWoman opts to stop and blog about it.
http://rantwoman.blogspot.com/2011/11/wish-this.html

Stop a couple times mid-post for more tea and a trip to the bathroom.

Notice that the Queen of Spades has also puked, more extravagantly than average in a long stream on the bedroom floor. Clean up after the Queen of Spades and mumble soothingly in her direction.

Consider the vet for two pukings in one day. Consider empty wallet. Consider emailing Cat Maniac friend for tips. Cat Maniac friend is another work from home language professional; she took up working from home years ago when severe allergies made it impossible for her to continue her college teaching. RantWoman occasionally consults Cat Maniac friend about extremely technical vocabulary, the kind one needs a PhD in chemical physics for. Cat Maniac friend consults RantWoman about matters of culture or of idiom where studying the language more than the science makes a difference. Cat Maniac friendtypes about a zillion words per minute. She can always drench RantWoman with a firehose of information flow. RantWoman is not up to being drenched at the moment so just keep an eye on the Queen of Spades.

Finish blog post about online retailer and take a break.

Look at clock and realize it's too late for one excursion that was on the maybe list anyway and for a phone call RantWoman owes someone.

Decide to eat lunch chicken rice vegetable soup taken from the freezer a couple days ago.

--Go outside to check weather and garden on balcony. Chives and parsley are raggedy but still growing after cold spell. Spy last cherry tomato still on thicket of tomato plants. RantWoman is absurdly happy that the eight or so tomatoes her plants grew from last year's seeds are eight more than some other friends got in an actual in-ground garden. The last tomato is finally ripe and VERY tasty. RantWoman appreciates the plant life and dirt therapy but is VERY glad not to have to subsist on what she grows.

Realize there are good reasons to forward rant about online retailer to eager you former staffperson at the Friendly Neighborhood Center for Extreme Computing who just got a job at the very online retailer RantWoman was blogging about. Compose and send said email.

Digress to the new Bus Chick item in blogroll.
http://www.buschick.com/?p=4420
Busling is a toddler. The item is a picture of, RantWoman thinks, a teenager. RantWoman is missing something.

Read Bus Chick's This I believe Essay! Yeah Bus Chick!
http://thisibelieve.org/essay/13074/

Back to email. Add a networking / disability access Meet and greet on behalf of the Friendly Neighborhood Center... to RantWoman's calendar. Compose email about the think out of the box approach to the requested mentoring option that occurred to RantWoman in connection with the networking opportunity.

Realize there are some other items in the inbox that, as long as RantWoman has her paper calendar out should get added. Bounce to something else before items get looked up.

glance at From and Subject fields from email to bling programmers list. Notice name of young guy who has grown up on the list, from typical teenager programmer to someone who can almost communicate professionally.

Glance at clock. Too late for face time with a couple people at the Friendly Neighborhood Center.

Shower. Upgrade from presentable if someone comes to the door to reasonable for going out in public.

Still to compose:
--responses to outcomes survey for the Friendly Neighborhood Center...

--motherly email to frustrated college student on blind programming list: accessibility is an eco-system. Thanks to representative of major vendor. Work with the humans you have both on campus and with vendors. This is RantWoman's view from long-ago life in academic tech support.

--email to corporate rep from above email. He mentioned doing consultation with a couple international companies and RantWoman wants to see whether there might be a chance he could play a role as blind language professionals try to get the right combination of expertise into an accessibility conversation so that a key product gets and stays accessible across new versions.

--email to person who just got appointed to FCC Diversity panel. Email is about how RantWoman thinks work-at-home phone interpeters such as those RantWoman interacts with on an online discussion list have some of the same consistent telecommunications performance needs on an individual level as RantWoman absorbed from listening to Boeing CIO about corporate level at an FCC hearing awhile ago. Maybe add some other comments about Work at Home and disabled people.

Digress to email from language professionals list. A youtube item RantWoman has viewed previously. Among other topical points, an example of economics of in-person vs remote interpreting. The payment terms in teh video are for expert in-person interpreting; people who interpret over the phone or video relay are usually paid by the minute. That scenario also has specific requirements as far as telecomm infrastructure. Video nicely captioned which is a good thing since it's about a sign-language interpreter.
http://alboum.com/2011/08/a-day-in-the-life-of-a-cancelled-interpreter/

Read the first of an email chain about using iPhones or iPad for accessible voting in Kitsap County. It's a twofer: it mentions both accessibility and language access so RantWoman is going to have to look up how the language access is accomplished.

Work on deciding which of two impossible to get paid for IT research projects RantWoman wants to take on next...

Sunday, September 11, 2011

Seattle Area Readings: An Authentic Translation of the I Ching

RantWoman heartily endorses and commends to her readers' attention the following wonderful new book and series of readings coming up this week in the Seattle area.

RantWoman especially recommends this book because it is the first translation of the I Ching by a woman. RantWoman had the privilege of meeting the author this morning and is impressed by the breadth of her scholarship and the slightly understated firmness she brings to comments about really key characters in the original Chinese being female rahter than male. RantWoman is pretty sure that better scholars of Chinese and Chinese history than RantWoman will find much of interest, much to digest and interrogate.

Readers who also need their daily quota of RantWoman ranting and rambling are invited to scroll to the bottom.

The Original I Ching.
An Authentic Translation of the Chinese Book of Changes
by Margaret J. Pearson, Tuttle Publishing, 2011.

My book is designed to help people navigate change which living with kindness and courage in a world
which can be perilous for those committed to living with integrity.
For September 11, 2011, Hexagram 11 PEACE (depicting earth above sky)

Translation:
Sky and earth interact: the image of peace. Thus the queen guides the natural
forces of both sky and earth, assisting them into harmony by
[gathering] the people to her right and left.
Explanation: As earth and sky interact with one another; all things are
created. This kind of peace is the reverse of immobility. Instead it
is a time when those above are receptive to those beneath them, so
that creativity rises up in abundance. When mother, teacher, manager,
or leader hears and heeds her children, students, or co-workers, she
acts as a life-giving refuge which provides protection to new lives
when they are as vulnerable as fledglings or new kings. Only the
greatest leaders are capable of the self-restraint and generosity
required for true receptivity to those beneath them. But such leaders
gain a realistic, nuanced picture of the realities they face and
elicit sincere and creative loyalty. Authoritarian rulers, listening
only to sycophants, quash creativity and real loyalty, bringing
destruction to their people. Because Mao refused to listen to those
who brought unwelcome news of bad harvests during the Great Leap
Forward, millions perished.
Peace here is not static, not everyone stuck in their “proper
places,” but out of their usual places and therefore moving towards
one another. Here earth, the receptive, lies above the creative,
usually associated with the sky above. It is because leaders are
willing to be humble and their subordinates dare to create that a
fecund peace can be attained.

Compare to hexagram 12, sky above earth: stagnation.
Seattle area readings
From The Original I Ching.
An Authentic Translation of
the Chinese Book of Changes
by Margaret J. Pearson,
Tuttle Publishing, 2011.

September 15 at 7pm, signing and talk, no cost to attend or need to RSVP
East West Bookshop of Seattle
6500 Roosevelt Way NE
Seattle, WA 98115
206-523-3726
800-587-6002

September 16 at 7pm, signing and talk, no cost to attend or need to RSVP
University Bookstore
4326 University Way NE
Seattle, WA 98105
206.634.3400
Toll Free: 1.800.335.READ

September 19 at 7pm, signing and talk, no cost to attend or need to RSVP
Third Place Books
17171 Bothell Way NE
Lake Forest Park, WA 98155
206.366.3333
http://www.thirdplacebooks.com/


RantWoman needs to express vexation: as far as RantWoman knows, the book is only available in print, no electronic formats and RantWoman did not think to ask about some usual distribution streams for materials for the blind. RantWoman is aware that distribution in electronic formats comes with economic hassles for authors and small publishers but RantWoman is still vexed.

RantWoman has eyeballs enough to scrape over about a page or two at a time, especially in the typeface used by the book. RantWoman has a CCTV to enlarge the pages but it is ergonomically so uncomfortable to deal with that RantWoman has to steel herself to use it.

RantWoman can interact with the whole subject of human readers. RantWoman confesses, though, despite several years of experience with this midlife vision meltdown thing, RantWoman still has really not overcome her childhood association of being read aloud to with bedtime and falling asleep. Strange as it seems to some, RantWoman finds computer speech easier to stay awaked with because RantWoman can typically tweak speed and voice characteristics in various ways to enhance comprehension and increase the likelihood that RantWoman will stay awake.

RantWoman's personal experience with the I Ching is limited to some kind of reference in a book RantWoman remembers basically as Hippies 101. Based on where RantWoman knows she was living when this occurred, this would have been when RantWoman was about 10 or 11. RantWoman remembers for some reason thinking any more interaction would have been just too much. RantWoman has a few friends whose study of and experience with the I Ching is considerably more encyclopedic. RantWoman's point: in this, RantWoman's fiftieth year, finally RantWoman is charmed enough by the new book ans the author's insights about history and translation that she is going to have to try to overcome one or more of her reading whines to read at least some of this book!