LAND OF RELIGIOUS PLENTY

MARCH 10, 2021 – Where I grew up, sometimes you’d run into a kid who went to Mt. Olivet Missouri Synod Lutheran Church, hidden on our side of town; the Baptist Church, standing across from Monty’s Pure Oil at Main and Ferry; the Congregational Church, sitting modestly behind Anoka Junior High School; the understated Methodist …

PRETENDING TO BE ATOP TUCKERMAN’S

MARCH 9, 2021 – On today’s local news the youthful forecaster cheerfully promised bright sunshine and record high temperatures. Mercury’s already flying high—well above 40. My main concern is . . . over the past 24 hours, how much snow has disappeared from my remaining run in nearby “Little Switzerland”? Yesterday, before the sun got …

JACK ‘N JILL

MARCH 8, 2021 – Until my wife and I watched The Crown on Netflix, British royalty was barely a blip on my radar (See 2/24/21 post). By the end of the series, however, the blip was a battleship. Then came last night’s airing of Oprah’s interview of Harry and Meghan. My wife and I watched …

THE ANTI-SOCIAL DILEMMA

MARCH 6, 2021 – PING! I checked my phone—a message on WhatsApp. Since I’m connected with only three people on that Facebook-owned app, by easy deduction I knew the text was from our son Byron. “If you are looking for an interesting documentary [. . .],” it read. “Yes?” I replied “The Social Dilemma[.]” “Netflix?” …

RESILIENCE

MARCH5, 2021 – On August 5, 2019, I met Idris, a 27-year old Somali immigrant who made an immediate positive impression. The next day, I wrote about him in a blog post (I’d misspelled his name, adding an extra “s.”). Yesterday, Idris called out of the blue.  I was delighted to hear from him, and …

SWISSKI

MARCH 4, 2021 – As my closest friends (and imaginary psychologist) know, for years my exercise regimen involves a weekly quota of a mile of vertical feet—stairs and hiking or skiing uphill. This works out to 750 feet a day, plus an extra 30 feet (called “leap feet”) per week. Much of my climbing occurs …

IF I RAN THE ZOO (or “Yankin’ the Yink”)

MARCH 3, 2021 -The big news on an otherwise slow news day: six Seuss classics banned for life. My reaction?  Hmm. I’m an acknowledged American “leftist” (the equivalent of center-right in much of good ol’ Europe), and anyone reading my posts knows how I feel about the need for racial justice in the Disunited States …

“FOLLOWERSHIP”

MARCH 2, 2021 – Yesterday, while walking home from my skiing, I pondered material for today’s post. A fertile patch: news items I’d scrolled through an hour before, just before heading out the door. One story in particular was Sunday’s CPAC appearance by you-know-who and a statement by South Dakota Governor Noem that “We aren’t …

IN A STATE OF SKATE

FEBRUARY 28, 2021 – Though my dad was athletic, he was not into sports.  In fact, he openly despised our culture’s obsession with sports. But he loved to ice skate, and he did so with perfection. Each year he’d drive the family 20 miles down the (Mississippi) River Road to Powderhorn Park in Minneapolis, where a …

WHEN WILL IT “BE DONE”?

FEBRUARY 27, 2021 – Yesterday evening our five-and-a-half-year-old granddaughter was working hard at a life-size drawing of “make believe” on a large sheet of paper. When I approached, she waved me off.  “You’re not allowed to look yet, Grandpa!” she said, “It’s not done yet.” Obediently, I repaired to a nearby chair to continue my …

“THE MISTAKE,” TOLD PERFECTLY

FEBRUARY 26, 2021 – I remember the story well—how Mother backed her car into a lamp post in the parking lot next to the church, bashing the bumper and trunk lid. What impressed me most, however, was Dad’s sense of humor about it. After all, Mother had managed to back into the same lamp post …

HUMANITY ON TRIAL (AGAIN)

FEBRUARY 25, 2021 – After practicing law all day, what did I do yesterday evening? I watched Nuremberg, the 2000 mini-series starring Alec Baldwin.  This cinematic experience was the inevitable sequel to my having watched Tokyo Trial.  (See my 2/23/21 post.) Despite some historical inaccuracies, Nuremberg provides a reasonably satisfactory overview of the proceedings against …

A CROWNING ACHIEVEMENT

FEBRUARY 24, 2021 – My wife and I have been watching The Crown on Netflix. I’m surprised. I’ve never been interested in British Royalty—they’re British and they’re royalty.  Besides, I’ve always thought the current members were off kilter; not up to the job.  Now I’m learning that apparently the Queen lacks a normal range of …

HUMANITY ON TRIAL

FEBRUARY 23 2021 – Recently, I watched on Netflix the four-episode, historical drama, Tokyo Trial (2016). It’s the Pacific (war) Theater counterpart to Judgment at Nuremberg (1961) and mini-series Nuremberg (2000). A Japanese-Canadian co-production, Tokyo Trial was co-directed by a Dutchman and an American and filmed mostly in . . . Lithuania.  Nominated for Best …

MATS-ÅKE’S BIRTHDAY . . . AND GEORGE’S TOO!

FEBRUARY 22, 2021 – Most likely no American outside our family knows that today is the birthday of our Swedish cousin, Mats-Åke Svensson. Sadly, I’ll bet that all too few Americans know it’s George Washington’s birthday today as well. Back when America was great, every school kid knew February 22 as Washington’s birthday.  Then in …

CAR BIZ CURIOSITY

FEBRUARY 21, 2021 – Yesterday I spent two-and-a-half hours transacting business at a car dealership. During long waits, I had no choice but to observe and ponder the goings-on around me—I can’t stand wasting time just “waiting,” which is why I take writing and reading material wherever I go, but yesterday, I’d forgotten. (Beyond a …

TEXAS TOAST

FEBRUARY 20, 2021 – Years ago I ate occasionally at the Texas Steak House—a restaurant chain where on a budget you could pretend you were in the money by eating . . . steak. The slab of beef came with extra-large fries and a piece of “Texas toast,” about two inches thick and soaked in …

PERSEVERANCE . . . ON EARTH

FEBRUARY 19, 2021 – Every day of the ski season, I observe the same routine before heading out the door, especially when it’s radically cold. It goes like this: Turn on living room TV. Run upstairs to bedroom, remove “street clothes” and put on windblock tights, grab four layers for upper body, and photo I.D. …

THE DOOR . . . AND THE HIPPOCRATIC OATH

FEBRUARY 18, 2021 – Last Monday I wiped out on skis. The issue was “boilerplate,” as my uncle used to call a patch of glare ice on a ski slope. Plus, I was on x-c skis—without sharp, metal, defensive edges. It was my first fall of the season—63 days, so far. As my left hip …

UNDERSTANDING STALIN

FEBRUARY 17, 2021 – Last December I watched a Russian TV series entitled Zhukov, the famous Red Army general who led Soviet forces to victory in WW II. Everything about the (Star Media) production—except the subtitling—was superb. (With a little imagination an Anglophone can interpret the fractured English.) Casting, acting, direction, cinematography, soundtrack—including whole-cloth musical …

“OVERCOME IGNORANCE MONTH”

FEBRUARY 16, 2021 – I have a dream that one day, every white person I’ve heard decry urban violence attributed to “Black Lives Matter” will read Taylor Branch’s Pulitzer Prize-winning Parting the Waters – America in the King Years 1954-63. Yesterday I read the 63-page chapter, “The Montgomery Bus Boycott,” a detailed account of the …

“FIGHT FOR . . . PEACE”

FEBRUARY 15, 2021 – During last week’s impeachment trial, the defense presented a montage of prominent Democrats saying “fight” in various public settings. The point was to show that Trump was being singled out unfairly. The argument fell flat, given that none of the Democrat speeches could be linked to a riot right down the …

DISHONESTY ACQUITTED

FEBRUARY 14, 2021 – During a break in the impeachment trial, I received a call from Jeff Klenk, a close college friend of mine. We’d both been observing the proceedings closely and talked earnestly about them.  As a government major during our undergraduate days, and ever since, as a serious student of political science, Jeff …