Wednesday, February 25, 2026

The Gift Of Stability!

      In the 4+ years I've been an inmate of the OFH very few of the professional staff have left. This stability of excellent staff is a great gift. Friends are ina different OFH, in an affluent neighborhood with no bus access, so securing serving staff is very difficult. Consequently, professional staff have to step in, they burnout and leave. 

    Jim, the food services director here is top notch. He retired after a successful career in commercial food service. He wasn't home long before his wife asked "Don't you have be somewhere?"  That inquiry prompted him to take the position here five years ago when the OFH opened.

   About every three months he offers a gourmet meal. Tonight's the night. The menu for tonight's La Belle Notte Gourmet Dinner: Red & White Wine, Shrimp Arancini, Italian Chopped Salad, Beef Tagliata Steak, and Tiramisu. Now for the funny part; it starts at 4:30.😂 When I asked Jim, "Why so early?" He said "That's when everyone shows up." That's proof that this indeed an Old Folks Home!

Takk for alt,

Al

Tuesday, February 24, 2026

Immigrant Gift!

      She was born in India, raised in Kenya, and now in America. A teacher at the University of Minnesota, and named after a Hindu god, Krishna. She's a goddess in my eyes, she did my dental work this morning. Seldom have I experienced a dentist as communicative as she. My preference is for female dentists, not least for their small hands in my mouth.

   The task was replacing and old crown that had corrosion around its base. Its position in the back of my mouth prohibited repair work with it in place. With the old crown removed and the tooth polished she sat down beside me to design the new one a computer screen. With our active conversation I neglected to ask about the technology constructing the crown, but, I go back next week for work on another crown.

   As we were chatting she said that the dental classroom at the University has the technology she used to design my crown. However, she said the older professors are reluctant to use it. They prefer older methods.

  Given time to talk I asked her if she wanted to hear a dental story. She said yes enthusiastically. So I told about Art, the dentist in Mohall, N.D., when I lived there. Art did some farming. One day when he was in the field, his neighbor Wesley was working in the next field. Stopping to talk across the fence Wes said, I've got a terrible toothache. Art said let me look at it. Then Art said we can fix that, lie down on your back. With his knee on Wes' chest Art pulled the tooth with his plier. Art told me the story.  

   Dr. Krishna symbolizes, for me, the value of immigrants.  

Takk for alt,

Al

Monday, February 23, 2026

A Little Smile For Your Day

 



      In the same vein as Pearls, is this quote I found while cleaning my desk.  I may have used it before but it's worth repeating. (Incidentally, Mouse, in the comic strip, is typically negative.)

 "A loving person lives in a loving world. A hostile person lives in a hostile world, everyone you meet is your mirror." Ken Keyes, Jr. 

   The ICE assault locally has scaled down leaving wreckage behind. They were randomly picking up brown and black people, one of whom, was an off duty police officer. Their behavior was a total violation of the 4th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

Amendment IV

The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.

In other words: "The Fourth Amendment originally enforced the notion that “each man’s home is his castle”, secure from unreasonable searches and seizures of property by the government. It protects against arbitrary arrests, and is the basis of the law regarding search warrantsstop-and-frisk, safety inspections, wiretaps, and other forms of surveillance, as well as being central to many other criminal law topics and to privacy law."  Cornell Law School


Takk for alt,

Al

Sunday, February 22, 2026

Rev. Jesse Jackson, 10/8/41-2/17/26 R.I.P.

      MKV forwarded this very interesting bit of Jesse Jackson history. It's a testament to what differentiated non-anxious behavior ca accomplish. Thanks, MKV, not to be confused with my other friend MJV.

Takk for alt,

Al 

During the 1983 Lebanese Civil War, Lieutenant Robert Goodman of the U.S. Navy was acting as Bombardier-Navigator on an A-6E Intruder when his plane was hit by Syrian surface-to-air defenses.

Goodman ejected. After landing, he was captured by Syrian troops. 

Naturally, the United States government wanted him back. But it soon ended up in a diplomatic deadlock. 

If Syria released Goodman, it would look like it yielded to American pressure. If the U.S. raised the pressure, it would look like escalation. With Syria and with the USSR (which was allied with Syria), during one of the tensest moments of the entire Cold War.

There was no path home for Lieutenant Goodman. 

Until Jesse Jackson stepped in.

Jackson offered to mediate. On his own. With no formal authority or license from the U.S. government.

He flew to Damascus personally. 

Syria found him credible because he was not some agent of the government strictly aligned to U.S. power and interests.

The United States found him credible because he was a widely recognized moral leader, not a political operator.

What did he say in the negotiation?

Nothing about interests, precedents, security, deterrence, alliance, escalation, quid-pro-quos, threats, concessions, or anything like that.

Something simpler. Starker. And more powerful.

He talked about the release not as a strategic consideration but as a humanitarian choice.

And because Syria would be giving Goodman up to Jackson, not to the U.S. government, it wouldn’t look like surrender. 

Jackson reframed the decision. By his presence. And by his message.

Instead of a concession to an adversary, it became an act of compassion.

On January 3, 1984, Jackson and Goodman left Syria together and came home. 

Medieval canon law had a name for what Jackson became in that room. Sanctuary.

For centuries, if you could get yourself through the doors of a church, you were untouchable. Kings, armies, it didn't matter. The institution's moral authority was so accumulated, so real, that violating it was simply unthinkable. Nobody created that power during a crisis. It was deposited slowly, over centuries, by people who weren't thinking about crises at all.

Jackson walked into Damascus as a one-man sanctuary. A space both sides could enter without it meaning anything strategically. It worked for exactly the same reason it worked in the 12th century. The authority was real because it had never been manufactured.

Every wise word you say and every principled action you take is a deposit. When the balance gets big enough, it opens doors that don't exist for anyone else.

But reputation is almost beside the point. Why was Jackson the only person who could walk into that room in the first place?

Syria couldn't place him inside their mental model of American power. He didn't fit the game. He wasn't legible to the system, and that illegibility was the whole thing. It was his most valuable asset.’

Saturday, February 21, 2026

Grace during Lent.

       Grace University Lutheran, to which I belong emails devotions to members during Advent and Lent. Contrary to Homeland Security announcements there is little sign of an ICE withdrawal from Minnesota. Today's Grace devotional reflects on the ICE occupation and attack (see below).

Saturday, February 21, 2026


The January 26, 2026, New Yorker magazine contained a poem written by Klya Kaminsky, titled “Psalm for the Slightly Tilted,” that I found particularly heartening. During this period of civil unrest, I am inspired by the extraordinary signal moms, dads, friends, & colleagues who show-up. Though they risk harm, they seek justice for our immigrant neighbors.
 
Psalm for the Slightly Tilted
by Klya Kaminsky
 
This is not
a good year.
But it has
witnesses.
 
When you see them protest the powerful,
since who else does,
they stand
like flagpoles outside the courthouse
after a northeaster.
 
They came with
the wrong shoes
for revolution.
Still,
they showed up.
 
Comfort, Lord,
their bodies –
each a question mark
doing time
as a coatrack,
hung with borrowed jackets.
 
They are your legion
of bent spoons.
They are the only ones
who showed up –
with their orthopedic flair.
 
I saw my people lean –
not toward hope but toward each other.
They chant off-rhythm
and mean it.
 
These are my kind of people:
no tears – just
steam from a kettle
that never quite boils.
 
In times like these, don’t forget us:
the lopsided
leaning on one another,
like sodden paperbacks
left out on the stoop –
Nobody opens them.
But they still insist
On carrying the plot.
 
Comfort us standing up –
half scarecrow
half saxophone
with a squawk.
While stiffness becomes state policy,
comfort us sitting –
in that collapse called calm.
 
In the year they come for us
watch my people
make protest signs
out of old pizza boxes.
Watch –
 
There are no boring people
which is unfortunate.
You’d think statistically
we’d get at least a few –
one-speed souls
with just meh stuff to do.
 
But none of them are dull.
Each 
a suitcase
held together
by duct tape.
 
These are your coffee-stained saints
who rise not with trumpets
but with Advil.
They stand
and wait
creased like maps
of a country
that doesn’t exist anymore.
 

Prayer
Dear God, we thank you for these coffee-stained saints, who chant, with whistles around their necks and with their wrong shoesborrowed jackets and pizza box protest signs. They lean on one another, lopsided, some like flagpoles, others like bent spoons, on the steps of the state capitol, at the memorials for Renee Good and Alex Pretti, and outside elementary schools. They deliver food, put signs in their windows and give to Go-Fund-Me sites.  The duct tape holding them together is your call to bear witness, to be just, to be merciful and to love all our neighbors.  Amen.

Nancy Baker

Takk for alt,

Al

Friday, February 20, 2026

An Introvert Morning!

     Last night the University of Minnesota women's basketball team took on number ten ranked Ohio State. OS has been one of their nemesis since 2016,  to whom they lost ten games in a row. The Minnesota Gophers took an eight game winning streak into the match. For the first time in years, Minnesota is nationally ranked; at #23, which seems low to this fan. Minnesota, known for defense and not turning the ball over, couldn't buy a bucket in the first half. In spite of all the misses, shots they'd normally make, they trailed by only three points at halftime.

   In the third quarter they found the basket and soon led by fourteen points. They won their 9th straight game 74-61. Take that Ohio State! Ohio plays a full court and trapping defense but it didn't give the Gophers much trouble. In Minnesota's first Big Ten League game they lost to Maryland by one point in double overtime. Their loss came as they didn't handle Maryland's pressure defense very well. Obviously the coaching staff has done good work in preparing the women for Ohio's defensive pressure. 

   This introvert had nothing scheduled this morning. As the washer and dryer hummed I watched the replay in detail and with pleasure. Many of the players on this team played in Minnesota high schools, which adds to the satisfaction as they succeed.

Takk for alt,

Al

Thursday, February 19, 2026

Today at the OFH

      Minneapolis StarTribune columnist Erik Roper and Melissa teamed up on a  history podcast. The essence of it was tracing the history of an African American couple, Harry and Clementine Robinson,  who once lived in Erik's house in south Minneapolis a century ago. The story traces the lives of the Robinsons and their lives' ups and down. The podcast Ghost of a Chance won a bronze award in the history category.

     Today Roper was the guest speaker at the OFH. He described the making of the podcast and the history of the Robinsons. In response to the podcast funds were raised to place a marker on Clementines grave in north Minneapolis. Roper's articulate presentation captured the attention and imagination of the listeners. To listen to the podcast go to the StarTribune online and type in Ghost of a Chance.

Takk for alt,

Al

PS 7.6" of snow yesterday.

Erik Roper

Heather Cox-Richardson quoted Illinois Governor J. B. Pritzker...

"Pritzker noted that Trump is making life harder for everyday Americans with tariffs that raise costs for working families and small businesses; trade wars that are devastating farmers; cuts to healthcare, nutritional assistance, and education; increased bureaucratic demands on states; and low job creation. The good news, Pritzker said, is that Illinois had managed such crises before and had found a way forward"