Category Archives: Respect

NYC Mayor Adams’s “We Are Not All Right” Rally

By | October 14, 2023

[October 14, 2023]  I’ve had doubts about NYC Mayor Eric Adams, particularly his pandering to special interest groups and missed opportunities.  But, I missed his Sunday, October 10th rally, where he made it clear that New York stands with Israel.  His remarks were made the day after the Hamas terror attacks on Israel.  He says that he not… Read More »

Letters to My Granddaughter, No. 28

By | October 11, 2023

[October 11, 2023]  The sun burned our skin, and the humidity made us feel like we were suffocating.  I remember the relentless sun, incessant bugs, circling buzzards (lots of buzzards), people dragging their kids about, and some adults dressed up in old-fashioned military uniforms.  At the time, I wondered why my Dad had taken this family trip, about… Read More »

White People on a Hike

By | October 9, 2023

[October 9, 2023]  Humor is an art form.  Art comes in many forms: painting, sculpture, literature, architecture, cinema, theater, music, and video/humor.  One of my favorite commentators on the web is Amala Ekpunobi who alerted me to a great piece of comedic stereotyping, title White People on a Hike.  I loved it and laughed’ nearly spitting my morning… Read More »

Family Privilege:  Some Thoughts

By | October 6, 2023

[October 6, 2023]  Steve Hayward of PowerLineBlog has a good article out yesterday (link here) that attempts to explain why “utopian socialists since Plato” and the political “left” hate two-parent families.  The reason, he says, is that intact is that a two-parent family is the greatest privilege today, practiced mostly by whites. Steve includes three charts that are… Read More »

Letters to My Granddaughter, No. 27

By | October 4, 2023

[October 4, 2023] “For the hundredth time, Douglas, stop picking your nose while eating.”  Mom was a stickler for good manners because she was interested in civilizing us kids.  She knew that well-mannered children who say “please” and “thank you” and know how to shake hands, present a genuine smile, and listen politely to adults, then adults will… Read More »