Friday, June 24, 2022

Frank McCourt, Teacher Man

I sometimes take a look at the stats at my old blog, the original Hootsbuddy's Place. I notice someone linked this 2007 post, fifteen years ago. 

Frank McCourt, Teacher Man

Coming to the end of McCourt's Teacher Man, a running narrative of three decades teaching English in the New York City public schools, I came across these three paragraphs that brought me close to tears. McCourt has to be one of the best story-tellers working today. I can't say enough about him.

The kids are opening up in their writing and classroom discussions and I'm getting a written tour of American family life from East Side town homes to Chinatown tenements. It's a pageant of the settled and the new and everywhere there are dragons and demons.

Phyllis wrote an account of how her family gathered the night Neil Armstrong landed on the moon, how they shuttled between the living room television and the bedroom where her father lay dying. Back and forth. Concerned with the father, not wanting to miss the moon landing. Phyllis said she was with her father when her mother called to come and see Armstrong set foot on the moon. She ran to the living room, everyone cheering and hugging till she felt this urgency, the old urgency, and ran to the bedroom to find her father dead. She didn't scream, she didn't cry, and her problem was how to return to the happy people in the living room to tell them Dad was gone.

She cried now, standing in front of the classroom. She could have stepped back to her seat in the front row and I hoped she would because I didn't know what to do. I went to her. I put my left arm around her. But that wasn't enough. I pulled her to me, embraced her with both arms, let her sob into my shoulder. Faces around the room were wet with tears till someone called, Right on, Phyllis, and one or two clapped and the whole class clapped and cheered and Phyllis turned to smile at them with her wet face and when I led her to her seat she turned and touched my cheek and I thought, This isn't earthshaking, this touch on the cheek, but I'll never forget it. Phyllis, her dead father, Armstrong on the moon.

If that doesn't make you want to read Frank McCourt nothing will. I was lucky enough to find a new copy at Goodwill for a dollar. Having already read Angela's Ashes and heard McCourt in a couple of interviews I was primed. That may have been the best dollar I spent last year.

Saturday, June 18, 2022

Personal Remembrance of Ladislas Segy

This Saturday morning BBC World Service brought me a welcome escape from the stresses of the day with a delightful conversation about the management and ownership of cultural artifacts produced by indigenous people around the world, specifically those in Africa. 

The program is nearly an hour long and I will listen when I finish these notes. But the last quarter hour triggered personal memories which are the reason for this blog post.

The Real Story - The repatriation of precious artefacts

The King of Belgium this month handed back a Congolese mask, one of about 84,000 artefacts taken during the colonial-era which the country has agreed to return. In 2018 a report commissioned by the French government recommended the return of thousands of African artworks taken from the continent during colonial rule. This week the director of the V&A museum in London, Tristram Hunt, told The Real Story that he’d like to see a review of decades-old UK laws which prohibit historical pieces being returned to their countries of origin. The clamour for the return of objects which may have been taken, stolen or bought during the colonial era is growing louder. The people and communities who want them back say it's about preserving their cultural identities. So, is it time for some of the planet’s biggest and most visited museums to repatriate many more of the items they’ve acquired from around the world? And how can the educational value of so-called ‘encyclopaedic museums’ continue to educate millions if the number of artefacts they have on display is diminished?

Before being conscripted into the Army I had the good fortune to meet Ladislas Segy, a prominent African Art expert whose collection was displayed at the Columbus Museum. The event was arranged at the last minute when someone realized that no one at the museum had officially arranged to invite Mr. Segy to dinner by way of thanking him for his time and the loan of his collection. The Ansley family was among the museum benefactors and someone with little attention to protocol decided that Mr. Ansley's Country Club membership could be used for that purpose. It was my good fortune to join his two high-school age sons for that meal during which Mr. Segy, a delightful man exchanged endless little barbs with a provincial local man with cosmopolitan grace. 

Thanks to a web search I just discovered another link archived from 1944 which I will now also take time to hear.

The NYPR Archive Collections - Ladislas Segy

A talk with Ladilas Segy about his collection of African sculpture, driftwood, and his paintings.
Although a fairly recent immigrant, he feels he is an American painter because the American public is keenly interested in art and he can be part of the growing development of American art. Segy says he has been very welcome in this country. They talk about mixed drinks in America and the parallels in art.

Saturday, June 11, 2022

POLITICO Post Regarding Jan 6 Insurrection hearing

Pence-world’s final takedown of Trump’s Jan. 6 bid to remain in power revealed in his lawyer's memo

Top adviser told the then-vice president that the courts would likely not support him if he gave in to Trump's pressure to delay certifying electoral votes.

By BETSY WOODRUFF SWAN and KYLE CHENEY
06/11/2022 04:41 PM EDT

A day before a mob of Donald Trump supporters smashed their way into the Capitol to disrupt the transfer of presidential power, then-Vice President Mike Pence’s top lawyer dashed off a fateful memo.

In the three-page document, attorney Greg Jacob concluded that if Pence were to embrace Trump’s demand that he single-handedly block or delay the counting of electoral votes on Jan. 6, he would be breaking multiple provisions of the Electoral Count Act, the law that has governed the transfer of power since 1887.

Such a move, Jacob concluded, would assuredly fail in court. Or worse, he said, the courts would refuse to get involved and leave America in an unprecedented political crisis.

In that case, he said in the memo obtained by POLITICO and published for the first time, “the Vice President would likely find himself in an isolated standoff against both houses of Congress … with no neutral arbiter available to break the impasse.”

Jacob is scheduled to testify publicly Thursday to the Jan. 6 select committee about Pence’s decision to resist Trump’s pressure campaign. The panel declined to comment on Jacob’s memo.

The memo informed Pence’s ultimate decision to rebuff pressure from Trump to reverse the outcome of the election. Pence announced his decision the next day, when he traveled to the Capitol to preside over the Jan. 6 meeting of the House and Senate. His decision, in a letter that closely tracked Jacob’s memo, inflamed a crowd of thousands of Trump supporters that the president had called to Washington to protest his defeat.

Within an hour of Pence’s announcement, hundreds of members of that mob would bludgeon their way past police lines and into the Capitol itself, sending the vice president and members of Congress fleeing for safety. Some members of that mob chanted, “Hang Mike Pence.”

The Jan. 6 select committee has had Jacob’s memo for months. It’s an important element of the panel’s view that Trump criminally conspired to overturn the election, when his legal challenges had all failed. Pence’s team firmly believed that embracing Trump’s push to block Joe Biden’s presidency would require numerous violations of the Electoral Count Act, a position they had relayed to both Trump and attorney John Eastman, the conservative lawyer who developed Trump’s fringe legal strategy to remain in power.

Jacob’s memo, titled “Analysis of Professor Eastman’s Proposals,” is dated Jan. 5. But Jacob told the select committee in February he drafted most of it a day earlier in response to an intense first-time meeting with Eastman.

A federal judge has agreed that Eastman’s strategy likely veered into criminal territory. U.S. District Court Judge David Carter ruled in March that Eastman’s legal theories were outcome-driven and unsupported — he dubbed it “a coup in search of a legal theory” — and that effort to obstruct the counting of electoral votes likely amounted to a criminal conspiracy with Trump.

In his memo, Jacob said Eastman acknowledged his proposal would require Pence to violate the Electoral Count Act in four ways. They included rejecting the law’s requirements that 1) Pence count all electoral votes from states in alphabetical order, resolving any disputes before moving on to the next state; 2) Pence call for any objections from lawmakers after introducing each state’s slate of electors; 3) lawmakers be permitted to consider competing slates of electors; and 4) the session of Congress cannot be adjourned once it starts and must conclude within five days.

“Eastman’s proposal, by contrast, contemplate[s] an extended recess of the joint session to allow State legislatures to investigate the election and to vote on which slate of electors to certify,” Jacob noted.

Eastman spent the final weeks before Jan. 6 agitating for Republican-controlled legislatures in a handful of states won by Biden to appoint their own competing slate of electors. In that scenario, Eastman posited, Pence would be required to consider these “dueling” slates. But no state legislature agreed to follow Eastman’s advice. Instead, pro-Trump activists met and sent their own uncertified slates of electors to Congress, but without the blessing or backing of any legislature or governor.

Without that certification, Eastman began pushing Pence to adopt a different tactic: delay. He urged Pence to declare the results in a handful of states to be in dispute and to recess the joint session of Congress until those legislatures could resolve the controversy.

Jacob’s Jan. 5 memo could be seen as the bookend of his month-long legal cramming session on the Electoral Count Act. Jacob drafted an opening memo for Pence on Dec. 8, previously obtained and published by POLITICO, that informed Pence’s initial thinking on the question but drew no firm conclusions. By Jan. 5, Pence’s team had clearly decided there was no viable path to pursue Trump and Eastman’s strategy.

Notably, Jacob indicated that if any state legislatures had, in fact, certified a pro-Trump slate, the vice president might have taken a different path.

“A reasonable argument might further be made that when resolving a dispute between competing electoral slates, Article II, Section 1 of the Constitution places a firm thumb on the scale on the side of the State legislature,” Jacob wrote

“Here, however, no State legislature has appointed or certified any alternate slate of electors,” Jacob noted, “and Professor Eastman acknowledges that most Republican legislative majorities in the States have signaled they have no intention of doing so.”

In justifying his conclusions, Jacob cited former Supreme Court Justice Joseph Bradley, who helped resolve the disputed election of 1876. In breaking a political logjam — the very dispute that led to the passage of the Electoral Count Act – Bradley determined that the vice president had no role deciding the validity of electoral votes. Federal courts in Washington D.C., Jacob added, were very likely to agree with that.

Instead, Eastman had been banking on something that could create even more chaos: the courts refusing to step in. Under the so-called “political question doctrine,” courts often avoid weighing in on murky disputes between the legislative and executive branches of government. But Jacob said even that scenario would not work out in Trump and Eastman’s favor.

“[I]t is unclear that any favorable political solution could follow,” he wrote.

Jacob’s judgment also influenced two changes Pence made to the vice presidential script when he presided over the Jan. 6 session — before and after the mob ransacked the Capitol. In one, Pence made clear that he was only introducing presidential electors that had been certified by a state government — and refusing to introduce the uncertified slates sent by pro-Trump activists. In the other, he explicitly asked whether there were objections by House and Senate lawmakers after each state’s electors were introduced.

On Jan. 6, just as rioters were bearing down on the Capitol, Eastman made a last-ditch plea with Jacob to convince Pence to reconsider. In an email, he showed Pence a letter suggesting that Republican legislators in Pennsylvania appeared likely to reconvene and appoint pro-Trump electors if they had more time. When Jacob said any effort to send the matter back to the states would still violate the law, Eastman called his response “small minded.”

“You’re sticking with minor procedural statutes while the Constitution is being shredded,” Eastman wrote.

“I respect your heart here,” replied Jacob. “I share your concerns about what Democrats will do once in power. I want election integrity fixed. But I have run down every legal trail placed before me to its conclusion, and I respectfully conclude that as a legal framework, it is a results oriented position that you would never support if attempted by the opposition, and essentially entirely made up.”

“And thanks to your bullshit,” he continued, “we are now under siege.”

~~➤ H/T Kyle Cheney Twitter Thread!


Monday, June 6, 2022

Growing up Poor -- Twitter post and replies...

 Growing up poor - Twitter thread and replies.

I have no idea who Brandon is but he has over two thousand followers. I did not explore the backstories of the various replies but they appear to be serious responses from an array of Twitter users.
I think my biggest financial problem is I grew up poor asf so now that I make my own money I don’t know how to budget. I’m always gonna spend the extra penny for quality cause I can and I hate the feeling of being limited on what I can do bc of a price tag
I had to mute this cause sheeeesh. Imma just say pls pay attention and take care of your mental health! Take some time when you need too, do things that make you happy, spend time with friends and family. We’re usually our own biggest enemy 🫡

My family is not poor, but my parents teach me to make money even i still am student right now, i do it by doing online surveys that pay me dollars for my needs. Than i think that's enough money for me

The key to financial stability is to invest in an asset that gives you constant income like buying a house/appartment to rent out, then you can use your salary from your day job to cover daily costs, and use the income from your rented property for buying nice things and savings.

Ok, let's not forget, mortgage payments increase over time. Our payment started at $700 and is not almost $900 because of taxes n shit...soo...it will be tough for some.

Um. What? Your mortgage stays the same for the entire term of the loan unless you have an adjustable loan.

Your interest rate will stay the same. It will increase if you have property taxes escrowed into your payment and taxes increase. Mine went up over $100 in the past year.

I relate to this so much for similar reasons. Ppl don’t understand that when nothing is available to you growing up, u overspend to compensate for that insecurity

Absolutely right. Terry Pratchett put it perfectly, here:







I grew up in a working class council estate in the UK I learnt how to manage my money from my parents when they wanted to buy something they would save up for it if they couldn't afford it they wouldn't buy it I also saved up before I moved out of my parents house

I have the same issue. It’s a mixture of being afraid of not having the money for what you want & lack of self control.

Take it from me, set a budget, build an emergency fund and invest. The sooner the better! Live below your means and in 20-30 years you’ll be so glad you did!

Growing up poor is constant trauma—and that trauma often impairs cognitive function. You often don’t think rationally in fight or flight mode—you just think fast. In law school, there was a workshop called a “poverty simulator” and I found it so offensive for this reason.

It’s really easy to give a person born with money a hypothetical list of expenses and a budget and tell them to manage fake poverty. They’ve had a lifetime of wealth to pay for things while not in a state of panic. It was designed to offer perspective but I think it made it worse

Tru asf. Sometimes I be living paycheck to paycheck & uk what? I still buy clothes n shi that make me happy when I got the extra money bc of jus that. It makes me happy.

It's curious how I went from "this single bar of chocolate is my luxury and has to last a month" to "I can buy all the chocolate I want, but my bigger luxuries (like driving) will suffer".
Ive worked damn hard for my luxury items like great headphones or washing machine.

I’m always treating myself to nice things cause I never had nice things growing up. The financial freedom is liberating but the guilt is paramount cause there is constant anxiety I’m gonna go down a poverty path.

This is a bit like how I feel too. Though I wouldn't say we never had nice things, we were always careful about spending money. So when I bought a Switch for €300, I kinda felt guilty for spending so much money and worried that something's going to happen.

I don’t have money issues because I’m frugal AF. My parents taught me from a younge age to work hard for every dollar I make. I don’t see the point of wasting money for the sake of having nice things. I live debt-free and have a nice stack of savings for a rainy day.

My fam of 3 survived on child support grant (5 years). Then my NSFAS allowance below R800(4 years).R5k from a 1yr internship. Then R0 when it ended. R5k again in another 1yr. My relationship with money is inconsistent. I spend and save out of fear.

I’m fortunate and it had the opposite affect. I don’t budget everything but I’m super tight because it doesn’t feel right to splurge on stuff and I always triple guess every purchase like “so do I NEED this?”. Not the same for all but the trauma just worked different for me

I can relate to this. Hence when I got my first job, I was on a roll! I did everything I always wanted to do without a second thought. I was advised to save but never did. Now that I am running a business, I am seeing flames. I have def learnt many important lessons!

You want to spend some money, spend it on Super projects that helps the live of this planet. Spend it on UNITSKY STRING TECHNOLOGIES INCORPORATED Project and you'll have more in few years. I too was extremely poor and still coming from it but I don't spend all I got to prove sth.

for those that dont really understand how it didnt make op and some other better at money management, its kinda like how some people who experienced food deprivation show signs of overeating and food hoarding. like ‘it rarely came your way so you gotta make it count while it

lasts’ kinda thing. even when the person has it in (relative) abundance now, the mindset has already been so ingrained in their head they barely even register it happening

I too grew up poor. Graduated from high school, received my 1st position in accounting. Saved my hard earned money. I was on my own at 18. Renting an apartment. Budgeting. Met my best friend who I married. We have joint accounts. Happily Married for 27 years. 1 daughter who's 15

We shy away from the fact that being poor and under privileged comes with its own traumas
I think the most important thing Is facing those memories. 
Then actively/consciously try budget.
Reward system still works for me. If I don't buy 1,2,3 now, I can do something next month

This. It’s been very hard for me to break with the generational concept of money and, for a while, budgeting was the answer but now my budget is more of a natural practice than a balance sheet, made easier by automated deposits and payments. Good luck.

You sound like one of my sons. While we weren’t that poor- middle class, he likes nice, quality things. He got himself in big debt at first. He’s gotten himself out of it & starting over. Put aside something in retirement first, even a little. Plan for what you want. Enjoy life.