Lens-Artists Photo Challenge #290: Going around in Circles

Just look around you! How many circles are there? They are everywhere! I am driving in circles every day, though Audi calls them The Rings. I looked up while in the Everett Public Library, and what did I see, but some brightly-colored glass circles. OK, Tina, here are some for you. Seattle's Great Wheel How's …

Continue reading Lens-Artists Photo Challenge #290: Going around in Circles

What’s on my mind right now, in memes and cartoons

This week has shown us how thoroughly corrupt our governments are now.  Governments from local to national have treated law-abiding taxpayers like domestic terrorists, when they're not taking us for granted as piggy-banks.  The Federal government is arresting trespassers, holding them in filthy prisons for years, and sentencing them to years in prison for actions …

Continue reading What’s on my mind right now, in memes and cartoons

Lens-Artists Photo Challenge #250: Skyscapes/Cloudscapes

This week's topic is tailor-made for me.  On my computer, I have an album dedicated to photos of clouds.  Here in the Pacific Northwest, the sky is as apt to be covered with gray clouds all winter, and they are never the same one minute to the next.  But when Spring arrives and the gray …

Continue reading Lens-Artists Photo Challenge #250: Skyscapes/Cloudscapes

What does the “Housing First” approach to homelessness say to the world, and to the homeless?

When the governments who run cities with huge homeless populations adopt the "housing first" approach, their first actions are aimed at finding housing for those living in tents on the streets and in parks.  This method, besides being doomed to failure (since housing is very expensive in most cities, and takes a long time to …

Continue reading What does the “Housing First” approach to homelessness say to the world, and to the homeless?

New Dispatch from the Seattle Cesspool

Yes, it's that time again.  Time for a news roundup of what's going on in the dystopia that Seattle and environs are becoming.  Contributed to by the perverse state law that prohibits police pursuit of fleeing vehicles, which results in hundreds more stolen cars, and criminals allowed to get away. First, we have the case …

Continue reading New Dispatch from the Seattle Cesspool

Lens-Artists Photo Challenge #216: Urban Environments

Thinking back on the past three years, it occurs to me that we have pretty much stayed out of big cities, both at home and on vacations.  In the last three years of Covid madness, I have only been to Seattle once, for a private concert at the new Center for Chamber Music, which Hubby …

Continue reading Lens-Artists Photo Challenge #216: Urban Environments

Terri’s Sunday Stills Challenge: #Urbanity

These days, I live in a suburb.  The closest big city is Seattle, 20 miles south of our home in Everett (where the airplanes are made).  I was born and raised in Seattle in the 1950's and 1960's, and lived there from the mid-1970's until 1990.  I do not recognize the Seattle of my childhood …

Continue reading Terri’s Sunday Stills Challenge: #Urbanity

Intriguing election results from November 2

The press has been very active since early yesterday, registering and reacting to all the election results from around the country.  Not only did the state of Virginia turn a lot redder (electing a new governor and state assembly members), but locally the Deepest Blue city of Seattle seems to have chosen a new City …

Continue reading Intriguing election results from November 2

A sordid tale from Seattle’s anti-religion stance.

A friend of mine sent me the link to an article on the Heritage Foundation's Daily Signal site. He is connected to the mainstay downtown Union Gospel Mission, which is facing a deadly threat from a lawsuit by a person who applied for a position there, and objected to the Mission's requirement for all its …

Continue reading A sordid tale from Seattle’s anti-religion stance.

Circles and Wheels: This week’s Photo Challenge from Cee Neuner.

I just had to do this one, for my friend Cee, who doesn't live too far from me.  Circles make the world go round (see what I did there?), and trace the roughly-circular orbits of all the planets and their satellites.  Did you know that the ancient Egyptians did not use the wheel?  They found …

Continue reading Circles and Wheels: This week’s Photo Challenge from Cee Neuner.