July 13, 2026

Tales from the Attic: The humanities in our capital

Sam Smith, 1986 - I was asked to give a toast at the fifth anniversary celebration of the DC Community Humanities Council, which I helped to start. Here is what I said:

Five years ago the DC Community Humanities Council was formed, charged with the diffusion of ideas, the encouragement of thought and the inspiration of rational discourse within this our nation's capital. This was a little like trying to sell Bibles in a brothel, and I think that any fair assessment of what has occurred around us since we began would indicate that we have failed miserably. The best efforts of the council and its sainted staff have failed to halt a national and local stampede towards what is perhaps the most anti-humanistic era of our lifetimes.

It is an era when we propose to devise the most complex weapons system ever created, but when we go to explain it to people, our government feels compelled to use comic book stick figures on television. We have become the first society to know more about the external world than we do about ourselves. And now we even seem to be losing the ability to talk or write about the problem.

It is an era in which, like the fifties, the man in the gray flannel suit is in the ascendancy, but unlike the fifties, when he was viewed with the ambivalence that economics forces upon us, he or she remains a cultural role model, and, unbelievably, even considered hip, charismatic and sexy.

And it is an era in which we know how to promote, facilitate merge, network, manage, integrate, finalize and bottom line, but are losing the ability to make or to create. I have a nightmare that one day the country will awake and discover that there is nothing to manage, finalize and facilitate. 

So we have failed -- here in the jaws of the lion -- but I would argue that given the powers arrayed against the humanistic ideal, failure has been the only sane and honorable course. And the failure, one hopes, is only temporary. Long ago, John Locke warned of the constant decay of ideas, and how they must be "renewed by repeated exercises of the senses." If not, "the print wears out, and at last there remains nothing to be seen."

The print is fading, but, thanks in part to this band of happy humanistic warriors, it could have been a lot worse. It has engaged in repeated exercise of the senses with an integrity, decency, fairness, sensitivity and good humor rarely seen in this town anymore. In a city that is obsessed with style, it is one of the few real class acts. So a toast to the Council for all it has done and will do and to the humanistic spirit. May we live to see it once more.

Word

Ty Cobb on Trump: “The man is crazy. He is a malignant narcissist, he’s demented. It’s all about self-enrichment. I spent hours and hours in the Oval working through things with him. It’s much worse now”


Speaker Johnson's plan




Annie

Polls

πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ Harris vs Vance crosstabs by Zogby Analytics 🟦 Kamala Harris: 48% πŸŸ₯ JD Vance: 43% —— πŸ”΄ Male: Vance +3 πŸ”΅ Female: Harris +11 πŸ”΅ Non-binary: Harris +37 --- πŸ”΅ Age 18-24: Harris +42 πŸ”΅ Age 25-34: Harris +9 πŸ”΅ Age 35-54: Harris +10 πŸ”΄ Age 55-69: Vance +11 πŸ”΄ Age 70+: Vance +4 --- πŸ”΄ White: Vance +7 πŸ”΅ Black: Harris +62 πŸ”΅ Hispanic: Harris +13 πŸ”΅ Asian: Harris +33 --- πŸ”΅ Catholic: Harris +2 πŸ”΄ Protestant: Vance +13 πŸ”΅ Jewish: Harris +35 πŸ”΅ Other/none: Harris +21 --- πŸ”΄ Married: Vance +10 πŸ”΅ Single: Harris +22 --- πŸ”΅ Lost a job last year: Harris +27 --- πŸ”΄ Suburban men: Vance +9 πŸ”΅ Suburban women: Harris +12 --- πŸ”΅ Dem: Harris +76 πŸ”΄ GOP: Vance +73 πŸ”΅ Indie: Harris +8 --- πŸ”΅ Definitely voting: Harris +5 πŸ”΅ Very likely voting: Harris +13 πŸ”΄ Somewhat likely voting: Vance +12 --- πŸ”΅ Liberal: Harris +75 πŸ”΅ Moderate: Harris +22 πŸ”΄ Conservative: Vance +68 πŸ”΄ Libertarian: Vance +27 πŸ”΄ Populist: Vance +20 Zogby Analytics

Weather

Independent -   Residents across several Philadelphia neighborhoods and surrounding counties spent Sunday grappling with the aftermath of severe, short-lived thunderstorms that unleashed widespread destruction.

The intense weather event, characterized by powerful microbursts, swept through the region on Saturday afternoon, leaving a trail of downed trees, severed power lines, localized flooding, and significant structural damage.

One particularly dramatic incident saw a building collapse in West Philadelphia, sending bricks cascading into the street, crushing parked cars, and obstructing trolley tracks.

The National Weather Service confirmed that at least four distinct microbursts delivered straight-line wind gusts ranging from 60 to 70 mph (97 to 113 kph) across Montgomery and Philadelphia counties between approximately 2:30 and 3:15 p.m. Saturday.

Despite initial speculation that a tornado was responsible for the damage, which included part of a roof being torn from a Philadelphia Housing Authority apartment building, NWS officials definitively attributed the destruction to these straight-line winds.

Abuse in Israeli prisons

The Guardian -  The scale of abuse, torture and death in Israeli prisons is well documented, but every once in a while an image appears that is Abu Ghraib-like in its relish and abandon. Earlier this month, a photo taken by an Israeli soldier was posted on social media. It shows a Palestinian man from Gaza face down, stripped to his underwear, bound with ropes to a plank and an iron rod. The caption said “good morning” in Hebrew. The echoes of Abu Ghraib were all there, the sinister gloating, the sexualised humiliation of stripped prisoners, the taking of photos as some sort of trophy.

These are not isolated incidents, or even measures established during the current conflict, although they have accelerated during it. The administrative detentions and abuse are part of a wider longstanding system that has severed Palestinians from human rights, and appears to be designed to terrorize, break morale and collectively punish. For decades, the Israeli state has practiced a policy of keeping the bodies of Palestinians, refusing to hand them over to their families for burial. Some bodies are buried in numbered graves in sealed military zones, others are held in freezers. …

And then there are the missing. Those in Gaza who, according to eyewitnesses, were detained by Israelorities, but never recorded. These amount to “enforced disappearances” according to the Israel-based human rights organization HaMoked, which is trying to trace the whereabouts of almost 2,000 people


CNBC's ten worst states to live in

Newsweek - CNBC’s ranking of the 10 worst states to live in 2026—all of them Republican-led—has drawn criticism from conservatives.   The broadcaster gave each state a Quality of Life score based on factors including crime rates, air quality, healthcare access, worker protections and civil rights laws. The Quality of Life category was one of 10 in the outlet's annual America's Top States for Business study.

Tennessee was ranked the worst state to live in after receiving a score of just 64 out of 290. CNBC noted that Tennessee had one of the highest violent-crime rates in the nation, citing FBI statistics, as well as the third-highest drug-death rate.

The broadcaster also cited state laws restricting transgender people’s bathroom access, limits on local anti-discrimination ordinances and Governor Bill Lee’s designation of June 2026 as "Nuclear Family Month." June is widely recognized as Pride Month across the United States.

CNBC's bottom 10 states for quality of life, from lowest-scoring upward, were:

  • Tennessee (64 out of 290)
  • Texas (78)
  • Indiana (82)
  • Louisiana (89)
  • Georgia (89)
  • Utah (95)
  • Missouri (98)
  • Alabama (99)
  • Oklahoma (103)
  • Arkansas (103)

Donald Trump

Feedly -  President Donald Trump has again overstated levels of public support for his administration, claiming that a sizable majority of the country approves of his presidency despite no recent surveys showing him enjoying nearly the same level of support from the American electorate.
In a late-night post to Truth Social on Sunday, the president wrote: "59 percent Approval Rating. Prices coming down along with the lowering of oil and gas. Thank you! President DJT."
Trump did not specify the type of "approval rating" he was referring to or the specific poll that had shown him at 59 percent, though none of those tracked by RealClearPolling or The New York Times show him with over 50 percent approval in recent weeks or months.

In fact, the latest polling averages from RealClearPolitics have Trump 15.5 points underwater-with 41 percent approving and 56.5 percent disapproving-while the most recent Times/Siena poll revealed that only 37 percent of the country are happy with his handling of the presidency.

Food

CBS News - Millions of Americans are borrowing money or draining their savings to buy groceries, highlighting the financial strain many households face as the cost of living rises, new research has found.  More than a quarter of working-age adults who relied on credit cards to buy groceries were either unable to pay their balance in full or missed their minimum payment, according to the Urban Institute, a nonpartisan think tank. About one in 10 adults relied on so-called "buy now, pay later" loans to cover their groceries — of those, about a third missed a payment last year, the analysis found. 

About 20% of working-age adults said they had tapped long-term savings that weren't intended for everyday expenses, such as an emergency fund, at least once in the last 12 months to pay for groceries, the researchers said. 

Health

Newsweek -   A cancer diagnosis can turn life upside down. But for a growing number of Americans, one of the biggest challenges may be getting to treatment in the first place.

New research published in the International Journal of Radiation Oncology (also known as the Red Journal) suggests access to radiation therapy—one of the most commonly used cancer treatments in the U.S.—has been shrinking across hundreds of counties, with rural communities facing the greatest losses.

The study found that more than 50 million Americans now live in counties without a radiation oncology practice site. Researchers say the concern is not only the number itself but what happens when treatment disappears from areas that already have limited healthcare resources.


Men’s average testosterone levels have halved over the past 50 years

The Guardian -  Total testosterone levels in men declined by 54% between 1972 and 2019, according to data presented at the annual meeting of the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology in London on Tuesday. Rising levels of obesity and diabetes are expected to play a part, but the team behind the work suggest that environmental factors such as endocrine-disrupting chemicals – which can be found in various household items – and global heating could also be factors in the apparent striking decline.

“I think that we have a major crisis in male reproductive health and it’s currently not given enough attention,” said Prof Hagai Levine, of the Hebrew University-Hadassah Braun School of Public Health and Community Medicine in Israel.

“We saw an over 50% decline in total testosterone over this time period,” he said. “It reflects a more than 1% decline each year, so this is not a fluke, this is not a statistical error. It’s very strong trend.”

Meanwhile...

The Guardian  - The US senator Mitch McConnell on Sunday revealed for the first time that a fall led to his hospitalization, breaking the silence about the Kentucky Republican’s condition after weeks of mounting speculation about his health.  McConnell, 84, said in a statement that he has undergone a battery of tests as doctors try to determine what led to his fall. He explained the long silence about his condition by saying that “folks of my generation often hesitate to share the vulnerability that comes with growing older”. 

NPR - As many younger Jewish Americans question supporting the state of Israel, an increasing number are discovering community through learning Yiddish.

Mitch McConnell said in his first public statement since he was hospitalized nearly a month ago that he was “briefly unconscious” after a fall and had mild pneumonia. He added that he would return to the Senate but didn’t give a date.

 People -  Centenarians John and Jerry Carroll, who marked their 80th wedding anniversary in April and Jerry's 100th birthday in June, go to their local McDonald's in Tennessee every Friday and order the same menu item. "For breakfast, we usually eat the egg McMuffin with sausage," John, a 101-year-old World War II veteran, told local news outlet NewsChannel5 of what they order at the McDonald's in Murfreesboro when they meet up with a group of friends for their weekly fast-food outing.

 

Middle East

The Hill - The U.S. and Iran are sending conflicting messages over whether the Strait of Hormuz is open following continued strikes by both countries. 

Trump claimed Sunday that the strait is open, while U.S. Central Command (Centcom) said traffic was flowing through the waterway. Centcom said U.S. forces are “positioned and prepared to ensure that freedom of navigation remains available despite unwarranted Iranian aggression, harassment, threats, and arbitrary declarations.” 

“Iran does not control the strait,” Centcom said in a post on the social platform X

That differs from Iran’s message. It said Saturday it was closing the strait again after the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps struck a Cyprus-flagged ship using an “unauthorized route” through the area. 

The tanker attack led the U.S. to launch another round of strikes against Iran, the latest sign of the ceasefire agreement falling apart.

Disagreements over the strait sparked the apparent breakdown in negotiations, leading Iran to open fire on multiple ships in the strait and the U.S. to hit more than 100 targets across Iran last week. 

U.S. forces launched additional strikes Sunday to undermine Iran’s ability to attack additional shipping, Centcom said. 

Peace negotiations haven’t officially been called off, but Trump has called the Iranians “scum” and “liars,” leaving the prospect of future talks in doubt. 

Iranian Parliament Speaker Mohammed Bagher Qalibaf, Tehran's top negotiator, warned the U.S. on Sunday to uphold its end of the peace deal or “pay the price.”om/

July 12, 2026

John F Kennedy

Fara Kaufman
- As president, he earned $100,000 a year. That's about $1 million in today's money. But he didn't keep it. He donated every cent to charity. Some of the money went to the United Negro College Fund. Some went to the Boy Scouts. He gave it all away.  He never talked about it much. He just did it. A quiet act of generosity from a man who had more than enough—and chose to share it. 

Hmm....


                Denise

A little history


Polls

Party identification - Q2 2026 πŸ”΅ Democrats 49% πŸ”΄ Republicans 39% Highest lead for any party in 6 Years - Gallup

Los Angeles County wildfire

Independent - A rapidly spreading brush fire has triggered evacuation orders in a sparsely populated area of Los Angeles County, fueled by scorching temperatures and exceptionally dry conditions.

The blaze ignited around 1 p.m. on Friday in a remote high desert region, approximately 45 miles northeast of Los Angeles.

Temperatures in the area soared to nearly 100 degrees Fahrenheit, according to the LA County Fire Department.

By Friday evening, the fire had consumed approximately 2,700 acres, Angeles National Forest officials reported on X.

 The number of structures currently at risk remains undetermined, though the American Red Cross has opened a shelter at a local YMCA.


Middle East

 NY Times -   U.S. Central Command said on Saturday evening that it had launched strikes on Iran after the Iranian navy attacked a container ship in the Strait of Hormuz, rejecting a U.S. ultimatum to open the critical waterway to traffic.

Hours earlier, the Iranian foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, had met in Oman with its top diplomat to discuss safe passage in the Strait of Hormuz, but he made no public commitments. The prospect of a reopening seemed dimmer than ever after Iran announced the attack, a warning shot on a container ship, and said it would close the strait “until the end of U.S. interference in the region.”

The Iranian navy said it had fired after “several ships attempted to travel along an unapproved route” and ignored directions to transit through Iran’s territorial waters. It warned that it would meet any U.S. retaliation to its attack with a “forceful response.”

Federal deficit already passes last year's totla

Headline USA –  Only nine months into fiscal year 2026, the U.S. government has already borrowed $1.4 trillion, surpassing the entire federal deficit of the previous fiscal year.

The federal government collected $4.2 trillion over the past nine months and spent or lost a total of $5.5 trillion, according to a new Congressional Budget Office report.

During the month of June alone, the nation added $126 billion to the over $39 trillion national debt.

“We will likely borrow $2 trillion or more this fiscal year – an astounding figure given that the economy keeps growing and unemployment is low,” Maya MacGuineas, president of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, stated in response to the report.

Smithsonian responds to Trump regime attack

Washington Post -  Smithsonian Secretary Lonnie G. Bunch III issued a defense of the National Museum of American History to staffers on Tuesday, in response to a caustic White House report accusing the museum of pushing “extreme political activism.”

In an email obtained by The Washington Post, Bunch wrote to staffers that “we continue to review the report and its findings carefully” and that “there will always be room for improvement.”

But the report “is not a fair characterization of the work and totality of the National Museum of American History,” he added. “At the Smithsonian, our work is driven by scholarship, accuracy, and an uncompromising commitment to tell the fullness of America’s story.”

The 162-page document, credited to the White House’s Domestic Policy Council, was released on Saturday. It largely focused on the American history museum and criticized its leadership as having “explicitly adopted an ideological framework that no longer treats the American story as a shared national inheritance to be taught or celebrated, but as a political instrument to divide, dispirit, and discourage our citizens.”

Wikipedia under attack

 NY Times -   Wikipedia is in peril. In a world where trust in truth is crumbling, the grande dame of collective online fact-gathering is under threat on every front. The MAGA right, with Elon Musk at the fore, is slinging accusations of political bias and antisemitism and has even questioned the site’s nonprofit status. Artificial intelligence is raiding the encyclopedia’s resources and draining attention. Repressive governments have hauled its volunteer editors into penal colonies.

In Wikipedia’s 25-year history, it has never had to fight this hard.

The organization that supports the site, the Wikimedia Foundation, is increasing its lobbying budget and advertising in Times Square. It is charging companies like Google and Meta that gobble up the encyclopedia’s 65 million articles, and throttling access for certain scrapers. And it is expanding its human rights team to better protect volunteers against rising harassment, surveillance and retaliation.

For an organization that holds neutrality as a cardinal rule, it is a lot of conflict, requiring Wikimedia to go on the offensive — diplomatically, of course.

California has $1.4 billion in SNAP errors

Headline USA -  California saw $1.4 billion in Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program errors for Fiscal Year 2025. That accounts for $3.8 million every single day. That’s part of a trend of Southwestern states having to repay the federal government for SNAP benefits.

A payment error rate refers to instances of overpayment or underpayment to households. It is not inherently indicative of fraud, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, which oversees SNAP for the federal government. Rather, according to the department, it often stems from households providing incomplete information or state data processing errors.

Because of the high volume of error, California is subjecting itself to having to repay the federal government.

States that manage to stay below a federally mandated threshold of 6% for mistakes are safe. But consecutive years above the threshold force states into USDA-approved corrective action plans and financial liabilities. Under federal rules, liabilities can either be repaid in full, or states can reinvest half of the penalty into improving state operations to prevent future errors.