Devil’s Golf Course
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Black Wednesday?

This morning Peter Navarro, Trump’s erstwhile trade advisor cautioned us about the expected jobs report that comes out tomorrow, “We have to revise our expectations down significantly for what a monthly job number should look like. Wall Street has to adjust for the fact that we’re deporting millions of illegals out of the job market.” In reality less than 250,000 people have been deported so far.
I think that the shenanigans that have been passed off as economic policy by this administration are beginning to come home to roost. After a year of Taco’s on-again/off-again tariffs it is a wonder that we are not in worst shape. Just this week he announced ownership of the so called “Trump economy.” This hopefully is the last time he will blame everything on Biden, but I doubt it.
Foreshadowing, as Navarro has done, tomorrow’s jobs report is illegal, but how can you expect a convict, working in a felonious crime family to stop criming. Anyway, I got paid. I made $14.20 for last month’s jury duty, eleven dollars a day plus travel peridium. Most of the job cuts are expected in healthcare, once a shining beacon, but with the last year’s cuts to Medicaid, now not so much.
Whatever the number will be, they have got to be bad. Else why risk be sent back to jail. The question is how bad will they be? It is hard to say, what with the way that they have been cooking the books since last September. So much faith has been placed into the Dow, what with its current record high that no thought is given to how quickly its edifice can collapse. What goes up, comes down.
Black Canyon of the Gunnison
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Change in the Weather

All this year, we have suffered both extreme cold and too much snow. Recently, the groundhog predicted that more of the same was also in store. However, our current ten-day forecast shows highs in the fifties and the sixties. Could this forecast signal the end of winter? This seems too good to be true, because in ten days we will leave town and fly to California, sunny California. However, this same forecaster offers a very rainy prediction over the next ten days for where we are going. Into each life a little rain must fall, but the predicted amounts look more like a deluge. But maybe the rain is just another sign of spring.
Antelope Canyon
Superb Owl Weekend

We went to a potluck dinner party. This event was originally scheduled for tonight, but then someone realized when the big game was. Bill and Mary, our usual hosts had convened another meeting of Team Kaldis, our longtime charity bicycle team. The team is still active, though most of us in attendance are not. We have all turned old and grey. Catching up with each other, last May’s tornado was discussed. Where we were dining and where many of us live was along its path. We were all fortunate. One member had been cycling in Forest Park as the storm approached and had to ride into the storm to get home. Another perennial topic these days was a memoriam for team members who are no longer with us.
Last night, our culinary offering was a salad, persimmons and pomegranates, a NY Times recipe, with ingredients from our local Schnucks. Many at that party shop at this same store and opinions varied. Compared to the Schnucks that it replaced, it represents a big improvement, but time has not been kind to the place. Gone is the live trout tank. Further west this store is both dwarfed and out shone by newer and larger stores in the chain. My store still outsells all the rest. Perched above the food desert that is the City of Saint Louis, it no longer requires a holiday of a snowstorm to fill the parking lot. This winter, I have had opportunity to be impressed twice with its produce department. Last November, it stocked fresh rhubarb from the Netherlands, so that Harry could have his pie. And in January, I just bought fresh persimmons and a pomegranate from Spain. “She may not look like much, but she’s got it where it counts, kid.”



