My honey left around 8 AM for golf here at SCCL on Saturday
(12/7), and for me, the day was all about dipping :~). First, I made myself a good breakfast....I told you I made these cheese biscuits on Friday:
Well, I split 3 of them in half (next time I'll make a couple of big ones that I can use as a piece of bread!!):
Then put spinach on top of them:
then fried up an egg...yum!!:
After that I got ready for more Christmas food. My chocolate arrived Friday night (actually, it was lollapalooza at our
house Friday night as far as deliveries were concerned…..we got 3 postal
packages while Paula was visiting…and then when I was downstairs sewing my
string quilt, Michael called down to let me know 4 MORE packages had shown up
from AMAZON!!!! Tis the season….)
I got started at 10 AM with 2 packages of oreos (double stuffed....my honey's favorite):
then I made Ritz/peanutbutter sandwiches and dipped those:
I was just finishing up bagging them:
at 2 PM when my honey
got home from golf. He said he had a
good time….but a bad round :~(, so I asked him if he wanted the little bit of leftover dipping chocolate:
He made himself a more nutritious snack:
before joining me in
the studio. Our local Pregnancy Care
Center put in a request for some baby quilts, and I had a very small piece of
pink butterfly fabric:
that I thought I might be able to get a quilt out
of. June stopped by to pick up her chocolate while I was working:
I got my fabric all cut and after dinner
sewed it together:
I’m hoping to get a 1
inch border out of the scraps. I may
never do big quilts again…this came together in a FLASH :~).
One of the saddest things to me about the current political climate
is that everyone seems to have become inured to the hateful comments
made by our president about women, all non-whites and immigrants. And the insults he so casually strews his
everyday speech with. How has it become
acceptable that the leader of the free world sounds like the leader of a white
supremacist group, and no one reacts. Of
course you do know that white supremacist groups have claimed him as one of
their own…right?
Contrast that hate
speech and hate feelings with his opposition (from The Washington Post):
James Rosen, the longtime Fox News correspondent now with
right-wing Sinclair Broadcast Group, told me he didn’t like the assignment his
editors gave him Thursday morning. So, he said as we awaited House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s news conference, he decided to come up to Capitol Hill
and, as he put it, make his own news. He proceeded to do just that.
Pelosi had been the very definition of deliberate Thursday, first
in a televised statement announcing that lawmakers would draw up articles of
impeachment against President Trump, and then in a news conference defending
the “heartbreaking” decision. But as she strode off the stage, Rosen
stopped her in her tracks with seven words:
“Do you hate the president, Madam Speaker?”
She turned, pointed a finger at Rosen and
walked toward him. “I don’t hate anybody,” she said. “Not anybody in the world.” She
returned to the microphones. She pulled up her sleeve to reveal a bracelet made
with a bullet from a shooting survivor. “I think this president is a
coward when it comes to helping our kids who are afraid of gun violence,” she
said. “I think he is cruel when he doesn’t deal with helping our ‘dreamers,’ of
which we are very proud. I think he’s in denial about the climate crisis.” She
made a motion with her hand sweeping all that away. “However, that’s about the election.”
Impeachment, she went on, “is about the Constitution of
the United States and the facts that lead to the president’s violation of his
oath of office.” Looking at Rosen again, she said: “And as a
Catholic, I resent your using the word ‘hate’ in a sentence that addresses me.
I don’t hate anyone. … And I still pray for the president.” She concluded:
“So don’t mess with me when it comes to words like that.” After she
left, you could hear the reporters’ exhalations in the silence.
It
was raw. It was angry. And it was powerful, in a way her prepared statements
on impeachment, full of Founders’ quotes and Latin phrases, were not. She
got at the essence of impeachment: This isn’t a personality dispute or a
political disagreement, much as Republicans try to make it so. The president
abused his office for personal gain — plain and simple.
Trump saw a woman
speaking forcefully and attributed it to a medical condition. “Nancy Pelosi
just had a nervous fit,” he tweeted. As for Pelosi’s prayers, Trump replied: “I
don’t believe her.”
I once doubted that Pelosi, about to turn 80, was the
right leader for Democrats against Trump. But she was made for this moment. She
uniquely gets under Trump’s skin, routinely beating him in standoffs with her
blend of sorrow and bewilderment: “This is a strain of cat that I don’t have
the medical credentials to analyze nor the religious credentials to judge,” she
told the New Yorker. Republicans needled her as she resisted the
left’s impeachment demands. Now Republicans needle her for rushing impeachment.
Yet she pulled off the near-miracle of uniting Democrats, first counseling them
to wait for something “overwhelming and bipartisan,” and then, when the Ukraine
scandal made clear bipartisanship was impossible no matter how overwhelming the
evidence, she struck swiftly.
She began the day reading a statement
from a teleprompter announcing impeachment articles would be drawn. She seemed
tense — “oath of office” sounded more like “oafuthoaf” — and the language was
high 18th century, from Jefferson to Gouverneur Morris to Benjamin
Franklin. A little over an hour later, a more relaxed Pelosi visited
the House TV studio, taking the usual shots at the “rogue Senate leader” Mitch
McConnell, joking with reporters about impeachment ruining their holidays and
batting down concerns about her decision to proceed. “We feel
comfortable with all of the time that has gone into this, two and a half years
since the appointment of [Robert] Mueller, and all that transpired since then.” “This
has absolutely nothing to do with politics,” she said (a claim that might have
been more persuasive if she hadn’t just cited impeachment
polling). Nor, she said, would she wait while Trump, losing in
court, exhausts his appeals. “We have our facts, and we will act upon them,”
she said, vowing additional actions later. She could have left it at
that, and ignored Rosen’s parting question. The two have a history (she
previously dubbed him “Mr. Republican Talking Points”), and he obviously wanted
to provoke. But she made an instinctive decision to get in Rosen’s
face with a righteous smackdown of those, such as Rep. Doug Collins (R-Ga.),
who claim Democrats are motivated by hate. The commanding result was one more
reminder that, in this moment, you “don’t mess with” Pelosi.
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