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Monthly Archives: June 2025

Shame is where you find it

04 Wednesday Jun 2025

Posted by ag1970 in American History, History, Uncategorized

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The Tripolitan Monument, United States Naval Academy, dedicated to Stephen Decatur

Stephen Decatur was an early 20th-century U.S. Navy hero.

Tripolitan pirates were kidnaping American merchant sailors in the Mediterranean. In 1803, they seized the USS Philadelphia, a 36-gun American frigate. Decatur led a sixty-man boarding party aboard. At the cost of one man slightly wounded, Decatur’s sailors killed twenty pirates and set Philadelphia ablaze. The British admiral, Horatio Nelson, called it the most daring action “of our age.”

(Above) Decatur kills a Tripolitan Pirate; the USS Philadelphia ablaze.

In the War of 1812, Decatur commanded the USS United States. His ship pummeled the British frigate Macedonian so severely that the ship surrendered and was captured. The battle lasted seventeen minutes.

United States (r) defeats HMS Macedonian

In 1815, commanding the frigate President, he became a British prisoner after his ship was defeated and captured. Decatur and his executive officer were hit by flying splinters; Decatur was hit in the chest and forehead; his lieutenant, standing next to him, lost his leg. The battle lasted eighteen hours.

After that war, he was put in command of the Navy’s Mediterranean squadron and, in 1820,, finally forced the “Barbary Pirates,” based in Tripoli, to surrender.

USS Harvey Milk; Secretary Hegseth


Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth today ordered the oiler USS Harvey Milk renamed. Milk was a U.S. Navy diver during and after the Korean War. He was the San Francisco supervisor who was assassinated in 1978. In both his naval and political life, Harvey Milk was fearless. His assassination and Hegseth’s order both stem from the fact that Harvey Milk was a gay man.

Decatur, bottom right-center, in the hand-to-hand fight with the pirates.

Harvey Milk was gay.

So was Stephen Decatur.

The shame lies in neither Milk nor Decatur. Pete Hegseth owns it today.

Naval Academy cadets on parade. My beloved brother-in-law, Steve, a husband and father, would have seen the Tripolitan Monument many times. Steve was an Annapolis grad. This is his memorial in the Academy Columbarium.

Captain Stephan Bruce in the ceremony that marked his retirement from the Navy. He flew Sea Stallion helicopters.

I am a 73-year-old Swiftie.

04 Wednesday Jun 2025

Posted by ag1970 in Film and Popular Culture

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This is the first point that needs to be made. She is enjoying herself.



She still includes a banjo. I like that, it’s a wonderful throwback to her musical roots. And I like her lyrics here: Quirky, self-contradicting, clever. The backup singers are sublime,and this song demands them.


Now maybe we forget how young she was when she started. “Tim McGraw” was her first hit song. She was sixteen, and that’s why I still like this high-school song. (And, again great backup singers on the chorus.)



Yeah,, there’s those stupid umbrellas. But the neener-neener of the chorus and the interplay of her solo and the percussive instruments is, well, sparkling (?) So’s the whole lighty-uppy thing. COOL!

I love this song. It wails and does the be-bop thing in the chorus. I like her hat.


She’s not afraid to reach out to some people who are marginalized. Here she is at New York’s Stonewall Club, the scene of the 1969 that pitted the NYPD against the City’s gays. If you’re a fan of Modern Family, note who’s singing with her.


But that doesn’t mean that cops don’t love her, too.


Cynics would say her interaction with others is cultivated, but I think she really likes people. She’s working the audience in this performance of “Love Story,” on Letterman, but at about 2:45, look for her reaction to the little brunette girl. That’s genuine.



And, of course, there’s her cause: Childhood cancer. I think that’s genuine, too.







Miraculous people.

01 Sunday Jun 2025

Posted by ag1970 in Personal memoirs, Uncategorized

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I’ve been talking a lot, on Facebook, about my hospitalization, but there are some things I need to write down before I forget them. Eventually, I WILL be quiet, but I’ve been thinking about the nurses at Cottage—where I detoxed for five days– and about my friends who are nurses.

In short, my nurses were incredible. They were cheerful, accommodating if I asked for something, and vigilant about vital signs, blood draws, meds and so on.

Most of all, they were kind.

Yet they had to deal, as a group, with patients who were experiencing psychotic breaks, the kind where they had to clear us out of the halls for our safety.

There were two of these at the same time one morning and all the nurses closed ranks around those patients, talking them through their crises, but that morning they needed the help of four large security staffers, their backup.  The security men later escorted the patients, one of them my short-term roommate, to a ward where they could get more intensive care and more potent medications.

So this is what I found out: Being a nurse can be scary. I didn’t realize this, and this was the guy who, during one stay in the ER, wanted to rip aside the room’s dividing curtain and pummel the doctor I overheard referring to the nurse assisting him as “sweetie.”

The nurses don’t know this, but they became my friends. I also made friends with the women who cleaned our rooms, Maria and Joanna. They were, like the nurses, unbelievably sunny. My ego demanded that I share a few words in Spanish with them, and they were admirably tolerant.

My new friends included a boy who couldn’t get through two sentences without suddenly putting his hand over his heart and starting to cry.

There was an older man who couldn’t get discharged and so was palpably, painfully sad. He owned everything he’d done while using, so maybe part of what looked like sadness was a actually a kind stoic strength. I guess wisdom, once it’s earned, hurts like hell. Thankfully, he finally got out early on the Friday I did. We shook hands and looked squarely at each other, the way that men do when they communicate the euphemism “regard” for each other when the proper and more accurate word is “love.”

There was a young woman, small and fine-boned, who spoke so softly that she affirmed my need for new hearing aids. She had the profile of a Nubian princess. She was very black and incredibly lovely. In fact, she was, I thought, one of the most beautiful young women I’d ever known, and thirty-plus years of teaching guarantees that I’ve known thousands of beautiful young women.

Phone Man was ALWAYS on the phone, making arrangements, keeping tabs, deciding decisions, I think all of it for his business. He was never really in the hospital, not at all. I did not like him.

Another young man—there were a LOT of young men—beamed proudly when, after four times, he remembered my name. He was very tall, sweet and unassuming, but I’m not sure if his mother had ever really loved him.

An older woman (my age) had been a world traveler, another was homeless. That woman’s life was scored by the deaths of those she loved the most, and the loss showed. She was a little stooped, had lost a few teeth, had lost one of the arms on her eyeglasses, had lost everything she owned except for the clothes she wore into the ward. She now wore the tan scrubs and static socks that Cottage provides.

Only twenty-four hours after coming in, and abstaining from drinking, I overheard a conversation she had with a nurse. The woman I’d pitied was intelligent, articulate, focused on her future after discharge. I was chastened. She was a remarkable person who needed, if just for a few days, a place where she could find herself again. “Remarkable” is almost the right word. “Miraculous” might be a better one for her.

Maybe all of us, after all, are miraculous.

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