Well, he have a nice patio out back with chairs for the adults and a sandbox for the kids. Nice, but gets hot or annoying when it rains. The sun is in your eyes if it's late in the day because it faces west. Looks like time to think about an awning!
Sun Setter starts advertising in the Spring to sell them for your Summer use. Good thinking. But their flim flam gives me the willies. (That's a retro comment.) Here's what they say.
First they show a bouncy, friendly couple who decided they need an awning. We are told they got theirs for "less than $700 dollars." Then we are told we can get one for as little as $599 dollars. Then we are told we can get a certificate (for a limited time only, so get with it) for $200 off. Here's my analysis.
Less than $700 is probably $699. That's the most it could be to fit the claim.
$599 as a price is the starting point the "bare bones" system. No size is given and no installation cost is mentioned, and the only add on I remember was a motor to open and close the awning rather than using a hand crank, which they show an older female using. See, it's easy to open and close.
Then there's that $200 discount coupon. If they used it when they paid under $700 dollars it would mean that their cost was as much as $899. Almost $900.
If you want a motorized system, at some size that fits your area, and have somebody else install it, it's all add on to $900 (less discount which is for a limited time only, perhaps for a year!). This could start reaching into the "over a $1000" range! There was a little mention that it is "assembled in the USA." Great. I'll guess it was made somewhere else: China? Peru? Mexico? India? Who knows?
My next step would be to seek out an internet site for Sun Setter and find out more details, but frankly, after watching the TV ad I just give up.
No awning this year! I rate this ad as poor, but I guess it will excite some folks to call up for their certificate and get on the contact list for interested buyers. They'll probably regret that. I know I would.
I still enjoy my patio, though.
Thursday, June 13, 2019
Thursday, March 7, 2019
A New Beginning (just like Star Wars!)
Well, it's looking like I need to pay a bit of attention to this blog I have nibbled at from a long time ago. I really don't have a lot of time anymore, since I'm trying to start up an Etsy store to help with my old-age retirement (I just turned 80). But Quoro is somewhat limited with it's entry size (which I didn't know until I tried to post there) and I should spend more regular hours trying to get my thoughts in print (or whatever it's called in digital form). So, feel free to read any of my old stuff and comment on anything ... just stay calm and with no name calling. I believe in sensible discussion with any points of view accepted. The other stuff (which sometimes funny and often offensive) doesn't really help anybody. Maybe I should find a way to promote traffic to my blog. Maybe not. It's a commitment either way..
Take this as an opening shot and I'll try to keep this blog current, though not yet on any predictable schedule right now.
BTW, if anyone reads this and is interested in calligraphy, that's a main topic of interest for me right now. Feel free to check Etsy.com and search for Labowcalligraphy my newest endeavor that is taking up a lot of my time. Not complaining; I enjoy it!
Take this as an opening shot and I'll try to keep this blog current, though not yet on any predictable schedule right now.
BTW, if anyone reads this and is interested in calligraphy, that's a main topic of interest for me right now. Feel free to check Etsy.com and search for Labowcalligraphy my newest endeavor that is taking up a lot of my time. Not complaining; I enjoy it!
Monday, October 30, 2017
Gunner Control (Revisited)
For several years I have been formulating a system that might help with the improper use of firearms in this country. The overall planning is hampered by several factors, however. The first is the fact that each state has regulations about the use, transport, purchase, etc. of firearms that makes it almost impossible for a citizen to know what is and what is not a legal process. Secondly, the availability of a number of types of weapons confuses the issues around what kinds of guns make sense to have in the hands of a variety of persons. Third is the market of stolen and personal sale transfers of guns from one person to another, making a murky trail of possession.
The whole issue has been approached by almost everyone involved as an attempt to control guns. This has been shown to be hopeless given the current regulations, even though laws currently passed try to control them.
I have come to believe that the whole issue should be approached in a new way. The control and all association laws should be directed to gunner control. By this I mean the process would be one of defining the gun holder as the issue, and attempt to assure that anyone having a gun is knowledgeable about the laws that apply to owning and using weapons, is skilled in the use of the type of weapon that person buys, and that the person can be tested and approved for the purchase and ownership of a weapon of any kind.
Firstly, any such system must define the qualifications of a person to have a weapon of a type that discharges a destructive payload to be delivered at some distance from the user. I suggest that classes of users be defined that are allowed to own such weapons in the first place. Age is a natural starting place to restrict a person from having a weapon of one of the defined classes. For example, a young child should not be allowed to purchase, own, have access, or use of a weapon of a class that is military in nature. Physical limitations may play a role in determining weapon ownership and use, but this isn’t perfectly clear without study. The reason a person wishes to be eligible weapon owners/users should also be able to show a knowledge of that type of weapon and knowledge of the laws applying to its purchase, sale, and use.
I suggest there are five legitimate reasons for a person to have a weapon of any class.
1. A member of the military, National Guard, or paramilitary force such as police, private investigators, drug officers, etc.2. Collectors of functioning and non-functioning weapons.
3. Hunters.
4. Sportsmen, such as target shooters and those using weapons in the course of competitions like the Olympics.
5. Civilians in general who can make a case for a need of self defense, at home or work, such as store owners/operators, drug counselors, psychologists, etc. who have a higher percentage of contact with marginally dangerous clients.
This list, or one more properly drawn after study, would represent the “gunners” that any law would attempt to control. Any law proposed should be described as “gunner control.”
The process embodied in such gunner control legislation is what I have been working on for several years (off and on). Some years ago I presented an early version to some lawyers for the NRA, who agreed with me on its general approach and saw nothing objectionable with it. This is encouraging, but there are a lot of issues that have to be explored to get this into a reasonable law.
Firstly, and unfortunately, my process would require the establishment of a new government agency. I’m not really interested in doing this, but I haven’t seen where in the current government hierarchy the appropriate commission might be located. The agency I suggest would be something like the Federal Communications Commission in its original charter for controlling the use of frequencies of the electromagnetic spectrum. It was originally in the Depart of the Navy, I believe, but eventually was handled by the specifically created FCC.
When I decided to become a radio amateur there were a number of steps I had to take to prove myself. First, I had to register and pay a fee which helped to defer the cost of the agency. Second, I had to take a written exam which covered the laws and regulations in the use of the spectrum: what transmission modes were used at which frequencies, what power limitations there were on each band of frequencies, what type of equipment was allowed, what record of spectrum use had to be kept, etc. Third, I have to take a practical exam, demonstrating my ability to perform certain communication actions, primarily the sending and receiving of Morse code at a specified speed. Lastly, I had to agree to be monitored in my use and produce records of my activities if needed.
This did not seem at the time to be an unmanageable burden to me. I also had no objection to my call letter assignment being published with my name and address. In fact, this became useful to me in finding others with whom I had contact, and for business purposes. I got a lot of advertising for radios and electronic parts.
Note that this system controls the users of the equipment, not the equipment. There were and are some restrictions on the use of equipment in very limited areas. I believe it is still considered illegal to own and use a police scanner to follow police transmissions, but it may be the use of scramblers and codes may have eliminated that restriction. Such bans were minor.
A similar system would control gunners (not guns), and provide for the ability of persons to own and use weapons of various classes only if they were licensed to do so. What follows is an outline system, suggested as a starting point, for such gunner control.
All weaponry would be categorized as to what class of weapon it is. A cannon, for example, would never be thought of as a hunting class weapon, or fall into a category of self-defense. It would easily be a military weapon, and perhaps a collection item, if non-functioning, etc. Such categories and classes would have to be carefully defined based on some measurable characteristic of each weapon. I can’t imagine what all these might be, but such elements as rate of fire, size of payload, portability, etc. could figure into the description.
Once categories are defined, a set of tests covering the laws and regulations and practical issues of each class of weapon would be developed. These would represent the defining requirements a person must meet to be eligible to purchase and own a weapon of a class. A person passing the exam(s) for a given class would be issued a license of that class. It would only be legal for a person holding a license of a class to purchase or own a weapon of that class. A person could, of course, qualify for more than one class, but do so for each individually.
On passing all the requirements for eligibility for a class license, the person’s name, address, and class license information would be entered in a license data base which would be publicly available, probably at some charge or subscription rate. This data base would be available to groups who had an interest in licensees of weapons classes. This might include police departments, state police, manufacturers, legal departments, etc. Even an individual might wish to purchase access to the data base, but there is no clear reason that I can imagine at this time for this.
Upon entry into the data base, any entity that has access could search and/or scan the records and could submit an objection to a new licensee being issued of the license based on one or more of a set of grounds spelled out in the legislation. Only these grounds can be used to file an objection. This is a key element of such legislation. As such, the grounds must be carefully determined and defined. Some grounds would seem to be obvious: the applicant is a documented felon; or has a psychiatric history of dangerous behavior; or is a documented member of a violent/terrorist/anti-government group; or is a person wanted for smuggling, drug dealing; etc. The completion of this list of grounds might take the most time to get right and likely would have to be revised from time to time.
After a reasonable waiting period which would allow for objections to be filed, the license would be issued to the applicant. Objections could still be filed at a later date, but the license would remain issued and in effect until the grounds were upheld.
If an objection is filed it would have to be evaluated and a ruling made within some specified time from the date of the objection being submitted. After that time, the objection would become moot and normal laws would come into play for suspending a license due to weapons violations, as defined now.
After a period of two years (or other agreed timeframe) the applicant’s record for an issued license would be removed from the data base. The main reason for the record to stay “live” for some period of time is to catch the impulse licensed weapon buyer.
The record of the sale is a delicate issue at this point. It could be entered into the data base or not. I currently believe it should not be. It should be logged in the seller’s records and available later if called for.
Penalties should be defined for a person selling or having a weapon of a class without a license, or for which he is not licensed. This is analogous to a person caught driving without a license, or operating a taxicab without the proper class license, etc.
All other weapons issues relating to general use of would still apply at the state level, such as concealed carry permits, transportation of weapons regulations, use of weapons in various jurisdictions, etc. But the right to a weapon and the ability to purchase a weapon would be regulated by “gunner control.”
The agency could have the right to retest an individual if issues arise concerning misuse of weapons by a licensee, or at after some appropriate licensed time period. There should also be requirements for a licensee to report changes of address to the commission and for new licenses to be issued at the current address. This is the same as the requirements for amateur radio licenses.
More about Gunner Control
Let’s talk a little about gun control.
Every time I write or otherwise
correspond with legislators about controlling those who buy guns and turn out
to be dangerous to the public I get a nice letter telling me that THEY are
doing what is needed to keep guns out of the hands of “bad actors.” They may well
think they are because of the Brady Bill and the background check system that
is run by the FBI.
It is true that some persons are
prevented from buying a weapon legally because of failing a background check.
Good. But some persons are denied purchase of a weapon wrongfully. This denies
a person of their second amendment rights. Is it better to prevent persons who
should legally be allowed to purchase a gun because they are mistakenly pulled
in the same net as those who should not be allowed to legally purchase a gun?
That’s in the line of “deny them all and let the courts sort it out.” Not a
good procedure because many persons do not file protests which they would
probably win because of cost, time, and low level of true need for a gun.
In 2014, for example, the background
check system denied purchases for 90,895 persons of which 4,411 were overturned
when challenged. It is probable that most of the others were not challenged, or
even were and resulted in success and the purchase was “allowed” to proceed.
Such permission, however, is purged from the system in 24 hours after being
given. If the purchaser doesn’t return in that time, another check is made and
will probably result in the same denial as the first since it is using the same
procedure as the previous check.
The information that is being checked
for is clearly listed and seems logical and meaningful. These are listed here
(source: Wikipedia) and reads as follows:
A prohibited person is one who:
·
Has been convicted in
any court of a crime punishable by imprisonment for a term exceeding one year;
·
Is under indictment
for a crime punishable by imprisonment for a term exceeding one year;
·
Is a fugitive from
justice;
·
Is an unlawful user of
or addicted to any controlled substance;
·
Has been adjudicated
as a mental defective or committed to a mental institution;
·
Is illegally or
unlawfully in the United States;
·
Has been discharged
from the Armed Forces under dishonorable conditions;
·
Having been a citizen
of the United States, has renounced U.S. citizenship;
·
Is subject to a court
order that restrains the person from harassing, stalking, or threatening an
intimate partner or child of such intimate partner;
·
Has been convicted in
any court of a "misdemeanor crime of domestic violence", a defined
term in 18 U.S.C. 921(a)(33)
While I have no major objection to this,
I do object to the unknown number of “false hits” due to a variety of reasons.
The one most cited resulted in overturning a false hit is non-matching fingerprints
of the database to the applicant. That means doing a lot more to capture
fingerprints to prove you are not a “prohibited person.” I’m sure gun dealers,
and private sellers wouldn’t be thrilled with having to take fingerprints and
submit them at the point of purchase. Impossible!
Three major changes are needed that my
suggested plan tries to make are:
1.
The screening
check emphasizes the person applying to purchase a weapon. Notice this is not
“gun” oriented but includes any type of weapon that is deemed dangerous enough
to be legally restricted: rocket launchers, cannons, flame throwers, crossbows,
etc. A person who I would trust to use a shotgun for hunting may not be
somebody I want to have a rocket launcher. See my post on “Gunner Control” that
breaks out reasons to have a weapon.
2.
The screening
check slows the purchase to several days (or more) while the fact of the
application to purchase is made available to a wider audience than the FBI
database. Police, mental health practitioners, businesses, anyone who want to
subscribe to the information, would have a chance to participate in identifying
“prohibited persons” that they think they know of.
3.
The screening
check shows the reason that the person is applying for a particular kind of
weapon, and have a “precheck” provision that the person has already passed an
examination that tests for knowledge of the law and handling of that kind of
weapon. Notice that age has no play in this, although the plan could have age
limits, and even other physical limits (vision checks, some types of diseases,
etc.).
My proposed plan, “Gunner Control” is a work in
progress that tries to describe the kind of control over weapon purchases I
think would work. I am open to changes and welcome comments. Just be polite and
reasoned. No name calling and off-topic comments, please.
My master problem with the current instant check is
that it IS instant. This is not enough time to explore the purchaser, and
consider the purchaser by more than an undoubtedly flawed database. Another
problem is that it doesn’t do anything about the seller, making them withhold a
weapon for a purchaser that hasn’t passed a “precheck” proving knowledge about
the weapon type and the laws concerning it.
My general objection, of course, is that non-approved
persons of any kind will simply steal or buy guns (and maybe other stuff) from
fellow lawbreakers. Maybe this is where “stop and search” comes into play. But
that’s another topic for another day.
Thursday, October 26, 2017
My Spiritual Experience
I had a truly spiritual experience this
week.
A little background:
When I was a b oy I slept in a room we
called the sun porch. It was a long room off the hall with a doorway into a
bedroom (my sister’s). It had windows around the three walls: the end walls had
two windows each and the long wall at the back of the house had ten windows.
Actually, all these walls were windows. The depth of this room was about 6-7
feet. My bed was in one corner along the long wall, which faced east. I had
“the sun in the morning and the moon at night,” as the song says.
The result of this set up meant that I
went to bed every night was a view of the sky in the east, mostly after dark. I
saw, studied, and was taught about the stars occasionally by my brother who was
a sailor in WWII. I had a pretty good knowledge about the stars, planets, and
sky “events” from my six years at that house. I was there for 2nd –
7th grade.
By the time I got out of college I had
learned a lot about astronomy, and had a few great books and had gone through a
small telescope and some pairs of binoculars in studying the stars and the
moon. During college I took the opportunity to photograph the pages in an old
book from the library (Ball’s Handbook of the Heavens) and print up two
copies of the pages in the darkroom at school (I was photographer for the
school newspaper and yearbook). One copy was for the chemistry teacher and the
other was for me!
I didn’t realize I had taken the sky for
granted. It was just always there. As a radio amateur I participated in “field
days” when we camped out for weekends and made as many contacts as we could
with our mobile and portable equipment. There were sometimes great places to
observe the sky on these trips, like my favorite on the top of Mount Joy in
Valley Forge Park.
I worked one season during the
Geophysical Year (actually 18 months) doing meteorite watches on various nights
and sending observation data to a processing center. (I think it was in
Montreal, Canada, but I’m not sure I remember that right.)
As the years ground by I also changed.
Although I still thought a lot about space and the sky, my activities shifted
to science fiction and more worldly concerns, mainly music, magic, theater
craft and drinking. The world, in return also changed, sadly enough, to greater
air and light pollution across most inhabited areas.
Any night I went out I would glance at
the sky, but frankly was sometimes upset to find I could not find any
constellations, but only the brightest of stars and planets. Sometimes I wasn’t
sure about what star I was even seeing without the “reference” stars around and
asterisms to see entire areas. I tried using binoculars to enhance my viewing,
but the reduced field of view left me with more stars in a small area of sky
than I was familiar with using the naked eye. (Comet hunters, I might add, get
to know small areas of sky in more detail in order to “catch” a point of light
that doesn’t belong there due to its relative motion; they know the less bright
stars that the casual observer never sees.)
Slowly but surely I was losing my
fascination and love of the stars! The actual conquest of space from the major
rocket launches spoiled my enjoyment of science fiction (and I never got much
into fantasy) so I faded out of science fiction activity. I had become
Earth-bound.
So, what was this spiritual experience?
I was outside a night this previous week, checking the sky as I do from time to
time when there are some nice alignments of planets (still visible for the most
part) and the moon. The total eclipse of the sun, the shadow of which swept
across the United States in 2017, brought me out with a quickly thrown together
pin-hole projector to watch it on. (Never, NEVER look directly at the sun; I
don’t even trust the glasses they sell because the heat and production flaws
can sometimes cause them to crack and let the sun burn your eyes; you can
become blinded by this.) These small visits with my old friends in the sky were
all I had left of years of observations.
That night, following a few days of
light rain, was clearer than most. I was out later than usual, even for me, to
take our dog out. I had our outdoor lights off, and so did many neighbors. (I
hate it that so many leave theirs on all night!) But it was clear enough and
dark enough, even in my front yard, to see the sky as it should be seen. There
was the milky way, which I rarely see, and all the current constellations
filling the sky not obstructed by trees. I walked the dog around a little just
so I could view different areas. There was no moon, also, which was a help.
As I stood and looked up, absorbing the
overwhelming beauty and memories of the myths, folk stories, and human history
associated with the creation and meaning of the sky story I was struck with one
thought. These were only the stars I could see (maybe 30,000 in one hemisphere
of the sky on any given night) and they are all in our one galaxy (unless you
are acute enough to see, naked eye, the nearest galaxies in Andromeda). And
yet, there are billions and billions of other galaxies everywhere humans have
been able to look and capture their light. And there are probably more and more
galaxies we have never seen yet. And each galaxy has billions and billions of
stars. And who can guess how many planets exist around some per cent of those
stars. And life …. how much of it is there?
We are such a tiny, tiny piece of the
universe. We take ourselves so seriously even though we are truly nothing
special; our planet is ordinary, our sun is ordinary, our galaxy is ordinary.
Everything we do, have done, and probably will do is so unremarkable and so
temporary both in memory and in fact when considered with what is going on “out
there.” How can anything we are be
anything but the fact that we just are. Just our being is remarkable, but to
whom?
To what society? To what country? To
what planet? To what galaxy? To anything in this universe?
I was transfixed, knowing definitely
that I am just “stuff” that some forces have come to form into …. me. From my parents, theirs, back to man, back to
development of life, back to formation of Earth, back to formation of our sun,
stars, galaxies, particles of matter, back to primary creation by primary
force, by what? Unconditional love, I
call it. God. It.
Now, is that spiritual, or what?
Sunday, October 15, 2017
TV advertising flimflam
The
advertisers on TV are at it again. I know they are going to state their case in
as favorable light as they can for their products. That’s fair as long as what
they state is true. But flimflam is more and different than being dishonest. Confusing,
or misleading, statements would seem to be in the gray area between honesty and
dishonesty. They seem to be misleading with the purpose to get the public to
think of their products as better than they are. [Aside: Webster says flimflam
means “deceptive nonsense.”]
Let’s
play a little game of make-believe. I am going to start a random-winner system
in which I invite a “customer” to send me $1 a day for a month. Specifically, I
will state that I want a “customer” to send me $30 for every month except
February, in which I want $28. For this “purchase” I will guarantee that each
lucky participant in my product will win “up to $100” in each month. Would you
do this? I’m sure you would think this through (I hope!) and would decide that
the “up to $100” means that the most you would get is $100, even if I also
said, “Maybe you will get $200, $300, or even more!”
So, at
the end of the month when you received $23 you will have received “up to $100,”
which really means “as much as $100, but probably less.”
I have
tried to keep this from sounding like gambling, which it isn’t, but I don’t
want you to think it is. Indeed, I put in other action for you to take other
than sending me the $30 a month. And I guarantee you that if I am smart, and
get hundreds or even thousands of “customers” that many of my “customers” will
even get less than $23 back at the end of the month. Of course, if I’m smart I
would make sure that the occasional “customer” would get back $100 or even
more. This would really look good in a later ad! [Serious aside: Don’t send me
any money, PLEASE!]
Now if
I’m really greedy, but clever, I will send each “customer” something during
each month to help each one keep track of their potential good future payout: I
might send them a ball point pen and a pad to keep track of their behavior and
little reminders of things they can do to be frugal and thrifty. I will try to
give them “value” for their daily dollar with good advice. Will that be enough
to keep each one happy? Perhaps, if I’m really greedy, I will offer them
additional information, like life hacks, for an additional amount of perhaps
$25 more per month, or $50; whatever I think I can get out of them is fair
game. Remember, they could get back “up to $100” at the end of the month.
My
real life example of this is a crazy ad from Nutrisystem® that states that you
will lose “up to 13 pounds” the first month using their plan. I don’t know how
much the plan will cost you, because they don’t list prices, but when I checked
their web site I was sent an offer of “$20 OFF our top rated plan, Uniquely
Yours” plus “free tips and weight loss info.” The net page, when I rejected
this stellar offer, was for “up to 13 lbs & 7 inches overall in your first
month.” I’m not sure where those 7 inches come from “overall” maybe an inch
here and an inch there, but I hope not off my height! And 13 lbs? Well, “up to
13 lbs.” Such as 8 lbs or 4 lbs, perhaps, as the footnote mentions: “Weight
lost on a prior program. Expect to lose an avg. of 1-2 lbs per week.”
So,
the claim to lose “up to” 13 pounds really means you should expect to lose 4 to
8 pounds.
The
trick here is that even that amount isn’t guaranteed! You can EXPECT any amount
you want, more or less, but 4-8 pounds the first month is the most likely
range.
I am
going to expect that such weight loss will vary a lot, depending on my own
behavior in eating, exercising, etc. and in making use of those “free tips and
weight loss info” I will be getting. The price of the food? Not known until I
sign up and pick a plan. But, I suppose the
top rated
plan is the one I would need. [Aside: Amazon shows the Nutrisystem® Everyday 5
Day Weight Loss Kit (1) for $39.98 as of 10/15/17.]
Anyway,
I know advertising tries to hook you with honest statements that reel you in.
This one does, and I think everything they say is honest. One just has to be
careful and smart enough to figure out what is actually being said. “Up to”
means “at best, but maybe less.” And additional statements saying you could
get/lose even more are just advertising puff, which is allowed. There are so
many variations of how your behavior will go that the advertising statements
turn into meaningless …. flimflam. Just my opinion, but I’m sticking to it.
Wednesday, August 23, 2017
Protests a long time ago
Once upon a time some people in this country held protests. They weren't too much different from ones we have today ... except for the REAL protests. I'll give you examples from my past.
When I was still in school (I graduated in 1962), all starry eyed and sure to change the world I became involved in a few protests. I marched, for example, with the NAACP picketing of Fairyland Park, an amusement park in Kansas City, MO, and the Swope Park swimming pool, that was a large swimming pool complex. There were three pools: a small kiddie pool; a three board diving pool (two low and one "high;" and a city block sized pool of even depth of 4 feet for general fooling around. In the summer this pool complex was always jammed with hundreds of kids and their parents (a few). It was mostly for teenagers and was completely (trust me on this) white kids.
So, the decision was to try to integrate this unjust segregation. Oh, there weren't signs saying "Whites only," or "No blacks." It was just culturally understood. (I have learned, now that I am "old" that Fairyland Park was open one day a year to blacks and that there was an area called "Watermelon Hill" where blacks could picnic.) So we marched to protest injustice.
We were prepared with little signs, pins, and instructions not to damage anything, remain silent, and keep walking in a long back and forth in front of the main entrance. We didn't interfere with anybody, and no one brought sticks, knives, guns, baseball bats, etc. to the protest. After all, we weren't going to riot or anything like that! We were peacefully protesting. If others came and stood around watching us, or even talking or yelling at us, we were to ignore them and stick to protesting. Simple! And there were even a few policemen there to watch what was going on. I only remember a few, perhaps a dozen or so.
I remember being scared as we got on the buses, and I was pretty much surrounded by black people, but they didn't seem to mind my being there.
We walked, we protested, we got yelled at a little, and so it went. A few times like this and ... what do you know? The city and the people who ran Fairyland Park came to agree to allow anyone to use the park and the pool! We had succeeded without violence or getting our heads split open. I was pretty happy about that. (Actually, it took about two years.)
That summer, a neighbor of mine and I went to the Swope Park Pool. This large pool was always packed. But not then. For one thing, I think we were the only white persons there! And there were only a few small groups of blacks in the pool! The place was almost deserted. The same thing was happening at Fairyland, and the owners were struggling to keep the place open. By 1977 it was closed and gone. (You can check out what was lost by reading about Fairyland Park on Wikipedia.)
Some things aren't really meant to survive cultural change, although I suspect playground parks can if they start out right. Look at the Disney offerings, the Seven Flags, and local area parks like Hershey Park, etc. They seem to still be doing well ... and are integrated without making a fuss about it. (I'm not sure the gay community will agree from what I have read.) But our quiet protests (and some not quiet ones in the deep South) did work and result in a changing society. I would hope we are over the rough beginnings and into a new society.
But no, there are still "protests" where more than one side (sometimes a whole flock of them) are coming together, armed and spoiling for a fight. I don't think that's protest ... it's rioting. Can't our government units just admit this and work to stop rioting?
I want my peaceful protests back. Please?
When I was still in school (I graduated in 1962), all starry eyed and sure to change the world I became involved in a few protests. I marched, for example, with the NAACP picketing of Fairyland Park, an amusement park in Kansas City, MO, and the Swope Park swimming pool, that was a large swimming pool complex. There were three pools: a small kiddie pool; a three board diving pool (two low and one "high;" and a city block sized pool of even depth of 4 feet for general fooling around. In the summer this pool complex was always jammed with hundreds of kids and their parents (a few). It was mostly for teenagers and was completely (trust me on this) white kids.
So, the decision was to try to integrate this unjust segregation. Oh, there weren't signs saying "Whites only," or "No blacks." It was just culturally understood. (I have learned, now that I am "old" that Fairyland Park was open one day a year to blacks and that there was an area called "Watermelon Hill" where blacks could picnic.) So we marched to protest injustice.
We were prepared with little signs, pins, and instructions not to damage anything, remain silent, and keep walking in a long back and forth in front of the main entrance. We didn't interfere with anybody, and no one brought sticks, knives, guns, baseball bats, etc. to the protest. After all, we weren't going to riot or anything like that! We were peacefully protesting. If others came and stood around watching us, or even talking or yelling at us, we were to ignore them and stick to protesting. Simple! And there were even a few policemen there to watch what was going on. I only remember a few, perhaps a dozen or so.
I remember being scared as we got on the buses, and I was pretty much surrounded by black people, but they didn't seem to mind my being there.
We walked, we protested, we got yelled at a little, and so it went. A few times like this and ... what do you know? The city and the people who ran Fairyland Park came to agree to allow anyone to use the park and the pool! We had succeeded without violence or getting our heads split open. I was pretty happy about that. (Actually, it took about two years.)
That summer, a neighbor of mine and I went to the Swope Park Pool. This large pool was always packed. But not then. For one thing, I think we were the only white persons there! And there were only a few small groups of blacks in the pool! The place was almost deserted. The same thing was happening at Fairyland, and the owners were struggling to keep the place open. By 1977 it was closed and gone. (You can check out what was lost by reading about Fairyland Park on Wikipedia.)
Some things aren't really meant to survive cultural change, although I suspect playground parks can if they start out right. Look at the Disney offerings, the Seven Flags, and local area parks like Hershey Park, etc. They seem to still be doing well ... and are integrated without making a fuss about it. (I'm not sure the gay community will agree from what I have read.) But our quiet protests (and some not quiet ones in the deep South) did work and result in a changing society. I would hope we are over the rough beginnings and into a new society.
But no, there are still "protests" where more than one side (sometimes a whole flock of them) are coming together, armed and spoiling for a fight. I don't think that's protest ... it's rioting. Can't our government units just admit this and work to stop rioting?
I want my peaceful protests back. Please?
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)