Thursday, July 16, 2026

Snow Fantasy

 

One of the ways I've dealt with the canicule (heatwave) is to fantasize snow, complete with my Scarves, Swedish mittens, and boots. I picture gentle falling snow outside our window then howling winds. I go back to my childhood when we turn snowdrifts into forts.

My husband had a more practical method. "Let's go to Chamonix. It's in the 20s instead of the mid 30s."

 "Sherlock go," we reassured our dog who considers suitcases a cause of anxiety and off the three of us went to the ski resort in the Alps.

Arriving about noon we stepped into cooler air. We thought off season it would be empty but it was filled with hikers.

An Italian restaurant provided lunch served by a Thai waitress who preferred English to French. The pasta was fresh made, the cheese local. We sat on the terrace under umbrellas.

As if there was a switch, someone turned on pounding rain and high winds. We ran inside for our after lunch coffee and tea. And as suddenly as it started, it stopped.

Rick has a habit of finding interesting hotels. We've stayed on a Dutch canal boat, a plastic bubble on an Austrian country roof, a converted schoolhouse in Ireland, a château owned by a descendant of Napoleon, and the Davos Hotel where the world leaders stay at the Economic Forum.

This unpretentious family owned hotel that he found was simple with everything we needed. The friendly receptionist wore a T-shirt that said, "Life is too short to learn German."

Sherlock, who made a hit with the hotel staff, loved walking around one of the three lakes near the hotel.

The next morning we went searching for the brand new musée of Alpine history. I went in the morning, Rick in the afternoon. Sherlock was chien non grata.One of us had to stay with him 

Lunch at chez Josephine. Rick said that he had the best onion soup he ever eaten and he loves mine, which isn't half as good as my late friend Bill's. A plate of local meat, potatoes, salad and olives reminded me how Italy has anti pastas and Spain Tapas. 

Rick checked on a store that sold English books and brought back Land by Maggie O'Farrell and Fourteen Days, overseen by the Author's Guild. He also found French chocolate.

Tomorrow we descend to Geneva. The temperature is predicted to drop to the high 20s, which will be a relief.

Meanwhile we've had the break from the heat, a mini getaway.

And my fantasy? Every time I look up, I've seen snow on the Alps. 

 

 

Letters

  

I wanted to write before I could write, so I did orally, adding "he said or she said" and descriptions to whatever was happening.

Our mailbox was at the end of a long driveway. Almost everyday my grandmother and I would walk out to get the mail. She did not appreciate the day when I laughed and said, "The little girl said laughingly holding the fat cook's hand." The suggestion from my parents was to continue writing but silently.

Letters flew back and forth when we lived in West Virginia. My grandmother, A.K.A. the fat cook, kept in touch with her friends back in Massachusetts. Each letter's arrival was a cause for celebration.

As a teenager, back home in Massachusetts, my cousin Joanie in NJ was a pen pal and later as an adult I would have an English woman as a pen pal. She wrote on the special baby blue airline paper that cost less to send than a regular envelope.

During summers when I was a teenager, my future husband was a counselor on Cape Cod, which seemed so far away. I answered his twice weekly letters. I couldn't wait for morning deliveries so I went to the post office.

Bunny Clarkson, postal employee and family friend, always had a big smile when he had a letter for me.

When said boy friend became my fiance he was stationed at the Naval School of Music in Washington DC. I bought all different stationary and inks and tried to create works of art in my missives.

We were stationed in Stuttgart Germany, but our mail was sent to an APO address in New York to be forwarded. I treasured letters from my father and college friends. My grandmother kept me updated on my brother and mother plus the soap opera we had watched together. Recipes were included.

Back in the States there was no more need for letters. Mail was bills and catalogues.

Many years later, my daughter and I crossed the Atlantic. I moved to France after she finished a year at a Gymnasium in Germany. We communicated by fax, faster than letters.

In France I still wrote letters to my mother and stepmother. In a rush I sent the wrong letter to the wrong mother. My stepmother was amused, my mother wasn't.

Letters reappeared when I moved permanently to Switzerland, mainly from my best friend's father who acted as a stand-in father throughout my high school years. He described me as "That little girl from Reading who moved to Europe."

Somewhere in the 90s, communication became email. No longer did I have to wait for that precious envelope. Almost every afternoon around 3:00 there would be an email from my best friend. We filled a large notebook with our exchanges sharing as much as we had done when we shared a house. 

Emails do not have to rely on distance. In the 2000s sharing a four-story house, emails could bounce between floors saving steps. 

"How do you feel about going to Marro for lunch?" 

"Great, noon?" 

"Meet you downstairs."

We have archived letters from famous people for scholars to research. That will be lost with the click of a delete key. Sad in a way.

Would I give up email? 

Absolutely not. 

The immediacy, back and forth, is wonderful. But still there is something about getting an envelope with thoughts and ideas. There's something about coming across a letter from years before that carries us back to an earlier emotion. 

I consider myself lucky, I've had both.

 

 

 

Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Free Write - Two Men

  




As the three Free Writers sipped their espresso, English Breakfast Tea and hot chocolate respectfully in the cool tea room we looked for a "victim" to be the prompt for this week's exercise. Rick spied the two men and snapped their photo. We picked up our pens and started to write.

Rick's Free Writ

They had been a‘couple friends’ for a number of years. Their wives were frequent friends, so Douglas and Pierre got pulled along to social gatherings and therefore knew about each other without much detail. They were not in similar businesses – Douglas construction, Pierre a merchant. So small talk mostly – the weather, the next Swiss national initiative up for votation, maybe a little international politics but without either revealing whether they leaned left or right. You didn’t divulge that in polite company.

But after both Harriet and Dolores had died within months of each other, Douglas and Pierre, now retired, had a plethora of time on their hands.

You wouldn’t call them ‘dates,’ not with two elderly hetero males. More like hanging out. The café once or twice a week. An occasional movie, eventually supplanted by Netflix at one or the other’s house. Museums. Even a day trip to Paris.

It worked for them.

Julia's Free Write

One two, one two, good little soldiers are we!

Interesting to see two men having coffee – or tea – obviously not anything stronger as it is a tearoom and 10 in the morning.

But we are summer and they are, again obviously, retired.

If one were to guess what their professions had been, I’d go for at least middle management in a sedentary post. Why? Short hair, white shirts – note not t-shirts nor polos – and dark Bermuda shorts.

The shorter of the two was in the lead: boss perhaps?

More intriguing: research later would show that both had been heavily involved in the management and training of Russian spies!

D-L's Free Write

Identical shorts, shirts, sneakers. Jim first, John second walking out of the tea room in formation. 

The two of them, retirees, codgers, wrinklies. Friends from being childhood neighbors. Cub Scouts, Boy Scouts.

Only Christmas reunions when they were at university, Jim at Stanford, John at Harvard.

New York City jobs, Jim in finance, John with a law firm.

Homes in Westchester. Weekend golf, tennis .

Jim 2 boys, John 2 girls. No, the kids didn't match up.

Kicked out of their houses by their wives to go have coffee together. Jim espresso. John plain black.

Talk about the good old days. The World Cup. Wimbledon. The Yankees.

A life flashing by. 

 About the Free Writers

Rick Adams is an aviation journalist and publisher of www.aviationvoices.com, a weekly newsletter reporting the airline industry  top stories . He is the author of The Robot in the Simulator. AI in Aviation Training.  

Visit D-L.'s website  https://dlnelsonwriter.com, She is the author of 15 fiction and three non fiction books. Her 300 Unsung Women, bios of women who battled gender limitations, can be purchased  at https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/300-unsung-women-d-l-nelson/1147305797?ean=9798990385504 

Visit Julia's blog. She has written and taken photos and loves syncing up with friends.  Her blog can be found: https://viewsfromeverywhere.blogspot.com/ 

 

 

 

Monday, July 13, 2026

The Bayeux Tapestry and Me

 


Hundreds of thousands of tiny wool stitches sewn by unknown women became the first news banner telling the story of the 1066 Battle of Hastings. The Bayeux Tapestry is 230 ft.x 20 in.

It tells the story of *William the Conqueror's defeat of King Harald Godwinson for the English crown in 58 scenes. The Battle changed English history and culture.

Legend has it Queen Matilda, William's wife commissioned it, but Bishop Odo, William's half brother was also said to be responsible. The first historical mention was in an inventory of the Bayeux Cathedral in 1476.

Although I knew of the tapestry, I didn't expect to see an exact duplicate of it when my train broke down in Reading England. It was three hours before the next to London.

What to do?

The Reading Museum provided shelter from the rain and more interesting than a café. Displayed was a copy of the Bayeux Tapestry. The original was on my bucket list, but not in my immediate future. 

Elizabeth Wardle, a member of the Leek Embroidery Society, had seen the original and felt England should have its own copy. She made it happen in 1885. Plagiarism in wool?

On a trip to France to meet old friends, my husband and I saw the original. I could imagine women sitting on stools, buckets of green, brown, black and red colored yarn at their feet, dipping their needles in and out as the story took shape.

At the souvenir shop -- there's always a souvenir shop --I bought a metal tray with one of the scenes. I use the tray daily.

The original tapestry was shipped to the UK for display this week. Over 100,000 tickets have already been sold.  


What a story. Artists and seamstresses as reporters. Their work survived peace and war through the ages. 

*Note: It was a thrill to stand at the tomb of William the Conqueror. Only a thigh bone is said to remain. Yet, to be in the same place as even part of a historic figure who changed history in 1066 brings the story to real life in my mind.
 

 

 

Coat Hanger and Knitting Needles Lawrence Lader


Not all pro-life legislators are men, but policy makers usually are.

Texas is one example where 80% of the legislators are men and have pushed through laws that close access to women’s health services. Between 2010 and 2014, childbirth deaths in Texas doubled from 18.6 per 1,000 live births to 35.8, the highest in the nation. 

When it comes to women’s rights, I have discovered there are two kinds of men. Those that want to control women, for reasons far beyond me to explain. And those who understand and help women.

Before rejecting the idea, think of Horatio Robinson Storer (1830–1922) of the early American Medical Association who led the “physicians' crusade against abortion.” Under his urging a Committee on Criminal Abortion was formed, a report made, then presented and approved by the association in 1859.

Abortion, which had been somewhat accepted before quickening, was now campaigned against with such furor that women were consigned to the back alleys as, state by state, laws were written and approved outlawing the practice.

Birth control, which prevents pregnancy and the need for abortion, was also outlawed. Women, according to many men in the late 1800s, were on this planet to produce babies, although they didn’t phrase it that way. It was spoken under the guise of “morals.”

Committees on women’s rights and health in the U.S. Congress and state legislatures were/are often made up entirely of men. The result: defunded Planned Parenthood clinics which had provided health services such as mammograms, uterine cancer checks and birth control for women at a price even the poor can afford.

Mostly male legislators in Georgia in 2011 wanted to make a law (HB1) requiring that miscarriages be investigated as murder, just one of too many examples of male-promoted laws limiting women’s control of their own bodies.*

Lader, an Unlikely Crusader for Women’s Rights

On the other side, there are men who fight for women’s rights with a passion. Lawrence Lader was one of those.

He was born in 1919 in New York City. His father worked in a family business making food additives. Not much in his childhood would have led anyone to predict he would become a crusader for abortion.

When he was a student at Harvard University, he met Jean MacInnis, whom he married in 1942. She kept her maiden name and had her own bank account, almost unheard of in the 1940s.

Although they divorced in 1946, Jean had a long-term positive influence on Lader. In 2003, some 57 years after they were divorced, he wrote in Ideas Triumphant, Strategies for Social Change and Progress: “It was established between us that her personhood was independent, and she was guaranteed all social and legal rights.”

His writing career was jump-started by World War II. Lader served in the Pacific theater for the Armed Forces Radio and his reports were often published in The New Yorker. After the war, he wrote for many leading magazines.

He wanted to write a book but had difficulty finding a subject until he stumbled across Margaret Sanger, the woman who fought so hard for women to have access to birth control. He spent three years writing her biography, including spending time with Sanger, who was then in her seventies. He adopted her belief in “inviolable personhood,” the idea that a woman owned her own body.

The result was Margaret Sanger: And the Fight for Birth Control, which was published in 1955 when Lader was 36. The book delves into Sanger’s crusade, which had been outlawed from the 1870s because it was considered immoral and allegedly encouraged prostitution and venereal disease.

A new copy of this book is available on Amazon for $625 (as of July 2017), although used editions, when available, can be purchased for normal book prices.

He said of Sanger: “undoubtedly…the greatest influence on my life.”

Although he had in-depth conversations with Sanger, abortion wasn’t included. Sanger’s knowledge was limited to the horrible back-alley stories.

Lader thought there would be a logical step from birth control to abortion for his next book, but when he started researching the subject he found almost nothing. Today, when I was researching this book I found books, videos, magazine articles, testimonies, historical documents, etc. readily available.

In an interview with Body Politic (a Canadian monthly magazine published 1971-1987), he said, “It was an issue no one discussed...I was trying to make the jump from birth control to an abortion right that not only didn't exist but was an underground, abhorrent topic.” He went on to write Abortion, published in 1966. The book offered a thorough, carefully documented examination of the topic, starting with the words “Abortion is the dread secret of our society.” He examined the underground system for descriptions of ways to abort a baby to philosophical/religious attitudes as far back as Plato.

Lader also argued that based on the 1965 Supreme Court decision on privacy in family planning, Griswold v. Connecticut, which allowed married women to get birth control information, the right should be extended to abortion.

Betty Friedan, author of The Feminine Mystique, which ratcheted up the woman’s movement (whom Lader had met her through his first wife when Friedan was a student at Smith College), said of Abortion that “it was an authoritative study of the hypocrisy and absurdity of abortion practices.”

Because of Abortion, the topic was discussed in important places. It was cited eight times in Roe v. Wade.

Abortion II was published in 1973.

Fighting for Repeal and Medicine

Writing about abortion wasn’t enough for Lader. In February 1969 he attended the First National Conference on Abortion Laws: Modification or Repeal? There were mixed opinions among those who thought abortion should be limited to casesof rape, incest or to save the mother’s life andthose who thought it should be the woman’s choice under any circumstances. Lader, along with others,wasonthewomen’schoiceside.Thewomen’schoicepointofviewwonattheconference.

Friedan has called him “the father of the abortion rights movement” while anti-abortion groups have referred to him as “abortion's chief propagandist.”

These activities led to the founding of the National Abortion Rights Action League (NARAL) in July 1968. Lader served on the board. The organization worked on the reformation of abortion laws in New York. They succeeded in 1970.

After his board position with NARAL ended in 1975, Lader formed Abortion Rights Mobilization (ARM). Much of its work was the fight to lift the U.S. ban on RU-486 (Mifepritone), developed in France in 1980. The French began to use it as an abortion drug, combining it with Misoprostol in 1987. During the first 50 days of pregnancy the drug has a 95% efficiency rate to end a pregnancy. RU-486 is sometimes confused with the morning after pill (levonorgestrel or ulipristal acetate). RU-486 was unavailable in the U.S.

Lader and a pregnant social worker, Leona Benten, flew to London where he bought a dozen RU-486 pills to take to the U.S. To make sure the issue received proper attention he faxedU.S. customs officials, who met him at Kennedy Airport and confiscated the medicine. He wrote two books:

RU-486, the Pill That Could End the Abortion Wars and Why American Women Don't Have It (1991)

 A Private Matter, RU-486 and the Abortion Crisis (1995)

The Supreme Court heard Benten's appeal on the confiscation. Lader got his hands on a Chinese copy of the drug and synthesized it. Abortion Rights Mobilization (ARM) sponsored clinical trials. Hundreds of women received the pill free from ARM.

In 2000 the Food and Drug Administration gave their blessing to RU-486.

Not everything Lader did worked. His lawsuit against the Internal Revenue Service, alleging it allowed the Roman Catholic Church tax exemptions when it was playing politics with its fight against abortion laws, failed.

He wrote that the 1965 Supreme Court decision in Griswold vs. Connecticut, which overturned the state's right to outlaw birth control, was broad enough to apply to abortion.

His discussion of the legal history of abortion was repeatedly cited in the majority opinion for Roe v. Wade. Being footnoted in that landmark decision, Lader later said, was “one of the things I'm proudest of.”

In addition to the Sanger biography and Abortion, Lader also authored:

  The Bold Brahmins: New England's War Against Slavery (1961)

 Power on the Left: American Radical Movements Since 1946 (1980)

 Politics, Power and the Church (1987

 A  Private Matter, RU-486 and the Abortion Crisis (1995). 

Lader died of colon cancer in 2006.

*Not all pro-life legislators are men, but policy makers usually are. Texas is one example where 80% of the legislators are men and have pushed through laws that close access to women’s health services. Between 2010 and 2014, childbirth deaths in Texas doubled from 18.6 per 1,000 live births to 35.8, the highest in the nation.

Sunday, July 12, 2026

A Mole

 

Our studio feels like a mole hole.

During the canicule (heatwave) we draw the drapes. A fan provides air. We keep lights to a minimum. 

This has been going on since mid June. No relief predicted until later this month.  

Our landlord has put umbrellas on the patio outside our door and we can feel the difference. It helps.

There are stairs to get to the garden with its shady mulberry tree but even the tree doesn't help in the 36°-41°(96-106°) temperatures. 

At night it drops to 17° (62°) degrees. That's when we throw open everything that can be thrown open. It's necessary in the morning to be aware of the temperature creeping up to go back to being a mole.

There is a reason I would never, ever live in the south. I'm a lover of fall colors and brisk air. I want a couple of months of snow.  I love spring when a few brave flowers poke their way up through the dirt. 

We are in our Geneva home now thinking that it would be cooler than the south of France. There are fires nearby to our French village according to neighbors there who say there's the smell of smoke. It's not as bad as the fires across the border in Spain, many of which the news says were set.

According to the forecast nothing but high heat until later in the month. YUCK! 

Maybe next summer we can spend in Northern Scotland or Sweden. 

I will try and remember how lucky I am there is no genocide around me, my family is safe and bombs are not falling. Home is not a tent. My pantry is full. 

Maybe we will just go on being a mole until next month.  

 

Friday, July 10, 2026

Celebrity Scams

  

I gotta give the scammers credit for originality. No more I'm (give a name and a place). They go on to say I've just had my wallet stolen, they say. Send money. 

So many friends have received these calls including the one allegedly from my pal Mary. Mary was sitting in my office with me when I got the message. Scams.

My first ALLEGED celebrity contact was from Il Divo's Urs, a Swiss like me and my favorite of the four singers. He started out saying he liked to contact fans even if his manager didn't know he did. He wanted to make sure I didn't have any press connections.When I didn't answer he went away but not before mentioning money. I'm still a fan of the group.

Because I'm a writer, I've been e-mailed or Facebooked by ALLEGED writers John Irving, Stephen King, Donna Leon and this morning by James Patterson.

John Irving - I had a relation with him in my head because I loved his writing. Same birth year, both of us lived in Exeter NH but not at the same time. My masters degree thesis was on repeated symbolism in his books. However, that would not be a reason for him to contact me so I played along for a bit and when I asked for authentication he went away.

Stephen King - I'm not a fan of his genre although I admire his style. I don't think I've ever mentioned him on the Internet. He could have found my name from my books, articles, etc. I didn't play along at all.

Donna Leon - I hoped she was real. We both live part time in Geneva, Switzerland. I imagined having a fondue at the Café du Soleil and talking about how we write our mysteries and what living internationally has done to our writing. She also knew a bit about my writing, unlike the other celebrity writers. However, as soon as I asked for verification, she disappeared. A tiny bit of me still wishes she was real.

James Patterson - His message was totally blank. Maybe I should write back and offer to check his marketing.

Each day I get one to five emails offering to publicize my books because they happened to come across them and like my style, plots, characters, etc. without ever mentioning the title. I suspect hidden in some AI data center is the same letter to send out. And yes, I check the internet to see if they are real companies. 

All in all these e-mail or Facebook interruptions are a change from my writing, reading, playing with the dog, doing things with my husband, but I do wish they would be more original. Maybe I can do a short story about a scammer. 

 

 

Thursday, July 09, 2026

Plashing and Pinocchio

   

My last text message from her said that it was almost impossible to type with her arthritic fingers. A friend was doing it for her. He died a few years back. 

One of the hardest things about aging is losing people who were important along the way.

This couple was 10+ years older than me. It was a second successful, happy marriage replacing two unhappy ones. They bought the condo over mine in Boston. 

We became friends, sharing meals and events together. When we traveled for business or pleasure, we looked after each other's teenagers, who were too old for a sitter, but young enough to have an adult on call and maybe a meal or two.

When they moved to Maine, I visited them first in their condo and second in their old farmhouse. Their red depression glass table settings, found in antique stores and flea markets over several years, brought forth so many memories of other meals.

They came to see me in Geneva. When they went to Italy, they asked me to join them in a house on a hill. The village was in Collodi where Carlos Collodi had written Pinocchio. The village souvenir shop was full of Pinocchios some in the image of George Bush. It was during Iraq.

We walked in a garden with a fountain and he and I commented on the "plashing" fountain at the same moment.

"Amy Lowell, Patterns," he said at the same time I did.

I was shocked that he knew it. I was shocked that he didn't change plashing to splashing. This was why we were all friends. Shared interests, shared appreciation for tiny things. 

We were never together again as we drifted into an email friendship, a condolence to her on his loss. There may be a void of contact but there will never be a void of memory, of warmth. 

I walk down the garden-paths,
And all the daffodils
Are blowing, and the bright blue squills.
I walk down the patterned garden-paths
In my stiff, brocaded gown.
With my powdered hair and jeweled fan,
I too am a rare
Pattern. As I wander down
The garden-paths.

My dress is richly figured,
And the train
Makes a pink and silver stain
On the gravel, and the thrift
Of the borders.
Just a plate of current fashion,
Tripping by in high-heeled, ribboned shoes.
Not a softness anywhere about me,
Only whalebone and brocade.
And I sink on a seat in the shade
Of a lime tree. For my passion
Wars against the stiff brocade.
The daffodils and squills
Flutter in the breeze
As they please.
And I weep;
For the lime-tree is in blossom
And one small flower has dropped upon my bosom.

And the plashing of waterdrops
In the marble fountain
Comes down the garden-paths.
The dripping never stops.
Underneath my stiffened gown
Is the softness of a woman bathing in a marble basin,
A basin in the midst of hedges grown
So thick, she cannot see her lover hiding,
But she guesses he is near,
And the sliding of the water
Seems the stroking of a dear
Hand upon her.
What is Summer in a fine brocaded gown!
I should like to see it lying in a heap upon the ground.
All the pink and silver crumpled up on the ground.

I would be the pink and silver as I ran along the paths,
And he would stumble after,
Bewildered by my laughter.
I should see the sun flashing from his sword-hilt and the buckles on his shoes.
I would choose
To lead him in a maze along the patterned paths,
A bright and laughing maze for my heavy-booted lover,
Till he caught me in the shade,
And the buttons of his waistcoat bruised my body as he clasped me,
Aching, melting, unafraid.
With the shadows of the leaves and the sundrops,
And the plopping of the waterdrops,
All about us in the open afternoon—
I am very like to swoon
With the weight of this brocade,
For the sun sifts through the shade.

Underneath the fallen blossom
In my bosom,
Is a letter I have hid.
It was brought to me this morning by a rider from the Duke.
“Madam, we regret to inform you that Lord Hartwell
Died in action Thursday se'nnight.”
As I read it in the white, morning sunlight,
The letters squirmed like snakes.
“Any answer, Madam,” said my footman.
“No,” I told him.
“See that the messenger takes some refreshment.
No, no answer.”
And I walked into the garden,
Up and down the patterned paths,
In my stiff, correct brocade.
The blue and yellow flowers stood up proudly in the sun,
Each one.
I stood upright too,
Held rigid to the pattern
By the stiffness of my gown.
Up and down I walked,
Up and down.

In a month he would have been my husband.
In a month, here, underneath this lime,
We would have broke the pattern;
He for me, and I for him,
He as Colonel, I as Lady,
On this shady seat.
He had a whim
That sunlight carried blessing.
And I answered, “It shall be as you have said.”
Now he is dead.

In Summer and in Winter I shall walk
Up and down
The patterned garden-paths
In my stiff, brocaded gown.
The squills and daffodils
Will give place to pillared roses, and to asters, and to snow.
I shall go
Up and down,
In my gown.
Gorgeously arrayed,
Boned and stayed.
And the softness of my body will be guarded from embrace
By each button, hook, and lace.
For the man who should loose me is dead,
Fighting with the Duke in Flanders,
In a pattern called a war.
Christ! What are patterns for?

 

 

Wednesday, July 08, 2026

Communism/Socialism Aren't Dirty Words



My mother and grandmother never missed a minute of the televised 1950s McCarthy Hearings. They avidly read every word about it in our morning and afternoon newspapers. They talked about the danger of communists in our midst. Their friends were also scared.

As kids we hid under desks for regular bomb tests when the siren blew.

The TV Show I was a Communist for the FBI  and a companion radio program reinforced the fear of communism.

It took years for people to realize even after Lawyer Joseph Welch said, "Have you no sense of decency, sir, at long last?" cCarthy was red baiting.

There was also the fear of creeping socialism which I discovered as a cub reporter covering Reading's Town Meeting. What was the creeping Socialism? Fluoride in the town water. 

It's happening again. Only this time the president is using the threat of communism is the scare tactic. The president said, “There is now a resurgence of the communist menace in our land, including from newcomers to our country who embrace ideas totally opposed to our way of life and our great success.

“Communism is the enemy of free people everywhere, everywhere in the world, never works, it’s the enemy of the Constitution, above all, it’s the enemy of July 4, 1776 – it is the enemy indeed.

"Americans will never let anyone take our freedom away . . . And all these talks from the communists, they haven’t got a chance. We don’t want communists in our country. Never worked, and it never will work. . .Right now, it’s happening in New York and California, but you’ll live in squalor . . .There will be no food, there will be no housing, there will be no military, and there will be no law and order. There will be no nothing. You’ll be a Third World country in every way, and everyone will suffer or die. That’s what happens. Crowds of evangelicals and Catholics who are part of the nonprofit Faith and Freedom Coalition which advocates for traditional family values and religious liberty. "These ruthless communists will attack all religions, but in particular Christianity. They always do."

Many countries have communist parties some in almost total control like China, Cuba, Laos, North Korea.

When I was first in France I was shocked to see election posters saying "I'm a communist and I vote"  Je suis communiste et je vote. At work in Switzerland, a very un-communist country, one of my staff was communist as was all her family. I see offices for the communist party sometimes as I drive through towns in France. 

There's nothing like a scare technique to promote a political party. We've had: Hordes of insane immigrants swarming the border to take jobs. Soon the immigrants will take over the whites. Now its the communists that are the danger.

Freedom House, Founded in 1941 in Washington, D.C. to promote Freedom and pro-democracy puts out a list each year on the ranking of Freedom Countries.

Notice the U.S. is on the bottom of the list. Notice at the top of the list are the countries the current American government considers socialist. 

 
 

 America is not in danger of being taken over by communists, democrats, democratic socialists. They are in danger of being destroyed by the current administration starting with their scare tactics.