Monday, April 13, 2026

Motherless: Clara Duvall 1895-1935


From Coat Hangers and Knitting Needles

People hurt by illegal abortions include the children left behind. A film made in 1992 recounts the story of four children whose mothers died from an illegal abortion. Over the next couple of weeks, I will publish four chapters that tell these stories from my book. This book was sent to pro-life organizations and judges including the Supreme Court.

These stories are no less poignant today than they were when they happened, when Linn Duval was an old woman or today when we read about it. 

I doubt Linn Duvall is still alive today.

Linn Duvall Hartwell’s Story

A black-and-white photo of three little girls with bobbed hair in the style of the 1920s is on the screen. One of them is Linn Duvall Hartwell.

We do not know how old she was when her mother, Clara, died in 1925 of an illegal abortion. We can glean some information by simple math. The film was made in 1992. Linn took viewers on a tour of her old neighborhood. She tells the audience she hadn’t been back for fifty years, making her around 69.

Linn has huge glasses and curly gray hair. She looked like a cookie-baking grandmother with a lap ready to cuddle any child.

The director used Linn’s voice over movies of Pittsburgh in the 1920s. A few Model-T type cars and street cars move back and forth down city streets. Pedestrians walk at a slightly faster pace than normal.

The camera switches to Linn riding down Princess Avenue, where she grew up. Her childhood home was a modest yellow-brick, two-story house. All the homes on the street were either wooden or brick houses with porches. They almost touch. It would be easy to imagine parents sitting on those porches after dinner as children played ball in the small yards or on the street during a summer evening.

Linn was one of five children living there with her parents and grandparents.

A photo of her father shows a balding man dressed in a suit and tie. She described her father as a “wordsmith,” saying he’d been Editor for the Pittsburgh Press and the Pittsburgh Gazette.

A profile photo of Clara shows a beautiful woman, her long hair piled on her head. She had what they call a button nose.

Her mother was a singer and sang on the radio, the first woman to do so, Linn said. The song? “If I had the wings of an angel, over these prison walls I’d fly.” Ironic.

Linn doesn’t know whose idea the abortion was. Did her grandmother say you can’t have another child? There isn’t room. With five children and four adults in the house, that possibility is realistic.

Linn believed her mother must have been desperate to run the risk of losing her life.

The children were at Clara’s deathbed. “You’re the mother now,” Clara said to her ten-year old daughter Eleanor, Linn’s older sister.

Linn was an adult before her grandmother said that her mother had died from an abortion.

The camera follows Linn walking through the cemetery where her mother is buried until they come to a small, simple stone with the name, date of birth and date of Clara’s death carved. “If you hadn’t been there I would have lain down on the ground and wept,” she tells the camera.

A lifetime later there is still pain. “Very unnecessary and even though it was this long ago, it Shouldn't have happened to women."

Botched illegal abortions continue today as laws controlling women's body increase. Women with resources can go elsewhere. Women with less income do it themselves. Doctors who see patients with medical problems and need a portion are afraid to give women the care they need. 

American women have gone backward in time.

More can be read about prize winning film directors/producers Janet Goldwater, Barbara Attie and Diane Pontius. https://abortionfilms.org/en/show/3484/mutterlos-das-vermachtnis-des-verlustes-illegaler-/ and at www.attiegoldwater.com  


Sunday, April 12, 2026

News-Who Controls America

This was created by Andrew Sterling Ansley to show how unfree the American media is. Don't believe what you hear. Thank you ASA. To find out more about ASA check the internet.

Information that controls your life is controlled by a few individuals in a few companies. According to Harvard’s Future of Media Project, seven companies now own more than half the major daily newspapers in America.

Local reporting is vanishing. What replaces it is national content wearing a local masthead. According to Harvard’s Future of Media Project, seven companies now own more than half the major daily newspapers in America.

Local reporting is vanishing. What replaces it is national content wearing a local masthead. Who is telling YOU the news YOU rely on?

CNN

Owned by Warner Bros. Connected with:DC Comics

  • Discovery Channel,
  • HGTV, 
  • the Food Network
  • multiple film studios.
Largest institutional shareholders: 
  • Vanguard (10%), 
  • BlackRock (6.3%)
  • State Street (5.5%)
Censorship? In 2011, CNN sent reporter Amber Lyon and a crew to Bahrain to covered the Arab Spring. They filmed:
  • Government forces shooting unarmed demonstrators
  • Interviewed torture victims
  • Detained at gunpoint 
The resulting documentary, iRevolution, won a Gold Medal at the New York Festivals. 
  • CNN aired it once domestically
  • CNN International, the most-watched English news outlet in the Middle East, never aired it. Not once. Meanwhile, CNN International was running paid content produced for the Bahrain Economic Development Board, chaired by the Crown Prince, casting the regime as pro-democracy reformers. 
What happened next:
  • Lyon went public about the suppression and was laid off in 2012
  • CNN threatened to terminate her severance and benefits if she ever spoke about it again. The Bahraini government paid CNN.
  • CNN killed the documentary that made the Bahraini government look bad. CNN confirmed the payments were for “advertising.”
FOX NEWS

Owned by Fox Corporation.
Controlled by the Murdoch family through a dual-class share structure giving them roughly 42% of voting power.
  • Fox Corporation also owns 
  • Fox Sports
  • Fox Business
  • 28 local TV stations.
The Murdoch family also controls a separate company, News Corp, which owns the: 
  • Wall Street Journal
  • New York Post
  • Barron’s
  • MarketWatch
  • HarperCollins
  • Major newspapers in Australia and the UK.
  • One family controls both the most-watched cable news channel in America and one of its most respected financial newspapers.
Largest institutional shareholders of Fox Corporation after the Murdochs: 
  • Vanguard (6.4%)
  • BlackRock (5.4%), 
  • Dodge and Cox (4.8%).
In 2023, Fox News paid $787.5 million to settle a defamation lawsuit brought by Dominion Voting Systems. Internal communications revealed during the case showed that Fox hosts and executives privately acknowledged the election fraud claims they were broadcasting were false. Rupert Murdoch testified under oath that some Fox hosts had endorsed the false claims. The network aired them anyway. The business logic was straightforward: the audience wanted to hear it, and ratings drove revenue. Fox chose profit over accuracy, with internal documentation proving the network’s leadership knew exactly what it was doing.

MSNBC

Was owned by NBCUniversal, a subsidiary of Comcast, the largest cable and broadband provider in the country.
In January 2026, Comcast spun MSNBC and other cable properties into Versant Media, rebranded as MS Now, still controlled by Comcast’s Roberts family.

Largest institutional shareholders of Comcast: 
  • Vanguard (9.5%)
  • BlackRock (7.5%)
  • State Street (4%)
  • Three cable news channels. Three supposedly different worldviews. The same three asset managers are among the top shareholders of all three parent companies.
In 2003, MSNBC fired the highest rated program Phil Donahue.  A leaked internal MSNBC claimed Donahue was “a difficult public face for NBC in a time of war” and that his show could become “a home for the liberal antiwar agenda at the same time that our competitors are waving the flag at every opportunity.” 

Donahue was the only major cable news host opposing the Iraq invasion and was required to book two conservative guests for every liberal.. 

At the time, MSNBC was co-owned by General Electric, one of the largest defense contractors in the country. GE made enormous profits from the war Donahue was questioning. 

Three weeks after Donahue was fired, the invasion began.

ABC NEWS
Owned by The Walt Disney Company.
Disney also owns: 
  • ESPN
  • Hulu
  • FX
  • Pixar
  • Marvel
  • Lucasfilm
  • 20th Century Studios
  • National Geographic
  •  Disney
Largest institutional shareholders: 
  • Vanguard
  • BlackRock
  • State Street
In 2019, ABC anchor Amy Robach was caught on a hot mic saying the network had killed her story on Jeffrey Epstein three years earlier. She said she had an interview with accuser Virginia Giuffre, photographs, and corroborating evidence. She said the network was told “who’s Jeffrey Epstein, no one knows who that is, this is a stupid story.” She said Buckingham Palace threatened ABC “a million different ways” over allegations about Prince Andrew, and the network was afraid of losing access to interview Prince William and Kate Middleton. The story sat on a shelf for three years. It could have been public in 2015. Epstein wasn’t arrested again until 2019. He died in jail that August.
ABC said the reporting didn’t meet their editorial standards.

NBC NEWS

Owned by NBCUniversal. Owned by Comcast, the largest broadband and cable provider in the United States.

Largest institutional shareholders: 
  • Vanguard (9.5%)
  • BlackRock (7.5%)
  • State Street (4%)
In 2017, reporter Ronan Farrow spent eight months investigating Harvey Weinstein’s sexual assault of women for NBC News. He had on-camera interviews. He had a secretly recorded audio tape of Weinstein admitting to groping a woman.

Farrow and his producer were ordered to stop reporting. Farrow took the story to the New Yorker.  and won the Pulitzer Prize. 

CBS NEWS

Became part of Paramount Skydance in 2025.
  • Skydance is led by David Ellison, son of Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison.
  • Oracle is one of the largest government technology contractors in the world. 
  • The Ellisons are major political donors. 
  • Both are vocal supporters of Donald Trump and have publicly pledged to use their influence to advance his agenda.
When CBS covers government tech contracts, AI regulation, or political campaigns the Ellisons support, the network’s owner has skin in the game.

After Skydance completed its acquisition, CBS News underwent rapid editorial and staffing changes.

Three broadcast networks. Three nightly newscasts watched by millions. Every single one is a subsidiary of a corporation whose primary business is something other than journalism.

THE WASHINGTON POST

Owned by Jeff Bezos founder of Amazon. Net worth: roughly $200 billion.
  • Amazon Web Services holds billions in cloud computing contracts with the Pentagon, the CIA, and the NSA. Amazon is one of the largest government contractors in the country, one of the largest employers in the country, and the target of ongoing antitrust and labor investigations.
  • In 2024, the Post declined to endorse a presidential candidate for the first time in decades. The decision triggered roughly 250,000 subscription cancellations and public criticism from the paper’s own journalists. 
  • Multiple reports indicated the decision came from Bezos himself.
When the Post covers government contracting, tech monopolies, warehouse labor conditions, or antitrust enforcement, the man who owns the paper is on the other side of every one of those stories.

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

Owned by News Corp. Controlled by the Murdoch family.

It's the most-watched conservative cable channel. One of the most respected financial newspapers in the world. 

THE NEW YORK TIMES

Controlled by the Ochs-Sulzberger family since 1896. The family maintains control through a trust and dual-class shares.
  • The Times is the most-visited news website in the country, roughly 5.5 billion visits over a recent twelve-month period.
  • Among major outlets, the Times is the closest to independently owned. But it is still a publicly traded company, responsive to advertiser revenue and the preferences of its increasingly national subscriber base. Independence is relative.
SINCLAIR BROADCAST GROUP
  • Owns or operates roughly 185 to 193 television stations in over 100 markets. 
  • Covers more than 40% of American households. 
  • Largest owner of local stations affiliated with Fox, NBC, CBS, ABC, and The CW.
  • In 2018, dozens of Sinclair anchors across the country were recorded reading an identical script, word for word, warning about “false news.” The script was written by corporate headquarters in Maryland and distributed to every station. Your local anchor. Your city. Words written in a boardroom a thousand miles away.
  • Sinclair is widely documented for requiring its local stations to air centrally produced commentary segments with a conservative editorial slant.
  • Controlled by the Smith family through a dual-class share structure.
NEXSTAR MEDIA GROUP
  • Owns 200 stations.
  • Owns News Nation, a cable news network
  • Owns The Hill, a political news outlet.
Largest institutional shareholders: 
  • Vanguard, 
  • BlackRock
  • State Street
GANNETT (NOW USA TODAY CO.)

Largest newspaper publisher in America. 
Owns USA Today and over 200 daily newspapers in 44 states.

Since its 2019 merger with GateHouse Media, Gannett has cut roughly half its workforce, from about 25,000 to roughly 11,000. 

In 2024, it dropped the Associated Press wire service to save money.

THE LOS ANGELES TIMES

Owned by Patrick Soon-Shiong. Net worth: roughly $7 billion. Biotech billionaire. His companies require FDA approvals.

In 2024, Soon-Shiong blocked his editorial board from endorsing Kamala Harris after the endorsement had already been drafted. The editorials editor resigned in protest. Two more editorial board members resigned. Over 20,000 subscribers canceled.
Soon-Shiong then announced plans to remake the editorial board, hired a conservative CNN commentator, and proposed an AI-powered “bias meter” to flag the bias of his own reporters. 

He has praised Elon Musk, Donald Trump, and Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on social media. 

A columnist alleged the paper killed an op-ed critical of Kennedy.

In 2020, Soon-Shiong had also blocked the editorial board from endorsing Elizabeth Warren in the Democratic primary.

By early 2025, the paper’s entire editorial board had resigned or taken buyouts. Soon-Shiong made his fortune in pharmaceuticals. He needs regulatory goodwill from whoever is in power. Draw your own conclusions.

BLOOMBERG NEWS
Owned by Bloomberg LP. Bloomberg LP is owned by Michael Bloomberg. Net worth: roughly $109 billion.

Bloomberg ran for president in 2020. During his campaign, Bloomberg News announced it would not investigate Bloomberg or any Democratic primary candidates. It would only investigate the Trump administration. After the campaign ended, the policy was loosely reversed, but Bloomberg News has never had a mandate to aggressively cover its own owner’s business empire, political activities, or philanthropic influence. 

The editor-in-chief reports to a billionaire who was recently a presidential candidate, is one of the largest political donors in the country, and runs a financial data empire whose clients include every major bank and hedge fund in the world.

POLITICO AND BUSINESS INSIDER

Owned by Axel Springer, a German media conglomerate.
I
n 2021, private equity firm KKR took Axel Springer private in a deal worth roughly $6.8 billion.
KKR is one of the largest private equity firms in the world. Former CIA Director David Petraeus is a partner at KKR. Axel Springer also owns Bild and Die Welt, Germany’s most influential tabloid and one of its major broadsheets.
America’s most-read political news website is owned by a German company that was taken private by a firm where a former CIA director works.

THE ATLANTIC

Owned by Laurene Powell Jobs, widow of Apple co-founder Steve Jobs. Net worth: over $10 billion.
Powell Jobs also has investments in Axios and has funded ProPublica.

Her fortune derives primarily from inherited stakes in Apple and Disney. When The Atlantic covers tech regulation, Apple policy, or Disney’s business, the owner’s financial interests are in the room.

THE BOSTON GLOBE

Owned by John Henry. Henry also owns the Boston Red Sox, Liverpool F.C., and other sports properties.

When the Globe covers stadium deals, public funding for sports, labor disputes involving athletes, or Boston city politics involving real estate his businesses touch, the owner has interests beyond journalism.

REUTERS

Owned by Thomson Reuters. The Thomson family of Canada holds a controlling stake. Net worth of the Thomson family: roughly $70 billion.

Thomson Reuters is also one of the largest legal and financial data companies in the world, selling services to law firms, banks, and governments.

THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE, NEW YORK DAILY NEWS, ORLANDO SENTINEL, AND OTHERS
Owned by Alden Global Capital, a hedge fund based in Manhattan.

Alden is the second-largest newspaper owner in the United States. It owns roughly 200 newspapers and publications.

Alden’s model: 
  • Buy newspapers, many of which are still profitable
  • Cut staff to the bone
  • Sell the real estate
  • Otsource layout to the Philippines
  • Maximize short-term profit margins above 20%.
  • According to the NewsGuild, Alden cut staff at union-represented papers by an average of 75%, twice the industry rate.
Alden is not a news company. It is a hedge fund that treats newspapers as distressed assets to strip for parts.

THE BALTIMORE SUN

Sold by Alden Global Capital in 2024 to David D. Smith, executive chairman of Sinclair Broadcast Group, the same company that distributed identical scripts to local anchors nationwide.

TIME MAGAZINE
Owned by Marc Benioff, co-founder and CEO of Salesforce. Benioff bought Time in 2018 for $190 million. Salesforce is one of the largest enterprise software companies in the world and a major government contractor.

Now connect the dots.
Not a single major cable news channel is owned by a journalist or a news organization. They are owned by entertainment conglomerates, telecom monopolies, and billionaire families.
Not a single broadcast network news division is independent. Each one is a subsidiary of a corporation whose primary business is something other than journalism. Theme parks. Broadband. Government tech contracts.

Saturday, April 11, 2026

Stories vs Reality, April 10

These are a few of the news stories that leave me shaking my head in disbelief that the U.S. could be a rogue nation that hurts itself, its people and the world. A sample only.

Automatic registration for US military draft to begin in December (The Hill).

Were I a mother, wife, sister, daughter, girlfriend during Vietnam or Iraq wars, and my son, husband, brother, father or boyfriend wanted to go serve their country in the American military, I would kidnap them and take them to Canada. They would not be protecting their country, but being trained to kill innocent civilians in faraway lands, putting money in the upper echelon of arms dealers for fake reasons sold as patriotism.

By contrast I like that in my new country, Switzerland, military (or civilian service) is required of every male. It brings citizens together from four disparate regions with four languages. It is truly for defense and not to attack other countries

The difference is the leadership.

The full story isn't in on this. CBS News is one of several sources.

An employee of a third-party distributor of the Kimberly-Clark paper goods warehouse in Ontario, California was arrested on multiple felony arson charges in connection with a massive 6-alarm fire that engulfed the 1.2 million square-foot building on Tuesday morning.

On Wednesday, a video posted by a person who appears to be the firebug says, "All you had to do was pay us enough to live ... There goes your inventory."

There was a point in France when the people were fed up with the aristocracy taking too much and decided to take matters in their own hands by removing heads from aristocratic bodies. The serfs when upset by the Czar killed his entire family.

I don't recommend decapitating the billionaires and the CEOs who take too great a portion of the effort made by the rest of the country nor do I recommend burning down property, but there is a major strike scheduled for May 1 telling people to buy nothing, not go to work, stop all activities. They demand a nation that puts workers over billionaires. No school! No work! No shopping! More info can be found at https://maydaystrong.org. Non violent.

People need to show enough is enough. 

The US “has the military power to do whatever it wants in the world,” a top official told the Vatican’s US representative. “The Catholic Church had better take its side.” Free Press

I'm not a religious person, but threatening a religion that has existed for over 2000 years is wrong. At the same time other members of the same administration asking for God's blessings in their illegal wars. A good god, a good religion, does not support killing people, What's next, bombing the Vatican while chanting God is Good????

ICE is paying 'eye-popping' prices for warehouse detention centers. Experts in federal property acquisition said DHS may be paying high prices to compel developers and commercial landowners to sell.

How many ways can one spell CO R R UP T I O N? Why does the U.S. need detention centers? Should we name them Buchenwald Redux? Auschwitz America? Do you want to be a part of a country that has concentration camps?

So who was rescued? Multiple stories and a news conference.

So allegedly two American pilots ejected out of an American aircraft behind enemy lines. One was rescued immediately. Another hid until Americans at a cost between half and two billion dollars (but there's no money for things for the American people). Never mind that the two pilots were committing a war crime and were there to kill innocent people. This is by an administration that went nuts talking about cost savings. 

If there were service people rescued that would be good for them and for their families, but why aren't their names released? Shouldn't they be used to exploit how clever the military is? I don't want to push conspiracy theories, but I find it just weird this entire story. What else might the American military have been doing with all those planes behind enemy lines? 

WASHINGTON – Senate Select Committee on Intelligence Vice Chairman Mark R. Warner (D-VA) today released a statement after voting in favor of Senator Tim Kaine (D-VA)’s war powers resolution.  

What Happened?

The Senate went home rather than deal with a resolution that points out the unconstitutional acts of the deranged President Trump.

It is hard to believe that Congress is refusing to act. Words that come to mind are immoral, scumbags, lily-livered, scaredy cats, traitors who should be thrown out of office for not fulfilling the responsibilities they were elected to uphold. I know that throwing words like that around is not journalistic professional. 

I have only been this frightened for my birth country once before at this level and that was during the Cuban Missile Crisis. I'd just married and my Army husband was on his way to his next assignment in Stuttgart, Germany. If there were a war, would I ever see him again? My senior year of high school in history class when every student was assigned one major country to follow closely, from it's history to all aspects of its politics, I felt sympathy for Cuba. After being one of those children who hid under their desks to practice in case Russia dropped a nuke, I was afraid. Fortunately we had a sane president at the time.

I'm not alone in my fear. My Catalan physiotherapist told us the same thing as did other neighbors, locals and internationals. Their opinion of the American president is he is out of control and the people are unaware of how disturbed he is and how dangerous for every living creature on the planet.


Tuesday, April 07, 2026

The Sounds of Tea

 


The Cuckoo awakens at 8. Some mornings it goes off at 7, other mornings 9 or ten. So much for Swiss precision.

The dog raises his head. He's in no mood to start the day. 

My husband is checking his mobile. I'm reading. My husband goes into the kitchen. 

I'm a lucky woman because every morning he brings me tea in bed. The flavor is a surprize: Earl Gray, caramel, Ceylon, vanilla, mint, Yorkshire, spice, etc.

I hear water being run into the kettle and boiling followed by the click of the kettle shutting off. I don't hear the water being poured into my bowl. 

My morning tea comes French style in a bowl. I was happy to read in Louise Penny's Three Pine series, they drink tea from bowls too.

My husband puts the bowl on a small plate along with a spoon. As he walks to the bedroom, his feet make a small padding noise and the spoon clicks against the glass. 

The tea is put on my nightstand by the next book I plan to read.

It's spice tea, and the aroma filters through our bedroom.

A peaceful way to start the day in a chaotic world, a privilege denied to so many.

The dog still isn't ready to start.

Free Write -- Little People

 


A friend, who stayed in my Nest (studio), left these little people on the 400-year-old-plus stone wall. Rick thought it would make a great prompt.

Rick's Free Write

“Now what are we going to do, Stephen?” wailed Priscilla, spitting out his name in clear indication she held him responsible for their dilemma.

It wasn’t even a first date. Just a casual encounter in a café, that led to a stroll, that led to the nearby grotto.

As they ventured deeper into the dank, dark cave, Priscilla became more nervous.

“I prefer the road less travelled,” he bragged.

“I need a toilet,” she insisted.

He finally acquiesced, but as they tried to circle back it was evident they were lost.

“Help! Anyone there?” Priscilla shouted.

They could no longer hear other voices. Was it after closing time?

Then, trying to cross a small chasm from one stone to another, Stephen slipped. He started to slide into a crevasse. And, as he was holding her hand, she slid with him.

They ended up on separate narrow ledges. No way to go up. Too dark to try to go down.

Priscilla thought she heard a noise. An animal noise.

No, it was Stephen, whimpering.

Julia's Free Write

Perception

Here she was in the middle of one of the weirdest dreams that she had ever experienced.

Now in real life “a long time ago” as all good stories start, she had found herself almost to the top of a cliff with no way down and no knowledge of what lay over the edge.

She had been to various cave dweller settlements: more sophisticated than she would have believed.

This, however, was nothing like those. And what was a man in a suit doing casually posed behind her?

Her dress and his shirt were pink and baby blue: a subliminal message?

Take in the details visitor: it looks real until one realizes that these are figurines on a brick wall: baby announcement (she’s holding her stomach)?

Or her internal message telling her to wake up, she needs to pee?

Worse than Artificial Intelligence.

Perception: one needs the bigger picture to understand.

D-L's Free Write

When Sharon saw the box of 100 rubber doll-house dolls at the flea market,she had to buy them. They were something her granddaughter Laila could play with.

Sharon had had a dollhouse when she was Laila's age. It had stairs between the ground and first floors, something most doll houses did not. 

Laila was not impressed with the dolls. "I want to play with my Barbies," she said. 

Laila didn't like anything that wasn't corporate crap and advertised on television," Sharon thought.

The child had rejected the button box with buttons from four generations of buttons snipped from clothing that could not be saved. All the designs and games that could have been made were ignored.

Laila had not wanted to design mosaics from the decorative envelope linings also saved from generations.

And she rejected the rubber doll-house people: the mothers, fathers, boys, girls, babies, butcher, men in suits, basketball players, etc. What adventures they could have had.

What to do with the dolls?

Sharon cut pieces of wood and wrote a few sentences on each one, a saying or a tiny story. She painted a backdrop and glued the appropriate dolls to illustrate the story or content of the sentence before varnishing it all in place.

In her centuries-old village, each street had large rocks at the ends, to keep wagon wheels from hitting and damaging the houses.

One moonless night she glued one of the pieces of wood to each stone.

People noticed. Then France3 did a news segment.

Sharon's daughter called. "Mother, was that you?"

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, April 06, 2026

Mink(s)

 

mink

The first mink I ever saw was a gift to my former housemate. Her cousin had brought it back from Korea.

A couple of decades later my daughter inherited it, and when I visited her in Malden during a cold December, its warmth was a joy.

My husband, deciding we needed one, researched the web and found a company that imported them to France.

He ordered one and we waited, and waited, and waited and... Months and then seasons went by without either the mink or a response to our emails. No phone was found.

We cancelled the credit card and settled for living through winters minkless. 

Almost another year went by and we forgot about it. We decided to go to Scotland. Friends dog-sat our pup. About halfway through our stay along with pictures of our dog, we had a picture of our dog sitter and dog along with the mink. "It's heavy," he said. 

The company we ordered it from no longer exists and where the mink came from or why it arrived so late we don't know, so we had no way to send another payment. That was at least 10 years ago and winter nights we have happily snuggled under its warmth and weight. 

The Cost of Dying: Susannah Lattin


This is the first in a series of abortion stories before Roe v. Wade which were published in Coat Hangers and Knitting Needles which took me over a year to research from articles, interviews and statistics. It showed me that abortion will never be stopped any more that prohibition stopped people drinking alcohol.. Over the next few weeks, I'll publish some of their stories.

Unmarried women, falling in love with a man, sleeping with him and expecting marriage, has happened through the ages. Having a man disappear once a pregnancy is known is not new either.

The daughter of Henry K. Lattin (1806-1904) and (Julia Wood (1813-1873), Susannah, was born on Long Island. She was one of 18 surviving children. Two siblings had died.

She moved in with Andrew Wood, her cousin, who lived in Brooklyn in 1867.

George C. Houghton, a clerk at a store called Whitehouse's, impregnated Susannah Lattin. He did not want to be a father. He paid Dr. J.C. Harrison $50 (US$832 in 2018) to abort the baby. When Susannah did not go through with the abortion, Houghton escaped his responsibility by running away to Philadelphia.

Lattin turned to an older cousin, George Powell, a butcher at the Washington market. Pretending to be her husband and using the name Smith, Powell rented a room for her and arranged an appointment with Dr. Henry Grindell, operator of an illegal abortion clinic.

Grindell wanted to charge $150 ($2,817 in 2018). Other research shows that the clinic charged $300 per week normally with more for board, medical and adoption fees. Perhaps the fee was based on what he could get.

Lattin gave birth on 5 August 1868. Thirteen days afterwards, she developed an infection. A medical student caring for her did not realize the seriousness until it was too late. The baby was adopted, but there are no adoption records.

When Lattin revealed her true name at the urging of Dr. Edward Dame, Lattin's parent were notified by letter but could not arrived before Lattin died.

The resulting inquest under a Coroner Rollins censured Dr. Grindell. It made the suggestion that such clinics be under the supervision of the Board of Health.

Lattin's cousin, George Powell, was arrested as an accomplice. Houghton was brought back from Philadelphia. 

They were never found guilty of her death.

The next story is about Clara Bell Duvall (1895-1925) told by her daughter Linn. We may forget living children of women who die from abortions suffer too no matter in what year the tragedy occurs.



Sunday, April 05, 2026

Disgusting

 

 

Don't get me wrong. I'm glad the American pilot is safe. I'm happy for his family. I'm happy no other American was killed.

But there were other deaths. Sadly part of the operation, according to the news, America bombed a hospital, killing nine. Are their lives worth less to their families? Will it make them not hate America even more?

The pilot, although following orders, was engaged in an illegal war both nationally and internationally, that is wreaking havoc on not just Iran but on the world. Let's not count all the other deaths that the U.S. has wrought at the will of a demented U.S. president. 

Let's not think of balance. After all the 1000 to 75000+ ratio of dead Israels to Palestinians is considered more than okay by many. Israel, it is said has a right to defend itself, but, of course, not Iran or any other country that doesn't fall in lockstep with the U.S. In fact, supporting Palestine is a reason for punishment. 

But that's not why I'm writing.

Globally Iran is 17th in size with 92 million people. The U.S. has interfered regularly in its government by coups, yes plural coups, and financially with sanctions. Iran has good reason to have been and to be pissed off with the United States, which is a victim of its own bad behavior to it. 

Saying that, I'm not a big fan of Iran as a feminist and a supporter of democracy, but that does not give my birth country a right to kill and bomb.

And let's not think about the cost of the illegal war, when U.S. citizens should not have their tax money spent on weapons that maim and kill, but are great for the arms manufacturers and especially their CEOs.

Once more the U.S. population is lied into a war under false threats. At my age, I'm not only tired of it, I'm disgusted.


Saturday, April 04, 2026

 

Chapter 66

Lexington, Massachusetts

April 20, 1775

 EVERYTHING SEEMED VEILED when James opened his eyes. He couldn’t keep them open. His stomach ached as it had never ached before. He smelled bread baking and meat roasting. James heard voices as he lay in a bed.

Man:       You’re crazy to help him.

Woman:  He’s not going to live. He’s lost too much blood.

Man:       He’s a bloody lobsterback.

Woman:  He’s still Christ’s child, someone’s son, maybe brother, maybe husband, maybe father.

Man:       We’ll never know. There’s no identification.

Woman:  We could try and send him back to the British, when he dies.

Man:       You are …

The voices faded and it sounded as if they were going down a flight of stairs.

James thought of Bess. It hurt to breathe. Then he couldn’t breathe at all. 

 


Chapter 67

Argelès-sur-mer

I MOURN JAMES. For over a year, he has been with me almost every day in two different countries and many cities and villages. He has lived with me through a pandemic and quarantine.

I’ve tried to feel his pleasures, hopes, fears knowing all the time how he would die, where he would be buried in a grave marked on a battlefield of the American Revolution.

My other characters, who have become real to me, can go on with their lives.

Not James.

There are real unknown soldiers buried in Lexington, not just in that one grave. Would they have been mourned by fathers, mothers, wives, sons, brothers in faraway countries? Would not knowing what happened to their family members haunt them or would they not care?

May they all rest in peace throughout the ages.

Socks don't have to be boring

 

I decorate my laptop and also my former ever-so-boring beige car, which was 1% less boring than the thousands of black, gray or white cars making the highways depressing especially on cloudy days. What do European car manufacturers have against color?

Socks were the same. Boooooooring.  No more. There are many choices to reflect mood and interests.

I wanted different socks. I've found them. Here are some of my favorite non-boring socks.They change the ho hum of getting dressed into a memory or idea generator for the day. At the very least they make me smile. Some of my choices:
  • The Kiss by Gustave Klimt. I was lucky enough to see the painting in Vienna. The model Adèle Bloch Bauer sat for Klimt twice. As a wealthy Jewish socialist who was unhappy, she was childless after a miscarriage. What were the discussions between the painter and the model on the gold dress he painted rather than the white dresses she preferred? Fun to imagine. She died, age 43, of meningitis. Those socks evoke memories of the Vienna trip, not just of the museum, but little sandwiches, conversations with my Viennese writer friend and her family, summer nights sitting in their garden and more. Not bad for simply slipping pieces of cloth onto my feet.
  • People who know how I love to read send me socks with books on them. There's something about a rainy day, a good book(s) and tea while wearing those socks.
  • My favorite pair of all time was a birthday gift. What makes it so special? There's an avatar of me along with my name. The giver is someone with whom I've shared so much bad, good and middling.
  • Ruth Bader Ginsburg (1933-2020) Something about having a woman I admire on my feet reminds me of how far women have come in my lifetime. She was a civil rights activist and a Supreme Court Judge. As a woman, she had trouble being considered for posts that she was more than qualified for. Her courage and intelligence is an inspiration.
  • Kitten socks...Even if I'm more a dog person, I melt for cute cats and cute socks. I can do cute. Cute makes me smile.
Not shown but in my sock drawer:
  • My truly favorite woman of all time is Eleanor of Aquitaine (1137-1304) wife of French King Louis VII, Plantagenet King Henry II, mother of English kings Richard the Lionhearted and John who signed the Magna Carta. She gave birth to the queens of Castile and Sicily. For my 75th birthday, rather than have a party, I went to visit her tomb at the Fontevraud Abbey, which she had built. She was buried next to Henry and Richard. I never put on the socks that I don't remember being in her presence as well as the wonderful meal and exploring the abbey with its rich history.
  • Not the least historical, literary or arty are my socks with pictures of movie house popcorn boxes and popcorn. They are fun.
I would love some Eleanor Roosevelt socks for my birthday but I'm torn between not buying anything American (they are sold at the Smithsonian and her loved home Val-kill) and pleasure knowing I'd be wearing something Trump hated. Even more important was her work for everything I believe in.

It may seem silly to some, but things like socks help me survive the disaster the U.S and world has become.