The Past = Drudgery For Women

This post is ultimately going to be about how life for women prior to 1900 was nothing but drudgery and toil unless they were fortunate enough to be rich and have servants, but first some background. I’ve been having exciting adventures with the Viessmann boiler that not only provides hot water to my house, but also heats the house through the in-floor system. Turns out the boiler had a fatal fabrication flaw that had necessitated a recall. The plumbing company that installed it and...

Living Life On Your Own Terms — Kay McCauley

I met Kay McCauley at the World Science Fiction Convention in Toronto back in 2003. I was in desperate need of a new literary agent, and George offered to introduce me to his agent. Kay was there to support George who was the GoH, but wasn’t much into the convention scene so I took a taxi and met her for lunch at her hotel. The woman I met was a bit taller than me with elegantly coifed brunette hair, elegant gold jewelry, a chic pantsuit and a perfect manicure. Kay alternated between being...

Votes, Like Elections, Have Consequences

As few days ago I heard Jon Meacham, imminent historian and author of numerous history books, the most recent about Representative John Lewis, one of the lions of the Civil Rights Movement. Meacham said something on a news show that shook me. Unfortunately, I’ve been unable to locate the exact quote, but here is a close approximation: “This election will determine if we are the citizens of the country of Abraham Lincoln and Fredrick Douglass or of Jefferson Davis and Robert E. Lee? Are we the...

What She Meant

2020 was the year where we lost two giants who led in the pursuit of justice and a more perfect union. Representative John Lewis who fought for civil rights and voting rights to the point of shedding blood and nearly dying on the Edmund Pettus Bridge, and Ruth Bader Ginsberg who fought for women’s rights and fought gender discrimination for her entire life. It’s daunting to realize that it’s only been 100 years since women gained the right to vote, and in 1920 that franchise...

This Is The Test

“It is with your aid, as the people, that I think we shall be able to preserve – not the country, for the country will preserve itself, but the institutions of the country – those institutions which have made us free…” Abraham Lincoln. Last night I engaged in a spirited, but very civil Twitter exchange with Tom Nichols who is a professor of national security affairs at the United States Naval War College. I am certain that Mr. Nichols and I would agree on little...