Open Thread - Wednesday September 2, 2015

I have written this Open Thread well in advance as I am now in Florida today attending a memorial service celebrating my father who died on August 21. My father was 92 years old and had been ill for several years. My father was a beautiful human being and a wonderful father. He and my mother knew each other as far back as grade school and theirs was a lifelong love story. I could not have asked for a better atmosphere to grow up in.

One of my father's great loves was jazz and he was a huge fan of Duke Ellington's music. Daddy used to call Ellington's music "harmonious discord, which I think is a wonderful description. So today, this Open Thread features the music of the incomparable Duke Ellington.

First up is one of Duke Ellington's most famous compositions, Take the A Train.

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cb2w2m1JmCY]

This next song is one in which we get two greats on one song. Thisi is Caravan, featuring the fabulous Ella Fitzgerald on vocals.

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X3ADroVuFwM]

Mixing it up a little, here's It Don't Mean a Thing.

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qDQpZT3GhDg]

This is a beautiful song, Isfahan. To me, it captures what my father called the harmonious discord of Ellington's music.

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m2U1MGX8SLU]

One of the Duke's most famous songs is Satin Doll.

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TrytKuC3Z_o]

And finally, what I always thought as the signature sound for Duke Ellington, Mood Indigo.

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TrytKuC3Z_o]

I hope you will enjoy this wonderful music as much as I did while putting this Open Thread together. I had a hard time choosing which compositions to include so I tried to do a variety. I regularly listened to Duke Ellington while growing up thanks to my father's love of his music.

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This is a sweet and touching tribute. Peace, cw.

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gulfgal98's picture

It is all good. It is not hard to find wonderful things to say about a good man and a life well lived. Smile

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

makes me like those folk more and more.
http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/world-news/more-than-11000-icelan...

More than 11,000 families in Iceland have offered to open their homes to Syrian refugees in a bid to raise the government’s cap of just 50 asylum seekers a year.

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hecate's picture

And go well, honoring your father.

Two years before Ellington died, in 1972, Yale University held a gathering of leading black jazz musicians in order to raise money for a department of African-American music. Aside from Ellington, the musicians who came for three days of concerts, jam sessions, and workshops included Eubie Blake, Noble Sissle, Dizzy Gillespie, Charles Mingus, Max Roach, Mary Lou Williams, and Willie (the Lion) Smith. During a performance by a Gillespie-led sextet, someone evidently unhappy with this presence on campus called in a bomb threat. The police attempted to clear the building, but Mingus refused to leave, urging the officers to get all the others out but adamantly remaining onstage with his bass. “Racism planted that bomb, but racism ain’t strong enough to kill this music,” he was heard telling the police captain. (And very few people successfully argued with Mingus.) “If I’m going to die, I’m ready. But I’m going out playing ‘Sophisticated Lady.’ ” Once outside, Gillespie and his group set up again. But coming from inside was the sound of Mingus intently playing Ellington’s dreamy thirties hit, which, that day, became a protest song, as the performance just kept going on and on and getting hotter. In the street, Ellington stood in the waiting crowd just beyond the theatre’s open doors, smiling.

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_8LLfFY9pQg]

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gulfgal98's picture

Thank you hecate! Smile

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

hecate's picture

poll re-confirms that it is the stupid people who are gettin' jiggy for The Hairball.

66% of Trump's supporters believe that Obama is a Muslim to just 12% that grant he's a Christian. 61% think Obama was not born in the United States to only 21% who accept that he was.

In 1992, the stupid people supported another rude, goofy, boorish Barnum of a billionaire with a grudge against the Bush family. Believing they were thereby giving it to "the man," "the system." That year a coastal insurgent with a boy's name challenged a Clinton from the left. And Darth Cheney was rumbling around, darkly mumbling that Democrats posed an existential threat to America, and indeed all the world.

Whoever lives two or three generations, feels like the spectator who, during the fair, sees the performances of all kinds of jugglers and, if he remains seated in the booth, sees them repeated two or three times. As the tricks were meant only for one performance, they no longer make any impression after the illusion and novelty have vanished.

—Arthur Schopenhauer
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The overlooked element

Baghdadi ingratiated himself with both the Sunni inmates and the Americans, looking for opportunities to negotiate with the camp authorities and mediate between rival groups of prisoners.
“Every time there was a problem in the camp,” recalls The Guardian’s source, “he was at the center of it.
...
Many of the 24,000 inmates at Bucca were Sunni Arabs who had served in Saddam’s military and intelligence services.
When Saddam fell, so did they, a consequence of the American purge of the Baathists and the new ascendency of Iraq’s long-oppressed Shiite majority.
If they weren’t jihadists when they arrived, many of them were by the time they left. Radical jihadist manifestos circulated freely under the eyes of the watchful but clueless Americans.
“New recruits were prepared so that when they were freed they were ticking time bombs,” remembers another fellow inmate, who was interviewed by a reporter with Al Monitor. When a new prisoner came in, his peers would “teach him, indoctrinate him, and give him direction so he leaves a burning flame.”
Many of the ex-Baathists at Bucca, some of whom Baghdadi befriended, would later rise with him through the ranks of the Islamic State. “If there was no American prison in Iraq, there would be no [Islamic State] now,” recalled the inmate interviewed by The Guardian. “Bucca was a factory. It made us all. It built our ideology.” The prisoners dubbed the camp “The Academy,” and during his ten months in residence, Baghdadi was one of its faculty members.
By the time Baghdadi was released on December 8, 2004, he had a virtual Rolodex for reconnecting with his co-conspirators and protégés: they had written one another’s phone numbers in the elastic of their underwear.
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I'm all out of outrage

U.S. taxpayers will have to pay at least $30 million to cover attorney fees incurred by defense contractor KBR Inc., accused of wrongly exposing U.S. and British soldiers – including dozens from Oregon – to toxic chemicals during duty in the Iraq War

KBR's contract to restore Iraq's oil fields indemnifies the company from paying legal costs to defend itself against the soldiers' lawsuits, an Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals judge ruled last month.

This leaves the costs of KBR's lawyers, and any potential court judgments, up to the Army to pay – a burden ultimately shouldered by taxpayers. The skyrocketing costs, with no end in sight, have left public officials outraged.

Three years have passed since U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., asked Defense Secretary Leon Panetta to examine billable hours run up by KBR as part of its contract with the Pentagon. Wyden's staff pored through court records, finding that lawyers for the company billed up to $750 an hour, sometimes flew first class to legal proceedings and paid millions to expert witnesses. One expert, paid more than $500,000, dozed off during a deposition.

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As of October 1, Detroit had spent almost $23 million in fees to lawyers, consultants and financial advisers for the bankruptcy.[76] Some of the fees are:[76]

$11 million to law firm Jones Day
$4.59 million to Conway MacKenzie, a Detroit area restructuring firm
$4.17 million to Ernst & Young, accounting firm
$1.5 million to Plante Moran, accounting firm
$1.2 million to Miller Buckfire, investment banking firm
Orr used $95 million earmarked for unsecured bond debt and pension payments to Detroit's restructuring initiatives, which caused Detroit to first miss bond payments in June 2013.[76]

Fees paid to 3 Jones Day partners who billed the city for more than $1000 per hour of their time, as well as for trips to or from vacation homes, proved particularly controversial, but their former partner Kevyn Orr, did not consider them overbilling.[77] On December 31, city officials disclosed that the city's general fund paid $164.91 million in fees relating to the bankruptcy, although they did not reveal concessions made by various parties pursuant to a mediation order, said to be worth about $25 million. The city's plan of adjustment allotted $177 million for legal and consulting fees. Disclosed fees included:[78]

$57.9 million to Jones Day,
$17.28 million to Conway MacKenzie for operational restructuring
$20.22 million to Ernst & Young for financial restructuring
$22.82 million to investment banking firm Miller Buckfire, and
$15.41 million to Dentons US LLP, a law firm that acted on behalf of an official committee of city retirees fighting pension cuts
$980,000 went to two Detroit mediator firms
Furthermore, the two pension funds paid attorneys at Clark Hill $6.25 million and financial advisers at Greenhill & Co. $5.71 million to fight the bankruptcy case. Judge Rhodes, whose judicial salary is set by Congress, has up to 14 days to determine whether the agreed-upon fees are reasonable.

This was then followed by a fire sale on Detroit's assets. One man now owns DETROIT, MI - Like it or not, Dan Gilbert is still grabbing up downtown Detroit real estate. The city looks like it could be a game board, with various properties bought, redeveloped or occupied weekly under Gilbert's real estate arm Bedrock Real Estate Services. According to most recent stats released by Bedrock. downtown Detroit's monopoly man currently owns 70 properties totaling 10 million square feet in the city's core. The real estate investments total $1.6 billion in commercial spaces and downtown parking decks and garages.

http://issuu.com/detroitfreepress/docs/dfp_gilbert_anniversary_propertie...

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"Religion is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich."--Napoleon

gulfgal98's picture

In the future, we will all lament the short sightedness of our leaders who have allowed the predatory capitalists to impoverish our cities, counties, and states by loading them up with debt and then forcing them to sell off the public commons at fire sales. This is exactly what Mitt Romney and or predatory capital companies like Bain Capital did in the corporate world. Now they are doing it in the public sector.

It is obscene. Sad

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

Maybe the most important development in the war.

One report has even alleged that Russian pilots are gearing up to fly missions alongside the Syrian air force, dropping bombs not just on ISIS but on anti-Assad rebels who may or may not be aligned with the United States or its regional allies.

Several sources consulted for this story said the Pentagon is being unusually cagey about Russia’s reinvigorated role in Syria. A former U.S. military officer told The Daily Beast, “I’m being told things like, ‘We really can’t talk about this.’ That indicates to me that there’s some truth to these allegations.”

Right now there is only circumstantial evidence, but there is a lot of it.

Recent open source reports and unverified images of Russian equipment in Syria indicate that the Kremlin may slowly be ramping up its presence in the war-torn country in support of the beleaguered regime of Syrian President Bashir al-Assad.

The important thing here is that Assad doesn't care if the rebels are ISIS, or al-Qaeda (i.e. allies of Qatar, Turkey, and Saudi Arabia), or "moderate" rebels like FSA, that we train and arm. He'll bomb them all.
And that puts Russia against us in a proxy war.

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lotlizard's picture

("R2P" = "responsibility to protect" — in theory a nice idea, in practice most often just another propaganda excuse for high-handed military-empire intervention, usually ending in devastation and slow genocide for the people who are ostensibly being "helped"…)

Why wouldn't Russia finally jump on the bandwagon and decide to do the type of thing the U.S. and NATO have always done? Sauce for the goose…

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linnk

In a statement released online (seen above), and translated by the SITE Intelligence Group, the group says “the soldiers of the Caliphate were able to mount an attack on barracks of the Russian army in southern Dagestan, in Magharamakint village.” The raid allegedly “led to the killing and wounding of a number of them.” Afterwards, “the soldiers of the Caliphate returned to their positions safely and with spoils, and unto Allah is all praise and gratitude,” SITE’s translation reads.
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mimi's picture

you write to wonderful of your father. You have been blessed to have such a father, and your father certainly has been blessed to have you as a daughter. And all of you have been blessed with a great love story and marriage. Bless your family. May you all find peace.

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gulfgal98's picture

We are all doing well. My father had a very good life and we could not have asked for more. Smile

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

gulfgal98's picture

My sister's entire family was there. That included all six of her children plus two spouses and one grandchild who came. A cousin whom I had not seen in years came up from South Florida with his wife, and a number of my parents' friends who are still living all were in attendance. My sister and I both gave short speeches about our own memories growing up. My father was a very kind man who was well loved and respected by everyone who knew him. It was a very positive memorial event.

We will head back to Tallahassee in the morning so I hope to be on line on and off for a couple of days before we go back to NC.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

Pluto's Republic's picture

Thanks for deepening community ties by including us in your journey, gulfgal.

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____________________

The political system is what it is because the People are who they are. — Plato
gulfgal98's picture

My father was a very good man. Smile

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

Glad you have so many great memories to store in your heart.

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"Religion is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich."--Napoleon

gulfgal98's picture

It is all good. Today was a closure. Smile

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

link

For Smith, inequality’s effects extend well beyond individual character. It is the source of serious social dysfunction. The greater the gap between the wealthy and the poor, the less regard the wealthy have for the poor and their relative well-being. He notes in his "Lectures on Jurisprudence" that slave societies characterized by extreme inequality find that “the slaves were treated with the utmost severity, and were put to death on the smallest transgressions.” This stems from his observation in the "Theory of Moral Sentiments" that “Men . . . feel so little for each other, with whom they have no particular connexion, in comparison of what they feel for themselves.” The results of this failure to establish sympathy include a legal system that is fundamentally rigged in favor of the wealthy without regard to the interests of the poor, and potentially even class violence -- consequences some would claim have come to fruition.
As recent scholarship has documented, Smith’s concern about economic inequality and poverty led him to argue in the opening pages of his "Wealth of Nations" that a market economy generates so much aggregate social wealth that everyone benefits, including the poor, by escaping desperate poverty. There is real truth in this. Insofar as the greater social wealth of market economies provides clean water and housing for the poorest citizens, it has achieved demonstrable, valuable goals. At the same time, however, Smith’s solutions are aimed more at the problems associated with desperate poverty than they are at the problem of inequality. Providing clean water to the poor, while incontestably good in itself, does nothing to curb the vanity of the rich. It does little to console the existential anxieties of the poor. It does little to constrain the tendency of the law to favor the rich. It does little to limit a desire to dominate the poor. Poverty is one thing; inequality is still another. Smith offers a solution to the first; he offers little for the latter. Despite his obvious concerns about inequality, as distinct from poverty, he prioritized the benefits of a growing economy over making a more serious effort to stem inequality.
What, then, does this look back at Smith accomplish? First, it challenges arguments made by those who insist that inequality wouldn't have been problematic for the intellectual founder of free-market capitalism. Second, Smith offers insights into the nature of economic disparity that should guide a more enriched contemporary discussion of the issue. Many of today's critiques of inequality center on how it can stifle economic growth. This may be true. But as a professor of moral philosopher, this wasn't the focus of Smith’s commentary. Third, Smith’s attention to inequality as opposed to poverty is a rejoinder to those who suggest inequality isn't problematic in itself. Finally, Smith’s inability to offer a solution, one may argue, is manifested in our own failure to address inequality and its accompanying troubles. We have inherited a system that has made no provisions for a dilemma apparent at its very foundations.
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enhydra lutris's picture

clean water and housing for the poor, nor a way out of desperate poverty.

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That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --

Easy to see coming

Richard Landén from Helsingborg, southwest Sweden, tried to open a simple savings account at Swedbank. But the bank wanted him to move over his entire account, including his monthly salary deposits and any savings he had.

"You have to be an complete customer, they said. It's either that or nothing at all, apparently," Landén told Swedish Radio News.

Swedbank declined to comment on the case.

Sweden's central bank has cut its key interest rate, the repo rate, to -0.35 percent, meaning making a profit on savings alone has become nearly impossible. The central bank will announce its next interest rate decision on Thursday.

Exactly how many people have been denied opening a savings account is hard to say. But savings advisor Claes Hemberg at Avanza Bank thinks it's a new trend. Several customers have been in touch with him about it

"Yes, savers get in touch and ask: 'Can the bank refuse me?'" he said.

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I obviously can't post this on GOS

If it were just the courts suppressing free speech, that would be one thing to worry about, but First Amendment activities are being pummeled, punched, kicked, choked, chained and generally gagged all across the country.

The reasons for such censorship vary widely from political correctness, safety concerns and bullying to national security and hate crimes but the end result remains the same: the complete eradication of what Benjamin Franklin referred to as the “principal pillar of a free government.”

Officials at the University of Tennessee, for instance, recently introduced an Orwellian policy that would prohibit students from using gender specific pronouns and be more inclusive by using gender “neutral” pronouns such as ze, hir, zir, xe, xem and xyr, rather than he, she, him or her.

On many college campuses, declaring that “America is the land of opportunity” or asking someone “Where were you born?” are now considered microaggressions, “small actions or word choices that seem on their face to have no malicious intent but that are thought of as a kind of violence nonetheless.” Trigger warnings are also being used to alert students to any material or ideas they might read, see or hear that might upset them.

More than 50 percent of the nation’s colleges, including Boston University, Harvard University, Columbia University and Georgetown University, subscribe to “red light” speech policies that restrict or ban so-called offensive speech, or limit speakers to designated areas on campus. The campus climate has become so hypersensitive that comedians such as Chris Rock and Jerry Seinfeld refuse to perform stand-up routines to college crowds anymore.

What we are witnessing is an environment in which political correctness has given rise to “vindictive protectiveness,” a term coined by social psychologist Jonathan Haidt and educational First Amendment activist Greg Lukianoff. It refers to a society in which “everyone must think twice before speaking up, lest they face charges of insensitivity, aggression or worse.”
...
On paper, we are free to speak.

In reality, however, we are only as free to speak as a government official may allow.

Free speech zones, bubble zones, trespass zones, anti-bullying legislation, zero tolerance policies, hate crime laws and a host of other legalistic maladies dreamed up by politicians and prosecutors have conspired to corrode our core freedoms.

As a result, we are no longer a nation of constitutional purists for whom the Bill of Rights serves as the ultimate authority. As I make clear in my book Battlefield America: The War on the American People, we have litigated and legislated our way into a new governmental framework where the dictates of petty bureaucrats carry greater weight than the inalienable rights of the citizenry.

It may seem trivial to be debating the merits of free speech at a time when unarmed citizens are being shot, stripped, searched, choked, beaten and tasered by police for little more than daring to frown, smile, question, challenge an order, or just breathe.
...
Just as surveillance has been shown to “stifle and smother dissent, keeping a populace cowed by fear,” government censorship gives rise to self-censorship, breeds compliance and makes independent thought all but impossible.

In the end, censorship and political correctness not only produce people that cannot speak for themselves but also people who cannot think for themselves. And a citizenry that can’t think for itself is a citizenry that will neither rebel against the government’s dictates nor revolt against the government’s tyranny.

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Big Al's picture

The more humans on earth, the smaller our brains become. It's a law of something, can't remember which one. That's why the
ruling class wants to depopulate the earth, they're feeling the effects as well.

Did you see what they're doing in Spain, home of the Podema's? A new gag law for criticizing police. One woman got fined
for posting a picture of a cop car parked in a handicapped spot on Facebook.

It's simply not going to stop until some of us (humans) stop it.

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joe shikspack's picture

once he gets beyond the complaints about political correctness, he's got a real point. in my view, he's improperly conflating private actions (universities creating speech codes - reports of which usually seem to crumble under scrutiny) and government actions such as police brutality. frankly, given the seriousness of the effects of government actions, i don't see why he would feel the need to even bring up "political correctness" except that he probably has an axe to grind.

on the other hand, government repression of first amendment rights has a long history in america, going back at least to the alien and sedition acts, wilson's evil speech suppression during wwi, the entirety of j. edgar's career, the mccarthy era, cointelpro, the brutal repression of occupy and the persistent surveillance and government infiltration of groups from quaker peaceniks to #blm. -- and that is only scratching the surface.

government repression of first amendment rights is so ingrained in our culture and pervasive, that i wonder if we would know what it was like to be free.

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hecate's picture

not insane, but you're reading and reproducing John Whitehead, who believes "that courts must place themselves under the authority of God's law," that "the church has a mandate from the Creator to be a dominant influence on the whole culture," that "the Christian attorney is [] to stop at nothing less than reclaiming the whole system," and who formed the Rutherford Institute, the site to which you link, with his mentor R.J Rushdoony, who described Whitehead to fellow Christian Reconstructionists as "a man chosen by God," and who, as Chris Hedges pointed out in American Fascists, called "for a Christian society that is harsh, unforgiving and violent. The death penalty is to be imposed not only for offenses such as rape, kidnapping and murder, but also for adultery, blasphemy, homosexuality, astrology, incest, striking a parent, incorrigible juvenile delinquency, and, in the case of women, 'un-chastity before marriage.' The world is to be subdued and ruled by a Christian United States. Rushdoony dismissed the widely accepted estimate of 6 million Jews murdered in the Holocaust as an inflated figure, and his theories on race often echo those found in Nazi eugenics, in which there are higher and lower forms of human beings. Those considered by the Christian state to be immoral and incapable of reform are to be exterminated."

So there's a reason behind his grousing about all those things: they stand in the way of his Godly Nation, in which all will always all day long fellate Jesus—or go the gaol or the gallows. His "facts," assertions, opinions, etc., should therefore best be accorded the same weight as those of any other wild-eyed true-believing Christian Reconstructionist who hangs with Holocaust deniers.

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smiley7's picture

What a good way to share the memories of your Dad, through the music he enjoyed. Thinking of you,

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joe shikspack's picture

i'm so glad that you can look back and see a life well-lived and have some relief that his suffering with illness is done.

by complete happenstance, tonight's evening blues features none other than duke ellington. i guess it's a synchronous universe, after all. B)

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