Desperate English Housewife in Washington, chapter 223

The Season of the Spelling Bee

It is the season of the Spelling Bee. Competitions galore in the USA.

The purpose of the Spelling Bee competition is to ‘help students improve their spelling, increase their vocabularies, learn concepts, and develop correct English usage that will help them all their lives.’

The Spelling Bee is full of colourful / colorful words ;)

The Spelling Bee is full of colourful / colorful words 😉

I wonder if I were in the Spelling Bee competition, as a Brit, if I might win because I put an extra U certain words, making them that little bit longer….. Or would I be disqualified? An interesting conundrum. Actually, I would probably be disqualified for being 38 and not 8.

Watch this one for an amusing Spelling Bee moment in a competition 🙂 Cute!


The ladies loves an English accent

The American girls are fawning over Harry. If he has listened to one thing I said, it is this: keep your accent, the ladies love it. And they do. They go ga-ga for it.

Why is that? A dating site called I love your accent says this:

‘American women are going a Brit crazy over English accents – especially posh ones.

‘A poll was commissioned by the latest dating website in the USA in which couples are matched by the sound of someone’s dialect.

Bit of posh, anyone?

Bit of posh, anyone?

‘The site’s founder, Rochelle Peachey revealed: “American women go crazy over the upper class British accents like Princes William and Harry although I have to say if you breakdown the figures, in the Midwest we found the Cockney or Liverpudlian accent were winners as well.

‘“But most American men in the Southern states are more likely to be attracted by a regional accent like Geordie or Welsh – the outcome of the poll was fascinating and revealed different tastes in dialect right across the USA.”

‘The poll findings are bad news for German men and not good for their French counterparts either as the figures revealed the one-time sexy French accent no longer has a great influence on hot-blooded American women, unless they live in Washington State where French men came tops ahead of their English and Italian counterparts.’

FYI, here is the top ten list….

The Top 10 ‘sexy’ accents favored by American men are:
1. English Posh
2. English Cockney
3. Italian
4. Irish
5. Welsh
6. French
7. English Northern
8. Russian
9. Scottish
10. Spanish

The Top 10 ‘sexy’ accents favored by American women are:
1. Upper-class English
2. Cockney
3. Scottish
4. Northern English
5. French
6. Italian
7. Spanish
8. Welsh
9. Liverpudlian
10. Russian

My husband is a Cockney, so he’ll be happy. Gawd Bless the English accent, guv’nor!

And let’s confuse it further, courtesy of the Fast Show….

And for some Cockney shenanigans….

I think I’m going to ham up my posh accent a bit more……okay, ya? 😉

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Desperate English Housewife in Washington, chapter 222

Dunkin’ Donut thefts

No! Not donuts being stolen in Howard County?! Deep breaths….. It’s okay, folks, the thieves who hit three Howard County Dunkin’ Donuts locations in the early morning hours of Sunday were after the cash, not the donuts. Phew.

Fear not, none of these were taken.

Fear not, none of these were taken.

To confirm: NO DONUTS WERE HARMED, STOLEN OR (heaven forbid) EATEN. Which is good since apparently “America runs on Dunkin'”

😉

Expat Life by Apple Gidley, Slice by Slice

Meet Apple…..

Apple Gidley, an Anglo-Australian writer with American citizenship, has lived in the USA twice, both times in Houston, Texas due to her husband’s work in the oil and gas industry. She has called 12 countries home and has relocated 26 times. Her family is scattered around the world in Britain, Australia, and the Caribbean
Apple writes regularly for Global Living Magazine on travel and expatriate issues, blogs at www.my.telegraph.co.uk/applegidley and her first book, Expat Life Slice by Slice (Summertime Publishing) came out in March 2012. She runs the website www.applegidley.com and is currently working on her first novel.

A bloody good read!

A bloody good read!

What do you enjoy most about living in the USA? Does it feel like home?
The amazing variety of the country, cultures and people – a true crucible, and the can do attitude. And being able to pay for my petrol at the pump! Yes it feels like home because everywhere I have lived has been home, no matter the duration.

Anything specific you miss about the UK?
A difficult question, having spent more time out of Britain than in it, however I do miss the British sense of humour, and the understated manner of speaking. Irony too.

What differences do you still encounter?
a) Banking makes me shake my head here but then the world’s local bank, HSBC, don’t seem to be all that sparkling either.

b) I like the solution-based attitude in the US compared to the problem-based attitude so often found in the UK. I call it the Eeyore Factor – it’s sunny now but it’ll be raining soon!

c) Alcohol laws – you can drive a car at 16, join the military with parental consent at 17, you can marry, purchase a gun at 18 but can’t have a drink until you’re 21.

Cheers! (If you're 21)

Cheers! (If you’re 21)

How do you feel the two cultures have come together, and what still separates us?
I don’t think we have come together really, anymore than any other countries. We all wherever we live have merging axes, or are at least aware of different cultures, because of film, television and books but most of us still cling to our comfort zones, what we know. Our expectation that life will be largely similar in the US to that in the UK is one of the hardest things to come to terms with when we realise it isn’t.

A shared language both joins and separates us; think of George Bernard Shaw’s quote “two countries divided by a common language”.

Education is very different in the two countries and so it inevitable the culture will be different.

The intensity of religious belief among many Americans is not something shared by the average Brit, and there are pockets of the US that still have a rather parochial view of the rest of the world.

In what way do you think your life is different because you are in the USA, and how do you think it would compare if you were in the UK?
I tend to withdraw in winter; which was certainly how I was when living in Aberdeen, children and work being the only things able to prise me away from huddling around radiators, so living in Houston, Texas is a real bonus. Opportunities that presented themselves in various countries all lead to an increased desire to write. In the US I have had the freedom to work at my writing – something I might not have had in the UK.

The big city

The big city

If you could change three laws in the USA what would they be?
a) Tighten gun controls – the gun culture prevalent in many areas and through all strata of society appalls me, and is something I will never get used to.

b) Do away with the death penalty in all states. I struggle to understand how taking a life for a crime is not a crime itself.

c) Immigration laws are hopefully in the process of changing in the US, however it would seem a relatively easy long-term fix would be to follow British law as laid down from 1st January 1983. Paraphrasing it states, if neither parent is a British citizen, or are in the country illegally, any child born of that union in Britain does not gain automatic citizenship.

However, I do think children brought into the US illegally before the age of consent should be given a track to legality, as long as they are in full time education, or are/have served in the military and have a clean record. The Dream Act is a fair and reasonable proposed law despite the vitriol spewed about it by right wing commentators.

What advice do you have for people coming to the USA to live?
Arriving here with good credit doesn’t mean a thing, though I understand it is improving. In any event get as much credit history as you can early on through store and gas cards.

Use the fact that you sound different to your advantage! A very handy phrase I use when explaining/complaining, and accompanied by an apologetic smile/laugh, is “as you can tell I’m not from here, so would you mind explaining to me why……” – it invariably gets a helpful response.

Americans are warm and welcoming but it can sometimes be difficult to get below the superficial despite a propensity to overshare.

Don’t expect laws to be the same in every state.

Figure out medical insurance as quickly as possible, if you are not on an expatriate package it is a minefield.

Apple :)

Apple 🙂

P.S.

Like anywhere, our attitude is key to how we are treated, so come and enjoy what the US has to offer, give something back and always remember we are guests in someone else’s country, which ironically I feel whether I am in the UK or the US despite being a citizen of both.

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Desperate English Housewife in Washington, chapter 221

The Mattress

Today I spotted a mattress in the road. What’s so odd about this? It was in the road in Clarksville, MD, dear people! A mattress! Dumped in the road! In Clarksville! The horror! My friend spoke thus: ‘What is this, white trash town?!’

The offending mattress

The offending mattress

I had to pull over and take a picture. Goodness me, whatever next in Clarksville…..Big Issue sellers…? 😉

The proof is in the pudding

Is it really? Another friend – a British one – announced her dismay at hearing some Americans use this very phrase.

The original phrase is “The proof of the pudding is in the eating”. Which means you have to eat the pudding to know what’s inside of it.

The modern version of “The proof is in the pudding” implies that there is a lot of evidence that I will not go through at this moment and you should take my word for it, or you could go through all of the evidence yourself. Apparently.

But this is a paraphrase of the original phrase, which means nothing, suggested my friend. I think her actual words were: “WTFing hell do they mean by that?”

There might some proof in here. Or some rum, or whisky, or even a penny.

There might some proof in here. Or some rum, or whisky, or even a penny.

Deer nibbling my bushes

Two handsome deer spent an hour nibbling the berries on my bushes this morning (which made me giggle in an immature way when I kept thinking about that).

Cute as buttons, they were, despite the ticks.

Bill the deer

Bill the deer

His brother, Ben

His brother, Ben

Pumpkin Crunch Cake (aka Cholesterol Raising, Have a Heart Attack Cake)

I’m no cook, but as we are heading towards Halloween there are many recipes around involving pumpkins. Not real pumpkins, though. Canned pumpkin puree stuff.

Eat your way to a heart attack with this monstrosity 😉

Ingredients

Original recipe makes 1 9×13 inch cake

1 (15 ounce) can pumpkin puree
1 (12 fluid ounce) can evaporated milk
4 eggs
1 1/2 cups white sugar
2 teaspoons pumpkin pie spice
1 teaspoon salt
1 (18.25 ounce) package yellow cake mix
1 cup chopped pecans
1 cup margarine, melted
1 (8 ounce) container frozen whipped topping, thawed

Directions

Preheat oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C). Lightly grease one 9×13 inch baking pan.

In a large bowl, combine pumpkin, evaporated milk, eggs, sugar, pumpkin pie spice, and salt. Mix well, and spread into the prepared pan.

Sprinkle cake mix over the top of the pumpkin mixture, and pat down. Sprinkle chopped pecans evenly over the cake mix, then drizzle with melted margarine.

Bake for 60 to 80 minutes, or until done. Top with whipped topping when ready to serve.

Open a can, make the cake

Open a can, make the cake

Hello Halloween.

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Desperate English Housewife in Washington, chapter 220

American TV shows….and how they influenced my view of America

A recent article by Ruth Margolis, who writes for the BBC America site Mind the Gap, touched on American TV shows, where she stated (I am guessing with her tongue firmly in her cheek) ‘Want to learn everything there is to know about U.S. society without actually leaving the house? Turn on your telly…’

Is this true? Could I really just watch American TV shows and think I knew America inside and out? To be fair, they do give a good insight into various aspects of the culture, but having lived here, there’s so much more to it, isn’t there now….?!

Glee = high school caricatures and dilemmas (and the odd bit of singing and dancing, which I WISH happened)

It almost makes me want to go back to school....

It almost makes me want to go back to school….

The Wire = depicts some areas of Baltimore (the Mayor character is, after all, alleged to be based on my hot politician of the decade, Martin O’Malley)

Love this show

Love this show

Desperate Housewives = maybe touches on the lives of many of the women I’ve seen in this very area (not that I’ve seen that many hot gardeners about though, sadly….)

Just a little bit influenced by this show - and their clothes ;)

Just a little bit influenced by this show – and their clothes 😉

I was influenced by watching American TV, and movies, in my youth. Only in May did I gasp in wonderment at the array of red short and bikini-clad lifeguards running along the beach in Rehoboth – ‘Baywatch!’ I exclaimed with all the joys of the show circling around in my TV-fed head.

I paused ‘E.T’ only the other week whilst watching it with Harry and madly gesticulated at the screen which showed, in one scene, the large houses with unfenced gardens and steps to the decking at the back – ‘Real American houses!’ I declared. You see, I’d seen these houses before in many a movie or TV show, but I only just realised that they do exist in ‘real life’. Obviously, I realise that aliens aren’t real, but then I also watched the X Files, so you never know….

I do believe in aliens, I do!

I do believe in aliens, I do!

I see the movie-set America on my travels, but does any of it adequately explain the culture of America? No show on TV prepared me for the real way of American life; that is the one I am living now. But I love seeing aspects of it, and acknowledging the TV shows that have influenced my outlook as they appear to me in a USA landscape or setting as I take my slow, but steady, tour across America.

I’m sure there will be many more times that I say ‘Oooh, it’s just like such and such TV show/movie…’ (I look forward to and dread the moment I reference ‘Deliverance’, though…. 😉 )

Here’s Ruth’s piece so you can make your own mind up 🙂

Interviews

I’m running another series of interviews, touching on subjects such as living in the capitals – London and DC -, parenting and schooling in the UK and the USA.

Here’s the first for your enjoyment….

An interview with Alexia, Mum in London

I’m Alexia, translator and full time mum, half French/half Greek. I moved from Athens to London in September 2012 with my husband, Mr K, and our son, Baby Lu, for my husband’s new job.

What you love about London?
I love London parks; from Holland Park’s peacocks to Richmond Park’s deer, I can’t get enough of their beauty. They are the ideal place for family outings and picnics, whatever the weather.

How is living in the UK different from the other countries you have lived in?
The main difference between London and Athens, not surprisingly, is the weather. Rain, cold and cloudy skies are a big challenge for us. Life in London is also considerably more expensive than in Athens, especially rents and childcare. Then again, it’s also a lot more organised and stress-free when compared to the small chaos of Athens’ city life.

Daisies, Hyde Park

Daisies, Hyde Park

What cultural traditions from the UK do you admire and partake in?
I like the “cool enthusiasm” British people have for all things British. For the Wimbledon tournament, the Royal Family and everything around it, the 2012 Olympic Games… I admire and applaud the unpretentious way they feel proud about their country.

How much do you think European culture influences life in the UK?
Not much. From what I have experienced so far, I believe the UK, as an island, has its own way of doing things and a distinct character that welcomes few foreign influences. Here, I do not feel I’m in Europe as I do when I’m in France or in Greece.

Deer, Richmond Park

Deer, Richmond Park

How do you find being a mum in London/UK is different from Europe?
Not having your family’s help is quite difficult when you’re raising a child. But the hardest part is childcare costs in the UK. They are so expensive, it makes little sense for a mum to work. That is different from most European countries, where childcare is more affordable or even free.

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Desperate English Housewife in Washington, chapter 219

That Bloomin’ Bridge!

Some American chums have been mocking me for fearing the amazing Chesapeake Bay Bridge. It’s so bloody high and winds along and up in a rollercoaster way, with not a lot of side coverage, that’s why it’s all a bit scary…. (And no, I’m NOT doing the run over it!)

Beautiful, but scary!

Beautiful, but scary!

This video by the BBC highlights for me exactly how I feel about it!

Sure, once you get to the other side it’s amazing (and the views are incredible of the bay if you can bear to look out), and I do breathe a sigh of relief when I get back over it towards home, but it’s still ‘the scariest bridge in the world’ for me (despite being ranked no. 9).

A Transatlantic Movie?

Not all movies in the UK do well in the USA….why is that? Do they not translate across the Atlantic?

I still have to wait for the Alan Partridge movie with Steve Coogan in to come out on DVD or Netflix if they think it’s worth it 😦

But wait! There is light at the end of the movie theatre tunnel – Steve Coogan and Dame Judi Dench (America, you LOVE her, right?!) in a movie together – a movie that is set in the UK and the USA and is all human interest and comedy and stuff we may both get…. please let this one be in movie theaters here. It is Dame Judi, after all, even if it is a little independent type movie called ‘Philomena’ directed by Stephen Frears.

Yey, Dame Judi and Alan Patridge...um, Steve Coogan ;)

Yey, Dame Judi and Alan Patridge…um, Steve Coogan 😉

(It’s the true story of an Irish woman, Philomena Lee, who became pregnant as a teenager in 1952, and was sent, in disgrace, to a convent in Limerick. Her son was taken away at the age of three and sent to America, to be adopted, and she was strongly encouraged to sign a contract that she would not try and find him.

Spoiler: she breaks this contract.)

Come on AMC movie theaters (cinemas), enough of the blockbuster crap – get some of the indie movies in!

Fall or not to Fall?

Now Labor Day is passed and the pools are closed, is it officially Fall?

It can’t be, cos I am still in my Daisy Dukes and the leaves are still on the trees and I am still using up the last of the suncream.

When does Fall begin? Apparently the equinox brings Fall/Autumn on September 22, 2013 at 4:44 P.M EDT. So I will welcome Fall then, and not before!

‘It is the summer’s great last heat,
It is the fall’s first chill: They meet.’
Sarah Morgan Bryan Piatt

Lovely Fall!

Lovely Fall!

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Desperate English Housewife in Washington, chapter 218

Labor Day parade!

So, today is Labor Day which means it is a national holiday in the good ole USofA.

And I took a stroll in the Kensington parade with County Executive for Howard County, Ken Ulman, who is running to be the incoming Lt. Governor alongside Anthony Brown (current Lt. Governor for Maryland and who is running for Governor to take over from Martin O’Malley) .

Things I learned today in America:

1. American towns do parades most excellently.
2. I am used to saying ‘Lieutenant’ as in ‘lefftenant’ (the British way), not ‘lootenant’ (the American way).
3. American pride is a marvellous thing to behold.
4. Kensington in Maryland ain’t nothing like the UK Kensington (tho it is still v charming!)
5. Ken Ulman looks a little bit like Channing Tatum (his daughter, Maddie, told me this is a family joke….!)

Channing Tatum?

Channing Tatum?

Ken Ulman?

Ken Ulman?

Here’s some cool stuff from the parade….

011

026

030

045

067

068

070

109

123

130

140

153

And these are a few videos of the parade for your enjoyment/amusement 🙂

What is Labor Day all about in the USA?

It’s about enjoying time with friends and family over the holiday weekend whilst remembering the men and women who helped to pave the way for better wages, better working conditions and more opportunities for others in the USA.

Happy Labor Day peeps!

laborday2

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Desperate English Housewife in Washington, chapter 217

The One About The UK Boyfriend and the US Girlfriend and How They Decided to ‘Take A Break’

There was once a UK boy and US gal who fell in love, regardless of there being a massive Ocean that separated them, and that their was quite an age difference between them (he was a lot older than her, and didn’t she hear about that all a bit too often).

Anyway, they’d been together a long time, and, despite the fact that they had once had a massive falling out about what was hers and what was his and the US gal had told the UK boy to sling his hook (and then she had a bit of a dalliance with a French lad), they stayed friends and, as time progressed, their love affair rekindled, going from strength to strength.

But, as always, things outside of their control took over and the relationship began to turn sour over something that they could not agree on. The US gal sought solace in the arms of a few of her exes, including the French lad, much to the disappointment of the UK boy. All eyes were on the broken couple as the US gal and the UK boy decided to ‘take a break’.

People everywhere were talking about the US gal and the UK boy and wondering how this special relationship would pan out …… After this, could it ever be like it was before?

The End – or is it…..? 😉

There's still a lot of love going on!

There’s still a lot of love going on!

That’s my story! This, on the other hand, is The Guardian’s more politically astute article on the special USA/UK relationship in the current climate.

Halloween stuff….

Yep, it’s already there, hanging out in shop and store doorways – pumpkins galore. Only two months to go, that is all!!

Fall stuff....

Fall stuff….

From loo to potty….

Harry informed me yesterday that he had ‘to go potty’. Does this mean his American transformation is complete?

I was quite taken aback, and had to pop off to the ‘loo’ to mull this over……..

Totally.

Totally.

I was then reliably informed by a number of American, Canadian and British friends about other expressions for what we call this loo thing.

‘I have to make doo doo’ – another Americanism, apparently.

‘I gotta go pee’ – a Canadian thing, I am told.

‘We [Brits] say I’m just nipping off to the loo (middle class) or I have to pee (lower middle class) or I need the toilet (lest said the better!)’ my friend stated.

Alternatively ‘Oi Mom I need a slash!’ or ‘I’m going for a leak’ were the suggestions.

And there was have it – an abundance of expressions to choose from should you require them 🙂

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Desperate English Housewife in Washington, chapter 216

Cheerleaders suspended for hazing

I confess that I did not know what ‘hazing’ was when I read this cheerleading story on CBS.

I asked my husband. ‘Do you know what hazing is?’

‘Yes,’ he replied. ‘It’s when people do initiation stuff to the new kids at university in the USA.’

‘Well, the Towson University cheerleaders have just been suspended for hazing,’ I responded.

‘Cheerleaders….’ said he. ‘Is there any footage?’

No, dear readers, none has been released (much to my husband’s disappointment), but this is the story….

What have these naughty gals been up to? I'm guessing it's not all splits in the air and pom poms for their version of hazing.....

What have these naughty gals been up to? I’m guessing it’s not all splits in the air and pom poms for their version of hazing…..

Towson University’s national championship cheerleading squad has been suspended from competition for a year for its hazing ritual, the details of which have been withheld.

After learning of the hazing incident, the university launched an investigation and eventually decided to bench the entire team for a full year. (Hazing, by the way, has led to some fatalities in the past, so, in fact, it is no laughing matter….this is the description: Hazing is any action taken or situation created intentionally that causes embarrassment, harassment or ridicule.)

What exactly did the cheerleaders do? The University ain’t saying!

Now for a totally unnecessary and gratuitous picture of cheerleaders 🙂

;)

😉

Labor Day Weekend

It’s a bit like August Bank Holibobs in the UK. This Labor Day I’ll be walking with Ken Ulman in this Labor Day Parade for Maryland in Kensington – lucky gal, aren’t it?!

Happy Labor Day folks! (That’s LABOR and not LABOUR – I keep having to delete that British ‘U’!)

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Desperate English Housewife in Washington, chapter 215

Diversity in the USA

I’ve said before that one of the reasons I like living in Howard County is because of the diversity of the people here.

One of Jim Rouse’s goals when he ‘made’ Columbia was to achieve a fully integrated city. So, did he do that very thing?

The University of Virginia’s Weldon Cooper Center for Public Service has released a map which takes racial data from the 2010 U.S. Census and represents each citizen, by race, as a dot on the map.

Each race is represented by a different colour: blue for white, green for black, red for Asian, yellow for Hispanic, and brown for other races.

Taken together the dots show a visual representation of the racial makeup of cities, towns and the country.

The good chaps at Columbia Patch have zoomed in on Columbia, showing the racial makeup of Columbia’s villages and neighborhoods. See their map here.

A bloomin' great place to live :)

A bloomin’ great place to live 🙂

Wired.com called the map “The Best Map Ever Made of America’s Racial Segregation”. Wired writes that every city tells a different story, but in some the segregation can be surprising.

In the Midwest, though, the racial divide can be shockingly exact. In Chicago, bands of whites, blacks, and Latinos radiate out from the city center like sun beams. In St. Louis, a buffer of a few blocks separates a vast area of largely black citizens from another of white and Asian ones,” the peeps at Wired.com say.

As far as Columbia goes, some of the comments on the Columbia Patch article from residents have been the most interesting….

‘……if one does NOT live in a “diverse” neighborhood, will HUD come in and make it so by force of government? Is there any benefit whatsoever to living in a “diverse” neighborhood or any detriment to do so?

Personally, I really like living in an area with a lot of income/cultural/ethnic diversity. I get a richer view of the world, and feel like my kids grow up with an appreciation for the variety of human experience. It was one of the values by which Columbia was founded, and I’m glad that it’s been maintained.

You have to take into consideration how long people have lived in those houses. When Columbia started, the % of African-Americans was near 12%, it is now 25%. Similar with other minorities. However, if those who purchased homes in 1970 are all still living in those homes, the diversity in those particular neighborhoods has been static for the last 45 years. The key here is that when those houses eventually are sold, they need to be made available to all buyers. As long as that happens, I believe Columbia will continue to be diverse, and will become more diverse, in the future.

Columbia - a view from above by Jeffrey Sauers

Columbia – a view from above by Jeffrey Sauers

Forced Diversity “Among the several hidden initiatives in the Obama Administration’s goal to bring “fundamental change” to America are plans, already being implemented, to use Federal power and Federal money to require greater “diversity” in each and every American community. According to an article posted on Fox News Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Secretary Shaun Donovan, while speaking at the NAACP convention last month, spoke of a new policy called “Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing.” This policy, according to Fox, requires HUD “to gather data on segregation and discrimination in every single neighborhood and try to remedy it.” See http://www.americanthinker.com/2013/08/forced_diversity.html’

‘I think Columbia’s map is really fascinating compared to other parts of the country where the lack of diversity is so striking (like the Midwest cities Wired mentioned). In my opinion, I think it shows that Columbia is a pretty diverse city on a macro level.’

‘I love the fact that my kids attended one of the most diverse HS in Howard County. But it should be noted that in a lot of cases, clusters of the same ethnicity is not aways due to income factors but that people naturally seek out neighborhoods of similar ethnicity.’

Varying viewpoints, interesting feedback, Columbians 🙂 I’d love to read views from other places and residents in the USA. And I’d also like to see a map for the UK, and see how it compares…..

The Butler

My friend and I watched The Butler last night. You know the one – the movie with Forrest Whitaker in as the butler at the White House for over thirty years. I loved it, it made me cry, I learned much about American history and the appalling issues of segregation, the historical back drop was reminiscent of Forrest Gump, and Forrest (the actor), Oprah Winfrey and David Oyelowo were amazing.

Bet it gets a few Oscars!

Bet it gets a few Oscars!

I love this piece by Justin Shaw, which gives a great insight into some of the racial themes covered in the movie.

Go see the movie. Take a tissue, mind you 😉

More on the Confederate Flag

A nice chap at the BBC has written about the Confederate Flag and its symbolism, much like I did. See Tom Geoghegan’s piece here.

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Desperate English Housewife in Washington, chapter 214

Harry has a new name…

‘Walker’. That’s what they call him at Breakfast Club. I was very confused until I worked out why.

Here’s the tale.

‘Good morning Walker,’ says Missy, the Breakfast Club leader.

Harry sort of looks embarrassed and mutters ‘Hi.’

I shuffle him over to the sign in sheet. ‘Walker?!’ I giggle. ‘Why are they calling you Walker?’ I am giggling – a lot.

Harry shrugs. ‘I don’t know,’ he mumbles.

‘Have you told them your name is Harry?’ I ask.

‘Yes, but they keep calling me Walker,’ he replies, looking a bit glum and I giggle some more.

And then I realise why Harry is being called ‘Walker’. His name tag, which is in place to ensure a smooth after school pick up, is hanging around his neck and has twisted round. His actual name is at the back, but because he doesn’t take the bus or the car pool and we walk to and from school, Harry is identified by his tag ‘Walker’, which is hanging at the front.

‘Hahahahaha,’ I laugh A LOT (and quite embarrassingly loudly for a five-year old in front of his new friend.)

I tell Missy: ‘His name tag was showing his pick up status and not his name, so I’ve turned it round.’

She looks at the name tag and seems a bit baffled. She takes Harry’s hand. ‘Come on then, Gary,’ she says.

I giggle all the way out the school doors and all the way to work. 🙂

One thing I learnt from this:
1. That ‘Walker’ is a name easily accepted in the USA 😉

Cop dad

There is a dad who does drop off at the same time as me and who is a cop, but doesn’t wear his uniform (to confirm, he does actually wear something – it’s just that its regular clothes, not the police uniform 😉 ).

I know he is a cop because he has a big black car with all sorts of radio stuff on the dashboard, and he has a big old badge and gun hanging off his belt.

I stare at his gun a lot when I am doing Breakfast Club drop off.

You wouldn’t see that in the UK, I think to myself. I want to ask him if I can shadow him during his day’s work. I think I might do that in a few weeks when I’ve got over staring at his gun. Now, hanging out with the cops – that would be interesting….

I want to hang with the HoCoPoPo

I want to hang with the HoCoPoPo

Police officer killed

Which leads me on to the sad story that has rocked the neighbourhood of Catonsville, not far from us.

It’s about the murder of a Baltimore County police officer, shot and killed on Wednesday morning while serving a search warrant.

Police Officer Jason Schneider was killed in the line of duty, despite that fact that he did have on a bulletproof vest when he was shot multiple times. One bullet made it through the vest.

One brave cop

One brave cop

Schneider was killed when he and other officers served a warrant at a home on Winters Lane in Catonsville. Apparently the 13-year-veteran had executed such search warrants hundreds of times throughout his career.

Schneider was shot multiple times by Tevon Smith. The story does not finish there – Schneider was able to fire back in self-defense and 25-year old Smith died on Wednesday night.

A sad story for Schneider’s family, the police and the community of Catonsville. Of course, the real culprit here is guns….because two lives were taken in this incident.

Guns

Guns…a recurring theme in my blogs. When there are guns on the street, it seems a wholly good idea for the cops to have them too….doesn’t it?

In the UK police officers do not carry firearms, except in special circumstances. The arming of police in Britain is a perennial topic of debate……. but then, guns are less prevalent in the UK and it’s not easy to get a firearms license.

He could stop that criminal by throwing Evian in his face....

He could stop that criminal by throwing Evian in his face….

A BBC News article about why police in the UK don’t have guns intrigued me.

However, there is also this clip and article about Mark Kessler, police chief in Pennsylvania, which has caused a bit of outrage.

Guns. They confuse me, America.

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