We did set the alarm for late to get up to see the eclipse, but the plan was only to look if we could see it from our bed (we can often see the moon from our window), but we could not and so went back to sleep. The world is, however, brighter this morning, and we are glad.
Last night we found a restaurant on the edge of Soho (so it claims, is Noho/Little Italy the edge of Soho now? God help me) that has gluten-free pasta and pizza. Also, excellent ambiance and major skylight action. We're very happy.
A cruise option may be back on the menu vs. France now. We're going to try to figure it out over the holidays. I don't know.
14% of the US population now receives food stamps. In Washington DC that number is over 20%; if you look at people under 16, the number near doubles in some jurisdictions. Some politicians would tell you the shame is that they're lazy. The shame is that our system is so broken that so many people need our help (and make no mistake, everyone who needs help isn't getting it) and that we vilify them for it.
P.S., Happy Dalek Day! (Gosh, there's a lot of analysis to do about bodies and sexuality and absence and The Void thanks that still of the Dalek plunger blocking out Barbara's torso, ne?). The first appearance on our TVs of the Doctor's nemeses (singular or plural do you think? How collective are they? Has this changed over time? Do we need to discuss the Dalek/human hybrid?), the Daleks, happened December 21, 1963.
A Brooklyn food pantry tries a plan to allow recipients to choose their groceries. This is huge. For people who need food assistance but also suffer from diseases like celiac disease the choice is often go hungry or get sick.
Wow, that's so great! We were on WIC for half a year when my son was a baby (husband was laid off) and it was barely worth the hoops we had to jump through because the two items we were allowed the most of, milk and cheese, weren't part of our diet and there were no substitutes permitted. It was very frustrating.
The food bank here in Seattle which I use has a color coded system. You get a shopping cart, and your color coded card based on household size. The shelves say how many of each item/item type you can have based on your color card. It lets us pick the items that we use, and leave behind those which we don't (so, being The Jew that they get, they will hold the special kosher items for me if I call ahead, so I don't get stuck with the problem of all the protein being porky). I don't take bananas, so I get grapes and apples instead. We also get as many bags/bins of salad mix and containers of pre-cut fruit and veg as we like.
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Wow, that's so great! We were on WIC for half a year when my son was a baby (husband was laid off) and it was barely worth the hoops we had to jump through because the two items we were allowed the most of, milk and cheese, weren't part of our diet and there were no substitutes permitted. It was very frustrating.
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