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WordPress Can Be Obnoxious

It’s really obnoxious has WordPress continues to find ways to push people to the block editor. I do not like it, I find the built in editors in WordPress to be super bloated, so I’ve ended up writing most of my own editors that reside just on the outside of the normal WordPress interface. Works for me.

 Below Windham High Point

What is it, will rates change, and what economists think the risks are, explained – Vox

Inflation: What is it, will rates change, and what economists think the risks are, explained – Vox

There’s a smallish but growing chorus of economists and policymakers sounding the alarm about inflation. They warn that a combination of government stimulus and the impending economic snapback will cause prices to overheat. A lot of regular people might be confused by this. After all, the country is still in the middle of the Covid-19 outbreak, the economy is far from back to normal, and we’re still millions of jobs short from where we were pre-pandemic. Many economists and lawmakers have spent months arguing that the risk is doing too little, not too much, to save the economy. Some say a little bit of inflation may be a good thing, especially given how low it’s been in the recent past.

At one level I'm a bit worried about inflation, as external economic disruptions can cause inflation but also America is in a much different place than in the late 1960s. There is no new Interstate system being built now, no major urban renewal projects or college campuses being built. No Vietnam War today.

On the other hand, oil and natural gas production fell dramatically during the pandemic, and suddenly the highways are once again packed bumper to bumper with fuel hungry cars and businesses are once again firing up their lights and cranking up the air conditioning. A significant spike in oil prices into the $200 plus range could certainly spark inflation in some parts of the economy, as could a spike in natural gas prices as the power plants has become very addicted to gas.

A Long Shutdown Might Roil The Global Economy : NPR

Suez Canal: A Long Shutdown Might Roil The Global Economy : NPR

Before the grounding of the massive Ever Given container ship in the Suez Canal, some 50 vessels a day, or about 10% of global trade, sailed through the waterway each day — everything from consumer electronics to food, chemicals, ore and petroleum.

Now, with the ship lodged sideways in the canal, closing off the main oceangoing highway between Europe and Asia, much of that cargo is sitting idle. It's either waiting to transit the canal or stuck in port while owners and shippers decide what to do.

I saw they cut my auto-refill discount for my phone plan by $4, raising my phone by from $60 to $64 with the 20-gb hotspot plan

I saw they cut my auto-refill discount for my phone plan by $4, raising my phone by from $60 to $64 with the 20-gb hotspot plan. Just another cost on the budget — but with remote work and the library closed it’s kind of important to have Internet at home. That kind of sucks, but I guess everything is going up in price. May 1st my rent is going up too, and I just adjusted my bank to reflect the additional $25 a month. Car insurance is due on Monday. At least I should be getting a good tax-refund and the stimulus check this month, and I think I will be able to otherwise stay the course on my budget and savings. Once office life resumes, I can go back to the more basic data package, that will save money, to offset the cost of bus fares for commuting.

The Truth Behind Mother Goose. Children’s nursery rhymes are not…

The Truth Behind Mother Goose. Children’s nursery rhymes are not…

The simple and seemingly innocent nursery rhymes we grew up reciting; hide a twisted and dark history. Mother Goose’s ulterior social and political agendas are cleverly masked in the guise of playful nursery rhymes. Pick up a copy of The Real Mother Goose (see “Further Reading” free download links below), and reread the familiar childhood stories with eyes wide open. Let’s examine five of the most popular and creepy rhymes with some historical context: Three Blind Mice, Mary Mary, Quite Contrary, Humpty Dumpty, Baa, Baa, Black Sheep, There Was an Old Women; found in, The Real Mother Goose illustrated by Blanche Fisher Wright.