Sunday, February 14, 2010

Tea Party

I'm a huge advocate for the Tea Party movement. I've not participated in any events but I know several people who have and I can attest to the fact that they are normal Americans like me who are unhappy about the direction of this country and unsupported by any political group. As far as I'm concerned, it's just one more example of the bias of the mainstream media that so much has been made of nutcake fringe people in this group as if the same kind of people aren't evident within every other protest group as well. The basic good nature of the Tea Party protesters is very evident just by comparing the capitol landscape after a protest. I know this is really old news but check out the trash after the Obama inauguration compared to the trash found after the 9-12 Protest.
Just like with any group, other supporters may say or believe things I don't agree with but I do agree with the need for smaller government and letting people keep their own money. It makes me sick to see how as unemployment has skyrocketed, government employment has done the same along with government salaries. I've found a cool logo designed by a local design company (which I find very cool) so I've added it to my sidebar. I'm proud to claim the Tea Party movement as something I support.

Sunday, January 17, 2010

The Making of a Marchioness


This week I read "The Making of a Marchioness" by Frances Hodgson Burnett. Best known for "A Little Princess" and "The Secret Garden", I learned through the blog 'Random Jottings of a Book and Opera Lover' that Burnett had written many adult fiction books as well. It was a very interesting book, quite a contrast to the many regency romances I've read written by today's authors. Today's romances often use the flavorings of historical periods but modernize the attitudes of the hero/heroine so that the unpleasant or un-admiral qualities of the time period are frankly whitewashed away. Since this book was written in 1901 in the Edwardian age, that whitewashing has not occurred so what you get is an unvarnished look at marriage attitudes and what it was like for women in that time period. To consider what it must have been like for women when marriage was the only way out of a life of hardwork and semi-poverty with no social system to fall back on in the case of illness was very sobering. It really made me think about what a luxury it is today that women can marry or not but if they choose to marry, they can definitely wait til they fall in love. That being said, I do think that many women marry for financial considerations or because they don't want to be alone even today, they just don't admit it. It doesn't seem to me to be a bad reason except when the woman isn't sufficiently appreciative of the man and disdains him. Emily, the heroine in this book, I assure you, appreciates her husband to the point of worship and is perfectly willing to die for him in gratitude of the fate he has saved her from. Next, I'm on to a biography of Lucy Maud Montgomery, the author of the Anne of Green Gables series which I've never read but I did see the terrific mini series on TV a few years ago. It's a little backwards, I admit. :0)