Showing posts with label Washington DC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Washington DC. Show all posts

Friday, January 24, 2020

Visiting District Wharf in SW Washington DC


Visiting the District Wharf area in SW Washington DC


New venues, hotels and restaurants have opened in the last couple of years. Narration.
RT 03:37 https://youtu.be/PEhiTX6e6jI
This is a video uploaded through Art Promotions YouTube film & animation entertainment channel: blessings427. The channel features short videos about art, film, music, travel, and inspirational subjects created by Karen E. Francis, producer of the TV series "Heart of the Matter." Trailers about the family movie CHRISTMAS RIDE (PG) are spotlit. It is Free to watch online and Subscribe to receive notifications of new uploads.


Wednesday, July 4, 2012

HAPPY FOURTH OF JULY FOR ALL


    Wishing you all a Happy Fourth of July from Memphis on the big muddy Mississippi River, the city where music plays day and night and barbeque flows like waves on the ocean.
     Fireworks started on Sunday here at a big Baptist Church campus nearby.  Families gathered for picnics on the lawn, and shared their bread and the Word of God.  Last night a suburb shot off its fireworks.  Families gathered around the performing arts center and at homes eating hot dogs, and it's "pass the mustard, please, and have some more of this here sweet tea."
    Then dragging lawn chairs outside, they sat in front yards, in driveways, and even in the street watching as the fireworks burst forth in the sky, reminiscing over Fourth’s gone by and as the little ones saw their first, wondered if this one would be their last.
    I enjoy the patriotic music wafting through the broken window.  I hear Cohen, Sousa, Berlin, Howe, and wonder if I’m related to Samuel Francis Smith or Francis Scott Key.  I am reminded of all the sacrifices made by those before us and around us to bring freedom to this country and keep it.  Today I think of the great debate about Health Care in America.  When our country started out so long ago, there weren’t many people here, compared to today.  Science had not advanced so far in its healing measures.    Though our forefathers wrote words of unity, people were more self- reliant.  They grew their own food, made their own clothes.  Think about it.  Today most of us are more dependent on others for everything, electricity, water, food.  Our jobs (if we have one at all) are more specialized.    Our country was established by struggling immigrants to this new land.  We were poor in riches, but rich in spirit.  Today, we have a very wealthy nation, despite all the troubles we face. 
    Our government has the means to deliver health care to everyone.   And what greater service can a government provide to its people, than providing for the Health of its people?   Insurance for all, is NOT the same thing as health care for all.   If a man cannot afford health insurance now, making a law requiring   that man to buy it, does not make it possible.   Such a law is a guarantee that insurance companies are profitable and an assurance that the Health Care PACs, lobbies, are alive and well in DC.   On the web recently, one thoughtful person wrote, “the entire health care debate could be resolved by taking out two words from the Medicare Act.”  Those two words were “over sixty-five.”  
    Is that correct?   I don’t know.  But when I think about the purpose of government, I see it as working to achieve greater good for the people it governs.  Sometimes that comes in the form of checking on the quality of the food we buy, or building highways and dams to produce electricity.  But the sine qua non  of a strong, free country, with the exception of its spiritual focus, is the health and education of its people.  And from these its wealth derives.   Perhaps America can afford a Healthcare now for its people which it couldn’t when it began its great experiment in 1776 “of the people, FOR the people.” 

Friday, March 12, 2010

Art Museums in Washington DC

A blitz of the Smithsonian Art Museums on the mall in Washington DC revealed the numerous treasures of both the East and West wings of the National Gallery of Art. The underground tunnel between the two bookstore gift shops and cafes of the museums is still in use but at this time of year the cascading waterfall was not running. New lighting surrounded the moving sidewalk in the East wing. A highlight was seeing the only Leonardo da Vinci oil painting in America, Ginevra de' Benci, c. 1474-1478, which happened to be painted on both sides of the panel and displayed in such a way that one may see both sides. The Freer Museum of Asian Art also exhibited many fine examples of Whistler's portraits. The outdoor Sculpture Garden of the round Hirshhorn Museum was quite pleasant to stroll through after viewing the Josef Albers exhibition within which runs until April 11, 2010. Visiting the Smithsonian's National Portrait Gallery involved walking a few blocks North of the Mall to F and 8th St. NW. There one could see three floors of portraits, old and new, and take in a sense of American history as well, with the many depictions of U.S. Presidents and other historical figures of accomplishment. Of special note for Memphians, "One Life: Echoes of Elvis" is up through August 29, 2010 on the First Floor.
This museum is open until 7:00 pm.
Other favorite art museums such as The Corcoran on 17th Street NW near to the White House, could not be toured, as it was closed on Monday and Tuesday, though the scaffolding of its impending renovations looks exciting.