November 23, 2025

24 Nov

 

 




Flagstaff Today 38°: 30° Week 48 Day 328

Wind 9 mph Gusts 13 mph

Air Quality: Fair Cloudy Intermittent rain

Active Fire: 213 miles away Risk of Fire: Very Low

Nearest lightning: 7 miles away

Nov. Averages: Temps: 53°\25° Moisture: 4 Days  ave. 1.6”

Weekly Observations

18-24

World Antimicrobial Awareness Week Link

20-26

National Farm-City Week

Dermatology Week: 21-24 Link

22-26

World Cocktail Championships Link

22-28

Church/State Separation Week 
GERD Awareness Week
Link
National Family Week
National Game & Puzzle Week
Better Conversation Week:
22-29

National Bible Week 

Daily Observations

Brownielocks Day Link
Celebrate Your Unique Talent Day
D.B. Cooper Day

Fairy Bread Day Link
International
Carménère Day Link
World Conjoined Twins Day

Today’s Quotes                                                             


Today’s Memes

 



Thoughts for the day

It looks like another day of moisture…sometimes rain, sometimes snow. I’ve lived here for over a decade and a half and I don’t remember a wetter fall. I just read Phoenix set a record for rainfall in November and there is more November ahead. No complaints.

I am discouraged after the ASU/CU football game. The Buffs played an awful game and all the talk about ‘it’s a rebuilding year’ was in full view. I had hoped for so much more from the team and from the coaching staff.

I hope all sides can find an end to the war in Ukraine. I learned long ago that when there is a disagreement, it is best to have all sides sit down at a table and figure out how to go forward. Everyone needs to express their past concerns…which will be very difficult…and then work for what to do in the future.

History that is not true…

The Aztecs thought Hernan Cortes and the conquistadors were gods

History is written by the winners, and perhaps nowhere is this truer than 16th-century Mexico. The Spanish conquest of the Aztecs is prime myth-making territory, as most of our sources are self-aggrandizing retrospectives by victorious conquistadors describing events that happened deep in the jungle. A profound sense of cultural and religious superiority oozes from these accounts, obscuring the customs and perspectives of the defeated Aztecs, many of whom did not live to tell their tales.
Chief among these myths is the idea that the Aztecs thought the Spanish were deities – specifically the prophesied return of the creator god Quetzalcoatl . This notion was cooked up by Franciscan friars in the late-1500s and is absent even from most Spanish sources. Even Cortes himself – the leader of the conquistadors, and one of history’s least modest individuals – makes no mention of it. 

Myths people still believe about Native Americans…

Native Americans who don't know their culture are less authentic

Millennia of involuntary acculturation, boarding schools, adoption, and the prohibition of Native religions cut a lot of cultural ties. To fault Native people because they were not Indian enough is to miss this history.

Many people today are reclaiming what they have lost, such as the study of ancient languages and the re-establishment of traditional rituals. This Renaissance is not a lack of authenticity, but rather one of resilience and hard work.

Random Thoughts

Do you think Spider-Man has the auto-rotate feature turned off on his phone?

All of the caution messages on various products were likely put there because someone tried them out. 

The way we treat moths versus butterflies is a real-life example of pretty privilege.

One day, they’ll probably create a Harry Potter remake, and there’s nothing we can do to stop it.

Historic Events

Click here for 24 November history

Birthdays

Sarah Hyland, 35

TV Actress


Katherine Heigl, 47

Movie Actress


LiAngelo Ball, 27

Basketball Player


Shirley Henderson, 60

Movie Actress


Garret Dillahunt, 61

Movie Actor


Billy Connolly, 83

Movie Actor


Oscar Robertson, 87

Basketball Player


Dwight Schultz, 78

TV Actor

 

 

Paul Tagliabue (d.2025 @84)

Sports Executive


Frank Caprio (d. 2025 @88)

Politician

 

The End for today…

           

November 22, 2025

23 Nov

 

 



Flagstaff Today 44°: 33° Week 48 Day 327

Wind 9 mph Gusts 14 mph

Air Quality: Fair High Cloud Sunshine

Active Fire: 213 miles away Risk of Fire: Very Low

Nearest lightning: 962 miles away

Nov. Averages: Temps: 53°\25° Moisture: 4 Days  ave. 1.6”

Weekly Observations

18-24

World Antimicrobial Awareness Week Link

20-26

National Farm-City Week

Dermatology Week: 21-24 Link

22-26

World Cocktail Championships Link

22-28

Church/State Separation Week 
GERD Awareness Week
Link
National Family Week
National Game & Puzzle Week
Better Conversation Week:
22-29

National Bible Week 

Daily Observations

Doctor Who Day
Fibonacci Day 
Link
International Image Consultant Day

National Espresso Day Link
Old Clem's Night..St. Clement 
Wolfenoot 
Link

Today’s Quotes                                                             


Today’s Memes

 



Thoughts for the day

A good fall day with just a tad too many wind gusts.

I picked up scripts yesterday. One was new so I paid the $24. When I got home I looked information about the scripts. It turned out that the new script was covered completely, but the thyroid one was used GoodRx and not my insurance. I called and they said bring in the receipts. Turns out the last time I refilled the thyroid one it was too early, so they ran it through GoodRx. It was my screw-up. I had been taking the med forever, and when my doctor sent in a new script he changed me from every day to every other day. I didn’t see it, so used it twice as fast as I should have. Walgreens was so good as they ran it through BC and refunded the charge. Embarrassed, but happy.

I recently read a news story about ICE and Border Patrol. Border Patrol works within 100 miles of our borders and it responsible for stopping immigrants at or near the border who are entering without proper paperwork. They are trained to capture and detain them and remove them from the US. ICE is very different. They can work anywhere within the US. They get information from many different sources to identify people who may or may not be here illegally. They review their information, make a plan of action to capture the illegal, notify the relevant local officials of a raid, capture and detain the illegal who then waits for a court date. This administration has decided to use both ICE and Border Patrol anywhere in the US. Border Patrol has never been trained the way ICE agents have been trained. This new responsibility for Border agents is why there are so many problems with identifying and capturing illegals. I believe both should do their jobs as outlined in the law.

It was a crazy week for this administration. First Mayor-elect Mamdani and President Trump met. Many expected something bad. It turned out that when Trump talked directly to Mamdani, they had a good conversation without rhetoric. Nice! Then Marjorie Taylor Greene announced her resignation from the house for January 2026. First, MTG flipped on Trump and many Republicans, shocking many in the news. Then out-of-the-blue on Friday, she announced she was resigning after Trump had called her a traitor. I seldom agree with MTG and her MAGA politics, but in this case I understand her reasons and applaud her for stating them so clearly. 

History that is not true…

The Taj Mahal’s builders were mutilated

Called 'a teardrop on the cheek of time' by Indian poet Rabindranath Tagore, the Taj Mahal is world-renowned for the transcendent beauty not only of its architecture, but its backstory. Built by heartbroken Mughal emperor Shah Jahan as a mausoleum for his beloved wife Mumtaz Mahal, the Taj is a symbol of enduring love and beauty that was always intended to ring down the centuries. So determined was he that no future monument should ever rival its beauty that Shah Jahan cut off the hands of each of the 20,000 laborers who worked on the site.

It’s easy to see why this mix of high romance and unspeakable cruelty appeals to storytellers, but it is just that – a story.

Unfortunately, mass mutilations do appear elsewhere in the historical record. In the 13th century, some Mongol conquerors kept track of their victims by severing their right ears and then counting them up in large piles. Byzantine emperor Basil the Bulgar-Slayer meanwhile, is thought to have blinded up to 15,000 Bulgarian prisoners in AD 1014, leaving just one man in every hundred with his sight so he could lead the others home.

Myths people still believe about Native Americans…

The Manhattan purchase was a fair deal for trinkets

The history of the sale of Manhattan for $24 worth of beads is a simplification of the actual events. In 1626, the Dutch exchanged goods with the Lenape people, valued at approximately $1,000 in present-day money, including tools and cloth.

The Lenape would have perceived this as a settlement to share the land, rather than to sell it permanently, as they had a different worldview regarding land ownership. 

Random Thoughts

An onion is the bass player of food. 

Finding worms in apples has been much less of a problem than I anticipated experiencing as a kid.

April Fool’s Day is the one day a year when people critically examine news articles before accepting them as true.

Brushing our teeth is the closest we ever come to cleaning our skeleton.

Historic Events

Click here for 23 November history 

Birthdays

Miley Cyrus, 33

Pop Singer


Lia Marie Johnson, 29

Movie Actress


Snooki, 38

Reality Star


Lucas Grabeel, 41

Movie Actor


Lance Thomas King, 63

Metal Singer


Nicolás Maduro, 63

Politician


Chris Hardwick, 54

Comedian


Franco Nero, 84

Movie Actor

 

Franklin Pierce (d. 1869; @64, cirrhosis)

US President

 

The End for today…