November 18, 2025

19 Nov

 

 





Flagstaff Today 41°: 34° Week 47 Day 322

Wind 1 mph Gusts 6 mph

Air Quality: Fair Overcast Sun

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

15-21

International Fraud Awareness Week Link 
International Restorative Justice Week
Link 
Nat’l Hunger & Homeless Awareness Week
Link  
Roc Your Moc Week
Link  

American Education Week: 16-20 Link 
Geography Awareness Week: 16-20 
Link 
National Global Entrepreneurship Week: 16-22 
Link

World Antimicrobial Awareness Week: 18-24  Link

Daily Observations

American Made Matters Day  Link
Beaujolais Nouveau Day   
Link
Children's Grief Awareness Day
 Link 
Educator For A Day 
Link 
Equal Opportunity Day
(aka Gettysburg Address Day)  Link
Great American Smokeout 
Link 
Have A Bad Day Day 
 Link
International Men's Day
 Link
National Parental Involvement Day  
Link 

National Rural Health Day   Link
Red Shawl Day 
Link
Rocky and Bullwinkle Day
Transportation Security Administration Day
Use Less Stuff Day 
Link 
Women's Entrepreneurship Day 
Link
World Pancreatic Cancer Day 
Link  
World Philosophy Day

World Toilet Day Link

 

Today’s Quotes                                                             


Today’s Memes

 



Thoughts for the day

The day started with fog/mist covering our town. Now it is just light rain and cloudy.

I’ve been getting scripts at Walgreens for over a decade. Before that I went to CVS, but the Flag pharmacy had terrible customer service back then. Over the past couple of months, Walgreens has not been a great pharmacy. Renewing a script online became a real hassle. I asked the local pharmacist as was told to use the app rather than calling on the phone. That helped a little. Then all my scripts were being filled by the computer in Phoenix and even the tiniest pills came in a huge plastic bottle. When I asked, they said they knew it was a problem and just ask for a smaller pill bottle when I picked it up. That adds about 15 minutes to each visit, so I live with the large bottles. The 2 local pharmacists and the 5 or 6 regular techs are great, so I just live with the inconvenience. Today I saw an article explaining the Walgreens changes. They were bought out by another company and are now in some turmoil. They now must work on holidays that previously were paid no work holidays. Now the new company is messing with their work hours and for also their retirement packages. It is so sad. The new owners don’t realize that it is the workers that make their stores successful.

With all the talk about affordability, I checked a inflation calculator and discovered that in 1965 gas was about 25¢/gallon. In today’s money it becomes $$2.58/gallon. It is really about $3.06/gallon. Hmmm

I am taping Ken Burn’s American Revolution on PBS. Episode 1 was excellent, and I look forward the rest of the series. I suggest everyone check it out and help PBS.

History that is not true…

Marie Antoinette said "let them eat cake”
Poor Marie Antoinette. As if being publicly beheaded wasn’t bad enough, she’s now gone down in history as a byword for greed, callousness, and excess, thanks mostly to a line of dialogue that is, at best, a mistranslation. The notorious phrase reads "Qu’ils mangent de la brioche", and while brioche bread was considered a luxury in 18th-century France, it’s hardly the Victoria sponge so often imagined by modern minds. 

More importantly – she never said it. The phrase is drawn from Confessions, a work by philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau which was written 24 years before the French Revolution when Antoinette was 11 years old.

Antoinette was viscerally hated in her era, but modern historians take a kindlier tone. She was a convenient lightning rod for French frustration – foreign, female, royal – even though her unhappy marriage left her with minimal power. Salacious pamphlets libeled her with cruel innuendo and depicted her as a scheming behind-the-scenes manipulator.

But, with references to baked goods aside, her reputation for extravagance was well-earned. She once had an entire farm built in the grounds of Versailles so that she and her attendants could play at being milkmaids.

Myths people still believe about Native Americans…

Native Americans all live on reservations

The U.S. Census indicates that approximately 78 percent of Native Americans reside off the reservations. Large Native American populations are found in cities such as Los Angeles, New York, and Phoenix.

Reservations vary widely. The Navajo Nation, which spans 27,000 square miles — larger than West Virginia — compares to California rancherias, which are typically less than an acre in size. Some reservations are economically successful, while others are basic, lacking quality internet coverage or medical facilities.

A high number of Native people travel through reservations and urban living, preserving tribal relations even when they seek education or jobs in the cities. 

Random Thoughts

You only have one birthday; the rest are congratulations for surviving each year.

Some stranger remembers you for being kind to them when no one else was.

Most people aren’t scared of being alone in the dark—they’re scared of not being alone in the dark.

How do nudists clean their glasses?

Historic Events

Click here for 19 November history

Birthdays

Reid Scott, 48

TV Actor


Jason Scott Lee, 59

Movie Actor


Larsen Thompson, 25

Movie Actress


Jack Dorsey, 49

Entrepreneur


Mark Bonnar, 57

TV Actor


Meg Ryan, 64

Movie Actress


Allison Janney, 66

TV Actress


Calvin Klein, 83

Fashion Designer


Adam Driver, 42

Movie Actor


Jodie Foster, 63

Movie Actress

 

 

James A. Garfield (d.1881; @49, shot)

US President


Larry King (d.2021; @91)

TV Show Host



 

The End for today…

           

November 17, 2025

18 Nov

 

 



Flagstaff Today 42°: 33° Week 47 Day 322

Wind 4 mph Gusts 6 mph

Air Quality: Fair Mostly Cloudy Sunshine

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

Nearest lightning: 894 miles away

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

Weekly Observations

15-21

International Fraud Awareness Week Link 
International Restorative Justice Week
Link 
Nat’l Hunger & Homeless Awareness Week
Link  
Roc Your Moc Week
Link  

16-20

American Education Week Link 
Geography Awareness Week 
Link 

16-22
National Global Entrepreneurship Week 
Link

18-24

World Antimicrobial Awareness Week Link

Daily Observations

European Antibiotic Awareness Day Link
GIS Day
(Geographic Information Systems) Link 
International Day of Islamic Art

Married To A Scorpio Support Day  Link
Mickey Mouse Day
National Apple Cider Day 
Link
National Educational Support Professionals Day 
Link  

National Princess Day  Link
National Zinfandel Day 
Link 
Push-button Phone Day
World Day for the Prevention of and Healing from Child Sexual Exploitation, Abuse and Violence  
Link

Today’s Quotes                                                             


Today’s Memes

 



Thoughts for the day

Another day of moisture…much appreciated. Our town might even see a little snow.

I got to watch the Broncos game on live TV on Sunday. This doesn’t happen very often. The Broncos came from behind to beat the Chiefs by 3. The 49ers beat the Cards in a blowout.

Until I watched 60 Minutes, I had never heard of Chess Boxing. There I saw some matches. Sorry, not impressed. The only thing I derived is that not all chess players are nerds. Wait, I already knew that.

Trump will be remembered for his high number of pardons. Many will remember that over a dozen of those he pardoned soon had additional charges from their current actions. I must wonder if he will give them another pardon.

We are starting to wonder ‘which President will tweet today?’ Today’s 180 turn was that he now encourages the House Republicans to vote to release the Epstein files. Of course, he could stop all this by simply releasing the files…and today he did not say he would sign off on the release. Crazy.

History that is not true…

Ferdinand Magellan was the first person to sail around the world

Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan is famous for exactly one thing – being the first person to circumnavigate the globe. His achievement has rung down the centuries, and to date Magellan has lent his name to a NASA spacecraft, two dwarf galaxies, countless cruise liners and container ships, the straits around the southernmost tip of South America, and a species of penguin – the Magellanic penguin. This lofty reputation is not entirely unearned. He set sail under the Spanish flag with a fleet of five ships in September 1519, and one of those ships, the Victoria, crawled back into port at Seville in 1522, having rounded the world in two years and 351 days.
There was just one problem: Magellan wasn't on board. The treacherous expedition had been gutted by starvation, desertion, mutiny, hostile encounters with natives, and above all scurvy – the perpetual sailor's disease. Magellan himself was killed in battle on the Philippines (his body was never recovered), and only 18 of his 270-strong crew made it back to Spain under the command of Juan Sebastián Elcano – the actual first man around the world. Magellan died thinking he'd failed, and would find his modern reputation gratifying, baffling, and amusing.
 

Myths people still believe about Native Americans…

Sports mascots honor the Native Americans

Those who wear headdresses and make tomahawk chops argue that they do so as a tribute, but the statistics tell a different story. In a study, 67 percent of the Native Americans regard these mascots as offensive or harmful.

The issue isn’t just imagery. Racial slurs such as redskins are used. Suppose a group was named Blackskins or some other group based upon the Asian stereotypes–would that outrage be instant? Native activist Suzan Shown Harjo states, “We are not mascots.” We’re people.” 

Random Thoughts

Your life can’t fall apart if it was never really together in the first place.

Every single decision you’ve made in your life has led you to where you are now. 

Whatever happens inside our bodies happens in pitch-black darkness. 

You’ve survived 100% of your worst days. 

Historic Events

Click here for 18 November history

Birthdays

Nathan Kress, 33

TV Actor


Owen Wilson, 57

Movie Actor


Mike Epps, 55

Comedian


Chloe Sevigny, 51

Movie Actress


Damon Wayans Jr., 43

TV Actor



 

 

Caleb Williams, 24

Football Player


Rick Owens, 64

Fashion Designer


David Ortíz, 50

Baseball Player


Kevin Nealon, 72

Comedian


Elizabeth Perkins, 65

TV Actress


Megyn Kelly, 55

Journalist

 

The End for today…