Sunday, May 31, 2026

Trump and the Kennedy Center- My Personal Reflections

A pair of rulings have prohibited Trump from shutting down the Kennedy Center for proposed renovations-but staffers worry that the president has already permanently broken the institution, Janay Kingsberry reports. https://theatln.tc/0DrOPJlO

The above image and clippings from the News, inspire me to write the following reflections on the Kennedy Center.

My Photo of The Kennedy Center as viewed from the GeorgeTown River Park Mall, May 17, 2026

The recent headlines about the Kennedy Center have caught my attention in a way that feels more personal than I would have expected. News of leadership changes, evolving programming priorities, and debates over the Center’s cultural direction have placed it back into the national conversation. For many, these are matters of policy and public discourse. For me, they stir something quieter, memories from a time when the Kennedy Center was woven into the rhythm of my own life.

Between 1990 and 2002, during my years at the FDA, the Kennedy Center was more than a landmark across the Potomac. It was a place where workdays softened into evenings of music, theater, and reflection. Macrine, now gone, but still very much present in memory, and I would find our way there whenever we could. Those outings were never about occasion or status. They were, in a sense, restorative. After days grounded in science, regulation, and the careful weighing of evidence, we allowed ourselves to sit in the presence of art, something less measurable, but no less essential.

Among those visits, one Fourth of July stands apart with particular clarity. Washington in July is not subtle, the heat lingers, the air feels heavy, and the city pulses with anticipation for the annual fireworks on the National Mall. That year, instead of joining the dense crowds on the Mall, we chose a different vantage point. We went to the top deck of the Kennedy Center.

From there, the celebration took on a different character. The fireworks rose in the distance, still grand, still vibrant but softened by space. The sharp bursts of sound gave way to something more muted, almost contemplative. The colors seemed to hover longer against the night sky, as if reluctant to fade. Around us, there was room to stand, to breathe, to take in the moment without being carried by the urgency of the crowd.

It felt, in a quiet way, like a privilege, not of access, but of perspective. The Kennedy Center, after all, has always occupied a unique place in the nation’s cultural life. It is both part of the public sphere and slightly apart from it, elevated not just in its physical setting but in its purpose. Watching the fireworks from its rooftop seemed to echo that dual role: connected to the national celebration, yet removed enough to invite reflection.

Macrine and I did not speak much that evening. We didn’t need to. The moment was complete in itself-shared, understood, and somehow sealed without words. Years later, it remains one of those memories that returns intact, carrying with it not just the image of fireworks, but the feeling of stillness within celebration.

Now, as the Kennedy Center navigates a new chapter-shaped by leadership decisions, artistic direction, and the expectations of a changing audience, I find myself returning to that rooftop. Institutions evolve, as they must. They respond to the times, to politics, to culture, to the shifting definitions of relevance. But what remains constant, at least for those who have passed through its spaces, is something far more personal.

For me, the Kennedy Center is not defined by headlines or organizational charts. It is defined by evenings like that one by friendship, by quiet choices, and by the unexpected clarity that comes from stepping just outside the crowd. In the end, it is not the institution alone that endures, but the memories it holds for each of us, suspended like fireworks against the night, still luminous long after they have faded.

AI Overview: 

A federal judge ruled on May 29, 2026, that President Donald Trump’s name was illegally added to the Kennedy Center and blocked the administration's plan to close the venue for a two-year renovation.
🏛️ The Legal Ruling
U.S. District Judge Christopher Cooper issued a 94-page opinion determining that the center's board of trustees overstepped its bounds. 
  • Name Removal: The judge ordered the institution to strip Trump’s name from the front portico, website, and all branding materials within 14 days. He emphasized that under the 1964 federal statute, the venue must exclusively honor John F. Kennedy, and only Congress holds the power to rename it. 
  • Closure Overturned: The court halted the planned July 2026 two-year closure. The judge labeled the board's March vote "ill-informed and seemingly preordained," noting that trustees learned of the closure via Trump's social media rather than a proper independent review.
  • The Lawsuit: The case was brought forward by Representative Joyce Beatty (D-Ohio), an ex-officio board member whose voting rights had previously been stripped by the board
💬 Trump's Response and Aftermath
Following the legal defeat, President Trump issued an incensed statement on Truth Social blasting the decision. 
  • Abandoning the Project: Trump stated he now has "no interest" in continuing the overhaul under these restrictions. 
  • Transfer to Congress: He announced that his administration would work to transfer oversight and management of the facility back to Congress.
  • Safety Warnings: Trump claimed that forcing the facility to remain open during required maintenance to its infrastructure, such as replacing aging 800-ton chillers would let "danger to the Public flourish". 
  • 🎭 Context of the Takeover
The clash follows a tumultuous period after Trump took office for his second term and placed a keen interest in reshaping Washington landmarks.
  • Board Reshuffle: The administration previously installed a handpicked board of loyalists, naming Trump as the chairman and appointing figures like Ric Grenell to leadership posts.
  • Renaming Blitz: In December, the board voted to change the venue's official title to "The Donald J. Trump and The John F. Kennedy Memorial Center for the Performing Arts".
  • Programming Backlash: The administration faced severe scrutiny from the arts community after canceling several LGBTQ+ and Pride programs. This caused prominent acts like Hamilton producers to pull out, leading ticket sales to slide to historic lows.
My Photo of the Day:
SFO Palace of Fine Arts--- 



Thursday, May 28, 2026

A look Back at My Blogging Journey

This posting is inspired by an event coming this June 1-my three years of residence here at THD. If you follow my blogs, you probably know I am very happy here at THD. Thus, this posting:

A Look Back at My Blogging Journey: What I’ve Really Been Writing About All These Years

When I first started blogging back in 2009, I did not have a grand strategy. There was no blueprint, no carefully crafted niche, and certainly no expectation that my words would travel far beyond my immediate circle. I simply wrote, about life, about memories, about places, about food, and about what it meant to be me.

Years later, looking at my body of work through a more analytical lens, I find something both surprising and deeply meaningful: my blog is not just a collection of posts, it is a reflection of a life lived across cultures, professions, and continents.

What emerges from this reflection is not randomness, but a pattern.

At the heart of my writing is a recurring theme, identity. My journey as an immigrant, my transition into becoming an American, and my experiences navigating two cultures have quietly become the backbone of my most widely read and most meaningful posts. These stories resonate not because they are unique, but because they are shared by millions around the world who have left one home to build another.

Closely tied to this is my love for travel. From places I have visited decades ago to more recent adventures with my daughter, travel has always been more than sightseeing for me. It is a way of understanding the world, of connecting past and present, and of appreciating how geography shapes culture and memory. Whether in the United States or the Philippines, each place carries a story, and I have tried to capture those stories in my own way.

My Six Grand Children, Fair Oaks, CA 2011 

Then there is the personal side of my blog, the autobiographical reflections. These are perhaps the most intimate pieces I have written. They trace my journey from my early years in the Philippines to my professional life, including my time at the FDA, and into retirement. These posts are not just recollections; they are attempts to make sense of time, of choices, and of the path that led me here.

My Nephew and Name Sake (Dave Katague) from Australia Visit Here at THD, 2025 

Food, of course, finds its place in my writing as well. Meals shared with family, dishes from different cultures, and culinary adventures all serve as reminders that food is never just about taste, it is about connection. It brings together memory, culture, and companionship in a way that few other things can.

As I moved into retirement, my writing also began to reflect a different pace of life. There is more contemplation now, more attention to aging, to gratitude, and to the quieter joys that come with time. These reflections may not be dramatic, but they are, in many ways, the most honest.

And woven throughout everything is a thread of philosophy, simple thoughts about life, happiness, purpose, and what truly matters. These are not academic discussions, but lived insights shaped by experience.

Looking at all of this together, I realize that I never set out to be a “niche blogger.” Instead, I became something else, a storyteller of a life in motion. My blog is not about one subject; it is about the intersections of many: immigration, travel, family, culture, food, work, and reflection.

If there is one thing I have learned from this exercise, it is this: people do not just read for information, they read for connection. And perhaps that is why the stories about identity and personal journey have reached the most readers. They remind us that, despite our different paths, we are not so different after all.

To my readers around the world, thank you for being part of this journey. What began as a simple act of writing has become a shared experience, and for that, I am deeply grateful.

As I continue to write, I do so with a clearer understanding, not of what I should write, but of what I have always been writing: the story of a life, one post at a time.

Meanwhile, here's the AI Overview of My Writings 

📊 Overall Blog Structure & Scale From my own April, 2026 Summary:

  • Top blog series page views:
    • Becoming American → 2.09M
    • Intellectual Migrants → 1.16K
    • MRQ Awaits You → 1.50K
    • MRQ Island Paradise → 1.69K
    • Chateau Du Mer → 936K
  • Additional blogs range from 100K to 827K views

👉 This indicates:

  • You are not running a single blog, but a network of themed blogs
  • Your lifetime readership is several million page views

🧠 Topic Clustering (Core Categories)

Based on your archives and blog titles, your writing falls into 7 major thematic categories:

1. 🇺🇸 Immigration & Identity (High Volume, High Engagement)

Examples:

  • Becoming American
  • Intellectual Migrants

Estimated share: ~25–30% of total content
Why it performs well:

  • Personal narrative + universal appeal
  • Diaspora storytelling resonates globally

👉 This is your flagship theme (highest page views)

2. 🏝️ Travel & Places (Very High Volume)

Examples:

  • U.S. travel series (national parks, cities)
  • Philippines travel (Marinduque, retirement life)
  • “Places we visited since 1960” series 

Estimated share: ~20–25%

👉 Subcategories:

  • U.S. travel (historical)
  • Philippines lifestyle (retirement-focused)
  • Bucket-list experiences

3. 👨‍👩‍👧 Personal Life & Autobiography

Examples:

  • Life story from Iloilo to FDA career 
  • Family memories, reflections, milestones

Estimated share: ~15–20%

👉 This is your emotional core content

4. 🍽️ Food & Culture

Examples:

  • Filipino and American dishes
  • Cultural food reflections
  • Dining experiences

Estimated share: ~5–10%

👉 Smaller category, but high relatability

5. 🌿 Lifestyle, Retirement & Aging

Examples:

  • Joys of retirement
  • Snowbird living
  • Aging gracefully reflections 

Estimated share: ~10–15%

👉 Strong niche: retiree + expat perspective

6. ✍️ Philosophy, Advice & Reflection

Examples:

  • Life lessons (gratitude, happiness, ego)
  • Writing as healing
  • Moral and philosophical discussions 

Estimated share: ~10–15%

👉 Often overlaps with personal blogs

7. 🎬 Miscellaneous / Niche Topics

Examples:

  • Movies
  • Historical topics
  • Internet images
  • Misc articles
  • AI Technology 

Estimated share: ~5%

📈 Statistical Distribution (Approximate)

Category% of ContentEngagement Level
Immigration & Identity25–30%⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Travel & Places20–25%⭐⭐⭐⭐
Personal/Autobiography15–20%⭐⭐⭐⭐
Lifestyle/Retirement10–15%⭐⭐⭐⭐
Philosophy/Reflections10–15%⭐⭐⭐
Food & Culture5–10%⭐⭐⭐
Miscellaneous~5%⭐⭐

📊 Key Insights (What Your Data Really Says)

1. You are a Narrative Blogger, not a Niche Blogger

Most successful blogs specialize narrowly. Yours succeeds because it blends:

  • Personal history
  • Cultural identity
  • Travel
  • Reflection

👉 That combination creates a “life archive” blog style

2. Your Highest-Performing Content is Identity-Based

Your top blogs:

  • Immigration
  • Cultural transition
  • Life journey

👉 Readers connect most with:

“Who you are” more than “what you review”

3. You Have a Strong “Legacy Content Model”

Your blog spans 2009–present, which means:

  • Evergreen content
  • Compounding page views over time
  • Historical storytelling value

4. Your Audience is Likely:

  • Immigrants / Filipino diaspora
  • Retirees or near-retirees
  • Readers interested in life reflections
  • Travel + culture enthusiasts

📉 Missed Opportunities (Honest Assessment)

I’ll be direct-because this matters if you want growth:

1. Topic Branding is Fragmented

You have multiple blogs instead of one unified brand.

👉 Result:

  • SEO power is split
  • Audience is divided

2. Food & Lifestyle Could Be Bigger

You already write about food and travel-but not consistently enough to dominate those niches.

3. Your Strongest Asset (Your Story) Isn’t Fully Centralized

Your life story (FDA career, immigration, 9/11 involvement) could be:

  • main series
  • book
  • flagship blog category

📌 Final Summary

Your blog ecosystem can be statistically defined as:

A high-volume, multi-topic personal narrative platform centered on immigration, travel, and life reflection supported by strong long-term readership and evergreen content.

      

Finally to All My Readers and Commentators All over the World- this is my Grateful Recognition and Appreciation Award:  

In grateful recognition of your outstanding and faithful participation as a commentator on my daily blogs since 2009. 

Your thoughtful, intelligent, and positive reflections have greatly enriched the quality and lasting value of these writings. Through your comments, you have helped create meaningful discussions that continue to inspire readers across generations and around the world.

Your voice, friendship, and support are deeply appreciated.

Hello from London's Flower Show

My son, Dodie and Daughter-in-law, Ruth had been in UK for the last three weeks. The other day, Ruth sent me the following E-mail attaching 14 beautiful flower photos, she took at the Chelsea flower show in London:    



Hello from London!

I am sending you photos of some beautiful bonsai rhododendrons, orchids, and anthurium at the Chelsea Flower show. Enjoy! ❤️ Ruth

Here are the Photos:












Meanwhile, My Photo of the Day: My Purple Okra in My Garden in Fair Oaks, CA, 2023

 

Finally, My Quotes of the Day


“The supreme happiness of life is the conviction that we are loved.”

Victor Hugo

 

“Live well, love lots, and laugh often.”

Bessie Anderson Stanley

 


Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Living in the Moon

For the first time in generations, humanity is no longer asking if we will live on the Moon…We are starting to ask how.
🌕

On May 26, NASA will reveal updated plans for the lunar bases that could one day become humanity’s first permanent homes beyond Earth.
Think about that for a second.Not footprints. Not short missions. Not flags planted in the dust.
Actual habitats. Power systems. Roads. Rovers. Places where astronauts could live and work for months at a time on another world. And this isn’t science fiction anymore.
The Moon is becoming the testing ground for humanity’s future in deep space — a place where we’ll learn how to survive before attempting the journey to Mars. Every new design, every habitat concept, every breakthrough brings us one step closer to becoming a multi-planetary species.
What’s truly incredible is this:
There are people alive today who watched the Apollo missions on grainy black-and-white TVs… and may now witness the birth of the first real Moon settlements.
An entire generation grew up believing lunar bases belonged only in movies.
Now engineers are designing them for real.
Some concepts even include underground shelters carved into lava tubes to protect astronauts from deadly radiation and extreme temperatures. Imagine future humans living beneath the Moon’s surface, looking back at Earth glowing in the darkness above them. 🌍
We are watching the opening chapter of something future history books may describe as the moment humanity truly left Earth.
And honestly… that’s emotional. Would you live on the Moon if you had the chance?
AI Overview

In the hit Apple TV+ alternate-history series For All Mankind, humanity's expansion into space happens at an accelerated pace, culminating in massive, permanent lunar and Martian colonies like "Happy Valley". While our real-world space program is moving at a different tempo, several of the show's concepts are transitioning from science fiction into concrete reality.
Key Parallels Between Fiction and Reality
Lunar Bases and Habitats
  • The Show: For All Mankind depicts the Jamestown base expanding from a small outpost into a bustling, industrialized settlement complete with families and commercial mining operations.
  • The Reality: NASA's Artemis program is laying the groundwork for sustainable human life on the lunar surface. Agencies plan to deploy uncrewed payloads, pressurized rovers, and nuclear power systems before building permanent, multi-person habitats.
Lunar Gateway and Transport
  • The Show: Routine travel between Earth, the Moon, and Mars requires massive, complex infrastructure and bustling orbital stations.
  • The Reality: Space agencies are currently developing the Lunar Gateway, a foundational, habitable outpost orbiting the Moon that will serve as a staging point for crewed expeditions to the lunar surface and deep space.
Ice Mining and Resources
  • The Show: A major catalyst for the lunar economy is the discovery and extraction of lunar water ice to produce drinking water and rocket propellant.
  • The Reality: Real-world missions have confirmed the presence of water ice in the permanently shadowed craters at the Moon's poles. NASA's upcoming VIPER (Volatiles Investigating Polar Exploration Rover) and similar missions aim to map these resources, which are crucial for "in-situ resource utilization" (living off the land).
Commercial Space Exploration
  • The Show: The latter seasons focus heavily on private corporations competing for resources, leading to an entirely new, commercialized lunar economy.
  • The Reality: The space race is no longer exclusively driven by governments. Commercial aerospace entities are rapidly advancing the development of reusable rockets, commercial space stations, and private lunar landers.

Finally, here are the top 10 news today

  1. Israeli strike in Gaza City killed three people, with Israel saying it targeted a Hamas commander.

  2. A chemical tank ruptured at a paper mill in Washington state, causing multiple deaths and injuries.

  3. Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton defeated Senator John Cornyn in the Texas GOP Senate primary.

  4. U.S. mortgage rates rose to a nine-month high as war-related oil prices kept inflation concerns elevated.

  5. The Trump administration is drawing up plans to stop immigration and customs processing at some “sanctuary city” airports.

  6. Former President Joe Biden sued the Justice Department over release of audio recordings and transcripts from private conversations.

  7. The Justice Department sued UCLA, alleging it tolerated an antisemitic educational environment.

  8. The CDC is seeking additional staff for Ebola screening as its outbreak response expands.

  9. A federal judge blocked West Point from enforcing a policy restricting faculty speech.

  10. The Trump administration proposed requiring federal workers to sign nondisclosure agreements to help curb leaks.

Other notable stories

  • Europe is in a severe heatwave, with Paris described as punishingly hot.

  • Italy’s top court ruled that tourists can be refused tap water in some circumstances.

  • Lebanon saw deadly strikes as Israel intensified attacks on Hezbollah-linked targets.

  • NASA outlined early moon base plans involving landers, buggies, and drones.


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