Who Was That Masked Man, Anyway?

Who Was That Masked Man, Anyway?

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The man on the left is Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa, President of Portugal. He is setting an example by wearing a mask (shorts optional, but mask and pants required). This photo was taken while he was grocery shopping during a recent visit to Ericeira. The man on the right is the President of the United States, wearing his mask all wrong. Even his loyal dog, Silver, is laughing. Joking, of course. The President doesn’t have a dog.

Some people are taking the stance that wearing a mask is an infringement upon their freedom. You may recall, some people also felt that way about smoking on a plane, where the non-smoking section started directly behind the smoking section. Non-smokers were protected by an invisible shield, a stealth barrier, as it is called in the aerodonetics industry (no, not really).

As is the case with most positions taken in the US, masks and social distancing have fallen into mainly two camps. One camp insists that Covid-19 is either a hoax, or no more destructive than the annual Demolition Derby, and that any effort made to save people from it is unpatriotic. The other camp sees those people as lunatics who should drink bleach.

Sometimes it’s hard to tell which conspiracy-du-jour belongs to the far-left or to the far-right. There is a theory, called the horseshoe theory, which proposes that the political extremes are closer to each other than either is to the political center. In other words, they are not opposites on the political spectrum. I would take it even a step further and have come up with my circle theory, which states that they overlap and are practically indistinguishable from each other.

It should be noted that even Portugal has its extreme political wings, neither of which has a significant following. The left has its Communists, whose headquarters looks like they ran out of money for paint. The right has its Chega party, and I’m not even sure if they have a headquarters.

The Portuguese government operates under the concept that if you do your best to treat all the people fairly, then extremes will not take root. So far, that philosophy seems to be working.

masks in Portugal

Here is a picture of the leaders of Portugal’s opposing parties marching in solidarity over their commitment to work together against the coronavirus. Maybe this is one of the reasons why Portugal’s coronavirus mortality rate is lower than most of Europe.

The Virus of Racism

I wrote most of this blog about a week ago, just before the recent killing in Minneapolis, and the ensuing riots across the country. One week ago, the only story was Covid-19, and the mask controversy. Coronavirus will end someday, but racism is a virus that just doesn’t seem to go away.

A friend recently posted a video of a young, black woman sharing her feelings on racism to her mostly white church. This was during a church gathering on Zoom (before George Floyd’s murder). It was significant because she was talking about subtle racism, not just the obvious racism that has recently become front and center once again.

She gave an example of how a black person wearing the “wrong” kind of mask during this pandemic gets suspicious looks, whereas a white person does not. Her message was delivered with love and thoughtful reflection, and it was received much in the same way.

This made me think back to when my son was very young. We were watching the story of Rosa Parks, the black woman who refused to move to the back of the bus.

I told him that when I was growing up, there were water fountains marked white and colored, and we had to drink from our designated fountains. He then asked me, “So you had to drink out of the colored water fountain?” I told him, “No, because I was white.” He then asked, “When you were young you were white?”

I do have a dark complexion, so his observation would made perfect sense to an innocent mind. Racism is a learned behavior. We are not born with it.

I also remember an experience in a shopping center with my younger brother, maybe 1960. He tried out both the white fountain and colored fountain and came away disappointed because the water was the same in both. I think he was expecting Kool-Aid from the colored fountain.

A Word About Designer Masks

Recently, in my Facebook newsfeed, I saw a Harley Davidson mask being advertised for $30. Seemed a bit high but anything with a Harley logo tends to be about ten times the normal price. Besides, I’m not really the right demographic for a Harley Davidson mask. Speaking of demographics, though, is the Harley crowd the right group to be receiving ads for COVIC-19 protective masks? Many of them take issue at even wearing a protective helmet. But what do I know? I’m not a marketing genius.

Look at this picture, though, surrounded by coronavirus germs shown in actual size (no, not really). Does this couple look like your average Harley Davidson riders? Looks more like an episode I remember of the Dick Van Dyke Show where he was riding a small, maybe 50cc, motorbike and ended up in the middle of a biker club. He ended up becoming the honorary leader of the pack. But I digress. If you want to watch it, though, you can click >>HERE<<. If that link doesn’t work, search “Br-rooom Br-rooom” on YouTube. It actually makes me chuckle, even now.

Hi ho, Silver! Away!

There is one “Silver” controversy I would like to address here. It is not the controversy about whether or not the Lone Ranger says “Hi ho, Silver” or “Hi-yo, Silver”. I’m not going to jump into the middle of that quagmire. People might start unfriending me over which side I take.

The controversy I want to talk about is the televangelist preacher who sells Silver Solution, which he claimed kills SARS, HIV and, of course, COVID-19. And, it’s only $80 for a 4-ounce bottle! He says it has been proven by the government to work (no, it hasn’t). Is Silver Solution a brand name for the miracle drug, hydroxychloroquine? No, that was a different cure being promoted by a competing televangelist. I forget his name.

But I do know the name of the conman selling Silver Solution. He is the ex-con (although still a con), Jim Bakker. Remember Tammy Faye’s husband? Back in the 80s, he scammed many followers out of millions of dollars by overselling timeshares in his Christian Disneyland condominium project.

Jim and Tammy Faye Bakker

Bakker sold 66,000 lifetime memberships, with thousand-dollar deposits, for access to a 500-room hotel, which landed him in jail. Now that his new bogus company has been removed by the FDA, he is asking followers (how does this man still have followers?) to just send money anyway.

Sure, why not? I was just gonna waste it on food and rent anyway. The only miracle about Silver Solution is how it miraculously fattened Jim Bakker’s wallet after he already spent years in jail with his previous scam.

A few years back, in between the condo scam and the Silver Solution scam, he was selling freeze-dried survival foods. They were for the end days just before the Rapture. “Imagine, the world is dying and you’re having a breakfast for kings.” Yes, that was an actual ad. One food review likened it to wet cement or paper-mache, both in taste and consistency.

Enough about him. In conclusion to the mask controversy, most professionals agree that masks help prevent spread of the virus. They’re not a cure, not even the Harley-Davidson masks, but a preventative measure. Some people are close-talkers, and they tend to exude more than their fair share of molecular saliva particles. Hence, the masks.

Learning Portuguese – The Equivalency of a Mask for Alzheimer’s?

Are there mask equivalencies for non-contagious pandemics, such as Alzheimer’s? Could learning Portuguese really keep Alzheimer’s at bay?

There now appears to be rather conclusive proof that learning a second language slows down Alzheimer’s Disease significantly. Scientists have taken MRI scans of brain regions associated with memory. When they start talking about cortical thickness and gray matter density, though, I just get sleepy. Learning Portuguese is already hard enough. Rather than attempt to understand and interpret the data, >>HERE<< is one such study if you are interested.

Since the lockdown, my wife and I have been spending a little more time with our Portuguese studies. But so far, I still can’t remember where my glasses are when they’re sitting on top of my head. So, this jury is still out in connection to the cure for Alzheimer’s.

One of your first encounters with Portuguese when you visit Portugal, will be the word Puxe, because you see it on almost every merchant’s door. It is pronounced push, but it means pull. If that won’t  fire new synapses in your brain, then nothing will. I guarantee you will learn that word after only one bruised nose, experienced when pushing rather than pulling.

Learning in the Zoom Classroom

Zoom has become huge during the lockdown. Zoom this, Zoom that, everyone seems to be Zooming something these days. This really shouldn’t need to be said, but you need to be careful when you are carrying around your devise while Zoom is still on.

The example that you may have seen is the Zoom class (I can’t recall the subject because that became rather irrelevant), where the woman carried her laptop into the bathroom during class. The teacher was oblivious to what was going on, but she noticed that the class had stopped paying attention to her.zoom

The teacher rambled on for a minute or so before stopping and asking what was going on. What was going on was that one of her students had dropped her drawers and sat down on the toilet. Then your heard someone in the class mutter, “Poor Jennifer”. You might be asking how that could happen. Honestly, I don’t know. But apparently it is happening more often than you would think.

There is also a lot of Zoom hacking going on, too. Recently, during a Zoom Bible study, someone hacked in and started showing some radical porn. Not just XXX, but XXXX! And they were clever enough, or devious enough, to disable the presenter’s controls so that it couldn’t be shut off.

Fortunately, neither of those mishaps have taken place during our Portuguese classes on Zoom. I do keep my fingers crossed, however, whenever someone stands up in our sessions, hoping that they remembered to wear pants. Or that I remembered to wear pants.

By the way, if you are planning a move or visit to Portugal, I would recommend downloading “Learn 50 Languages” on your phone. It is the best app that I have found for learning European Portuguese. It’s free, and pants are not required!

Rediscovering Portugal’s Cultural History

Now, with things opening back up, maybe we will be able to experience more of Portugal again. President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa is suggesting that during this time with fewer tourists around, we residents should get out and rediscover Portugal’s history and culture. Sounds like a good suggestion. Most of our recent experiences have been within walking distance, like this picture of the beautiful sunset taken on the sidewalk outside of our Mafra apartment.

Sunset in Mafra

Last Thing.. Website Update

I have been working on my blog website and the notification emails that you receive. The millions of you who have subscribed (okay, dozens) may have recently received a duplicate email notification of last month’s Carnation Revolution blog. Sorry about that! Still working out the kinks. The main problem was that the feature photo for each blog was not showing up in email notifications although it does show on my website. Hopefully, that is fixed now.

Anyway, feel free to comment about anything on your mind or suggest topics you would like to see covered in the future. Tchau for now!

This Post Has 14 Comments

  1. George

    My wife and I have been reading a lot of expat blogs to decide where to retire. It has gotten too expensive in the US in places where we would consider living. The political climate is another reason. Do you need to speak Portuguese to get by there?

    1. Bob

      Hi George. The cost of living here is quite affordable, especially when it come to essentials likes groceries. The political climate is stable, sane and humane. While you don’t need to speak Portuguese to get by, I would highly recommend that you put forth the effort. It creates a tighter bond to the local community if you at least try, and you learn a lot about the culture by the way words and phrases are used. There are many translator apps, and they help, but they only scratch the surface to to a deeper understanding.

  2. Laurie Landa

    Aloha Bob,
    When my sons were into dirtbikes..Harley Davidson had just opened in Maui. What a glossy, homogenized, clean image they presented. No hogs displayed except one or two that shined brightly in the huge picture windows! These kids in the ad or the new look of Harley…they are the new Angels!
    Just a thought about Collodial silver…really is anti bacterial and anti viral….but you can make it in your kitchen with a battery for pennies!
    Aloha and a hui ho,
    Laurie

    1. Bob

      Aloha, Laurie! That is interesting that this clean-cut, wholesome couple represent the new faces of Harley-Davidson. I know that they are trying to go after a younger audience since their key demographic is getting up there in years.

  3. Ronda Goldberg

    Hey Bob…Good to hear from you, as always. I feel I’m getting the Portuguese be education I didn’t get when married to an American with Portuguese heritage. It’s probably because his mother always disliked me, so she talked about me while I was there, but in Portuguese of course.

    Enough about me. Are you feeling at all settled? Or is it a sense of displacement? Do you truly like the Portuguese people? It seems you do from your blog. What types of people are you meeting? Tradesman, Suits, ExPats, maybe all.

    I keep saying if the idiot gets reelected, I’m moving to Costa Rica. Of course I won’t, but…

    I’m somewhat envious of your braveness in relocating to another country, especially with grandchildren! You must have been very disappointed when they weren’t able to visit because of the coronavirus. What are the age spans of the grands? Mine are six to eighteen. I’m an hour and a half from the Massachusetts gang, and then there’s the two in Oregon. I miss them all!

    What has been the biggest disappointment and the biggest happy surprise in all this adjusting?

    Love and miss you. Ronda

    1. Bob

      Hi Ronda. We are feeling settled but will feel more settled once our place is finished. Hopefully before the end of the year. The Portuguese people are wonderful. We have met expats and Portuguese neighbors. Trying to learn Portuguese, but it’s hard. Fortunately, many people speak some English. Biggest disappointment has been all the cancellations from friends and family due to the virus. Biggest happiness, although not a huge surprise, is how welcoming and nice the people are here.

  4. Larry Burrows

    Hey Bob –
    I wasn’t expecting Kool-Aid from that “colored” fountain, circa 1959.
    What I did expect was what my big brother (you) told me before I went to bed: that I’d wake up black and that Mom & Dad wouldn’t recognize me!
    Minor detail. Still love you, though.
    Larry

    1. Bob

      Details become foggy after 60 years. 🙂

  5. James Steere

    Excellent Bob; entertaining and thought provoking as always.

    1. Bob

      Obrigado, meu amigo!

  6. Betsy

    Excellent write up. I really enjoyed reading it

    1. Bob

      Obrigado! 🙂

  7. Mark Jurmain

    Hi Bob,
    I enjoy your ex-pat-very-aware-and-connected-to-US blog. I’ll check out the language app. We are watching news closely, to see when we could travel to Portugal. Shelly DOES NOT WANT to be here during the election! And if the results go bad, we will be wildly wanting to get out of here! In that context, I have been studying the ground squirrels in the desert, outside our breakfast nook window. If we can’t fly, maybe I will learn to dig my way somewhere.

    1. Bob

      Hi Mark. I hope you and Shelly can make it out here during that time. My wife plans on spending a few weeks in the US (end of October and beginning of November), as she is missing the grandkids. Unfortunately, they had to cancel their visit here. 🙁 I will stay behind to hold down the fort.

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