Here’s Grey News!

Excellent article in, unexpectedly, Greenwich Time, written by their own Robert Merchant.

Why everything looks gray now, from Connecticut homes to new developments

By Robert Marchant, Staff WriterMarch 20, 2026

Take a drive through Connecticut and one color stands out — or rather, fades into the background: gray.

From the REI sporting goods stores in Milford and Norwalk to Heights Crossing in Darien and the new Delamar Hotel in Mystic, neutral palettes abound, evoking an overcast Connecticut day with leaden skies. Once famous for barnyard red, the region’s landscape has shifted toward shades with names like "antique pewter,” “sea wind” and “iced marble.”

For the past decade, architects, designers, influencers and real estate agents have been painting the world gray — or its close relative, “greige,” a blend of gray and beige. In a 21st-century twist on Henry Ford's famous line about the Model T — they could be in “any color the customer wants, as long as it’s black” — gray seems to be only color in the paint box for many developers and home builders. 

Architectural and design pundit Kate Wagner has dubbed the era the “age of gray supremacy,” while others have described it more broadly as the “graying of America.” 

“In the past decade, gray was everywhere,” said Shawna Feeley, a Westport designer. “And before that, we were doing gray walls, gray floors — just everything gray.” Though, she notes, a backlash is beginning to take hold: “It has turned the corner.”

So, what’s behind the ubiquitous neutral color scheme?

Architects and builders say gray has universal appeal, and few people actively dislike it. That makes it a safe bet, especially in real estate, where agents often recommend neutral tones to attract the widest pool of buyers. Television, too, has played a role. For years, home renovation shows on channels like HGTV have promoted gray as the go-to solution for modernizing older properties.

Gray also has a lot of fans in the fields of construction and design.

Toll Brothers, the national building company working on a large townhouse development in Stamford’s Waterside neighborhood, cited a desire for “a cool, neutral palette” in its filings with City Hall. Design drawing called for “pearl gray” on the Hardie board siding and a “charcoal gray” roof, raising concerns among city planners about how much gray is too much.

“Maybe have a couple of other building colors?” asked Vineeta Mathur, Stamford's principal planner. “It’s all the same white and gray colors.”

Ray Mazzeo, a planning consultant for the project, defended the design as “understated and elegant,” reflecting a consumer preference for neutral colors and gray tones. 

Consumers do seem to have a taste for gray and muted colors. Sherwin Williams, the paint manufacturer, has tracked color trends over the past century. Bright hues dominated the earlier part of the 20th century. In the 1970s, brown and beige were big. A pronounced shift toward gray began in the 2010s. In the current decade, five of the top 10 exterior house colors are shades of gray, according to the paint company’s marketing department.

Duo Dickinson, an architect based in Madison, traces the trend back even further. Earlier in his career, clients wanted their kitchens to be “all white everything, all the time.” About 40 years ago, Dickinson said, there was a shift toward gray — influenced by European fashion trends.

“In the late '80s and '90s, those gray tones were super big in fashion — shiny gray fabric," Dickinson said. "Gray became hip. It was fashion first, and then the architects had this palette of materials to make exterior buildings with. There’s an aesthetic, descended from high modernism, of gray, aluminum and glass exteriors. It’s chic and cool, like an Armani suit.”

Gray’s versatility is another factor. It can lean warm or cool, pair with almost anything and hide wear better than stark white. “Real estate agents push common applicability; there’s no ‘turn-off’ with gray,” said Dickinson, who writes regularly on architecture and has appeared on HGTV as a commentator.

Feeley, a designer who lives in Fairfield, said a group mentality can take hold among builders and real estate brokers. 

“Realtors and (speculation) builders, they get very comfortable with cookie-cutter trends," Feeley said. "What worked once — like a Hollywood movie that was successful — they make six more of them. They stay with a trend.” 

>>>>

The popularity — and unpopularity — of gray paint has also been topic of debate on social media

“No one actually loves grey; it’s just that no one hates it,” one post said.

Victoria Taft's weekly "West Coast, Messed Coast" column is up

(May, 2022 — She went on to become governor)

Winner!

— of most corrupt state of the West Coast, Messed Coast™. 

The unfortunately-named Tina Kotek, the governor of Oregon, rammed through a bespoke bill to pull a switcheroo on the initiative-petition-signing opponents of a massive gas tax increase. That switcheroo completely turned Oregon law on its head and pulled a bait and switch on voters. But her path to getting there was even more traitorous and torturous. 

Kotek signed the massive tax increase earlier in a special legislative session but only after waiting until the last minute to deprive opponents the ability to collect enough signatures to qualify an initiative for the November ballot. 

Opponents got the signatures in record time, however, and qualified the tax repeal for the November ballot.

Knowing the repeal would pass, Kotek then attempted more political chicanery by issuing a press release to stop her own tax increase. 

Then she tried to stop the gas tax by attempting to repeal the entire bill, which would stop and/or moot the November vote on the legally qualified initiative. 

Then came her effort to get the initiative moved to the May ballot. Kotek got Democrats to sponsor a bill to pull the date switcheroo. 

In the meantime, a Democrat appointed judge (what other kind are there in Oregon anymore?) ratified the moves by the lawbreaking Democrats. 

And now Kotek has signed the bill into law, changing the date of this particular initiative.

I'd say this is the most corrupt practice I've seen in Oregon, but that's not true. Indeed, the other most corrupt practice also occurred this past week when, at Kotek's prompting, Democrats produced a bill allowing secret meetings by lawmakers. The move completely blows up the Oregon open meetings law. 

Kotek's party also "disconnected" Oregon's tax law from three of Trump’s 2025 tax cuts in the Big Beautiful bill.

The Religion of Pieces (Update: John Cleese has a suggestion for improving relations between the Islamists and the rest of the world

An excellent book by Raymond Ibrahim compiles letters and speeches from various Al Qaeda terrorists that were delivered to Arabic-speakers and entirely different from those released to a gullible western audience in English. Denounced as a fraud by CAIR and other defenders of Islam, it gives a true picture of who these people are and what they plan for the non-believers. Spoiler alert: they don’t to intend to stop with Israel and the Great Satan.

The Al Qaeda Reader

…. Perhaps the most disturbing aspect of these works is how grounded they are in the traditional sources of Islamic theology: the Koran and the teachings of the Prophet. The founders of al-Qaeda use these sources as powerful weapons of persuasion, reminding followers (and would-be recruits) that Muhammad and his warriors spread Islam through the power of the sword and that the Koran is not merely allegory or history but literal truth that commands all Muslims to action.

In addition to laying bare al-Qaeda’s ultimate motives, The Al Qaeda Reader includes the organization’s propagandist speeches, which are directed primarily at Americans, Europeans, and Iraqis. Here, al-Qaeda’s many "official" accusations against the West are meticulously delineated, from standard complaints such as the Palestinian issue and Iraq to wholly unexpected ones concerning the U.S.’s exploitation of women and the environment.

Taken together, the Theology and Propaganda sections of this volume reveal the most comprehensive picture of al-Qaeda to date. They also highlight the double-speak of bin Laden and Zawahiri, who often say one thing to Muslims in their religious treatises ("We must hate and fight the West because Islam commands it") and another in their propaganda directed at the West ("The West is the aggressor and we are fighting back merely in self-defense").

UPDATE — The Minister of Silly Walks weighs in

New listing on Londonderry. I'm not wild about the front, but great views, and even the laundry room is a useful addition

41 Londonderry Drive, $3.495 million. It might seem silly to mention a laundry room, but with five kids, my parents added one, and it was in constant use (partly because when father finally relented and permitted a (small, b/w) television in the house, he insisted that it be placed in that room. We kids spent a lot of time there, but we all learned to read like madmen before that, and we’re still readers today, not viewers).

Another follow-up to a previous post

Yesterday I mentioned the $100 million uncompleted wildlife bridge California is spending its taxpayers’ money on, but this post by Chris Rufo adds another dimension to it.

Something has to be done with these lower court federal judges

Federal judge grants temprorary restraining order lifting DHS restrictions on lawmaker visits to detention facilities

U.S. District Judge Jia Cobb in Washington, D.C., justified a temporary restraining order on the policy by concluding that ICE likely violated funding restrictions and that its policy causes irreparable harm.

The judge’s order stated that the court previously found that the DHS policy requiring advance notice for congressional oversight visits to ICE detention facilities "imposes irreparable harm" on lawmakers, "denying them the ability to carry out timely oversight of covered facilities."

You’ve seen these in the news: a gaggle of politicians stage a dog and pony show, appearing without notice at a detention center and demanding to be let in, all in front of the television crews they’ve alerted before hand. DHS has been requiring a weeks notice for such “visits:, in part because they’re incredibly disruptive and drain away staff resources while the politicians are entertained.

Individual congressmen have no legal right to barge into a detention center or a prison, but these judges aren’t concerned with mere legalities.

And, absolutely related, this:

Dem rep's staffer repeatedly posed as lawyer for detainees, smuggled phone into Texas facility, ICE says

A staffer for Rep. Veronica Escobar, D-Texas, allegedly lied about being an attorney at least 11 times for detainees at a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in an effort to meet with them and sneak in cell phones. 

Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons informed Escobar in a letter dated Thursday about Benito Torres, a senior caseworker on the congresswoman's staff.

Lyons said Torres lied about being a lawyer for detainees in ICE custody at the Camp East Montana facility at Fort Bliss in El Paso. 

"The available evidence demonstrates your staffer, a senior caseworker named Benito Torres, misrepresented himself as counsel for detainees in ICE custody, violated clear detention standards and security protocols prohibiting the use of cellphones inside ICE facilities, improperly met with multiple detainees, and falsely claimed to ICE personnel such use had been approved by the agency," Lyons wrote. 

"As a result of bringing a cell phone into the Camp East Montana facility, contrary to facility visitation policy, Mr. Torres’ misrepresentation that he is a licensed attorney to gain access to detainees, his improper meetings with groups of detainees, and his assertions to ICE personnel about the origins of his visit, Mr. Torres is herby [sic] prohibited from accessing any ICE facility."

An image of a sign-in log shows Torres allegedly claiming to be a "lawyer" visiting a "client." ICE records show that Torres first misrepresented himself as a legal professional in September 2025, Lyons said. The most recent incident happened on Jan. 30. 

During that visit, Torres was confronted by a facility administrator and admitted that he was not an attorney and was visiting as a private person. The confrontation happened after officials in the facility became aware of someone passing a phone to multiple detainees, the letter states. 

South of the Village

29 Irvine Road, guide price $4.299 million, pending after 7 days. When a house goes “pending” in this short number of days as opposed to “under contract”, it means that all contingencies have been met. In this market, it means that the only offers coming in (or being accepted, anyway), have no contingencies: not mortgage, house inspection or approval from parents. You can sometimes get permission to ge an inspector inside, but any problems he finds and reports are for your use only; you can’t withdraw for the contract (without penalty), and the sellers are under no obligation to adjust the price. In fact, right now, with 10 buyers for every house, they have no reason to.