A compilation - not sure who the guy is who posted this.
« August 2018 | Main | October 2018 »
A compilation - not sure who the guy is who posted this.
Sunday, September 30, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (0)
Highland Ape Rescue out of West Virginia will be teaming up with Cornwell Primate farms to supply hundreds of monkeys and apes to the Senate. The animals will be fed a nutritious mixture of foods that produce easily throwable feces. Protective glass will be put up around the Senate for camera crews to safely film, but anyone being interviewed by the new senators will have to sit in the middle of the poo-flinging octagon, coming under a heavy barrage of projectile excrement.
“It will be a huge improvement from how things were before,” said ape trainer, Marlena Henwick. “No more 10-12 hour hearings. With these monkeys, all the fecal projectiles will have been flung in under 30 minutes. One and done.”
The recently replaced senators will be placed on display at the National Zoo in Washington, D.C. for families to park attendees to observe and zoologists to study.
Sunday, September 30, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (2)
Saturday, September 29, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (0)
It's very unusual for the Journal to make any editorial endorsement (they like to point out the last Presidential candidate they endorsed was Herbert Hoover...) so they feel quite strongly about this. As you can tell from reading the editorial.
FULL DISCLOSURE: I've only seen a few minutes of the Thursday hearings.
Ms. Ford certainly was a sympathetic witness—by her own admission “terrified” at the start and appearing to be emotionally fragile. Her description of the assault and its impact on her was wrenching. She clearly believes what she says happened to her. Her allegation should have been vetted privately, in confidence, as she said she would have preferred. Instead ranking Democrat Dianne Feinstein held it for six weeks and it was leaked—perhaps to cause precisely such a hearing circus.
Yet there is still no confirming evidence beyond her own testimony, and some of what she says has been contradicted. The female friend Ms. Ford says was at the home the night of the assault says she wasn’t there. The number of people she says were there has varied from four to five and perhaps more, but every potential witness she has cited by name says he or she doesn’t recall the party.
She still can’t recall the home where the assault took place, how she got there or how she got home that evening. She has no witnesses who say she told them about the alleged assault at the time—until she first spoke of it at a couples therapy session 30 years later in 2012. Mr. Kavanaugh’s name doesn’t appear in the notes of her therapist.
As for Judge Kavanaugh, his self-defense was as powerful and emotional as the moment demanded. If he was angry at times, imagine how you would feel if you were so accused and were innocent as he says he is. To deny the allegations as he did—invoking his children and parents and so many others who know him—and be lying would mean that he is a sociopath. If he were found to be lying, he would be impeached and probably prosecuted. Nothing in his long record in public life betrays the kind of behavior he is accused of against women.
Had he not been as forceful, his opponents would have said he looked guilty. Because he called the Democrats out for their character assassination, the critics now say he lacks the right temperament. The truth is that there is no answer, and no demeanor, that Brett Kavanaugh could offer that the left would credit. Their goal isn’t the truth. They want to destroy Judge Kavanaugh.
***********
Incredibly, Democrats spent their time with Judge Kavanaugh asking about drinking games and lines in his high school yearbook. Once Senator Lindsey Graham made that look foolish (see below), Democrats focused on their only other argument, which is that the FBI should investigate. But they well know the FBI would merely repeat the interviews they and the Senate Judiciary staff have already done.
The real Democratic goal is to push a confirmation vote past Election Day. They can then spare their incumbents running for re-election from taking a difficult vote. If they win the election, they will then try to block any confirmation until they take over the Senate in January. No nominee to the right of Merrick Garland would then be confirmed in the final two years of the Trump Presidency. The Supreme Court would be divided 4-4 until 2021 at least.
Senate Republicans should understand that these are the real political stakes. This nomination isn’t only about the fate of a single man whose reputation can be discarded like some tabloid celebrity. This is about the future of the Supreme Court and who will control the Senate. If Republicans reject Mr. Kavanaugh based on what we know now, millions of voters will rightly be furious.
But as important, a rejection will bring dishonor to the Senate. It will validate the ambush and smear politics that Democrats are using. And it will turn Supreme Court nominations over to the justice of the social-media mob and the politics of accusation. It’s time for Senators to stand up and confirm Brett Kavanaugh.
Saturday, September 29, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (2)
I have a client who did own a pile of Sears stock. We sold all, long before the mudslide.
Sears' market value has fallen to less than $100 million. Lampert recently offered to buy the Kenmore appliance line through his hedge fund for $400 million, suggesting that the Kenmore brand on its own is worth more than four times as much as the whole company.
All of which is a stunning reversal for a company that was once not only the nation's largest retailer, but also its largest employer.
In its heyday, Sears was both the Walmart (WMT) and Amazon (AMZN) of its time. In the late 19th century and early decades of the 20th century, many Americans bought mass-produced goods for the first time through the Sears catalog. Most lived on farms and in small towns, and had previously made many of the goods they needed, such as clothes and furniture, themselves.
Saturday, September 29, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (1)
Here's a column from last Sunday from Fr. George Rutler, who is the pastor of St. Michael the Archangel Church in NY. He is an Anglican convert and an author and speaker of some note.
The selection of Saint Michael as our parish’s patron in 1857 certainly was inspired. Who could be a better champion in “Hell’s Kitchen” than that heavenly soldier wielding the sword, as the great statue in our church shows him? As angels are pure spirit and sublime intelligence, it is tempting for mortals of flesh and limited intelligence to pretend that they are fictions, but many times in meeting strangers we may “entertain angels unawares” (Hebrews 13:2).
Michael, whose name means “no one is like God,” leads a combat that is even more violent for being spiritual and not merely political. Spiritual combat is virulent now, when virtually every social institution is confused and angry, and harshly so in the Church, which is more than a human invention and is in fact the “Body of Christ”—that is, his living presence on earth. Our Lord predicted “… that the Son of Man was destined to suffer grievously, to be rejected by the elders and the chief priests and the scribes” (Mark 8:31).
In 1776 Thomas Paine wrote contemptuously of “the summer soldier and sunshine patriot” who flees when the going gets rough. Such are those who claim to have been baptized as Soldiers of Christ but who flee from spiritual combat when they are scandalized by news of sin. There is a parallel here with what a recent book, The Coddling of the American Mind, describes as a young generation living in a cultural bubble protected from psychological discomfort. They are so cushioned from the hard facts of life that they flee into “safe spaces” when traumatized by reality.
Saint Augustine said, “In addition to the fact that I am a Christian and must give God an account of my life, I as a leader must give him an account of my stewardship as well.” Church leaders who have been chortling glad-handers cannot give a good account because they have been summer solders and sunshine patriots. When the clouds gather, and battle lines are drawn, they are unable to confront what Belloc called Satan’s “comic inversion of our old certitudes.”
It has actually been suggested that Satan is exposing the sins of men in order to discourage the faithful. But the Prince of Lies exposes nothing. He has long been the cover-up artist. The Holy Spirit does the revealing: “For nothing is secret, that shall not be made manifest; neither anything hid, that shall not be known and come abroad” (Luke 8:17).
“Saint Michael the Archangel, protect me against the ruses and temptations of Satan. I consecrate to you all the faculties of my soul, my soul itself and all its potentials. Guard well the weaknesses of my poor nature, that the many battles that I may undergo will become as many victories and the eternal glory of the Most Precious Blood of Our Lord Jesus Christ. Amen."
Saturday, September 29, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (4)
UPDATE: Dershowitz thinks the FBI should do an investigation. Thinks it will ultimately help Kavanaugh.
Dershowitz, the famous Harvard Law professor. He appears on both CNN and FOX. His politics - Democrat.
Friday, September 28, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (0)
Of course a great time for the three news channels. The once dominant CNN continues down the drain. And FOX crushes it. Funny Martha McCallum's "The Story" show didn't make top ten; much better one hour than most of these. There's no accounting for taste - Hannity #1?
CABLE NEWS RACE
WED SEPT 26 2018
FOXNEWS HANNITY 4,450,000
FOXNEWS TUCKER 3,622,000
MSNBC MADDOW 3,462,000
FOXNEWS INGRAHAM 3,413,000
FOXNEWS BAIER 3,405,000
FOXNEWS THE FIVE 3,265,000
MSNBC O'DONNELL 2,668,000
MSNBC HAYES 2,221,000
MSNBC HARDBALL 2,196,000
CNN CUOMO 1,583,000
CNN COOPER 1,428,000
Thursday, September 27, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (0)
Thursday, September 27, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (0)
Recently, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez was criticized for wearing a $3500 outfit in a photo shoot, which seemed a celebration of the luxuries of capitalism that ran counter to her supposed support of socialism. When pressed on it, she seemed confused by the criticism and simply explained, “I like pretty outfits!” She was also asked again how she plans to pay for her $40 trillion in proposals, though she seemed confused by the numbers and simply blurted, “I like pretty outfits!”
***************
At publishing time, various socialist supporters across the country had confirmed they only want wealth redistributed from people who make more than they do. “What I make should be the cut-off line,” said one woman.
Thursday, September 27, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (0)
He's an embarrassment to the rest of us.
Mr. Avenatti is the latest Democratic activist and staunch adversary of the President to advance a last-minute allegation against Supreme Court nominee and current federal Judge Brett Kavanaugh. Today Mr. Avenatti is sharing on Twitter a photograph of a woman named Julie Swetnick along with a statement he attributes to her alleging that as a teenager, Mr. Kavanaugh participated in a criminal organization of males who repeatedly spiked drinks and gave them to females in order to facilitate gang rapes.
Judge Kavanaugh has flatly denied participating in or knowing about any such thing. The Journal notes:
In a statement released by the White House on Wednesday, Judge Kavanaugh called the allegations “ridiculous and from the Twilight Zone.” Of Ms. Swetnick, he said: “I don’t know who this is and this never happened.”
Over at New York magazine, Jonathan Chait is clinging to his belief that Judge Kavanaugh will not be confirmed for a Supreme Court seat but admits that the attorney advancing today’s shocking claim is not exactly an ideal selection:
Avenatti is not the lawyer I would recommend for anybody bringing forward an allegation, but it’s understandable why a famous face that’s plastered on cable news seemingly at all hours would catch Swetnick’s attention. His involvement hardly invalidates her testimony.
Wednesday, September 26, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (0)
Love Babylon Bee news coverage. I'm buying their t shirt.
"We just reported on what Trump did and things that were said," Brian Stelter said in an on-air apology. "We realize now this was not consistent with what we've done in the past or who we are as a news organization. It was dangerous and irresponsible."
All links to the piece were quickly pulled, and CNN assured its readers that it would never happen again.
Wednesday, September 26, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (0)
Wednesday, September 26, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (2)
TS Eliot in the opening of his epic poem The Wasteland starts the poem with "April is the Cruelest Month..."
But we know better.
From Investopedia -
In 1922, T.S. Eliot called April the cruelest – actually, "cruellest" – month. With the benefit of hindsight, we can safely say he should have picked October.
Stock market lore has labeled just four days "Black," and they all happened in October: Black Thursday (October 24, 1929), Black Monday (October 28, 1929), Black Tuesday (October 29, 1929) and the other Black Monday (October 19, 1987). The most stomach-wrenching drop of 2008 happened when Lehman Brothers folded on September 15, but we threw the following October in anyway, because 14% down in a month is nothing to sneeze at.
Tuesday, September 25, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (0)
The weekend Wall Street Journal editorial -
“As Judge Kavanaugh stands to gain the lifetime privilege of serving on the country’s highest court, he has the burden of persuasion. And that is only fair.”
—Anita Hill, Sept. 18, 2018
“Not only do women like Dr. Ford, who bravely comes forward, need to be heard, but they need to be believed.”
—Sen. Maize Hirono (D., Hawaii)
This turns American justice and due process upside down. The core tenet of Anglo-American law is that the burden of proof always rests with the person making the accusation. An accuser can’t doom someone’s freedom or career merely by making a charge.
The accuser has to prove the allegation in a court of law or in some other venue where the accused can challenge the facts. Otherwise we have a Jacobin system of justice in which “J’accuse” becomes the standard and anyone can be ruined on a whim or a vendetta.
*******
Another core tenet of due process is that an accusation isn’t any more or less credible because of the gender, race, religion or ethnicity of who makes it. A woman can lie, as the Duke lacrosse players will tell you. Ms. Hirono’s standard of credibility by gender would have appalled the civil-rights campaigners of a half century ago who marched in part against Southern courts that treated the testimony of black Americans as inherently less credible than that of whites. Yet now the liberal heirs of those marchers want to impose a double standard of credibility by gender.
A third tenet of due process is the right to cross-examine an accuser. The point is to test an accuser’s facts and credibility, which is why we have an adversarial system. The denial of cross-examination is a major reason that campus panels adjudicating sexual-assault claims have become kangaroo courts.
It’s worth quoting from the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals ruling this month in Doe v. Baum on a sexual-assault case at the University of Michigan.
“Due process requires cross-examination in circumstances like these because it is ‘the greatest legal engine ever invented’ for uncovering the truth,” wrote Judge Amul Thapar. “Not only does cross-examination allow the accused to identify inconsistencies in the other side’s story, but it also gives the fact-finder an opportunity to assess a witness’s demeanor and determine who can be trusted. So if a university is faced with competing narratives about potential misconduct, the administration must facilitate some form of cross-examination in order to satisfy due process.”
*****
We don’t doubt that Ms. Ford believes what she claims. But the set of facts she currently provides wouldn’t pass even the “preponderance of evidence”—or 50.01% evidence of guilt—test that prevails today on college campuses. If this is the extent of her evidence and it is allowed to defeat a Supreme Court nominee, a charge of sexual assault will become a killer political weapon regardless of facts. And the new American standard of due process will be the presumption of guilt.
Monday, September 24, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (12)
I'm on his emailing list - he mailed multiple times to promote his hate Trump film. If you saw it, leave a review in the comments section.
Monday, September 24, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (1)
UPDATE: Here's a UN article on India's pledge to combat plastics pollution - India sets pace in global race to beat plastic pollution
Having posted several times in the last few months about plastics pollution - the latest here: Off Philippines; scuba diver in a sea of plastic - I decided to do some research. No surprise who the biggest ones are - I had recently read that 90% of plastics pollution comes from the four countries of China, India, Indonesia, and The Philippines.
Here is what seems to be the most recent (2015) study with figures from a reputable research group - the figures refer to millions of metric tons. I think the graph tells the story. Note that India isn't even on the list - perhaps they were unable to get data from India? The graph does say it's from "selected countries".
The Countries Polluting The Oceans The Most
A team of researchers in the United States and Australia led by Jenna Jambeck, an environmental engineer at the University of Georgia, analyzed plastic waste levels in the world's oceans. They found that China and Indonesia are the top sources of plastic bottles, bags and other rubbish clogging up global sea lanes. Together, both nations account for more than a third of plastic detritus in global waters, according to a report in The Wall Street Journal. The original source data can be found here.
In 2010, 8.8 million metric tons of mismanaged plastic waste came from China with an estimated 3.53 million metric tons of it ending up in the ocean. A total of 3.2 million metric tons of mismanaged plastic waste came from Indonesia and it is estimated that 1.29 million metric tons became plastic marine debris. The United States is also guilty of polluting oceans with plastic, but at a much lower level than China. Annually, 0.11 million metric tons of waterborne plastic garbage comes from the United States.
Originally this infographic incorrectly labeled the total amount of mismanaged plastic waste as the amount found in the water. It is now been updated to show the total amount of mismanaged plastic waste and the total amount of plastic marine debris.
Monday, September 24, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (4)
That's the length of the Pacific Coast Trail. Not exactly what I posted about yesterday Hike: Up Anthony's Nose . This guy goes by "Darwin on the Trail". I think his wife gets mentioned - "Snuggles". They dropped out of the real world (so called) about 4 years ago and just hike around America. Here's a 6 minute video on how they afford it. And below is his gear list - interesting even if you're not planning a monster hike. He knows what he's doing & has cutting edge lightweight gear.
Sunday, September 23, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (0)
Saturday, September 22, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (1)
Gotta love the title as Jeanne Marie and I did a fast hike last Saturday, the shorter version from pullover parking lot area on the south side of Anthony's Nose (for the uninitiated, Anthony's Nose is the rock face overlooking the east side of the Bear Mountain Bridge. This is a shorter hike than going from the old Bridge Toll building that's now a visitor's center.
About 2.5 miles round trip - Beautiful weather, a bit warm.
Looking south - those dots are circling hawks!
Trying to crop for the birds -
Jeanne Marie, counting railroad cars?
We're about 900 feet above sea level.
Photo by JM
We'll be looking to do the beautiful up Bear Mountain hike soon.
Saturday, September 22, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (8)
Here's the coverage in the Guardian (UK) - the British paper.
Friday, September 21, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (1)
A good article from two days ago; since there's a sudden fear of ... I'm not sure what. I guess things aren't getting better fast enough? Extensive excerpt since the link may not work if you are not a Journal subscriber.
Faster-than-expected growth has produced a revenue windfall.
Compare the August 2018 economic forecast from the Congressional Budget Office with the one from June 2017, before the tax cuts passed, and we discover some very good news. The much higher than expected economic growth in the wake of the Trump tax cut means that U.S. gross domestic product will be higher than expected every year over the next decade.
Even if we assume a reversion to the pre-Trump 1.9% growth path, the ratchet up in GDP this year translates into $179 billion in unexpected output this year, $465 billion next year, $654 billion in 2020, and so on. This magic of compounding yields more than $6 trillion additional GDP over the decade thanks to the faster growth already achieved.
The federal government is expected to capture a bit more than 18% of that extra output in tax revenue—about $1.1 trillion over the 10-year window. That’s well above the $400 billion to $500 billion expected revenue loss from the corporate tax-rate cut.
Corporate tax revenues are down this year, but receipts from nearly every other tax source are rising at the federal and state levels. The higher growth this year alone will give states and cities almost $20 billion in windfall revenue. No surprise then that many states are reporting “unexpected” gains in tax collections this year and will have budget surpluses.
Perversely, because the economy is bigger now than expected, the CBO has revised upward its estimated “cost” of the tax cut. Because of lower tax rates, the government will get a smaller share of the larger-than-projected economy—even though the tax cut encouraged the faster growth.
One can argue about how much of the boom is a result of the corporate tax cut. My view is that the small-business tax cuts also have helped, as have deregulation and pro-energy-production policies.
The results we are seeing are perfectly consistent with the original game plan. We always believed that creating jobs and elevating growth from 2% to 3% or 4% should be the major focus of the economic revitalization strategy. Faster growth would make every other national problem—poverty, stagnant wages, funding Social Security, even drug abuse—easier to solve. Certainly the national debt is less frightening with $6 trillion more GDP.
This is the growth dividend we all hoped for when designing the tax cut. Although it is still early in the game, so far things are going even better than we expected.
Friday, September 21, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (2)
As reported in the Croton Bee -
Burton told his friends and family Tuesday that he would totally revolt against our “unconstitutional” and “power-hungry” federal government, but then he’d have to get dressed, leave his house, and, in his own words, “Ugh, that just sounds so exhausting.”
Burton often complains about government overreach online, stating that the government can try to “come and take it,” but admitted that he’d probably just let the feds “come and take it” if he just wasn’t feeling like doing much in the way of sedition or fighting for his God-given rights that day. “Depends on if there was anything good on Hulu at the time. Castle Rock‘s coming on in a little bit here ...
“I’d have to like, talk to people and stuff, and I’m just not sure I’m up for that right now. Maybe tomorrow,” he said as he changed his profile picture to the Gadsden Flag. “I am staunchly opposed to the government treading on me, but if the price to stop their oppression is having to walk around my house and try to find some clean clothes in order to organize a rebellion, ugh. I’m just not ready to adult that much today.”
Friday, September 21, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (0)
From the Wall Street Journal -
The Dow Jones Industrial Average and the S&P 500 rose to hit new intraday records, as expectations for another surge in corporate profits helped investors look past the latest trade sparring between the U.S. and China.
The S&P 500 added 0.3% to 2918 to surpass its last record of 2914.04, set in August. The Dow industrials also surpassed its previous record, set Jan. 26, soon after the opening bell.
Thursday, September 20, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (2)
I've posted about this before. Go here for one of them - plastic pollution - a very real environmental problem.
Thursday, September 20, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (5)
Thanks to Maria for sending me this.
I thought Democrats liked it when rich people paid more in taxes - but not if they're in NY State? The scheme was to basically make property taxes a charitable donation. My heart breaks for Scarsdale property owners who've lost their fraudulent charitable gift fund.
Thursday, September 20, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (0)
Wednesday, September 19, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (0)
That's the 1964 cast - the last year Lee J Cobb played Judge Garth. The Virginian ran for nine seasons - total 249 episodes.
Wednesday, September 19, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (1)
From the Catholic online magazine Crux.
The 2016 program was conceived by the Council of Major Superiors of Women Religious and brought together 300 young women for a week-long conference at the Catholic University of America and included some of the major women leaders in the U.S. Church, including Carolyn Woo, former President and Chief Executive Officer of Catholic Relief Services; Sister Norma Pimentel, executive director of Catholic Charities of the Rio Grande Valley; Helen Alvaré, professor of law at the Antonin Scalia Law School at George Mason University; and Mother Agnes Mary Donovan, Superior General of the Sisters of Life.
In a press release, Donovan said “GIVEN was conceived in the hearts of women religious and remains a significant response on the part of the Church to encourage, inspire, and mentor young women at a crucial moment in their lives. We want each of them to know they are loved, noticed, and necessary.”
Italiano, who is the former executive director of communications at the Catholic University of America, told Crux that she’s well aware that she faces an uphill battle by debuting a Catholic initiative at a time in which the Church is under fire from within and outside of the institution as it seeks to regain credibility over its handling of sex abuse.
**********
“In times like these it’s important to highlight where the Church is thriving and its credibility is strongest. One quick glance at the roster of women who spoke at the inaugural GIVEN Forum would be a place to start,” said Italiano.
“The Sisters of Life are expanding their presence across the country to serve pregnant women in need of help. Sister Norma Pimentel is on the front lines ministering to migrants at the border. And many of the lay women leaders work directly alongside of bishops and clergy and will contribute to the Church’s reform,” she continued.
While multiple studies have revealed that millennial women are disaffiliating from the Church in record numbers, GIVEN believes it can be part of the solution through building stronger ties that highlight women’s particular gifts in ministry, family life, and the professional realm.
Italiano added that she believes the institute is a direct response to Francis’s call for “an incisive feminine presence” at all levels of the Church’s ministry, though she said she’s eager to move beyond doctrinal debates about women’s leadership and focus on immediate solutions.
*******
“There are so many faithful, skilled women contributing to the life and mission of the Church already,” she continued. “GIVEN will pull back the curtain and showcase those contributions more widely.”
Tuesday, September 18, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (0)
This is a pretty good article about the current situation with the Supreme Court nominee - doesn't take very long to read. The comparison is to an allegation (ultimately dismissed) against Al Gore in 2009.
Tuesday, September 18, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (3)
Evidently took awhile to convince him.
NASA scientists reportedly called the meeting after it became clear the United States’ top leader was operating on a faulty astronomical model, taking actions and making comments that indicated he felt the world actually revolved around him.
“See this big, yellow circle right in the middle of our solar system?” chief astrophysicist Virgil Cantano said slowly and carefully, according to those present at the meeting. “The world revolves around this actually.”
“That must be me then. I’m the big yellow circle? Not a very good drawing of me. Sad!” Trump reportedly responded. “Lots of bad artists in here, many people are saying! Not good!”
********
“He took the news alright, all things considered,” acting NASA Administrator Robert M. Lightfoot Jr. told reporters after the meeting. “He seemed disappointed, but conceded the point after we presented a mountain of evidence indicating that it was impossible for his person to generate enough gravitational force to retain a planet in orbit.”
Tuesday, September 18, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (0)
Monday, September 17, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (0)
Monday, September 17, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (3)
UPDATE: Ocasio-Cortez tweets a response - 'I am an excellent thrift shopper'. & 'You don't get to keep the clothes' for a photoshoot
That's socialism for ya. Maybe she picked it up at Good Will? This was up on Drudge.
Monday, September 17, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (5)
He must be auditioning for CNN. Below the little video, a link to a report that the Weather Channel is defending him - the grass is slippery and he was tired ...
Saturday, September 15, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (0)
Saturday, September 15, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (1)
Trouble ...
Johnson regrets voicing his confusion. “I now know when she asks, ‘Have any questions?’ she really means, ‘Don’t say a word unless you accept everything I say without hesitation.’ Lesson learned!” Johnson told reporters as he adjusted his neck brace.
Johnson has since apologized to his professor, his class, as well as the entire student body, claiming that his question came from a place of “subconscious misogyny” and that he won’t let it happen again.
Saturday, September 15, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (1)
Friday, September 14, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (0)
Friday, September 14, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (0)
Here's a link to the video which is over an hour long; I watched the first three minutes - crushed by the Trump win but happy about the legalization of pot - all in the first three.
Friday, September 14, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (1)
Ahhh, that's good.
The new data, which provide a broad look at U.S. economic well being, show that median household income increased to $61,372 last year, up 1.8% when adjusted for inflation. There were 39.7 million people in poverty last year, and that rate dropped 0.4 percentage point to its lowest level since 2006. The percentage of people without health insurance coverage for the entire 2017 calendar year was 8.8%, or 28.5 million, not statistically different from 2016.
The household income level is the highest on record, but a change in the way the figures are calculated over time makes comparisons imperfect, and census officials said the figure isn’t statistically different from previous income peaks in 1999 and 2007.
Thursday, September 13, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (1)
Socialism - ain't it great? Bernie - This time it's different.!?
From the Miami Herald -
Thursday, September 13, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (1)
At a talk she gave to a young Democrat group. Five minute video below the link. Sorry to say, this type of nonsense could easily lead to violence.
She despises Pence also.
“I had a conversation here today with someone asked, ‘Well, what about Pence? If you are able to impeach, Pence will be worse,'” she recollected.
“Well, I said, ‘Look, one at a time.’
“You knock one down, one at a time,” she said.
“You knock one down, and we’ll be ready for Pence. We’ll get him, too,” she vowed.
Wednesday, September 12, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (4)
I hate today. Below is a posting I first put up in 2006. Tommy should be 47.
I knew seven people killed on 9/11. But I only knew one of them real well.
I knew Tom Knox ("Tommy") because I coached him for five years at the North Jersey Rugby Club. He was a great kid. Funny, quick witted, really sparkling personality. The sort of fellow you enjoy hanging around with; you're glad he's your friend.
He was an intense rugby player and wonderfully coachable guy.
Tom was married to Nancy for less than a year. He was thirty years old. The youngest of six children. He worked at Cantor Fitzgerald. No trace of him has been found. 1,000 people attended his funeral Mass. It is still painful to even write about this.
If you have time, go here Guest Book - Thomas Patrick Knox and read some of the 21 pages of tributes Tommy's friends wrote.
Tuesday, September 11, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (1)
Monday, September 10, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (1)
This was Obama's "coming out" speech at an Illinois University, signalling his return to partisan politics. I cannot recall any prior President, republican or democrat returning to this kind of politiking. But hey, he's the King! This is actually one of the more mild sections of his one hour plus speech.
Sunday, September 09, 2018 | Permalink | Comments (8)
Recent Comments