Monday, September 26, 2011
Thursday, September 22, 2011
Monday, September 19, 2011
Technology: Sometimes Good, Sometimes Not So.
Some things give us hope.
Some things remind us it's hopeless.
It's a remote-controlled spy plane that can fly up to 400 feet above the ground, snoop quietly on wireless networks below and attack one if it wants to.
Sorry, the embed code has been disabled, but here's the link: ZOOM! It's worth a look.
Some things remind us it's hopeless.
It's a remote-controlled spy plane that can fly up to 400 feet above the ground, snoop quietly on wireless networks below and attack one if it wants to.
Sorry, the embed code has been disabled, but here's the link: ZOOM! It's worth a look.
Thursday, September 15, 2011
Civil Disobedience that would make Thoreau proud
In 1849, Henry David Thoreau posed that governments are typically more harmful than helpful and therefore, unjustified. He also stated that Democracy was no cure for this, as majorities simply by virtue of being majorities do not also gain the virtues of wisdom and justice.
It seems that at no time in our nation's history is that point more poignant than today, witness the Department of Homeland Security, an over-bloated bureaucracy that is literally trampling our 4th Amendment rights.
But Hark! There is a glimmer of hope. For in the end, civil disobedience will prevail if we each do our part.
Here's one of the most novel ways of disobedience that I have come across, 4th Amendment Underwear!
Metal imprinted underwear that sends a pretty clear message. Great stocking stuffers for the traveler in your family.
It seems that at no time in our nation's history is that point more poignant than today, witness the Department of Homeland Security, an over-bloated bureaucracy that is literally trampling our 4th Amendment rights.
But Hark! There is a glimmer of hope. For in the end, civil disobedience will prevail if we each do our part.
Here's one of the most novel ways of disobedience that I have come across, 4th Amendment Underwear!
Metal imprinted underwear that sends a pretty clear message. Great stocking stuffers for the traveler in your family.
Sunday, September 11, 2011
Saturday, September 10, 2011
Wednesday, September 7, 2011
The Finer Points of Swinedom
Mr. Charleston, always alert to different and exciting life experiences, decided over this past holiday weekend to take in that perennial Baja Georgia favorite... the Labor Day Swine Classic.
My travelling partner on this day was my good friend Pat, who upon receiving the invitation remarked, "What? Are you inviting me to a hog show?" "Yeah," I replied. "You should be flattered. After all, how many girls get invitations to a hog show?" "Besides," I continued, "we can finish it off with lunch at the Kingsland Catfish Festival." Being a country girl, that last bit got her. No respectful Bajaian can refuse a fried catfish lunch. So, bright and somewhat early on Saturday morning, we set off to the bustling metropolis of Callahan for a day of down-home country.
It was only later I realized that we were so hungry for catfish that I completely forgot to take a picture of any. Oh well, a ride down the coast and across the St. Johns River ferry finished the day. Got home in time to put my feet up and enjoy a beer and an afternoon of college football.
Eat your hearts out city-slickers.
My travelling partner on this day was my good friend Pat, who upon receiving the invitation remarked, "What? Are you inviting me to a hog show?" "Yeah," I replied. "You should be flattered. After all, how many girls get invitations to a hog show?" "Besides," I continued, "we can finish it off with lunch at the Kingsland Catfish Festival." Being a country girl, that last bit got her. No respectful Bajaian can refuse a fried catfish lunch. So, bright and somewhat early on Saturday morning, we set off to the bustling metropolis of Callahan for a day of down-home country.
| When we got there, we found the competitors riveted in anxious anticipation of the impending competition. |
| The contestants, ready for action. |
| This hog show stuff can be big time business. Note generator for powering fans in the trailer. |
| No being able to afford a generator, this boy keeps his hog cool the old-fashioned way, by spraying him with water. Note the belt buckle. A first-place trophy from another show. |
| Now we're getting down to it, the contestants enter the ring. |
| The idea is to parade the hogs around in a circle, under the watchful eye of the judge. Someone forgot to tell the pigs. |
| A veteran. |
| Hogs will be hogs after all. |
| Having had our fill of hogs, we turned our attention to the catfish festival. |
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| Enjoying a 90 degree day whilst making four pots of ice cream. A really interesting contraption powered by an antique Briggs & Stratton. I liked the t-bucket parked out back. |
| Never too early for Christmas stuff. A porker of a different sort. |
| I had never seen this before. I wondered how long these kids could stay in there before suffocating. I didn't find out. |
| Redneck entrepreneur. An old lawn tractor and a few 50-gallon drums and you've got a ride worthy of Disney. |
| And, of course, the ubiquitous pony ride. I always feel sorry for the ponies, no matter how many times I see this. But the kids sure enjoy it. |
It was only later I realized that we were so hungry for catfish that I completely forgot to take a picture of any. Oh well, a ride down the coast and across the St. Johns River ferry finished the day. Got home in time to put my feet up and enjoy a beer and an afternoon of college football.
Eat your hearts out city-slickers.
Saturday, September 3, 2011
Tub-O-Lard. This is just plain sick.
When I first read the news that there's a movement afoot to declare obesity an illness, my first reactions were twofold. 1) Another excuse to blame something else for lack of self-control and personal responsibility, and 2) There must be an insurance or medical industry profit motive involved.
Here's someone who's trying to do both.
Here's someone who's trying to do both.
Thursday, September 1, 2011
Now You See It. Now You Don't.
Cleveland, along with a growing number of other cities nation-wide, is solving the foreclosed and abandoned housing problem once and for all, by removing them.
This video pretty much reflects what's happened to the American Dream.
This video pretty much reflects what's happened to the American Dream.
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