From Pine View Farm

February, 2015 archive

Snowy Sunrise 0

Sunrise on a snowy morning at my brother’s place on Virginia’s Northern Neck.

Snow scene

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Mean Girls 0

I didn’t even know that high school team dance competitions were a thing.

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“An Armed Society Is a Polite Society” 0

The polite practice family togetherness:

The father was apparently cleaning a handgun when it discharged. The bullet went through the father’s hand, struck the 11-year-old sitting on a couch, and struck the mother in the elbow.

The child did not survive.

Yet another gun nut too stupid to unload a gun before cleaning it.

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Light Bloggery 0

The area is crushed under two or three inches of snow. Crushed, I say (just ask the telly vision).

There are rumors of a burgeoning black market in bread and milk, as thawing is not expected to begin until noon. Even our morning paper was an hour late.

Civilization as we know it is doomed absurd.

I’m taking it easy on a snow day.

(Typo corrected.)

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Q. Where’s a Good Place for Breakfast? 0

A. Try the new Rand Paul waffle house.

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QOTD 0

Frederick William Robertson:

There are three things in the world that deserve no mercy: hypocrisy, fraud, and tyranny.

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Great Moments in Gunnuttery 0

Fetish wear for ammosexuals.

How long before some bozo wearing this gets his stupid self shot?

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True Believers 0

Disconnects:  Islamist Jihadi:  No connection to Islam.  Klansman:  No connection to Christianity.  Wingnut saying,

Via Job’s Anger.

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“Not Our Fight” 0

Thom explains why Frankenstein must pursue his own monster.

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Bruisin’ for a Cruzin’ 0

Steven M. notes that Ted Cruz doesn’t seem to be doing so well in the polls and tries figure out why, as he says, Cruz is “in Sarah Palin territory these days.”

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Drive Carefully 0

Hot-dogging it on the highways leads to no good.

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Along the Way the Signs Would Say . . . . 0

In his Roadshow column, the San Jose Mercury-News’s Gary Richards remembers Burma Shave signs.

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“An Armed Society Is a Polite Society” 0

Do not allow politeness to take a back seat to anything.

A 4-year-old Indiana girl accidentally shot her father from the back seat of the family’s car, and it’s the dad who faces felony charges, prosecutors said Sunday.

. . . Paulson was shot Jan. 31 when his daughter, who wasn’t in a child restraint seat, pulled the loaded .40 caliber Smith & Wesson handgun from the pocket of her dad’s overalls, according to a probable cause affidavit, prosecutors said. It went off and hit Paulson in his upper right arm.

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Mauling a Mall 0

I used to visit Granite Run Mall from time to time. It was a bit out of our normal stamping grounds, but it was not a bad mall, though it seems to be quite out of fashion these days.

The best way to turn around the struggling mall, according to its owners, is to demolish it.

What was once a classic suburban mall will be reborn as something more classically urban.

Outdoor courtyards will replace the traditional mall structure as it becomes a town center with retail stores, restaurants, and luxury apartments.

There is no town for it to be a center of. There is just an intersection in the suburbs.

We have one of those faux “town centers” created at an intersection right here in Virginia Beach. It is sterile wasteland of cookie-cutter chain restaurants, over-priced ersatz boutiques, and sky-high-costing condos and apartments with all the gritty urban flavor of, well, a suburban shopping mall.

To have a “downtown,” you must first have a town that knows how to get down.

“Town Centers” are “developed.” Downtowns are.

Afterthought:

You can bet that the developers will make out okay. They’ll be long gone when the vacuous emptiness of their effort becomes apparent.

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QOTD 0

Mark Twain, from Following the Equator:

To speak plainly, we despise all reverences and objects of reverence which are outside the pale of our own list of sacred things. And yet, with strange inconsistency, we are shocked when other people despise and defile the things which are holy to us.

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Situational Ethics 0

Obama holds


Click for a larger image.

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None Dare Call It Terrorism 0

An article in the Tampa Bay Times reflects on the legacy of Judge Lynch.

It is important to remember that the hangings, burnings and dismemberments of black American men, women and children that were relatively common in this country between the Civil War and World War II were often public events. They were sometimes advertised in newspapers and drew hundreds and even thousands of white spectators, including elected officials and leading citizens who were so swept up in the carnivals of death that they posed with their children for keepsake photographs within arm’s length of mutilated black corpses.

These episodes of horrific, communitywide violence have been erased from civic memory in lynching-belt states like Louisiana, Georgia, Alabama, Florida and Mississippi.

The article goes on to discuss the efforts of the Equal Justice Initiative to ensure that the memory of those deeds are not obliterated, however much preserving them may discomfit some Southern white folks who long for the Good Old Days, but will not mention just what it was that makes them think those old days were so good.

Unlike another much-derided New York Times story, which neglected to mention just who did the lynching, the Tampa Bay Times article* does not flinch from identifying the culprits.

Give it a read, then follow the link to the Equal Justice Initiative and read the report or download the Executive Summary (PDF).

________________

*In fairness to the NYT, I think the TBT article may have also appeared there. The TBT does not credit its origin.

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Republican Family Values 0

Yeah. Right.

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For the Love of the Hunt . . . 0

The Assault Rifle Sportsman:  All the mounted trophies on the wall are spotches.  The Sportsman is saying,


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Plus Ca Change 0

Leonard Pitts, Jr., places Alabama Supreme Court Judge Roy Moore’s recent invocation of nullification in the face of gay marriage into context. A nugget (please read the rest):

. . . there is nothing new here. History reminds us that whenever social change comes too fast for the South’s taste — which is to say, whenever social change comes — there seems to invariably arise some demagogue to decry the “tyranny” of having to obey the law and follow court orders. The South always resists.

That’s what necessitated the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and the Freedom Rides of 1961. It’s why federal troops had to march into Little Rock in 1957. For that matter, it’s why they had to march into Richmond in 1865. The demagogues always use the same justification, always say that in denying it the right to discriminate as it sees fit, the federal government steps on the South’s “traditions.”

(snip)

Of course, “tradition” is just a smokescreen word, like “values,” “heritage,” “faith” and all the other pretty terminology opponents of marriage equality use to justify their increasingly untenable position. . . . It is, and ever has been, only about a single ugly word: bigotry. . . .

One more time, when you hear someone invoke “states’ rights,” ask, “States’ rights to do just what, precisely.”

Dollars to doughnuts you don’t get a precise answer.

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