Search This Blog
Friday, October 13, 2023
Homecoming 2023
The Face of the Era
Thursday, October 12, 2023
The 2023 NKOTB Cruise - arrival day
As we learned from our own cruises together, it is always best to travel to the port city the day before embarkation, not only to avoid any travel delays that make you miss the ship, but just to de-stress and unwind.
Wednesday, October 11, 2023
An Evening with Smiley
The Nun II
Monday, October 9, 2023
Sunday, October 8, 2023
War In Israel
The naked body of a [Israeli] woman was paraded through the streets in the back of a pick-up truck on Saturday as Hamas fighters sat on her unmoving form.
A celebrating crowd surrounded the armed men in combat fatigues, who shouted “Allah Akbar” from the open back of the truck.
Some in the crowd, which included youngsters, spat on the woman’s body before the truck sped away on a day of unprecedented massacres of Israeli civilians.
The woman was later named as Shani Louk. Miss Louk’s family confirmed they had seen the video but said they “still have some kind of hope” that she had survived.
-https://news.yahoo.com/naked-israeli-woman-paraded-jeering-191753028.html
What does US Congresswoman (D) Rashida Tlalib, of the so-called "Squad" have to say?
Saturday, October 7, 2023
The Cat Tree!
Found it!!
Just a day ago I asked about a science-fiction short story anthology I had as a kid, the title of which had been lost to me for decades.
It took a reader on Sci-Fi Stack Exchange all of about twenty minutes to give me an answer.
Beyond the Stars: Tales of Adventure in Time and Space not only included the only known excerpt from the original Star Wars novelization, it also had an excerpt from a Doctor Who novel, a fact I had completely forgotten but that roared back with full clarity once I saw the table of contents. It also had a weird combination of Star Wars cosplay and Battlestar Galactica Vipers on the cover!
How often do you think of the Roman Empire?
As I was sitting at a coffee shop with LuLu yesterday I overheard a conversation at a nearby table. They mentioned the recent Tiktok trend where men are asked how often they think about the Roman Empire. The surprisingly common answer to that inquiry - "a lot/everyday/every other day"
Now according to these people - two men and a woman - this was "probably a lie," designed to woo potential female partners, and that no guy thinks of Rome that often. What woman, other than Mary Beard, would grow faint at such a line wasn't made clear. Nor am I alleging these were America's best or brightest scholars: one of them said that the only time *he* thought of the Roman Empire was when he was watching a movie about it, "like 300" - which of course is a movie about Greece, not Rome.
Now a few weeks ago Junie, asked me this very same question, phone in hand, probably to comply with that Tiktok trend. And my answer was an honest "A few times a day."
I assure you, that wasn't to reel in a lady or because Rome was a "patriarchal, militaristic society," or any other drivel that haters use to dismiss the answer. My reasoning is simple: Why wouldn't you think of Rome often?
Not just the Empire, but the Republic that proceeded it, and Byzantium that followed it. The built a society that spanned three continents and lasted 800 years (1800 if you don't exclude the Eastern half of the Empire); not the largest empire in history, true, but no doubt the most influential to modern life. Law, politics, language, construction, you name it, the Romans had a hand in improving it.
I think of their roads and their cement every time I drive over streets like Logan Avenue in Milwaukee, riddled with so many potholes you think it was target practice for artillery; I think of their language whenever I look up a term of art in the law; I think of their role as conquerors and their willingness to embrace change when I think of Christianity; I think of their art and their architecture and their weapons and their Senators and their Emperors and . . .
Well, I think of them often.
And NOT just when I watch "300."
Friday, October 6, 2023
A Nightmare in Las Cruces
On February 10th, 1990 gunmen entered and robbed a bowling alley in Las Cruces, New Mexico. They took around $5000, ordered everyone to get on the ground – and then opened fire. Four were killed, another died of her injuries within a decade, and two others were wounded.
The age of three of the dead? Thirteen, six, and two, with the toddler shot point blank in the forehead.
The case was never solved.
A Nightmare in Las Cruces is a full-length documentary, filmed for the
20th anniversary of the massacre, that Lisa and I rented from Amazon
Wednesday night.
It was
not a pleasant film to watch.
But the filmmaker did the viewer, and himself, no favors either.
For one, the audio in the film was horrendous. Sinister music plays incessantly at times, even while family members are sharing their thoughts. Other parts of the film have the audio cut in and out and some scenes have an odd buzzing in the background.
Visually, actual footage of the slaughter, up to to and including video that lingers on the corpse of the six year old, plays far too often. Including the unblurred footage is questionable but impactful, but that impact lessens when it is played over and over.
In terms of telling the story, small but vital details are omitted. You're left wondering why two middle school girls are in a bowling alley office on a Saturday morning, and why an employee would bring his two and six year old with him to work. The answer? (thank you Google) is that the bowling alley had a daycare for the bowler's children, which the middle school girls were going to supervise. With no babysitter that day, the two and six year old were going to spend the day in the daycare while their Dad worked.
The documentary also (in my opinion) wastes time trying to imply that this was a deliberate assassination, as a vendetta against the business owner. Maybe it was, maybe it wasn't, but it reeks of desperation, of a frustrated public being unable to rectify the sad fact that humans sometimes kill, and kill children, for no reason we can fathom.
The documentary had the best of intentions and occasionally, it is moving and powerful. But overall, I would rate this as a C.
Star Wars Question
In my childhood I was gifted a hardcover sci-fi short story anthology that featured an excerpt from the novelization of Star Wars by George Lucas/Alan Dean Foster. As I recall, it was from their time on the Death Star, and it was illustrated with sketches that were either drawn a) by someone who'd never seen the movie or b) by someone really careful to avoid recreating the movie designs for legal reasons.
I mention that the book was hardcover, but as I recall the dark cover was oddly glossy. For some reason now lost to my subconscious, I think the book may have been published in England.
Does anyone know what this collection was called? Does anyone know where I can find a list of collections that were authorized to excerpt the novelization?
Thursday, October 5, 2023
Surrender your keyboard
Congratulations on doing what you do Best.
Congratulations to the Milwaukee Brewers for finishing with a 90-72 record, a National League Central title . . .
49 years.
FORTY NINE YEARS this team has disappointed me and left me bitter and angry and incapable of EVER trusting that they'll win a Championship. They would have to be up by six in the ninth inning of game seven of the World Series before I could feel certain of victory.
You think I'm kidding?
In the example above, I originally wrote "up by 5 in the 9th inning." Why did I change it?
Because, hand to heart, I immediately pictured a scenario where they allow a couple runs and some baserunners, fall apart as the momentum swings, and surrender a grand slam to lose the Series. Right here, at my desk, I could see it clear as day, and my heart dropped.
No mas. No mas.
Wednesday, October 4, 2023
This isn't the kind of history you want to see created
Let’s be clear about one thing: the unprecedented – literally – ousting of sitting Speaker of the House by a maverick group of extreme-right Republicans yesterday?
Idiotic.
Last week Speaker Kevin McCarthy orchestrated a
bi-partisan effort to avoid a government shutdown. Whatever the merits of the
act, and your opinion of it, it was mundane. It was not, by any stretch of the
imagination, a grand betrayal of the Republic.
Enter Rep. Matt Gaetz, who as part of the deal McCarthy
made to secure his leadership, had pushed for a rule change to allow any single
lawmaker the ability to file a motion to vacate the Speakership.
He did so.
Gaetz and seven Republicans voted to oust; they were
joined, ironically, by 208 Democrats.
No Speaker had ever been ordered to vacate the post.
Until yesterday.
Don’t try and tell me that this was some triumph of
principle over tradition. That’s a lie, both for the extremist cadre of Republicans
and their newfound Democratic allies. The former are content to scorch the
earth, as governance seems a secondary desire to them. And the Democrats? A
petty, partisan pile-on. Unless you think they voted to oust McCarthy because he
worked with them last week, which seems like a good way to ensure no olive
branches are extended in the future.
Chaos rules the House today. There is no Speaker.
There is no easy *path* to Speakership, as any candidate would have to concede points
to the fringe to get the votes, and after yesterday, who will trust them?
If Gaetz and company wanted to demonstrate to the
world that the party is in turmoil, mission accomplished. If they wanted to handcuff
a third of the government, the mission was accomplished. Beyond that . . .
Shameful.
Tuesday, October 3, 2023
Monday, October 2, 2023
Tim Wakefield