Temporary outage
Our rural internet connection has been down since Tuesday, 8/20.
Anticipated return: Tuesday afternoon, 8/27.
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Category Archive 'Uncategorized'
24 Aug 2024
Temporary outageOur rural internet connection has been down since Tuesday, 8/20. Anticipated return: Tuesday afternoon, 8/27. 13 Aug 2024
“A Filigree of Spitfires”Battle of Britain, Britain and the United States, John KeeganI was determined to locate the phrase’s origin, and I did find it in a lengthy 1996 essay in American Heritage by Keegan on his relationship with, and perspective upon America, as a Briton. The quote: “Britain’s glory time, between Dunkirk and Pearl Harbor, when Hitler’s army stood on the French coast and only a filigree of Spitfires hung between my unthinking self and invasion.” It’s a fine essay. 12 Aug 2024
The Glorious TwelfthJ.K. Stanford, Red Grouse, The Glorious Twelfth, The TwelfthIn honor of the Feast of St. Grouse, here’s a link to an ebook version of J.K. Stanford’s hilarious The Twelfth. 11 Aug 2024
Reading the News From BritainRevolutionary War, That England That Was Wont To Conquer Others Hath Made a Shameful Conquest of Itself, Totalitarianism
11 Aug 2024
MoreHoplophobia, Labour Government, That England That Was Wont To Conquer Others Hath Made a Shameful Conquest of Itself, Totalitarianism
11 Aug 2024
Today’s Totalitarian UKFree Speech, Hoplophobia, Labour Government, That England That Was Wont To Conquer Others Hath Made a Shameful Conquest of Itself, Totalitarianism
07 Aug 2024
Where Was This Woman’s Husband?Bat, Decadence, Liberals, State Dependency, The Younger Generation
As time goes by, Matt Taibbi becomes ever more conservative in perspective. Today, Matt could be found waxing sardonic about suburban Americans of recent generations’ dependency on government and officialdom, invertebrate tendencies, and general inability to cope.
—————————— All this brings to mind a long ago incident, shortly after Karen and I were married and had acquired our first house (built in 1712) in Newtown, Connecticut. We were having over for a serious formal dinner my two close friends from college and their wives. Karen was preparing a large roast of New Zealand fallow deer. I had laid in an ample supply of Lynch Bages. Karen was happy to have a suitable occasion to use the wedding present Spode and Baccarat. The table was set with candles and china and crystal. We men were wearing black tie, and the wives were all in evening gowns. Our dining room featured a massive colonial fireplace that once had functioned for cooking dinner. It had been rumfordized in the early 19th century, but it had no damper. Just as our guests were arriving, right down the chimney came an uninvited guest: a bat. He circled the dining room, flew off down the front hall and (conveniently for me) turned left into the library, to which I was able to shut the door. Rather than call for the authorities, myself, I thought over the problem, and came up with a solution. I remembered that among the pistols stored away in a cupboard in the same room there was my wife’s High Standard Trophy target .22 pistol. I also had on hand a supply of.22 birdshot cartridges. These contain a small load of teeny tiny No. 12 shot, a bit bigger than dust. Just the ticket for wingshooting bats! I thought. The bat was circling the room anti-clockwise, viewed from above. To my left and right were bookcases, to my rear was the wall with windows. One wouldn’t want to shoot in any of those directions. However, when we acquired our house the inside plaster wall around the fireplace was in bad shape. So I had carefully removed the ancient ornate wooden mantelpiece, and I’d covered over the bad plaster with fresh new sheetrock. My repair work was still in progress. The sheetrock was not even yet painted. Consequently, I thought it would make an easily repairable backdrop. So I loaded the pistol, took my stance, and prepared to take that bat incoming, silhouetted against the sheetrock wall. He circled once. He circled twice. I took aim. Bang! One shot as he came straight toward me and he dropped like a stone. The sheetrock was unmarred. I’d managed to put the entire pattern into him. I gathered up the bat, using a sheet of paper, placed him for now in the wastebasket, closed the door behind me, and returned to our guests who had not even noticed that one quiet gunshot. So perish all our enemies!
07 Aug 2024
The Sergeant Who Had to Step In to Replace Tim Walz SpeaksTim Walz, War on TerrorIn 2005, Tim Walz was the top-ranking non-commissioned officer in the National Guard’s First Battalion 125th Field Artillery. The news came down that the battalion was going to deploy to Iraq, whereupon Walz chose to retire. His replacement. NCO Thomas Behrends, has some choice comments on Walz running for office repeatedly on his military record. 05 Aug 2024
Experts Can Be Wrong!Art, Glatisant the Questing Beast, King Pellinore, Metropolitan Museum of ArtThe Metropolitan Museum describes this wonderful object thusly: Title: Aquamanile in the Form of a Crowned Centaur Fighting a Dragon Date: 1200–1225 Geography: Made in possibly Hildesheim, Lower Saxony, Germany Culture: German Medium: Copper alloy Dimensions: Overall: 14 3/8 x 13 3/4 x 5 in., 8.347lb. (36.5 x 34.3 x 12.7 cm, 3786g) Classification: Metalwork-Copper alloy Credit Line: Rogers Fund, 1910 Accession Number: 10.37.2 ———————————— An aquamanile is a jug or ewer used to pour water for the washing of hands over a basin. ———————————— But the description is wrong. In reality, it is King Pellinore riding, or merely combined with, Glatisant, the Questing Beast, who has the head of a snake, the body of a leopard, the haunches of a lion (lacking here), and the feet of a hart, from the Medieval Arthurian stories. 30 Jul 2024
How Iran Covers the Olympics2024 Olympics, Bizarre, Iran, Islam
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