This doesn’t look *quite* right…
This doesn’t look *quite* right…
This, my friends, is Utah capitalism at its finest:
There are, of course, people getting all twitchy about this. The Brigham City Police have checked him out and given him and his business model the all-clear.
This young man, in the area of 600 South 200 East, has a twist on a lemonade stand. Yep, he’s selling beer … ROOT…
Posted by Brigham City Police Department on Tuesday, July 16, 2019
Gee, that’s swell.
The charges involve at least seven homicides, many of which were recorded by the perpetrators,
All cultures are beautiful
Some of the suspects were high school students at the time of the slayings
The new normal is glorious.
You know what we need? Open borders.
Poindexter asks the question that those in charge (I’m looking at *you*, ghost of Ted Kennedy on a day pass from Niflhel) should have asked a few generations ago:
Because we’re in our civilizations decline and are not culturally allowed to openly notice it.
Back in 1989, CBS ran an “as it happened” bit on the launch of Apollo 11… many hours of uninterrupted 1969-era news coverage of the launch. And I managed to screw up programming the VCR, ending up with nothing. Grrr. Fortunately a mere thirty years later they have done it again… but this time, on YouTube. A four and a half hour chunk of wall-to-wall vintage 1969 TV, currently downloading. 2.1 gigabytes at 500 K/sec is gonna take a little bit of a while, I suppose…
With luck they’ll do the same in a few days for the landing itself.
And here are a number of photos of the many aircraft that paid my little neck of the woods a visit in order to fight the massive wildfire.
A year ago Hasbro launched their “Haslab” crowdfunding project. This is for developing – or not – toys of unusual size and cost that would be financially dangerously risky to develop without crowdfunding. Their first project was the ginormous Jabba’s Sail Barge from “Return of the Jedi;” it was successfully developed and sold to the nearly 6,000 backers for $500 a pop. They’ve come out with a new project: a 27-inch-tall Unicron from “Transformers: The Movie.” A 27-inch-tall figure toy is not that unusual; before Disney screwed the pooch on Star Wars, they were selling Darth Vader and stormtrooper toys bigger than that. But what Hasbro is doing with their Unicron figure it to make it as mind-bogglingly complex as possible. And consequently, the price is a bit much… $574.99. But if you just have to have a giant Unicron that somehow transforms between robot and planet forms, or you want to speculate on what the ebay resale value on these might be (there are a number of Sail Barges on ebay now all with Buy It Now prices of a grand and up), then here ya go. With 46 days left in the crowdfunding campaign, there are currently 920 out of 8,000 backers. Maybe you could buy two and sell one on ebay for twice the price, thus you end up with a free Unicron. Better still, buy three, sell one, send one to me.
As previously illustrated, late Sunday night an electrically interesting cloud floated by leaving a few wildfires in its wake. I stayed up excessively late photographing it and processing photos; by 4:30 AM or so I’d had about enough and went to bed. Before that I checked the progress of the fires and it seemed like the firefighters seemed like they might have had a handle on it. It looked like nothing of much more interest was going to happen.
I wonder how that prediction panned out…
So last night about 11PM a single solitary cloud blew past, about ten miles north of here. What harm could one cloud do? What risk could it possibly pose? Behold:
The latest in replacement news:
Well, there goes another franchise I don’t need to worry about spending any more time or money on.
Shooting for an elevation of 20 meters and a translation. Just a short hop, but it’ll be an untethered flight. Following that will hopefully be a detailed description of the Starship, and within a few Musk-months a flight to 20 kilometers.