Thursday, July 11

Mell of a Hess


 It has always amazed me how it is ok to say cuss words with the wrong letter than to say the actual word, even though everyone knows you are cussing.  It just seems a little two-faced or hypocritical to me...  so instead of saying HELL OF A MESS, I am ok with MELL OF A HESS.


Unless you are BRAIN DEAD, you know exactly who I am talking about... Boe Jiden...


The Dems are in PANIC MODE as they say trying their best to spin the situation positively...  but once you have some Dem congressional leader and the mainstream, liberal media turning against him, it would appear that it is all over but the shouting.


Boe Jiden is not dropping out of the race according to what WH sources say, what he says, and what his wife and son say as well...

HOWEVER...  they are not donors!!!


Dan Bongino says there are three things standing in Boe Jiden's way:

  • He's aging poorly
  • He's not good at anything
  • Donors will cut him off


Now...  can Boe Jiden be replaced?

Sure, he can, if he steps down...  but that won't happen because of his ego, because of his wife, and because of his son who needs his sentence commuted.

If he does step down, who will replace him?

No one but Kamala Harris will have access to his political war chest.

So, is there enough time to fund raise?

If Boe Jiden steps down from the race, he might as well step down from the Presidency, leaving Kamala Harris as President.

What kind of job do you think she will do?


This is a huge problem for DEMS...  and as I said, the Dems have gotten themselves into a Mell of  Hess.

Somewhat Politrical

 






Growing Chinese Presence in CUBA


ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (NewsNation) — New satellite images released Monday have renewed concern over China‘s growing presence in Cuba, reigniting fears that President Xi Jinping’s forces are using the island to spy on American military bases.

The new report comes a year after the Biden administration accused China of upgrading Cuban intelligence bases for years — one of those bases just over 50 miles from a U.S. military base in Guantanamo Bay.

CCR

 

Wednesday, July 10

Crazy Drivers

When I was about 19-25 years old, I made a point of driving fast wherever I went, whether it was inside the city limits, on a country road or interstate highway.


After a while, I realized that driving that fast was not necessary and it was also stressful because as a driver you were always on the outlook for law enforcement.  So, I confined my fast driving to just the interstate highways.


But, after several speeding tickets and no radar detectors on board, I decided to confine my excess speed to 5-10 miles over the speed limits.


When I retired in 2015, I had completely lost the desire to drive fast and I made a point of making sure that I left home with plenty of time so that if I ran into any traffic delays, I would still be able to arrive at my appts on time.


When I drive now, I laugh, smirk, or smile at all the drivers that are driving fast either because they want to or because they are LATE to wherever they are going.


I also get a big kick out of those drivers (mainly young) who cannot gauge DEPTH OF FIELD, so they run up onto the backside of another vehicle and have to slam on the brakes.  This is especially humorous when drivers are trying to pass slow traffic by going into the slower lane, and even with an increased amount of speed they misjudge the distance,


I also like those drivers that like to tailgate.  There is usually one of three things that I do when that happens to me:

1. maintain my speed

2.  slow down

3. turn on my headlights


However, I have refrained from any recent behavioral actions like this because you never know when an ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT or some jerk-off might get pissed off and pull out a firearm and start shooting.  So, I just stay in the slow lanes and let crazy drivers be crazy drivers.

Inside

 

Across Asia

 

Bench

 


Shot

 


Taxes

Intruder

 


Diet


 

Viable

 


Politeness


 

In The NEWS


Sports, Entertainment, & Culture
> 2024 UEFA European Championship semifinals kick off today with Spain taking on France (3 pm ET, Fox); see full preview (More) | Eighteen-player roster for Team USA men's soccer Olympic team announced (More)

> Shaboozey becomes the first Black male artist to simultaneously top Billboard's Hot 100 and Hot Country Songs charts with "A Bar Song (Tipsy)" (More)

> Complete rosters for 94th MLB All-Star Game (July 16) announced, including 32 first time All-Stars (More) | Twelve-team field set for Paris Olympics men's basketball competition (More)


Science & Technology

> James Webb Space Telescope discovers a Jupiter-like exoplanet roughly 64 light-years away with an atmosphere predominantly made of hydrogen sulfide; compound is responsible for the "rotten egg" odor (More) | James Webb telescope 101 (More, w/video)

> Ex-Meta researchers debut EvolutionaryScale, an AI-powered large language model, to predict protein structures; model was trained on 2.7 billion protein sequences and structures (More)

> Neuroscientists capture in real time the brain activity that underlies the subjective feeling of curiosity; patients underwent brain imaging while attempting to decode depictions of ambiguous situations (More)


Business & Markets
> US stock markets close mixed (S&P 500 +0.1%, Dow -0.1%, Nasdaq +0.3%) ahead of inflation data and batch of Q2 earnings reports; S&P 500, Nasdaq close at record highs (More)

> Boeing to plead guilty to criminal fraud charge tied to two 737 Max crashes in 2018 and 2019 that killed 346 people; Boeing to pay $244M fine, invest at least $455M in safety and compliance programs (More) | Boeing in talks with US Defense Department over contracts that may be compromised due to guilty plea (More)

> Mike Bloomberg's charity donates $1B to Johns Hopkins University's medical school, resulting in free tuition for most medical students starting this fall (More)


Politics & World Affairs
> Roughly 3 million people in Texas are without power as of this writing after Beryl made landfall as a Category 1 hurricane—the season's first hurricane to hit the US; at least three deaths reported in Texas (More) | Beryl weakens to tropical depression; track it here (More)

> Three Columbia University deans placed on indefinite leave over text messages that were allegedly antisemitic in nature; university to launch antisemitism and antidiscrimination faculty training program (More)

> Kenyan cult leader and 94 codefendants begin trial over terrorism charges related to the deaths of more than 400 followers (More) | See our previous write-up (More)


SOURCE:  1440 NEWS

Not a Sports Fan


I grew up in Alexandria, Virginia, just 8 miles outside of Washington, DC going south towards Mount Vernon.  From a very early age, I was exposed to the Washington Redskins and the Washington Senators who later moved to Baltimore and changed their name.


The Washington Redskins were always being watched in our household, even after we moved to North Carolina in 1966, so much so that I became disinterested with sports.  It wasn't just football, but we watched baseball, basketball, and tennis.  It was not just professional sports but also college sports as well.


When I got married, it was a mandate to have some sort of sports activity playing on the television when those relatives came to visit whether it was Thanksgiving or Christmas.  And if we were lucky and had to visit their homes, then sports activities were playing on the television screen in their homes as well.


When I was in high school, I played football, basketball, baseball, and was on the track team.  I guess that I just got so inundated with sports that I just lost my interest in playing as well as watching.


I never really got into tennis or golf and as I got older, baseball was the first sports activity over which I lost interest - mainly because it was so damn slow.  When I did play the game, my position was first base.


The second sport that fell off my radar was football and while I really enjoyed playing the game, I just got tired watching.  My position was right defensive linebacker, and I was on the the kicking and receiving teams.  I had tried out for fullback but could not hold onto the ball like I needed to.


My interest in basketball lasted the longest which I believe was due to going to college and being part of the ACC conference.  There were always some exciting teams in that conference, especially when Michael Jordon played for UNC at Chapel Hill.  My wife and I continued to follow his career with the Bulls, but once he retired, our interest in that sport died as well.


Today I hardly ever watch any kind of sports activity on the television, unless it is the Super Bowl or the NBA playoffs.  To tell you the truth, I am not sure why I lost interest in sports, unless it was because I was so immersed in sports most of my life.


The last thing I want to do when I am bored and wanting something to do these days is watch something that has to do with sports.  I'm not even interested in watching the Ninja Warrior competitions.


 

Somewhat Political





 

ANTS Perform Life Saving Operations

 

Florida carpenter ants perform amuptations on nestmates when their legs are injured. 
(Image credit: Bart Zijlstra)



Ants in Florida perform life-saving surgery on their peers, scientists have discovered. They are only the second animal in the world known to do this — along with humans.


The researchers found that Florida carpenter ants (Camponotus floridanus) identify limb wounds on their nestmates, then treat them with either cleaning or amputation.


The team published its findings Tuesday (July 2) in the journal Current Biology.            READ MORE...

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