Saturday, August 30, 2014

Wut?

I'm watching an episode of Mr and Mrs North, a 1953 tv show, the plot of which revolves around the titular "seven sacred rubies" being smuggled in from "Angkor Wat - the fabulous lost city of India".

I know it was originally a Hindu temple, but "India"? Cambodia may have been an "Indianised kingdom", but that doesn't mean it was actually Indian.

Labels:

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

     <-- Older Post                     ^ Home                    Newer Post -->

Between Everett and Walla Walla

A few shots from the drives to and from Walla Walla:

This is Highway 12 leaving Walla Walla - they call it a "freeway" but where I come from freeways don't have intersections!


A vinyard


A wind farm


Seriously, Yakima?


The mighty Columbia


 A bird flies over the Walla Walla river...


... a pelican!


This is the Snake


Another wind farm


Irrigation does make all the difference




Various landscapes with dramatic clouds






Approaching the Cascades from the east


Going through the Snoqualmie Pass from the west


Labels:

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

     <-- Older Post                     ^ Home                    Newer Post -->

Walla Walla

Walla Walla, Washington. (What a great name!) Here are a few shots from around the city. I'll do separate posts about the places we went specifically.

Two of the Welcome signs




This bumper sticker makes me smile


One of the best reasons to visit Walla Walla - the wineries!


The Blue Mountains look rather like a matte painting background


Downtown has sculptures on a lot of the corners


Chicken or egg?

Labels:

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

     <-- Older Post                     ^ Home                    Newer Post -->

Thursday, August 28, 2014

all we need to know

The existence of a thing called Bullets and Burgers tells us all we need to know about America's strange relationship with guns.

Labels: ,

2 Comments:

At 1:46 PM, August 29, 2014 Anonymous Kathie had this to say...

While obviously the dead instructor is a victim, it can be argued that in a way the child who shot him is one as well. I don't know whether anyone has publicly addressed this issue yet, but I worry about the lifetime of trauma (PTSD?) and sense of guilt that the 9-year-old could well suffer.

 
At 5:02 PM, August 29, 2014 Anonymous Mark P had this to say...

Based on what I have seen of situations like this (obviously nothing exactly the same), I think the little girl is likely to be scarred permanently. A young girl of driving age who lived across the street from my parents had a little kid she was babysitting killed by a moment's inattention in a car. Her own life was destroyed as well.

I read that the instructor was a true believer.

 

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

     <-- Older Post                     ^ Home                    Newer Post -->

Tuesday, August 26, 2014

Pics from the Edmonds - Kingston ferry

A few shots to brighten your Tuesday (did I say "brighten"? Hahahaha this is the Pacific North-west!):

Seattle


fog on the water


fog with sailboat


cute fogbank

Labels:

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

     <-- Older Post                     ^ Home                    Newer Post -->

Monday, August 25, 2014

A provocative question

If protesters hadn’t looted and burnt down that QuikTrip on the second day of protests, would Ferguson be a point of worldwide attention? It’s impossible to know, but all the non-violent protests against police killings across the country that go unreported seem to indicate the answer is no. It was the looting of a Duane Reade after a vigil that brought widespread attention to the murder of Kimani Gray in New York City. The media’s own warped procedure instructs that riots and looting are more effective at attracting attention to a cause. (asked by Willie Osterweil at the new inquiry)

Labels: , ,

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

     <-- Older Post                     ^ Home                    Newer Post -->

Crazy?

Brad Paisley did a song about race that raised a bit of a kerfuffle. He's also got one about atheism. (Or agnosticism, as he puts it.) Or he thinks he has.

As one country source puts it,
The lyrics are written from the point of view of a non-believer, but Paisley himself was raised in the Southern Baptist tradition and still attends church. (Taste of Country)
And here's Paisley himself in an article on Faith Gateway:
The song is written from the point of view of someone baffled by people of faith. ... Most puzzling to the skeptic in the song is not the faith itself, but the actions that such faith produces. Things such as mission trips to dangerous regions, baptism, hospital visits to strangers, sobriety, forgiveness of atrocities, talk of heaven, etc., all must look insane to someone who is agnostic.
But the lyrics really don't catch what atheists think about Christians. And frankly, his insistence that only Christians do "good works" is annoying (though not nearly as annoying as characterizing nonbelievers as "poor lost soul[s] like me" ripe for conversion). The line in the song is about sitting "by the bedside of a stranger in a cold hospital room", but the source for it? A dying cousin for whom "[t]here weren't five minutes of intensive care that there weren't at least two church members at the hospital, around the clock." Not exactly strangers.

But let's not lose track of the song's denouement: Pascal's wager, conversion of "a poor lost soul", and "If I ever really needed help, well you know who I’d call" (because of course other atheists/agnostics/skeptics wouldn't help him out).

So I doubt that the "new backlash from religious conservatives" Paisley is "expecting" (according to Charisma News, anyway) will be as strong as all that. After all, this is as pro-Christian a "skeptic" song as you could find.


Those crazy Christians, I was gonna sleep in today
But the church bells woke me up and they’re a half a mile away
Those crazy Christians, dressed up drivin’ down my street
Get their weekly dose of guilt before they head to Applebee’s

They pray before they eat and they pray before they snore
They pray before a football game and every time they score
Every untimely passing, every dear departed soul
Is just another good excuse to bake a casserole

Those crazy Christians, go and jump on some airplane
And fly to Africa or Haiti, risk their lives in Jesus’ name
No, they ain’t the late night party kind
They curse the devil’s whiskey while they drink the Savior’s wine

A famous TV preacher has a big affair and then
One tearful confession and he’s born again again
Someone yells hallelujah and they shout and clap and sing
It’s like they can’t wait to forgive someone for just about anything
Those crazy Christians

Instead of being outside on this sunny afternoon
They’re by the bedside of a stranger in a cold hospital room
And every now and then they meet a poor lost soul like me
Who’s not quite sure just who or what or how he ought to be
They march him down the aisle and then the next thing that you know
They dunk him in the water and here comes another one of those crazy Christians

They look to heaven their whole life
And I think what if they’re wrong but what if they’re right
You know it’s funny, much as I’m baffled by it all
If I ever really needed help, well you know who I’d call
Is those crazy Christians

Labels: , ,

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

     <-- Older Post                     ^ Home                    Newer Post -->

Sunday, August 24, 2014

The Week in Entertainment

DVD: Two (of four) episodes of Shetland, a well-done series based on Ann Cleeves's "Shetland Quartet" (Red Bones, Raven Black, Dead Water and Blue Lightning). They're filming more next year, going off on their own, I guess, since they've done all but one of the books (much like the Dalziel & Pascoe series did). Interestingly, I see the program originally broadcast them as two one-hour episodes per story, but they've been consolidated on the DVD as two-hour episodes.

TV: Doctor Who - yes yes yes. I love the new theme/title sequence, I think I'm gonna love the new Doctor, and Clara might actually turn into a real character before she leaves. Also? "I'm not your boyfriend." "I never thought you were." "I didn't say it was your mistake." Yes. And was that a Matt-Smith-Doctor Ganger mask they used when Capaldi disguised himself as an android? All in all, a very nice handover episode.

Read: Finished The Magician's Land, which was an utterly satisfying end to the trilogy. Lovely, lovely writing and a helluva story. Colorless Tsukuru Tazaki and His Years of Pilgrimage by Haruki Murakami was delivered to my Kindle (from a pre-order) and I devoured it on the plane ride yesterday. It's one of the quiet, almost melancholy ones (unlike its predecessor, 1Q94), accessible and haunting. I also read Designated Daughters, a Deborah Knott novel; this one's almost overrun with her family, but still a nice little read.

Labels:

3 Comments:

At 9:06 PM, August 31, 2014 Anonymous Adrian Morgan had this to say...

I'm surprised you like the the new theme. I'm surprised anyone likes it. I find it bland, half-hearted, completely lacking in excitement/passion.

The first two episodes of the season have been so-so in my opinion. Some good elements, some bad. The single worst thing about Episode One is that it had Strax in it. A reformed bad guy who "accidentally" commands people to surrender is a stupid idea which, as comic relief, got old long ago.

I do agree that Capaldi is doing a good job. I can see elements of classic Doctors 3, 4, 5 and 6 in his personality.

 
At 5:56 PM, September 01, 2014 Blogger The Ridger, FCD had this to say...

Yes, a lot of 3 especially. As to the theme, I suspect you're in the majority. I like the time-ness of it, the chimes, and the graphics. I may grow tired of it, but right now I like it.

 
At 5:56 PM, September 01, 2014 Blogger The Ridger, FCD had this to say...

ps - I'm over Strax myself.

 

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

     <-- Older Post                     ^ Home                    Newer Post -->

Salmon at Sekiu

Here's some odd carvings for the By the Bay Cafe in Sekiu, and the view from the front window.


Sekiu Welcomes You
welcome sign for Sekiu

Girl salmon fish (I don't know what kind, but on reconsideration, that's not a salmon face, and it's different from the next one!) up by the main road
carving of a walking salmon is skirt, halter top, and sneakers

The By the Bay Cafe
by the bay cafe

Boy salmon outside the cafe
carving of a walking salmon in shorts and sneakers

The view of the other side of the harbor
across the Sekiu harbor

Bald eagle over the harbor
bald eagle

Adult and juvenile gulls in the Sekiu harbor
gulls on docks in harbor

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

     <-- Older Post                     ^ Home                    Newer Post -->

Birds around Neah Bay

A gull
gull over beach

Crows
crows over water

I think this is a Wilson's Warbler? Maybe?
small greeny bird with yellow face on beach

Cormorants
cormorants on rock

Great Blue Heron
great blue heron in bay

A crow
crow in fir

A whole group of barn swallows
barn swallows on line

Barn Swallows
two barn swallows

Pair of adult bald eagles with a juvenile
bald eagle family on beach

Bald eagle with following crow
bald eagle and crow over water

Labels: ,

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

     <-- Older Post                     ^ Home                    Newer Post -->

More of Neah Bay

Or more accurately the coast between Neah Bay and a little place called Sekui (SEEK you), where we ate one evening at the Bay View Cafe.


coast

coast

coast



coast



coast

coast

coast

coast

coast

coast

coast

coast

coast



coast

coast

coast

coast

coast

coast

coast

coast

coast

Labels:

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

     <-- Older Post                     ^ Home                    Newer Post -->