And I didn’t see this.
Just where are my tax dollars going?
It sure ain’t to fix the roads. There is a reason I don’t drive sports cars any more.
And I didn’t see this.
Just where are my tax dollars going?
It sure ain’t to fix the roads. There is a reason I don’t drive sports cars any more.
“What year is this?” “It is the Viking Age.” “That explains the Laser Raptor.” http://vlt.tc/1xyq
I’m all for order in our schools, and I am not really that fond of school ceremonies or assemblies, but damn.
Warrants issued for people who cheered at Senatobia graduation
SENATOBIA, Miss. — “My 18-year-old daughter, Lanarcia Walker, graduated from Senatobia High,†Linda Walker said.
The pomp and circumstance did not last long for some Mississippi families.
“He said ‘you did it baby’, waived his towel and went out the door,†Walker explained.
“When she went across the stage I just called her name out. ‘Lakaydra’. Just like that,†Ursula Miller said she shouted about her niece.
Miller and Henry Walker were two of the four people asked to leave Senatobia High School’s graduation ceremony for cheering.
Police at Northwest Mississippi Community College, where the high school ceremony was held, said the superintendent asked the crowd not to scream and to hold their applause until the end.
Otherwise, they would be asked to leave.
However, that wasn’t the end of it.
“A week or two later, I was served with some papers,†Miller explained.
The papers threatened to throw them in jail.
Senatobia Municipal School District Superintendent Jay Foster filed ‘disturbing the peace’ charges against the people who yelled at graduation.
Officers issued warrants for their arrests with a possible $500 bond.
That is a dick move if I’ve ever heard one. Rules are rules, but breaking them should have an appropriate punishment.
I find much in common with hoplohobia in this fellow’s tale of learning to stall a plane. Initially I was contemptuous, but then it hit me that my first fears of firearms as a young man were also filled with such magical thinking. I overcame it on my own, but I cannot fault him for coming to a similar outcome with a coach.
Today, I encountered the rare IRS employee who retained his humanity, which meant he could acknowledge and lament the inhumanity of his fellow employees in unjustly confiscating a company’s funds in violation of the IRS’ own regulations. “It can happen,” he said matter-of-factly.
To the rest of them, I recite some A.D. Hope:
The Kings
The lion in deserts royally takes his prey;
Gaunt crags cast back the hunting eagle’s scream.
The King of Parasites, delicate, white and blind,
Ruling his world of fable even as they,
Dreams out his greedy and imperious dream
Immortal in the bellies of mankind.
In a rich bath of pre-digested soup,
Warm in the pulsing bowel, safely shut
From the bright ambient horror of sun and air,
is slender segments ripening loop by loop,
Broods the voluptuous monarch of the gut,
The Tapeworm, the prodigious Solitaire.
Alone among the royal beasts of prey
He takes no partner, no imperial mate
Seeks his embrace and bears his clamorous brood;
Within himself, in soft and passionate play,
Two sexes in their vigour celebrate
The raptures of helminthine solitude.
From the barbed crown that hooks him to his host,
The limble ribbon, fecund, flat and wet
Sways as the stream’s delicious juices move;
And as the ripe joints rupture and are lost,
Quivers in the prolonged, delirious jet
And spasm of unremitting acts of love.
And Nature no less prodigal in birth
In savage profusion spreads his royal sway:
Herds are his nurseries till the mouths of men
At public feasts, or the domestic hearth,
Or by the hands of children at their play,
Transmit his line to human flesh again.
The former times, as emblems of an age,
Graved the gier-eagle’s pride, the lion’s great heart,
Leviathan sporting in the perilous sea;
Pictured on History’s of the Muse’s page,
All knew the King, the Hero, set apart
To stand up stiff against calamity,
Breed courage amid a broken nation’s groans,
Cherish the will in men about to die,
To chasten with just rule a barbarous tribe
And guard, at last the earth that kept his bones.
And still the Muse, who does not flatter or lie,
Finds for our age a symbol to describe.
The secret life of Technocratic Man,
Abject desire, base fear that shapes his law,
His idols of the cave, the mart, the sty –
No lion at bay for a beleaguered clan,
No eagle with the serpent in his claw,
Nor dragon soter with his searing eye,
But the great, greedy, parasitic worm,
Sucking the life of nations from within
Blind and degenerate, snug in excrement.
`Behold your dream!’ she says. `View here the form
And mirror of Time, the Shape you trusted in
While your world crumbled and my heavens were rent.’
With Michigan State University!
You will likely be as well. Whether you like it or not.
Have a looksee at something I was working on last week.
So, a fellow employee is doing some work for his church in the shop during his off-hours. He buys the materials through work (getting their price and not yours and mine) and is only charged for the hours needed for someone to put it together and paint it.
This will be going around the maintenance door on the roof of the church. It’s 5 pieces that will surround the small solid enclosure and it also has a gate. Each piece is about 4ft tall. The frames are built from 2in x 2in square tubing with mitered corners and the panel material is 16 gauge formed sheet metal that is tacked to vertical 10 gauge rod.
RNS Blogstation Tacoma (aka: Firebase Blue) has 6ft chain link fencing that separates the back yard from the front and wraps around the whole of the rear of the property. There is a walk-through gate on the north side of the house and a drive through gate on the south side. I have used those oddly expensive plastic slats to make it harder to see through, but I am now thinking of replacing the frontage portion of the chain link with something like this (except 6ft tall).
It wouldn’t be bullet resistant or even really vehicle proof, but it would put up a nice front. If I powder coated them, it would be very rust resistant. Most importantly, you wouldn’t be able to see through it without walking up to it. I would pour concrete anchors with embedded 1.5in x 1.5in posts sticking out a few inches and then simply set the fencing sections onto these posts and weld them onto the embeds.
I asked my boss about this and I would get the same deal on steel pricing and be able to do all the work at home (except for the cutting of the panel material).
I have also always wanted to build a bigger and better porch for the front of the house and am thinking of doing so out of steel since the contractors who want to build it out of wood have quoted me in the $6k range. I could do the construction of the porch myself and just pay the contractor to attach it to the house.
I would use the same panel material to cover the sides of the lower portion of the porch so that I could use the area underneath as locking storage.
What say ye?
Is this an attractive enough design? Would you put something like this on the front side of your home?
It’s been a while since I have posted an update on the happenings at work and in the Fab Shop. So why not today?
At work, I’ve put the finishing touches on a number of Flying Buttresses. This was one of “the small ones.”
The fitters love me so much, they leave me big “gifts” in the assembly. The 1/4in gaps weren’t much of a problem. Not even the 3/8 gaps caused me to pause. But the angle gap there in the middle I could stick my thumb in.
We also welded up some column caps/buckets. The box is 16″x12″x4″ and was to be completely welded, inside and out, as well as the top brackets, all the way around where they connect to the top of the box.
Once you get the five welds inside done, and two on either of the outside welds, according to our infrared thermal scanner, you can fry an egg on it.
I am actually passing this box design onto the instructors at the school as a weld sequence test. Just put the tacked together box on the front desk and ask the students to list which welds they’d do first, second, etc.. Every one of the guys in Fab Shop I showed the picture and described the weld req’s to failed. I likely would have too had I not walked into the project after five were already done.
Btw, there were 60 some-odd of these we did over two days.
Speaking of the Fab Shop, I’ve been relatively busy. Shop goes from 1730 to 2130, but being a working guy, I am not always able to make it for the start time and I am definitely not able to stay until closing time if I want to get up for work at 0430. So I work from a little before 1745 to around 2000-2030 and call it good.
I made one of these for my sister
And I’m making this for the guy who does my tattoo work.
He wanted to be able to carry 500-800lbs off the back of his Jeep Wrangler. He’ll be able to tow another Wrangler with this, if the need arises.
Oh, and it does this too
It’s currently about half painted. The muggy heat means hours of wait time while the paint dries.
Lastly, there was a regional Welding Rodeo in Western Washington a couple weeks back. Two teams of students from the school signed up, as did our Fabrication instructor and a couple of other teachers who work at the school.
For the Fabrication competition, you needed to incorporate “Fire and Ice” in your project. So the instructor team made a hoop and drilled a large number of holes on the top side of it with the idea of hooking it up to a propane cylinder.
Much disappointment was had. Stupid government mandated internal valve regulators.
I suggested trying the MAPP gas cylinder. And after some fiddling about with fittings, much happiness arrived.
That is with the valve only about opened to the 25% level and without adding oxygen. Which is good, because our Joan of Arc there was whining after about 10 seconds of stepping into the circle.
I’ll post some pics of the hitch carrier when the paint is done and see what other projects I walk into.
Laterz.
But somebody on the left has got to pretend to be worried about “the children”.
Self-proclaimed socialist and progressive favorite Sen. Bernie Sanders (I., Vt.) laments the idea that Americans can choose between “23 underarm spray deodorants†as children go hungry under President Obama’s economy.
“You don’t necessarily need a choice of 23 underarm spray deodorants when children are hungry in this country,†Sanders told John Harwood in an interview posted Tuesday.
I don’t know what he has against spray deoderants. Maybe he uses Secret?