Will we be seeing snow here soon? That doesn’t seem to be the case, at least here at the lake. But up north there may be some, but not enough that will accumulate or cause traffic issues. That’s fine with me. We’ll be seeing snow soon enough.
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Two downsides to the cooler temperatures have been the need to turn on the heat – mostly to take the chill off in the morning – and the tire pressure monitors on cars and trucks tripping because tire pressures have dropped. (The latter happened to both the WP Mom’s car and the trusty RAM 1500, requiring me break out the Official Weekend Pundit Air Compressor and Official Weekend Pundit Tire Pressure Gauge this morning.)
Heating season has started thought it’s going to be on-and-off for the next month or so. One of the things I like about The Gulch is that it is pretty efficient when it comes to heating and cooling. It costs a lot less to heat than The Manse, even with higher fuel prices and the fact that quite a bit of the heat for The Manse was coming from a woodstove. There are a couple of things I need to do to make The Gulch even more efficient – replacing two casement windows on the second floor and replacing the slider leading out to the porch with something better.
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Now this is just weird: Japanese village struggling with low population creates life-sized dolls to mimic feeling of bustling society.
To paraphrase what was written on Instapundit, it sounds like something out of a Twilight Zone episode.
The hamlet of Ichinono, which has less than 60 residents and only one child, is trying to fill the void with stuffed mannequins, which they dress up and place around the community — and even pose on swings and bicycles.Is this a preview of what we might experience in the US in the future as our birthrate is collapsing, already below the so-called replacement rate and heading downwards? Will this happen in our towns in the future or will we merely add to the number of ghost towns and depopulated sections of cities like Detroit?
“We’re probably outnumbered by puppets,” 88-year-old resident Hisayo Yamazaki told AFP.
Yamazaki explained that although older inhabitants there had children, they encouraged them to attend college away from the tiny community about an hour northwest of Kyoto.
“We were afraid they would become unmarriageable if they remained stuck in a remote place like this,” she told the outlet.
“Out they went, and they never came back, getting jobs elsewhere. We’re now paying the price.”
Twilight Zone indeed.
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Is the Left blocking access to early voting sites as a means of suppressing voters in a deep red area? It appears so.
The havoc wrought by Hurricane Helene in western North Carolina brought disaster to homes and families, but that has not stopped Democrats from blocking the approval of emergency early voting sites in the heavily Republican area. The refusal to act forced the GOP-led state legislature to intervene.Ironically, in adjacent deep-blue counties Democrats have already taken measures to ensure there are new voting locations to replace the ones damaged by Hurricane Helene. Seems like a double standard to me.
Democrat-run local elections boards in McDowell and Henderson counties have failed to approve additional early voting sites in the disaster-stricken area, despite increasing calls for more access to voting. Both counties voted for Donald Trump in 2020.
“Ensuring the right to vote is upheld for western NC citizens devastated by Hurricane Helene should be a non-partisan issue,” western North Carolina native Clay McCreary said, according to The Carolina Journal. McReary is North Carolina political director of Restoration of America, an organization that has been advocating for additional voting opportunities in the disaster area. “We simply cannot allow the people of western North Carolina who have lost so much to lose their voice in the political process.”
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In a related post it appears Democrats are also trying to intimidate black voters. A Democrat Super PAC is running ads in cities with large black populations warning them that “their voter files are public.”
One of the ads, funded by Future Forward PAC, gives the false impression that it is aired by a government agency called the "National Voter Report." The ad begins with an "election alert" with the words "Who you vote for is private, but IF you vote is public information. After this election, your voter record will be updated, and your friends and family will be able to see how often you vote."It’s interesting that the ads are running in cities in swing states. Are these ads a means of forcing black voters to the polls even if they don’t want to vote? Is there a subtext to these ads, that subtext being “We’ll also know how you voted and if you don’t cast a vote for the correct candidates we’ll make sure everyone knows it”?
There is no federal or state law that compels U.S. citizens to vote. Although states keep a record of which elections individual voters participated in, such information is often difficult or confusing for the average person to access.
The more-than-$500,000 ad campaign appears to be targeted exclusively at various metropolitan areas, according to data obtained by the Washington Free Beacon. The bulk of the ads are airing in the Atlanta, Philadelphia, Detroit, and Milwaukee markets.
Charming.
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Every Republican President is Hitler.
Who knew?
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November 5th is ten days away and I’ll be glad when all of this campaign madness is over. I have a feeling a lot of people agree with me.
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And that’s the news from Lake Winnipesaukee, where the leaves are falling in increasing numbers, almost all of the boats are now out of the water, and where Monday is returning...yet again.