8/24/2025

Thoughts On A Sunday

It’s recover day from yesterday’s activities, sleeping in to almost 6:30 this morning. The normal Sunday chores got taken care of, just a little later than usual.

One thing I did notice over the weekend was the heavy traffic into, out of, and around the Lakes Region, with a lot of people getting one last summer weekend in before schools start again. A lot of schools start this week while others won’t start until the day after Labor Day. Mush as it had when I was going to school.

Speaking of Labor Day, that’s next weekend and I expect we’ll see very heavy traffic starting sometime late this coming Thursday and ending sometime Monday afternoon. Some folks will be pulling their boats out of the water and closing up their summer camps over the weekend. Others will do so over the next few weeks leading up to Columbus Day. (The Official Weekend Pundit Lake Winnipesaukee Runabout will come out of the water before the end of October.) Many of the summer food stands, restaurants, and attractions will be dialing back after Labor Day, mostly open only on weekends until Columbus Day. Others will close their doors until next May.

I have no idea where the summer went as it seems that the Fourth of July was just a couple of weeks ago.

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This sounds like it’s going to be fun!

It looks like 4chan will refuse to pay the daily UK Online Safety fines.

Basically the UK is fining 4chan because it is exercising its freedom of speech in the US, posting about the Orwellian turn of the UK government.

A lawyer representing the online message board 4chan says it won't pay a proposed fine by the UK's media regulator as it enforces the Online Safety Act.

According to Preston Byrne, managing partner of law firm Byrne & Storm, Ofcom has provisionally decided to impose a £20,000 fine "with daily penalties thereafter" for as long as the site fails to comply with its request.

"Ofcom's notices create no legal obligations in the United States," he told the BBC, adding he believed the regulator's investigation was part of an "illegal campaign of harassment" against US tech firms.

Ofcom has declined to comment while its investigation continues.

"4chan has broken no laws in the United States - my client will not pay any penalty," Mr Byrne said.

The US government has already stated the UK does not have the power to enforce their laws in the US against either organizations or individuals in the US who have not broken US laws, particularly when it comes to Constitutional Rights.

From the comments in the linking post:

If 4chan doesn't have a physical corporate presence in the UK how would the UK imagine it is in a position to extract fines?

And this one:

No mere treaty can threaten the free speech of American Citizens, and any fine trying to do so from overseas is null and void on the get-go. Being incorporated in Delaware and not having foreign operations, 4Chan can do as it wishes under our Constitution and Amendment I. Go ahead and levy meaningless fines to show just how limited you really are. Please. Make fools of yourselves so the people of the UK can see you for what you are: children trying to bash down free speech to get their way. It was never about protecting children, but about silencing adults and those in power in the UK have said as much.

Indeed.

I can almost hear George Orwell spinning in his grave and with a ghostly moan saying “I wrote 1984 as a warning, not as a how-to manual!”

It will be interesting to see how all this will play out.

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On more than one occasion I have stated that I believe that social media is not the great panacea so many thought it would be. Yes, it makes instant communications to a group of people a possibility, but it has psychological effects that very few, if any, thought about. On thing I have mentioned more than once is the anonymity that allows otherwise reasonable and nice people become absolute monsters online. Social boundaries that exist when people are face-to-face disappear when people are on social media. Their ways of thinking, their ways of interacting with people change, and not necessarily for the better.

When a healthy person has multiple roles in life, they develop what we might call “modes.” These are mental states suited to their current circumstances, such as Work Mode, Parent Mode, or Friend Mode. Colloquially, we often refer to this as “putting on a hat.”

These modes may overlap at times—a doctor might need their Doctor Mode when advising a friend about a medical issue. Recently, in conversation with two friends, I was asked to “put on my data scientist hat” and explain something about statistics. But generally, these modes remain distinct.

Healthy flexibility, called adaptive compartmentalization, allows psychologically normal individuals to shift between roles effortlessly without losing a cohesive sense of self. Their core identity remains intact, and the modes do not fundamentally conflict. Even under stress, a healthy person can usually navigate these shifts, though it may take effort—for example, a father decompressing after a stressful day at work before switching to Daddy Mode to play with his kids.

Psychological fragmentation is the unhealthy extreme of this natural compartmentalization, typically caused by trauma. At its most severe, fragmentation becomes dissociation. Dissociative Identity Disorder (formerly called Multiple Personality Disorder) is the farthest extreme, where one fragment is unaware of the others.

--snip--

I posit that social media turns most of us into the worst version of ourselves because it does, under the cloak of anonymity, something unique.

It creates and facilitates a situation where, in healthy people, a negative “mode”—or, in less healthy people, a destructive fragment—can operate freely, without restraint or challenge, and often with lavish dopamine rewards.

Social media not only allows these negative fragments to flourish—it rewards and amplifies them. Over time, this persona can overshadow our real selves, fracturing our identity further.

I have seen this more than a few times. I would like to think I have managed to avoid this, for the most part.

Mind you, my only real social media outlets are Facebook, which I primarily use to keep in touch with family and friends, and some blogs. I rarely post to my own timeline on Facebook but will regularly react and comment to other people’s posts. About 90% of the time it’s a Like, 8% will be HaHa or Care replies, and the balance Sad replies. Comments are usually either informational or asking questions. I rarely, if ever delve into politics on Facebook. I save that for here or some of the other blogs out in the blogosphere.

In any case Read The Whole Thing to dive deeper into the psychological effects of social media. I don’t necessarily agree with everything in the post, but Holly makes a pretty good case about the problems with social media.

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Who’da thunk it?

It looks like Hawaii is learning the hard way that criminals will continue to break laws.

Criminals get guns without too much of a problem in this day and age, but they did that before 3D printers were common, too. So banning it, even if it stopped the private production of firearms, wasn't going to have much of an impact. However, now officials are shocked to learn that the law didn't stop felons from getting "ghost guns."

Ghost guns are those made privately by someone other than a manufacturer or those assembled from individual parts purchased separately. There are no serial numbers on such guns. Not that criminals really care one way or the other as it isn’t like they obtain their guns legally. All guns could be outlawed and confiscated tomorrow and criminals will still have them and will still be able to obtain them from many of the same organizations that smuggle drugs into the country.

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And that’s the news from Lake Winnipesaukee, where many of the summerfolk have made their last visit to the lake this year, boats are being pulled from the water, and where once again Monday is coming along to ruin our weekend.

8/23/2025

A Little Bit Of Small Town America

Today was our town’s Old Home Day, a day to celebrate our town by townsfolk past and present.

The day starts with a pancake breakfast at our local church and a 5K footrace that starts in our town’s “Village”, an area that is a historical district and includes homes and buildings dating back as early as the early 1800’s.

Later in the morning is a parade that starts at Town Hall and ends near our high school which is next to the big town cemetery. Once that has finished every heads to the Village Field which has food and crafts for sale, and games and amusements galore. Those activities last until early evening when a concert by our community band at the bandstand. Then around 9pm the fireworks start.

Those aren’t the only activities taking place as our local church hosts a “White Elephant” sale which has all kinds of things for sale. The WP Mom has helped deal with the jewelry up for sale for the past 20 years. There’s also a silent auction that takes place at the same time.

I can personally attest that the food offered for sale by the various food vendors was pretty darned good, having performed my duty to ensure the quality of the food being offered. There was pizza, steak and cheese sandwiches, fried dough, Chinese food, barbecue, sweet sausage, baked goods, ice cream, and a whole host of other foods for sale. The lines of people waiting to order or to pick up their food were long, but moved quickly.

There were plenty of amusements available running from bouncy houses and up through a bull-riding machine. Someone selling e-bikes was offering test drives around the Village Field.

The number of crafts for sale ran the gamut of crocheted table place-mats to mixed spices, pictures, some jewelry, and so on.

There were a lot more people attending than I’ve seen over the years. There were a lot more people both watching and participating in the parade than I’ve seen in years.

It was a darned good Old Home Day!

Friday Funny (Saturday Morning Edition) - Fluffy Checking Into A Hotel

8/17/2025

Thoughts On A Sunday

It’s been another 50:50 weekend up this way, with it being a nice day on Saturday and hot (90’s) and humid today with afternoon thunderstorms forecast (though not here). Ironically we get into the cooler temps (70’s) for the workweek. Not that I’m really complaining.

Last week I mentioned seeing an early start to “acorn fall” from the oaks, it starting about a month earlier than I’m used to seeing. It turns out it isn’t just acorns were seeing (or hearing), but a lot of sap from those same oaks. Seeing ‘dotting’ of sap on our windshields isn’t unusual at all. We see it in late spring and through the summer, thought it isn’t constant. However, I’ve noticed it has been heavier than I’ve ever seen.

A neighbor taking a walk around the neighborhood mentioned to me that our road feels ‘sticky’ and a quick test showed he was right. I’ve even see a sap ‘shadow’ under one of the oaks that overhangs a part of our road and what I thought might have been some condensation on the road under those branches turned out to be a layer of tree sap. I’ve also noticed that some of the leaves on the oaks in The Gulch’s back yard look like someone came by with a water hose and soaked them, but it wasn’t water.

It was tree sap.

I don’t recall ever seeing it like this.

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I have been thinking the same thing, too.

As the Instaprof brings forth via X:

Why is almost every Washington DC liberal protestor out this weekend white? 90%+.

DC is 50% black or brown and Hispanic.

It seems the only people against Trump bringing in the National Guard to bring law and order back into D.C. are people who don’t live there. As Eric Daugherty asks “Who brought them in?”

Who indeed?

Notice who isn’t protesting against safe communities?

Ironically, it seems that people in D.C. are feeling safer and have been praising President Trump for his crime-fighting efforts.

We know Chuck Schumer thinks Washington doesn’t need help because he feels safe walking the streets. I would feel safe too if I had the security detail he has surrounding him.

UPDATE: Now Black residents of Chicago are asking Trump to send National Guard troops there to help stop the killing and violence.

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So when is he going to move to Italy?

TDS Drives Jimmy Kimmel to Get Italian Citizenship.

Rosie O’Donnell moved to Ireland because of her TDS...and no one here in the US noticed or cared. Will anyone miss Jimmy Kimmel if he moves to Italy?

Probably not.

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Why doesn’t this surprise me in the least?

It turns out that California, the Pyrite State, has the highest unemployment rate in the nation.

I know. Shocking, right? Who’da thunk it?

KRON reports that the Golden State’s unemployment rate has edged up to 5.5 percent. In June, South Dakota had the nation’s lowest unemployment rate at 1.8 percent.

California’s current governor, Gavin Newsom, is term-limited. He cannot run again. Newsom desperately wants to be President and is aiming toward a 2028 run. But, as California’s two-term governor, he has no record to run on. His state is a basket case. Hence, his emphasis on these stunts like redistricting and opposing ICE.

It appears some of that job loss can be attributed to layoffs in the tech sector, with about 12,400 jobs lost since July 2024, with some of those job losses being driven by AI. I also have to wonder if one of the other areas seeing large job losses are the hospitality industry as the state has given workers in that industry a heck of a pay raise which has led to some layoffs. It’s the same thing that happened in the fast food industry when the minimum wage was boosted to $20 – lots of people working in fast food saw their jobs disappear.

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After watching all the hoopla about the meeting between Putin and Trump in Anchorage, Alaska, I have to wonder if it may be a step to end the war in Ukraine or whether Putin will use this and subsequent meetings will be nothing more than yet another episode of maskirovka.

I get the impression that Putin’s plans to “get the old gang back together” has not changed and if he gets his way in Ukraine that Moldova will be next. There are already Russian troops in the Transnistria region of Moldova and have been for a few years. This will be just another way to achieve his goal.

I know Trump is smart enough not to trust Putin, particularly since Putin has lied to him once already.

I’ll admit I don’t like the idea of a cease fire for one reason: The Russians will use it to move more men, weapons, armor, ammo, and aircraft to the front and build or repair fortifications in preparation for a new offensive once the cease fire ends.

If plans do go forward for peace, great. But I will add a warning from Ronaldus Magnus:

Trust, but verify.

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And that’s the news from Lake Winnipesaukee, where the weather is getting cooler, the traffic is still very heavy on the weekends, and where the kids will soon be starting school again.

8/16/2025

Now Wood Stoves Are Killing Us?

When I saw this post my first thought was “Why can’t they make up their friggin’ minds?”

It seems that now wood stoves are even more dangerous because some can release toxic pollutants.

I remember when there was a push for people to use wood stoves to heat their homes because they used ‘renewable’ and ‘eco-friendly’ fuel. We used a wood stove to heat The Manse for over 13 years, going through about 3 cords of wood between the end of October through the mid-April. It was a lot less expensive than using propane, which at one point was almost $4 per gallon. The Manse would use around 200 gallons of propane per month during the heating season if we used the furnace for heat. Using firewood, which cost us anywhere between $200 and $325 per cord over the 13 years we used it to heat The Manse, was a heck of a lot cheaper. Yes, we still used the furnace, mostly if the outside temperature was below zero because the wood stove couldn’t quite keep up. At other times we used the furnace if we were going to be away for a day or more. We still used propane because our water heater was fueled by propane as was our clothes dryer. Even then we maybe used about 50 gallons per month.

Now we’re being told it may be a Bad ThingTM.

Research reveals that even modern eco-design stoves can emit dangerous pollutants indoors. Ventilation and fuel choice greatly influence exposure levels.

Researchers at the University of Surrey’s Global Centre for Clean Air Research (GCARE) are cautioning residents about the health risks posed by wood-burning stoves, including those built to modern eco-design standards. Their findings show that using these stoves can lead to short-term exposure to high concentrations of harmful pollutants, which may present health hazards for people living in affected homes.

Published in Scientific Reports, the study involved monitoring several homes in Guildford, Surrey, that used different types of heating stoves and clean solid fuels, such as seasoned wood, kiln-dried wood, wood briquettes, and smokeless coal. Measurements focused on pollutants including ultrafine particles (UFPs), fine particulate matter (PM2.5), black carbon (BC), and carbon monoxide (CO). The results showed that open fireplaces were the highest emitters, raising PM2.5 levels up to seven times more than modern stoves.

I have seen the problem when people are loading more firewood or cleaning out ashes, particularly if they do not have the chimney and air dampers open well prior to doing that. After years of using wood stoves that go back to my childhood, and quite a bit during my college years, one learns how to minimize the above mentioned pollutants from entering the living space. It isn’t perfect by any means, but once you figure it out it isn’t all that difficult.

While the linked post mentions different fuels, here in New Hampshire we tend to use seasoned or kiln-dried wood. I am not including pellet stoves in this mix because they are a different technology and are not ‘passive’ stoves, meaning they require power to operate the pellet feed and burn blower. They aren’t configured the way wood stoves are. (For full disclosure, the wood stove at The Manse did have a built-in blower that helped circulate the hot air generated by the stove which allowed it to heat a much larger area that it would otherwise.)

But do the findings in the study in the linked post really mean we have a problem? Yes, the study took place in the UK, not the US, but does that invalidate the findings? Probably not. That we have a lot of forests here in the US, and particularly in New Hampshire, wood stoves are likely to continue to be used to heat homes for quite some time.

To be honest, I am contemplating putting in a wood stove here at The Gulch. Not today. Not tomorrow. But sometime in the future. It wouldn’t need to be large, certainly a lot smaller than the one in The Manse as The Gulch is less than half the size of The Manse. We don’t use a lot of heating oil during the winter, going through between 80 and 110 gallons per month during the heating season. I do miss the ‘warmth’ of a wood stove as it always seemed different to me than heat from a furnace. Even the feline contingent loved the wood stove in The Manse as they would gather around the “warm box” during the cold winter months. So did the humans.

I’d hate to think that might go away “for our own good”.

8/10/2025

Thoughts On A Sunday

It looks like we’re back into the heat and humidity for the next four days or so, with temps expected to be in the 90’s and dew points in the 60’s and 70’s. That means cranking up the A/C again and watching the electric meter spinning like a top...again. Then again, it is summer so none of this should be unexpected.

One thing I and others have noticed over the past couple of weeks is the number of acorns the oaks have been dropping, something that is happening weeks earlier than usual. A wet spring and early summer might have something to do with it, but I don’t recall acorns falling this early.

I am also going to bring up traffic...again. I had the chance to talk with a couple of NH State troopers who live in my town and asked if they’ve seen the much heavier traffic and they both said they have. It now starts early Friday afternoon and has since mid-June. Even this Friday saw very heavy bumper-to-bumper traffic on the main highways starting around noon. It’s insane.

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Some criticism has been leveled at Trump after he fired Biden-appointed Commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics Erika McEntarfer after allegations she purposely provided a July jobs report that had been altered to show less new jobs than were actually created.

There might be something to this as during the Biden administration reports of the number of jobs created was over 1.5 million jobs too high. A million and a half jobs supposedly created during the Biden years never existed.

Regardless of the allegations that [McEntarfer] deliberately tried to weaken the latest jobs report to make Trump look bad, anyone who’s been paying attention to the jobs numbers over the past few years understands that numbers were reported high, then quietly revised downward. Something shady has been going on at the BLS. That’s what economist Steve Moore is trying to emphasize.

The Biden administration grossly overestimated job gains, and whereas real wages consistently went down under Biden, the opposite trend is emerging under Trump, based on the data Moore shared.

It is also worth keeping in mind that, as of the start of 2024, the touted “job gains” were going to migrants, including illegal aliens, while U.S.-born men were facing disturbingly high unemployment. While big companies, hotels, and farming conglomerates hired illegal aliens at lower wages, Americans couldn’t find any of the jobs McEntarfer and Biden boasted about.

One thing I learned from the Biden administration was to wait for the revised BLS jobs numbers a couple of months later as they reflected the reality. Not that most of the media paid much attention to the revised numbers as it wouldn’t reflect well on Biden’s policies.

As with the Biden era jobs reports I will wait for the revised jobs numbers which should be out in another month or two to find out if the dismal July numbers were real or the product of a Democrat/Deep State wishful thinking.

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First I thought it was just me, being a “old faht”, looking back to the nostalgic pre-Internet days with fondness. I have seen how, as wonderful as the Internet can be, it has also been problem, particularly when dealing with social issues. Surprisingly it appears a lot of Gen Z are romanticizing a pre-Internet era they never knew, seeing the same thing I and the rest of us Boomers and Gen X have noticed.

What exactly do we think we’re missing? Personally, I assume that before the social Internet people behaved in more authentic and idiosyncratic ways. Social media has sped up trend cycles, resulting in an eerie uniformity across styles and personalities: we buy the same products, wear the same clothes, act in the same way, reference the same memes—even quirkiness itself or more “unique” behavior can be ascribed to trends.

I also imagine that if we weren’t on display all the time, our friendships and interactions could be less commodified. Now, spending time with friends is material to be documented and then demonstrated to a faceless audience.

--snip--

But it may be that these “negative” aspects are what young people yearning for disconnectivity actually want—we have a sense that there was a value, now largely lost, in the practical effort required for social interaction, for finding good music, or joining a subculture. Life now in comparison seems streamlined, efficient, more yassified, in a phenomenon that writer Michael Harris calls a “loss of lack”.

One of the downsides to today’s 24/7 mass connectivity is what is called FOMO – the Fear Of Missing Out – which has people clinging to their smart phones and using them with the tenacity of a junkie looking for their next fix. If they don’t have their phone within arm’s reach they start getting antsy. If they misplace it or forget it some will melt down and act almost like they’re going through a drug withdrawal cold turkey. Maybe that analogy is appropriate because some folks have become so addicted to what it presented on the screens of their phones even though most of what they think is important isn’t even real.

I will admit to a small bit of FOMO, but only because I am taking care of the WP Mom who is in her 90’s and I don’t want to be out of touch for too long in case she needs help. But I don’t spend hours and hours on my phone perusing social media. In fact, one of the apps on my phone tells me how much time I spend using my phone on a daily and weekly basis. I average 37 minutes of usage per day. That’s split between calls, texts, and Solitaire. (I have to admit that between 10 and 20 minutes a day is taken up by Solitaire.)

I remember when phones were mounted on the wall and had a long cord between the phone and the handset. I remember when dialing someone’s phone number meant actually using a dial to enter the phone number. (This was pre-Touch Tone phones.) I remember having a party line when we lived in Maine when I was a kid.

I remember when TVs were only black-and-white. Color TVs didn’t become more common until the 1960’s. TV shows quite often included the tag line “In living color!” Rabbit ear antennas were the most common. Outdoor antennas were used in the outer edge of a TV station’s coverage area. You were really lucky if you had an antenna rotor so you could pick up more than a couple of TV channels. TV stations signed off the air around midnight, usually playing the national anthem, then showing a test pattern, and eventually going off the air for a few hours.

If you wanted to send someone a letter there was no e-mail. You had to use paper and pen or pencil and write them out, fold them and put them in an envelope, address the envelope and put a stamp on it, then put it in the mailbox and raise the little red flag that let the mailman know there was an outgoing letter.

Were the old times better? Who knows? Some things were definitely simpler. I can understand why Gen Z has been looking back to those days. For lack of a better term I think of it as “Future Burnout”.

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From the Land of Oz comes this tidbit:

Great Barrier Reef in great health, but climate change is killing science institutions.

Despite record high emissions of carbon dioxide, and hottest ever temperatures, the Great Barrier Reef was again enjoying one of its best years yet. In the 40 years that AIMS has been studying it, the last four years are great results.

Judging by the data, corals are coping fine with today’s heat and CO2. But the more money we spend finding a climate crisis, the worse our science institutions get. One-sided money and monopoly science can turn any institute into a tax-grabbing-machine, that serves the Blob, not the people. Thus is it so.

The above isn’t saying the reef isn’t being affected by climate, but that it isn’t being affected to the extent all the ‘experts’ said it would. It isn’t just the reefs where we’re seeing predictions made by the experts falling to the wayside as Mother Nature has refused to cooperate. It’s being seen across the globe. Antarctica has thumbed its nose at the ‘experts’ predictions of declining ice thickness and shrinking ice sheets. Desertification hasn’t occurred. Instead the Earth has been getting greener as carbon dioxide levels have increased.

Whatever are all the science institutions receiving millions and billions of dollars of funding going to do when the funding starts being rolled back because they haven’t been able to produce relatively successful climate predictions and/or climate models? Will they end up being the victims of climate change?

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Yes, Sydney Sweeney has great jeans. But Mike Rowe does, too.

Unless you’ve been hiding under a rock, you’ve undoubtedly seen the liberal meltdown taking place over actress Sydney Sweeney’s ad for American Eagle. Innocent play on words or outright Nazi propaganda? If you’re overweight, over-tatted, and have an unnatural hair color, you’re probably screaming the latter.

Don’t get me wrong, the ad is annoying. While I could do without the vocal fry, the commercial is otherwise good marketing; it features Sweeney, who is recognizable and gorgeous, and utilizes a fun play on words to sell jeans. It’s really that simple.

…Or is it?

Mike Rowe seems to think something more sinister is going on at American Eagle and he took to social media to discuss the blatant propaganda. The shocking part? Rowe revealed he is also a denim-wearing Nazi. Oh, heil naw.

All is not as it seems.

Jean Therapy

Long before the Nazis at American Eagle began promoting The Master Race in a series of commercials celebrating “good genes,” (with a little help from a hot model wearing some “good jeans,”) I was doing the same thing for another famous denim provider hoping to capture the attention of millions of white people. I refer, of course, to the bigots over at Lee Jeans, who asked me to help them raise some money for The American Cancer Society.

Specifically, as the official “Celebrity Ambassador of Denim Day 2011” I was asked to announce a very promising breakthrough in “gene” therapy, and then, urge Americans to forego the purchase of another pair of “jeans” they probably didn’t need, and instead, donate the cost of those jeans to The American Cancer Society. I said sure, but only if I could do so in a way that would please Adolf Hitler.

“No problem!” they said. “Go for it!”

So I called my mother, an avowed white supremacist and breast cancer survivor who taught me all I know about eugenics. We filmed the PSA later that week, and the bigots at Lee Jeans put it on the air fourteen years ago. In it, you’ll notice I’m not wearing any pants, and flaunting my genes in a way that would have made The Fuhrer proud. In other words, you’ll see me doing the same thing that MSNBC, The New York Times, and countless scolds across the Internet have accused Sydney Sweeney of doing. Accusations that, it must be noted, have led to an unprecedented level of free publicity that’s turned American Eagle into the latest Wall Street darling.

Perhaps, had the mainstream media been this diligent in 2011, those bigots over at Lee Jeans would have raised enough money to cure breast cancer once and for all.

Maybe next time.

Good jeans indeed.

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And that’s the news from Lake Winnipesaukee, where the hot and humid weather has returned, the traffic is still heavy, and where Monday is coming back to screw up yet another weekend.

8/09/2025

Texas Redistricting Kerfuffle

I’ve been watching the whole Texas re-districting kerfuffle unfold with both concern and amusement.

While it appears that Texas does have the right to do so whenever it chooses to, at least under its state constitution, the response by Democrat legislators to deny a quorum feels more like what a spoiled child does when they don’t get their way, in this case fleeing the state. That Texas law also addresses this problem by allowing the governor to declare their seats in the Texas Legislature as abandoned, just adds to the drama.

That Democrats don’t like gerrymandering whenever it works against them, but are all for it when it works in their favor, shows they hypocrisy of the system. Not that Republicans are any less hypocritical, but at least they don’t act like the aforementioned spoiled child who throws a tantrum when denied something they want.

There is something to be said for redistricting to be handled by an independent non-partisan group to implement redrawing the lines of Congressional Districts when required. We certainly don’t want it to be handled by the courts because even judges can be partisan and biased as we’ve seen over the past few years.

One of the more clueless responses was that of Massachusetts Governor Maura Healey when she threatened to gerrymander Massachusetts Congressional Districts in favor of Democrats. There’s only one problem with her threat.

There are no Republican Congressional Districts to do away with.

All nine House seats in Massachusetts are in the hands of the Democrats. Unless of course Healey is going to try to carve out a tenth Congressional District which is not within her power to do so. It must also be remembered that Healey fought against the Kinder Morgan natural gas pipeline that would have brought more much needed natural gas into New England from Pennsylvania. The pipeline was canceled. Then a few years later she laments the shortage of natural gas during this past winter, conveniently ignoring the fact that she helped cause that shortage to begin with.

California is getting into the act as well, with Gavin Newsom stating he supports independent redistricting, then with his next breath saying he “wants to pick up 5 seats in Congress” by going around the Independent Redistricting Commission in violation of California’s constitution.

Even Washington, D.C. is getting into the act with President Trump asking for a new census to be performed, this time without counting illegal aliens which can seriously skew the number of Congressional Districts in various states.

If nothing else this whole thing will be interesting to watch as it unfolds.

8/08/2025

Friday Funny - Black Face Is Wrong

Just a warning: If you are offended by everything or feel you need to be offended on the behalf of people who aren't offended who you think should be offended, then the following is not for you.

8/03/2025

Thoughts On A Sunday

We’ve managed to escape the hot and humid weather we’ve been experiencing, with temps in the mid 70’s yesterday and upper 70’s/low 80’s today. About the only thing we’ve really had to deal with is the haze caused by smoke from Canadian wildfires coming out of the northwest. I’ve seen the reddish haze but I haven’t felt any of the effects that some folks with asthma or emphysema or other respiratory problems might. All in all it’s been a low key weekend so far and I’ve been able to get some things squared away around The Gulch, particularly in the attics as the temperatures inside them haven’t been eleventy-eleven degrees.

I am hoping to get out onto the lake late today after the weekend folk have departed. The observations about traffic that I made in yesterday’s post also applies to the lake, so when the weekenders are gone so is much of the boat activity on the lake.

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I have to add to yesterday’s post about traffic. I asked some friends and family members and dropped the question about traffic on one of the Facebook groups I frequent and without fail, every single response I got – 26 39 102 153 in total - confirmed what I noticed. It wasn’t just in New Hampshire that people have noticed the increased traffic, but in a number of 13 different states.

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I have to agree with Sarah Hoyt about this: It’s about friggin’ time.

One of the biggest mistakes made in US history was JFK’s executive order that authorized federal employees to unionize. (Some states had already done so for state employees.) Allowing federal employees to unionize was something that President Franklin Delano Roosevelt and labor leader George Meany were against and warned about as they both knew it was inherently corrupt as it meant that the government was “negotiating with itself” when it came unions and that since the money paying for the wages and benefits came from the taxpayers and not the earnings as was done with labor unions in the commercial world.

However, that mistake may soon be corrected.

A federal appeals court lifted a judge’s order which originally prevented President Trump to end union bargaining for federal employees. The appeals court ruling will now allow the President to do so.

U.S. District Judge James Donato in San Francisco in June had issued the injunction blocking 21 agencies from implementing Trump's March executive order exempting many federal agencies from obligations to bargain with unions.

Donato concluded Trump's order retaliated against unions deemed critical of the president and that had sued over his efforts to overhaul the government, including the mass firings of agency employees, violating their right to free speech under the U.S. Constitution's First Amendment.

But the 9th Circuit panel said Trump's order on its face "does not express any retaliatory animus," and it agreed with the Trump administration that the president "would have taken the same action even in the absence of the protected conduct."

The 9th Circuit panel included U.S. Circuit Judge John Owens, an Obama appointee, and U.S. Circuit Judges Bridget Bade and Daniel Bress, two Trump appointees. Another federal appeals court in Washington, D.C., had in May paused a similar order that had also blocked Trump's order.

This has been long overdue as it has been proven over the past sixty-plus years that FDR and Meany were right. The ‘negotiation’ process has been corrupt since day one.

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In meteorological terms, it’s a blink of the eye.

It seems that a number of Nordic countries are in the midst of an unprecedented heat wave with temperatures in the 30’s (Celsius), breaking records “going back to 1961.”

Umm, that’s 64 years which is nothing in meteorological time.

However, there are accounts of an expedition back in 1927 by a group of women trying to drive to the Arctic Ocean but they weren’t able to make it because “hot weather, melting permafrost and forest fires forced them to abandon their expedition.”

...the motor party journeyed to 270 miles north of the Arctic Circle, prepared for freezing weather. To their continued astonishment the temperature was never less than 90 degrees F (32ºC) in the shade.

The intention was to reach the Arctic Ocean, but 40 miles of marsh country on the coast prevented this. An average of 210 miles a day was made on the journey, which was arduous in the extreme, and at one time the car had an actual race with death among the forest fires in Sweden over terrible roads.

As best I’ve been able to determine most weather records go back maybe 200+ years, and then only in certain parts of the world. The British Royal Navy has records from the logbooks of their ships going back maybe 400 years, and again they don’t cover everywhere. So when someone says some weather conditions are “record breaking”, be aware those records only go back maybe 200 years, if that.

Like I said, a blink of the eye.

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Another thing that has definitely been a scam being funded by taxpayer dollars is offshore wind farms. They are expensive to build, expensive to maintain, require much more maintenance than land-based wind, and don’t have anywhere near the service life of land-based wind. Not that land-based wind farms are much better as they have failed to deliver the benefits promised by the climate cultists. It’s not cheap. It’s not reliable. And it’s not dispatchable.

Now it appears the Trump Administration is going to “restore sanity” when it comes to the off-shore wind farm scam.

The Trump administration’s move to rescind all designated Offshore Wind Energy Areas (WEAs) in the United States is being characterized as a “major policy reversal,” but what it truly represents is a refreshing application of rationality in a field too long dominated by dogma, groupthink, and the wishful economics of green technocracy.

The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) announced the decision to rescind every single federally designated wind energy area on the U.S. Outer Continental Shelf, which brings to an end the federal protection of more than 3.5 million acres previously targeted for “offshore wind development.” The scale of the reversal cannot be overstated: this is not a minor adjustment or a routine regulatory tweak. This is, in the words of the article, the effective “end” of offshore wind leasing in the United States—at least for the time being.

To understand the gravity and necessity of this move, let’s remind ourselves how we got here. The Obama and Biden administrations, along with their European counterparts, threw unprecedented support behind offshore wind, an industry that—despite the tidal wave of public subsidies—has shown a knack for floundering economically and technologically whenever taxpayer money is not propping it up. In fact, the very need for designated wind energy areas is itself an admission that offshore wind cannot compete on a level playing field; it requires the full faith, credit, and political muscle of government to exist.

Supporters keep playing up the “Energy is free” side of wind, choosing to downplay if not ignore the great costs involved with ‘collecting’ that free energy. The costs and subsidies for offshore wind farms are even greater than for those land-based wind farms and the cost per kilowatt-hour is quite high compared with ‘traditional’ power sources. Proponents push the low carbon footprint of wind, but choose to ignore the carbon output of the entire manufacturing, construction, maintenance, and operation chain and finding it isn’t nearly as green as is claimed. And then there’s the power factor which is defined as actual power produced versus the plate capacity of the wind turbines/wind farm which is somewhere around 30%. Coal, natural gas, and nuclear are much higher with nuclear being somewhere above 90%.

Wind sounds nice, but the reality doesn’t come close to matching the promises made by its proponents. If it did, then taxpayer subsidies would be unnecessary and the costs per kilowatt-hour would be lower than the more traditional power generation sources.

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And that’s the news from Lake Winnipesaukee, where the road traffic is high, so is the boat traffic, and where Monday has returned yet again to “harsh our mellow”.

8/02/2025

Traffic, Lots And Lots Of Traffic

I decided to forego any politics today as it’s been a great day and I have no wish to “harsh my mellow” (or anyone else’s) for the most part. That doesn’t mean I won’t complain, bitch, and moan about one subject or another as goodness knows there are plenty of topics to choose from.

Today’s target...er...topic is traffic.

No, I am not talking about the traffic coming to Weekend Pundit. It seems to be fine, though it comes nowhere near matching Instapundit. (Frankly, I wouldn’t want it to because at that point posting becomes a job rather than something I like to do.)

I am, of course, talking about the traffic we see on the roads, streets, and highways. At first I thought it was just me, but it seems to be a lot heavier this summer than any other I recall, and not just here in the Lakes Region of New Hampshire. We all expect traffic to be heavier on the weekends, usually starting sometime Friday afternoon and dropping of starting Sunday afternoon.

But the levels I’ve been seeing over the past couple of months have gone beyond what I remember from pre-Covid days.

The older of the WP Sisters and her boyfriend came up from their home just outside Worcester yesterday (Friday), departing at noon for the approximately 90 minute trip up here to The Gulch. It took them over 4 hours to get here. From the time they got on I-495 to the time they got off of I-93 in Concord, NH it was bumper to bumper. No accidents, no construction, and no traffic enforcement seen seen along the entire trip, yet traffic was moving slowly. It can see if this had been a holiday weekend as folks would get an early start, but this wasn’t one of those. There weren’t any really big events taking place like a NASCAR race at New Hampshire Motor Speedway in Loudon. It was just a typical summer weekend.

I noticed heavier than usual traffic this morning as I made my way to our local Walmart at 7:30 to take care of my share of the weekly grocery shopping. The trip between The Gulch and Walmart takes less than 10 minutes if I hit the three sets of traffic lights between here and there just right. It took me almost 20 minutes. Ironically the parking lot at Walmart didn’t have nearly as many vehicles I expected to see early on a Saturday morning and I was able to get in and out in less than 20 minutes. In that 20 minutes the traffic had become heavier, but it still took me about 20 minutes to make it back to The Gulch.

A couple of hours later my sister’s boyfriend and I made a dump run and found the traffic was even heavier and slower. We dropped off the recyclables and trash and looked through the pile of old street signs that were collecting outside the rear of the recycling building, and then headed home. I took a different route back to The Gulch which cut a couple of minutes off our return trip.

Not too long after lunch my sister and her beau headed home, the return trip taking a little longer than the usual 90 minutes, but they hadn’t hit heavy traffic on their southbound trip. However, they did see that northbound traffic was bumper to bumper just as it had been on their trip up. It looks like a lot of people were leaving Massachusetts and heading to New Hampshire and Vermont. (One route into Vermont from the greater Boston area takes folks through New Hampshire to I-89 which goes into Vermont.)

The heavy traffic may also explain the higher than average number of traffic accidents and fatalities we’ve been experiencing.

I have noticed that traffic even during the week seems to be heavier than normal though I haven’t checked with friends at the NH Department of Transportation to find out what the traffic volumes have been over the past few weeks.

In the mean time I will stick to the back roads and byways as much as possible to get where I need to go without having to deal with the heavy traffic on the main roads and highways.