February 16, 2014

Food Thread: Knives and Mandolins and other dangerous implements of culinary destruction (CBD)
— Open Blogger

We Politely Request That All Off-Topic or Political Comments Be Directed to the Thread Directly Below This One, Which Will Serve Officially as the Current "Active Conversation" Thread for All Discussions Not Related To This Topic.

Amateur cooks are probably as fanatical about the tools of their hobby as gear heads and shooters, but with far less reason. It is eminently possible to cook magnificent food in a bare-bones kitchen, and certainly the clean up is easier without a few dozen dirty pots, pans, knives, food processors and assorted gadgets piled high in the sink and on every flat surface.



The French Chef
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Open Thread (reserved for politics) [CBD]
— Open Blogger

And the lustful thoughts of the Morons who saw that photo of T.J. Oshie's girlfriend...and the lustful thoughts of the Moronettes who saw T.J. Oshie!

Posted by: Open Blogger at 11:09 AM | Comments (132)
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Sunday Travel Thread: Tourism for the Sports Enthusiast [Y-not]
— Open Blogger

This thread sponsored by “Be like Mark Spitz: drink your milk!”


MarkSpitzMilk.jpg

Nice 'stache!

In honor of the Olympics, I thought it might be fun to have the travel thread that covered some interesting sports-related travel destinations? For the purposes of this thread, letÂ’s use a loose definition of sports. In other words, golf IS a sport, you haterz! As are curling, cheerleading, gymnastics, cycling, etcÂ…

LetÂ’s leave off hiking, climbing, fishing, hunting, and camping for another day because IÂ’d really like to do a outdoorsy travel thread sometime. I think it deserves itÂ’s own thread (or two or three).

So with those “ground rules” in mind, here are some of my favorite sports-related travel destinations as well as some that are on my bucket list:
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Sunday Morning Open Thread
— andy

HERE RESTS IN
HONORED GLORY
AN AMERICAN
SOLDIER
KNOWN BUT TO GOD


The Washington Times had a nice piece last week on the 3rd U.S. Infantry Regiment (The Old Guard) that guards the Tomb of the Unknown at Arlington National Cemetery 24/7/365 in conditions both fair and foul.

I can't imagine what it would be like to lose a family member in war and not have the closure that comes with saying that final goodbye at a funeral. Yet there in Arlington are fathers, sons, brothers, husbands who are, as the inscription says, known but to God.

It is comforting and well that the nation accords these men, representative of all unknown soldiers, the solemn, respectful honor of a permanent vigil that will go on until the last of them is identified.

Their families deserve no less.

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Sun. Morning Open Before The Book Thread Thread [OregonMuse]
— Open Blogger

Today's thread for non-book related discussion is brought to you by a couple of old guys playing their guitars: more...

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Sunday Morning Book Thread 02-16-2014: The City of Books [OregonMuse]
— Open Blogger


church book store 6498_2-500.jpg
Boekhandel Selexyz Dominicanen Bookstore, Maastricht, Holland

Good morning morons and moronettes and welcome to AoSHQ's prestigious Sunday Morning Book Thread.


Great Bookstores

A book thread reader tipped me to this Business Insider article ,18 Bookstores Every Book Lover Must Visit At Least Once. Some of these look absolutely gorgeous. I was chiefly interested to see if one notably awesome bookstore made the list, and I was not disappointed.

Coming in at #18 is Powell's Books in Portland, Oregon. Started by Walter Powell in 1971, it has expanded into several locations, even when other bookstores were closing due to competitive pressure from the large chain bookstores and internet sales.

It is one of this country's most remarkable bookstores:

The "City of Books," as the four-story flagship store on West Burnside is known, occupies an entire city block, and carries more than one million books. The sixty-eight-thousand-square-foot space is divided into nine color-coded rooms, which together house more than 3,500 sections. From the moment you walk in, it feels as if you could find anything there. (And if you can't, try one of the seven branch stores in five other locations throughout Portland, specializing in everything from technical books to home and garden.)

If you're ever in Portland, you really need to visit Powell's. It's an amazing bookstore.

We have a bookstore down here in Eugene which I like to think of as sort of a Powell's mini-me: Smith Family Bookstore has survived for 35 years by selling (primarily) used books, particularly used college textbooks. There is no facility on the Smith Family web page for browsing their inventory, since none of it is online. You actually have to go there yourself. I kind of like that.

So I'm wondering if any of you morons have favorite local, independent bookstores nearby that have managed to survive the brutal competition of the last two decades.

Here are some more bookstores worthy of note.

Thanks to Chris for the tip.


You've Seen The TV Show, Now Read The Book

I don't know how many of you are watching the 'House of Cards' series on Netflix starring Kevin Spacey. I myself am a fan of the original BBC series with Ian Richardson as the conniving, power-obsessed politician that came out in 1990. Spacey is a good actor, but he doesn't match the robust malevolent glee of Richardson's Francis Urquhart.

That mini-series, however, was based on the novel 'House of Cards' by former Thatcher adviser Michael Dobbs, and originally published in 1989. For a modern book, it has been unusually hard to get a hold of. Until now. The Kindle edition of HoC is now available for purchase at the pleasantly surprising price of $6.15. Dobb's two sequels, "House of Cards: To Play the King" and "The Final Cut," will be made available later this year.

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February 15, 2014

The Sweet Tears of Epic Failure - [Niedermeyer's Dead Horse]
— Open Blogger

Footage has been discovered of the aftermath of the failed UAW attempt to unionize the Volkswagon plant in Chattanooga, TN. Ordinarily, I loathe gloating. It's just bad form. I prefer that winners act like, well, winners.

In this case, however, I'll make an exception.

Behold the joyous celebration. more...

Posted by: Open Blogger at 02:13 PM | Comments (322)
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Overnight Open Thread (2-15-2014) - [Niedermeyer's Dead Horse]
— Open Blogger

CDR M is off this evening pursuing his dream of becoming an Olympic ice dancer. He claims he was inspired, not by the strength and grace of Olympics-quality competition, but by Johnny Weir's flair for fashion. Who can blame him? Johnny is f-a-b-u-l-o-u-s!

He did however, drop by to remind us that Curling is too a sport, and provided a video of some of the most tension-filled moments of icy shuffleboard Curling ever witnessed.

Behold the magic:


Speaking of fashion, Rodarte's Fall 2014 ready-to-wear collection just kills it. It draws from the designer's own individual creativity and is designed for only the most discriminating of tastes.

I say this with my tongue planted firmly in cheek.

These ready-to-wear dresses, intended to be accessible to a larger-than-couture consumer market, defy logic. The kind of woman who might wear such a dress, hoping to make a statement, will certainly feel less an individual when several other such rebels show up in the same, or similar, dress. A gimmick such as this only works once: Perhaps on a red carpet or at a movie premier.

But. Wait. They aren't for sale? You mean they showed dresses at a RTW fashion show that won't even be available for purchase? So, the one measure of success of this gimmick is exactly what they anticipated: A massive amount of press coverage. It seems the press never tires of being manipulated. Slow clapping here, Rodarte. Slow clapping, indeed.

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Moron Wiserbud Interviews Two American Astronauts in Space
— Dave in Texas

Longtime moron Wiserbud interviewed a couple of American astronauts live on the International Space Station today. Pretty cool. H2 Splitter Roamingfirehydrant hooked him up for his radio show today. The Wiserbud part of this video is just under ten minutes, the rest is another radio personality interviewing them.

I like how they hand the mic to each other in zero gravity. Good interview wiserbud, particularly editing out the delay stuff. Moving you to the "kill later" list.

Twitter addys:

@miriaf, rocket surgeon.
@Wisermeany, dork radio guy
@astroRM Astronaut Rick Mastracchio
@astroillini Astronaut Col. Mike Hopkins, USAF

Posted by: Dave in Texas at 11:08 AM | Comments (156)
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February 17, 2014

Occidental Petroleum Tells California "GTT"
— Dave in Texas

Gone to Texas.

OXY is moving their HQ to Houston Texas from Los Angeles after a century in California. They announced their intention to spin off California operations and focus on their highly productive west Texas Permian Basin holdings in a state that welcomes shale production because Black Gold Texas Tea has propelled Texas into the number one state for oil and gas production. Which means high paying good jobs (over a half million and growing in the past five years), and pumped billions of dollars into our economy and state budget.

California conversely has been very stingy with permits, even though they may be sitting on even larger fields than Eagle Ford, Permian Basin and North Dakota/Montana/Saskatchewan/Manitoba Bakken deposits.

Which is why they are spinning off their California operations.

A move to Houston will allow the company to focus on its operations in the Permian Basin in Texas and spin off its less productive California division. The new California company, which will employ about 8,000 people, will be the state's biggest natural gas producer and "establish its headquarters" in the Golden State, the statement said. It will continue operations in oil and gas basins including Los Angeles and San Joaquin.

I'm going to make a crazy prediction here. The environmentalists will lose an argument against billions of dollars in new state revenues. They'll put up a fight, it'll be ugly. But when the dust settles the lure of the money will be too much. And in five to ten years California will experience a surge in energy production that will bring jobs back.

Nothing else will do that.

America is on the verge of oil and gas energy independence. Something we were told could never happen.

Well (SWIDT?). Technology unlocks potential and prosperity. Like a boss.

Charts below the fold thingy. more...

Posted by: Dave in Texas at 08:25 AM | Comments (220)
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