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Post by billhammond on Jul 6, 2024 15:16:21 GMT -5
The latest is "Project 2024 2025". I had to Google it up to find out what it is. Apparently it's the conservative plan to take over the country and make it safe for bigots again, but the only people I have heard mention it are from the extreme left. I've been seeing it in lots of media. The Heritage Foundation is key to its inner workings.
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Post by billhammond on Jul 6, 2024 14:12:18 GMT -5
MAYO!!!! Blcch! It's an Eye-talian sub, not chicken salad. It has salami, capocollo, provolone, lettuce, tomato, onion, oil & vinegar and oregano-basil. Ain't that enough? Yes, with a little mayo. Does it help if I call it aoli? I think of mayo as a moisturizer -- and if you have oil & vinegar and hot peppers, it's plenty moist. But you've always been weird!
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Post by billhammond on Jul 6, 2024 14:07:29 GMT -5
Yup, peppers added, and I ordered some tater salad, too, haven't tasted it yet. I go for the Little John #5, light onions, add a light spread of mayo and Jimmy peppers. It's the same as the Vito but it's smaller. MAYO!!!! Blcch! It's an Eye-talian sub, not chicken salad. It has salami, capocollo, provolone, lettuce, tomato, onion, oil & vinegar and oregano-basil. Ain't that enough?
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Post by billhammond on Jul 6, 2024 13:13:10 GMT -5
Jimmy John's is calling! Behold the Vito sammich ... The Vito is my choice there also, add banana peppers. Yup, peppers added, and I ordered some tater salad, too, haven't tasted it yet.
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Well?
Jul 6, 2024 13:10:39 GMT -5
Post by billhammond on Jul 6, 2024 13:10:39 GMT -5
I'm starting to think we shudda paid more attention to Dean Phillips. Sigh ...
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Post by billhammond on Jul 6, 2024 12:47:24 GMT -5
Jimmy John's is calling! Behold the Vito sammich ...
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Post by billhammond on Jul 5, 2024 19:43:03 GMT -5
Excerpt from St. Paul Pioneer Press
Supporters of the late Minneapolis author Robert Pirsig will kick off a motorcycle ride from Minneapolis to San Francisco on Monday to commemorate the 50th anniversary of Pirsig’s best-selling book “Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance: An Inquiry Into Values.”
Registration to join the ride has closed, but the public is invited to join a free kickoff event from 2 to 5 p.m. Sunday at the Minnesota Zen Meditation Center in Minneapolis, where Pirsig was vice president and served on the board of directors from 1973 to 1975.
Pirsig wrote the book after the 1968 cross-country motorcycle trip he and his 11-year-old son made from St. Paul to San Francisco.
Sponsored by the nonprofit Robert Pirsig Association, it will feature speakers Mark Richardson, author of “Zen and Now: On the Trail of Robert Pirsig and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance,” and the association’s co-chair Ian Glendinning. Advance registration is available online at robertpirsig.org.
Pirsig, who graduated from high school at 14, went on to study biochemistry at the University of Minnesota. He enlisted in the Army in 1946 and spent two years stationed in South Korea. After he was discharged, he moved to Seattle before returning to the University of Minnesota, where he earned a bachelor’s degree in 1950. He went on to study philosophy at Banaras Hindu University in India and the Committee on the Analysis of Ideas and Study of Methods at the University of Chicago. In 1958, he earned a master’s degree in journalism and taught at Montana State University and the University of Illinois.
In 1968, Pirsig and his 11-year-old son, Chris, took a 17-day journey by motorcycle from their home in St. Paul to San Francisco, which inspired him to write a fictionalized version of the trip in “Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance.” He spent four years writing the book while living above a south Minneapolis shoe store and working as a tech writer for Honeywell. He punctuated the narrative with various philosophical discussions on topics including epistemology, the history of philosophy and the philosophy of science.
After receiving 121 rejections, an editor finally agreed to publish the book, despite thinking it would not be profitable. It went on to sell 50,000 copies in the first three months and more than 5 million copies in the decades since. It stands as the best-selling philosophy book in the United States.
After the publication of “Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance,” Pirsig was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship, which allowed him to write the follow-up “Lila: An Inquiry Into Morals.”
Pirsig died at age 88 at his home in Maine in 2017. Two years later, the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History acquired the 1966 Honda CB77 Super Hawk he drove on the 1968 ride with his son.
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Post by billhammond on Jul 5, 2024 17:17:47 GMT -5
Funny how my job can affect my off-work hours at times. I edited a piece this morning about various ways to create summertime-special Cobb salads, and it reminded me that nearby Stout's Pub has one on their menu. So when my shift ended, I motored over there, ordered a happy-hour-priced glass of Portuguese rose and the salad. Whilst enjoying the John Deere Classic golf tourney on the telly, I consumed all of the guacamole, cherry tomatoes, hard-boiled egg quarters, blackened shrimp and maybe half of the mixed greens. I brought home nearly all of the chopped bacon, bleu cheese, shredded carrots, diced cukes and the remaining greens, plus a wee container of dressing -- all of which should make a nice lunch tomorrow. Restaurant prices these days seem much more tolerable when you get two meals out of one purchase.
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Post by billhammond on Jul 4, 2024 20:22:23 GMT -5
She hit 100 today, looks pretty good, doncha think?
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Post by billhammond on Jul 4, 2024 19:13:35 GMT -5
Super-great gathering at the Radtkes' place this afternoon. Food was fab -- nobody grills better brats than Dave -- and there was a nice group of music-makers who repaired to the music room after chowing down: half a dozen guitar dudes, male and female singers, a flutist, and Melva filling in beautifully on her compact accordion. So sweet.
Thanks so much, Melva and David!
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Post by billhammond on Jul 4, 2024 11:34:06 GMT -5
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Post by billhammond on Jul 4, 2024 11:23:04 GMT -5
Happy 4th of July. I think back to July 4th, 1976. I spent that special day in Tehran, Iran. A quiet day for me today. Let's see, that was the summer I was working at the Leader-Smellogram in Eau Claire and I got my Blue Angels ride, unforgettable. I graduated from college in December of that year, started on the Milwaukee Sentinel in January 1977.
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Post by billhammond on Jul 3, 2024 21:35:27 GMT -5
It will probably be fairly skeeter free at the Radtke's tomorrow. Got a couple bottles of Wollersheim Fume and some pistachio fluff to share. What are you bringing Bill? Just Barb, didn't have time this week to do any shopping.
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Post by billhammond on Jul 3, 2024 20:10:28 GMT -5
Mosquitoes expected in Cass County over 4th of July holiday weekend
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Post by billhammond on Jul 2, 2024 23:22:51 GMT -5
My wife’s 14 year old Prius is about to hit 300k and we are not close to retiring it yet. That is an average of 21,000-plus miles a year! Where the hell does she go?
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Post by billhammond on Jun 30, 2024 16:40:33 GMT -5
My God, it I had one, you guys are stupid. What does this mean???
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Post by billhammond on Jun 30, 2024 16:11:09 GMT -5
My Previa had AWD. Loved it. We were the kid chafer for the neighborhood. The kids got chafed? What, the seats were covered in sandpaper?
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Post by billhammond on Jun 30, 2024 15:27:46 GMT -5
I'm not sure if it goes by Previa because I've had folks tell me that they had a Town Ace back then. That would indicate that they are two different things. And, yes, the Jeep thing. The more I looked into it, the more bad reviews I got. Is your Ace all-wheel-drive or rear-wheel-drive? I think the Previa was FWD. Nope, RWD.
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Post by billhammond on Jun 30, 2024 15:04:15 GMT -5
That van looks really nice and clean (and no rust showing where it would matter). And you are better off with the gas engine. Those Toyota fours of that generation were amazingly reliable engines often running well north of 200,000 miles (some into 300K territory) (the diesels were good, but a lot of fun in winter. and if parts are needed, parts for the gas are more common and cheaper.) Thanks for the word of encouragement. I need it. It feels stupid paying $7K for a 25 year old vehicle. That it has 48,000 miles is ameliorating to a degree. Still, that's a lot of money for a very old vehicle, regardless of the shape it's in. Right hand drive is a quirky thing. The demand is specific but high. I paid half of what most of their inventory goes for. Yes, mine has an idle problem to solve (it won't run unless the air conditioner is running), but I think I've got a couple of reliable mechanics in Warsaw. I'm just so glad you stepped away from Jeep, which seems to have increasingly troublesome quality control problems. Is your van basically the same as what was exported to the U.S. as the Previa?
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Post by billhammond on Jun 30, 2024 11:55:41 GMT -5
I've gotten coffee, hit Trader Joe's for essentials and Morelli's for vino, provolone and Genoa salami. Getting ready to head over to PittieQ BBQ to try one of their burgers -- if they are anywhere near as good as their ribs and brisket, I'll be a happy feller. p.s. The Austrian Grand Prix was unexpectedly exciting this morning. Too bad Howard missed it!
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