“Potheads who thought government legalization of pot would lead to heaven on earth forgot about one tiny detail: getting the government involved in anything either makes it more expensive or ruins it completely.”
Via PJMedia
“Potheads who thought government legalization of pot would lead to heaven on earth forgot about one tiny detail: getting the government involved in anything either makes it more expensive or ruins it completely.”
Via PJMedia
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Posted in Bureaucracy, South of the Border, The Drug War
Tagged illegal weedstill sells, PJMedia
A new kind of electric can opener, which produces lids without sharp edges, and does its work hands off. We love it. Thank you, Mama.
A different type of Holocaust survivor memoire, told in matter-of-fact, often heart-breaking style by Manny Drukier, the title taken from a Primo Levi quote about those who can forget and those for whom the memory is carved in stone. It’s pricey at $30 for the ebook, but worth it. The 2017 book is also the basis for a new documentary, called Finding Manny, so far only available at film festivals.
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Posted in History, Judaism, Library
Tagged Carved In Stone, Finding Manny, Manny Drukier
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December 17, 2021 in Plus-sized models, Rule 5
Tagged plus-size models, Rule 5, Sophia Adams
He wants a reprieve, as the politicals seemingly prepare for another lockdown against the Omicron variant, of such shenanigans. And for the health authorities to regain some of their respect by allowing such as Ivermectin and hydrocloriquine which have had some effectiveness, to be used rather than scorned.
“We also have to recognize that this virus is mutating,” Carson said. ”It will continue to be with us for years to come. Fortunately, it seems to be attenuating. It’s getting weaker, which is sort of like the natural thing that viruses do as they mutate, but obviously, it’s a novel coronavirus that is something new.”
Irish democracy already is in full swing in Florida and here in Texas and seeing that, people in other states are going to be ignoring Lyin’ Biden’s vaccine push even for toddlers who have almost zero chance of dying from an infection. Time to use science as more than a political slogan.
Via Newsmax
I would suspect that Amtrak’s decision to halt the vaccine mandate for employees reveals that most of the holdouts are front-line workers on the trains themselves.
“I would bet, and it is essentially admitted by the statement from Amtrak, that a much higher percentage of the critical workers are refusing the vaccine than exist in the total employment ranks. The most productive and critical employees within any organization are independent minded, dependable and capable of a much larger influence than the average person. It is inside that core group of highly critical employees where effects from a vaccine mandate refusal makes the biggest impact.”
The mask nazis, in other words, whom we encountered on our last train trip, who threatened to throw off the train any passenger caught not wearing a mask. And put them off in the furthest reaches, the most rural, part of the schedule. Their performance soured us a bit on government railroad but we’re still considering a rail trip to Sedona next year.
It’s the 75th anniversary of the publication of Paramahansa Yogananda’s worldwide bestseller (more than 10 million copies sold) that has inspired thousands on a path of yoga, meditation and self-exploration. It’s quite a good book, an interesting tale. And you can start with a painless video before embarking on the read.
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Posted in Library, meditation
Tagged autobiography of a yogi, Yogananda