Why sunflowers follow the sun



you wanted this, I know you did... ha ha BOOM

head wag

 
...a statement that was given in June by Dr. Jill Stein , an American physician, activist, and politician. She is currently the Green Party’s presumptive presidential nominee for the 2016 election. Her statement echoes the words of many others in previous years, including Theodore Roosevelt,  who once told the world that “presidents are selected, not elected,” and that “behind the ostensible government sits enthroned an invisible government owing no allegiance and acknowledging no responsibility to the people.” (source

"...If quantum mechanics hasn’t profoundly shocked you, you haven’t understood it yet. Everything we call real is made of things that cannot be regarded as real.” – Niels Bohr, a Danish Physicist"

BOOM - head wag indeed 

blue hand books

If you are looking for a book, I have a place to look:

BLUE HAND BOOKS

buffalo dreams

AUGUST should be all about reading...
I'm reading this unpublished manuscript...

My friend sent me her book Buffalo Dreams... it's all about dreams... I like dreaming... BOOM

ARTSY US: Institutional Time

“In this characteristically tenacious book, feminist artist and educator Chicago, best known for her 1979 installation The Dinner Party, shares her struggles and successes as an art instructor—at CalArts (where she helped establish the feminist art program), Indiana University, Duke, Western Kentucky, Vanderbilt, and elsewhere—and boldly calls for a systematic restructuring of studio art programs, which she finds ‘deficient, dishonest, and lacking in standards,’ as well as androcentric. Chicago’s critiques and proposals are powerful conversation-starters, presented earnestly and without academic jargon. She contends, for example, that studio art educators should have teaching credentials; that students should be exposed to a greater variety of art practices and practitioners, such as muralists and community-based artists; women’s studies should be fully integrated into the core curriculum; and, finally, ‘artists might consider joining forces to combat an art system that is bad for art and toxic for artists.’ Disillusioned students and educators will benefit from this rousing book.”
Publishers Weekly
this is true, if I had $40 I'd buy this...BOOM!

pickle ball anyone?

Hey, I have good friends who play this - have you? I'm going to google it - BOOM

Monday Maniac

This is an album cover - you decide - BOOM


Eric Serra - "The Experience of Love"





BOOM - James Bond's Golden Eye has this song stuck in my head

Brainwrap: No debate? WHAT?

Just last night I posted a diary which included a poll asking what how people thought the Debates between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump will play out. I included 7 different options.

The very last option I included...which ended up receiving a whopping 58% of the votes...was this:
Trump chickens out of showing up at all, blaming the media/the moderator/the host network for "not treating him fairly"
Well, less than 24 hours later, guess what?

BOOM.

Wow...I figured there was a good chance of him weaseling out of the debates, but I didn’t think he would start the process the very first day of the general election!

In fact, I actually figured he’d go ahead and willingly participate in the first one (September 26th), and would only squirm out of the second and third ones after getting his ass thoroughly handed to him in Round 1.
From the looks of it, he has no intention of even showing that much backbone.
Stay tuned...

subscribe

road trip here

Boom - you are in Massachusetts now - take an easy e-trip with me...
(pack a little bag of plain m&ms for us, please)

Lizzie Borden Bed & Breakfast --we'll not stay there


we'll go here!
Fall River, Massachusetts
Sleep in the death bedroom, then buy a Lizzie bobblehead!
- See more at: http://www.roadsideamerica.com/location/ma#sthash.kKXesUgM.dpuf

Lizzie Borden Bed & Breakfast

Fall River, Massachusetts
Sleep in the death bedroom, then buy a Lizzie bobblehead!
- See more at: http://www.roadsideamerica.com/location/ma#sthash.kKXesUgM.dpuf
 
 
 
 

 Bewitched Statue Salem, Massachusetts

Lizzie Borden Bed & Breakfast

Fall River, Massachusetts
Sleep in the death bedroom, then buy a Lizzie bobblehead!
- See more at: http://www.roadsideamerica.com/location/ma#sthash.kKXesUgM.dpuf

The Mapparium

Field review by the editors.
Boston, Massachusetts
- See more at: http://www.roadsideamerica.com/story/11455#sthash.5A6gtcDM.dpuf
go look at the MA places to visit HERE

The Mapparium

Field review by the editors.
Boston, Massachusetts
- See more at: http://www.roadsideamerica.com/story/11455#sthash.5A6gtcDM.dpuf

The Big Wobble: Missile test, space junk or a meteor?

CLICK The Big Wobble: Missile test, space junk or a meteor? Blazing spec...: Photo usa.liveuamap.com

I must say it looks far to slow for a meteor.
Yesterday! A fireball which streaked across the sky in the western United States caused social media to light up back on earth.
The blazing spectacle spotted in Nevada, Utah and California, has also left space experts divided over what it was.

BOOM - this shit scares me...

make me a poem this good

SOURCE: PLEASE BURY ME IN THE LIBRARY
IMG_0532
Lately I’ve found myself reading a wide variety of fiction and nonfiction works, often from my own at-home bookshelves

by J. Patrick Lewis:

Please Bury Me in the Library

Please bury me in the library
In the clean, well-lighted stacks
Of Novels, History, Poetry,
Right next to the Paperbacks,
Where the Kids’ Books dance
With True Romance
And the Dictionary dozes.

Please bury me in the library
With a dozen long-stemmed proses.
Way back by a rack of Magazines,
I won’t be sad too often,
If they bury me in the library
With Bookworms in my coffin.

Are You a Book Person?
A good book is a kind
Of person with a mind
Of her own,
Who lives alone,
Standing on a shelf
By herself.
She has a spine,
A heart, a soul,
And a goal —

To capture, to amuse,
To light a fire
(You’re the fuse),
Or else, joyfully,
Just to be.
From Beginning
To end,
Need a friend?
*******

Hey wait a fast minute

The world’s last VCR (Video Cassette Recorder) will be produced by Japanese electronics maker Funai Electric Co. sometime this month according to an anonymous spokesman for the company.

BOOM - I am heading to a store to buy one (or many) as soon as I can afford it...

Ladies & Gentlemen of A.D. 2088

Here's Kurt Vonnegut's letter:

Ladies & Gentlemen of A.D. 2088:

It has been suggested that you might welcome words of wisdom from the past, and that several of us in the twentieth century should send you some. Do you know this advice from Polonius in Shakespeare's Hamlet: 'This above all: to thine own self be true'? Or what about these instructions from St. John the Divine: 'Fear God, and give glory to Him; for the hour of His judgment has come'? The best advice from my own era for you or for just about anybody anytime, I guess, is a prayer first used by alcoholics who hoped to never take a drink again: 'God grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, courage to change the things I can, and wisdom to know the difference.'

Our century hasn't been as free with words of wisdom as some others, I think, because we were the first to get reliable information about the human situation: how many of us there were, how much food we could raise or gather, how fast we were reproducing, what made us sick, what made us die, how much damage we were doing to the air and water and topsoil on which most life forms depended, how violent and heartless nature can be, and on and on. Who could wax wise with so much bad news pouring in?

For me, the most paralyzing news was that Nature was no conservationist. It needed no help from us in taking the planet apart and putting it back together some different way, not necessarily improving it from the viewpoint of living things. It set fire to forests with lightning bolts. It paved vast tracts of arable land with lava, which could no more support life than big-city parking lots. It had in the past sent glaciers down from the North Pole to grind up major portions of Asia, Europe, and North America. Nor was there any reason to think that it wouldn't do that again someday. At this very moment it is turning African farms to deserts, and can be expected to heave up tidal waves or shower down white-hot boulders from outer space at any time. It has not only exterminated exquisitely evolved species in a twinkling, but drained oceans and drowned continents as well. If people think Nature is their friend, then they sure don't need an enemy.

Yes, and as you people a hundred years from now must know full well, and as your grandchildren will know even better: Nature is ruthless when it comes to matching the quantity of life in any given place at any given time to the quantity of nourishment available. So what have you and Nature done about overpopulation? Back here in 1988, we were seeing ourselves as a new sort of glacier, warm-blooded and clever, unstoppable, about to gobble up everything and then make love—and then double in size again.

On second thought, I am not sure I could bear to hear what you and Nature may have done about too many people for too small a food supply.

And here is a crazy idea I would like to try on you: Is it possible that we aimed rockets with hydrogen bomb warheads at each other, all set to go, in order to take our minds off the deeper problem—how cruelly Nature can be expected to treat us, Nature being Nature, in the by-and-by?

Now that we can discuss the mess we are in with some precision, I hope you have stopped choosing abysmally ignorant optimists for positions of leadership. They were useful only so long as nobody had a clue as to what was really going on—during the past seven million years or so. In my time they have been catastrophic as heads of sophisticated institutions with real work to do.

The sort of leaders we need now are not those who promise ultimate victory over Nature through perseverance in living as we do right now, but those with the courage and intelligence to present to the world what appears to be Nature's stern but reasonable surrender terms:
      1. Reduce and stabilize your population.
      2. Stop poisoning the air, the water, and the topsoil.
      3. Stop preparing for war and start dealing with your real problems.
      4. Teach your kids, and yourselves, too, while you're at it, how to inhabit a small planet without helping to kill it.
      5. Stop thinking science can fix anything if you give it a trillion dollars.
      6. Stop thinking your grandchildren will be OK no matter how wasteful or destructive you may be, since they can go to a nice new planet on a spaceship. That is really mean, and stupid.
      7. And so on. Or else.
Am I too pessimistic about life a hundred years from now? Maybe I have spent too much time with scientists and not enough time with speechwriters for politicians. For all I know, even bag ladies and bag gentlemen will have their own personal helicopters or rocket belts in A.D. 2088. Nobody will have to leave home to go to work or school, or even stop watching television. Everybody will sit around all day punching the keys of computer terminals connected to everything there is, and sip orange drink through straws like the astronauts.
Cheers,
Kurt Vonnegut

ECO WATCH: In 1988, my then Hyannis Port neighbor the late Kurt Vonnegut wrote a prescient letter to the Earth's planetary citizens of 2088 for Volkswagen's TIME magazine ad campaign. His seven points of advice are perhaps more relevant today than at any time in human history. We should keep this advice in mind this election year and adopt Vonnegut's recommendations while we still can.

Thursday=Thor Day

image: screenrant
Origin and Etymology of thursday

Middle English, from Old English thursdæg, from Old Norse thōrsdagr; akin to Old English thunresdæg Thursday, Old Norse Thōrr Thor, Old English thunor thunder — more at thunder

First Known Use: before 12th century [ "Thursday." Merriam-Webster.com. Merriam-Webster, n.d. Web. 28 July 2016.]

BOOM! You wanted to know this. I know you did.


just a reminder

  good reminders!  


oh yeah...

oh yeah...

Trace's book