h/t Morroco Mole — Oh those early Olympics were some kinda fun! 1904 St. Louis Olympic Marathon.
Your turn.
h/t Morroco Mole — Oh those early Olympics were some kinda fun! 1904 St. Louis Olympic Marathon.
Your turn.
Do tell.
Devastating headline for Democrats:
🚨 ‘No One Believes Anything’: Voters Worn Out by a Fog of Political News 🚨
From collusion to obstruction of justice to abuse of power to quid pro quo to bribery/extortion, Democrats have cried 'wolf' too many times. https://t.co/aD7SSdbMdD
— Rep Andy Biggs (@RepAndyBiggsAZ) November 18, 2019
Related: The Supreme Court Halts Lower Court Ruling for President Trump Tax Returns….
How much does it cost Blue Apron to land a new customer? About $500. How much is an average customer worth? About $400 in the lifetime of the relationship. Blue Apron loses $100 on every customer.
More: “How does this thing make any sense?” I asked my friend.
h/t KP
It’s not just California anymore;
More than a dozen people affiliated with an animal rights group have been arrested in a protest against sled dog kennels, months after the same organization’s occupation of a turkey barn prompted the Alberta government to promise a crackdown on rural trespassers.
RCMP say they were called to the Mad Dogs and Englishmen kennels east of Canmore, Alta., on Saturday morning when approximately 30 protesters allegedly broke into the kennels to protest the treatment of the dogs.
Police say 15 people, including one young person, were arrested and face charges of break and enter to commit mischief.
I was updating our records of the Lobbying Registry’s forgotten lore last week, rummaging through records, and something just didn’t seem right. The entries seemed boring. True, all these entries seem boring, but these somehow more so. They seemed familiar. Ah, said I, it’s nothing really, just the fancies born of memories of so much time online, only this and nothing more.
Ah, distinctly I remember, t’was in the bleak December… of 2014 actually, when we’d found the first problems within CSA’s Lobbying Registration.
I was seeing last week some of the same things I’d seen in 2014. It didn’t seem at all like fancies; more like facts. So I ran an experiment.
Greta Thunberg continues to set the bar high when it comes to rethinking the way we travel. The young environmental activist has refused to fly to the up and coming climate conference in Madrid, setting sail from America yesterday.
Via email (lightly edited);
I’m not wishing them any ill luck but I’ve made two trips from Sidney to Glacier Bay by slow boat. It can get real nasty out there and there’s a good reason why real sailors don’t cross the North Atlantic at the end of November. The Met forecast for that area really sucks – that big red blob is every bit as nasty as it looks.
She’s onboard Lavagabonde. Its crewed by a husband and wife who are internet darlings with 4 years of ocean passage “experience”. Their Facebook page is a hoot. There’s 4 adults plus Greta and their 11 month old baby on this publicity stunt. That’s the two principals on Lavag plus Greta’s dad plus one woman who may actually have some real blue water experience. They left New York (?) on Thursday.
If you look closely you can see some disagreement about the course in the early going. This is obviously just a WAG but it looks to me as though they chickened out and followed the coast so they could duck back in if it got too nasty. Then whatever happened early Saturday in the dark and they abruptly turned through 100+ degrees to head where they want to go. That’s a 3 week crossing in a capable boat and there’s some dispute whether this is the right boat. The heroes were given the boat as a publicity stunt by the mfr. They’re not going to want to see it go down and I’d be willing to bet there’s a chase vessel somewhere nearby.
I’ve never done this kind of a passage but I have some experience with bad conditions and long (18 hour) passages. Even the most capable sailors get seasick and it can completely debilitate you. You can’t think straight and you just want to curl up in a ball. My experience is on power boats where you don’t have to manage sails and move around on slippery decks with big things banging at your head in the wind. On a power boat when it gets ugly you close the doors, turn up the heat, turn on the autopilot and slow down. If you look at the Met forecast they’ve got 30+ foot stuff ahead of them and that means that the average height of the largest 1/3 of the waves are over 30 feet. Individual waves could be more than twice that and they’re short period waves which are the absolute worst. Long rollers can be huge and not bother you but short square shit is just plain nasty.
That big red ball is forecast to move slowly SE before turning NE. Right now its about where George Clooney went down in The Perfect Storm.
Mark Levin interviews Devin Nunes.
Thread’s open.
All is forgiven: “Prince Andrew’s attempt to explain away his friendship with pedophile financier Jeffrey Epstein in a high-profile TV interview degenerated into a farce that threatens to be the British royal family’s biggest public relations disaster since its handling of the death of Princess Diana in 1997.”
Wow, there was a lot of blinking in the response to that question. Probably nothing. 🤔 pic.twitter.com/HDet6xcfSY
— Paul Joseph Watson (@PrisonPlanet) November 16, 2019
Breaking: House minority leader Kevin McCarthy demands answers from ABC News on Epstein story
“Democrats need to embrace Hollywood because this is where they need to come to learn how to tell a story.” – Michael Moore
Ouch.
This is really cool — Ventusky. I’ve added it to the sidebar. (h/t Latitude)
Oddly enough, the Germans seemed to know where to aim the landing. Or at least – two of them did. Footage from the 1936 Olympics Cross Country.
Part one is here.
Your tips are welcome in the comments.
Human ingenuity is rising to the perceived challenge of climate change. if governments can scrape together enough wisdom (a tall order, I know) to put their full weight behind these efforts, we may be spared from whatever type of war that we are headed for as Luddites keep trying to smash energy machines with no realistic alternative to replace them. Read on…
Sprite: the soft drink of child sexual grooming.
Here’s @Sprite joining the push for full societal rot.
If it feels like the forces pushing this degeneracy are building, it’s because they are. Don’t be shamed into silence. pic.twitter.com/5EG9A9UnZL
— Jesse Kelly (@JesseKellyDC) November 16, 2019
It’s not the lowest elevation on the planet but -35C at 50deg latitude in mid November. Getting rediculous and no news coverage. pic.twitter.com/HTKpu1yVNY
— Syn Kronos (@KronosSyn) November 16, 2019
Richard Fernandez: I don’t know enough law to meaningfully comment on Barr’s argument, but its breadth and mere existence are every bit as provocative as knocking the hat off the pole. This is the dread moment that may pass unnoticed–or otherwise.
Full transcript here and a good Twitter summary by Josh Blackman.
Through the scorched earth, no holds barred war of resistance, the left is shredding rule of law and undermining rule of law.
— Josh Blackman (@JoshMBlackman) November 15, 2019
Who could have predicted this?
Wall Street’s exuberance over legal weed has quickly curdled into sober reality.
In a matter of months, white-hot cannabis companies have flamed out in spectacular fashion. Many have lost two-thirds or more of their value.
Widespread legalization has been thwarted. Bank financing has dried up. Deep-pocketed institutional investors remain on the sidelines and old-fashioned black-market dealers still provide stiff competition.
The pain deepened on Thursday, when Ontario-based Canopy Growth Corp. announced revenue that fell short of the lowest Wall Street estimate and a loss that one analyst called “astounding.” That sent shares to the lowest since December 2017. It’s still the largest pot company in the world, but at C$7.1 billion its market value is just a sliver of the C$24 billion it reached in April.
On a day when Canada’s stock market reached an all-time high, shares of cannabis companies continue their downward spiral.
To save $190 million in planned expenses, the company announced it was halting construction of one production facility in Medicine Hat, Alta. and stopping work at another facility.
In Montreal, Aurora Cannabis chairman Michael Singer told CTV News, “we are tightening the belt and being very cautious about spending.”
For the cannabis industry, it’s been a dramatic shift from the abundant investment hype seen during the last year’s lead up to legalization.
Anybody with a scintilla of knowledge about the price and availability of pot on the street, that’s who.
Bill Jacobson, founder and publisher of Legal Insurrection as well as a clinical professor of law and director of the Securities Law Clinic at Cornell Law School, shares his insights on Gibson’s Bakery v. Oberlin College.