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Journal Journal: it's a good time for TV (part 3 of 3) 1

p.s. on part 1: So on FU Garage earlier in the week they located and haggled over and bought a 1970 Torino 429 Cobra Jet, of which they said not a whole lot were made. (And with an engine that size, would be highly desirable.) They had no project car to work on at the time, so the wrench monkeys were idle. And the possibly head partner guy flipped it for only $2500 profit. WhyTF not fix it all up and sell it for a $25K profit?!?

3) Zombies

Comment Re:Better support than they have for Web? (Score 1) 192

Have you used ASP.NET MVC? Because if you're not using the HTML helpers (which among other things create tags for you), you're doing it wrong. Tags are matched, but you get some line breaks in weird places that make the generated HTML not as neat as I prefer. And the checkbox helper emits two controls instead of one, so that the model binding magic works.

Comment What's the big deal? (Score 1) 33

This is simply a core, fundamental belief in modern American Leftism. They'd moved on from trying to convince the working classes to join them in overthrowing the system, to being convinced (and this part they're right about) that people are too stupid to make the right decisions for themselves and therefore they need to fool them into letting them gradually, fundamentally transform the system. Communism has simply adapted and evolved, to what works and what doesn't. (Because what works is the *only* thing it's all about, because in that (man-made) morality system, the virtues of the dreamt about outcomes far outweigh sacrificing truth, and human dignity (for greater, collective outcomes).)

This stuff just isn't even shocking anymore. I guess rather you post things like this just to tweak your two Leftie besties/tormentors back. Integrity is like infidelism; it's just one group's axis of morality that's not even recognized as being one to the other.

Comment She's getting close, ... (Score 1) 48

...but not completely there yet. She's figured out that Lefties are fueled by vile thinking, and that this is characteristic only of that side. What she and I believe you haven't fully connected the dots on is the deceit. TFAuthor writes as though she believes the extent of lying on the Left is only on behalf of its set of sacred cows. And in the absence of attacks on those, Lefties will level with you, such that it even makes sense to converse with them, as long as you stay away from or make allowances for their reactions to those touchy areas.

Comment Re:Seems to me .... (Score 2) 3

water purification tablets

And there's another! Why don't these people think of these things? It's like they apply to appear on the show, but they're never watched it. So it's like they're oblivious to the same kinds of problems each pair runs into.

Maybe it's that if you've got the guts and confidence to volunteer for something like that, you think you don't need to learn anything from prior contestants/victims. Strangely, no one dropped out voluntarily on N & A's first season, and they didn't have any way of knowing what it would be like from watching a previous season. Later seasons find people going in all cocky, and then tapping out, and they have the benefit of knowing in advance what they'll be in for! (And some of these people wussing out are survival instructors; to fail at what you claim you're good at, on national TV, can't be too good for that part of your career!)

I kinda glossed over the plastic sheet thing, but that's brilliant too. All the people on these shows are actually amazingly good at making shelters, but they can leak a little in a downpour. Would make a good inner liner, from the rain as well as wind. And bugs, if it was big enough. Which leads me to the last puzzling thing I'll mention; in some locales the bugs eat them alive, and in some they freeze their butts off at nights, and I can't help but wonder, how come no one has ever gone subsurface with their shelter. Some, esp. in jungle areas, have made very cool raised shelters, I guess because of army ants and venomous snakes. But there's nothing insulating like earth.

(p.s. You might also be thinking using the plastic sheet to condense steam. One guy on Dude You're Screwed had a plastic baggie, and put some juicy leaves in it and left it in the sun, and got a bit of fresh water that way.)

Comment Re:there's nothing wrong with ads (Score 1) 2

Sure, I don't mind at all when the mfr's release teaser images of a new model, for example. There's no commentary with it; you decide if you like the style of the new whatever, or if you think it could grow on you, or not. But for a "review", entailing pros and cons, and including comparisons with competitors say, I'd rather listen to third parties (even though some of them can be bought and sold by a given advertiser and/or already be predisposed towards certain mfrs).

Ads are one-sided, and that's their deficiency (to their recipients). Movie trailers can portray a movie a lot funnier than it is. I watch all the movie trailers I come across, and keep a list of movies I haven't seen that might be worthwhile, but they only tell me if it *might be* worthwhile. I've got burned a few times with some real zonkers, because I don't generally seek out reviews of movies first.

Taking this a little broader, realize that, generally speaking, ads totally suck. They're not for you and me. They're meant for the vast masses of dummies. They only have a short time to convey a winning impression, and it seems like the people in the ad business, like the people on the Left, almost always opt for trying to fool you about or into something. Things like "if such-and-such is great on this, just imagine how good it would be for that" don't work on us, because we're logical enough to know that that's not a real reason, and that a 30 second spot has completed and they've made no actual claim.

Watching ads is like watching FNC only, or watching anything but FNC only.

Comment Re:Not always (Score 1) 10

those pretentious not-to-be-touched hipster coffee-table books.

Reminds me, my sis's in-laws are those certain kinds of people who wallpaper their small homes with dusty old bookshelves and books, of wildly varying, esoteric topics.

What will today's hipster youth do when they're older to peacock (yes, I just verbized that) their bohemianness or whatever.

Comment Re:Tradition of small government? (Score 1) 23

The District of Columbia might be a counterexample of that.

I guess you're saying the lower levels of governance would have the militias and the territory to support them, and the higher levels wouldn't, and the lower levels would use them against the higher levels if they overstepped their levels of what they were responsible for handling.

Seems like some lower orders might side with an overstepping higher order, for competitive gain. Civil wars might be occasional rather than practically never.

Comment Re:not far enough (Score 1) 28

Holy crap, apparently it's a colloquialism for a large, sprawling set of freeway onramps and offramps! Now that I'm looking at the pattern, I think I know where a half "cloverleaf interchange" is in my area.

That's okay, we're never been on the same wavelength (like for example, doesn't it seem like this got strayed awfully far from what I was posting about, or what you journaled about in the first place?).

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