Category Archives: Humor and Observations

1871 Gun Ad

An 1871 gun advertisement to get ladies to buy a revolver for burglars.  Especially cool for me is that it is from the Ever Johnson Arms and Cycle Works.  “We make guns and bicycles.”  How many businesses in history can say that?

1871 home protection

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More Cosplay Pictures!

Having lost my collection of 1,000 cosplay pictures…sigh…due to corrupted disk storage, most of these are brand new.  Enjoy!

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Creepy ghost town emerges from sea

Creepy ghost town emerges from sea in Argentina

Published May 10, 2013

Associated Press

  • ArgentinaGhostTown.JPG

    May 7, 2013: Birds fly over the village of Epecuen, Argentina. (AP)

EPECUEN, Argentina –  A strange ghost town that spent a quarter century under water is coming up for air again in the Argentine farmlands southwest of Buenos Aires.

Epecuen was once a bustling little lakeside resort, where 1,500 people served 20,000 tourists a season. During Argentina’s golden age, the same trains that carried grain to the outside world brought visitors from the capital to relax in Epecuen’s saltwater baths and spas.

The saltwater lake was particularly attractive because it has 10 times more salt than the ocean, making the water buoyant. Tourists, especially people from Buenos Aires’ large Jewish community, enjoyed floating in water that reminded them of the Dead Sea in the Middle East.

Then a particularly heavy rainstorm followed a series of wet winters, and the lake overflowed its banks on Nov. 10, 1985. Water burst through a retaining wall and spilled into the lakeside streets. People fled with what they could, and within days their homes were submerged under nearly 10 meters (33 feet) of corrosive saltwater.

Now the water has mostly receded, exposing what looks like a scene from a movie about the end of the world. The town hasn’t been rebuilt, but it has become a tourist destination once again, for people willing to drive at least six hours from Buenos Aires to get here, along 340 miles (550 kilometers) of narrow country roads.

People come to see the rusted hulks of automobiles and furniture, crumbled homes and broken appliances. They climb staircases that lead nowhere, and wander through a graveyard where the water toppled headstones and exposed tombs to the elements.

It’s a bizarre, post-apocalyptic landscape that captures a traumatic moment in time.

One man refused to leave. Pablo Novak, now 82, still lives on the edge of the town, welcoming people who wander into the wrecked streets.

“Whoever passes nearby cannot go without coming to visit here,” Novak said while showing The Associated Press around. “It’s getting more people to the area, as they come to see the ruins.”

Many residents of Epecuen fled to nearby Carhue, another lakeside town, and built new hotels and spas, promising relaxing getaways featuring saltwater and mud facials.

“Not only do we have Epecuen with the ruins and its natural wealth, but we also can increasingly offer other alternatives,” said Javier Andres, the local tourism director.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/world/2013/05/10/creepy-ghost-town-emerges-from-sea-in-argentina/?intcmp=obinsite#ixzz2SxbZX63h

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Iron Man 3 – Movie Review

Iron Man 3

Movie Review

by Michael Bradley

 Iron-Man-33

As a huge comic book fan and reader of the original Iron Man comics, I would probably go see any movie made about Marvel or DC Comics heroes.  Unfortunately, that is what Hollywood banks on too often.  Film producers do not understand the fascination with comics and rely on the old tried and true formula of big stars, big trailers and lots of computer generated special effects.  It is what makes Iron Man 3 interesting, but also what makes it fall short of the mark.

I try to avoid spoilers in movie reviews, but in this case, I have to discuss the scenes themselves.  If you have not seen it before, I give it high marks for eye candy and low marks for plot and acting.  You should stop here if you want no spoilers. 

Iron Man 3 starts off with The Mandarin, the mystical head of the Ten Rings shadowy organization.  The Mandarin played horribly by Ben Kingsley, a man who other than Gandhi has played every stupid role in a film.  The Mandarin turns out to be an idiot actor with no villain qualities at all.  It is a real insult to the comic fans.  Robert Downey as the title character seems to call it in on this movie, having already announced he might not do future ones.  His acting is wooden.

You start off with Tony Stark narrating how he made innocent people into demons.  This narrative is heavy handed throughout the film, including The Mandarin being a fake terrorist to prop up military industrial spending.  They come out and tell you over and over, that we make our own demons.  The point of the movie is clear, that all terrorists are created by our military to sell weapon systems.  It is just as crassly portrayed in the movie, a political charge that is without any depth.

At the beginning, we find Tony Stark beset with anxiety attacks, worried about Pepper Pots, but never spending any time with the person who is indispensable to him.  Then he makes a stupid taunt in the press and nearly gets both killed.  He spends most of the film trying to get one partially functional suit to work, only to have forty fully functional suits magically appear at the end of the film for the finale.

An army of Iron Men suits appear for the finale.

An army of Iron Men suits appear for the finale.

The best part of the movie, and there are not a lot other than the computer action scenes, come when Tony Stark is relating to a young boy named Harley Keener, played by Ty Simkins.  Ty steals the scenes and you wish the movie dwelt more on real characters like that than on the incessant assault on the senses of loud destruction scenes.  The other good part of the movie is the humor inserted.  A henchman actually leaves a scene, putting down his weapon and saying, “I hate this job, the people are weird here, I’m just going to leave if that is ok.”

The end has the Vice President being part of the conspiracy of course, so he can take over and you guessed it – get in more wars to sell more weapons for the defense industry.   When Stan Lee created his characters they were about social commentary.  The X-Men represented the viewpoints during the Civil Rights movement.  Spiderman was the boy coming of age and learning how to be a man.  Iron Man was created during the Vietnam War as a challenge to make a warmongering weapons manufacturer popular at the height of protests and hostilities.  Stan Lee always played against type.  That is one reason turning Iron Man into a pacifist who still builds violent personal robot exoskeletons by the score attacks the very foundation of the canon.

The worst attack on the canon of Iron Man is at the end.  Tony Stark decides to get his heart “fixed” by removing the metal shards in it.  What?  The one thing that made Iron Man was that his heart was inoperable, that he had to create the power device that made him part human, part machine.  The scene lasts less than a minute, and then he is all healed and throws his chest power plant into the ocean.

They even made over Pepper Potts from the spunky, smart, moralist to a superhero with compromised moral viewpoints at the end.  Last, after waiting through the longest credits in history, was the let down of the end clip.  In previous films in the Avenger line, the end clip reveals some cool clue about an upcoming movie.  In Iron Man 3, the end clip is just Tony Stark finishing his narrative to a sleeping Incredible Hulk in human form, who tells him he is not a psychologist.  Of course Tony Stark in the comics would never open up about anxiety disorders, his love of Pepper Potts, or giving up his powers to a fellow Avenger, but hey, every other thing about Iron Man seems to be lost in this movie as well.

If you are an Iron Man fan, you will see this movie no matter what I say, and probably already have.  Once your adrenaline settles back down from the cgi and sound track, see if you don’t agree with these comments.  Movie producers, please pay attention to character development and not just special effects.

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More Evil Bases

A recurring post is “evil bases” you can see more by typing that in the Search box on the home page.  Basically, if you are an evil mastermind, where would you put your base?  You want security, comfort, anonymity or total intimidation?  Here are some possible evil base locations.

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Victorian Spy Camera

1886-1890:Victorian Spy Camera

“The Lancaster Watch Camera was patented in October 1886 and made until 1890. Such tiny cameras were the forerunners for the ‘spy’ camera”

– Lionel Hughes, Bonhams

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Before Babel? Ancient mother tongue reconstructed

Before Babel? Ancient mother tongue reconstructed

By Tia Ghose

Published May 07, 2013

LiveScience

  • tower of babel.jpg

    The idea of a universal human language goes back at least to the Bible, in which humanity spoke a common tongue, but were punished with mutual unintelligibility after trying to build the Tower of Babel all the way to heaven. Now scientists have reconstructed words from such a language. (public domain)

The ancestors of people from across Europe and Asia may have spoken a common language about 15,000 years ago, new research suggests.

Now, researchers have reconstructed words, such as “mother,” “to pull” and “man,” which would have been spoken by ancient hunter-gatherers, possibly in an area such as the Caucuses or the modern-day country of Georgia. The word list, detailed Monday in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, could help researchers retrace the history of ancient migrations and contacts between prehistoric cultures.

“We can trace echoes of language back 15,000 years to a time that corresponds to about the end of the last ice age,” said study co-author Mark Pagel, an evolutionary biologist at the University of Reading in the United Kingdom.

Tower of Babel
The idea of a universal human language goes back at least to the Bible, in which humanity spoke a common tongue, but were punished with mutual unintelligibility after trying to build the Tower of Babel all the way to heaven. [Image Gallery: Ancient Middle-Eastern Texts]

‘We can trace echoes of language back 15,000 years.’

– Mark Pagel, an evolutionary biologist at the University of Reading 

But not all linguists believe in a single common origin of language, and trying to reconstruct that language seemed impossible. Most researchers thought they could only trace a language’s roots back 3,000 to 4,000 years. (Even so, researchers recently said they had traced the roots of a common mother tongue to many Eurasian languages back 8,000 to 9,500 years to Anatolia, a southwestern Asian peninsula that is now part of Turkey.)

Pagel, however, wondered whether language evolution proceeds much like biological evolution. If so, the most critical words, such as the frequently used words that define our social relationships, would change much more slowly.

To find out if he could uncover those ancient words, Pagel and his colleagues in a previous study tracked how quickly words changed in modern languages. They identified the most stable words. They also mapped out how different modern languages were related.

They then reconstructed ancient words based on the frequency at which certain sounds tend to change in different languages for instance, p’s and f’s often change over time in many languages, as in the change from “pater” in Latin to the more recent term “father” in English.

The researchers could predict what 23 words, including “I,” “ye,” “mother,” “male,” “fire,” “hand” and “to hear” might sound like in an ancestral language dating to 15,000 years ago.

In other words, if modern-day humans could somehow encounter their Stone Age ancestors, they could say one or two very simple statements and make themselves understood, Pagel said.

Limitations of tracing language
Unfortunately, this language technique may have reached its limits in terms of how far back in history it can go.

“It’s going to be very difficult to go much beyond that, even these slowly evolving words are starting to run out of steam,” Pagel told LiveScience.

The study raises the possibility that researchers could combine linguistic data with archaeology and anthropology “to tell the story of human prehistory,” for instance by recreating ancient migrations and contacts between people, said William Croft, a comparative linguist at the University of New Mexico, who was not involved in the study.

“That has been held back because most linguists say you can only go so far back in time,” Croft said. “So this is an intriguing suggestion that you can go further back in time.”

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/science/2013/05/07/before-babel-ancient-mother-tongue-reconstructed/?intcmp=features#ixzz2SrPS5Nqv

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1800’s Model Eyeball

1800s Model Eyeball 

1800 – 1899:Optical Model of the Eye

“René Descartes suggested in 1637 that to understand the properties of the eye, one should study the eyeball of a recently deceased man or a freshly killed large animal. Beginning in the late 17th century, optical models provided an alternative. The lens of the model projects an inverted and reversed image onto a matted screen on the back. Two lenses can be placed in front of the eye to demonstrate the function of corrective lenses for near- and farsightedness.”

– Corning Museum of Glass

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Mini Cooper Art

Mini Coopers as art make them a little more bearable (14 photos)

JANUARY 6, 2010

FOLLOW  ON TAPITURE

a mini cooper art 10 Mini Coopers as art make them a little more bearable (14 photos)

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Things You Would Like to Have

Here are some things you would like to have.

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