Today, my new 1GB memory card arrived (no more downloading pictures every 30 shots or so). I’m starting to get the hang of the new camera’s controls. I celebrated by spending a few hours on the riverfront taking more pictures. Chattanooga is lovely city in the fall. Enjoy.
Monthly Archive for October, 2006
Woohoo! My new digital camera (a Canon S3 IS) has arrived! This thing rocks! Check out some photos I’ve taken in the last hour or so … (sorry, none of Autumn; she’s not here right now).
Pop quiz! What’s the phrase you always hear when anti-smoking advocates talk about banning smoking in public places? That’s right … “second-hand smoke.” And … they’ve got a point. Almost everybody finds cigarette smoke to be obnoxious. Most people don’t like cigar smoke. And, even though lots of people have fond memories of their grandfather smoking a pipe, and love the smell … you’ll find people that don’t like that either (especially if the smoker in question is smoking something heavy on perique or latakia).
“What if I want to enjoy a steak and a glass of wine without breathing smoke?” we hear. “What if I want to go to the bar and have a beer and not come home smelling like stale cigarette smoke?” My answer has always been “Well, don’t go the restaurant/bar that allows smoking. Vote with your wallet. If enough people do that, most of the places that allow smoking will go out of business. My opinion is … if smokers want a restaurant where they can smoke, fine. If I want to eat in a restaurant without smoke … fine. We can get along here. (Note: I am an occasional pipe and cigar smoker)
Silly Libertarian ideas …
So, what happens when a city like Chicago bans smoking nearly city-wide (with the exception of shops that sell tobacco products)? What happens when, after the ban passes, when anti-smoking advocates find a place that doesn’t quite look like a tobacconist where people are smoking, poking at their laptops, and generally having fun?
Yes, that’s right, they are outraged!
Why? Is there some reason they want to visit and chill out at the Marshall McGearty Tobacco Lounge? The place that generally sells tobacco, but happens to have coffee as well, and free wireless internet access? Probably not. I’d wager there is a coffee shop around the corner they can enjoy. After all, it’s Chicago. So … obviously, second-hand smoke isn’t the issue here.
Fortunately, the article I read on the WRAL web site isn’t shy about saying why:Critics say the lounge does something else: Sidestep an ordinance enacted to save lives.So … it’s really not about the second-hand smoke. It’s about saving lives … and not the lives of the non-smokers. It’s about trying to snuff out smoking completely, and helping the smokers do the right thing by making it impossible to do what they are too stupid to do on their own. Yes, some anti-smoking advocates have been saying this for years. But generally, they’ve been working the press under waving the “second-hand smoke” flag. Because really … what non-smoker likes to come home smelling like cigarette smoke? How many of them really like that smell? None. So … who among them is going to be opposed to banning public smoking? They don’t smoke, so they don’t care.“People are dying,” said Ed Smith, the city alderman who sponsored the ordinance. “This (business) gives them a chance to die.”
What’s more, anti-smoking advocates worry the lounge sends a dangerous message.
“These places are an effort to glamorize smoking,” said Matt Myers, president of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, saying the lounge is an effort to create “the exact kind of attractive place young people go to.”
Make no mistake …. as Ed Smith and Matt Meyers demonstrate above, the real issue is whether ANYBODY should be able to choose to smoke. Yes, smoking is dirty. Yes, it has negative effects on your health. Different types of tobacco use can seriously increase your risk of certain kinds of cancer, heart and lung disease, etc. But … the key issue is … should the government really be able to say whether you should be able to do something that is detrimental to your health? Do you REALLY want them making that choice?
Try changing a few words in the quotes above:“These places are an effort to glamorize fast food,” said Matt Myers, president of the Campaign for Fast Food-Free Kids, saying the lounge is an effort to create “the exact kind of attractive place young people go to.”Hmmm. Yes, fast food isn’t generally healthy either. Nobody wants to see kids eating three meals a day at McDonald’s either. We’ve got far too many people in this nation with an obesity problem (myself included). But, the fact is, most of us have at least one unhealthy habit. Do we want the government banning [insert your bugagboo here]? No! It’s not their responsibility to keep you healthy.
So, what’s the big deal about this place in Chicago … one among millions of businesses … where people can go and smoke and chill? There isn’t any big deal. Let them smoke. They aren’t forcing you, Mr. or Mrs. anti-smoking advocate, to breathe their second-hand smoke. You have your businesses … and now that is most of Chicago. Let them have theirs.
Read More: A Year After City Smoking Ban, Tobacco Lounge Still In Business
I finally got my latest batch of photos of Autumn off the camera, and they are now posted for your viewing pleasure in the gallery named “October 28, 2006″. Enjoy.
Yeah, it’s not news any more. But I’m happy! It’s the first time in my life that the team I was pulling for won the World Series! Yay!
Sorry for the lack of updates. It’s been a busy week. My grandfather is in the hospital. A friend’s mother died on Wednesday. Another friend has a three-year-old granddaughter in the hospital with a serious heart condition that will require surgery. Rachel had a friend come and visit on Wednesday; today she saw two other college friends, and my old friend Brian and his wife Chris came to town for the weekend. So … a week of ups and downs.
I do have a couple of short posts in the works … maybe I will finish them tomorrow. I may be able to post some pictures, if I can convince my camera to allow me to download them from the internal memory.
Now, on to the juicy stuff … I just read this on MSNBC:PHILADELPHIA - A federal jury awarded $24.2 million to two men who were severely burned by electrical wires when they trespassed onto railroad property and climbed atop a rail car. Jeffrey Klein and Brett Birdwell, who were 17 at the time of the accident, sued Amtrak and Norfolk Southern Corp. after being burned by a 12,500-volt electrical wire in Lancaster in August 2002. In their lawsuit, they argued that the companies should have placed warning signs alerting people to the wires, which power locomotives.So, lemme get this straight … an easy ticket to being a millionaire:
1. Trespass.
2. Get Hurt.
3. Sue.
In one sense, I’m amazed. On the other hand … in a world where a grandmother sues people who joke about her fruitcake and a woman (successfully) sues McDonald’s when she is burned by hot coffee … I shouldn’t be surprised.
I suppose the fact that the railroads had “no trespassing” signs (at least I’m assuming they did … whenever I’ve been around railroad property, there were “no trespassing” signs all over the place) wasn’t good enough. And why would they have such signs up, and a “no trespassing” policy? Ummm … maybe because the property was dangerous? Hmmmm.
Wow.
Read More: $24.2 million for men burned atop rail car
Here’s some background, before I quote some from an article from WRAL’s web site.
1. In early January of this year, a woman named Michelle Bullard was kidnapped at gunpoint from the home of some of her friends.
2. The next day, a fellow, David Earl Wilson, is named as a ‘person of interest’. After he is pulled over that day in a traffic stop, he commits suicide.
3. The woman’s remains were found last week, on the border of property owned by Wilson’s brother.
Now, the Wilson’s family is complaining that people are harassing them, etc. Yeah, it definitely looks beyond suspicious, but personal attacks on the family are uncalled for. They more than likely had nothing to do with it, even if the guy was guilty.
But … the following quote in the WRAL article caught my eye:Wilson’s family said he killed himself because of health and marital problems and that the two incidents were coincidental. Authorities have never publicly stated whether Wilson was ever a suspect in the case.Huh? You were “trying to be nice” by sending the almost-suspect’s sister a birthday card with your murdered daughter’s picture inside? Yeah, sure. I’ll bet when Hitler invaded Poland, he was just trying to be a friendly neighbor.But, according to Myatt [Wilson's sister], public opinion differed. She said she and her family have received threatening phone calls and strange mail, which included a birthday card with Bullard’s picture taped inside.
“It was signed by Michelle’s mother, Karen,” Myatt said.
Bullard’s mother, Karen Riojas, confirmed with WRAL Tuesday that she did sent the card but said she meant no harm and was just trying to be nice.
Read More: Family Reports ‘Nasty Attacks’ Related To Bullard Disappearance
I read just a few minutes ago on WRAL that over the last month or so, there has been a string of vending machine burglaries in the Cary area. That in and of itself isn’t amusing, but the article notes that in one recent break-in, a security camera catches one thief buying a drink from a vending machine after being unable to break into it.
Read More: Vending-Machine Bandits Striking Area High Schools, Frustrated Vending Bandits End Up Buying Soda
I must say that of all the features that I read from online news sites, the “Whine of the Week” from MSNBC is my mostest favoritest. It’s packed full of sarcasm, unapologetic criticism, and all sorts of yummy goodness.
For instance, from this week:This week, we found ourselves considering with distaste people who pass judgment on things they’ve never seen. The crowd that wants to ban books from libraries has a particular talent for this. They whine and weep and wail about the Harry Potter series, for example, saying that the books promote witchcraft and paganism, when, if they’d bother to read the books, they’d find bears [sic] as much resemblance to the truth as Paris Hilton does to Ann Coulter.Yes! We have our sarcasm dial turned up to 11! Score!
Well, honestly the rest of it wasn’t as good. But geez … any time you can mention Harry Potter, Paris Hilton, and Ann Coulter all in the same sentence …
P.S. This is one of the few times I will allow the name “Paris Hilton” to show its face on this site. Wow. I feel dirty already.
To the editor:
Thank you for your kind coverage of the closing of The Corner Ice Cream Parlor (Raleigh Freezes Corner, Oct. 5). The response to your article has been incredible.
Who would have dreamed that two girls, one a Presbyterian from the North Carolina mountains and one a Catholic from Illinois, would have had this unbelievable love affair with these Baptist-influenced residents of the Forest of Wake?
We will never forget you. Please tell your children stories about The Corner so it will last always.
Kathaleen S. Chandley
Ruth Snap
Wake Forest


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