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Dan T.

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Everything posted by Dan T.

  1. at the slew of irony pics, China. And on the topic of KFC, they're introducing original recipe boneless chicken next week.
  2. As a younger man, Kim Jong-Un spent lots of time outside the cocoon of North Korea, though. He went to school in Switzerland, I think it was. He's got to be more globally aware than all the North Koreans he and his father have kept literally AND figuratively in the dark. Edit: EXcellent point, RVAbrendan.
  3. Watch how the new BMW F30 3-Series is manufactured from start to finish in Munich, Germany. The robotics are a technological marvel. http://www.youtube.com/embed/libw1rV2McY?feature=player_detailpage
  4. It still feels like the saber-rattling is intended for Bighead Littleman's internal audience more than the outside world. He's consolidating internal power politically and militarily. But his over-the-top rhetoric and military maneuvering is like a newly-licensed driver handed a Lamborghini who is mashing the gas pedal and grinding the gears.
  5. Considering the timing of all this, I blame Dennis Rodman.
  6. North Korea is the only nation that can stage a war for its people through strictly closed media, defeat the enemy, declare victory, and proclaim its Leader a hero, all without firing a shot. Big Head Littleman mayactually pull this off.
  7. Mask? Look again. That's dark pantyhose.
  8. Oh,man. I didn't realize that was actually Cab Calloway himself. I thought it was a dancer with Calloway's band. ---- BTW, dogs are cool:
  9. Okay now let's hear one of their ballads.
  10. The animation - and the guy on whom the animation is modeled - does some moves that look remarkably similar to the Moon Walk, 50 or 60 years before Michael Jackson made it famous.
  11. The US Army Is Planning For A Failed Nuclear State In North Korea By Geoffrey Ingersoll | Business Insider Don't mind the headlines. Crippling sanctions, starving soldiers , and an antiquated, rickety military collectively push the idea of a concerted North Korean strike to the fringes of credibility. Planners in Washington envision a more insidious threat: the untimely collapse of Kim Jong-un's government. Paul McLeary of Defense News posted today about a classified military wargame that played out the sudden collapse of North Korea and the immediate actions of the U.S. Military. McLeary writes: The Unified Quest war game conducted this year by Army planners posited the collapse of a nuclear-armed, xenophobic, criminal family regime that had lorded over a closed society and inconveniently lost control over its nukes as it fell. Yes, the most terrifying thing about North Korea is actually if it loses positive control of its nuclear technology and any active warheads it has. The war games didn't go smoothly: It took 56 days for the U.S. to flow two divisions’ worth of soldiers into the failed nuclear-armed state of “North Brownland” and as many as 90,000 troops to deal with the country’s nuclear stockpiles, a major U.S. Army war game concluded this winter. There were a few major problems tripping up the military, generals at the event told a handful of reporters, talking only without attribution. — No "ISR": It's difficult to establish Intelligence Surveillance and Reconnaissance in a hermit kingdom as closed off to the world as North Korea. Essentially, the generals involved agreed that they would move rapidly north of the 38th parallel and be totally blind, without well established information infrastructure. More: http://finance.yahoo.com/news/us-army-planning-failed-nuclear-233937289.html
  12. Since I couldn't find the "Something Cute" thread:
  13. Pick us a winner, you creepy man. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YNEnr2naOQU&feature=player_embedded
  14. Michael Jackson's dance scene from the "Black and White" music video, recreated with Legos For the original dance, for comparison, jump to 1:01:
  15. Wow. I guess Brian Wilson really was a post-production genius.
  16. Best obit ever? Maybe not, but a sweet one that's gone viral, written by the daughter of a guy in Mississippi who sounded like a bit of a character. Her obit touches on all his quirks and paints a pretty good picture of the man, a guy I bet was fun to know. Harry Weathersby Stamps, ladies' man, foodie, natty dresser, and accomplished traveler, died on Saturday, March 9, 2013. Harry was locally sourcing his food years before chefs in California starting using cilantro and arugula (both of which he hated). For his signature bacon and tomato sandwich, he procured 100% all white Bunny Bread from Georgia, Blue Plate mayonnaise from New Orleans, Sauer's black pepper from Virginia, home grown tomatoes from outside Oxford, and Tennessee's Benton bacon from his bacon-of-the-month subscription. As a point of pride, he purported to remember every meal he had eaten in his 80 years of life. The women in his life were numerous. He particularly fancied smart women. He loved his mom Wilma Hartzog (deceased), who with the help of her sisters and cousins in New Hebron reared Harry after his father Walter's death when Harry was 12. He worshipped his older sister Lynn Stamps Garner (deceased), a character in her own right, and her daughter Lynda Lightsey of Hattiesburg. He married his main squeeze Ann Moore, a home economics teacher, almost 50 years ago, with whom they had two girls Amanda Lewis of Dallas, and Alison of Starkville. He taught them to fish, to select a quality hammer, to love nature, and to just be thankful. He took great pride in stocking their tool boxes. One of his regrets was not seeing his girl, Hillary Clinton, elected President. He had a life-long love affair with deviled eggs, Lane cakes, boiled peanuts, Vienna [Vi-e-na] sausages on saltines, his homemade canned fig preserves, pork chops, turnip greens, and buttermilk served in martini glasses garnished with cornbread. He excelled at growing camellias, rebuilding houses after hurricanes, rocking, eradicating mole crickets from his front yard, composting pine needles, living within his means, outsmarting squirrels, never losing a game of competitive sickness, and reading any history book he could get his hands on. He loved to use his oversized "old man" remote control, which thankfully survived Hurricane Katrina, to flip between watching The Barefoot Contessa and anything on The History Channel. He took extreme pride in his two grandchildren Harper Lewis (8) and William Stamps Lewis (6) of Dallas for whom he would crow like a rooster on their phone calls. As a former government and sociology professor for Gulf Coast Community College, Harry was thoroughly interested in politics and religion and enjoyed watching politicians act like preachers and preachers act like politicians. He was fond of saying a phrase he coined "I am not running for political office or trying to get married" when he was "speaking the truth." He also took pride in his service during the Korean conflict, serving the rank of corporal--just like Napolean, as he would say. Harry took fashion cues from no one. His signature every day look was all his: a plain pocketed T-shirt designed by the fashion house Fruit of the Loom, his black-label elastic waist shorts worn above the navel and sold exclusively at the Sam's on Highway 49, and a pair of old school Wallabees (who can even remember where he got those?) that were always paired with a grass-stained MSU baseball cap. Harry traveled extensively. He only stayed in the finest quality AAA-rated campgrounds, his favorite being Indian Creek outside Cherokee, North Carolina. He always spent the extra money to upgrade to a creek view for his tent. Many years later he purchased a used pop-up camper for his family to travel in style, which spoiled his daughters for life. He despised phonies, his 1969 Volvo (which he also loved), know-it-all Yankees, Southerners who used the words "veranda" and "porte cochere" to put on airs, eating grape leaves, Law and Order (all franchises), cats, and Martha Stewart. In reverse order. He particularly hated Day Light Saving Time, which he referred to as The Devil's Time. It is not lost on his family that he died the very day that he would have had to spring his clock forward. This can only be viewed as his final protest. Because of his irrational fear that his family would throw him a golf-themed funeral despite his hatred for the sport, his family will hold a private, family only service free of any type of "theme." Visitation will be held at Bradford-O'Keefe Funeral Home, 15th Street, Gulfport on Monday, March 11, 2013 from 6-8 p.m. In lieu of flowers, the family asks that you make a donation to Mississippi Gulf Coast Community College (Jeff Davis Campus) for their library. Harry retired as Dean there and was very proud of his friends and the faculty. He taught thousands and thousands of Mississippians during his life. The family would also like to thank the Gulfport Railroad Center dialysis staff who took great care of him and his caretaker Jameka Stribling. Finally, the family asks that in honor of Harry that you write your Congressman and ask for the repeal of Day Light Saving Time. Harry wanted everyone to get back on the Lord's Time. http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/sunherald/obituary.aspx?n=harry-stamps&pid=163538353&fhid=4025#fbLoggedOut
  17. http://www.ancestry.com/1940-census/usa/Wisconsin/Rose-Fart_2pgx45
  18. Could somebody shop Eli's pic onto that Beyonce Super Bowl photo?
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