• Photography,  Religion,  Weirdness

    This might be worth a road trip sometime

    Certainly for a photo essay.

    The Stone Circle of Elberton

    Driving on rural Ga. 77 in northeast Georgia, you seem to time-travel across the sea to ancient Britain. What appears to be a scaled-down clone of Stonehenge rises above a hilltop.

    Elbert County stonemasons, not druidic priests, fashioned this circular array of six granite slabs, but its origins are almost as intriguing.

    In 1979, a mysterious stranger calling himself “Mr. Christian” commissioned the curiosity on the edge of a cow pasture 7.2 miles north of Elberton.

    He reportedly told the president of an Elberton granite finishing plant that what he called the Georgia Guidestones would be “for the conservation of the world and to herald a new age of reason.”

    As they talked, he admitted his name really wasn’t Christian, but he was a Christian and a patriot, who represented a group outside of Georgia with similar beliefs. Only the Elberton banker who handled Mr. Christian’s substantial deposit ever knew his true identity. He took the secret to his grave, and no one has ever identified Christian or his associates.

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  • Politics

    A perfect one-sentence description

    Of the current political situation anyway, from Winds of Change:

    as poor a hand as it may be, you can’t beat a pair of twos with nothing.

    That sums it up pretty well I think. The dems wouldn’t even have to try that hard at this point. Instead they’ll probably lose a house seat or two and then return to their default position of navel gazing. Perhaps it’s all a big plot by the Clinton faction to set the stage for Hillary in 2008.

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  • Economics,  Engineering,  Links,  Politics,  Quotes

    Saturday round up

    • Magnificent photography from Afghanistan
    • A guide to chopping foods
    • Race, Advertising and the Sony Playstation.
    • Big Brother mixes with the cast of Friends to create Dodgeball
    • An insightful post on Energy from the Winds of Change; it starts

      An optimist says the glass is half full, the pessimist says the glass is half empty and the engineer says the glass is the wrong size.

      Read the whole thing.

    • Some quite impressive numbers you’re not likely to hear about.

      In less than three years, the U.S. economic pie has expanded by $2.2 trillion, an output add-on that is roughly the same size as the total Chinese economy, and much larger than the total economic size of nations like India, Mexico, Ireland, and Belgium.

      I think Iraq is keeping the political class occupied, much like the Clinton scandals did in the late 90s, and saving us from grand new ideas.

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  • Adages,  Engineering,  Quotes

    Quotes of the moment

    Samuel Goldwyn

    “You’ve got to take the bitter with the sour.”

    37 Signals

    The secret to building half a product instead of a half-ass
    product is saying no.

    Each time you say yes to a feature, you’re adopting a child. You
    have to take your baby through a whole chain of events (e.g.
    design, implementation, testing, etc.). And once that feature’s
    out there, you’re stuck with it.

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  • America,  Cycling

    15 million illegal immigrants can’t be wrong

    Happy Birthday America!

    You’re 230 today! That’s 1,610 in dog years. And over 140 years without a civil war, which isn’t that bad, considering.

    I’m off to celebrate the day by riding to Alabama and back. If this site isn’t updated by this time tommorow, would someone please look for me?

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