Happy Day After National Farm Animals Day!

By PatD, a Trail Mix Contributor

Soon and late the day is coming,
Tyrant Man shall be o’erthrown,
And the fruitful fields of England
Shall be trod by beasts alone

Rings shall vanish from our noses,
And the harness from our back,
Bit and spur shall rust forever,
Cruel whips no more shall crack

Bright will shine the fields of England,
Purer shall its waters be,
Sweeter yet shall blow its breezes
On the day that sets us free

[Anthem from Animal Farm by George Orwell]
National Farm Animal Day

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craigcrawford
8 years ago

Orwell as punk rocker. Fun post, PatD

craigcrawford
8 years ago

Whsky, yep the Pigeon guy who cleaned up and disinfected our back decks said the most important thing is not to let them rebuild nests, clean them out every day until they give up, takes about two weeks

Dexter, return of the night watchman, always enjoy your stories

Pogo
8 years ago

Jace, last thread, LOL.

Love the Orwell bent.  Animal Farm was one of my first couple of “awakening ” books.

jace
8 years ago

Interesting Senate races looming. Needless to say I am watching AZ closely. McCain has a primary challenger who is a real piece of work. A strictly anti Government type who just can’t wait to govern, or not. Kirkpatrick is a good candidate but it will be a heavy lift. Hopefully She can pull it off.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/senate-races_us_5707efe8e4b0447a7dbc38f1

RebelliousRenee
8 years ago

oooooh….   I love those farm animals….

YUM!

Flatus
8 years ago

Sea, thank you so much for sharing your brilliant father’s oral history of his War years:
http://www.pakavideos.com/edward-cowley-private-first-class-us-army-world-war-two_39hjk7

Our Air Force paid me to drive through the areas where the Battle of the Bulge was fought. It was winter time and KumCho was with me. We both could sense the magnitude of the battles that were fought, the struggle of soldiers on both sides against the elements, and the inevitable casualties. I was able to gain some knowledge as to what our F-111s could do should Warsaw Pact forces reach this point in an early 1980s war.

Most of all, we were overwhelmed by the realization that we were traversing hallowed ground.

craigcrawford
8 years ago

story of the day, and near my neighborhood: The Hamburglar

Pogo
8 years ago

Greg Sargent does a decent job of outlining the problem Bernie has going forward.

But this ad also says something important about the remainder of the Democratic primaries, particularly the New York primary, which is set for April 19th. Many of them are closed to independent voters, meaning only registered Democrats can vote. In New York, Alex Seitz-Wald reports that Sanders supporters have worked hard to register new voters (who might be more inclined to vote for him) as Democrats, but that their efforts may have fallen short, because of the state’s overly restrictive voting rules:

There is no same-day registration in the state. Independents or members of third parties who want to vote as Democrats had to change their party registration by October 9. And new voters – another key Sanders voting bloc – had to register by March 25….

While state officials reported an unprecedented surge in new voter filings just ahead of last month’s deadline, overall voter growth was disappointing.  As of April 1, Democrats had added about 14,000 people to their rolls (out of close to 6 million registered voters) since the same day last year, according to Board of Elections data.

Sanders supporters say they’ll be able to compensate for this problem by “super-charging turnout among young people and other key Sanders groups,” Seitz-Wald reports. And that of course could happen. But throughout these primaries, Clinton has fared far better than Sanders in closed contests, in part because she wins among Democrats while Sanders wins among independents. (Sanders won in Wyoming over the weekend, but in this closed caucus the delegates ended up getting split evenly.)
***
The Clinton camp is betting that Democratic voters in particular have a deep well of historical memories of her at war with Republicans for more than two decades, and that as a result, they will conclude that she should be entrusted with the task of defeating Trump, given how horrifying the prospects of a Trump presidency really are.

Flatus
8 years ago

I thought Huxley’s 1984 was wonderful. I didn’t appreciate Animal Farm so much as Jonathan Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels.

Pogo
8 years ago

Flatus, I am with you, but did enjoy Animal Farm as well.  I loved 1984 and Gulliver’s Travels.

RebelliousRenee
8 years ago

I loved Orwell’s books too.  But the book that really got me thinking was Vonnegut’s Slaughterhouse Five.

It did help that it was about to be banned and one of my high school English teachers had us read it just under the bell.  My thought was if it’s important enough to be banned than it’s important enough to pay close attention to it.

Pogo
8 years ago

RR, ahhhh, to be unstuck in time.

Pogo
8 years ago

Guy I worked with at the bicycle shop – medieval musician, instrument builder and bicycle mechanic – was a huge Heinlein fan.  I was partial to Arthur C. Clark – was introduced to him when I read A Fall of Moondust, which my grandfather had.  I never could figure out why my grandfather had that book.

RebelliousRenee
8 years ago

Pogo…  it wasn’t the time travel.  My teacher told us the government wanted to ban the book because of “pornography”…  the scene where Billy Pilgrim comes across a photo of a girl having sex with a Shetland pony.  He said this was BS…  he really thought they didn’t want us to know about the bombing of Dresden…  the fact that the US bombed a city where they knew Americans prisoners were being held during WWII.  This was during the time of Vietnam and we were just beginning to learn of the atrocities committed by our government in our name.  I’m sure you remember it was a volatile time.

patd…  I loved Stranger in a Strange Land…  read it for the first time about 5 yrs ago because Jamie kept touting it.

Pogo
8 years ago

RR, didn’t mean to suggest I knew why your schools would ban Slaughterhouse Five.   I was always struck by the concept of Billy being described as unstuck in time. So it goes. 🙂

Pogo
8 years ago

Phil Bump, writing for the Fix explains delegate math.

“…It is not true that Sanders is having trouble catching Clinton “because of her overwhelming lead with ‘superdelegates.’ ” He is having trouble catching her because he trails her badly with pledged delegates (as on that sign at Clinton headquarters), and the states he keeps winning are smaller states with fewer delegates given out.”…

In fact, by every possible democratic measure, Clinton is winning. She’s winning in states (and territories) won, which isn’t a meaningful margin of victory anyway. She’s winning in the popular vote by 2.4 million votes — more than a third more than Sanders has in total. In part that’s because Sanders is winning lower-turnout caucuses, but it’s mostly because he’s winning smaller states. And she’s winning with both types of delegates.

sjwny
8 years ago

Big yawning question regarding The Hamburglar: Was there no alarm set before the last shift left? And the Chef de Cuisine looked pretty comfy in the kitchen, as if he had experience re: Le Fast Food. Even toasted the bun! Who was he talking to on the cell phone … taking an order to go 😉 ?

craigcrawford
8 years ago

Nothing like 10 pounds of cayenne pepper and a week of destroying their nests. Haven’t seen a single pigeon on my property since 2pm. Other than killing two eggs was mostly humane.

craigcrawford
8 years ago

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For those with bird issues, this stuff worked wonders and totally humane.

Blue Bronc
8 years ago

Ray Bradbury is my first choice.  Next is Jules Verne.

What is the meaning of life?  Or can the Caps win the Cup?  Baltimore O’s have the best start ever – 6-0.  Dreams of a World Series win – in April.

I had no skin in Sanders.  This last week has ensured I will be working for Hillary.  The old guy has lost it.

It is rather late in life to make major changes, but I have decided to change (at least one half the time) to a cocktail onion in my martini instead of an olive.  This is a huge change, one I may need to discuss with my shrink.

The pull of politics is growing.  Much depends on this election to preserve the United States of America.  Will the Trump and Cruz supporters leave for some other country?  I doubt it, but you never know.  They could choose Antarctica.

Pogo
8 years ago

BB, I’m of the opinion that ultimately the majority of the Sanders supporters who claim that they won’t vote for Hillary under any circumstances will. If not, when they are faced with the prospect of Hillary who, let’s face it is pretty much a center-left candidate, and one of the nut cases from the Republican Party, they will ultimately come to realize that it’s not in their interest to sit it out. And I also suspect that ultimately Bernie will tell them that.

Jamie44
8 years ago

RR

My children have a standing rule.  If you hear that someone wants to ban a book, read it immediately.  My son didn’t object until he had to read an edition of Little Red Riding Hood that had Red carrying a bottle of wine in the basket for Grandma.

 

Jamie44
8 years ago

Love that Ivanka Trump is 34 years old, a New York resident, and has never registered to vote.  Then she misses the deadline to vote for her own father.

 

Pogo
8 years ago

Chris Hayes on MSNBC just talked about one of Trumps ventures I had forgotten about – the Tour de Trump. Didn’t succeed.  Go figure.

tony
8 years ago

What Hillary Clinton gets right by being boring

Jonathan Capehart

One word would describe Hillary Clinton’s Saturday sit-down with the New York Daily News editorial board: Boring! And that’s a good thing.
The 80-minute wonkfest with the two-term  former senator from the Empire State was notably different from the editorial board meeting with Sen. Bernie Sanders a week earlier. That gathering was gasp-worthy for the Vermont Independent’s seeming inability to talk beyond his stump speech. Clinton had the opposite issue. She could talk — and talk and talk — about anything in thoughtful paragraphs stuffed with details.

Pogo
8 years ago

Tony,  I’m guessing you weren’t surprised…

tony
8 years ago

Happy Day After National Farm Animals Day!

LOl, Pogo, nope not at all.. The piece descibes the Hillary i admire.. Someone so smart, wow a brain like a computer, her data base is immense… Ha!

xrepublican
8 years ago

You are what you eat. So, what is the mythological critter who is half fish and half turkey ?

xrepublican
8 years ago

Yes, I confess to being a mythological critter.