Wednesday Fuel Up Open Comments

Poppyseed-sized nuclear fuel cells might power a NASA moon base

Nuclear fuel cells the size of poppy seeds could power NASA’s Artemis lunar base once it begins operations around 2030. Designed by researchers at Bangor University’s Nuclear Futures Institute in the UK, the miniscule power source—dubbed “Trisofuel”—is intended to run on a micro nuclear generator roughly the size of a small car created by Rolls Royce. According to a report in the BBC, engineers intend to begin fully testing their new fuel within the next few months. If successful, Trisofuel’s uses could even extend far beyond the moon’s surface.

/snip

Given its size and relative power, a resource like Trisofuel could be vital to lunar bases’ success. With its portability, however, the new nuclear fuel cell could easily be adapted to a range of other scenarios, both here on Earth and beyond.  Phylis Makurunje, a researcher involved Trisofuel testing, explained to the BBC that the tiny fuel pellets could be used to power rockets that one day take humans to Mars. “It is very powerful—it gives very high thrust, the push it gives to the rocket. This is very important because it enables rockets to reach the farthest planets,” Makurunje explained.

Trisofuel may be so strong, in fact, that it could nearly halve the time it takes to reach the Red Planet—from an estimated nine months down to between four-to-six months. “Nuclear power is the only way we currently have to provide the power for that length of space travel,” Bangor University professor Simon Middleburgh said in a release. “The fuel must be extremely robust and survive the forces of launch and then be dependable for many years.”

At a much more localized level, researchers believe that micro generators running Trisofuel could also be deployed to disaster zones with compromised electrical grids.


Posted

in

by

Tags:

Comments

62 responses to “Wednesday Fuel Up Open Comments”

  1. Super Dave Avatar
    Super Dave

    The OC topic is most interesting and could reduce the (school bus) size of the neighborhood nuclear power plants that have been talked about. This is of course way better than wind/solar but no pocket lining for the Democrat’s donors.

    Well, it’s Hump Day again and I’ve had a busy week so far that will continue today. I’ve caught up on all the mowing with the Hustler (8 hrs Monday, 5 hrs yesterday) and now it’s time to bush hog. FWIW; I’m cutting all fields and plots.

    Mornin’ Gang

  2. Shannon Avatar
    Shannon

    Mowing?

    What is that?

  3. GJT Avatar
    GJT

    Yeah I need to move some leaves around but that’s about it.

  4. Tedtam Avatar

    Here at the Dome, we don’t mow.  We blow chaff.  And that hasn’t happened in months.

  5. Adee Avatar
    Adee

    Good Morning Hamsters,

    Looks like we are off to a sunny day again with maybe some rain who knows where.

    Sprinklers are on again now that a glitch with our well was fixed yesterday.  It was a problem with the last item that was an original part lo these many years ago.  Now that is service.

    And again we have such a benign view out our windows this morning.  But just open the door and all that shrivels in the heat.  We expect the deer will show up again today and enjoy dining on our grass and lounging in the shade of our trees.  The water tank is full.

    Regarding the political hoo-rah in Texas and elsewhere, by this time normal folks are becoming weary of it.  Gratefully, football season has started….as a great distraction even if one is not a football fan.

  6. Tedtam Avatar

    Bsue – Hubby loved dinner last night, chicken in a Sicilian veggie sauce.  I had (too many, really) chicken thighs from the store sale, so I doubled this recipe.  The instructions called for adding celery which was overlooked in the ingredients list, so I added about a cup from my frozen sliced celery on hand. Fortunately, I have some healthy basil outside.  I should have tripled the recipe but wasn’t sure about the sauce:chicken ratio.  Next time I’ll do better, but it was still good.  Hubby had seconds and I set aside a leftovers container for him, and the rest is freezing in my pre-prep pans for my next Elsa run.

    The original recipe:

    SUGO ALLA ROMA

    • 2 cups tomato puree
    • 2 cloves garlic, minced (never enough garlic, I added extra)
    • 1/2 tsp dried parsley
    • 1/2 cup diced onions
    • 1/2 tsp Italian seasoning
    • 2 cups eggplant, peeled and medium diced
    • 1/2 cup olive oil
    • 8 basil leaves (yeah, right – I think I tripled that)
    • 1/2 tsp red pepper flakes
    • 1/2 tsp dried oregano
    • 1/2 cup celery?

    In a large Dutch pot on medium heat, add olive oil, onions, celery, and garlic. Cook 4 minutes.

    Add parsley and Italian seasoning.  Cook 4 minutes.

    Add tomato puree and diced eggplant and simmer for 20 minutes.

    Add oregano and pepper flakes, continue to simmer for 5 minutes.  Eggplant should be completely simmered into sauce.

    Tear basil leaves and add to sauce.

    I also shredded the chicken meat from the bone.

    Season with salt and pepper.

    Makes 3 cups.

    ***

    This looks like it’d make a good FD entree for your shelf.
    If you’re dealing with chicken parts, like thighs, I suggest doing at least some partial pre-cooking to make sure the meat is easily removed from the bone.

    My bones went into my chicken stock bag in my freezer.

  7. Tedtam Avatar

    LITERAL CHAOS ☙ Wednesday, September 6, 2023 ☙ C&C NEWS

    Good morning, C&C family, it’s already Wednesday! Your mid-week roundup includes: new variant name is actually an epic troll; national disgrace as President Peters delays visit to Burning Man disaster zone; WSJ runs op-ed questioning booster approvals and citing awful jab safety signals; new study reviews Pfizer’s original clinical trial data and finds the whole thing was a joke; another school mask mandate drops; San Fran protestors call for LESS drug enforcement; second state embraces PragerU videos for elementary education; Congressman Gaetz cryptic but suggestive tweet; and Florida man rides the gator.

    News:

    Mr. C. starts off with some amusing reflections on the latest name for the latest WE’RE ALL GONNA DIIIIEEEE variant.  He mused that the name “pirola” referred to an asteroid or some combination of Greek letters.

    Making me smile, it also refers to a certain part of the male anatomy.  There’s also a flower with a manhood shaped part that bears the same name.  How appropriate, since TPTB want to screw us all.

    If THAT doesn’t make you at least smile…

  8. Tedtam Avatar

    Related to the story above, Biden is “waving through” another booster.

    They. Will. Never. Give. Up.  They will squeeze that turnip for every last drop of blood and keep squeezing because, well, it worked so well before!  The money wheel is a fascinating thing: taxpayer dollars to the COVID complex, which in turn gives the money to campaign coffers.  Lather, rinse, repeat.

    We need to quit incentivizing the corruption, but it’s hard to stop when those wheels are being turned by the ones being made wealthy by the wheel.

    After disgustedly pointing out the last round of boosters was approved after only a “study” of eight mice, Dr. Makary noted this time there is even less safety and efficacy data. That obvious point was already nice to see in print somewhere, but then Makary dropped a hammer on jab risks, citing a study showing serious adverse events in 1 in 556 doses:

    Advocates of the new Covid boosters point out that the annual flu shot gets approved without a randomized trial. But flu shots use a traditional vaccine platform that has withstood the test of time, and Covid vaccines have higher complication rates. The latter have a rate of serious adverse events as high as 1 in 556 doses, according to a study published last year in the journal Vaccine. They have also been found to cause myocarditis in young people at a rate six to 28 times the incidence after infection, according to a 2022 JAMA Cardiology study.

    Needless to say, the risk of serious complications from catching covid is nowhere near 1 in 556 infections. What on Earth kind of risk/reward analysis are these experts calculating? I realize math isn’t their strong suit, but still.

    I was especially pleased to see Dr. Makary work the word “mockery” into his conclusion:

    The novel Covid booster shot may be warranted for some high-risk patients. But pushing it hard for young and old alike without human-outcomes data makes a mockery of the scientific method and our regulatory process.

    /snip

    Honestly, who is taking boosters at this point?

    My question ‘zackly.

  9. Tedtam Avatar

    Thirteen authors have put forth another study on Pfizer’s clot shot studying deaths that occurred during the vaccine trial.  I am ever so grateful for my headaches.  I’d been asking God for a way out of the jab once I started learning about it.  I stayed in the trial, because the trial administrator asked me not to drop out – he needed the data points.  I got some pressure to get the jab, but having those horrific, I’m-gonna-die thunderclap migraines gave me a good excuse to say no.  So I thank God for my mysterious headache ailments.  Praise Him in all things.

    Anyway…[insert chart from study – six deaths from cardiac failure]

    The first six deaths from Pfizer’s trial. Notice any pattern?

    The authors described their new study as being the first analysis of the original data from the main Pfizer vaccine clinical trial (44,000 participants) to be conducted by a group unaffiliated with Pfizer. Their analysis was enabled by the court-ordered release of Pfizer’s internal test data, which the FDA infamously tried to suppress for 75 years. [emphasis mine]

    What they found, unsurprisingly, and what was missed by federal regulators and the vaccine approval committee, was a significantly-higher rate of death in the vaccine group compared to the placebo:

    They found a 3.7x increase in deaths due to cardiac failure vs. placebo controls.  THIS WAS NOT REPORTED BY PFIZER!

    The authors reviewed each of the 38 deaths, and found Pfizer hijinx all over. Here’s one example (edited for brevity):

    Subject 11621327 was found dead shortly after receiving Dose 1 of the Pfizer vaccine on September 10th. His body was found at home (with lividity) on the 13th of September when the police performed a welfare check. “According to the medical examiner, the probable cause of death was progression of atherosclerotic disease.” The cause of death listed in the 6-Month Interim Report is “Arteriosclerosis”… autopsy results were not provided or available. Based only on the medical documentation in the CRF, there is no basis for ascribing the subject’s death to advanced atherosclerosis or concluding that the death was unrelated to the vaccine… It is likely that the subject died within a day or two of vaccination. This was a clear indication that his death could have been related to the Pfizer vaccine and this should not have been ruled out without a more rigorous investigation. In our opinion, this diagnosis was premature and an egregious misjudgment of the evidence at hand.

    An “egregious misjudgment” is one way of putting it.

    Pfizer reported an unusually low number of deaths in the full trial, which Mr. C. states is suspicious. Duh.  There were also a high number of “discontinued” patients.  Then the hard hit:  Pfizer trial data does not show that any lives were saved by the jab:

    To state that  vaccine saved lives, Pfizer should have shown a reduction in all-cause mortality due to a decrease in COVID-19 mortality in the vaccinated arm of the trial. Figure 1 does not support any such claim for Weeks 1 – 20 and, in fact, speaks against this conclusion in the weeks following Week 20 in which the Placebo cumulative plot is distinctly below that of the BNT162b2 vaccinated.

    In other words, fewer people should have died in the injection group than in the placebo group, but the exact opposite happened. How the vaccine committee missed this is anybody’s guess. Well, we have some pretty good guesses.

    Here’s the link to the study.

  10. Tedtam Avatar

    I have on my Wall of Wit and Wisdom in the downstairs powder bath a quote from one of our Founding Fathers, something to the effect that our democracy depends upon an educated populace.

    Libs are doing everything they can to circumvent that.  Next story:  the ignorance of college freshman.  Can’t do math.  Can’t string a coherent sentence together.  Think they’re smart enough.

    Last week, the AP ran a nauseating story headlined, “College students are still struggling with basic math. Professors blame the pandemic.”

    Nope.  This has been going on a lot longer than the pandemic.  Remember the whole “self esteem” movement where any answer given by a student was approved, because we didn’t want to blow de widdle babies’ emotional development?  Well, a lifetime of being unable to manage life will certainly be emotionally devastating.  I wonder if the lack of educational professionalism combined with the entitlement generation is a reason we have so many homeless folks who’ve been kicked to the curb because they can’t manage their lives and lose their jobs and homes?

    In another breathtaking example, a college math professor revealed her students couldn’t even subtract eight from negative six:

    For Jessica Babcock, a Temple University math professor, the magnitude of the problem hit home last year as she graded quizzes in her intermediate algebra class, the lowest option for STEM majors. The quiz, a softball at the start of the fall semester, asked students to subtract eight from negative six.

    “I graded a whole bunch of papers in a row. No two papers had the same answer, and none of them were correct,” she said. “It was a striking moment of, like, wow — this is significant and deep.”

    No two papers had the same answer! That’s a lot of guessing. Now, I’m just a lawyer, not a mathematician, but I’d hope to be able to handle that problem.

    Unsurprisingly, the article and its quoted professors fairly blamed pandemic lockdowns and “remote” instruction. This is yet more evidence of the intellectual devastation wreaked on an entire generation of kids by school closures. [I disagree with Mr. C. here, as mentioned above.  Closing down schools may have exacerbated the problem, but this mess began long before WLR arrived on the scene.]

    /snip

    The experts, who were so sure that schools must be closed, wrongly, are now baffled by how to fix the problems they created. 

    Remedial classes for college. REMEDIAL classes for college!  I hope the colleges don’t give credits for those classes.  They should not count towards any degree.  

  11. Tedtam Avatar

    Totally skipping the craziness in San Fran.  You just have to see the pictures to believe it.

    Moving on…and related to the former story on educational malfeasance:

    The Hill ran an uplifting story yesterday headlined, “Oklahoma follows Florida in allowing PragerU in schools.”

    It is about time for Dennis Prager’s excellent YouTube-based educational series to enter the mainstream. The series of short videos explain civics, economics, politics, and topical issues like climate change from a traditional, commonsense point of view.

    The Hill reported that Oklahoma announced yesterday it is adding materials from the conservative education platform PragerU to its public school curriculum, following a similar decision by Florida earlier this summer.

    YAY!  Some common sense still exists!  If I were to homeschool, or open a school, I’d be contacting PragerU and Hillsdale for my curriculum.

    The article added Texas is also looking at adopting PragerU’s kids platform but has received pushback from educators and has not yet announced an official decision. Let’s go, Texans!

    Here’s one example of PragerU videos: https://youtu.be/h4Vo8n5U220

  12. Bonecrusher Avatar
    Bonecrusher

    TT 0837:  The fact that pfizer failed to include those deaths AND “discontinued” a bunch more (how many in the discontinued group suffered adverse reactions?), leads me to believe that they committed FRAUD.  Any waiver signed becomes null and void in the face of fraud.

    The latest WLR variant BS 24/7/365, is already outside any benefit that the newest ‘vaccine’ could offer so WHY THE HECK ARE THEY STILL PUSHING IT unless they just want to kill/maim more people?  This is not going to end well with the makers/marketers of the jab, nor with the Feds pushing it.

  13. Tedtam Avatar

    Speaking of achievement levels and self-esteem, these Florida men should feel very comfortable with their accomplishment:

    Florida man rides gator

     

  14. Tedtam Avatar

    Speaking of WE’RE GONNA DIIIEEEE events:  Hurricane Lee is shaping up out there in the Atlantic.

    Never thought I’d be asking for a hurricane, but if Lee could just tone down a bit and head a little further west….

  15. Tedtam Avatar

    It wasn’t just Pfizer that lied…

    Democrat President Joe Biden’s administration kept the bombshell results of a U.S. military investigation hidden from the public, newly unsealed documents have revealed.

    The military probe exposed vaccine failures as early as January 2021.

  16. Tedtam Avatar

    Bsue

    I’m glad Altuve is one of ours.

  17. bsue54 Avatar

    Tedtam – me, too… And he’s not much taller than me 😉 Evidence that sometimes good things come in short packages 😉 LOL

  18. Tedtam Avatar

    Men have an issue with that… 😀

  19. Tedtam Avatar

    When I was on the boys’ basketball team in high school (stat keeper, not player), one of our best players was only about 5’2″ or so.

    That guy was FAST!  Being so low to the ground enabled him to get in among the arms, too, and combined with his speed, he was consistently a starter because he was such a threat to the other team’s offence.

    And he was a great shot, too.  Lethal.  I really enjoyed watching him on the court.

  20. Bonecrusher Avatar
    Bonecrusher

    TT 0910:  From your linkage:

    The documents show that the CDC and FDA ignored crucial information regarding the efficacy of vaccines that were exposed in the military investigation conducted in January 2021.

    /snip

    The emergence of breakthrough cases can be traced back to January 2021, the data in the newly unsealed documents shows. According to ICAN, the docs show that top White House officials, including Dr. Anthony Fauci, were aware of the findings but still pushed the false narrative onto the public that the mRNA shots would take “control of the virus.”

    /snip

    This news has emerged as the CDC quietly updated its Covid vaccine policy to state that Americans who have been vaccinated are now at a higher risk of contracting new variants of the virus than those who are unvaccinated.

    This is a definite RTWDT article.

  21. Tedtam Avatar

    I just finished hanging, hoping I could get some treadmill time in today.

    Nope, not so much.

    Hubby’s home for lunch, so after he leaves I guess I’ll have to settle for doing some floor exercises.

    Maybe tomorrow….

  22. mharper42 Avatar
    mharper42

    Morning, gang!

    Oh no, we finish up the week again with temps exceeding 100!

    Bummer…

     

  23. Shannon Avatar
    Shannon

    Bones.

    Agreed. The link (Tedtam @09:10) is about as damning as anything we’ve learned about this unprecedented crime against humanity.

  24. Texpat Avatar
    Texpat

    You only thought you knew how stupid and incompetent is Joe Biden.  You were wrong !

    A quote from behind the paywall at the Wall Street Journal:

    Nebraska’s Winnebago Tribe has long been stuck with sluggish internet service. The federal government plans to fix that by crisscrossing the reservation with fiber-optic cable—at an average cost of $53,000 for each household and workplace connected.

    That amount exceeds the assessed value of some of the homes getting hookups, property records show. While most connections will cost far less, the expense to reach some remote communities has triggered concerns over the ultimate price tag for ensuring every rural home, business, school and workplace in America has the same internet that city dwellers enjoy.

    “The problem is, money is not infinite,” said Blair Levin, a senior communications policy official in the Clinton and Obama administrations who is now an equity research analyst. “If you’re spending $50,000 to connect a very remote location, you have to ask yourself, would we be better off spending that same amount of money to connect [more] families?”

    The U.S. has committed more than $60 billion for what the Biden administration calls the “Internet for All” program, the latest in a series of sometimes troubled efforts to bring high-speed internet to rural areas.

    My immediate thought was why not simply buy all the Indians on this reservation internet accounts at Elon Musk’s Starlink satellite service ?  For $53,000 per household at $599 + $120/month you could provide premium high speed service for over 36 years.  It could be a lot longer if you negotiate for bulk pricing.

    Hat Tip: Stephen Green @ Instapundit

  25. Tedtam Avatar

    I just finished shredding some of MIL’s papers, part of the latest pile of stuff I dragged downstairs.

    It was an envelope of plea after plea, toothless demands for repayments of loans made to two daughters of her sister.  These nieces borrowed somewhere in the neighborhood of $60-70K between the two of them, and only made one payment that was funded for both of the loans.  Several hot checks and lots of promises.  MIL threatened to take them to court but I guess she never did because she and her sister were so close.

    And this is the family that wanted to get possession of MIL’s furniture and belongings when she died.

    Hubby set down a firm “nope” on that one.  It felt good to shred those.  I don’t need that kind of anger in me that those records set off.  Hubby doesn’t have anything to do with them now.  He used to love to visit them.

  26. Tedtam Avatar

    I guess I need to go play with the hairy grandson down at Handsome’s house.  Trying to avoid Handsome and wife from returning to a psychotic cat.

  27. bsue54 Avatar

    Good luck on that one, Tedtam – I personally don’t think I’ve ever met a cat that was NOT psychotic – or at the very least extremely neurotic!!!!!

     

  28. bsue54 Avatar

    MJ42 – Thanx for the heads up on that one… EEEEEEeeeeeeewwwww

  29. Tedtam Avatar

    And yet they are clueless as to why so much of our auto manufacturing is overseas….

    A 46% pay raise. A 32-hour week with 40 hours of pay. A restoration of traditional pensions.

    The demands that a more combative United Auto Workers union has pressed on General Motors, Stellantis and Ford — demands that even the UAW’s own president calls “audacious” — are edging it closer to a strike when its contract ends Sept. 14.

    So, if I were to demand 40 hours’ pay for 32 hours’ work, my employer would laugh me out of the office.  Complete with a security guard to make sure I don’t steal anything while packing up my desk.

    With 32 hour weeks, the auto makers would have to hire more employees, aka “union members”.

    And traditional pensions – like the ones not fully funded now?

    And this, class, is why we can’t have nice things.

     

  30. Tedtam Avatar

    Re Mharper’s #14

    I wonder if frozen produce gets the spray?  Most of what I dry is from frozen, since those veggies are already blanched, cut, and pre-frozen for me.

    Except ‘maters.  And mushrooms.

  31. Texpat Avatar
    Texpat

    I Left Out the Full Truth to Get My Climate Change Paper Published

    I just got published in Nature because I stuck to a narrative I knew the editors would like. That’s not the way science should work.

    Not only is this guy bluntly honest, he believes gaming the system is just fine as long as he knows the rules and gets to play serving his own interests.  It is quite stunning

    I am a climate scientist. And while climate change is an important factor affecting wildfires over many parts of the world, it isn’t close to the only factor that deserves our sole focus.

    So why does the press focus so intently on climate change as the root cause? Perhaps for the same reasons I just did in an academic paper about wildfires in Nature, one of the world’s most prestigious journals: it fits a simple storyline that rewards the person telling it.

    Almost all of the largest lies told to the masses are those of omission.  It is what politicians, bureaucrats, media clowns, various “experts” and scientists do not tell people to manipulate public opinion that are the greatest deceptions.

    This matters because it is critically important for scientists to be published in high-profile journals; in many ways, they are the gatekeepers for career success in academia. And the editors of these journals have made it abundantly clear, both by what they publish and what they reject, that they want climate papers that support certain preapproved narratives—even when those narratives come at the expense of broader knowledge for society.

    To put it bluntly, climate science has become less about understanding the complexities of the world and more about serving as a kind of Cassandra, urgently warning the public about the dangers of climate change. However understandable this instinct may be, it distorts a great deal of climate science research, misinforms the public, and most importantly, makes practical solutions more difficult to achieve.

    The author then explains in detail the precise formula required for any scientific researcher to get his climate study papers published in any major, widely recognized journal.  He doesn’t like it, but he participates in it and will continue to do so.  Thanks for the candor, Patrick T. Brown.

    As to why I followed the formula despite my criticisms, the answer is simple: I wanted the research to be published in the highest profile venue possible. When I began the research for this paper in 2020, I was a new assistant professor needing to maximize my prospects for a successful career. When I had previously attempted to deviate from the formula, my papers were rejected out of hand by the editors of distinguished journals, and I had to settle for less prestigious outlets. To put it another way, I sacrificed contributing the most valuable knowledge for society in order for the research to be compatible with the confirmation bias of the editors and reviewers of the journals I was targeting.

    Not only am I saving this one forever, but I’m sending it to several lefty climate fanatics I know.

    Via Ed Morrisey.

  32. Tedtam Avatar

    Texpat – I was just looking at that story and was going to run it tomorrow!

    Beat me to the punch, you did.

    Good for you.

  33. Bonecrusher Avatar
    Bonecrusher

    The pension system, where the current employees and customers pay for the retired employees until they die is simply not sustainable.  In government, in many cases, one only has to work for 20 years to qualify for a pension:

    Start working for the city at age 21 and work for 20 years = 41 years old and collecting a pension.  Work for a different agency at 41 for another 20 years and start collecting the 2nd pension at 61.  Take early SS and start collecting that as well.  2 lifetime pensions + SS makes for a real nice lifestyle for the next 25 years or so.

    The above scenario is neither sustainable nor fair to the tax payers – it reeks of corruption.

  34. Texpat Avatar
    Texpat

    Tedtam @ 1:10 PM

    Hey, sorry, but it happens.  I’ve had to go in and trash a scheduled post for the next day when somebody featured it in the comments.

  35. Tedtam Avatar

    Walk like a Joe Biden.

    I see this as a new campaign tune.

  36. Tedtam Avatar

    #18 Texpat

     

    Ahhhhh…the burdens of being a contributor…./back of hand to forehead

  37. Tedtam Avatar

    Bonecrusher – Hubby and I saw more than one City employee take their retirement and come back as a consultant, essentially double-dipping their pay for the same job.

    Yeah, but there wasn’t anything we could do about it.

  38. Texpat Avatar
    Texpat

    The politicization of everything via climate change becomes more than tool.  It becomes a weapon.

    Redfin, ProPublica and NPR put together this video on climate panic.  It’s really about the bad places to live in the USA and what the insurance industry can do to make it less attractive or nearly impossible to live there.

    The hot new thing in the insurance industry is CLIMATE RISK and that is why they want to raise home insurance (and other categories like life and auto) through the roof so you can’t afford to live in that house or even that part of the country.

    It is the sunbelt and definitely Texas and Florida.  Of course the industry wants to hammer the reddest region of the country all the while pleasing their Democratic overlords in DC.

    Go to 04:58 in this 13:29 minute video and see it for yourself.

  39. Shannon Avatar
    Shannon

    After watching these impeachment proceedings for 2 days, I can report that 82 year old Rusty Hardin is in a helluva lot better shape than 81 year old Joe Biden.

  40. Tedtam Avatar

    Texpat

    That video just missed me off. I guess it smacked so much of propaganda.

  41. Tedtam Avatar

    I just got a return call from Green Cousin.  Very, very short: “Don’t call me, I’M IN DIRE PAIN!” I hung up. I’d tried to call her once, about four hours ago.  She didn’t answer so I just assumed she’d call me when she was ready.

    I checked in with her mother, Beloved East Texas Aunt.  Turns out she has a screaming infection at her dialysis site.  Her body is all swollen again, she has a very high fever.  Her back hurts and they’re filling her with pain pills that are obviously not working.

    This is bad, bad news.  Prayers, please.

    Three days ago she was getting perky and sassy again.  I had hopes – as she did – that she’d be able to go home this week.

  42. Shannon Avatar
    Shannon

    I am officially employed again as of a couple hours ago.

    Part time, anyway.

    Enough to pay for my weekly HEB addiction. Almost.

    Yeehaw.

  43. mharper42 Avatar
    mharper42

    #21

    Details, Shannon!

     

  44. Super Dave Avatar
    Super Dave

    I am officially employed again as of a couple hours ago.

    Very good, a water well company?

  45. Shannon Avatar
    Shannon

    Has texanadian ever checked back in after his big vacation East?

     

  46. Shannon Avatar
    Shannon

    Details? Come on.

    Yes! It’s another exciting licensed rural water utility operator job!!

     

  47. Super Dave Avatar
    Super Dave

    My office today.  Hitching up the Bush Hog for an early start.

    Life is Good. 😉

  48. Shannon Avatar
    Shannon

    Looks pretty green over there, rocket boy.

    Remind me to post a pic of the general conditions over here.

  49. bsue54 Avatar

    TedTam, I don’t know if there’s anything in her recipes you can use (don’t know about keto stuff) but this site has a BUNCH of interesting recipes – with substitution suggestions.  I’ve only tried a couple so far but they were great.  The one that caught my eye tonight is prolly not on your agenda – because it uses frozen ravioli to make lasagna… But maybe there’s something you can use  😉

    https://bowl-me-over.com

     

  50. Tedtam Avatar

    I just watched a video comparing Biden from some years ago to today’s version.

    I make the assumption that the forehead wrinkles may be different due to plastic surgery, and the teeth may be different because it could be real teeth vs. dentures.

    The structure of the ear, however…old Biden had a separated earlobe, and rather deep out canal area, and the little thing that sticks up in the front was rather prominent. Today Biden?  The lobe is connected, the canal more shallow, and the little thing is not nearly so prominent.  That’s not stuff that changes.

    Basic head structure can be seen as different as well. The difference in cheeks could be implants.  Perhaps Biden had his cheeks done at the same time as the facelift, if he had one.  But the old Biden skull seems more square.  I’m disregarding the hair, because…age.

    I saw another video recently, one with Biden speaking and the lady who was viewing the image was going on about his forehead.  I admit, it did look like a skull cap was being used.  His forehead wrinkles ceased suddenly as if the top of the forehead was covered in a mask.  Weird looking.

    If we are dealing with a fake Biden, I have issues with his fake being such a doddering imbecile.  That, and the fact that the entire staff and family would be in on it.

  51. Tedtam Avatar

    Bsue, I’ll check ’em out.  I can always try to work out substitutions.

  52. Shannon Avatar
    Shannon

    Tedtam 9:20

    Huh?

  53. Tedtam Avatar

    Shannon – the video posits that the real Joe Biden has been replaced.

  54. GJT Avatar
    GJT

    I’ve got conspiracy family that have been saying that for a while now.

  55. Shannon Avatar
    Shannon

    Nope.

    Biden is actually the current President of the United States.

    Scary, huh?

  56. Shannon Avatar
    Shannon

    I am pretty certain that Kamala Harris will be our next President.

    Whether she will win the Democrat primary, I have my doubts.

  57. Shannon Avatar
    Shannon

    That’s right friends.

    I think old Joe won’t come close to finishing out his term.

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.