20 December 2010

yes, i did post about this before

[click image, via jo6pac]

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But I didn't know yet how it was to be officially overlooked. Thanks to WikiLeaks, we have confirmation. The government is perfectly cognizant of the destruction they are licensing... and it's because they are all space lizards sent down here from their craft that has been orbiting us for millennia.

I'm speaking, of course, of what we call the moon.

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love, 99
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15 comments:

  1. Speaking of the moon, I hope it clears by midnight for the totality of the lunar eclipse, however things aren't looking too god right now.

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  2. Yuh, been eyeing the radar and it keeps looking as though we'll get to see it, but then it keeps raining when the radar looked clear. I really hope it clears because the eclipse is just spectacular to see up here. It's SO soothing... as though we get to be on a whole new planet, in a whole new universe for that little while. Eerily beautiful and the moonsets afterward are also always so gorgeous you could die happily in them.

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  3. Overcast here, I can see the moon through the clouds, but there are no details or features to be seen. The clouds are moving fairly fast and it looks there is an occasional break so I may luck out.

    I wish my hot tub still worked, I could sit in it and watch the show.

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  4. Wikileaks just keeps on showing us how it is the mega-corporations that are running the world to the detriment of all living things!

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  5. I swear, it is an effort for me not to worship Assange. He is ONLY doing what a normal human does. The problem is that there are so few normal humans!

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  6. His father told him: Real men do not make victims; real men nurture victims. Agent 86's father told him real men use a washcloth and lots of soap. Seems fathers have big impacts.

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  7. Go HERE to see why I'm gonna goddam miss this eclipse!

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  8. If you luck out maybe the clouds will break for a moment and you can see it with lightning bolts all around it.

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  9. I think I neglected to mention that a lightning bolt hit about a hunnert feet from my gocart just south of Orick on my way home yesterday. That was pretty fuckin' awesome! Rock and roll hoochy coo....

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  10. Rin and I were in Pariah Canyon years ago, camped in a tent at the foot of a fossilized sand dune. The dune was about 60 feet high. A dry thunderstorm rolled in and lightning was crashing all around us with the dune being repeatedly hit.

    We were rather scared as the tent had metal poles. We wanted to get to the car where it would be safer, but didn't want to make the 50 yard dash from the tent to the car.

    The storm last more than an hour before it rolled off into the distance.

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  11. With a full overcast I gave up on the eclipse and went to bed at 10:30. I happened to wake up at 11:50 and went out to see if I could see it. It was still overcast, but there was a small break in the clouds moving up from the south. When the break got directly overhead, there it was straight overhead. It was moments from totality, only a slight sliver of sunlight on on edge. Then it was gone again into the clouds after about 45 seconds.

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  12. I bet, now that cars are electronics on wheels, we might be safer in them when lightning strikes, but I'm not so sure the cars would work anymore....

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  13. Lunar Eclipse - Dec 20, 2010

    I got ya covered.
    http://sacxtra.com/mbs/node/534

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  14. Wow! Thanks, Phil. I couldn't catch even a moment's glimpse of it last night.

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