And what country can preserve its liberties if their rulers are not warned from time to time that their people preserve the spirit of resistance? Let them take arms. The remedy is to set them right as to facts, pardon and pacify them. What signify a few lives lost in a century or two? The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants.
For a few months in the 70s I lived in Kagoshima Japan. Just across the bay was the volcano Sakurajima. There was some kind of ash and smoke release every day, but the prevailing winds blew most of it west into Miyazaki prefecture. Occasionally the wind would blow ash toward the city and it looked like very fluffy snow for a couple of hours until the wind blew it away. I remember once or twice seeing a plume approaching this size.
I wonder how many idiots driving electric cars (in order to "save" mankind) realize how this natural occurrence cancels out their pathetic attempt to avoid a "carbon footprint"?
I knew a guy in Missoula Montana that did that when St. Helens blew up. I ruined his C-182 windshield and damned near choked the engine out. But he made it home oK. His name was Thib.....something or other.
Cooling actually…
ReplyDeleteOf course, but not according to the climate doomers
DeleteWhen a hobbit drops a gold ring that's been in the family for *ages*....
ReplyDeleteFor a few months in the 70s I lived in Kagoshima Japan. Just across the bay was the volcano Sakurajima. There was some kind of ash and smoke release every day, but the prevailing winds blew most of it west into Miyazaki prefecture. Occasionally the wind would blow ash toward the city and it looked like very fluffy snow for a couple of hours until the wind blew it away. I remember once or twice seeing a plume approaching this size.
ReplyDeleteI wonder how many idiots driving electric cars (in order to "save" mankind) realize how this natural occurrence cancels out their pathetic attempt to avoid a "carbon footprint"?
ReplyDeleteGreat photograph. You don’t want to fly through that ash though.
ReplyDeleteI knew a guy in Missoula Montana that did that when St. Helens blew up. I ruined his C-182 windshield and damned near choked the engine out. But he made it home oK. His name was Thib.....something or other.
DeleteMother Nature pops another zit.
ReplyDelete