CigarBanter
Cigar Banter => Daily Cigar Deals Discussion => Topic started by: CigarBanter on September 11, 2023, 12:01:53 AM
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Happy Monday! Any cigar deals on the various internet sites? Join in this discussion and perhaps learn something about cigars along the way. Warning: don't proceed if you have thin skin but don't be afraid to post either... And welcome aboard!
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A solemn day.
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A solemn day.
Tell me about it. My son is playing saxophone in a 9/11 memorial service and then we're going to a wake for a neighbor.
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Morning, all.
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Joe:
Graycliff G2 Maduro Pirate - 10/32.50
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Sis:
Door #1 - Drew Estate Undercrown Connecticut Shade Toro Especial - 10/59.99
Door #2 - Diesel Uncut d.CT Robusto - 10/29.99
Door #3 - La Perla Habana Black Pearl Morado Belicoso - 20/64.99
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Morning, all.
What's the good word, LTG?
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We all got a bit of a late start today but everyone got to school/work on time.
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The weather has been dreary. I have a ton of wood in the yard from dismantling the swing set. I'm thinking of building an ark.
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Morning, all.
What's the good word, LTG?
All is status quo here today, which I suppose is good news these days. How's about you?
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The weather has been dreary. I have a ton of wood in the yard from dismantling the swing set. I'm thinking of building an ark.
Or a smoking shed.
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Morning Tony and Dave.
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A solemn day.
Tell me about it. My son is playing saxophone in a 9/11 memorial service and then we're going to a wake for a neighbor.
What saxaphone? Tenor? That's what I played.
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Morning, all.
What's the good word, LTG?
All is status quo here today, which I suppose is good news these days. How's about you?
No complaints. Have a long to-do list but am also taking time to prep for my next interview on Wednesday. The job requires me to do stuff I hadn't thought of in years.
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The weather has been dreary. I have a ton of wood in the yard from dismantling the swing set. I'm thinking of building an ark.
Or a smoking shed.
I have the garage for that. For now anyway. Until it gets commandeered.
Good morning, ClemsonDave.
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The weather has been dreary. I have a ton of wood in the yard from dismantling the swing set. I'm thinking of building an ark.
It was weird watching the Browns game yesterday. At some points, it was absolutely downpouring, and yet here, only 6.5 miles away as the crow flies, we barely got a mist.
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A solemn day.
Tell me about it. My son is playing saxophone in a 9/11 memorial service and then we're going to a wake for a neighbor.
What saxaphone? Tenor? That's what I played.
I played alto back in the day.
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A solemn day.
Tell me about it. My son is playing saxophone in a 9/11 memorial service and then we're going to a wake for a neighbor.
What saxaphone? Tenor? That's what I played.
Tonight, he'll be playing alto. That's his main instrument, but he also plays the flute and trumpet.
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A solemn day.
Tell me about it. My son is playing saxophone in a 9/11 memorial service and then we're going to a wake for a neighbor.
What saxaphone? Tenor? That's what I played.
Tonight, he'll be playing alto. That's his main instrument, but he also plays the flute and trumpet.
Show off.
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The weather has been dreary. I have a ton of wood in the yard from dismantling the swing set. I'm thinking of building an ark.
Or a smoking shed.
I have the garage for that. For now anyway. Until it gets commandeered.
Good morning, ClemsonDave.
But you didn't do AC there...have a decent heater for the upcoming months?
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Morning, muchachos.
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The weather has been dreary. I have a ton of wood in the yard from dismantling the swing set. I'm thinking of building an ark.
Or a smoking shed.
I have the garage for that. For now anyway. Until it gets commandeered.
Good morning, ClemsonDave.
But you didn't do AC there...have a decent heater for the upcoming months?
No a/c nor heater yet. I do have a fire pit for weather permitted evenings just outside the garage.
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Morning, muchachos.
Hola, Bret.
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A solemn day.
Tell me about it. My son is playing saxophone in a 9/11 memorial service and then we're going to a wake for a neighbor.
What saxaphone? Tenor? That's what I played.
Tonight, he'll be playing alto. That's his main instrument, but he also plays the flute and trumpet.
Never did Alto. Played Tenor and Bari, clarinet and bass clarinet. Even played a bass sax once in a jazz band competition.
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Wordle 814 4/6
⬛⬛🟨🟩⬛
⬛🟨⬛🟩🟨
🟨🟨⬛🟩🟩
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
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The weather has been dreary. I have a ton of wood in the yard from dismantling the swing set. I'm thinking of building an ark.
Or a smoking shed.
I have the garage for that. For now anyway. Until it gets commandeered.
Good morning, ClemsonDave.
But you didn't do AC there...have a decent heater for the upcoming months?
No a/c nor heater yet. I do have a fire pit for weather permitted evenings just outside the garage.
Well, lets get on it then!
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A solemn day.
Tell me about it. My son is playing saxophone in a 9/11 memorial service and then we're going to a wake for a neighbor.
What saxaphone? Tenor? That's what I played.
Tonight, he'll be playing alto. That's his main instrument, but he also plays the flute and trumpet.
Never did Alto. Played Tenor and Bari, clarinet and bass clarinet. Even played a bass sax once in a jazz band competition.
I love the sound of woodwinds. Especially in jazz.
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Connections
Puzzle #92
🟩🟩🟩🟩
🟨🟨🟨🟨
🟦🟦🟦🟦
🟪🟪🟪🟪
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Not a clue with connections today.... :-\
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Morning, muchachos.
Morning, Page2Raz.
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A solemn day.
I can't help feeling that if we go through this day somber, then the little rat-fucks that did it won.
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Today in History: September 11, the United States comes under attack
Today in History
Today is Monday, Sept. 11, the 254th day of 2023.
There are 111 days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in History:
On Sept. 11, 2001, nearly 3,000 people were killed as 19 al-Qaida hijackers seized control of four jetliners, sending two of the planes into New York’s World Trade Center, one into the Pentagon and the fourth into a field in western Pennsylvania.
On this date:
In 1789, Alexander Hamilton was appointed the first U.S. Secretary of the Treasury.
In 1814, an American fleet scored a decisive victory over the British in the Battle of Lake Champlain in the War of 1812.
In 1936, Boulder Dam — later renamed the Hoover Dam — began operation as President Franklin D. Roosevelt pressed a key in Washington to signal the startup of the dam’s first hydroelectric generator.
In 1941, groundbreaking took place for the Pentagon. In an anti-Semitic speech, Charles A. Lindbergh told an America First rally in Des Moines, Iowa, that “the British, the Jewish and the Roosevelt administration” were pushing the United States toward war.
In 1954, the Miss America pageant made its network TV debut on ABC.
In 1967, the comedy-variety program “The Carol Burnett Show” premiered on CBS.
In 1972, the Munich Summer Olympics, where 11 Israeli athletes and several others were killed, ended.
In 1973, Chilean President Salvador Allende (ah-YEN’-day) died during a violent military coup.
In 1997, Scotland voted to create its own Parliament after 290 years of union with England.
In 2006, in a prime-time address, President George W. Bush invoked the memory of the victims of the 9/11 attacks as he staunchly defended the war in Iraq, though he acknowledged that Saddam Hussein was not responsible for the attacks.
In 2008, presidential candidates John McCain and Barack Obama put aside politics as they visited ground zero together on the anniversary of 9/11 to honor its victims.
In 2012, a mob armed with guns and grenades launched a fiery nightlong attack on a U.S. diplomatic outpost and a CIA annex in Benghazi, Libya, killing U.S. Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans
In 2016, Hillary Clinton abruptly left a 9/11 anniversary event at ground zero in New York after feeling “overheated,” according to her campaign, and hours later her doctor disclosed that the Democratic presidential nominee had pneumonia.
In 2022, Javier Marías, Spain’s most prestigious novelist for most of his life, died at age 70.
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Today’s Birthdays:
Actor Earl Holliman is 95.
Comedian Tom Dreesen is 84.
Movie director Brian De Palma is 83.
Singer-actor-dancer Lola Falana is 81.
Rock musician Mickey Hart (The Dead) is 80.
Guitarist Leo Kottke is 78.
Actor Phillip Alford is 75.
Actor Amy Madigan is 73.
Rock singer-musician Tommy Shaw (Styx) is 70.
Sports reporter Lesley Visser is 70.
Actor Reed Birney is 69.
Former Homeland Security Secretary Jeh (jay) Johnson is 66.
Musician Jon Moss (Culture Club) is 66.
Actor Scott Patterson is 65.
Rock musician Mick Talbot (The Style Council) is 65.
Actor/director Roxann Dawson is 65.
Actor John Hawkes is 64.
Actor Anne Ramsay is 63.
Actor Virginia Madsen is 62.
Actor Kristy McNichol is 61.
Musician-composer Moby is 58.
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad is 58.
Business reporter Maria Bartiromo is 56.
Singer Harry Connick Jr. is 56.
Actor Taraji (tuh-RAH’-jee) P. Henson is 53.
Actor Laura Wright is 53.
Rock musician Jeremy Popoff (Lit) is 52.
Blogger Markos Moulitsas is 52.
Singer Brad Fischetti (LFO) is 48.
Rock musician Jon Buckland (Coldplay) is 46.
Rapper Ludacris is 46.
Rock singer Ben Lee is 45.
Actor Ariana Richards is 44.
Country singer Charles Kelley (Lady A) is 42.
Actor Elizabeth Henstridge is 36.
Actor Tyler Hoechlin (HEK’-lihn) is 36.
Actor Mackenzie Aladjem is 22.
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Today's Over/Under is 10
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Not a clue with connections today.... :-\
It took me a while to begin to see the groups.
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Today's Over/Under is 10
7
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Wordle 814 4/6
⬛🟨⬛⬛⬛
⬛🟨🟨⬛🟨
🟩⬛🟨🟩🟨
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
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Today's Over/Under is 10
Twelve.
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Today's coinky dink is Roxann Dawson and Virginia Madsen both appearing in Star Trek: Voyager.
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And page 3!
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Happy Birthday ladies.
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A solemn day.
I can't help feeling that if we go through this day somber, then the little rat-fucks that did it won.
It still feels too soon not to mourn the losses. Plus, aren't most of those rat-fucks dead? I'm sure there's new ones but still.
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Today's Over/Under is 10
Nine.
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Rat-fuck lull?
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Do real men smoke pink?
https://www.cigarpage.com/manly-man-pinkies-up-20-cigar-stacked-pack.html
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A solemn day.
I can't help feeling that if we go through this day somber, then the little rat-fucks that did it won.
I was working only 30 miles from the city at the time. A beautiful crisp early fall day. Neighboring towns had a lot of people that commuted into the city. A number of which worked in the towers. Guess it affects me differently. Somber and respectful is not the same as crippled and fearful. That slime will never win.
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A solemn day.
I can't help feeling that if we go through this day somber, then the little rat-fucks that did it won.
I was working only 30 miles from the city at the time. A beautiful crisp early fall day. Neighboring towns had a lot of people that commuted into the city. A number of which worked in the towers. Guess it affects me differently. Somber and respectful is not the same as crippled and fearful. That slime will never win.
* Tony lives even closer and was probably working in the city at the time.
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A solemn day.
I can't help feeling that if we go through this day somber, then the little rat-fucks that did it won.
I was working only 30 miles from the city at the time. A beautiful crisp early fall day. Neighboring towns had a lot of people that commuted into the city. A number of which worked in the towers. Guess it affects me differently. Somber and respectful is not the same as crippled and fearful. That slime will never win.
* Tony lives even closer and was probably working in the city at the time.
In the years since, I have been driving to Newark airport on numerous occasions early in the morning and seeing the two "light towers"
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A solemn day.
I can't help feeling that if we go through this day somber, then the little rat-fucks that did it won.
It still feels too soon not to mourn the losses. Plus, aren't most of those rat-fucks dead? I'm sure there's new ones but still.
Yeah, I get it. And I'm not suggesting we forget those lost and what was done to them.
But there are people in the world today who are celebrating the rat-fucks who did this. They aren't mourning those guys. They are celebrating them as martyrs, who inflicted pain, suffering, and sadness on us. And I just can't help feeling that they want us to spend this day sad. If we do, then their legacy is secure.
I won't do it. Today I will celebrate the memory of those we lost. I will remember their accomplishments, their sacrifices, their families, and those they left behind that have carried on. I will celebrate what those people brought to the world, which is a hell of a lot greater than what the rat-fucks accomplished in taking them from us.
TD said it's a solemn day. It is. I'm just saying solemn doesn't have to be somber.
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Connections
Puzzle #92
🟪🟪🟪🟪
🟩🟩🟩🟩
🟨🟨🟨🟨
🟦🟦🟦🟦
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A solemn day.
I can't help feeling that if we go through this day somber, then the little rat-fucks that did it won.
I was working only 30 miles from the city at the time. A beautiful crisp early fall day. Neighboring towns had a lot of people that commuted into the city. A number of which worked in the towers. Guess it affects me differently. Somber and respectful is not the same as crippled and fearful. That slime will never win.
I was supposed to be there, a block and a half away. Sheer luck or God's grace - take your pick - that I wasn't.
When my wife woke me up and made me come down and look at the TV, I stood there with all the blood draining to my feet, thinking, "Jayzus. I'd have just got my shoes shined outside the south tower, and would have been walking to the building where the class was being held when the north tower was hit."
What would I have done? Part of me would like to believe I'd have quickly deduced it was no accident. There would have been the instinct to go see if I could render aid, since I was fairly well-trained in first aid. There would have been the logical instinct to get the hell out and stay out of the way of the responders. I dunno. I'd have probably run to the classroom to ensure anyone there knew what was happening. Would I have encouraged them to shelter in place or get out? I dunno. In hindsight, sheltering in place would have been a bad idea. But who knew what was a good idea?
No real answers.
BH
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A solemn day.
I can't help feeling that if we go through this day somber, then the little rat-fucks that did it won.
I was working only 30 miles from the city at the time. A beautiful crisp early fall day. Neighboring towns had a lot of people that commuted into the city. A number of which worked in the towers. Guess it affects me differently. Somber and respectful is not the same as crippled and fearful. That slime will never win.
* Tony lives even closer and was probably working in the city at the time.
I was working in Brooklyn at the time and my wife was doing an audit at #7 World Trade (3rd building to collapse but luckily without human casualty). We went to Europe on vacation and watched the surreal happenings unfold on CNN from our hotel in Capri. We both personally knew many who met their demise that day. I'll never forget them.
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A solemn day.
I can't help feeling that if we go through this day somber, then the little rat-fucks that did it won.
I was working only 30 miles from the city at the time. A beautiful crisp early fall day. Neighboring towns had a lot of people that commuted into the city. A number of which worked in the towers. Guess it affects me differently. Somber and respectful is not the same as crippled and fearful. That slime will never win.
* Tony lives even closer and was probably working in the city at the time.
I was working in Brooklyn at the time and my wife was doing an audit at #7 World Trade (3rd building to collapse but luckily without human casualty). We went to Europe on vacation and watched the surreal happenings unfold on CNN from our hotel in Capri. We both personally knew many who met their demise that day. I'll never forget them.
I was in college and was driving to the campus when the first tower hit. I was listening to Stern, and at the time, they figured it was some sort of pilot error. By time that class was over and I made my way to my second class, the first tower had fallen and classes had been canceled. I went home, couldn't watch it on tv and headed to the course to play 9 holes with a friend. Sometimes, the course is a nice respite when nothing else makes sense.
Though, the wife had been at work and when she came home, she wasn't able to track me down. I think she's still mad at me about it to this day. Lol
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A solemn day.
I can't help feeling that if we go through this day somber, then the little rat-fucks that did it won.
I was working only 30 miles from the city at the time. A beautiful crisp early fall day. Neighboring towns had a lot of people that commuted into the city. A number of which worked in the towers. Guess it affects me differently. Somber and respectful is not the same as crippled and fearful. That slime will never win.
* Tony lives even closer and was probably working in the city at the time.
I was working in Brooklyn at the time and my wife was doing an audit at #7 World Trade (3rd building to collapse but luckily without human casualty). We went to Europe on vacation and watched the surreal happenings unfold on CNN from our hotel in Capri. We both personally knew many who met their demise that day. I'll never forget them.
I was in college and was driving to the campus when the first tower hit. I was listening to Stern, and at the time, they figured it was some sort of pilot error. By time that class was over and I made my way to my second class, the first tower had fallen and classes had been canceled. I went home, couldn't watch it on tv and headed to the course to play 9 holes with a friend. Sometimes, the course is a nice respite when nothing else makes sense.
Though, the wife had been at work and when she came home, she wasn't able to track me down. I think she's still mad at me about it to this day. Lol
At least you know why she's mad at you.
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A solemn day.
I can't help feeling that if we go through this day somber, then the little rat-fucks that did it won.
I was working only 30 miles from the city at the time. A beautiful crisp early fall day. Neighboring towns had a lot of people that commuted into the city. A number of which worked in the towers. Guess it affects me differently. Somber and respectful is not the same as crippled and fearful. That slime will never win.
* Tony lives even closer and was probably working in the city at the time.
I was working in Brooklyn at the time and my wife was doing an audit at #7 World Trade (3rd building to collapse but luckily without human casualty). We went to Europe on vacation and watched the surreal happenings unfold on CNN from our hotel in Capri. We both personally knew many who met their demise that day. I'll never forget them.
I was in college and was driving to the campus when the first tower hit. I was listening to Stern, and at the time, they figured it was some sort of pilot error. By time that class was over and I made my way to my second class, the first tower had fallen and classes had been canceled. I went home, couldn't watch it on tv and headed to the course to play 9 holes with a friend. Sometimes, the course is a nice respite when nothing else makes sense.
Though, the wife had been at work and when she came home, she wasn't able to track me down. I think she's still mad at me about it to this day. Lol
At least you know why she's mad at you.
That's true, no having to guess at what I might've done.
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New Trinidad Espiritu on the way:
https://halfwheel.com/trinidad-espiritu-no-3-heading-to-stores-on-oct-31/429341/?fbclid=IwAR1DBe2fSN-1pM2GDv6CrWgxJAHt27MEGEY0p-x1vF8rm6Pl96-MSq4UlEE
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Hazzuh!
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New Trinidad Espiritu on the way:
https://halfwheel.com/trinidad-espiritu-no-3-heading-to-stores-on-oct-31/429341/?fbclid=IwAR1DBe2fSN-1pM2GDv6CrWgxJAHt27MEGEY0p-x1vF8rm6Pl96-MSq4UlEE
Another AJ stick to be on the lookout for.
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MNF will be a must watch. Not only for Rick. Been following the Jets on Hard Knocks and now I'm eager to see what Aaron Rodgers does.
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A solemn day.
I can't help feeling that if we go through this day somber, then the little rat-fucks that did it won.
I was working only 30 miles from the city at the time. A beautiful crisp early fall day. Neighboring towns had a lot of people that commuted into the city. A number of which worked in the towers. Guess it affects me differently. Somber and respectful is not the same as crippled and fearful. That slime will never win.
* Tony lives even closer and was probably working in the city at the time.
I was working in Brooklyn at the time and my wife was doing an audit at #7 World Trade (3rd building to collapse but luckily without human casualty). We went to Europe on vacation and watched the surreal happenings unfold on CNN from our hotel in Capri. We both personally knew many who met their demise that day. I'll never forget them.
To my knowledge, no one I personally knew lost their lives that day - though it is completely possible I'd met people who did. I just don't remember all the names and faces of students I taught in New York. I expect there were at least some, perhaps a significant number.
If my statements offend you, Tony, because you knew so many that were lost, I apologize. That was not my intent.
I promise I do not minimize or disregard those we lost. I simply choose to remember them with jubilance, and celebration, rather than mourning.
I'm sure I've told it before, but I think often of the bootblack I used to visit when I taught in lower Manhattan. Is bootblack now a pejorative, racist term? I hope not. Surely it is more respectful than "shoeshine boy." He wasn't a boy. He called me "boss." He called everyone who visited his stand "boss." I told him I was nobody's boss. He agreed to call me "teach," but the next time I was there we had to have the same discussion.
He worked outside the south tower. I do not remember his name, and I regret that. He always remembered me, or convincingly pretended he did. So many passed him by, perhaps saw him as an anachronism, or were uncomfortable having a black man do such "servile" work for them. I didn't see it that way. He was earning a living, providing a service my grandfathers had taught me was important. Clothes don't necessarily make the man, but the condition of his shoes are a keen indicator of his priorities, responsibility and attention to detail. I could have shined my own damned shoes, but then I would have been depriving him of income that IBM was providing. My outdoor mentor, an ex-Green Beret medic, taught me later that you always protect your feet. Nothing is more important. The rest of the body depends on the feet.
So when I was in lower Manhattan, I visited his stand for a shine, and I tipped generously. What I remember most is that he didn't use an applicator to apply polish. He got his hands into it. There's no particular reason to do that. It's just what I remember, and it seems to me distinctly human.
He was the first person I thought of that day. I have no way of knowing whether he survived that day unscathed. I hope he did.
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Clark. His last name was Clark. The bootblack. I remember because it made me think of Clark Center, the heart of mass transit in Chicago, where I also spent a lot of time teaching.
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New Trinidad Espiritu on the way:
https://halfwheel.com/trinidad-espiritu-no-3-heading-to-stores-on-oct-31/429341/?fbclid=IwAR1DBe2fSN-1pM2GDv6CrWgxJAHt27MEGEY0p-x1vF8rm6Pl96-MSq4UlEE
Nice coinkidink.
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One story I always think of on this day.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X2FvRXZim7E
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A solemn day.
I can't help feeling that if we go through this day somber, then the little rat-fucks that did it won.
I was working only 30 miles from the city at the time. A beautiful crisp early fall day. Neighboring towns had a lot of people that commuted into the city. A number of which worked in the towers. Guess it affects me differently. Somber and respectful is not the same as crippled and fearful. That slime will never win.
* Tony lives even closer and was probably working in the city at the time.
I was working in Brooklyn at the time and my wife was doing an audit at #7 World Trade (3rd building to collapse but luckily without human casualty). We went to Europe on vacation and watched the surreal happenings unfold on CNN from our hotel in Capri. We both personally knew many who met their demise that day. I'll never forget them.
To my knowledge, no one I personally knew lost their lives that day - though it is completely possible I'd met people who did. I just don't remember all the names and faces of students I taught in New York. I expect there were at least some, perhaps a significant number.
If my statements offend you, Tony, because you knew so many that were lost, I apologize. That was not my intent.
I promise I do not minimize or disregard those we lost. I simply choose to remember them with jubilance, and celebration, rather than mourning.
I'm sure I've told it before, but I think often of the bootblack I used to visit when I taught in lower Manhattan. Is bootblack now a pejorative, racist term? I hope not. Surely it is more respectful than "shoeshine boy." He wasn't a boy. He called me "boss." He called everyone who visited his stand "boss." I told him I was nobody's boss. He agreed to call me "teach," but the next time I was there we had to have the same discussion.
He worked outside the south tower. I do not remember his name, and I regret that. He always remembered me, or convincingly pretended he did. So many passed him by, perhaps saw him as an anachronism, or were uncomfortable having a black man do such "servile" work for them. I didn't see it that way. He was earning a living, providing a service my grandfathers had taught me was important. Clothes don't necessarily make the man, but the condition of his shoes are a keen indicator of his responsibility and attention to detail. I could have shined my own shoes, but then Inwould have been depriving him of a customer. So when I was in lower Manhattan, I visited his stand for a shine, and I tipped generously. What I remember most is that he didn't use an applicator to apply polish. He got his hands into it. There's no particular reason to do that. It's just what I remember, and it seems to me distinctly human.
He was the first person I thought of that day. I have no way of knowing whether he survived that day unscathed. I hope he did.
I completely understand your point and am in no way offended by it.
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New Trinidad Espiritu on the way:
https://halfwheel.com/trinidad-espiritu-no-3-heading-to-stores-on-oct-31/429341/?fbclid=IwAR1DBe2fSN-1pM2GDv6CrWgxJAHt27MEGEY0p-x1vF8rm6Pl96-MSq4UlEE
Nice coinkidink.
Please share your thoughts.
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One story I always think of on this day.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X2FvRXZim7E
Don't have an hour now but I'll definitely check this out.
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Clark. His last name was Clark. The bootblack. I remember because it made me think of Clark Center, the heart of mass transit in Chicago, where I also spent a lot of time teaching.
Here's the list of Clarks that perished that day:
Benjamin Keefe Clark
Eugene Clark
Gregory Alan Clark
Mannie Leroy Clark
Sara M. Clark
Thomas R. Clark
Christopher Robert Clarke
Donna Marie Clarke
Michael J. Clarke
Suria Rachel Emma Clarke
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One story I always think of on this day.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X2FvRXZim7E
I don't watch other documentaries, and couldn't bring myself to visit the site, but do watch that every year.
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New Trinidad Espiritu on the way:
https://halfwheel.com/trinidad-espiritu-no-3-heading-to-stores-on-oct-31/429341/?fbclid=IwAR1DBe2fSN-1pM2GDv6CrWgxJAHt27MEGEY0p-x1vF8rm6Pl96-MSq4UlEE
Nice coinkidink.
Please share your thoughts.
Not the new one, this is Series No, 2
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Clark. His last name was Clark. The bootblack. I remember because it made me think of Clark Center, the heart of mass transit in Chicago, where I also spent a lot of time teaching.
Here's the list of Clarks that perished that day:
Benjamin Keefe Clark
Eugene Clark
Gregory Alan Clark
Mannie Leroy Clark
Sara M. Clark
Thomas R. Clark
Christopher Robert Clarke
Donna Marie Clarke
Michael J. Clarke
Suria Rachel Emma Clarke
I don't have enough information to determine whether he is one of these. I'll have to look up each one, and find what information is out there.
But I will look, because I remember him with respect. And honestly, Tony, I don't remember him with "white privilege" respect. I've been spending a lot of time contemplating what white privilege means, at the behest of my boss, Governor Jay Inslee. I don't have much respect for Mr. Inslee, politically. But he is my boss, and I do get it. Despite the fact that I voted for Donald Trump twice, and if I'm forced to again I will do it again, it is not because I'm a white supremacist or think Trump is a hero. He's not. Trump's an asshole. If the Democrat party offered something better, I might vote for it. But they don't. They just offer the same crap.
I remember Mr. Clark with honest respect. He was earning a living.
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Connections
Puzzle #92
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New Trinidad Espiritu on the way:
https://halfwheel.com/trinidad-espiritu-no-3-heading-to-stores-on-oct-31/429341/?fbclid=IwAR1DBe2fSN-1pM2GDv6CrWgxJAHt27MEGEY0p-x1vF8rm6Pl96-MSq4UlEE
Nice coinkidink.
Please share your thoughts.
Not the new one, this is Series No, 2
Is that one also an AJ stick?
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MNF will be a must watch. Not only for Rick. Been following the Jets on Hard Knocks and now I'm eager to see what Aaron Rodgers does.
Received an alert on my phone to seek shelter and not enter the venue yet if you're going to the game. The purple circle with the x is where the stadium is. (Top left corner)(https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/20230911/926d2c1318655840a9b913d893a41c44.jpg)
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MNF will be a must watch. Not only for Rick. Been following the Jets on Hard Knocks and now I'm eager to see what Aaron Rodgers does.
Received an alert on my phone to seek shelter and not enter the venue yet if you're going to the game. The purple circle with the x is where the stadium is. (Top left corner)(https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/20230911/926d2c1318655840a9b913d893a41c44.jpg)
Seems like an unusually high number of games played in monsoon conditions for week 1.
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Wordle 814 4/6*
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MNF will be a must watch. Not only for Rick. Been following the Jets on Hard Knocks and now I'm eager to see what Aaron Rodgers does.
Hope you caught his debut before it was paused.
Edit: Forget paused, make that ended. What did he get, 3 plays? Oof.
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MNF will be a must watch. Not only for Rick. Been following the Jets on Hard Knocks and now I'm eager to see what Aaron Rodgers does.
Hope you caught his debut before it was paused.
Edit: Forget paused, make that ended. What did he get, 3 plays? Oof.
I missed it because I was at a wake and then had to prepare dinner. About to sit down now and I heard he was out but don't know what happened.
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Mark Twain Memoir
(https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/20230912/14dcb9f6956dff3c190b4602dd3e14b6.jpg)
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MNF will be a must watch. Not only for Rick. Been following the Jets on Hard Knocks and now I'm eager to see what Aaron Rodgers does.
Hope you caught his debut before it was paused.
Edit: Forget paused, make that ended. What did he get, 3 plays? Oof.
I missed it because I was at a wake and then had to prepare dinner. About to sit down now and I heard he was out but don't know what happened.
I'm all caught up. Sheesh. But Zack is definitely looking better since being mentored by Aaron. Great game, so far.
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MNF will be a must watch. Not only for Rick. Been following the Jets on Hard Knocks and now I'm eager to see what Aaron Rodgers does.
Hope you caught his debut before it was paused.
Edit: Forget paused, make that ended. What did he get, 3 plays? Oof.
I missed it because I was at a wake and then had to prepare dinner. About to sit down now and I heard he was out but don't know what happened.
Got him on a sack. Didn't look bad, but he must've rolled his ankle or something.
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MNF will be a must watch. Not only for Rick. Been following the Jets on Hard Knocks and now I'm eager to see what Aaron Rodgers does.
Hope you caught his debut before it was paused.
Edit: Forget paused, make that ended. What did he get, 3 plays? Oof.
I missed it because I was at a wake and then had to prepare dinner. About to sit down now and I heard he was out but don't know what happened.
It was pretty easy to miss.
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MNF will be a must watch. Not only for Rick. Been following the Jets on Hard Knocks and now I'm eager to see what Aaron Rodgers does.
Hope you caught his debut before it was paused.
Edit: Forget paused, make that ended. What did he get, 3 plays? Oof.
I missed it because I was at a wake and then had to prepare dinner. About to sit down now and I heard he was out but don't know what happened.
Got him on a sack. Didn't look bad, but he must've rolled his ankle or something.
Old guys bones don't hold up so well.
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MNF will be a must watch. Not only for Rick. Been following the Jets on Hard Knocks and now I'm eager to see what Aaron Rodgers does.
Hope you caught his debut before it was paused.
Edit: Forget paused, make that ended. What did he get, 3 plays? Oof.
I missed it because I was at a wake and then had to prepare dinner. About to sit down now and I heard he was out but don't know what happened.
Got him on a sack. Didn't look bad, but he must've rolled his ankle or something.
Old guys bones don't hold up so well.
X-ray was negative. So it wasn't bone.
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I'm starting to think Josh Allen believes if he throws into double coverage, a TD will count for double the points.
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New Namakubi not quite up to the original.
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I'm starting to think Josh Allen believes if he throws into double coverage, a TD will count for double the points.
Not his best game.
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I'm starting to think Josh Allen believes if he throws into double coverage, a TD will count for double the points.
Not his best game.
3 interceptions so far.
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Very intense game. I'm on the edge of my seat.
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Very intense game. I'm on the edge of my seat.
With a movie scripted ending.
Nice game Jets.
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Very intense game. I'm on the edge of my seat.
With a movie scripted ending.
Nice game Jets.
Indeed. Even my wife got into it.
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Page 7!