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Author Topic: 10/28/2025  (Read 597 times)

LuvTooGolf

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Re: 10/28/2025
« Reply #15 on: October 28, 2025, 09:33:08 AM »

Morning, PumpkinDave.
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LuvTooGolf

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Re: 10/28/2025
« Reply #16 on: October 28, 2025, 09:54:59 AM »

Here's my coinkydink of the day - there have only been two 18+ inning games in World Series history, and Brad Paisley sang the anthem at both of them.
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LuvTooGolf

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Re: 10/28/2025
« Reply #17 on: October 28, 2025, 10:06:30 AM »

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A Friend of Charlie

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Re: 10/28/2025
« Reply #18 on: October 28, 2025, 10:50:25 AM »

Sandwiches are made and it's just about commute time. Wish me luck.
May the traffic be light.
It wasn't. But it definitely has been worse. Door to door with the school drop-off, 1 hour and 25 minutes.
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LuvTooGolf

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Re: 10/28/2025
« Reply #19 on: October 28, 2025, 11:02:10 AM »

Sandwiches are made and it's just about commute time. Wish me luck.
May the traffic be light.
It wasn't. But it definitely has been worse. Door to door with the school drop-off, 1 hour and 25 minutes.
Ouch
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A Friend of Charlie

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Re: 10/28/2025
« Reply #20 on: October 28, 2025, 11:10:30 AM »

Here's my coinkydink of the day - there have only been two 18+ inning games in World Series history, and Brad Paisley sang the anthem at both of them.
Hadn't heard that one. Very interesting.
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A Friend of Charlie

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Re: 10/28/2025
« Reply #21 on: October 28, 2025, 11:16:24 AM »

Prunella Scales, the actress best known for playing Sybil Fawlty, the intimidating wife of John Cleese‘s Basil on the ’70s British sitcom “Fawlty Towers,” has died. She was 93.

This is a shame, that show was fantastic.

I know the show, but don't remember her. I'll have to look her up. I believe Cleese's birthday was very recently. Maybe even yesterday. Always loved him and all the shows/movies he's been on. In any case, RIP Prunella.
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A Friend of Charlie

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Re: 10/28/2025
« Reply #22 on: October 28, 2025, 11:20:38 AM »

Prunella Scales, the actress best known for playing Sybil Fawlty, the intimidating wife of John Cleese‘s Basil on the ’70s British sitcom “Fawlty Towers,” has died. She was 93.

This is a shame, that show was fantastic.

I know the show, but don't remember her. I'll have to look her up. I believe Cleese's birthday was very recently. Maybe even yesterday. Always loved him and all the shows/movies he's been on. In any case, RIP Prunella.

Sure enough, she died on his 86th birthday. I remember her now that I've seen her image.
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LuvTooGolf

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Re: 10/28/2025
« Reply #23 on: October 28, 2025, 11:36:25 AM »

Prunella Scales, the actress best known for playing Sybil Fawlty, the intimidating wife of John Cleese‘s Basil on the ’70s British sitcom “Fawlty Towers,” has died. She was 93.

This is a shame, that show was fantastic.

I know the show, but don't remember her. I'll have to look her up. I believe Cleese's birthday was very recently. Maybe even yesterday. Always loved him and all the shows/movies he's been on. In any case, RIP Prunella.

Sure enough, she died on his 86th birthday. I remember her now that I've seen her image.
Another strong front runner for coinkydink of the day.
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razgueado

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Re: 10/28/2025
« Reply #24 on: October 28, 2025, 11:44:54 AM »

Morning, muchachos.
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LuvTooGolf

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Re: 10/28/2025
« Reply #25 on: October 28, 2025, 11:50:17 AM »

Morning, muchachos.
Morning, Page2Raz.
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razgueado

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Re: 10/28/2025
« Reply #26 on: October 28, 2025, 11:52:22 AM »



Quote
I understand you meant this for Travelin Dave, but allow me to answer, so that you can fully get my position.

Yes, I believe that there should be structures outside the executive branch that impose limits upon what the executive branch does with the resources that the executive branch controls. I always assumed this was part of the checks and balances our forefathers intended. But I'm sure you know the old adage about assuming.

Well, there is an open question about the separation of powers and the powers of the chief executive, which the SCOTUS is likely to settle this term as it reconsiders Humphrey's Executor v United States.  But the monuments in Washington DC are under the auspices of the National Park Service, which is an executive branch agency, and the White House itself is also under the auspices of the Committee to Preserve the White House (which was created by an executive order of LBJ) and the Capitol Planning Commission, which was enabled by an act of Congress, but is also an executive branch agency populated by presidential appointees. 

Followup question: Does it disturb you to learn that in 2009 Barack Obama, with private funding, installed basketball hoops and markings on Dwight Eisenhower's tennis court, and didn't submit the plans to the National Capitol Planning Commission?  Or is that too minor a change to bother with?

I hadn't considered the basketball court change because it was relatively minor, but if that was done without submitting plans, then it does bother me. I wonder though, did Ike submit plans to put the tennis courts in to begin with?
I erred.  It was Teddy Roosevelt who installed the tennis court.  And no, he did not submit the plans for approval, because there was no agency yet in existence to which they could be submitted.  The National Capitol Planning Commission wasn't created until 1924.
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razgueado

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Re: 10/28/2025
« Reply #27 on: October 28, 2025, 12:00:27 PM »

Quote
The White House had said it plans to submit the ballroom construction plan to the planning commission ‒ yet it went ahead with the East Wing demolition before doing so.

The director of the National Capitol Planning Commission (who also sits on the Committee for the Preservation of the White House, and whose main job, BTW, is Staff Secretary of the White House, under the Chief of Staff), said it had no jurisdiction over the demolition.  But he doesn't count?
Not really.  As you have said previously, there is no longer a separation of powers as Trumpf learned from his first term (and following Project 2025 to the letter) he has placed mindless sycophants in all critical positions so there is no independent review or challenge to his mercurial whims by an impotent congress.
I didn't say there wasn't a separation of powers.  If anything, I said the opposite - increased separation of powers - is a possible outcome of the SCOTUS taking up Humphrey's Executor during this term. 

Regardless of that, you don't feel that Neera Tanden, who was the White House Staff Secretary under Biden, was a "sycophant?"  How does one tell the difference between a sycophant and a loyal appointee to a position that doesn't require senate confirmation?
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razgueado

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Re: 10/28/2025
« Reply #28 on: October 28, 2025, 12:01:22 PM »

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razgueado

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Re: 10/28/2025
« Reply #29 on: October 28, 2025, 12:21:59 PM »

Quote
I understand you meant this for Travelin Dave, but allow me to answer, so that you can fully get my position.

Yes, I believe that there should be structures outside the executive branch that impose limits upon what the executive branch does with the resources that the executive branch controls. I always assumed this was part of the checks and balances our forefathers intended. But I'm sure you know the old adage about assuming.

Well, there is an open question about the separation of powers and the powers of the chief executive, which the SCOTUS is likely to settle this term as it reconsiders Humphrey's Executor v United States.  But the monuments in Washington DC are under the auspices of the National Park Service, which is an executive branch agency, and the White House itself is also under the auspices of the Committee to Preserve the White House (which was created by an executive order of LBJ) and the Capitol Planning Commission, which was enabled by an act of Congress, but is also an executive branch agency populated by presidential appointees. 

Followup question: Does it disturb you to learn that in 2009 Barack Obama, with private funding, installed basketball hoops and markings on Dwight Eisenhower's tennis court, and didn't submit the plans to the National Capitol Planning Commission?  Or is that too minor a change to bother with?
You know it is.
Actually, I really don't, and that's the point of this discussion.  I'm trying to understand where people draw lines between what is sacred and profane when it comes to the White House property.  People were very upset that Trump replaced the grass in the Rose Garden with a limestone patio.  But nobody was upset that Obama stuck basketball hoops on the tennis court and had basketball markings painted on it.  So are the grounds sacred or not?

I expect nobody here would disagree that the gutting of the interior of the White House and installation of a steel infrastructure under Truman was necessary, especially after a piano nearly fell through the second floor.  But how does that gutting square with what Kathleen Willey has called "the overwhelming history" that has been lost by knocking down the East Wing?  Is the history in the walls, or is it just hanging on the walls?  Because if it's in the walls, then every single presidential administration since John Adams has destroyed history by building and tearing out offices inside.  But if the history is hanging on the walls, or sitting on the floors, then why are we upset that a president has knocked down the walls to rebuild them? 

Also, when do the walls become historic?  The last time the East Wing was knocked down and rebuilt was 1942.  So is it after 50 years that a structure becomes historic?  80 years? Is a building immediately historic if it is erected on the White House grounds?

I'm not being flippant, I promise.  I really don't get where people put their boundaries, and clearly people have placed them in different places in their minds than I have.  So I'm trying to understand.
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