Oops. By Hivemind Standards, nearly 1-in-4 North Carolinian Blacks Are Racists

It’s a fact. By Hivemind Standards “proving racism” (ANY opposition to The Zero=”racism” according to Hivemind Standards), almost 1/4 of North Carolina’s Black voters are racists.

The Zero received 95% of the “Black” vote in 2008. Recent polls place his support significantly lower in that group:

Not only that, but if you notice, a firm 20% are “self-haterz” (again, Hivemind definitions in operation), since they have come off the Dhimmicrappic Race-Baiting Plantation to declare for The Romney Android 2.X.

Whatever is the world coming to? opposition to The Zero=”racism” according to Hivemind Standards

In the All Time Top Ten Best Songs…

The All Time Top Ten Best Songs of the last 300 years? Has to include the aria “Ombra mai fu” from Handel’s Serse (Xerxes). No kidding. Sure, the single best song of the 20th Century is “Nessun Dorma” (video link)–Puccini’s 1920s hit from Turandot, indisputably (no matter what some with tin ears and dulled mental capacities might think) THE “last great song written”… to date.

And ANY of Schubert’s lieder (preferably sung–at least most of them–by Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau–simply and inarguably THE greatest baritone voice of the 20th Century. Just sayin’ :-))can hold down ALL the places for “best songs of the 19th Century.” Go ahead: pick any one of them. Apparently, Schubert just could NOT write a clinker of a song, never blew a clam onto manuscript paper, wrote only solid gold songs. Beethoven, Brahms, Mozart even? Yeh, some great solos. But they just didn’t seem to have Schubert’s ear for song. YMMV, but whatever you think, I’m right. *heh*

But while the 18th Century had tons of singable, memorable and even great songs, this one’s my own fav, and as hundreds of recordings of it from the 20th Century on can attest, it has an enduring appeal. I collect recordings of this song–have tons of them. I’m in awe of David Daniel’s counter-tenor performances of this song; I absolutely love Bryn Terfel’s deft treatment of the song; my fav living tenor, Placido Domingo, also sings it beautifully, as do a number of good sopranos. But Jussi Björling’s 1959 Atlanta performance before a live audience just blows me away:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ex8Ja68Hc_U&feature=watch_response

The man’s talent was a one-of creative act by a God who loves music. And yeh, the video link above to “Nessun Dorma” is a Björling performance, too. Lesser performances aren’t on the same planet. Heck, the recitativo preceding the aria’s good, and usually a pleasant enough experience, but Björling singing the recitativo makes the hairs on my arms stand up and brings tears to my eyes. Really.

And “Ombra mai fu” is just a song about a (plane?) tree! Yeh, a flippin’ tree! (But hey, Nessun Dorma’s just a sort of “lullaby”–more or less. *heh*)

For All Time Top Ten Songs, nothing from pop music does it like the folks with real chops–writing and performing–can.



Frondi tenere e belle
del mio platano amato
per voi risplenda il fato.
Tuoni, lampi, e procelle
non v’oltraggino mai la cara pace,
nè giunga a profanarvi austro rapace.

(Tender and beautiful fronds
of my beloved plane tree,
let Fate smile upon you.
May thunder, lightning, and storms
never bother your dear peace,
nor may you by blowing winds be profaned.)

Ombra mai fu
di vegetabile,
cara ed amabile,
soave più.

(A shade there never was,
of any plant,
dearer and more lovely,
or more sweet.)

The only thing that might have improved on this concert performance would have been to have the strings accompaniment Handel scored. Some really subtle stuff going on in that. Listen to (Oh, go ahead and buy it! It’s just a buck) Bryn Terfel’s rendition (a third lower in pitch) for an appreciation of the stringed accompaniment. Very nice.

Is Too Exercise!

Well, sorta.

Short story made long(er), I’ve been thinking (in a very desultory, lackadaisical, downright unserious manner) of getting a wee tad more exercise–you know, beyond my typical couch-and-desk-potato exercises with occasional bursts of yardwork. I’ve thought of building a treadmill desk for either my desktop or laptop, but… I’m reluctant to spend the $$ on just adding more unused clutter to the house.

Still… primary hard drive on most-used computer is making funky noises, so it’s powered down until I get a new hard drive in, and, yeh, looks like I’ll have to double its capacity *drat!* since 500GB hard drives are becoming less, common and I can install a 1TB drive for little over a $10-$15 upcharge. *shrugs* Why not?

But… I need another “change of pace” computer. (No, I don’t really, but I’m used to moving around to different workstations and doing different things on ’em, so… ) So…

Enter lil netbook with a real mouse and keyboard attached, sitting on the “bar” on the dining room side of the kitchen counter, right about here:

Those stools are gone–replaced them with some neat ones that have padded seats, backs and built-in pullout step stools. I’m not using seating there, anyway. By using it as a standing desk, I at least get some “exercise” benefits, and by having it there, the coffee’s handy! Sweet!

*heh*

Oh, Great… for Kids Who Can Get Their Parents to Move East for the Summer

TD Bank is offering kids (18 or younger) $10 for reading 10 books this summer.

Great, right? Here’s the deal:

1. Read 10 books this summer. See suggestions.
2. Print out the Summer Reading Form
3. Write down the names of the books they’ve read
4. Take the form to the nearest TD Bank
5. Watch $10 be deposited into a new or existing Young Saver Account

Oh, wait. Notsogreat.

1. Locate the nearest TD Bank location (WTF?!? I thought TD Bank specialized in online banking!):

“There is no listing found based on your criteria. Please change your criteria and try again.” (IOW, “Move to a location where we have a physical presence, sucker!”)

2. Move there.
3. “Here’s your money kid, only… we’ll keep it for you. Howzat for a sweet deal, eh?”
4. 10 books? *feh* Sub-par. Way, way sub-par. (Of course, “par” to me is the last Summer Reading Program I participated in as a kid. My total? 235 books for the summer. Yeh, yeh, Mom did shoo me outa the house, and visits to grandparents involved lotsa outdoorsy stuff, too. IOW, wasn’t 24X7 w/my nose in a book. I used to read a lot more than I do even now.)

Of course, if parents would simply stop playing “event planners” for their kids entertainment schedules and just, well, parent while letting doing whatever they can to compel their mentally lazy kids to create their own entertainment, then encouraging them to read, making sure they can get to a library, etc., could go a long way toward improving our future citizens.

Just sayin’.

One More Sign I Want for My Lawn

I think it’d go well with a “Go Away” doormat and a used silhouette target (laminated), don’t you? And on the front door, “If you don’t have a search warrant, don’t knock. Just go away.”

*heh*

Not a hermit yet, but exploring the idea…