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Showing content with the highest reputation on 09/03/2013 in all areas

  1. Once upon a time in America there were bars were a Gentleman with a few extra dollars in his pocket could meet up with a Gentleman who was looking to earn a few extra dollars. Some of the most well known of these bars were Numbers in West Hollywood, the P.S. in San Francisco, Rounds and The Haymarket in New York but most cities of decent size had at least one such establishment. Here is a fantasy of such long gone places. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8e6pDJJFO98
    2 points
  2. episevilla

    Again in Brazil

    On Sunday I took a little train from Curitiba to Morretes, near the sea. It is a nice excursion for travelers not able to go to Iguaçù. Anyway, the trip is 3 hrs long and you cross very beautiful and green mountains. There was this old lady guiding the tour, annoying everybody with her irrelevant speech... Morretes is a beautiful vacational town, along a river. There were a lot of people from Curitiba, eager to spend the day there and to have lunch at the restaurants at the river. Local speciality is the 'barreado', a beef plate eaten with smash bananas and mandioca flour. Quite tasty. I went in the evening to 520. As the guy at the entrance said, the sauna usually is very bussy on sundays. I saw a few garatos, less and not so attractive as friday, Anyway, when I was finishing my 'strip-tease' in the lockers room, this young man joined us and started to change. He could be your typical garoto, in his 20's, thin but very fit and tight, with tatoos... Only he was a regular client!! As he stared to me with some curiosity, I hold of course his long look... After showertime I 'attacked' him in the steam; he was already very hard. Some french kissing and to a (paid, there are free too) cabina. It was a very satisfaying intergenerational encounter, as you know it happens frequently in Brazil. I still get hard remembering me soaping him and touching again and again his unattinable washboard abs ... Summing up, that day I save my BR for Rio, where I'm flyng back this afternoon.... Hugs Epi
    2 points
  3. Yes I still have not forgiven you for not getting his phone number!!!
    2 points
  4. Web design? As we always suspected! ...Pardon me, I'm late for an appointment with my ontologist.
    2 points
  5. LOL Yes it is. I just love the subject matter.
    2 points
  6. woohoo! always excited for technological progress!!!!! the subject matter never changes. It's the world's oldest profession, so I'm told
    2 points
  7. Lucky

    Movie: Closed Circuit

    Eric Bana is gorgeous in this movie, where he stars with Rebecca Hall in a legal thriller about defending a terrorist in the post 9-11 age. Reviews are mixed, and it is definitely flawed as well as fatalistic. I would recommend it for the small screen, but I did enjoy it and thought most of it was well done. It's unsettling, and that may account for some of the less stellar reviews, but it does raise important questions and was easy on the eyes with Eric Bana as well as the London scenery. Slate: "But there are enough genuine moments of surprise to make this genre exercise an invigorating one." NY Times: "“Closed Circuit,” a slick, tasty slice of late-summer nonsense from Britain, comes soaked in gunmetal blue and paranoia. The anxiety is well founded: they’re watching us. A lot — especially through the ubiquitous closed-circuit television cameras that dot London like neighborhood constables or plague sores, depending on your view of life in the surveillance state. Millions of these cameras watch over Britain, at least half of which seem as if they’d been tapped for this movie to lord down from lampposts and buildings over the little people below, including a concerned-looking yet manly Eric Bana and an equally fretful, fetching Rebecca Hall." LA Times: ""Closed Circuit" is a crisply enjoyable, professionally executed paranoid thriller of the "everyone is out to get us" variety. In an earlier, simpler day, its plotting would have been dismissed as far-fetched, but that was then and this is now."
    1 point
  8. lookin

    Syria

    Interesting opinion piece in yesterday's Jerusalem Post: Terra Incognita: Irrational condemnation of Obama By Seth J. Frantzman 09/02/2013 21:32 It can’t be that only the US is responsible for stopping war crimes. Confused, weak, ineffectual, prevaricating, hesitant; all those words, and other synonyms gathered from a thesaurus that commentators likely keep at hand for these types of situations, have been used to castigate the US president’s “inaction” on Syria. He has been lambasted for abandoning Israel and giving the Iranians the feeling that their nuclear program will never be opposed. Israeli Journalist Avi Issacharoff claimed “Israel is truly alone” and Bayit Yehudi head Naftali Bennett said it “proves once more that Israel cannot count on anyone but itself.” Fellow party member and MK, Uri Ariel, claimed last week that “we, as people, we as Jews, cannot remain silent in the face of genocide.” A half page ad in Haaretz, run by a dentist, asked Obama “don’t you have any teeth?” Israel’s press has been similarly apoplectic. Yediot Aharonot ran a cover showing Bosnia, Rwanda, Darfur and Syria, asking “until when?” Bradley Burston goes further; “here in the Holy Land, the genocide in Syria has made all of us, Israelis and Palestinians both, into the townspeople of Auschwitz [living next to genocide]… President Obama no longer has the option of nothing.” LET’S TAKE a step back for a moment. First of all, there is something massively hypocritical about those outside the US who “demand” US action “immediately” in Syria. Ariel told Army Radio that Assad should be “taken care of already.” It sounds like “yalla, get going America.” For those that demand America do more, perhaps they should demand their government do something, rather than tell everyone else to do more. There is an incredible dissonance for non-Americans to sit around on their armchairs and “demand action” from the US. If their logic is that the Syrian actions are similar to genocide than it is incumbent on all 200 countries in the world to take action. It can’t be that only the US is responsible for stopping war crimes and enforcing international norms. How about Brazil, South Africa, India, Australia or Nigeria? Saudi Foreign Minister Saud al Faisal has “urged US action” on Syria. He claims that his country can’t be bothered to do anything. “There is no capacity in the Arab world to respond to this crises,” he said. Really? There are 22 Arab states and they don’t have the “capacity” to do anything? The Saudi military alone has the most modern hardware, courtesy of the US. This consists of 310 Abrams tanks and more than 300 combat aircraft, including F-15s. It isn’t capacity that holds them back, it is cowardice. In 1991 when Saddam Hussein was on their border, they likewise hid behind America, vowing, as the saying goes, to “fight to the death of the last American.” Turkey is the elephant in the room. It too supports US intervention, even though it shares 822 kilometers of border with Syria. But on not one kilometer can the Turkish military, outfitted with the latest NATO equipment, be called upon to say “never again.” Only the Americans can do that, from several thousand miles away. The Arab media is full of condemnations of the US for “inaction” on Syria. Hussein Ibish, of the American Task Force on Palestine, bashes the US for “promoting” a refugee crises, intensification of the conflict and the rise of Islamist extremism through “inaction.” Elias Harfoush has bashed the US at Al-Hayat claiming “Obama sat in his oval office at the White House for two and a half years, counting the numbers of casualties among the Syrian people.” This is the Arab world’s response: Blame America. America doesn’t bomb people fast enough for public opinion. Not one editorial in the region seems to condemn Arab leaders for “dithering.” The princes and kings of Saudi and the Gulf, they are acceptable. But between discovering whales, sharks and sparrows that are “spying for Israel,” Egyptians throw up their hands and complain about US “inaction.” Americans should ask themselves serious questions about whether they are being hoodwinked once again by the “international community” to do the job that the community should be doing itself. If regional powers can’t confront Syria – but those same powers demand America take action – serious questions should be asked about why Saudis and Turks can’t stand on the front line, but young men from Alabama and Maine should staff the bombing missions? The evidence for Obama’s supposed “weakness” rests on the theory that the US has not enforced its “red lines.” However the actual “red line” spelled out in August of 2012 was more nuanced; “a red line for us is we start seeing a whole bunch of chemical weapons moving around or being utilized… that would change my calculus [on intervention],” Obama said. A garbled unintelligible sentence, whose actual conclusion has to do with a changing “calculus,” not even action, is what the US president is being hung on today. But Obama has been strong in his current position: “This attack is an assault on human dignity. It also presents a serious danger to our national security. It risks making a mockery of the global prohibition on the use of chemical weapons. It endangers our friends… this menace must be confronted… the US should take military action.” And Obama has done what many US presidents have done before; “I’m also mindful that I’m president of the world’s oldest constitutional democracy.” He stands in good company historically. On April 12, Confederate forces began the bombardment of the US Fort Sumter in Charleston Harbor. On April 15 Lincoln obliged the attackers: “In virtue of the power in me vested by the Constitution… hereby do call forth, the militia of several states of the Union… in order to suppress” the rebellion. In 1846, after a skirmish with Mexicans on April 26, it took Congress until May 13th to declare war. William Mckinley waited two months to get a declaration of war on Spain in 1898 after a US ship was sunk in Havana. Lyndon Johnson waited five days for the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, which gave him power to use convention forces against North Vietnam. When North Korean forces poured across the 38th parallel at dawn on June 25 it took Harry Truman – arguing that “communism was acting in Korea just as Hitler” – until July 7 to get a resolution out of the UN. Were Mckinley, Lincoln and Truman all hesitant confused leaders? They were only sparred these accusations because they didn’t operate in a 24-hour news cycle where immediate response is measured in hours, not weeks. THE ACCUSATION that Obama has allowed the Syrian military to escape by waiting is problematic. If the Syrians have had to disperse their chemical weapons and bury them in the desert, while breaking up their armored units and hiding tanks in orchards and in underground parking lots, this actually represents a success without firing a shot. Supposedly Sun Tzu argued that “every battle is decided before it is fought.” Assad can’t be “emboldened” by this inaction when his generals are looking skyward and some have deserted their headquarters. Let them hide. The Syrian National Council rebel spokesman Louay Safi says Obama has shown “failed leadership.” The only failure is for the rebels not to take advantage and attack now. However, a video posted online by one Islamist rebel group shows fighters in pickups “attacking” by rounding up some truck drivers who they summarily execute as “Alawite infidels.” Are the Americans seriously expected to step into the breach where some of the Syrian rebels “heroism” consists of gunning down unarmed civilians and shouting “God is great.” Similarly, those who preach that the use of chemical weapons is a form of genocide are missing the point. If Assad wanted to commit a genocide wouldn’t he kill more than 1,432 people with these weapons, and wouldn’t he have to actually attempt to exterminate a specific group? Saddam Hussein was thought to have killed some 50,000 Kurdish people in the Anfal genocide, where he used chemical weapons in 1988. It took until 2005 for The Hague to rule that an act of genocide. Comparisons between Syria and Auschwitz are so far off the mark as to dishonor the victims of Auschwitz, rather than honor the victims in Syria. The hysterical preaching about American “inaction” is devoid of historical understanding and based on hyperbole and armchair generalship, more than on reality. The reality is that Obama has made a sound decision to act pragmatically with the support of the American people.
    1 point
  9. TampaYankee

    The Daddy Dummies

    Let's discuss the issues and not each other. No one else really cares what you think of each other. That is a private conversation best taken off-line. Thanks. Also, best to make clear distinction between that suspected and that which is proven fact, lest credibility suffer in the confusion. Just the better debate form.
    1 point
  10. AdamSmith

    Water hammering

    hito, this is exactly why these exotic superheroes called plumbers get paid so much. Call one! Or accept the hard truth: Once your pipes get air in them and start hammering, the only real solution is to move.
    1 point
  11. We chatted many times and he was nice to an old man. I didn't think anything about him until we were in airport and there was a swarm of screaming girls. I asked him what was going on and he smiled and said he didn't know. And, then I figured out it was him. I felt stupid to say the least but he was very sweet.
    1 point
  12. I'll bet he still has your bag of peanuts.
    1 point
  13. Hard to believe I sat next to him on a trip to Brazil so many years back and didn't know who he was.
    1 point
  14. I don't know how I'll wait until January. I haven't been this addicted to a show since the Sopranos.
    1 point
  15. Very excited!!!!! The UK air date for the premiere of Downton Abbey season 4 has finally been revealed! The highly anticipated ITV series will on September 22, 2013. Downton Abbey is Britain's most successful TV export ever and has a global audience estimated at 120 million. Downton Abbey season 4 will premiere in the US on January 5, 2014. The series will run for eight consecutive weeks after its US premiere.
    1 point
  16. axiom2001

    Again in Brazil

    Episevilla, thank you and keep posting; I'm enjoying the views and the read! - -
    1 point
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