Authorities in Assumption Parish, Louisiana discovered a roughly 200-foot by 200-foot area of collapsed land last week. Local residents had reported a diesel smell, and upon investigating, officials found the “slurry” sinkhole. As a precaution, though, they’ve evacuated 150 homes and a few businesses and are prepared to open shelters for people. The collapse may be due to aging salt caverns that crisscross the location. The Texas Brine Company operated the salt mine from 1982 to 2011. The state of Louisiana has ordered the company to evaluate the structural integrity of the caverns. Good luck getting any company to take responsibility for something like that! In the meantime, this looks as nasty as it is dangerous.
Monthly Archives: August 2012
August 9 Notable Birthdays
If today is your birthday, “Happy Birthday!”
Actor Sam Elliott (Gettysburg, Lonesome Dove, Mask, Tombstone, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, Mission Impossible TV series) is 68.
Actress Melanie Griffith (Working Girl, Night Moves, Smile, A Stranger Among Us, Born Yesterday, Mulholland Falls, Lolita, Crazy in Alabama) is 55.
Actress Amanda Bearse (actress: Married……with Children; director: Dharma & Greg, Veronica’s Closet) is 54.
Actress Gillian Anderson (The X Files, Future Fantastic, Playing by Heart, The House of Mirth) is 44.
Filed under Birthdays
On August 9…
1831 – The first steam locomotive train began its inaugural run, between Albany and Schenectady, New York.
1859 – Nathan Ames of Saugus, MA, patented the escalator.
1910 – Alva J. Fisher of Chicago, IL, received a patent for the electric washing machine.
1936 – Jesse Owens became the first American to win four medals in one Olympics. Owens ran one leg of the winning 400-meter relay team in Berlin. His 3 other gold medals were won in the 100-meter, 200-meter and the long jump events.
1945 – Three days after it dropped a bomb on Hiroshima, Japan, the U.S. dropped a plutonium bomb carried by the U.S.A. B-29 bomber, Bockscar, on Nagasaki. Japan surrendered unconditionally the following day, thus ending World War II.
1969 – Cult leader Charles Manson and his disciples began their rampage of terror in Los Angeles by breaking into the home of movie director Roman Polanski and brutally murdering his pregnant wife, actress Sharon Tate, movie director Voityck Frykowski, hair stylist Jay Sebring, student Steven Parent and coffee heiress Abigail Folger. The next night the group murdered Leno and Rosemary LaBianca.
1974 – President Richard M. Nixon officially resigned from office. Vice-President Gerald Ford was sworn in as the nation’s 38th president, and Nelson Rockefeller was sworn in as Vice-President. Ford had been the Senate minority leader in October 1973, when Nixon’s first Vice-President, Spiro Agnew, resigned. Therefore, for the first time in American history, its people found themselves with a president and vice-president they didn’t elect.
Filed under History
We Go Through This Every Year
It’s hot. It’s supposed to be. It’s summer in the Northern Hemisphere. That’s when our side of the Earth is closest to the sun. Physics 101. Ergo – the temperatures get just a tad bit warmer this time of year. Deal with it!
We go through this every year. Even here in Texas – where high Celsius marks are matched only by the arrogance of our politicians – meteorologists and safety officials have to tell people to stay out of the sun and drink lots of water. Older people, children and folks with perpetual paranoia syndrome (it may not be in medical texts, but I know it exists) are especially susceptible to the heat. Don’t leave pets in vehicles, count your brood of kids when you return from an outing, try not to fall asleep atop your boat on the lake after downing a keg of Miller Lite – they tell people these things. Every damn year! And, some idiot leaves a dog in a car with the windows rolled up or forgets that the youngest child was asleep in the back.
Just recently, a police officer left his two dogs in his police truck – and forgot about them! And, the bastard was a canine handler at that. Surprise – both dogs suffocated to death. He’s been placed on a leave of absence pending the outcome of an investigation. I have a great idea. Duct tape his ass to the roof of Mitt Romney’s Bentley and leave him there until after the elections.
I have some nerve to rant. I actually like to go out jogging in this weather – although I haven’t been out jogging in a few years. But, in the middle of a torrid summer afternoon, clad in nothing but running shorts, running shoes and matching ball cap or kerchief, I’d head out to taunt the sun. People look at me like…well, like they’ve never seen someone outside running.
What’s wrong with you?! Are you crazy?!
No – just had too many sunburns as a kid and got used to it.
Late one Saturday afternoon several years ago, I took a lengthy jog around the park across the street from the apartment complex where I used to live. It’s a nice little area, and I had it all to myself. Came back sweating like a Coke bottle stuck up a Brahma bull’s ass and smelled just as bad. Fully aware of my surroundings though; knew how far to push myself. As I reached the street, headed back towards the complex, along comes a Dallas police officer, slowly ambling down the street in her cruiser. Good, I thought, she’s keeping an eye on the neighborhood. I couldn’t have been more wrong!
She opened her passenger side window and hollered, “Are you crazy?! Do you realize how hot it is out here?!”
“Yes,” I replied, sweat starting to irritate my eyes. Are you kidding me? She stopped to ask me that?! There aren’t any real criminals to accost? Can’t she kind a carjacker and yell at them instead? She wasted five minutes of precious taxpayer time to scold me for jogging on a triple-digit-temperature day? Must have been a slow crime day. Or, maybe she just felt like screaming at someone because she had to work on a Saturday afternoon.
People from the cooler climates have the unwitting tendency to ask, ‘Do you ever get used to the heat?’
Do you get used to the cold?
Hell no! You never get used to it. Just like you never get used to bad days at work and people driving slow in the left lane. You just deal with that shit when it slams you in the face. You can’t get used to extremes. That’s impossible. Animals deal with extreme temperature and weather conditions better than most people. Navy SEALs do pretty well with those elements, too. But, the rest of us aren’t genetically programmed as nicely.
So, I leave more skin cells on the steering wheel of my truck after it’s been sitting beneath the sun for some time and try to keep my eyes on the road, despite burying my face in a cooling vent. That’s how I deal with it. Just don’t yell at me!
Picture of the Day
On August 7, NASA first color image taken on Mars by the rover “Curiosity.” The view is of the north wall of the rim of the Gale Crater. While it doesn’t look like much, it’s a significant technological achievement in the history of both NASA and the U.S. space program.
Filed under News
Quote of the Day
“India needs to stop strutting on the world stage like it’s a great power and focus on its deep problems within.”
– Ramachandra Guha, an Indian historian, after a massive grid failure cut power to more than 600 million people over a 2-day period.
Filed under News
This is a great piece about a return to the more self-sustaining lifestyle that has kept humanity alive for millions of years.
The Great Turning – Joanna Macy | Center for Ecoliteracy.
The Great Turning is a name for the essential adventure of our time: the shift from the Industrial Growth Society to a life-sustaining civilization.
The ecological and social crises we face are caused by an economic system dependent on accelerating growth. This self-destructing political economy sets its goals and measures its performance in terms of ever-increasing corporate profits—in other words by how fast materials can be extracted from Earth and turned into consumer products, weapons, and waste.
A revolution is under way because people are realizing that our needs can be met without destroying our world. We have the technical knowledge, the communication tools, and material resources to grow enough food, ensure clean air and water, and meet rational energy needs. Future generations, if there is a livable world for them, will look back at the epochal…
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August 8 Notable Birthdays
If today is your birthday, “Happy Birthday!”
Actress – swimmer Esther Williams (Take Me Out to the Ball Game, Dangerous When Wet, Neptune’s Daughter, Million Dollar Mermaid) is 91.
Actor Richard Anderson (The Six Million Dollar Man, The Bionic Woman, Escape from Fort Bravo, The Long Hot Summer, Hit the Deck) is 86.
Singer – songwriter Mel Tillis (I Believe In You, Coca-Cola Cowboy, Ruby Don’t Take Your Love to Town, Detroit City, I Ain’t Never, Commercial Affection, Good Woman Blues) is 80.
Actor Dustin Hoffman (The Graduate, Tootsie, Midnight Cowboy, Little Big Man, Kramer vs. Kramer, Rain Man, Dick Tracy, Hook, Search for Tomorrow, Outbreak, Sphere) is 75.
Connie Stevens (Concetta Ingolia; singer: Sixteen Reasons, Kookie, Kookie [Lend Me Your Comb]; actress: Hawaiian Eye, The Grissom Gang, Parrish, Back to the Beach) is 74.
Actor Keith Carradine (Pretty Baby, The Long Riders, The Moderns, Kung Fu, Will Rogers Follies, Nashville) is 63.
TV host Deborah Norville (Today, Inside Edition) is 54.
Guitarist David Evans (‘The Edge’; U2) is 51.
Singer J.C. Chasez (’N Sync) is 36.
Actress Lindsay Sloane (Mr. Rhodes, The Wonder Years, Dharma & Greg, Working, My So-Called Life, Between Mother and Daughter) is 35.
Filed under Birthdays
On August 8…
1866 – North Pole explorer Matthew Henson was born in Baltimore, Maryland.
1876 – Thomas A. Edison patented the mimeograph machine, describing it as a method of preparing autographic stencils for printing.
1879 – Emiliano Zapata, a leader of peasants and indigenous peoples during the Mexican Revolution, was born in Anenecuilco, México.
1919 – Film producer Dino De Laurentiis (The Bible, Barbarella, Nights of Cambria, La Strada) was born in Torre Annunciata, Italy.
1963 – A gang of 15 thieves stole £2.6 million ($7 million) in Buckinghamshire, England, in Britain’s “Great Train Robbery.” All but three of the gang were identified by fingerprints.
1974 – President Richard M. Nixon announced his resignation in the wake of the growing Watergate scandal, becoming the first U.S. president to resign from office.
Filed under History
Cartoon of the Day
Can we give this damn Chick-fil-A crap a rest now? I mean, children are going to bed hungry every night in America, and we’re still worried what some right-wing nut job said?
Filed under News



































