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The Monday Morning Memo

The BeagleSword was CrazySmart
and the rabbit hole was juvenile, tasteless
and
pointless mockery of knuckleheads.

 

“No statue has ever been put up to a critic.”
– Jean Sibelius


“Savannah’s squares may be public, but they feel private. Their massive, gnarled oaks – dripping with Spanish moss – create an insular mood, not to mention a deep shade… So lazy and calming are these ancient parcels that they act as a narcotic. The temptation is to lose yourself in reverie, to slip irretrievably into a gossamer world of indifference and fantasy.” 

– Jolee Edmondson,
writing of her hometown in Sky magazine,
the inflight magazine of Sowthwest Airlines

If you haven’t seen Sideways you should.

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Random Quote:

“The first two U.S. elections were essentially not contested, with George Washington as the universal preference. So the third election, which occurred in 1796, was the first truly contested election, and it immediately showed the vitriol and ad hominem attacks we have come to expect in presidential politics. In it, Thomas Jefferson was accused of lacking manliness and proper Christian values, among other deficiencies. In fact, presidential contests have almost never been about a rational comparisons of policies, but instead have been morality tales framed by the respective campaigns.”

- DelanceyPlace.com, in their review of The First Presidential Contest by Jeffrey L. Pasley. March 9, 2016

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