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Today is the real Thanksgiving...at least at Rather Manor. Yes, we may have a feast on Thursday too, but the Church to which Mum and Dad belong does a neighborhood-wide superfeast, both on-site and delivered. So I'll have my quota of turkey, gravy, and mashed potatoes--and perhaps a slice of cake (I'll let everybody else have the pumpkin pie)--tonight for my dinner whether I go with the folks or stay here. And I'll likely stay here.

Earlier today I went to Harbour Freight in Knoxville and picked up the highest-priority tools for my purposes: a measuring set of calipers, dividers and scales; a combination square with multiple heads; a screwdriver set; a steel ruler; a mini flashlight. I'd toyed with the idea of buying more tools then and there, but decided against that because I'll be doing more shopping at the local Lowe's tomorrow and will try to complete my list that way. Besides, there's only so much me and Moonshine can carry at once. (I'll have to borrow Dad's Dodgepodge to transport the tool cabinet piece d'resistance.)
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Q: Did your Mom have a nice birthday?

A: She had a very nice birthday. And you know a holiday that involves gift-giving isn't over until all the gifts have been opened and enjoyed...so it's still ongoing for her. Today my sister and brother-in-law visited and treated her to a lunch of exotic foods guaranteed to help her through her health issues. Sis also gave Mum three new shirts.

A family/church friend gave Mum a Key Lime Pie for her dessert tonight, which excused me to finish off Mum's birthday cake. Oh, the duties I have in this family.
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I promise a taste test in the coming season. For Science--AND Justice!
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Nothing like going back to an old theme to see if it has anything I hadn't discovered the first (or second, or third) time.

In this Previous Commentary I did a look through of the 1981 Book of Predictions to see where we had been in the turn of the 21st Century as opposed to how things looked to happen back then.

Today I found the library's copy to look at predictions for 2010. What I saw in those pages:

* Nationalist "identities" being eroded by the emerging globalized culture. The cyberati/globalati find new ways to define themselves beyond where they live or local social class (or political affiliation).
* Terrorists obtain a nuclear warhead and use it on a major city. The death toll is in the millions and it prompts a global ban on weapons of mass destruction.
* Fusion energy becomes safe and reliable enough for companies to build large-scale fusion powerplants. The order of magnitude of the grid's capacity must be raised by a factor of twenty to thirty to make full use of the advance.
* Artificial Intelligence technology finds its "killer application" and is advanced to the point where AI systems frequently pass Turing Tests.
* The first segment of the first long-term space habitat is launched into orbit. Suborbital spaceflights become available for wealthy space tourists.
* Regional Economic Unions between Third-World nations proliferate as they are seen as a way out of the "continental poverty cycle". Dozens of national currencies get phased out world-wide in favor of regional ones. Where regions come together, some nations adopt two or more as official currencies as a way to reinforce global trading through their territory.
* The Kingdom of Jordan and the Palestinian Authority are merged as the end result of a constitutional crisis in Jordan. The new nation is ceded land from Saudi Arabia and southern Iraq, and this makes a political solution with the State of Israel possible.
* "Superstructures"--massive truss-like building systems--will become the next trend in urban construction.

While there is a lot more in the book, I think more than half of it is "obsolete" because it was either predicted to happen in the years between publication and 2000, or has come to pass/been disproven by events of recent history. And much of the other material is too trivial or silly to bother with.

Just the same, I think I'm having a craving for Convenience Store Pie about now.

FP
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Sagittarius Horoscope for week of June 11, 2009

Of the 190 short films the Three Stooges made for Columbia Pictures, only five actually had pie fights. However, those classic scenes sum up all there is to know about the mythic meaning of pie fights, as well as the needs they address and the techniques involved. I urge you to study up on the Stooges' teachings concerning these matters -- and put them to immediate use. Nothing could be more effective in dealing with stalled negotiations, convoluted mind games, superficial exchanges, excessive gravity, and bureaucratic slowdowns than a righteous pie fight.


I actually equate pie combat with the end of the Sixties/start of the Seventies all-primate TV spy spoof Lance Link.

My sister is 1) a pastry chef 2) a proud (at least former, if not present) owner of an Aladdin Lance Link lunchbox. If ever I need a pie fight, I can call in a pro. So there.

FP
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About a week ago I made a pizza. Yes, I do not cook often but the problem is my father. He decides what we eat for dinner without much input from us and then just plunges ahead and prepares it. Too often, it doesn't work.
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Convenience Store Pie.

The reason: An oven company invents a new commercial oven that is more energy-efficient and easier to use, so it replaces microwaves and other such cooking units in gas station shops and convenience stores. To promote this change, the company has a competition to come up with the best food that can be prepared in this oven...and a pie recipie wins.

My dream overnight was that I was introduced to the pie when I had a problem with my credit card at a gas station and the clerk gave me a sample.
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...You have dreams about chefs in the middle of nowhere (say, the backwoods of the Pacific Northwest/Canada/Alaska) who invent pies made from an obscure vegetable I haven't heard of before (and don't ask me, I don't remember this part) which becomes for this decade the food-fad parallel to quiche in the early Eighties.

This happened to me a few nights ago. I wish my folks could give Lidia's Italy, Mexico One Plate At a Time, Chefs A'Field and the other PBS cooking shows a rest for a while. Hey...they bought this house after overdosing on PBS home-improvement shows. Q.E.D.

I've never liked cooking. My pizza is probably as sophisticated as I can possibly get.

FP

PS: I introduced my Mom to Ficlets tonight. This is her first Ficlet.
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Cake. Chocolate Macaroon Bundt with confectioner's powdered sugar on top rather than frosting. Nicely cool. A steamy mug of cafe au creme (or that new Vanilla drink that General Foods makes) to go with it.

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Stephen R Bierce

March 2022

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