Yesteryear
One year ago today: July 6, 2024, some Karaoke.
Five years ago today: July 6, 2020, remember the COVID budget?
Nine years ago today: July 6, 2016, pitiless.
Random years ago today: July 6, 2014, pretty snippity.
My dog finally remembers me, the guy who feeds him chicken. I slept in till 7:30AM, unlike y’day when all the people who were not shooting off fireworks until two in the morning were running their two-stroke yard tools at six in the morning. No reports of casualties. I should be out in the van looking for my hatchet, but the dog has the right idea. I’m obliged to mention my inability to see close up objects on end is now a serious condition, see addendum. Do I dare open the shed and see what I’ve left there over the years? Return later today for this, and other blogworthy events. My iMac files disappeared, so these videos are the only thing I have for you today. You've probably guessed they are not usual blog fare, but I'm tapped out, all I can say is these videos are very current material, within the last 48 hours.
Let’s check the news over an extra coffee. Old Bernie has some explaining to do over a $44 million grant to “promote democracy” during 2016 when he suddenly decided not to run against Hillary. The new bigger-fatter AOC who sicced the IRS on Trump now wants the IRS abolished now that her sudden acquisition of $22 million is under scrutiny.
Back from the hour’s walk and we have the neighborhood update. It confirms it is time to move. Out toward the main road there are now five, possibly six houses occupied by obvious renters. Really obvious. I cleared away the main jungle trail which leads to the heavy woods between the subdivisions. Almost. As we got to the far end, we found this barrier. I walked along the shadeless side until I saw a couple on their patio and asked what gives. They said a lady from this side faked a slip and fall and was suing their HOA.
I asked if said lady was this high, wore horn-rim glasses, and was an [obvious renter] and they said yep, that’s her. Assuring them she was not representative of this neighborhood, the damage has been done. Other factors reveal the troubles began the month those people started moving in. I will henceforth lock my van at night. We have a problem, the van battery was dead this morning. It responded to a boost and a walk-around revealed the brake lights on one side and marker lights on another a staying on. I have no choice but to disconnect the battery when this far from the cabin.
The tree that fell from the north side over the fence is too big for me to move. I used my hatchet to chop it off even at the fence line, peering into the bamboo. This is not an axe, it’s a light hand tool and I’m sweating full-scale. I don’t think Dale (the neighbor) is ever going to be able to clean his yard now that the bamboo is forty feet high. I got myself winded clearing the shed before 10:00AM. My beauty of a mini-chop saw, perfect for making 45 degree cuts, is folded and ready to place in the van.
I checked the blade on the old club circular saw. I intend to use it on the tree to fit the fire pit. And that beauty of a “rose” tree on the west side of the porch keeled over from heavy rain on the branches. It came back to life but is blocking the passage to the back yard. I will have to saw those back as well. Just when it is in full bloom. The Reb wants some other bamboo removed so get ready for work, because I walked all the way to the back and did not find what she meant. It’s the neighbor’s bamboo that how chokes the whole west side, you cannot even see the fence I put in last summer. I stayed outside to watch how the dog is getting out, but he knows I’m watching.
So I walked out to the back to look at the exact spot the Reb pointed to. But that is not a bamboo tree. Things like that wait until I’m sure. All’s I’m saying for now is there is one hell of a lot of bamboo heading right this way. Let’s see if we can squeeze any adventure out of today, there must be something can be found, even in 2025 Tennessee.
The way to deal with this is get out of the sun and put on more coffee. I read another chapter of the personal privacy book and see that the courts are increasingly allowing “truthfulness” as a defense in defamation cases. In earlier times, the issue was not the accuracy of the facts, but whether or not there had been harm. For clarity, it was the harm that was illegal, not how true or false the facts. It made it difficult for anyone but famous people who ostensibly derived their livelihood from their reputations. But gossip was associated with idle tongues and village do-nothings. That has been replaced by soulless journalists and the Internet.
Picture of the day.
Henry Ford’s machine shop.
Remember to use BACK ARROW to return to blog.
My packages arrived just before the windstorm. My present to myself was one of those roller marker tools that lets you scribe a line with one hand. The treat is the Wainlux laser engraver, here it is on the kitchen counter next to a salami sandwich. Hey, I’m not some bean-head youTube unboxer who lives on Ramen noodles. The first impression is this device is very well designed. It seems to come with a full set of accessories, including a pair of safety glasses. There is a 150-page user manual of which of which 25 or so are in English. It was only gaining this manual that several questions got answered and that is not right. One was that jpeg format could only be used with downloaded drivers. That was one of many chances I took ordering this unit on-line. Even asking people who claim to be in the loop with all the apps and downloads are no help at all.

It appears to need connection to CutLabX, mentions sparingly in the documentation. My guess is that is software than must be installed. The paperwork and on-line how-to material is almost totally focused on using a mobile phone connection. That might explain why so much of the art is boringly simplistic. I scrolled past some 800 designs on five web pages without seeing a single novel or original pattern, so I gave that avenue up. Taking another chance, I downloaded the MAC software on to this computer, a process I have not done since 1991. Mercifully, that part does not seem to have changed, or put another way, no millennial has been allowed to “improve” it, although I am certain many have tried.
Dang, the driver install requires the system password and the one I’ve been using does not work. Should I just plug the thing in and see if it has a demo mode? Meanwhile, let’s go to CutLabX and see what we are in for. The similarity to LightBurn is instant, both of which I would have rejected due to privacy issues with their account requirements. Sure enough, the software is not compatible with older iMac OS installs and I think this computer is from the 1990s.
Looking deeper at the files, I see the samples use a “g-code” which I think stands for a gerber file, the very format that I balked at with 3D printer software. I am not an artist and I cannot design such things. The apps have no useful demo modes, but it is easy enough to see they are some sort of grey-scale conversion. Since I’m after a one-dimensional “branding iron” design, maybe I can bypass that step. One more, the process confirms why every on-line example is repetitious crap from the unwashed masses. Then, the system winks out for a ten-second power failure. It rejects the password so we are locked out until the Reb returns after the weekend. This, folks, is your measure of how little progress has really been made since 1985. And the guest mode is set to lock out social media. Safari sucks.
So, let’s plug the sucker in and take our chances. Nope, no demo mode. Won’t even burn their own logo. It’s the same old, a guesswork setup, not quite like any other I’ve done, and which has to be relearned every computer I ever use with it. It’s quite sturdy to handle and has a solid feel to it, plus an interesting way to focus the laser. The junior unit requires a reflective plate and focus know, this model has a feeler that folds down to the burning surface, and then back up out of the way. I got it to trace but not burn the engraving outline. Every bit of progress is always welcome around here.
Not to be outdone, I got out the depth marker and set it for 1/2”, now every piece of scrap lumber around here has a scribe. My centering cone is also here, along with that pricey hinge router bit, the one that cuts mortices for my box hinges. If it works right, that speeds up production by a half-hour per box. I have no hinged boxes for sale, this intense labor part makes each unit too precious to part with.
Fifteen arrested for ballot harvesting in Texas, including two mayors, the local judge, and the Democrat representative. Don’t worry, nobody is going to notice they were all Latinos. The part of the Big Beautiful Bill I follow is the $100 billion funding for ICE so the deportations can finally get underway big time. I still don’t think we should be flying them out. Let them back into Mexico where they crossed from and let that place deal with any subsequent issues. The Mexicans broke their promise to patrol the border the instant Trump was out of power.
Another Stalingrad documentary, but the propaganda myths of what happened die hard. The Germans never flew in the majority of their supplies. There was a railroad from Karkhov, a major railway hub for both sides. The Stalingrad line ended at Kalach where the bridge could not support rail cars. The cargo was loaded onto trucks and put back on the Stalingrad-Don, the oldest railway line in Russia at the time. So old that the trains could not turn around and were pushed backward to return to base. That hook mechanism used to destroy tracks was called Schwellenpflug (no link) and it says here a museum in Germany still has one in working order. (It was also called the rail wolf and the rail pig.)
It operates like so. The hook is lowered onto the railway bed and begins to plow up and break the ties. A clamp over the rails pulls out the spikes, and finally a trailing bar bends the rails into unusable twisted meal. Apparently the strain on the system was so great the device required a crew of ten to keep replacing the wheel bearings.
ADDENDUM
How could I have gotten so suddenly old in just four years? And no history to go on, I am the oldest male of my bloodline, no other has ever lived as long as I have, although I had an uncle that came close. He bore a strong facial resemblance to my father, but was a kind and gentle soul. Yet, he shared the family characteristic (until I came along) of no hobbies, interests, talent, personality, popularity, ambition, or ability to put in an ounce of extra effort. Just work a day job, go home and watch TV, and vegetate except for the long spells of criticizing anyone who at least even tried. I generally “feel” like I’ve got five years left and if so, that would make me by far the longest survivor in my lineage.
To describe my emerging vision problem more accurately, I now had a distinct “blind spot” for objects lying on end directly in my field of vision between three and roughly five feet away. Say a tool that is long and narrow. The last short while I was subconsciously always setting them down across my field of vision. It’s when I didn’t that I detected something wrong. If it is positioned on end, lying flat and away from me, I do not recognize the shape until I get close enough to look down on the object. This is not good.
Keeping my promise of 2003 to document the major changes due to age, that knotted muscle in my leg has stabilized and feels like a length of cartilage that makes walking uncomfortable. Which of these conditions will be the one to do me in? One thing age is no barrier to is making feminist enemies. I’m the guy who created the meme that if you don’t like Grammar Nazis it is because you are a Grammar Jew. Time permitting, I rag on people who cannot type, and one such feminist tried the angle that I was “flirting” with her. I assured her I only flirted with young, slim, blonde, college-age girls, which is basically true, and have now officially received my first death threat. Who said blogging was not a dynamic hobby?
Later, I’m thinking this crazy Wendy broad may be serious.
Last Laugh