"the only trouble with the fringe is, it does tend to unravel" -
a couple of notes:
babies become much more enjoyable to have around once they learn to Sit Up. this always follows the ability to grasp items fairly well, and does thus become, in a baby - the abilty to play by itself!
...for a while - afterwhich, it returns to the screaming demanding creature you remember from those newborn-days. but much heavier.
a note on zombie proofing:
the movie 28 days later taught all us apocolyptics an important lesson - a steel shutter will keep out a roving mob (looking for easy targets), an infinite number zombies, or a handfull of random burglars. thus it has become my metric for security in urban situations - whether this or that building is "zombie proof."
this has become one of my favorite hobbies, then, wandering, walking a stroller in the mission/bernal heights/noe valley area - to scope buildings for their zombie vulnerability.
today's lesson in zombie proofing: poor neighborhoods are m uch better zombieproofed than affluent neighborhoods.
on the whole, this is probaly good for humanity's long term survival versus the legions of the undead - poor people will have more guns and, likely, combat sense, with which to fight the zombies. (it should be kept in mind that the zombie-model is not so good when fighting, say, the us military)
in any case - who do you want surviving the coming artificial shitstorm. the rich people caused it, let them get masacred.
a couple of notes:
babies become much more enjoyable to have around once they learn to Sit Up. this always follows the ability to grasp items fairly well, and does thus become, in a baby - the abilty to play by itself!
...for a while - afterwhich, it returns to the screaming demanding creature you remember from those newborn-days. but much heavier.
a note on zombie proofing:
the movie 28 days later taught all us apocolyptics an important lesson - a steel shutter will keep out a roving mob (looking for easy targets), an infinite number zombies, or a handfull of random burglars. thus it has become my metric for security in urban situations - whether this or that building is "zombie proof."
this has become one of my favorite hobbies, then, wandering, walking a stroller in the mission/bernal heights/noe valley area - to scope buildings for their zombie vulnerability.
today's lesson in zombie proofing: poor neighborhoods are m uch better zombieproofed than affluent neighborhoods.
on the whole, this is probaly good for humanity's long term survival versus the legions of the undead - poor people will have more guns and, likely, combat sense, with which to fight the zombies. (it should be kept in mind that the zombie-model is not so good when fighting, say, the us military)
in any case - who do you want surviving the coming artificial shitstorm. the rich people caused it, let them get masacred.
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what else do you know about me?
[Edited on Jul 11, 2005 3:36PM]