Chamblee54

Wonder Drug

Posted in Undogegorized by chamblee54 on August 8, 2024


“everyone Demand front hole sex NOT generic single the last time” The well intended sign was designed to help queers avoid getting HIV through butt sex. The idea is to take prophylactic drugs 2-24 hours before you drop your drawers. Then, for the next 48 hours, you dose out on the wonder drug. The message was cheerfully illustrated with pill pictures, and included the delightful phrase front hole, which most people call vagina. A haiku was hidden in the burning bush. The reduction was posted to x, and not facebook. Some fbf are not ready to hear about butt sex.

The Ten Commandments Of Donald J. Trump: Thou Shalt not have any other President before thee. Thou shalt not pay the graven image makers. Thou shalt not use the name of the Donald in vain. Remember the sabbath day, to keep it bigly. Honor thy father, and thy mother, and thy money. Thou shalt kill. Thou shalt steal. Thou shalt commit adultery. Thou shalt bear false witness. Thou shalt foreclose on thy neighbor’s house. … This idea for a poem had been floating around for a while. At this point, it is just more words, about a boring person. Sad.

The tweet had an image, consisting of several people meeting celebrities under bad circumstances. The phrase “Shane MacGowan vomited” jumped out at me, along with “book launch typo queue.” Those five beats were not in the image, but rather a first haiku line condensation. I saw an opportunity for haiku reduction. Unfortunately, the snippets were pasted into the collection at peculiar angles. Selecting the parts I need would be a gigantic pain in the butt. The next problem was bits of the text in the upper line encroaching upon the lower line. The whole enterprise degenerated into too much work. Pictures today are from The Library of Congress.

Banana Boy

Posted in Poem by chamblee54 on August 7, 2024

Exit Charge

Posted in Georgia History, Poem by chamblee54 on August 6, 2024


It was the first Monday, and I braved the drive to L5P for the poetry bash. The talent wasn’t a poet, but a short story reader. The player was in New Jersey and New York, and he kept running into Lucifer, who seemed like a perfectly reasonable sort of gent, even if he does make odd fashion choices.

The story that sunk in was about designer lawns, and chemicals needed to preserve them. I live in mcmansion city. My white trash lawn is surrounded by manicured chemical dumps. Speaking of dumps, dinner is kicking in, and needs to kick out.

Han Vance is host of the L5PPB. One attribute that poets find helpful is being a ham, and enjoying the sound of your voice going out over a PA. This describes Han, and many of the L5PPB actors.

Han was talking about hosting open mic spaces. Poets are usually good, but many OM musicians tend to suck. Later, Han explored the concept of a bar with no entry fee, but you pay to leave. This would seem to be the ideal venue for this musician’s open mic. The more obnoxious the alleged musician, the greater the charge to go home.

A motif of the L5PPB is the haiku. How did the odd number geometry of five-seven-five come to have hegemony over the micropoem universe? Some say that the beat counting is obsolete, and you just need a total of seventeen beats.

The pics that illustrate this triple drabble feature are haiku reductions. You take an image, contort it into a standard size, highlight the malleable text, make a separate file, highlight a five-seven-five combination, blur out the remaining text, and paste the text over what remains of the original. The haiku structure helps to make sense of the whole enchilada.

Iconic Gardenia Hair

Posted in Library of Congress, Weekly Notes by chamblee54 on August 5, 2024


The display of a link on this page does not indicate approval of content.
The Story Behind Billie Holiday’s Iconic Gardenia Hair By Lauren Valenti
Before You Recuse Me (Take a Look at Yourself) … “Cop City” Open Records …
What If the Most Notorious Murder of a Gay Man Wasn’t a Hate Crime?
Twelve Murdered Children—and a Middle East on the Brink
Kamala Harris’ coconut tree meme is going viral (again). What does it mean?
Bestiality suspect punches inmate who taunted him with donkey noises
Megan Thee Stallion Performs ‘Mamushi’ & ‘Body’ at Kamala Harris’ Atlanta Rally
“I like to have a martini, Two at the very most. After three I’m under the table, after four …
Israel Beginning To Fracture As Economy Goes Into Steep Decline
You can (and should) stop charging your phone when it hits 80 percent
‘White Dudes for Harris’ virtual meeting roasted online: ‘Most Beta gathering in history’
How Barry White Tried To WARN Luther Vandross Of Clive Davis (And His Lust For Men)
Progressives Need To Stop Lecturing White Voters About Their Privilege
TracingWoodgrains as the Nietzschean Superman – Wesley Fenza Jul 31, 2024
“Curb Your Enthusiasm” Had a Funny End, But It Got Georgia’s Voting Laws Dead Wrong
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
White Woman Whisperer · White Woman Whisperer™️ · devi · crown of creation
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
baptists · potus rip · @N1ckSandmann · RID® · gsu
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
jackie and judy · sheena · mamushi · meg the stallion · wash your hands
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
congress.gov · kamala rally · owl parade · owl parade · Peachtree Industrial
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
laf · laf · cop city · multiple myeloma · kellyanne conway
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
marta · donald harris · israeli escalations · trump nabj · yglesias
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
kamala gsu · white dudes · 072424 · bibi speech · daily digest · con record
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
brad · iran · idf · klatch · white dudes · holly hendrix
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
bob dylan PLAYBOY: Did you ever have the standard boyhood dream of growing up to be President? DYLAN: No. When I was a boy, Harry Truman was President; who’d want to be Harry Truman? · Wash Your Hands ·
Lately, I have been walking.. I try to go for a couple of miles, in the morning before the heat becomes obnoxious. Today, I went out New Peachtree, until the MARTA line goes overhead, and I can walk under to another Peachtree. … The spell check suggestion for Peachtree is Peacekeeper. This is the last remnants of Peachtree Road, before it collides with Peachtree Boulevard. Many oldtimers still say Peachtree Industrial, which has a fifties retro feel to it. When you cross the road, you find a sidewalk in front of Peachtree Country Club. During the MARTA construction era, my mother was fond of saying that the golf course was willed to the Catholic Church in perpetuity. Of course, a few feet were shaved off to accomodate another lane on Peachtree. A few hundred yards down the sidewalk, I came to a half eaten bagel, a fork, a plastic box lined with old food, and a lid for a box. I carry plastic bags in my pack, and I got one for this detritous. Of course, there is not a trash can between here and the school dumpster, but there will be something else to put in that bag. There is a law in Georgia. Whenever you hear someone say “wish” in a sentence, you are required to say a bit of commodity wisdom. “You can shit in one hand, and wish in the other, and see which hand gets full faster.” You should wash your hands no matter whether you hope or defecate. There is a more useful version. You can wish in a plastic bag. Or, you can pick up trash, and put it in the plastic bag. One bag will get full before the other. Washing your hands is still a good idea. Pictures today are from The Library of Congress. · Is congress in session? Both of our senators are at the Kamala rally. Sen. Ossoff attended the speech, before Congress, by PM Netanyhu. Sen. Warnock did not return my call, when I called his office to ask if he attended. · This feature was written in 2014. The link to the quiz no longer works. There have been changes in the laws, and attitudes, of our society. … · It was a dark and stormy night; The rain fell in torrents—except when, Checked by a violent gust of wind, Which swept up the streets, (For it is in London that our scene lies,) Rattling along the housetops, Fiercely agitating the scanty flame, Lamps that struggled against the darkness, Paul Clifford – Edward Bulwer-Lytton · “I’ll just paraphrase it. You’re literally having a debate in the Knesset about whether it is legitimate to, quote insert a stick in a person’s rectum, and you have a member of the Likud party … saying yes if he is a … Hamas terrorist everything is legitimate to do to him. That’s how mainstream these views have.” · pictures today are from The Library of Congress · selah

Dark And Stormy

Posted in Poem by chamblee54 on August 4, 2024

Religion And Perfume

Posted in GSU photo archive, Religion by chamblee54 on August 3, 2024

LBCB074-092bz

LBCB074-104az

LBCB077-086az

LBCB077-086bz

LBCB077-086bza

LBGPNS7-117az

LBSCB02-137ez

LBSCB13-087bz


Religion and perfume have several things in common. They are both fun to smell, but dangerous to swallow. A tasteful drop behind the ear is pleasant. Too much, and you will run from the room gasping for breath. Both are cheap products, sold in a fancy bottle, at a steep markup.

Before easy access to water, people did not bathe every day. To cover up the aroma of human existence, many used fragrances. This too is similar to the function of religion.

Perfume has been considered a feminine product. In a clever marketing move, a masculine scent was called cologne, and sold to men. Religion is gross to many people, so it is sold as faith.

Smell is a driving force in animal behavior. Ants used smell to communicate, and perform feats in numbers which would be impossible as individuals. Smells go directly to the brain, without filtering and processing like sounds, sights, and tastes. Religion is the emotional equivalent of odors. This is a repost. Pictures are from “The Special Collections and Archives, Georgia State University Library”.

LBCB066-062fz

LBCB066-062gz

LBCB067-029bz

LBCB067-029cz

LBCB069-001dz

LBCB070-011bz

LBCB071-125az

LBP10-201aza

What Denomination Are You?

Posted in GSU photo archive, Religion by chamblee54 on August 2, 2024

LBSCB08-105ez

LBSCB10-009ez

LBSCB10-066az

LBSCB10-067az

LBSCB14-036cz

LBSCB14-036ez

LBCB066-062bz

LBCB066-062dz


This feature was written in 2014. The link to the quiz no longer works. There have been changes in the laws, and attitudes, of our society. … The fbf put up a link to an internet quiz, What Christian Denomination Should You Actually Be a Part Of? As the reader(s) of this blog might discern, I am an acknowledged non christian. My favorite denomination is the twenty.

The first question is “What is the source of your beliefs?” The choices include scripture, uncertainty, conscience, and people who talk about scripture. This question presupposes the omnipotence of the belief paradigm. In other words, not everyone feels that what you believe is a big deal.

I have three “fundamental” beliefs regarding xtianity. God does not write books. Jesus has nothing to do with life after death. It is none of your business. Are these concepts an allergic reaction to years of christian noise, both joyful and joyless? Is it a weary soul talking common sense? Who came first, the chicken, or the egg? Do you really need to know?

The second question is “how is one “saved?”” This is a big deal to Jesus worshipers. The xtian obsession with life after death makes me want to run screaming. The seldom heard option offered here is “I don’t know/no opinion.”

One concept is that what happens to the dead is none of the living’s business. Maybe, if you have faith in God, things will turn out ok. When you devote every sunday morning to screaming about so called salvation, you advertise a lack of faith in God.

Third is “what are your opinions on war?” This is one of those contradictions. You just have to understand. An abortion is bloody murder. When Israel shells a school housing refugees, it is justifiable self defense. The reconciliation of beliefs and practices is a source of brain damage. This is not a spiritually uplifting practice.

In many questions, you must choose the least bad answer. This is typical. For what type of worship suits you, being home churched is not an option. For what definition of the trinity best describes your belief, there are no good answers. I feel that the concept of a triune God is a grotesque violation of the First commandment.

The first commandment says to have no other God before you. In Jesus worship, this one God expands to at least six: God, Jesus, Holy Ghost, The Bible, Satan, and Salvation.

There are a few more questions. There is a Catholic slant to this quiz, with emphasis on the Virgin Mary. There is the concept that authority in today’s church was passed down from the disciples. Hopefully, Judas was not included. Finally, there is a question about Gay marriage. Maybe this quiz was designed by a Catholic divorce lawyer.

The answer was probably as good as could be expected. “You should really be Non-Denominational! You’ve never understood why people get so caught up with labels, creeds, and institutions. For you, faith is what matters. You have a personal relationship with God and you’re not so worried about being a member of any specific group or sect. You enjoy Bible study, casual gatherings, and a church where everyone is welcome regardless of theological labels.”

Whatever. Why study a book that teaches people to hate you? Maybe the advertisers at this quiz are getting a spiritual return on their investment. Pictures today are from “The Special Collections and Archives, Georgia State University Library”.

LBCE4-025az

LBCE4-025dz

LBSCB07-021az

LBSCB07-046ez

LBSCB07-046fz

LBSCB07-054az

LBSCB08-040dz

The Funeral Of Elvis

Posted in GSU photo archive, History, Holidays by chamblee54 on August 1, 2024


This is a repost. I was going to write about some depressing subject. People that are not kind to each other. People in Israel and people in Gaza just don’t seem to get along. Either Donald John Trump or Kamala Devi Harris is going to be our next President. Pictures are from “The Special Collections and Archives, Georgia State University Library”.

There is a saying, “if a story seems too bad to be true, it probably isn’t”. I tried to google that phrase, and got confused. Then he seemed to remember reading it in a column by Molly Ivins. Another google adventure, and there was this video. Miss Ivins, who met her maker January 31, 2007, was promoting a book. She sat down with a bald headed man to talk about it. I could only listen to 24:30 of this video before being seized with the urge to write a story. There is a transcript, which makes “borrowing” so much easier. This film has 34 minutes to go, which just might yield another story.

Molly Ivins was a Texas woman. These days there is a lot of talk about Texas, with Governor Big Hair aiming to be the next POTUS under indictment. Mr. Perry claims that his record as Texas Governor qualifies him to have his finger on the nuclear trigger. Miss Ivins repeats something that I had heard before…
“in our state we have the weak governor system, so that really not a great deal is required of the governor, not necessarily to know much or do much. And we’ve had a lot of governors who did neither. “ It makes you wonder how much of that “economic miracle” is because of hair spray.
Texas politics makes about as much sense as Georgia politics. For a lady, with a way with words, it is a gold mine.
“the need you have for descriptive terms for stupid when you write about Texas politics is practically infinite. Now I’m not claiming that our state Legislature is dumber than the average state Legislature, but it tends to be dumb in such an outstanding way. It’s, again, that Texas quality of exaggeration and being slightly larger than life. And there are a fair number of people in the Texas Legislature of whom it could fairly be said, `If dumb was dirt, they would cover about an acre.’ And I’m not necessarily opposed to that. I’m–agree with an old state senator who always said that, `If you took all the fools out of the Legislature, it would not be a representative body anymore.'”
We could go through this conversation for a long time, but you probably want to skip ahead and look at pictures. There is one story in this transcript that is too good not to borrow. For some reason, Molly Ivins went to work for The New York Times, aka the gray lady. In August of 1977, she was in the right place at the right time.


Mr. LAMB: And how long did you spend with The New York Times as a reporter?
Ms. IVINS: Six years with The New York Times. Some of it in New York as a political reporter at City Hall in Albany and then later as bureau chief out in the Rocky Mountains.
Mr. LAMB: Would you take a little time and tell us about reporting on the funeral of Elvis Presley?
Ms. IVINS: Oh, now there is something that when I’ve been standing in the checkout line at the grocery store and if I really need to impress people, I just let fall that I covered Elvis’ funeral. And, boy, people just practically draw back with awe. It may yet turn out to be my greatest claim to fame.
I was sitting in The New York City Times one day when I noticed a whole no–knot of editors up around the desk having a–a great scrum of concern, you could tell. It looked sort of like an anthill that had just been stepped on. And it turns out–The New York Times has a large obituary desk, and they prepare obituaries for anybody of prominence who might croak. But it turns out–you may recall that Elvis Presley died untimely and they were completely unprepared.
Now this is an enormous news organization. They have rock music critics and classical music critics and opera critics, but they didn’t have anybody who knew about Elvis Presley’s kind of music. So they’re lookin’ across a whole acre of reporters, and you could see them decide, `Ah-ha, Ivins. She talks funny. She’ll know about Mr. Presley.’
So I wound up writing Elvis’ obituary for The New York Times. I had to refer to him throughout as Mr. Presley. It was agonizing. That’s the style at The New York Times–Mr. Presley. Give me a break. And the next day they sold more newspapers than they did after John Kennedy was assassinated, so that even the editors of The New York Times, who had not quite, you know, been culturally aton–tuned to Elvis, decided that we should send someone to report on the funeral. And I drew that assignment. What a scene it was.
Mr. LAMB: You–you say in the book that you got in the cab and you said, `Take me to Graceland.’ The cabbie peels out of the airport doing 80 and then turns full around to the backseat and drawls, `Ain’t it a shame Elvis had to die while the Shriners are in town?’
Ms. IVINS: That’s exactly what he said. `Shame Elvis had to die while the Shriners are in town.’ And I kind of raised by eyebrows. And sure enough, I realized what he–what he meant after I had been there for awhile because, you know, Shriners in convention–I don’t know if you’ve ever seen a whole lot of Shriners in convention, but they were having a huge national convention that very week in Memphis. And they tend to wear their little red fezzes, and sometimes they drink too much and they march around the hotel hallways tooting on New Year’s Eve horns and riding those funny little tricycles and generally cutting up and having a good time. That’s your Shriners in convention, always something very edifying and enjoyable to watch. But they–every–every hotel room in Memphis was occupied with celebrating Shriners, and then Elvis dies and all these tens of thousands of grieving, hysterical Elvis Presley fans descend on the town.
So you got a whole bunch of sobbing, hysterical Elvis fans, you got a whole bunch of cavorting Shriners. And on top of that they were holding a cheerleading camp. And the cheerleading camp–I don’t know if your memory–with the ethos of the cheerleading camp, but the deal is that every school sends its team–team of cheerleaders to cheerleading camp.
And your effort there at the camp is to win the spirit stick, which looks, to the uninitiated eye, a whole lot like a broom handle painted red, white and blue. But it is the spirit stick. And should your team win it for three days running, you get to keep it. But that has never happened. And the way you earn the spirit stick is you show most spirit. You cheer for breakfast, lunch and dinner. You cheer when the pizza man brings the pizza. You do handsprings end over end down the hallway to the bathroom. I tell you, those young people will throw–show an amount of spirit that would just astonish you in an effort to win that stick.
So here I was for an entire week, dealing with these three groups of people: the young cheerleaders trying to win the spirit stick, the cavorting Shriners and the grieving, hysterical Elvis fans. And I want to assure you that The New York Times is not the kind of newspaper that will let you write about that kind of rich human comedy.
Mr. LAMB: Why?
Ms. IVINS: Because The New York Times, at least in my day, was a very stuffy, pompous newspaper.
Mr. LAMB: What about today?
Ms. IVINS: A little bit better, little bit better than it was.
Mr. LAMB: And…
Ms. IVINS: Has–has–it has a tendency, recidivist tendencies, though. You–you will notice if you read The Times, it–it collapses into pomposity and stuffiness with some regularity.
Mr. LAMB: Why did you leave it?
Ms. IVINS: Well, I–I actually got into trouble at The New York City Times for describing a community chu–chicken killing out West as a gang pluck. Abe Rosenthal was then the editor of the Times and he was not amused.
Mr. LAMB: Did–but did they let it go? Did they let it…
Ms. IVINS: Oh, no. It never made it in the paper. Good heavens, no. Such a thing would never get in The Times in my day.
POSTSCRIPT I found some pictures, marked up the text, and was ready to post the story. He decided to listen to a bit more of the discussion between Molly Ivins and the bald headed man. When he got to this point, it became apparent that he could listen to Molly Ivins talk, or he could post his story, but he could not do both at the same time.
Ms. IVINS: Oh, well, of course, I’m gonna make fun of it. I mean, Berkeley, California, if you are from Texas, is just hilarious.
Mr. LAMB: Why?
Ms. IVINS: Well, of course, it is just the absolute center of liberalism and political correctness. And it is a veritable hotbed of people, of–bless their hearts, who all think alike, in a liberal way. And, of course, I’m sometimes called a liberal myself, and you would think I would have felt right at home there. But I just am so used to–I’m so used to Texas that I found the culture at Berkeley hysterical.