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Windmills Tilted, Scared Cows Butchered, Lies Skewered on the Lance of Reality ... or something to that effect.


Wednesday, August 6, 2014

The Daily Drift

Wish we could, but repugicans keep hatching..!
 
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Today in History

1497 John Cabot returns to England after his first successful journey to the Labrador coast.
1863 The CSS Alabama captures the USS Sea Bride near the Cape of Good Hope.
1888 Martha Turner is murdered by an unknown assailant, believed to be Jack the Ripper, in London, England.
1890 William Kemmler becomes the first man to be executed by the electric chair.
1904 The Japanese army in Korea surrounds a Russian army retreating to Manchuria.
1914 Ellen Louise Wilson, the first wife of the twenty-eighth president, Woodrow Wilson, dies of Barite's disease.
1927 A Massachusetts high court hears the final plea from Sacco and Vanzetti, two Italians convicted of murder.
1942 The Soviet city of Voronezh falls to the German army.
1945 Paul Tibbets, the commander of Enola Gay, drops the first atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan.It was the second atomic bomb, dropped on Nagasaki, that induced the Japanese to surrender.
1962 Jamaica becomes independent, after 300 years of British rule.
1965 President Lyndon B. Johnson signs the Voting Rights Act, outlawing the literacy test for voting eligibility in the South.
1972 Atlanta Braves' right fielder Hank Arron hits his 660th and 661st home runs, setting the Major League record for most home runs by a player for a single franchise.
1973 Singer-songwriter Stevie Wonder is in an automobile accident and goes into a four-day comma.
1979 Twelve-year-old Marcus Hooper becomes the youngest person to swim the English Channel.
1981 Argentina's ex-resident Isabel Peron freed from house arrest.
1988 A melee that became known as the Tompkins Square Park Police Riot in New York City leads to NYPD reforms.
1991 Tim Berners-Lee publishes the first-ever website, Info.cern.ch.
1993 Pope John Paul II publishes "Veritatis splendor encyclical," regarding fundamentals of the Catholic Church's role in moral teachings.
1997 Microsoft announces it will invest $150 million in troubled rival Apple Computer, Inc.
2012 New Zealand's Mount Tongariro erupts for the first time since 1897.

Non Sequitur

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Democratic Congressman Catches Faux News Lying About Democrats Wanting To Impeach the shrub

hakeem-jeffries
Faux News Sunday tried to pull the both sides do it argument on the impeachment, but Rep. Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY) called out and corrected their lie.
Video:
Transcript:
WALLACE: We have got less than a minute left and I want to bring in Congressman Jeffries. You know, back in 2008, some members of your party, Democrats filed bills to impeach the shrub for his conduct of the Iraq War. Is this any different than what Democrats did to the shrub?
JEFFRIES: Of course, it’s completely different. House repugicans are clearly taking us on a march towards impeachment, and whether …
WALLACE: But look, did Democrats take — Excuse me, sir, did Democrats take the House on a march towards impeachment in 2008?
JEFFRIES: Not at all, because then Speaker Nancy Pelosi clearly said impeachment is off the table. Congress has several other …
WALLACE: Basically that’s what John Boehner said this week too, sir.
JEFFRIES: John Boehner did not say that. He didn’t make an unequivocal statement. And to the extent that John Boehner has taken definitive positions before, such as — he won’t shut down the government, he moved forward and shut down the government for 16 days costing the American people $24 billion in lost economic productivity. So there’s no real credibility there. We’re not clear who actually is running the House of Representatives. Ted Cruz, the junior senator from Texas seems to have outside influence. That’s why we’re concerned. But, Chris, the focus really should be on doing what’s right for the American people, dealing with the talking points issue important to the middle class and those who are striving to be part of the middle class.
Rep. Jeffries was correct. During a 2006 news conference, Rep. Pelosi emphatically stated, “I have said it before and I will say it again: Impeachment is off the table.”
In contrast, Rep. Boehner has made vague references to impeaching President Obama. Earlier this year, Boehner said, “We’re just not going to sit here and let the President trample all over us. This idea that he’s just going to go it alone, I have to remind him we do have a constitution. And the Congress writes the laws, and the President’s job is to execute the laws faithfully. And if he tries to ignore this he’s going to run into a brick wall.”
The Democrat who championed impeaching the shrub is current Faux News employee Dennis Kucinich. House Democratic leadership ruled out impeaching the shrub in a way that Boehner and the House repugicans have never done. Speaker Boehner will only say that he doesn’t support impeachment. He refuses to use his power as the Speaker of the House to take impeachment off of the table.
Earlier in the same interview, Steve King said that House repugicans need to examine impeachment if President Obama acts on immigration. There is no comparison between the behavior of Democrats and repugicans. Rep. Jeffries caught Faux News red-handed and busted them for trying to create a false equivalency.
Both sides don’t do it. Democrats never used impeachment as a political tactic against the shrub. The Faux News spin failed, and Democrats aren’t going allow repugicans to get a free pass on their Obama impeachment talk.

The Truth Be Told

Wingnuts Would Turn Their Shining City on a Hill into a Pile of Excrement

They want superstition and ignorance. They want demons not medicine. They want might makes right, not equality for all, war and hate rather than peace and love…
Landfill 
“You are the light of the world. A city that is set on a hill cannot be hidden.” – matthew 5:14
It’s hard to hide a big pile of garbage, too.
Do you remember when we lived on a planet where the future was so bright we had to wear shades? Sure there were problems. There are always problems. But the Western World had embraced first the Renaissance, and then the Enlightenment and principles of individual human rights.
We found ourselves, despite the long Cold War, in a world of hope, where medicine and medical care were improving, life spans increasing, science was the word of the day, and superstition was being shoved back into the distant 13th century where it belonged.
We had surmounted demon-obsessed and superstition-based medieval medicine. We had defeated the plague, cholera and other diseases. We created vaccines which many now refuse to take. We are being told once again that demons make us sick, as though the germ theory of medicine were only a passing fad.
What happened?
Reaction. It looks, for all the world, like wingnuts are finally reacting to the Renaissance and Enlightenment about 400 and 300 years after the fact, respectively.
It’s almost as if they decided that, doggone it, the sun DOES revolve around the Earth, the world IS flat, and demonic possession DOES cause disease. And oh, by the way, only god makes borders and if you violate them, you spit in god’s eye.
Wingnuts have gone god-centric.
Definitely a loss of privilege contributes to their collective mental imbalance. Wingnuttery is about the status quo. And let’s face it, everything that has happened since the dawn of humanism in the 1400s, on through the very secular European Enlightenment, and on through the idea and its implementation that all human beings are equal – and all religions too – has upset the status quo applecart and then some.
It seems they just can’t take it anymore.
And so we’ve come to the point where anything we say they don’t like, anything we do they don’t approve of, every action we take they insist we don’t take, is in some way a persecution of them. Heck, they are saying they expect to be rounded up and shipped off to FEMA camps any day now, if not rounded up and simply shot. They’re almost giddy with excitement at the possibility.
They’re going to be waiting a long time, because nice as the thought is when they say crazy shit about women’s bodies have magical abilities to destroy a rapist’s sperm, and about treating women as sexual chattel, and about atheists and blacks and Latinos and alternate religions like my own, it ain’t gonna happen.
Liberals actually believe in liberty. All the conservative projection in the world – and there is a LOT of it – isn’t going to change liberalism’s defining characteristic. The American Revolution – and yes, it WAS a revolution, social and cultural – was a liberal revolution. A wingnut revolution is an oxymoron.
You CAN have a wingnut counter-revolution, and that’s what the tea party amounts to. All those reactionary forces coming together in the smallest minds available to rail against change, mostly without any understand of that change, and of the historical forces which brought them about.
Education be damned, these people want to feel, not think.
And corporations and religions are more than happy to cash in on the ignorance train. There’s money in them there pockets.
OUR pockets.
So here we are again at a crossroads, with superstition behind us and science ahead of us, and it’s almost as though, while we balance on the tip of continuing our journey into a bright new future, these cretins are tugging us backwards.
They want superstition and ignorance. They want demons not medicine. And they want might makes right, not equality for all, war and hate rather than peace and love, a dystopian ugliness unmatched since the 13th century. Punish collectively. Punish the children. Punish those who refuse to believe.
Just punish somebody, dammit. Declare war on somebody.
The much sought after Shining City on the Hill is covered in excrement. It is a pile of waste, both figurative and literal. The shine is coming from a gummy sunlight streaming through poisonous clouds to strike the steaming wet surface of waste.
Let that be our Manifest Destiny. Ain’t it beautiful?

A Contradiction in Terms: The Ignorant wingnut Defense of ‘Religious Freedom’

by Allen Clifton
 
religious-freedom
A term that’s become extremely popular among wingnut christians here lately is “religious freedom.”  But every time I see wingnuts say this, a famous line from the movie The Princess Bride pops into my mind: “You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means.”
Which shouldn’t be surprising considering conservatives are often big fans of repeating words or sayings that might sound good, they just don’t make a whole lot of sense.
And the term “religious freedom” is a great example of that.
By its very nature, religion is the exact opposite of freedom.  Religion is a belief based on faith in something you cannot prove.  It’s a set of rules, guidelines and requirements which highly restrict the freedoms of those who claim to follow whichever particular religion to which they subscribe.
A christian, if they were to follow the bible word for word, wouldn’t be allowed to do many of the things a lot of us do in our day to day lives.
While it’s popular for christian wingnuts to go off on rants about abortion or gay marriage, I see plenty of them with tattoos, eating shellfish or wearing blended fabrics.
All things that are taboo according to the bible.
It’s an irony I pointed out to someone who once strongly defended Duck Dynasty’s Phil Robertson to me.  His son has tattoos, they all have long hair and their company sells plenty of blended fabrics.
But I just find it humorous how so many of these wingnut christians go on and on about “religious freedom” when what they’re really talking about is restricting the rights of others.
See, they want the freedom to follow whatever set of rules they choose.  They just don’t want people who disagree with them to be able to follow the rules of their choosing.
Because when these people say “religious freedom,” what they’re really defending is their right to tell someone else what is or isn’t acceptable based on their religion.
Which is what our Founding Fathers were escaping.  It’s why they gave us the freedom of religion in our First Amendment.  So that no American could be forced to follow the rules (aka control) of another based on religious views that they do not share.
Essentially that’s what the entire Hobby Lobby case was about.  A law that stated health care had to cover specific methods of contraceptives and a wingnut christian stating that their beliefs on contraceptives should matter more than the thousands of employees who work for them.  One person’s beliefs ruling over thousands.
That’s not freedom.  That’s theocratic rule.
It’s the same thing with gay marriage.  It’s still illegal in many states for two homosexuals to get married based on the religious beliefs of others.
Two American citizens, in love, wanting to get married who are unable to do so based on religious beliefs that they do not share.
Again, how exactly is that “freedom”?
Here in Texas (and other places as well) I can’t buy liquor on a Sunday.  Heck, I can’t even buy beer or wine until after noon on Sundays.  Some counties don’t sell alcohol at all.  Is it because I support these laws?  Nope.
And where do these laws come from?  Religion. 
So even when it comes to something as menial as being able to buy  a bottle of whiskey on a Sunday in Texas, I’m not allowed to do it based off beliefs I don’t support.
Where’s my “religious freedom”?
But religion has nothing to do with freedom.  In fact, religion is almost the exact opposite of freedom.  It’s a set of rules that people are supposed to follow otherwise their souls will be sent to some horrific place upon death.
So the next time some conservative says something about “religious freedom,” just say the line uttered by the great Inigo Montoya:

Random Photos

Scotland’s Stone Age Ruins

Before Stonehenge
One long-ago day around 3200 B.C., the farmers and herdsmen on Scotland’s remote Orkney Islands decided to build something big...
by Roff Smith
Picture of the Stones of Stenness, BritainThey had Stone Age technology, but their vision was millennia ahead of their time. Five thousand years ago the ancient inhabitants of Orkney—a fertile, green archipelago off the northern tip of modern-day Scotland—erected a complex of monumental buildings unlike anything they had ever attempted before.
They quarried thousands of tons of fine-grained sandstone, trimmed it, dressed it, then transported it several miles to a grassy promontory with commanding views of the surrounding countryside. Their workmanship was impeccable. The imposing walls they built would have done credit to the Roman centurions who, some 30 centuries later, would erect Hadrian’s Wall in another part of Britain.
Cloistered within those walls were dozens of buildings, among them one of the largest roofed structures built in prehistoric northern Europe. It was more than 80 feet long and 60 feet wide, with walls 13 feet thick. The complex featured paved walkways, carved stonework, colored facades, even slate roofs—a rare extravagance in an age when buildings were typically roofed with sod, hides, or thatch.
Fast-forward five millennia to a balmy summer afternoon on a scenic headland known as the Ness of Brodgar. Here an eclectic team of archaeologists, university professors, students, and volunteers is bringing to light a collection of grand buildings that long lay hidden beneath a farm field. Archaeologist Nick Card, excavation director with the Archaeology Institute at the University of the Highlands and Islands, says the recent discovery of these stunning ruins is turning British prehistory on its head.
“This is almost on the scale of some of the great classical sites in the Mediterranean, like the Acropolis in Greece, except these structures are 2,500 years older. Like the Acropolis, this was built to dominate the landscape—to impress, awe, inspire, perhaps even intimidate anyone who saw it. The people who built this thing had big ideas. They were out to make a statement.”
What that statement was, and for whom it was intended, remains a mystery, as does the purpose of the complex itself. Although it’s usually referred to as a temple, it’s likely to have fulfilled a variety of functions during the thousand years it was in use. It’s clear that many people gathered here for seasonal rituals, feasts, and trade.
The discovery is all the more intriguing because the ruins were found in the heart of one of the densest collections of ancient monuments in Britain. The area has been searched for the past 150 years, first by Victorian antiquarians, later by archaeologists. Yet none of them had the slightest idea what lay beneath their feet.
Stand at “the Ness” today and several iconic Stone Age structures are within easy view, forming the core of a World Heritage site called the Heart of Neolithic Orkney. On a heather-clad knoll half a mile away rises a giant Tolkienesque circle of stones known as the Ring of Brodgar. A second ceremonial stone circle, the famous Stones of Stenness, is visible across the causeway leading up to the Ness. And one mile away is an eerie mound called Maes Howe, an enormous chambered tomb more than 4,500 years old. Its entry passage is perfectly aligned to receive the rays of the setting sun on the eve of the winter solstice, illuminating its inner chamber on the shortest day of the year.
Maes Howe also aligns with the central axis and entrance to the newly discovered temple on the Ness, something archaeologists believe is no coincidence. They suspect that the freshly uncovered ruins may be a key piece to a larger puzzle no one dreamed existed.
Until as recently as 30 years ago, the Ring of Brodgar, the Stones of Stenness, and the Maes Howe tomb were seen as isolated monuments with separate histories. “What the Ness is telling us is that this was a much more integrated landscape than anyone ever suspected,” says Card. “All these monuments are inextricably linked in some grand theme we can only guess at. And the people who built all this were a far more complex and capable society than has usually been portrayed.”
Orkney has long been good to archaeologists, thanks to its deep human history and the fact that nearly everything here is built of stone. Literally thousands of sites are scattered through the islands, the majority of them untouched. Together they cover a great sweep of time and settings, from Mesolithic camps and Iron Age settlements to the remains of Old Norse feasting halls and ruined medieval palaces.
“I’ve heard this place called the Egypt of the North,” says county archaeologist Julie Gibson, who came to Orkney more than 30 years ago to excavate a Viking cemetery and never left. “Turn over a rock around here and you’re likely to find a new site.”
Sometimes you don’t even need to do that. In 1850 a gale tore away some sand dunes along the Bay of Skaill, on the western flank of Mainland island, exposing an astonishingly well preserved Stone Age village. Archaeologists date the village, called Skara Brae, to around 3100 B.C. and believe it was occupied for more than 600 years.
Skara Brae must have been a cozy setup in its day. Lozenge-shaped stone dwellings linked by covered passages huddled close together against the grim winters. There were hearths inside, and the living spaces were furnished with stone beds and cupboards. Even after the passage of thousands of years the dwellings look appealingly personal, as though the occupants had just stepped out. The stage-set quality of the homesteads and the glimpse they offer into everyday life in the Neolithic, to say nothing of the dramatic way they were revealed, made Skara Brae Orkney’s most spectacular find. Until now.
The first hint of big things underfoot at the Ness came to light in 2002, when a geophysical survey revealed the presence of large, man-made anomalies beneath the soil. Test trenches were dug and exploratory excavations begun, but it wasn’t until 2008 that archaeologists began to grasp the scale of what they had stumbled upon.
Today only 10 percent of the Ness has been excavated, with many more stone structures known to be lurking under the turf nearby. But this small sample of the site has opened an invaluable window into the past and yielded thousands of priceless artifacts: ceremonial mace heads, polished stone axes, flint knives, a human figurine, miniature thumb pots, beautifully crafted stone spatulas, colored pottery far more refined and delicate than anyone had expected for its time, and more than 650 pieces of Neolithic art, by far the largest collection ever found in Britain.
Before visiting the Ness, I tended to view Stone Age sites with indifferent curiosity. The lives of the long-ago inhabitants seemed far removed and alien. But art offers a glimpse into the minds and imaginations of the people who create it. At the Ness I found myself looking into a world I could comprehend, even if its terms were radically different from my own.
“Nowhere else in all Britain or Ireland have such well-preserved stone houses from the Neolithic survived, so Orkney is already punching above its weight,” says Antonia Thomas, an archaeologist at the University of the Highlands and Islands. “To be able to link these structures with art, to see in such a direct and personal way how people embellished their surroundings, is really something.”
One of the more startling discoveries has been discernible traces of colored pigments on some of the stonework. “I’ve always suspected that color played an important role in people’s lives,” says Card. “I had a sense that they painted their walls, but now we know for sure.”
Indeed one of the structures apparently served as a kind of paint shop, complete with piles of pigment still on the floor: powdered hematite (red), ocher (yellow), and galena (white), together with the dimpled rocks and grinding stones that served as mortar and pestle.
Also found among the ruins were prized trade goods such as volcanic glass from as far afield as the Isle of Arran in western Scotland, and high-quality flints from across the archipelago and beyond. These artifacts suggest that Orkney was on an established trade route and that the temple complex on the Ness may have been a site of pilgrimage.
More intriguing than the items traders and pilgrims brought to the site, say archaeologists, is what they took away: ideas and inspiration. Distinctive colored pottery sherds found at the Ness and elsewhere, for example, suggest that the trademark style of grooved pottery that became almost universal throughout Neolithic Britain had its origin in Orkney. It may well be that rich and sophisticated Orcadians were setting the fashion agendas of the day.
“This is totally at odds with the old received wisdom that anything cultural must have come from the genteel south to improve the barbarian north,” laughs Roy Towers, a Scottish archaeological ceramicist and the site’s pottery specialist. “It seems to have been just the reverse here.”
Traders and pilgrims also returned home with recollections of the magnificent temple complex they had seen and notions about celebrating special places in the landscape the way the Orcadians did—ideas which, centuries later, would find their ultimate expression at Stonehenge.
Why Orkney of all places? How did this scatter of islands off the northern tip of Scotland come to be such a technological, cultural, and spiritual powerhouse? “For starters, you have to stop thinking of Orkney as remote,” says Caroline Wickham-Jones, a lecturer in archaeology at the University of Aberdeen. “For most of history, from the Neolithic to the Second World War, Orkney was an important maritime hub, a place that was on the way to everywhere.”
It was also blessed with some of the richest farming soils in Britain and a surprisingly mild climate, thanks to the effects of the Gulf Stream. Pollen samples reveal that by about 3500 B.C.—around the time of the earliest settlement on Orkney—much of the hazel and birch woodland that originally covered the landscape was gone.
“It’s been assumed that the woodland was cleared away by Neolithic farmers, but that doesn’t seem to have been entirely the case,” says Michelle Farrell, a paleoecologist at Queen’s University Belfast who studies past land use and environmental change. “Although early farmers accounted for a degree of woodland loss, in some areas much of the woodland was already gone by 5500 B.C. It seems to have been a prolonged event and largely caused by natural processes, but what those processes were we really can’t say without better climate records.”
One thing is certain, says Farrell: “The open nature of the landscape would have made life much easier for those early farmers. It could have been one of the reasons why they were able to devote so much time to monument building.”
It’s also clear that they had plenty of willing hands and strong backs to put to the cause. Estimates of Orkney’s population in Neolithic times run as high as 10,000—roughly half the number of people who live there today—which no doubt helps account for the density of archaeological sites in the islands. Unlike other parts of Britain, where houses were built with timber, thatch, and other materials that rot away over time, Orcadians had abundant outcrops of fine, easily worked sandstone for building homes and temples that could last for centuries.
What’s more, the Neolithic homesteaders and pioneers who settled Orkney knew what they were doing. “Orkney’s farmers were among the first in Europe to have deliberately manured their fields to improve their crops,” says Jane Downes, director of the Archaeology Institute at the University of the Highlands and Islands. “Thousands of years later medieval peasants were still benefiting from the work those Neolithic farmers put into the soil.”
They also imported cattle, sheep, goats, and possibly red deer, ferrying them out from the Scottish mainland in skin boats, braving miles of open water and treacherous currents. The herds they raised grew fat on the island’s rich grazing. Indeed, to this day, Orkney beef commands a premium on the market.
In short, by the time they embarked on their ambitious building project on the Ness of Brodgar, Orkney’s farmers had become wealthy and well established, with much to be grateful for and a powerful spiritual bond to the land.
For a thousand years, a span longer than Westminster Abbey and Canterbury Cathedral have stood, the temple complex on the Ness of Brodgar cast its spell over the landscape—a symbol of wealth, power, and cultural energy. To generations of Orcadians who gathered there, and to the travelers who came hundreds of miles to admire it and conduct business, the temple and its walled compound of buildings must have seemed as enduring as time itself.
But sometime around the year 2300 B.C., for reasons that remain obscure, it all came to an end. Climate change may have played a role. Evidence suggests that northern Europe became cooler and wetter toward the end of the Neolithic, and these conditions may have had a negative effect on agriculture.
Or perhaps it was the disruptive influence of a new toolmaking material: bronze. Not only did the metal alloy introduce better tools and weapons. It also brought with it fresh ideas, new values, and possibly a shake-up of the social order.
“We’ve not found any bronze artifacts so far on the Ness,” says Card. “But a society as powerful and well connected as they were must surely have known that profound changes were coming their way. It may have been they were one of the holdouts.”
Whatever the reason, the ancient temple was decommissioned and partially destroyed, deliberately and symbolically. Before the people moved on, they left behind one final startling surprise for archaeologists to find: the remains of a gargantuan farewell feast. More than 400 cattle were slaughtered, enough meat to have fed thousands of people.
“The bones all appear to have come from a single event,” says Ingrid Mainland, an archaeozoologist from the University of the Highlands and Islands who specializes in ancient livestock. She has been analyzing the piles of bones that were deliberately arranged around the temple. Curiously, the people who ate that final feast left behind only the shinbones of the animals they slaughtered. “What the significance of the tibia was to them, where that fits in the story, is a mystery,” says Mainland.
Another unknown is what impact killing so many cattle may have had on this agricultural community. “Were they effectively taking out the future productivity of their herds?” wonders Mainland. “We don’t know.”
After cracking open the bones to extract the rich marrow inside, the people arranged them in intricate piles around the base of the temple. Next they draped unbutchered deer carcasses over the piles, presumably as offerings. In the center of the chamber they deposited a cattle skull and a large stone engraved with a sort of cup motif. Then came the final act of closure.
“They deliberately demolished the buildings and buried them under thousands of tons of rubble and trash,” says Card. “It seems that they were attempting to erase the site and its importance from memory, perhaps to mark the introduction of new belief systems.”
Over the centuries that followed the abandonment of the Ness, time and the elements took their toll. Whatever stones remained visible from the old forgotten walls were carried away by homesteaders for use in their own cottages and farms. Now it was their turn to play out their history on Orkney’s windswept stage.

Orkney dig dispels caveman image of ancestors

The Ness of Brodgar site in Orkney. Photographs: Jim Richardson/National Geographic
The Ness of Brodgar site in Orkney.
by Alistair Munro  
The image of our Neolithic ancestors as simple souls carving out a primitive existence has been dispelled. A groundbreaking excavation of a 5,000-year-old temple complex in Orkney has uncovered evidence to suggest that prehistoric people were a great deal more sophisticated than previously thought.
The archaeological dig at the Ness of Brodgar, which is still in its early stages, has already thrown up discoveries that archaeologists say will force us to re-evaluate our understanding of how our ancestors lived.
The picture that has emerged so far points to a complex and capable society that displayed impeccable workmanship and created an integrated landscape.
Until as recently as 30 years ago, the Ring of Brodgar, the Stones of Stenness, and the Maes Howe tomb, all in Orkney, were seen as isolated monuments with separate histories. Now it appears they were built as part of a connected community, although its purpose remains unknown.
Archaeologist Nick Card, excavation director with the Archaeology Institute at the University of the Highlands and Islands, says the ancient ruins are turning British pre-history on its head. “What the Ness is telling us is that this was a much more integrated landscape than anyone ever suspected,” he said.
“All these monuments are inextricably linked in some grand theme we can only guess at. The people who built all this were a far more complex and capable society than has usually been portrayed.”
The archaeological excavation, which is featured in the August edition of National Geo­graphic magazine, has yielded thousands of priceless artefacts – ceremonial mace heads, polished stone axes, flint knives, a human figurine, miniature thumb pots, beautifully crafted stone spatulas, highly-refined coloured pottery, and more than 650 pieces of Neolithic art, by far the largest collection ever found in Britain. Card pointed out that only 10 per cent of the Ness has so far been excavated, with many more stone structures known to be present under the turf nearby.
Roff Smith, author of the National Geographic article who has studied the cache, said: “They had Stone Age technology, but their vision was millennia ahead of their time. Five thousand years ago the ancient inhabitants of Orkney – a fertile, green archipelago off the northern tip of modern-day Scotland – erected a complex of monumental buildings unlike anything they had ever attempted before.
“They quarried thousands of tons of fine-grained sandstone, trimmed it, dressed it, then transported it several miles to a grassy promontory with commanding views of the surrounding countryside.
“Their workmanship was impeccable. The imposing walls they built would have done credit to the Roman centurions who, some 30 centuries later, would erect Hadrian’s Wall in another part of Britain. Cloistered within those walls were dozens of buildings, among them one of the largest roofed structures built in prehistoric northern Europe. It was more than 80ft long and 60ft wide, with walls 13ft thick.”
Smith noted that the complex featured paved walkways, carved stonework, coloured facades, even slate roofs at a time when buildings were usually covered with turf, hides, or thatch.
“Stand at the Ness today and several iconic Stone Age structures are within easy view, forming the core of a World Heritage site called the Heart of Neolithic Orkney.
“On a heather-clad knoll half a mile away rises a giant ­Tolkienesque circle of stones known as the Ring of Brodgar,” Smith said.
“A second ceremonial stone circle, the famous Stones of Stenness, is visible across the causeway leading up to the Ness. And one mile away is an eerie mound called Maes Howe, an enormous chambered tomb more than 4,500 years old.”
Orkney’s county archaeologist, Julie Gibson, who arrived in the islands more than 30 years ago to excavate a Viking cemetery, said: “I’ve heard this place called the Egypt of the North. Turn over a rock around here and you’re likely to find a new site.”
Smith added: “The Ness of Brodgar appears to be the anchor piece – the showpiece, if you will – that links these other great monuments into one great monumental landscape of a sort nobody had dreamed existed. And to have had it ­lying underfoot, unsuspected, for so many centuries only adds to the sense of wonder surrounding its discovery.
“Bear in mind archaeologists and Victorian antiquaries have been poking over this ground for well over a century.
“What fascinated and surprised me personally was the engaging humanity of these Neolithic ruins.
“Although I have done quite a few archaeology stories, all over the world, I sometimes find it hard to warm up to the Neolithic.
“The long, long ago world they inhabited, the lives they led, seems too remote for me to grasp – at least well enough for my imagination to get some traction. Not at the Ness of Brodgar.
“When I looked at those paved walkways, and admire that incredible craftsmanship in their dry stone work, I could readily imagine the people who built these walls and structures. They came alive to me as real people, just like us, and that gave these ruins a significance to me that Stone Age ruins never have before. It is an exciting find and will continue to be exciting for many years to come.”

Bedtime for the Twins

Henriette Jonassen has twin toddler boys. That in itself is a circus, and getting them to bed is a farce of Benny Hill proportions. In the Norwegian summer, the sun stays out late at night, and what kid wants to go to bed when it’s daylight? Jonassen says she’s tried different methods, and managed to capture video evidence of the worst one so far.
At first, I laughed, remembering how it was putting two toddlers to bed myself years ago, and then I cringed, remembering that I am babysitting grandchildren next week.

The Double Tree of Casorzo

A Tree Growing on Top of Another Tree
Located between the towns of Grana and Casorzo in Piemonte, Italy, is a very unique tree – well, they’re actually two trees, one growing on top of the other. Locally known as ‘Bialbero de Casorzo’ or the ‘double tree of Casorzo’, this natural oddity consists of a cherry tree growing on top of a mulberry tree.
No one really knows how the cherry tree managed to take root and survive in such a bizarre position. Locals believe that a bird might have dropped a cherry seed on top of the mulberry tree, which then grew its roots through the hollow trunk to reach the soil below.

Ziggy

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Daily Comic Relief

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From Pound To Palace

Odessa Heiress Rescues Dog Who Walked 30 Miles Back To Previous Owners 
A woman from Independence, Kansas, adopted the dog. But Lady escaped from her new home and walked 30 miles to her former family with the small dogs - who declined to take her back, according to the Pet Rescue Examiner.
The story resonated online and with Rich, who had recently lost her senior black Labrador, Granny, said her assistant, Barbara DiCioccio.
Rich, 65, contacted her staff to rescue the dog from the Chautauqua County Animal Shelter in Sedan, Kansas. At 4 p.m. Thursday, her assistants Chet Ragsdale and Barbara DiCioccio boarded a jet to Kansas to pick up the dog; they returned about 10 p.m..
“We don’t mess around here,” DiCioccio said. “We get things done.”
Lady will have a spot in Rosburg’s 11,000-square-foot, three-story Odessa home with five other dogs and a number of cats, DiCioccio said.
“The dog will be right there where she is,” DiCioccio said. “We already have a bed for her.”
Rich, the great-granddaughter of William J. Wrigley, founder of the famous chewing gum company in 1891, has a history of helping animals in need.
She’s the founder of On the Wings of Angels Rescue and has 70 rescue dogs, cats, cattle, horses, goats, rabbits, pigs and exotic birds in custom-designed quarters on a large tract of land in Odessa.
“That’s the reason I like working for her,” DiCioccio said. “I see all the good she does.”

Hibernating Bacteria

Dastardly E.coli can manipulate salt crystals into microscopic homes, where they sleep safely until water comes along.

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