Another piddling snowfall. Another huge shutdown. Another round of merciless mocking.
This is Washington’s winter weather cycle, as predictable as partisanship and twice as bruising.
The Monday night storm, a powderball that delivered two to six inches of snow to the area, shuttered schools, stuttered Metro, halted bus service and brought the federal government to its knees.
Then the eye-rolling began. Nowhere more so than among those with Boston ties.
Most of the beltway got around 3" of snow. When I was growing up in the Northeast normally that would not even rate a mention on the local news. The weather report would read "flurries or light snow." My first year of Grad School in Albany we got 111" of snow with no intervening melt off. I couldn't tell where I was a lot of times when driving because the snow banks were so high you could not see the houses on the other side and the street signs were all buried. I would have to pull over and climb a snow bank to get my bearings.
Trumpism is not a philosophy or a movement. It's a cult.
Another piddling snowfall. Another huge shutdown. Another round of merciless mocking.
This is Washington’s winter weather cycle, as predictable as partisanship and twice as bruising.
The Monday night storm, a powderball that delivered two to six inches of snow to the area, shuttered schools, stuttered Metro, halted bus service and brought the federal government to its knees.
Then the eye-rolling began. Nowhere more so than among those with Boston ties.
Most of the beltway got around 3" of snow. When I was growing up in the Northeast normally that would not even rate a mention on the local news. The weather report would read "flurries or light snow." My first year of Grad School in Albany we got 111" of snow with no intervening melt off. I couldn't tell where I was a lot of times when driving because the snow banks were so high you could not see the houses on the other side and the street signs were all buried. I would have to pull over and climb a snow bank to get my bearings.
These kids today! When I was a kid I had to walk 10 miles in the snow to get to school. And it was uphill both ways!
Another piddling snowfall. Another huge shutdown. Another round of merciless mocking.
This is Washington’s winter weather cycle, as predictable as partisanship and twice as bruising.
The Monday night storm, a powderball that delivered two to six inches of snow to the area, shuttered schools, stuttered Metro, halted bus service and brought the federal government to its knees.
Then the eye-rolling began. Nowhere more so than among those with Boston ties.
Most of the beltway got around 3" of snow. When I was growing up in the Northeast normally that would not even rate a mention on the local news. The weather report would read "flurries or light snow." My first year of Grad School in Albany we got 111" of snow with no intervening melt off. I couldn't tell where I was a lot of times when driving because the snow banks were so high you could not see the houses on the other side and the street signs were all buried. I would have to pull over and climb a snow bank to get my bearings.
These kids today! When I was a kid I had to walk 10 miles in the snow to get to school. And it was uphill both ways!
Oh wow! You're from upstate New York too?
Trumpism is not a philosophy or a movement. It's a cult.
HA! I used to live in Clifton Park, Guilderland and Albany. The company I worked for also had offices in DC and Atlanta. Some nice winter day we heard the DC office was closed because of the snowfall. So I was thinking, wow, that must be really bad in DC. But no, that also turned out to be an inch or so. Bstrds! We couldn't stay home for one freaking inch of snow!!!
"Well, if you're gonna sin you might as well be original" -- Mike "The Cool-Person"
"Yeah, well, that’s just, like, your opinion, man" -- The Dude
Libertarian666 wrote:
These kids today! When I was a kid I had to walk 10 miles in the snow to get to school. And it was uphill both ways!
Ad Orientem wrote:
Oh wow! You're from upstate New York too?
soft southerner, as a kid in Canada not only did we walk 10 miles uphill both ways in the snow, we had to walk backwards because you were always walking into the wind, and the wind chill was so cold it would freeze your nose and eyes shut...
-Government 2020+ - a BANANA REPUBLIC - if you can keep it
-Belief is the death of intelligence. As soon as one believes a doctrine of any sort, or assumes certitude, one stops thinking about that aspect of existence
Libertarian666 wrote:
These kids today! When I was a kid I had to walk 10 miles in the snow to get to school. And it was uphill both ways!
Ad Orientem wrote:
Oh wow! You're from upstate New York too?
soft southerner, as a kid in Canada not only did we walk 10 miles uphill both ways in the snow, we had to walk backwards because you were always walking into the wind, and the wind chill was so cold it would freeze your nose and eyes shut...
OK. Now I feel like a candy ass. I should just move to Florida.
Trumpism is not a philosophy or a movement. It's a cult.
Ad Orientem wrote:
OK. Now I feel like a candy ass. I should just move to Florida.
But your underwear will get plastered to your ass there...
"All generous minds have a horror of what are commonly called 'Facts'. They are the brute beasts of the intellectual domain." -- Thomas Hobbes
Disclaimer: I am not a broker, dealer, investment advisor, physician, theologian or prophet. I should not be considered as legally permitted to render such advice!
Most of the beltway got around 3" of snow. When I was growing up in the Northeast normally that would not even rate a mention on the local news. The weather report would read "flurries or light snow." My first year of Grad School in Albany we got 111" of snow with no intervening melt off. I couldn't tell where I was a lot of times when driving because the snow banks were so high you could not see the houses on the other side and the street signs were all buried. I would have to pull over and climb a snow bank to get my bearings.
These kids today! When I was a kid I had to walk 10 miles in the snow to get to school. And it was uphill both ways!
Oh wow! You're from upstate New York too?
No, the Philadelphia area.
But I did go to school (college) in western Illinois, where the first year I was there it got down to -28F. Not a wind chill, an actual temperature. Brrr!