December 18, 2025

19 Dec

 

 

 

 


 

Dec. Averages: Temps: 43°\20°             Moisture:4 Days moisture 0.7”

Flagstaff Today 61°: 32° Week 51 Day 353

Wind: 6 mph Gusts 11 mph                    Nearest lightning: 1353 miles away

Active Fire: 132 miles away Risk of Fire: High

Air Quality: Moderate Sunshine

 

 

 

  

Weekly Observations

4-24

Andisop (Meterological Fiddling Link

11-1/1/26

Drive Sober or Get Pulled Over Link 

14-22

Chanukah

14-1/5/26

Christmas Bird Count Week Link 

14-20

Gluten-free Baking Week
14-28

Halcyon Days

15-19

Cookie Exchange Week

16-24

Posadas

17-23

Saturnalia

Daily Observations

Look For An Evergreen Day Link
National Emo Day 
Link

National Ugly Christmas Sweater Day Link 
Underdog Day 

Today’s Quotes                                                             


 

Today’s Memes

 



My Thoughts for the day

Another nice blue-sky day.

Flagstaff had ‘Flock Cameras’ installed throughout the city. It is a system that identifies license plate numbers to assist police. As they came online lots of questions about privacy concerns were raised in many Flock Camera cities. After several citizen meetings, lots of input from citizens, the City Council voted to turn off the cameras immediately and have the company remove them. I did not get involved in the debate as I saw it as a help to catch criminals, but I was a little concerned about their use by others than the police.

I was not surprised by Trump’s speech last night. It was only 19 minutes, and from what I could tell, he stuck to the script. It was full of his exaggerations as expected. I wish someone would tell his speech writer that if he lowered drug prices by 300-600% that would mean that the pharmaceutical companies would be paying American buyers huge sums to use their product. A decrease of 100% would make the drugs free and anything over that would mean the company would pay the consumer real American dollars. The math is not that hard. 

Classic songs that unlock deep nostalgia…

“The Sound of Silence” stirs memories of change and reflection

A layered hush runs through “The Sound of Silence,” wrapped in stark melodies and unresolved chords. Its mood feels both intimate and distant, like a closed-door conversation held after midnight.

For many listeners who came of age amid political unrest and cultural upheaval, the song pins a time when silence didn’t always mean peace. It lingers as a reminder of collective confusion and youthful watchfulness, especially under streetlamps or inside record stores with cracked tile floors.

Cities that changed their names…

Pressburg → Bratislava (Slovakia)

When World War I ended and the Austro-Hungarian Empire dissolved, a new Czechoslovakia emerged, and with it, a new name for its western capital. Pressburg became Bratislava in 1919, tying the city’s future to Slavic roots instead of Germanic ones. The transformation was linguistic, political, and cultural all at once. Centuries of overlapping identities (Hungarian, Austrian, Slovak) fused into one word.
For Slovakia, the new name didn’t erase the past; it simply wrote the next chapter.
 

Random Thoughts…

We don’t have a skeleton in our midst. The brain is us. As a result, we’re in a skeleton.

Each of us has a different picture of ourselves and tailors a version of ourselves that we are unfamiliar with.

Children who have imaginary friends are creative, however, adults who have one are schizophrenics.

You’ve never seen the entire movie before since you’re blinking. 

Historic Events

1732 - Benjamin Franklin began publishing "Poor Richard's Almanac."
1777 - General George Washington led his army of about 11,000 men to Valley Forge, PA, to camp for the winter.
1842Hawaii's independence was recognized by the U.S.
1843 - Charles Dickens' "A Christmas Carol" was first published in England.
1871 - Corrugated paper was patented by Albert L. Jones.
1903 - The Williamsburg Bridge opened in New York City. It opened as the largest suspension bridge on Earth and remained the largest until 1924. It was also the first major suspension bridge to use steel towers to support the main cable.
1917 - The first games of the new National Hockey League (NHL) were played. Five teams made up the league: Toronto Arenas, Ottawa Senators, Quebec Bulldogs, the Montreal Canadiens and the Montreal Wanderers.
1957 - Air service between London and Moscow was inaugurated.
1972Apollo 17 splashed down in the Pacific, ending the Apollo program of manned lunar landings.
1996 - The school board of Oakland, CA, voted to recognize Black English, also known as "ebonics." The board later reversed its stance.
1998U.S. President Bill Clinton was impeached on two charges of perjury and obstruction of justice by the U.S. House of Representatives.
2008U.S. President George W. Bush signed a $17.4 billion rescue package of loans for ailing auto makers General Motors and Chrysler.

Birthdays

1944 Tim Reid (81 years old), American actor and comedian (WKRP in Cincinnati - "Venus Flytrap"; Frank's Place), born in Norfolk, Virgina

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Jennifer Beals (62 years old), American actress (Flashdance; The Bride; The L-Word), born in Chicago, Illinois

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Richard Hammond(57 years old)

1969 English motoring journalist and TV presenter (Top Gear; The Grand Tour, Brainiac; Science Abuse), born in Solihull, West Midlands, England

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Alyssa Milano(54 years old)

1972 American actress (Who's the Boss?; Charmed) and activist, born in Brooklyn, New York

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Brandon Sanderson(51 years old)

1975 American award winning author (Mistborn series, The Stormlight Archive), born in Lincoln, Nebraska

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Jake Gyllenhaal(46 years old)

1980 American actor (Donnie Darko, Jarhead), born in Los Angeles, California

 

 

Henry Clay Frick, American industrialist (built world's largest coke & steel operation) and art collector (Frick Collection), born in West Overton, Pennsylvania (d. 1919; @69, heart attack)

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Ralph Richardson(d. 1983; @80; strokes)

English actor (Anna Karenina, Doctor Zhivago), born in Cheltenham, England

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Leonid Brezhnev(d.1982; @ 75; heart attack)

General Secretary of the Soviet Union (1964-82), born in Kamenskoye, Ukraine

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Edith Piaf(d.1963; @47, liver cancer)

French chanteuse ("Little Sparrow", "Le Vie En Rose"), born in Paris

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 "Little" Jimmy Dickens, American country singer (Grand Ole Opry), born in Bolt, West Virginia (d. 2015; @94)

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David Susskind, American TV host (Open End, David Susskind Show), born in New York City (d. 1987; @66. Heart attack)

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Cicely Tyson(d. 2021; @96)

American stage and screen actress (Roots; The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman), born in Harlem, New York

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Phil Ochs, American anti-war folk singer ("Joe Hill", "The War is Over", "I Ain't Marchin' Anymore"), born in El Paso, Texas (d. 1976; @35, suicide)

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Reggie White(d.2004; @43, arrhythmia)

American College-Pro Football HOF defensive end (Super Bowl XXXI Green Bay Packers; 8 × First-team All-Pro; 13 x Pro Bowl; NFL Defensive Player of the Year 1987, 98), born in Chattanooga, Tennessee

 

…The End for today…

           

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