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Florida It Happened to Me The Current Situation

Palm trees and a puffy vest

Joey de Villa in a swetaer, wool blazer, and puffy vest, smiling in his front yeard, with palm trees behind him.

My friends in my old home town, Toronto, won’t find Tampa’s current temperatures cold, but by local standards, it’s downright frigid.

The past couple of mornings have started at a temperature that Torontonians would consider balmy this time of year: 4°C (39°F). With Tampa’s humidity typically in the 90% range, it feels more like 0°C (32°F). I pulled out the olive drab puffy vest that my Dad gave to me as a Christmas gift ages ago — he had a thing for giving me warm clothing — and snapped the photo above to let my Mom know how I’m doing.

Map of northern and central Florida, showing temperatures in cities from Gainesville in the north and as far south as Lakeland and Melbourne.
I added the temperatures in REAL units, as opposed to Herr Doktor von Fahrenheit’s old-timey measure for phlogiston in the ether.

It looks like it’s going to get a little colder this weekend, which is going to be a challenge for the sizable portion of the local population that’s perpetually in shorts and flip-flops.

But at least it isn’t snowing in Tampa…

Categories
funny Picdump The Current Situation

New Year’s Eve mini-picdump

It’s New year’s Eve, and in celebration, here’s a mini-picdump of NYE-themed memes! If you go out to celebrate tonight (Anitra and I are), do it safely!

Categories
funny Music The Current Situation

The “Home Alone” Yule Log

How did I not know about the Joe Pesci Home Alone yule log stream until now? This version’s got 24/7 music, so you can put it on your TV as “video wallpaper” for your Christmas dinner or holiday vibes.

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Tampa Bay The Current Situation

If you’re in crisis on Christmas, remember 211 and 988

As the lyrics say, all is supposed to be merry and bright during the holidays, but there are times when life has other plans. It’s been a while since I’ve faced a “Long Dark Christmas of the Soul,” but it has happened, and “merry” and “bright” were not words I’d use to describe that time.

If you’re in the Tampa Bay area and things for you are far from merry and bright, take advantage of First Contact (formerly 211 Tampa Bay Cares).

First Contact originated in the 1970s as the 2-1-1 Helpline, a crisis intervention hotline in Pinellas County, that offered support to individuals facing challenges like loneliness and thoughts of suicide. Over the years, it merged with the United Way’s Information and Referral line and evolved into a comprehensive resource for crisis intervention, family support, and referral services throughout the Tampa Bay region and across the state of Florida.

211 is a three-digit phone number that will connect you to information and referral services to health, human, and social service organizations. If you’re in the Tampa Bay area, that service is First Contact, but if you’re elsewhere, it will connect you to the equivalent services in your area.

988 is a three-digit number that will connect you to a suicide and crisis lifeline. If you are in crisis or experiencing thoughts of suicide, call 988!

You can dial 988 to receive support and resources for thoughts of suicide, mental health or substance use crisis, or any other kind of emotional distress.


Here’s hoping that your holidays are safe and happy. If they’re not, please take advantage of 211 and 988 — that’s what they’re there for.

Categories
funny The Current Situation

Special edition picdump for Thanksgiving 2024

Here’s a special edition of my weekly picdump that features Thanksgiving-themed pictures, infographics, and meme. Happy Thanksgiving, and enjoy the pics!

Categories
Science Stranger than Fiction The Current Situation

Louis Pasteur is spinning in his grave right now

That TikTok wellness influencer is so close to getting it.

Categories
America Editorial The Current Situation

U.S. post-election post #3: Now they’re emboldened

A demonstrator at Texas State University in Austin, Texas on Wednesday, November 6, 2024. Photo by Meg Boles, published in The University Star, Texas State University’s newspaper. Click to see the source.

The thing about people who voted for Trump is that his bigotry — never mind his criminality — wasn’t a dealbreaker for them. In fact, for some people, it was one of his selling points, and now that he’s been elected, they’ve been emboldened.

Demonstrators at Texas State University in Austin, Texas on Wednesday, November 6, 2024, surrounded by students. Photo by Louie Dean Valencia, a professor at Texas State University and posted on X/Twitter. Click to see the source.

Case in point: a couple of demonstrators who went onto the grounds of Texas State University in Austin, Texas, with signs reading “Women are property” and “Your sin of sodomy is worthy of death.”

Demonstrators and counter-demonstrators at Texas State University in Austin, Texas on Wednesday, November 6, 2024, surrounded by students. Photo by Louie Dean Valencia, a professor at Texas State University and posted on X/Twitter. Click to see the source.

To their credit, a counter-protest formed quickly. They were joined by United Campus Ministry Reverend Todd Salmi, who held up two signs reading “Jesus values and respects Texas State women” and “Jesus loves all y’all” to counter the hateful ones the demonstrators were holding up. He remembers that Jesus had harsher words for the Pharisees than for prostitutes.

Louie Dean Valenica, a professor at Texas State, tweeted the two photos above, followed by these posts:

Tweets by Louie Dean Valencia. Click to see the source.

Texas States’s response team was there quickly to help manage the situation.

As an expert on fascism… this is where it starts. Extremists at home who feel emboldened. The ones holding these signs were not part of our Texas State community. They might be outsiders, but they aren’t strangers to those of us who study the radical right.

Then there’s the matter of these racist text messages being sent to Black people:

A racist text message received by Talaya Jones. Click to see the source.

According to The Guardian:

Black people in states including Alabama, South Carolina, Georgia, New York, New Jersey, Nevada, the DC area and elsewhere reported receiving the messages. The messages were sent to Black adults and students, including to high schoolers in Massachusetts and New York, and students at historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs), such as Alabama State University and other schools, including ones across OhioClemson University, the University of Alabama and Missouri State. At least six middle school students in Pennsylvania received the messages, according to the AP.

For more:

Here’s a statement by Representative Bonnie Watson Coleman of New Jersey’s 12th Congressional District on the incident:

Click to see the source.

And finally, there’s this dipshit:

I’m not linking to this one. Go search for it, if you must.

None of these people are acting in any official capacity, but they were all emboldened by the election results. And we’ve seen this before — remember when high school students were using Trump’s image and name as racial insults aimed at Latinos at inter-school sports events?

Fans of Andrean High School held up a picture of Trump and shouted chants like “Build a Wall” during a basketball game against Bishop Noll Institute. This is from February 2016, before Trump’s first election. Click to see the source.

This is just the beginning, and this is what we must resist.

I’ll close with this meme from the previous election: