Japanese couple taking a selfie, 1920’s

Japanese couple taking a selfie, 1920’s

The southern border of Manitoba is the 49th parallel, that is quite far north. Minnesota and North Dakota are south of Manitoba to put it in perspective. Today the temperature reached +19 celsius, 66 fahrenheit. Which is about normal for this time of year. We don’t see temps get into the hot zone, +30 C or in the 80’s F until the beginning of July.
But after our extremely cold winters, along with the frustrating pandemic restrictions, people in Manitoba are ready to go outside and breathe the fresh air. Pics were taken in Winnipeg.













An attorney for an accused Capitol rioter said his client participated in the January 6 siege because he had ‘Foxitus’ and ‘Foxmania’ from watching Fox News for 6 months
An attorney for an accused Capitol rioter said his client had been radicalized by Fox News, and that he had “Foxitus” and “Foxmania.”
Anthony Antonio, of Clayton, Delaware, watched Fox News for six months prior to the Capitol riot, the attorney said during a multi-defendant hearing on Thursday related to the Capitol siege.
The attorney said his client started “believing what was being fed to him” by the news outlet and former President Donald Trump.
The attorney said his client started “believing what was being fed to him” by the news outlet and former President Donald Trump, HuffPost’s Ryan Reilly and The Daily Beast reported.
Antonio, who was wearing a black tactical bulletproof vest with a “Three Percenters” patch when Trump supporters stormed the Capitol on January 6, was included in a “seeking information” list posted by the FBI following the incident, court documents said.
Federal investigators interviewed Antonio on February 4, and Antonio said he was at the Capitol on January 6. But he did not answer when investigators asked if he had entered the building. Court documents alleged that Antonio entered the Capitol through one of the broken windows.
“Although his face was not visible, he was identifiable by the tattoo on his wrist and the distinctive black gloves with white writing,” the document said. A video also captured Antonio inside the building “picking up a piece of furniture, which appeared to have a broken leg, with another individual and tossing the furniture
off to the side,” the documents said.
In the February 4 interview with investigators, Antonio described his account of what happened when protesters confronted police officers outside the building, saying he saw “death” in the eyes of one officer who he said was asking for help.
Mike Fanone, a Metropolitan police officer, was shocked with a stun gun by accused rioter Danny “DJ” Rodriguez, who has been charged in relation to the incident. Video footage reported by HuffPost showed Antonio near Rodriguez while he was holding a stun gun.
A criminal complaint was filed against Antonio on April 14, charging him with unlawfully entering a restricted building or grounds, violent entry and disorderly conduct, obstruction of law enforcement, obstruction of an official proceeding, and destruction of government property.
A representative for Fox News did not immediately return Insider’s request for comment.


#1
Mary Evans / Ronald Grant-Everett Collection
The ne plus ultra of James Bond’s automobiles, the Aston Martin DB5 was introduced in 1964’s Goldfinger, and came equipped with all the extras a spy could ask for—including rotating license plates, machine guns, a radarscope, and of course, an ejector seat. To show how far product placement in the movies has come, Aston Martin owner David Brown (the “DB” in DB5) originally asked the film’s producers to pay to use the car because he didn’t want to damage a £4,500 vehicle. Though destroyed in Goldfinger, the car lived more than once in Bond films—it most recently made a cheeky cameo in Casino Royale, when Daniel Craig’s 007 wins a 1963 Aston Martin DB5 in a poker game. The classic car also reportedly will appear in the 23rd Bond movie, Skyfall, opening in December.
#2
beaulieu.co.uk
In a classic chase scene from Diamonds Are Forever, Sean Connery’s Bond gets behind the wheel of Tiffany Case’s 1971 Ford Mustang Mach 1, and the two evade police in Las Vegas—until he heads down a dead end. Thinking fast, they lean over, and then the car defies several laws of physics by driving down a narrow alley on two wheels. The iconic scene also contains a major Bond blooper—when they enter the alley, the Mustang is on its right tires, when they exit safely on Fremont Street, it’s driving on its left side.
Mary Evans / Ronald Grant-Everett Collection
Though not nearly elegant enough to be issued to Bond by Q branch, the AMC Hornet was practical enough to steal when Roger Moore needed to chase Scaramanga through Thailand in The Man With the Golden Gun. The comical scene also features a return cameo for Southern Sheriff J.W. Pepper (from Live and Let Die), who rides shotgun with 007 for the most dramatic moment: when the car does a 360-degree mid-air corkscrew.
BMW
Bond is notoriously hard on his cars, but no 007 vehicle met quite as painful an end as the BMW Z8 Pierce Brosnan drove in The World Is Not Enough. It was sliced in half by a helicopter equipped with a tree-cutting saw. When the blade meets the car, Bond quips, “Q’s not going to like this.”
Everett Collection
James Bond loves cars almost as much as he enjoys women, so it is fitting that the only love he marries—Diana Rigg’s Tracy Draco in On Her Majesty’s Secret Service—has a superb set of wheels. Tracy first drives the red Mercury Cougar XR7 onto a beach in Portugal before attempting suicide at the beginning of the movie, and it’s used later in the film when 007 is trying to escape Blofeld. Mr. and Mrs. Bond drive off in a different car, however, following their wedding—naively believing they have all the time in the world.
Dave Hogan / Getty Images
After a three-picture deal with BMW, Pierce Brosnan’s James Bond went back to an Aston Martin in 2002’s Die Another Day. And while the V12 Vanquish was equipped with some classic refinements—machine guns, rocket launchers, an ejector seat, and retractable spikes in the tires for driving on ice—it was car’s “adaptive camouflage” system that went a bit too far, even for a Bond film. The car disappears with push of a button, which is why the Vanquish’s MI6 codename is the “Vanish.”
In three of Ian Fleming’s novels, James Bond drove a 1933 Bentley “blower” convertible, equipped with a 4.5-liter engine and an Amherst-Villiers supercharger. (It also happened to be the very car Fleming himself drove—and posed with for the cover of Life magazine in October 1966.) But the Bentley only makes one appearance in the Bond film canon—when 007 takes Sylvia Trench on a picnic it’s in a Bentley Mark IV, a model that Fleming made up. And it’s equipped with a truly futuristic gadget for 1963: a car phone.
beaulieu.co.uk
Strictly speaking, this is not James Bond’s car—it belonged to Auric Goldfinger—but the 1937 Rolls Royce Phantom III is one of the most beautiful vehicles ever to appear in a Bond film, and it plays an important role in the movie’s plot. The car’s bodywork is made of 18-karat gold, allowing Goldfinger to melt it down and smuggle his favorite substance across borders without suspicion.

After the Aston Martin DB5, no Bond car had more imaginative modifications than the Lotus Esprit S1 from The Spy Who Loved Me. When Roger Moore’s 007 drives the Lotus off a pier while being chased, the white sports car instantly transforms into a submarine, equipped with fins, a periscope, and a surface-to-air-missile. In 2008, “Wet Nellie” sold at auction for £111,500.
Mono Lake is a large, shallow saline soda lake in Mono County, California, formed at least 760,000 years ago as a terminal lake in a basin that has no outlet to the ocean. The lack of an outlet causes high levels of salts to accumulate in the lake. These salts also make the lake water alkaline.
This desert lake has an unusually productive ecosystem based on brine shrimp that thrive in its waters, and provides critical nesting habitat for two million annual migratory birds that feed on the shrimp.
| Max. length | 15 km (9.3 mi) |
|---|---|
| Max. width | 21 km (13 mi) |
| Surface area | 45,133 acres (182.65 km2) |
| Average depth | 17 m (56 ft) |
| Max. depth | 48 m (157 ft) |
| Water volume | 2,970,000 acre·ft (3.66 km3) |
| Surface elevation | 6,383 ft (1,946 m) above sea level |
| Islands | Two major: Negit Island and Paoha Island; numerous minor outcroppings (including tufa rock formations). The lake’s water level is notably variable. |
The most unusual feature of Mono Lake are its dramatic tufa towers emerging from the surface. These rock towers form when underwater springs rich in calcium mix with the waters of the lake, which are rich in carbonates. The resulting reaction forms limestone. Over time the buildup of limestone formed towers, and when the water level of the lake dropped the towers became exposed.
![mono-lake-4[2]](https://markosun.files.wordpress.com/2013/02/mono-lake-42.jpg?w=1000)
![mono-lake-16[6]](https://markosun.files.wordpress.com/2013/02/mono-lake-166.jpg?w=1000)
![mono-lake-11[2]](https://markosun.files.wordpress.com/2013/02/mono-lake-112.jpg?w=1000)
![mono-lake-17[5]](https://markosun.files.wordpress.com/2013/02/mono-lake-175.jpg?w=1000)

Deep dragging Grandmamma

A 94-year-old Winnipeg man has pleaded guilty to killing his elderly neighbour by accidentally driving his car over him.
Edward Hudek admitted earlier this week to a Highway Traffic Act charge of backing a vehicle without due care. He was given a $1,000 fine and two-year driving prohibition.
Frederick Albert Tippen, 86, died in April 2010 after being struck by Hudek’s rented Suzuki SX4 in the parking lot of a St. Vital seniors residence.
Hudek, who has no prior criminal or driving record, told police he heard “knocking at the side of his car” as he reversed out of a stall. He then got out, saw nothing but went inside the Dakota House assisted living facility and told a staff member he might have “bumped into somebody.”
Police and paramedics arrived to find Tippen trapped underneath the vehicle, which had to be lifted to free him. The unconscious man was rushed to hospital but pronounced dead.
“This is a tragic, isolated incident in his life,” defence lawyer Martin Glazer told court.
Hudek surrendered his licence following the tragedy and has not driven since. He also wrote a letter of apology to Tippen’s family.
Glazer said his client was unfamiliar with the rental car and may not have seen Tippen in his blind spot while backing out.
The case has raised questions about how society handles a growing number of aging motorists. The ranks of seniors behind the wheel are expanding as baby boomers age, according to Manitoba Public Insurance.
In 1994, there were more than 80,000 Manitobans 65 and older with a valid driver’s licence, MPI said. In 2010, about 103,600 — 14 per cent — of the nearly 740,000 licensed drivers provincewide were 65 or older. It’s estimated 21 per cent of drivers in Manitoba will be over 65 by 2025.
Therefore driver testing for people who reach the age of 80 should be mandatory every 18 months. If these people can’t pass the test they can start taking cabs if they live in the city. If they live in rural areas they can move into an old folks complex. Friends and support staff will be there to help with the shopping, errands and appointments.
And it is not just the other drivers on the road that can be traumatized by bad senior citizen drivers, passengers are often affected as well.
Shopping can be provided by friends or companies that provide such services. Making it less hazardous in the parking lots.
Property damage, injuries and tying up the police could all be reduced if people in their later golden years had to take the mandatory drivers test.