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Nothing Says Summer Like Japanese Jock Itch Commercials
Growing up in a white trash neighbourhood
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Cat scratched my eye, have a nestling bluebird to take care of... broke ass pirate
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Review: Havana Club Rum 3 Years Old, 7 Years Old, and Seleccion de Maestros
For the third time at Drinkhacker we turn our attention to Havana Club, the essential Cuban rum that many an international traveler (including myself) has come to love. Widely available overseas, Havana Club is not available in the U.S. due to trade restrictions with Cuba. Nonetheless today we turn our attention to three of Havana Club’s expressions — out of a total seven that the Havana-based distillery makes.
The reviews below are of 700ml UK-destined bottlings, and the prices are approximate representations of what you’d pay in a typical duty free shop. As a final reminder, remember that this Havana Club is the original and is completely unrelated to Bacardi’s “Havana Club,” which is made in Puerto Rico.
Havana Club Anejo 3 Anos - At 3 years old, this is the youngest of the distillery’s rums (all Havana Club is at least “anejo”) and the only Havana Club expression bottled in clear glass, letting you see the pale yellow (filtered) spirit within. The nose is fruity with some sharpness to it, with the exuberance and slight funk of a white rum balanced by its share of refinements. Fresh lime is the biggest fruit note here, with hints of grapefruit and blood orange coming along after. The finish is spicy and piquant, offering a touch of hogo that is quickly cleaned away. Excellent as a mixer, Havana Club says this is “made for mojitos,” and it’s easy to see why. 80 proof. B+ / $20
Havana Club Anejo 7 Anos - The standard bearer of the Havana Club brand, 7 Anos offers a complex nose that, while clearly rum, ventures into exotic notes of polished wood, passion fruit, banana, coconut, and butterscotch. The body features tropical notes, ample vanilla caramel, cocoa powder, some smoky wood fire notes, and plenty of molasses. For kicks I compared this rum to the Italian-bought version of the same spirit (though the bottle has changed a bit) I reviewed in 2010. Very similar, indicating nothing major has changed at Havana Club in the last few years, though I get a bit more cocoa on the palate in the current bottling than the older one. Same rating. 80 proof. A / $30
Havana Club Seleccion de Maestros (pictured) – This “masters’ selection” is triple barrel aged, first in standard oak barrels, after which individual casks are selected and blended and aged further in a second set of barrels. After this round of maturation, the maestros sort through these barrels, pick their favorites, and blend them again in a third barrel, after which the rum is bottled at 90 proof. Sounds like a lot of work (and frankly, not a whole lot of information on either the wood used or the amount of time spent in it), but the results speak for themselves. The nose is intense and deep, a bit of a departure from Havana Club’s usual approachability. The nose includes light smoke, leather, nuts, and charred orange peel. On the palate, the extra alcohol is immediately noteworthy, giving the Seleccion more of a sherried character, along with notes of raisins and plums, incense, cinnamon, and tobacco. It’s a markedly different experience than the 7 Year Old expression, but of equally high quality and just as enjoyable in its own right. A / $60
Back To School Without Enough Choice
Image Credit: Catchmyparty.com
I’m sincerely convinced that a good parent is one who sacrifices from his or her own wellbeing and leisure to improve their children. If your family makes a better than median living and you are willing to sacrifice until you scrape by at the median, you can send two of your children to school at a lot of different places. Where I live, (Madison County, AL) you can give up about $15 K a year in tuition and fees to send your children to private schools that are solidly more capable than the public school alternatives. In so doing, you also give up the bus service and sacrifice a good 7 hours per school week driving your children around to those to schools and picking them up afterwards. This will add more than 10K miles to your odometer per year which equals about $6,500 more in cost to fuel and maintain your vehicles. My wife doesn’t work, so we save the additional cost for 15 hours per week of day care expenses that other families would have to
pay.
Now of course $20K per year is a lot to sacrifice. I was blessed with the willingness and understanding to major in mathematics in college so that I could pay off my GSL debt and make a salary that allowed me to invest north of $20K per year to keep my kids out of the local public schools. Mr. Logic would ask the question “Why on Earth would you pay that when 12 years of compulsory education are already being billed to your local tax bill?” Therein lays a tale of woe that I can best relate through two anecdotes regarding what friends of mine have experienced educating their children in Northern Alabama.
So I go see a guy who’s married to one of my wife’s BFFs. He and I are out in his back yard doing something original like drinking. He tells me his oldest boy is having it tough these days. I ask him why. He’s a temporary geographical bachelor these days. His wife had gotten a much higher paying job in Atlanta, and she moved there with the kids. His oldest had been an Honor Roll student in Huntsville Public Schools. In one of the better public schools in Atlanta, he was 1 month behind and trying hard not to flunk. Another family my wife and I know well recently decamped for South Korea. They sent their daughter over there to study in the summer like a lot of people from Korea do with their kids. She was so far behind what children her age get taught in Korea that her parents felt they had to go home so that their child wouldn’t grow up ignorant. These two events were both a surprise and a revelation.
I’ve known three different people who teach at the public schools in and around where I live. One woman retired after 25 years and works on Redstone Arsenal as an OR Analyst. Another coached my child’s Little League Baseball Team when she wasn’t teaching High School math and supervising the school’s Junior Robotics Team. A third is active in local government and probably has an eye on elected office. I don’t know her beliefs on big issues; but if she’s Conservative, I want her on that wall. So this leaves me flabbergasted. I know three very capable and intelligent women who are teaching in local public schools. If all three of these people can conquer a nice, healthy chunk of their corner of the world, how do the Honor Roll kids they teach end up 1 month behind the better public schools in Atlanta and wearing the Honorable Sheila Jackson-Lee Dunce Cap in comparison to school children in Seoul, Korea?
Conservative Smart-Guy, Dr. Thomas Sowell enlightens us more. These three teachers I know and admire mean well, work hard and present a positive example with their own lives in unique and interesting ways. They also are overwhelmed by a corrupt and dysfunctional Leviathan. Modern Public education is a monopoly that no longer specifically works on behalf on its customers.
This is why a voucher-driven school choice program is so important. Not everyone can or is willing to major in mathematics and then get lucky enough to land my job. There is no $20K in extra-income or 7 extra hours per week to commute back and forth to better schools. Not everyone has South Korean citizenship handy in order to prevent their kids from falling behind. Not all Americans are going to strike it rich and hit the boffo new job somewhere. People who are not fortunate, and can’t just slice off 33% of their cash balance after taxes, 401Ks and 529-Cs, are getting stuck in schools with priorities that supersede educating their children. This is wrong and means that children will not be educated in an effective manner across all public schools until something powerful smashes their monopoly and makes them stop.
This is why, on the 4th day of August, the 1st day of a new school year in Madison County, AL I strongly advise and admonish you to support school choice initiatives for those amongst you who don’t have somewhere close to $25K per year to throw down in return for decent Primary Education. It is not just good enough to care for my own offspring. Everyone else’s kids will help determine America’s future as well. Our Education-Government Complex is a corrupt and inbred industry that no longer always remembers to cater to its captive customer base. Americans should not have to pay large fractions of their disposable incomes every school year to have the choice of educating their children well.
The post Back To School Without Enough Choice appeared first on RedState.
Guy I know just came back from abroad and is avoiding sex with his extremely hot girlfriend..
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This puppy has the best reflex you’ve ever seen
He’s on “food alert” even while sleeping
The post This puppy has the best reflex you’ve ever seen appeared first on Say OMG - omg videos,omg photos, omg news, omg images, omg movies on say OMG.
High speed footage of a missile disintegrating a tank

Sploid reader trout linked to this video here: A TOW 2B Aero missile exploding over a Russian T-72 tank to deliver its penetrator charge. The second explosion is the penetrator reaching the explosives and fuel inside the tank.
A Fascinating Look At Shooting Targets Used By Armies Around the World

Teaching soldiers to take aim at a human target and pull the trigger requires practice, and while the end-game is the same—make flesh-and-blood contact—the enemy looks different depending on where you are in the world. Photographer Herlinde Koelbl spent six years shooting military training grounds for a new book called Targets, offering a rare, behind-the-scenes look at the wide interpretation of international bad guys.
An Ode to the Botfly, Nature's Nastiest Bug
Whaddya mean you don't want insect larvae chewing their way through your epidermis en route to bursting through your skin like tiny, winged Xenomorphs? That's just how the Botfly shows its love (and propagates its species). It's the circle of life, it rules us all, and many times it's really friggin' disgusting.
Behold some of the best Steadicam shots of all time

If you love filmmaking you will love this 10-minute montage of some of the best steadicam shots in cinema history. It's definitely missing some great long takes —like the amazing 6-minute steadicam shot in True Detective —but it's a great summary of good uses of this shot, invented by Garrett Brown in 1971.
This Animation Video Explains Everything You Need to Know About Earth

Kurzgesagt sums up all you need to know about our planet Earth in this nice animation explainer that's much more easy to understand than school ever was. It shows how fascinating and unbelievable Earth is and makes you realize how seemingly impossible it is for us to be living here. But we're here!













