Showing posts with label freedom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label freedom. Show all posts

Friday, September 11, 2020

Never Foget What They Did To Us

 .
Even with all the current unrest and disruption to our lives, the people who attacked us nineteen years ago still want to destroy us.  They may even be behind some of the current troubles.  Therefore,
We must never forget what Islamist terrorists
did to us in 2001.  


If you have forgotten, or were too young to remember the devastation on our own soil of the 9/11 attacks, look here for a short review.   The blood shed by over 3000 people is not visible in the photos. 


NOT ONE of the five masterminds of the 9/11 attack have been brought to justice!   Their trial is set for 2021.  
How is it possible that it could take 20 years to bring them to trial? 

We must stand strong against these terrorists and our sympathetic politicians forever and always, lest the freedom of this greatest country on earth be lost forever.  
While we are at it, add to that the current rioters, looters, thugs, and fake news purveyors.   They are just as much a threat to our freedoms as the terrorists of 2001. 
.

Saturday, June 20, 2020

Immediate Danger and Politicians Keeping Us "Safe"

.
I went for a ride yesterday.  I went up to Whitewater Falls, just into North Carolina -- about 45 miles from my home in Easley, SC.  You take South Carolina route 130 (that turns into North Carolina route 281), a fairly smooth road with many sweepers, to get there.  It is one of my favorite roads and favorite sights to see in the area. 

As I reach the entrance, there are cars parked everywhere along both sides of the road, even though there is no real place set up for such parking.  People are walking and standing along the road for a considerable distance.







They are in harm's way.

Why?  Simply because they came there to see what they own: Whitewater Falls is administered by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, National Forest Service.

Here is a look at what they own, taken on one of my previous visits. 


But the gates are closed and locked. The usual volunteer who stays there in his camper and oversees the area is not there because the park is closed. 

Even though the park is administered under the Forest Service, they say that their "decisions [on closings] will align with local city, county and state actions to provide for human health and safety (ie. quarantine, curfew, and other social restrictions)." 

So I suppose that North Carolina's Democrat governor Roy Cooper is responsible for the closing and endangering visitors who have to park and walk along the road. 

Again I ask, why?  The reason given by leftists like Cooper is that they are protecting our health from a virus.  Remember though, that this virus is not significantly different from past influenzas.  Old people and those already sick with some other troubles should be very careful, but the rest of us should not be punished and treated like disease-carrying vermin, keeping us out of places like this one for no good reason. 

So Cooper is putting people in imminent and immediate danger along that road so they might not get a virus while they are in the wide open outdoors.  Read that again, if you will.  Does that make sense to anyone? 

Being in the indoors has now been determined to be more likely to spread the virus than being outdoors.  So closing facilities like Whitewater Falls makes a lot of sense, doesn't it?  NOT. 

Well, I note that there is a parking lot just a tenth of a mile south of the falls entrance.  This lot is for hikers on the nearby Foothills Trail.  That trail goes many places, but one of them is to Whitewater Falls right next door. 

See the immediate surroundings on this map:

So that parking lot would be a good place to park, right?

Unfortunately, since the main Whitewater Falls parking lot has been closed, and the volunteer made to stay home, people parking in the gravel lot have experienced vandalism to their vehicles.  Just two months ago, one visitor reported that they "had somebody come and knock my car window out while we were hiking. There were probably 10 other cars parked there when we first arrived and 3 of them (including me) got their windows knocked out."

So, if you can't park in the lot where there is a volunteer who can watch over it, you are subjected to vandals who break out your car windows.

You can always park on the road, remember!  Ah, yes, with cars whizzing by a few feet away from you. 

Note on the map above that the trail from the gravel parking lot has a spur that goes to the restrooms at Whitewater Falls.   Don't be expecting to use them, though, because they have been locked for months now.   You have to use the great outdoors if you need to go!


Think about how much this reaction to a virus is costing us in enjoyment, damage to vehicles, accidents, inconvenience, higher costs, and on and on?  They say that suicides and depression are on the rise, and some of the 40+ million people who have lost their jobs will never recover economically. 


Well, back to the ride today.  I manage to turn around near the entrance to the falls parking lot, but the view of oncoming traffic is poor.   Another danger. 

I go about four tenths of a mile south on 130 and turn onto the Bad Creek Pumped Storage Facility road, and follow it to the overlook on Lake Jocassee.  The view is always nice here, but there is a little rain so I don't tarry.



Instead I go back to 130 and the Wigington Scenic Byway to the overlook onto Lake Jocassee. 


A bit hazy today, unfortunately, but the rain has stopped.

Then I turn back and follow SC-130 and SC-11, then US-178 back nearly to home. 


It was a nice day for riding.  I hope they open the parks again soon.

Email, call, or write Governor Cooper to urge him to do so:

  • email  
  • 919-814-2000
  • North Carolina Office of the Governor
        20301 Mail Service Center
        Raleigh, NC 27699-0301

.




Saturday, April 18, 2020

A Pretty Day in the Mountains, but More Disappointment

.
Well, I went on another ride a couple of days ago.  The weather was again beautiful, and I was looking forward to a few hours out in nature. 

I didn't have as good a time as I would have liked a few days ago on a ride due to bureaucrats deciding for us what we can and cannot do.  I'd recovered a little from that and decided to make another go on the bike. 

Today, I start out from home, and wander around a bit on the roads north of my house.  It isn't far to the foothills of the Blue Ridge Escarpment, so I go that way, north from Pickens South Carolina.  I meander in that direction, finally coming out at the junction of US-178 and SC-11.  I head further north on US-178, hoping to have a look from the lofty 3,554-foot elevation of the highest point in South Carolina, Sassafras Mountain.  Sassafras is a place I have often visited on the motorcycle.  

US-178 from SC-11 to Rocky Bottom is in pretty good shape, and there are some nice repeating s-curves near Rocky Bottom.  I enjoy taking the curves at a snappy pace for me.  Many motorcyclists use this section of road heavily, especially on warm weekends.  There is almost no traffic today because all of the schools and most businesses are closed. 

Here is the general route from Pickens to the road leading to Sassafras Mountain:


Just past the sign for the Rocky Bottom Retreat and Conference Center of the Blind, I turn right onto F. Van Clayton Highway, and see a new road sign.


I don't pay it much attention, and continue motoring toward my goal today. 

This road is also not too bad, a little narrower than US-178, and there is only one hairpin curve, surprisingly on the way to the top of the mountain.  (There isn't a warning sign for that hairpin, so be on the lookout.) 

As I near the road to the top, just where Glady Fork Road turns off to the left, I see it: 


A brand new, heavy-duty gate across the road, complete with stop signs and flashing solar-powered warning beacons.  I have not given it a thought today that they would close a mountain.  Now it dawns on me that the sign down near Rocky Bottom said the following: 

GATE AHEAD
ROAD CLOSED
PAST 
GLADY FORK RD

I suppose that new and substantial gate was paid for by taxpayers -- TO KEEP OUT TAXPAYERS!!!

I'm steamed, thinking about this stupidity, and the waste of my money to keep me out. 

I dismount, and take a closer look. 


Even more closely:


Yep.  Closed until further notice.  That could be years, maybe forever. 

I'm not only steamed, I'm fried, now.  I know, I know, they are just trying to keep us healthy.  Sure.  Keeping us out of the fresh mountain air will keep us healthy. I'll be healthier on this side of the gate than on the other. 

I also note that the new gate is in a fairly steep section of the road.  Whoever designed the gate forgot about this slope so the bottom of the right stop sign drags on the pavement when they open the gate -- whenever that is.  The pavement has bent the bottom of the sign away from the face of the gate. Clever. 

I look back toward my bike and spot something interesting.  Do you see it in this photograph? 


That is Glady Fork Road going off to the right in the picture.  Two of the three cars are parked on the wrong side of the road, probably indicating that they came here from the same way I did on F.Van Clayton Highway to the left in the picture. 

I have never seen anyone park there before.  I don't believe there is anything else around here that would require parking in that location. 

You know what I'll bet? 

I think that these folks got to the same point as I have, and decided to see the top of the mountain anyway.  ...from the nearly new overlook structure there.  Good for them. 

Here is a crowd on the observation platform September 2019. 



Here is a view from the top on the same day. 



Well worth the time to see the view, I'd say. 

Don't tell anybody about the cars parking near the gate, 'cause then the authorities might come by here and ticket or tow the taxpayers (and visitors) who simply want to see what is theirs. 

By the way, I am also getting a little fidgety, because I need to find a place to relieve myself.  Old men need that a lot, it seems.  Thinking about the nearly new restroom at the top of the mountain makes this even worse.  Torturing, I'd say. 

I nevertheless, mount my steed and head back the way I came. 

When I get to Pickens, I look for a good place; one where I don't have to take off my helmet or worry about the bike while I am using the facilities in some store.  ...and come to think of it, there aren't many stores open anyway. 

I think of just the place.  There is a city park with a playground, a trail, and a restroom just off US-178.  I go that way and find this: 



Closed.  I go on a little further to the Pickens Recreation Center, which is a gymnasium with ball fields and a very nice BMX track behind it. 


Closed too, though there is a small group of employees gathered on a picnic bench outside in the rear of the building.  They look to be much closer than the regulation six feet apart. Naughty, naughty! 

Now what will I do?  I am getting desperate. 

I wander around the city streets and spot this: 


See that house on the right?  It is being refurbished. 

Know what the workers need?  They need a place to go potty!  ...and they have just such a place. 

And I need one. Now. 

I quickly turn around, and park on the opposite side of the street from my immediate goal.  There, a guy is cutting his lawn on a tractor.  I have my helmet on, and my earplugs in.  I want to tell him why I am going to park on his sidewalk, but the noise of his tractor prevents him from hearing my muffled voice from within my helmet, even when I get closer to him.  [Not too close, mind you.] 



I suppose he might be a little wary of me, too.  I can't imagine why.  I'm sure motorcyclists in leathers stop here frequently. 

Finally, I devise a solution.  I give the universal sign of needing to go -- pointing at the nether regions -- then at the potty across the street. 

The shadow of my arm pointing at my immediate goal. 
He gets the message, acknowledges that he understands, and I sprint across the street. 

Whew.

I then mount up and head for home, tooting my horn in thanks to the man on the tractor. 

I really did have a nice ride today, but trying to find a suitable place when nature calls has, again, not been easy. ...and I really want to get our freedoms back, so I can go where I wish, see what is mine to see, shop where I want, and not feel as though I might be breaking rules all the time. 

I hope this nonsense ends soon, so we can again live in freedom. Write to your governor to tell him that. 
.


.

Sunday, April 12, 2020

100 miles and Some Disappointing Stupidity

.
I went out on a ride of a little over 100 miles the other day, in the beautiful foothills of the Blue Ridge Escarpment near my home.  It was a wonderful day to be out: just the right temperature and with only a few clouds in the sky.

I motor north to Pickens South Carolina and follow US-178 from there to SC-11, the Cherokee Foothills Scenic Highway.  I am enjoying the ride, but need to stop for a necessary break.  I decide that Keowee-Toxiway State Park picnic grounds would be a good choice.  

This is usually a quiet place to stop, but not today.  It is dead, because it is closed.  If I go in there, I might become infected, I guess. 


With what?  Something they are now saying is no worse than the common cold!   


Stupidity.  I think about hopping the gate and seeing whether I came down with anything. 


(No, I don't hop the gate.) 

Oh well, Ill go on further and find another place.  I hope I can wait a little longer. 

I continue on SC-11 to the Tamassee DAR School.  It is housed on a beautiful 110-acre campus with housing and other facilities for children without parents at home.  This facility has been open for around 100 years, serving children who have no other place to live.  They have a faith-centered program, including an early childhood learning center, an after school program, tutors, help for troubled kids, and they instill good citizenship and values.  In other words they have been building solid citizens from the children they serve. This is one of several DAR schools in the country. 

I noticed on their website, after I returned from my ride, that they are having to terminate many of their services because of a South Carolina lawsuit and new federal guidelines that require kids without parents at home to be placed in individual foster homes instead of group homes such as the DAR School that have been successful, reliable, and loving places where they can grow up in a stable environment -- and have done so for a hundred years.  

The lawsuit cites the fact that there are too few foster homes available in South Carolina, so, in response, they are making it impossible for the DAR School to continue to provide the very thing that is in short supply

Now these kids will be in fewer and less stable foster homes. This is stupidity with real consequences for these kids.  Government is damaging their futures. 

The nearby thrift shop run by the DAR School as also closed for the same reason Keowee-Toxiway Park is closed.  

So government has pinched off even more of the funding they so desperately need.  


I am not enjoying the ride nearly as much at this point.  Nevertheless, I stop at one of the picturesque places on the DAR campus, to view the Flat Shoals River from the bridge over it.  

I make my way to the river bridge for some pictures.



The view from the other side. 
Well, that is certainly a nice view of the river here.  I feel a little less tense, frustrated, and angry, having looked it over.  

Here are some pictures taken in November of 2009 of the buildings and sculpture on the campus.  






A nice place for kids, certainly.  


...but I still need to make a stop someplace.  

There are several man-made lakes in the Upstate of South Carolina, with almost unlimited opportunities to enjoy the water from the shore, from a boat, or even as a SCUBA diver.   

There are two nearby places to launch boats onto Lake Keowee (and that have rest rooms): Falls Creek Access Area, on Landing Road near 162 Fall Creek Church Road, Salem, SC 29676, and Fall Creek Access Area, directly to the east from 595 Shallowford Road (State Rd S-37-44), Salem, SC 29676. 

I decide to go to the first one.  As I near the turnoff, I spot the signs. 


Ahh.  Relief, soon.  

But wait.  What are those red tinged signs?   They look familiar, for some reason. 


...and what is that block of concrete there for? 


...and this sign in the road. 


...and more blocks of concrete. 


Oh, no.  Now what'll I do?

I stop for a few seconds, then dismount, walk through an opening at the end of the giant concrete blocks, and find the nearest natural restroom.

Relief, at last.

I get out my lunch and a bottle of water and eat in peace, there where no one was likely to come.  As I walk about, I take a better look at the red-edged signs.


Temporarily closed, eh?

This closure surely doesn't look temporary to me, what with the concrete blocks and the ROAD CLOSED sign embedded in the pavement.  I had gone into the forbidden zone, risking life and limb, apparently.

When I am sated, I pack up my tank bag, and go a mile or so to the other boat launch, the one to the east on  Shallowford Road.  I fully expect that I will find the same thing.

To my surprise, I find this:


An empty parking lot.  There is one pickup truck with an empty boat trailer and a single car.

The ramp is open with no warning signs in sight.




This must be a (the?) safe place in the park system.  I feel as though I can breathe freely here.  If someone had come along, I might even have risked getting less than 6 feet from him.

What freedom!  Right here in South Carolina -- at a park no less.

I spend a few more minutes savoring the view, the clean air, the beautiful sky, then start my motor and meander my way back home.   


I really did enjoy my time out, but the unreasonable restrictions are disappointing, unnecessary, and stupid. 

We have lost many of our freedoms in the just the last four or five weeks.  Our economic system has suffered a devastating blow because of mandatory closures.  The news people mostly support our downfall.



The leftists have succeeded in causing us deep distress that we may never recover from. 

...all in the name of protecting us from what amounts to the common cold. 


Maybe the next thing they'll take away is our scooters -- since they have no practical or necessary benefit in the eyes of the leftist bureaucrats. 


.

Monday, May 27, 2019

Memorial Day Rememberance

.
Flags  

Your grandma might have called it Decoration Day.  It was called Decoration Day because, in the immediate aftermath of the American Civil War, it was a day when the graves of soldiers were decorated in remembrance of their ultimate sacrifice while serving their country.

We call it Memorial Day now.  That name was first used in 1882, but it did not become common until after World War II, and was not declared to be the official name of the day by Federal law until 1967. 

(Memorial Day is not to be confused with Veterans Day, also known as Armistice Day.  Memorial Day is a day of remembering the men and women who died while serving, while Veterans Day celebrates the service of all military personnel not currently serving.  
Armed Forces Day is a holiday to honor servicemen who are presently in the military.

We are not so thankful for their sacrifices these days, I think, but we certainly ought to be.  Our very freedom in these United States was won by -- and is defended daily by -- the blood of our servicemen and women. 

In fact, our young people used to aspire to serve our country, like in this cartoon from around the year 1900. 


 "On Decoration Day" Political cartoon.
Caption: "You bet I'm goin' to be a soldier, too, like my Uncle David, when I grow up."

I wonder how many young people now even know they can serve. 

Why not take a little ride today and decorate the grave of some soldier, known to you or not?

.
.