Today I Learned #2: Gone for a Wiki Walk

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OK,
a) those slum gentry are freaking loaded and they aren't from the Navy;
and
b) that's the wrong brother you're talking about.

But like most of our gentry and aristocracy they are a bit nouveau riche.
When the House Of Lords was "reformed" and most of the peerage chucked out there was only 1 baronial title that had been held by the same family since before the War of the Roses.
 
More than 360,000 Oklahomans—nearly 10 percent of the state’s population—have acquired medical marijuana cards over the last two years. By comparison, New Mexico has the country’s second most popular program, with about 5 percent of state residents obtaining medical cards. Last month, sales since 2018 surpassed $1 billion.

To meet that demand, Oklahoma has more than 9,000 licensed marijuana businesses, including nearly 2,000 dispensaries and almost 6,000 grow operations. In comparison, Colorado—the country’s oldest recreational marijuana market, with a population almost 50 percent larger than Oklahoma—has barely half as many licensed dispensaries and less than 20 percent as many grow operations. In Ardmore, a town of 25,000 in the oil patch near the Texas border, there are 36 licensed dispensaries—roughly one for every 700 residents. In neighboring Wilson (pop. 1,695), state officials have issued 32 cultivation licenses, meaning about one out of 50 residents can legally grow weed.

What is happening in Oklahoma is almost unprecedented among the 35 states that have legalized marijuana in some form since California voters backed medical marijuana in 1996. Not only has the growth of its market outstripped other more established state programs but it is happening in a state that has long stood out for its opposition to drug use. Oklahoma imprisons more people on a per-capita basis than just about any other state in the country, many of them non-violent drug offenders sentenced to lengthy terms behind bars. But that state-sanctioned punitive streak has been overwhelmed by two other strands of American culture—a live-and-let-live attitude about drug use and an equally powerful preference for laissez-faire capitalism.

“Turns out rednecks love to smoke weed,” Baker laughs. “That’s the thing about cannabis: It really bridges socio-economic gaps. The only other thing that does it is handguns. All types of people are into firearms. All types of people are into cannabis.”

Indeed, Oklahoma has established arguably the only free-market marijuana industry in the country. Unlike almost every other state, there are no limits on how many business licenses can be issued and cities can’t ban marijuana businesses from operating within their borders. In addition, the cost of entry is far lower than in most states: a license costs just $2,500. In other words, anyone with a credit card and a dream can take a crack at becoming a marijuana millionaire.

“They’ve literally done what no other state has done: free-enterprise system, open market, wild wild west,” says Tom Spanier, who opened Tegridy Market (a dispensary that takes its name from South Park) with his wife in Oklahoma City last year. “It’s survival of the fittest.”

The hands-off model extends to patients, as well. There’s no set of qualifying conditions in order to obtain a medical card. If a patient can persuade a doctor that he needs to smoke weed in order to soothe a stubbed toe, that’s just as legitimate as a dying cancer patient seeking to mitigate pain. The cards are so easy to obtain—$60 and a five-minute consultation—that many consider Oklahoma to have a de facto recreational use program.

What is wrong with Kansas?
 
In November 1939, while the rest of the world was getting on with killing each other in WW2, America was arguing about how many Thanksgiving lunches to eat.
Spoiler CNN Summary :
If your grandparents or great-grandparents were living in Mississippi, Colorado or Texas in 1939 (like two of mine were), they may have celebrated Thanksgiving twice, thanks to Franklin D. Roosevelt's effort to bail out struggling retailers by moving Thanksgiving up a week -- thus extending the holiday shopping season.
Republicans mocked it as "Franksgiving", and it was a hotly divisive issue, cleaving Americans living in states who supported FDR's New Deal from those who didn't. But in three states (see above), they just went ahead and celebrated twice, perhaps implicitly acknowledging, with that extra pie, that there's no one way to get through tough times -- and sometimes there's enough gratitude to go around.
 
But now I suppose you've piqued my curiosity. Please tell me we're not supposed to pray the pandemic away, because history has shown that it's not a strategy that works.
Actually I advocate such measures as personal protection, washing hands, tracing, etc. etc.

But my point was that Berzerker has proclaimed himself to be a contrarian, i.e. he'll just oppose anything on a thread for kicks.
 
https://www.theguardian.com/science...s-rock-art-discovered-in-remote-amazon-forest

Amazonian Sistine Chapel from the ice age... Actually the Younger Dryas 12.5kya

One of the world’s largest collections of prehistoric rock art has been discovered in the Amazonian rainforest.

Hailed as “the Sistine Chapel of the ancients”, archaeologists have found tens of thousands of paintings of animals and humans created up to 12,500 years ago across cliff faces that stretch across nearly eight miles in Colombia.

Thats close to the event that triggered the YD about 12.9kya
 
Oh my, that last picture is really impressive.

This one?

6000.jpg


I am not seeing what's so impressive about it, tbh.
Looks like a collection of sprites from some 8bit Donkey-Kong mod :)

At least in the following some seem to be in happy mode:

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Well, you try to get up there and paint anything...

They weren't flying, but maybe they were clinging on to the side of that mountain (who knows, maybe they had some primitive "ladder" as well).
Still, that has little to do with painting (Sistine Chapel) :)
Unless the point is just that it is drawn somewhere high - but do you ever hear people comment on Michelangelo being on some scaffold to draw it?
 
They weren't flying, but maybe they were clinging on to the side of that mountain (who knows, maybe they had some primitive "ladder" as well).
Still, that has little to do with painting (Sistine Chapel) :)
Unless the point is just that it is drawn somewhere high - but do you ever hear people comment on Michelangelo being on some scaffold to draw it?
I think it is compared to the Sistine chapel in its size and historical importance, that a quantitative artistic valuation. You get that it is about 12,500 years old.
 
I am not ageist. I only care about the merit.

Well, if you go by that, the sistine chapel is actually also not that special. Mostly old and big. The art itself could today be done by a ton of different artists.
 
Merit is subjective in matters of artistic or cultural significance.

I won't be opening that can of worms :)

Well, if you go by that, the sistine chapel is actually also not that special. Mostly old and big. The art itself could today be done by a ton of different artists.

For example:

Touched_by_His_Noodly_Appendage_HD.jpg


568ce6eddd0895a83d8b4575
 
Well, if you go by that, the sistine chapel is actually also not that special. Mostly old and big. The art itself could today be done by a ton of different artists.
When I went to see it, I was totally nonplussed. To get to it, you have just walked through some of the most spectacular bits of the vatican, with loads of amazing art that is hung at a suitable angle for viewing, in relative peace. Then you get to this really crowded room, with some famous pictures on the roof. If you concentrate on the art you will bump into people, and looking gives you a stiff neck anyway.
 
When I went to see it, I was totally nonplussed. To get to it, you have just walked through some of the most spectacular bits of the vatican, with loads of amazing art that is hung at a suitable angle for viewing, in relative peace. Then you get to this really crowded room, with some famous pictures on the roof. If you concentrate on the art you will bump into people, and looking gives you a stiff neck anyway.

Probably with some stolen from the 1204 sacking of Constantinople ;)
 
I am not seeing what's so impressive about it, tbh.
Presumably because it isn't a rubble-strewn ruin of a Hellenistic temple.
 
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