HAPPY BIRTHDAY AVALON

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ON THE GROUND TBP CORRESPONDENT

I have an on the ground TBP correspondent at the Trump Rally in Wildwood today. After a hectic birthday weekend in NYC where we thought it was funny watching the impeachment hearings while sitting at the Trump Bar in Trump Tower, Avalon and her two best friends headed to Wildwood last night to observe the pandemonium surrounding a Trump rally.

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There is an unfounded rumor going around that the only reason they were going was to see Billy Jack at the Shamrock. Billy Jack is a big time Trump supporter and always announces The Burning Platform to the audience while on stage.

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Continue reading “ON THE GROUND TBP CORRESPONDENT”

26 YEARS OF WEDDED BLISS

It was 26 years ago today on a rainy cold day after Thanksgiving at Saint Patrick’s Cathedral in Norristown where I married Danielle Romano (aka Avalon). We met in Avalon, NJ. She and her friends rented the dump next to the dump me and my friends had rented for the summer. We met in 1988 and were married in 1990.

Twenty six years later, we’ve raised three boys, and we’re still happily married. She does still squeeze the toothpaste from the top and puts the toilet paper roll on backwards. But, I’ve learned to live with that. She’s learned to live with a cranky SOB.

Here’s a few pictures from the good old days before digital cameras. She still looks the same. I’m fat and bald. So it goes.


THE SPECIAL SNOWFLAKES AT WEST CHESTER UNIVERSITY ARE HIDING FROM TRUMP

Avalon has waded into the fray. She and her two best friends are at West Chester University today to attend a Donald Trump rally. The Donald is supposed to speak at 4:00 pm. I told her to start some trouble with the Black Thugs Matter protestors who are sure to be there. I want to see her on CNN. Her journalistic assignment for TBP is to record interesting aspects of the Trump phenomena and feed them to me instantaneously, so I can post them in this thread. 

Here is the first observation on campus. It seems the petrified special snowflakes are frightened by big bad Donald and are seeking safety in the office of the president. These pussies don’t feel safe around displays of the First Amendment. Imagine when these snowflakes have to make their way in the real world. With their liberal arts degrees in hand, they will feel unsafe as they man the drive thru window at Burger King or when a patron sends back a burger at TGI Fridays because it is too rare.

Remember when kids this age stormed the beaches of Normandy or got mowed down by the National Guard for protesting the Vietnam War? Now they whimper and hide in safe spaces.  

Houses on campus with anti-Trump signs

Yuuge lines forming to see Trump

Black Thugs Matter to Soros idiots are there.

Massive crowds and now riot police.


TO REBUILD OR NOT TO REBUILD, THAT IS THE QUESTION

Sorry rich people with McMansions on the beach. You are no different than the Free Shit Army that marches around West Philly collecting their Section 8 housing vouchers, food stamps, Obama phones, subsidized cable and SSDI. If you want to build a house 50 yards from the ocean, tough shit when it gets washed away. The taxpayers in Iowa and Nebraska should not be subsidizing your dumbass decision with their tax dollars so you can rebuild. The free shit has to stop because it isn’t free. You are going to see politicians across the land fork over your money by the billions without hesitiation over the next few weeks because who could possibly not help the multi-millionaire victims in Avalon and Stone Harbor.

No government entity had these costs factored into their budgets. They never do, even though natural disasters happen every year. Government drones never put money away for a rainy day. Neither do the American people. It’s the American way. Just add it to the bill and let future generations worry about the consequences of un-payable liabilities and interest on the debt. We’ll fork over the dough and homes will be rebuilt right on the ocean and bays. Nothing will change until our unsustainable economic system collapses under the immense weight of the debt. Then you’ll see what a real disaster looks like.   

Battered NJ agonizes over whether to rebuild shore

LONG BEACH TOWNSHIP, N.J. — In its tear of destruction, the megastorm Sandy left parts of New Jersey’s beloved shore in tatters, sweeping away beaches, homes, boardwalks and amusement parks.

The devastation left the state a blank canvas to redevelop its prized vacation towns. But environmentalists and shoreline planners urged the state to think about how — and if — to redevelop the shoreline as it faces an even greater threat of extreme weather.

“The next 50 to 100 years are going to be very different than what we’ve seen in the past 50 years,” said S. Jeffress Williams, a scientist emeritus at the U.S. Geological Survey’s Woods Hole Science Center in Massachusetts.

The sea level is rising fast, and destructive storms are occurring more frequently, said Williams, who expects things to get even worse.

He and other shoreline advocates say the state should consider how to protect coastal areas from furious storms when they rebuild it, such as relocating homes and businesses farther from the shore, building more seawalls and keeping sand dunes high.

How to rebuild after the disaster is becoming an issue even as New Jersey assesses its damage.

The state’s death toll from Sandy climbed to at least 14, 2 million customers remained without electricity and earth-moving equipment made its way for the first time to hard-hit barrier island communities.

National Guard members went door-to-door on Long Beach Island to check on survivors and delivered supplies to heavily flooded Hoboken. President Barack Obama, skipping campaign appearances, came to New Jersey to see the damage.

In Hoboken, a one-square-mile city on the other side of the Hudson River from New York City, at least 25 percent of the community was flooded and 90 percent was without power. National Guard troops delivered food and water as officials sent out a plea for boats and generators.

Most passenger trains were still suspended, lines were long at gas pumps, and Halloween celebrations were postponed. But there were some steps toward normalcy: many schools planned to open on Thursday, state workers were told to return to work and most New Jersey Transit buses were to resume service.

The state’s main focus was at the storied Jersey Shore, where houses were thrown from their foundations and parks and beaches were partially destroyed.

In his evening briefing Wednesday, Gov. Chris Christie reiterated that he wants to rebuild.

“I don’t believe in a state like ours, where the Jersey Shore is such a part of life, that you just pick up and walk away,” he said.

But the governor said homeowners in hard-hit areas should decide for themselves whether they want to rebuild or sell their property to the state for conservation.

The government, the Republican governor said, should not decide where rebuilding is and is not allowed.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, a Democrat, disagreed Wednesday, saying that rebuilding after Sandy should include new ways to prevent damage from future hurricanes and storms.

Shoreline advocates say there are three ways to protect the shore from extreme weather: build more jetties and seawalls, keep beaches replenished and relocate homes and businesses.

The physical solutions can help protect homes and roads, but also cut off access to the beaches or water. New Jersey is known for having a lot of protective barriers.

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers says it’s moved more than 65 million cubic yards of sand for replenishment projects in New Jersey. The state government has done additional projects without federal assistance.

Environmentalists say moving sand can cause harm to the areas it’s moved from, and might not be a good match for its new location. The supply of usable sand also is limited, they say.

“It’s like a bad drug habit,” said Chad Nelsen, the environmental director of the Surfrider Foundation, a national organization dedicated to preserving beaches and oceans. “Once you start, you can’t stop.”

Still, it seems to work. Some residents on Long Beach Island on Wednesday credited high dunes and wide beaches built as part of replenishment efforts there for keeping destruction from being even worse.

The northern barrier island that suffered the worst damage from Sandy is the longest developed stretch of New Jersey’s 127-mile coastline without the help of federal replenishment projects.

The federal government pays for much of the beach protection programs. Including state and local contributions, shore protection programs with federal involvement from Manasquan to Cape May have cost taxpayers $475 million since 1988.

Peter Kasabach, executive director of the planning advocacy group New Jersey Future, says that subsidy, along with federal flood insurance that encourages rebuilding, is problematic.

“We’ve built in places that we shouldn’t have built and now those places are becoming even more hazardous and more expensive to stay in,” he said. “As we grow and develop, we should make sure we don’t continue to invest in those places.”

He suggested bans on building in some sensitive beach areas, or requirements that homes be built farther from the ocean.

The Surfrider Foundation’s Nelsen said he hopes that New Jersey communities at least consider rebuilding in different places, which he said has never been done on a large scale in a U.S. oceanfront.

“We’re about to spend some ungodly sum of money to restore the coast,” he said. “Let’s make sure we spent it wisely.”