CL Redux

Discussion in 'Journals' started by schizo, Oct 9, 2009.

  1. I'm in San Francisco, I have to decide whether to go to Coit tower or down to the water to watch the Tsunami come in. There should some guys out surfing mavericks at half moon bay this morning, could be interesting.

    And just to make a crude related post, I'm wondering how all the offshore drilling rigs in California are handling the tsunami. I would imagine they are evacuating all the staff possible. Would be interesting if the tsunami causes an oil spill off the California coast.
     
    #17391     Mar 11, 2011
  2. Stay safe
     
    #17392     Mar 11, 2011
  3. schizo

    schizo

    Could we possibly get a repeat of yesterday? Spin the damn wheel!
     
    #17393     Mar 11, 2011
  4. schizo

    schizo

    Long 100.80

    Taking a gamble on this one. SL 99.80; PT 102.80
     
    #17394     Mar 11, 2011
  5. She's running
     
    #17395     Mar 11, 2011
  6. Picaso

    Picaso

    short .09

    out .15 (-6)

    107th
     
    #17396     Mar 11, 2011
  7. schizo

    schizo

    Not as poignant as yesterday, but I think the drama continues. Somebody will surely cook up some Arabian tale and let the damn jini out of the pisspot.
     
    #17397     Mar 11, 2011
  8. BCE

    BCE

    Decided to just monitor things and so far don't see any problems. (He said right before he was swept out to sea. :)) If you're swept out to sea call me on your cell before you go under. :)

    As far as Mavericks goes, I don't think this is a surfable wave. :)

    ADD I was telling tlow I almost drowned body surfing near the Wedge in Newport Beach when I was 13. Wave knocked the wind out of me and then I got swept way out there by a huge rip tide. Lifeguard saved the day. Even two surfers with boards couldn't get back to shore the rip was so strong.
     
    #17398     Mar 11, 2011
  9. BCE

    BCE


    Saudi Arabia 'day of rage' protest fizzles

    Few turn out for a 'day of rage' protest that had been talked about for weeks in Saudi Arabia. The call for demonstrations, organized on Facebook and by word of mouth, had drawn a stern response from the government.


    By Neela Banerjee, Los Angeles Times

    9:03 AM PST, March 11, 2011

    Reporting from Riyadh, Saudi Arabia


    A call for protests in Saudi Arabia that had been talked about for weeks drew only a handful of people Friday, allowing the kingdom to keep at bay for now the waves of political unrest that have battered the Middle East and North Africa.

    In the end, the "day of rage," organized on Facebook and by word of mouth, fizzled. No protests occurred in any Saudi cities except for a small demonstration in Al-Ahsa in restive Eastern province, said Maj. Gen. Mansour Turki of the Interior Ministry. Turki said he did not know if any arrests were made in connection with the Al-Ahsa protest. Human-rights activists did not return phone calls seeking comment on the events.

    The prospect of street protests in the highly conservative kingdom provoked people's curiosity, but few Saudis expected a big turnout.

    Even though Saudi Arabia has serious problems with youth unemployment, official corruption and discrimination against women and religious minorities, among other things, even the kingdom's critics do not want to overthrow the royal family. Instead they call for a gradual shift to a constitutional monarchy, a sentiment that all but saps the day of rage of its rage.

    But the near total absence of protesters also proved the efficacy of the Saudi government's relentlessly stern response to the call for demonstrations. Over the last week, the government had gathered clerics, the media, the foreign minister and Interior Ministry to assert that protests are banned and anti-Islamic, which human-rights activists deny.

    The state had pledged to shut down demonstrations swiftly. On Thursday night, Saudi security forces used percussion grenades and bullets to disperse a protest in the city of Qatif, wounding up to five people, witnesses said. Saudi activists saw the state's response in Qatif as a warning to any Saudis hoping to protest Friday.

    By early Friday morning, the government had established an overwhelming force in the capital. Riyadh's swank central Olaya district was clotted with police and security vehicles. The Al-Rajhi mosque on the outskirts of town, where small protests had occurred before, was ringed with police cars. Checkpoints were set up by the mosque and the Court of Grievances, the country's top administrative court, which abuts a proposed demonstration site. Helicopters crisscrossed the skies all day. Few Saudis were out.

    Another protest has been called for later in the month, but it remains unclear if that will draw anyone either.

    neela.banerjee@latimes.com

    Copyright © 2011, Los Angeles Times
     
    #17399     Mar 11, 2011
  10. schizo

    schizo

    Judging by the way prices are moving, I guess the Friday prayer is over. Are people out on the street yet?
     
    #17400     Mar 11, 2011