Delaware Dem
Delaware Dem's Latest Posts
Saturday Daily Delawhere [12.6.14]
A birdhouse at Buckley’s Tavern, made to look like the tavern itself, on Kennett Pike in Centreville. Photo by xzmattzx on Flickr.
Friday Daily Delawhere [12.5.14]
A farm on Wheatleys Pond Road in Duck Creek Hundred. Photo by xzmattzx on Flickr.
I Don’t Know What to Say
All I know to say involves having no further respect for any law enforcement officer any where until such time as they deal with both Darren Wilson and the scumbag fuck who choked Eric Gardner to death in a fashion befitting their crimes.
Thursday Daily Delawhere [12.4.14]
The former Rollins Tower, on Concord Pike in Fairfax. A Bank of the Month has the naming rights now. Photo by xzmattzx on Flickr.
Wednesday Open Thread [12.3.14]
Americans are narcissists. Self centered. Especially when it comes to their income, economic well being. They know how much things cost, and the costs usually always rise. They know how much they make, and that usually doesn’t rise, especially in this Reagan Anti-Middle Class Era that began in the 1980’s. When they are making enough money to afford things, Americans are happy. See mid to late 1980’s and mid to late 1990’s and early 2000’s for proof of that. When they are not, they are not.
First Read: “It’s possible — though hardly a certainty — that lower gas prices over a sustained period of time finally begin to change the public’s perception about the U.S. economy. After all, the economy has produced 200,000-plus jobs in each of the past nine months; GDP for the last quarter was revised up to a healthy 3.9%; and the unemployment rate has declined from 7.0% in Nov. 2013 to 5.8% now. But many Americans haven’t been FEELING that improvement, due in large part to wages not keeping up with the cost of living.”
“Politically, an improving economy helps the president and his party. (It also makes it harder to say the health-care law has stifled the economy.) And in macroeconomic terms, lower gas prices serve as a kind of economic stimulus — which Congress doesn’t have to pass or finance. Yet more importantly, they’re an easier way for Americans to ASSESS the state of the economy. The monthly jobs report might not mean a thing to them, but they can see when it costs just $35 to $40 to fill up their tank each week when it used to cost $50.”
Tuesday Open Thread [12.2.14]
E. J. Dionne, Jr.: “Now, it will be a Republican Congress vs. a Democratic president. Voters will have a much easier time seeing who stands for what…Obama and progressives should spend the next two years accomplishing as many useful things as they can, blocking regressive actions by Congress, and clarifying the choices facing the nation’s voters. And they’ll get much further by doing all three at once.”
We’re Back
Apologies to our loyal readers for the break we took over the past Thanksgiving week. Personally I had five days of real work packed into two and a half days, then we had thirty family members to visit and two Thanksgivings meals to attend and leaves to rake and Christmas decorations to put up and roofs to climb and lights to hang. Come to think of it, I need another week off.
So since you did not have an Open Thread for some time, have this one….
Monday Daily Delawhere [12.1.14]
The facade of Hercules Plaza in Wilmington. Photo by xzmattzx on Flickr.
Sunday Daily Delawhere [11.30.14]
The Kent County Courthouse, on The Green in Dover. The courthouse was built in 1875, and sits on the site of a colonial tavern. Photo by xzmattzx on Flickr.
Saturday Daily Delawhere [11.29.14]
The Old Academy, at 4th & Main Streets in Odessa. The building was completed in 1844, and has been used as a public school and a library. Photo by xzmattzx on Flickr.
Black Friday Daily Delawhere [11.28.14]
The Plank House, off of Main Street in Smyrna. The house is believed to have been built in the 1700s, and was originally located farther north on Main Street. It was moved behind the Barracks, another of Smyrna’s historic buildings, in the 1990s. Photo by xzmattzx on Flickr.


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