Winds of Change.NET: Liberty. Discovery. Humanity. Victory.

Formal Affiliations
  • Anti-Idiotarian Manifesto
  • Euston Democratic Progressive Manifesto
  • Real Democracy for Iran!
  • Support Denamrk
  • Million Voices for Darfur
  • milblogs
Syndication
 Subscribe in a reader

The Last Samurai

| 2 Comments
Since it's about 65 degrees in Florida, I'm not doing a lot of scuba diving. Then again, I don't have to watch 55 year old men on the beach in Speedos, either, as they demonstrate the Law of Conservation of Hair ("hair is neither created nor destroyed on men as they age - it just changes its location"). What I did do on Wednesday is go see The Last Samurai. I was going to write a post on how it's better than many of the reviews, but Eric S. Raymond has said everything I wanted to say and offers a fine history lesson to boot. FYI, if you want to learn more about the real Samurai leader Saigo Takamori and his rebellion against the Meiji Emperor, use the web. The city of Kagoshima's page and Ridgeback Press' Meiji Restoration personalities site are both helpful. Appropriately, however, one of the most informative write ups comes from U.S. Marine Corps veteran Sensei D. E. Tarver.

2 Comments

Conservation of Hair, so that's what it's called. I've had the theory that while my hairline is receding, hair sprouts up in new places. What, I have to shave my ear lobes now? I have expanded the research on this and can say that there is also a correlation between the particular location of hair loss and the new appearence of hair growth. Hair receding back from the forehead reappears in the earlobe to back of neck and shoulder areas. While the yamaka express/skull cap bald pattern hair loss pattern reappears on the back for the Rhodesian, err... Zimbabwian ridgeback look.

What, do you want photos?

I liked it too, mostly, but posted some thoughts on it, here and here.

Leave a comment

Here are some quick tips for adding simple Textile formatting to your comments, though you can also use proper HTML tags:

*This* puts text in bold.

_This_ puts text in italics.

bq. This "bq." at the beginning of a paragraph, flush with the left hand side and with a space after it, is the code to indent one paragraph of text as a block quote.

To add a live URL, "Text to display":http://windsofchange.net/ (no spaces between) will show up as Text to display. Always use this for links - otherwise you will screw up the columns on our main blog page.




Recent Comments
  • TM Lutas: Jobs' formula was simple enough. Passionately care about your users, read more
  • sabinesgreenp.myopenid.com: Just seeing the green community in action makes me confident read more
  • Glen Wishard: Jobs was on the losing end of competition many times, read more
  • Chris M: Thanks for the great post, Joe ... linked it on read more
  • Joe Katzman: Collect them all! Though the French would be upset about read more
  • Glen Wishard: Now all the Saudis need is a division's worth of read more
  • mark buehner: Its one thing to accept the Iranians as an ally read more
  • J Aguilar: Saudis were around here (Spain) a year ago trying the read more
  • Fred: Good point, brutality didn't work terribly well for the Russians read more
  • mark buehner: Certainly plausible but there are plenty of examples of that read more
  • Fred: They have no need to project power but have the read more
  • mark buehner: Good stuff here. The only caveat is that a nuclear read more
  • Ian C.: OK... Here's the problem. Perceived relevance. When it was 'Weapons read more
  • Marcus Vitruvius: Chris, If there were some way to do all these read more
  • Chris M: Marcus Vitruvius, I'm surprised by your comments. You're quite right, read more
The Winds Crew
Town Founder: Left-Hand Man: Other Winds Marshals
  • 'AMac', aka. Marshal Festus (AMac@...)
  • Robin "Straight Shooter" Burk
  • 'Cicero', aka. The Quiet Man (cicero@...)
  • David Blue (david.blue@...)
  • 'Lewy14', aka. Marshal Leroy (lewy14@...)
  • 'Nortius Maximus', aka. Big Tuna (nortius.maximus@...)
Other Regulars Semi-Active: Posting Affiliates Emeritus:
Winds Blogroll
Author Archives
Categories
Powered by Movable Type 4.23-en