Sale in Baldwin Farms

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33 Baldwin Farms S., closed at $3.4 million, which should please the owners; I’d have thought it would fetch less. It sold for $4.3 million in 2001 and $3.995 in 2010, so the trend has been down. These owners started at break even —$4.195 — in 2017, but eventually came around, and when they did, so did a buyer.

Sometimes Photoshop can be a bit too twee, but at least there isn’t a big-eyed doe and her cute-as-a-button fawn planted on the lawn. (Or, for cynical realists, a raging forest fire coming in from the north)

Sometimes Photoshop can be a bit too twee, but at least there isn’t a big-eyed doe and her cute-as-a-button fawn planted on the lawn. (Or, for cynical realists, a raging forest fire coming in from the north)

Chimney closes

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18 Chimney Corner, which I’ve written about here off and on when it first hit the market in 2005 at $18.5 (or was it $23 back then?), finally dropped to $6.750 million and according to listing agent Barbara Wells, immediately drew four offers; it just closed today for $6.8. Price it, sell it.

Great piece of land, even if the house is destined for the dumpster.

UPDATE: Barbara Wells informs me that the buyer, like at least one other bidder, likes the house and intends to keep it. The sales price reflects the property’s land value, I’d say, so if the buyer gets a house to live in as well, then the deal was qn incredible bargain.

Michael Moore set out to make a movie about renewable energy, and you won't believe what happened next

I’m ticked

I’m ticked

Someone’s been feeding the gullible a line of organic, bio-degradable buffalo chips.

LOS ANGELES (AP) — What if alternative energy isn’t all it’s cracked up to be? That’s the provocative question explored in the documentary “Planet of the Humans,” which is backed and promoted by filmmaker Michael Moore and directed by one of his longtime collaborators. It premiered last week at his Traverse City Film Festival.

The film, which does not yet have distribution, is a low-budget but piercing examination of what the filmmakers say are the false promises of the environmental movement and why we’re still “addicted” to fossil fuels. Director Jeff Gibbs takes on electric cars, solar panels, windmills, biomass, biofuel, leading environmentalist groups like the Sierra Club, and even figures from Al Gore and Van Jones, who served as Barack Obama’s special adviser for green jobs, to 350.org leader Bill McKibben, a leading environmentalist and advocate for grassroots climate change movements.

Gibbs, who produced Moore’s “Bowling for Columbine” and “Fahrenheit 9/11,” didn’t set out to take on the environmental movement. He said he wanted to know why things weren’t getting better. But when he started pulling on the thread, he and Moore said they were shocked to find how inextricably entangled alternative energy is with coal and natural gas, since they say everything from wind turbines to electric car charging stations are tethered to the grid, and even how two of the Koch brothers — Charles and David — are tied to solar panel production through their glass production business.

“It turned out the wakeup call was about our own side,” Gibbs said in a phone interview. “It was kind of crushing to discover that the things I believed in weren’t real, first of all, and then to discover not only are the solar panels and wind turbines not going to save us ... but (also) that there is this whole dark side of the corporate money ... It dawned on me that these technologies were just another profit center.”

….

It’s part of the reason why they had to make it independently. Gibbs said he tried for years to get an environmental group on board to help offset the costs, only to be turned down at every door. He was further disheartened when, in the film, he approaches people like Jones, McKibben and a local Sierra Club leader, and asks them about their stance on biofuel and biomass. Biomass, like wood and garbage, can be used to produce heat and is considered a renewable source of energy. It can also be converted to gas or liquid biofuels that can be burned for energy.

He finds every one ill-prepared to comment on their stance about the biomass process, which the documentary says requires cutting down enormous numbers of trees to produce the woodchips that are converted into energy. Neither Jones nor McKibben responded to request for comment from The Associated Press.

…. “It’s up to people who actually share the same values to sometimes call each other out and bring out the uncomfortable truths,” Gibbs said. “This is not a film by climate change deniers, this is a film by people who really care about the environment.”

Although the findings will be disheartening, both Gibbs and Moore say they hope that it inspires people to reset and start thinking differently.

“Now we can begin to come up with the right solutions that might make a difference ... The film doesn’t have the answers but it will get us asking a better set of questions,” Gibbs said. “I really do trust that when millions of people are discussing an issue, answers will emerge ... This is what we do as humans, we solve problems, but we’ve got to have the right questions.”

___

It would be the greatest home improvement in years

“Sod off, Swampy”

“Sod off, Swampy”

Gown the drain: Trump wants to turn back the clock and bring back dishwashers that work. Will washing machines be in the next cycle of regulatory reforms?

For years, consumers have complained about slower, noisier dishwashers that produce dirtier dishes, the result of tighter federal efficiency regulations that the Trump administration is now seeking to unload.

The Energy Department last month proposed a rule to create a new dishwasher product class that would finish a normal cycle in an hour or less by using less stringent energy standards than permitted under the current rules.

Sam Kazman, general counsel of the free-market Competitive Enterprise Institute, which led the charge for the regulatory clean-up, said the ever-tighter restrictions on energy and water have produced machines that take twice as long without getting dishes as scrubbed as earlier models.

“Basically, these dishwashers have turned into crap, and it is solely the result of the Department of Energy’s so-called efficiency regulations,” said Mr. Kazman.

He cited data from Consumer Reports showing that average wash times have increased from about 70 minutes in 1983 to 140 minutes in 2018 as manufacturers slow down the cycles to “compensate for the negative impact on cleaning performance,” as the department acknowledged in 2016.

Naturally, the global warming hysterics are screaming, but these are the same people who imposed this nonsense on us in the first place, using the equally-erroneous claim that we were going to run out of oil by the year 2000, and their next tactic will be to call the move “racist”.

The real point of regulations like these, like bans on plastic straws and mandatory composting is to exert governmental control over the plebes and remind them who’s boss. Inconveniencing the citizens is intended, as a plastic straw banner said recently, while acknowledging that the ban itself was useless, “to get people thinking about the environment”. And to instill a sense of self-righteous superiority in the woke set.

Joe Biden explains why Democrat policies are so hard to understand

Oops! I did it agin.

Oops! I did it agin.

“We choose truth over facts”. Some are labelling this another gaffe by the dork, but the crowd cheers him saying it, and I think he and they are on the same page: better “truthie truths” than hard, unpleasant facts. Perhaps someone had lectured them on the economics of wind power, say, before Jolted Joe took the stage.

Old Greenwich sale price reported

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21 Hendrie Drive, $2.175 million. The owners priced it at $2.650 in April but quickly adjusted accordingly. Smart move.

Purchased new for $2.095 in 2001 so even throwing in transaction costs the sellers didn’t do badly for eighteen years of living here. Of course, for sellers, it’s a bit discouraging to see prices back to 2001 levels, but things could be an have been worse.

Exactly as intended, Trump supporters doxxed by Congressman Joaquin Castro start receiving threats

We know who you are, and we’re coming

We know who you are, and we’re coming

The hatred is building; imagine the fever pitch that will have been reached by November, 2020. And beyond. The tape’s at the link. Here’s the transcript:

"Hi! I see that you've donated the most allowable by federal law to Donald Trump. I think you're a scumbag and I f***ing despise everything you stand for. I plan on calling you and filling up your voicemail with a bunch of bulls***, so enjoy that. I will make sure to post this number and extension all over the Internet. F*** you very much, f*** you for your racist bulls***, and f*** you for being scared of your fellow human beings. I think you're a scumbag. It's pretty apparent that all you do is make money off other people's sales of their property because you have no f***ing worth of your own. So why don't you go f*** yourself, and have a terrible day. Goodbye."

Yesterday, Twitter suspended Mitch McConnell’s account after his staff posted a video of BLM demonstrators outside his house at 2:00 AM, screaming, “put stake through the motherfucker’s heart” among other endearments. Why? Because, just as Bureau of Land Management employees are incapable of being racist, they also can’t hate, so the tape had to be fake. At least, I assume that’s why Twitter is shutting down the conservatives; it’s to protect the rest of us, for our own good.