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Ten for Friday Night

Local roundup

Dave Moulton answers the age old question, why do cyclists shave their legs.

Holy City Style has some tips for translating Hollywood style to fashion that fits the streets of Chucktown.

Today JanetLee warmed the cochles of my heart:

My man-child has been out to sea since last October and returned to port last week. He is supposed to have leave this weekend so I am planning Christmas in June.

Jason asked me if I didn’t think that perhaps a tree would be over the top (he actually used some fancy smarty pants French term but I don’t know how to spell it). I gave him my you-ain’t-seen-nothing-yet look and informed him that no, I don’t think a tree is over the top and furthermore, I fully intend on dragging out the X-mas box and decorating the kitchen and back room at least.

Nate on the first lawsuit following the approval of the I believe license plates:

I really wish we could sue the fundegelical state lawmakers who are forcing us taxpayers to bear the burden of the litigation they knew they were inviting. It’s a waste of $$ that the state taxpayers cannot afford.

The Friendly Christian takes a look at Fred Phelps:

 Is Phelps no different than you and I: a sinner in need of a savior?

I can’t help but want to judge and criticize this dude, though. I believe that he is severely misrepresenting Christ, misleading the church, dividing the church, and pushing non-believers away.

This dude is a Christian. To some people, Fred Phelps is the only taste of Christianity they’ll ever experience. He will speak on behalf of every Christian. He will be the only bible that some people ever read. That scares me.

There was no surf at Folly for International Surfing Day.

BlueIon helps you brush up on your social netiquette.

Christopher Donahue:

There’s been a good bit of coverage of the recent floods in the Midwest as there should be for such a far reaching natural disaster, but it just doesn’t seem to resonate with folks who aren’t immediately impacted by it. I guess it’s because these floods happen slowly over the course of days and weeks unlike other natural disasters that reshape lives and landscapes in an instant like hurricanes and earthquakes.

Hugging the Coast draws conclusions about trends in American cuisine based on this year’s James Beard Awards.

Chad asks, are green taxis coming to Charleston?

Heather @ June 20, 2008

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