photo by Alison Church. www.alisonchurch.com
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Drinking the Kool-Aid or the Malt liquor??
Just a few things before this show is over. I always have an opinion on just about everything and this is my final rant about this election and all of the craziness that has ensued.
- I worked at an Obama campaign office yesterday calling voters making sure they knew where their polling station was and asking if they needed a ride there. Most people were happy and talk to me and many had already voted. One 70/80 something woman said she hated Obama and said he was a charlatan. Now that’s a word I haven’t heard that word in a long time. Then she proceeded to tell me that he was risky(HOW??) and hung around with bad people(Do you mean that Ayers guy that he worked with on that REPUBLICAN education project?). Then she brought out the clincher! She said, “It’s not because he is black!” OK folks let me tell you something. If your reason(s) for not voting for him dosen’t include “Because he is black” please don’t mention it! As soon as you say, “It isn’t because he is black” it is painfully obvious that that is the reason. Just shut your pie-hole ok!!!
- The concept of Palin energizing the Republican “base” mystifies me. I consider the Republican base the bottom-of-the-barrel extremists right wingers. Do you know what else comes from the bottom of the barrel? Malt Liquor. That is what remains after the good beer has been brewed and bottled. These are your go-to people that you are so glad you could energize?? They are the Mickey’s widemouths of your party!!!!! These are the very same people who don’t let their kids read Harry Potter. Ariana Huffington calls then the LUNATIC FRINGE and that is a really good description.
- I came to my voting decision after a lot of fact checking and numbers running. Not because I drank the Kool-Aid or believed the hype. McCain’s tax breaks don’t help me because I am MIDDLE CLASS!!!! I am sure most of us don’t fall into the $250K pack. He is a vet himself but I have seen too many troops struggling to get by after returning from war. This Republican administration has failed them most of all. Find out the facts please!
- I did not vote Obama because he is black. Alan Keyes wants to be our leader too but you won’t find me writing him in on my ballot because of the shade of his skin. If race was the case this fool would be talked about more and it would be a split decision in the black community over who we wanted in office.
Now I will shut up. And wait and see…
Life in the Slow Lane
Until I move to Joe’s midtown address I am facing a daily commute to the office of 11 miles each way. We all know that you get better miledge on the highway than on the streets, so I have changed my usual exit to one closer to my job as school is out and the highway traffic has thinned out. With current fuel cost drama I am looking at every way to save pennies when I am filling up my Jetta and I found something out that really does save gas. SLOW DOWN. It turns out that being a led foot is a sure fire way to burn through the fuel in your tank.
My gage has been at a little over 1/2 a tank since Monday and as of Wednesday it has only budged a bit. Just to warn you all I am the silver Jetta on the westside of 285 only going 60-65mph. I am in the far right lane so don’t yell at me.
I am reposting an article I found on CNN Money this past April. Happy reading and I hope to see you all in the slow lane!
by Peter Valdes-Dapena
Tuesday, April 1, 2008
provided by
CNN Money
Speeding on the highway adds a surprising amount to your fuel costs.
With gas prices rising, gas-saving advice abounds: Drive more gently, don’t carry extra stuff in your trunk, combine your shopping trips.
This is all sound advice but there’s one driving tip that will probably save you more gas than all the others, especially if you spend a lot of time on the highway: Slow down.
In a typical family sedan, every 10 miles per hour you drive over 60 is like the price of gasoline going up about 54 cents a gallon. That figure will be even higher for less fuel-efficient vehicles that go fewer miles on a gallon to start with.
The reason is as clear as the air around you.
When cruising on the highway, your car will be in its highest gear with the engine humming along at relatively low rpm’s. All your car needs to do is maintain its speed by overcoming the combined friction of its own moving parts, the tires on the road surface and, most of all, the air flowing around, over and under it.
Pushing air around actually takes up about 40% of a car’s energy at highway speeds, according to Roger Clark, a fuel economy engineer for General Motors.
Traveling faster makes the job even harder. More air builds up in front of the vehicle, and the low pressure “hole” trailing behind gets bigger, too. Together, these create an increasing suction that tends to pull back harder and harder the faster you drive. The increase is actually exponential, meaning wind resistance rises much more steeply between 70 and 80 mph than it does between 50 and 60.
Every 10 mph faster reduces fuel economy by about 4 mpg, a figure that remains fairly constant regardless of vehicle size, Clark said. (It might seem that a larger vehicle, with more aerodynamic drag, would see more of an impact. But larger vehicles also tend to have larger, more powerful engines that can more easily cope with the added load.)
That’s where that 54 cents a gallon estimate comes from. If a car gets 28 mpg at 65 mph, driving it at 75 would drop that to 24 mpg. Fuel costs over 100 miles, for example – estimated at $3.25 a gallon – would increase by $1.93, or the cost of an additional 0.6 gallons of gas. That would be like paying 54 cents a gallon more for each of the 3.6 gallons used at 65 mph. That per-gallon price difference remains constant over any distance.
Engineers at Consumer Reports magazine tested this theory by driving a Toyota Camry sedan and a Mercury Mountaineer SUV at various set cruising speeds on a stretch of flat highway. Driving the Camry at 75 mph instead of 65 dropped fuel economy from 35 mpg to 30. For the Mountaineer, fuel economy dropped from 21 to 18.
Over the course of a 400-mile road trip, the Camry driver would spend about $6.19 more on gas at the higher speed and Mountaineer driver would spend an extra $10.32.
Driving even slower, say 55 mph, could save slightly more gas. In fact, the old national 55 mph speed limit, instituted in 1974, was a response to the period’s energy crisis.
It was about more than just high gas prices, though. The crisis of the time involved literal gasoline shortages due to an international embargo. Gas stations were sometimes left with none to sell, and gas sales had to be rationed. The crisis passed, but the national 55 mph speed limit stayed on the books until the law was loosened in the 1980s. It was finally dropped altogether in 1995. (The law stuck around more because of an apparent safety benefit than for fuel saving.)
Despite today’s high gas prices, don’t expect to see a return to the national 55 mph speed limit. The law was unpopular in its day, and higher speeds have become so institutionalized that even the Environmental Protection Agency’s fuel economy test cycle now includes speeds of up to 80 mph.
Driving 10 miles per hour faster, assuming you don’t lose time getting pulled over for a speeding ticket, does have the advantage of getting you to your destination 50 minutes sooner on that 400 mile trip. Whether that time difference is worth the added cost and risk is, ultimately, up to you.
Copyrighted, CNNMoney. All Rights Reserved
Beerfest Enjoyed by All
We had loads of fun at Beerfest. The weather was perfect and apparently the fear of rain kept the early birds away which allowed us to get a jump on the beverages. We took MARTA (ITSMARTA)down to the park and had a blast.
So many vendors were there. Our first stop was to one of our favorites, Sam Adams. He has a cherry wheat that is new and amazing. I usually avoid the fruity but this one will be added to my list.
Nothing like the backdrop of downtown Atlanta for a pretty picture. 
This guy was dressed to drink. He was the only person we saw in a kilt. I was only the second person to ask to take his photo. I am sure he got many more requests as the day progressed. 
Joe’s hat was the best though. You can get your own at http://www.moderndrunkard.com
There was dancing and much tomfoolery.
Some of our favorite brews were:
Duckrabbit
Dogfish
Longhammer
Guinness(of course)
Fire Rock(a Hawaiian brand. Very tasty!)
Carta Blanca
Widmer
Terrapin(Athens brew)
Brooklyn
Safe Ride America was there to help those who had actually driven. Why would you do such a thing??


