the "Headline That Caught My Attention or the WTF" thread

Yes, one of the myriad of pension payment options I had was higher monthly payments until I started getting SS payments. I never bet on that being there.
Someone I know working for a bank many years ago had that option and chose a higher payment for 5 years until SS eligibility made economical sense.
 
And the entire increase (and then some more) will go to buying basic item - you know, gas, food, heating oil. Most will find themselves in a worse situation than before. I just cannot understand why you keep forgetting that very important piece. But hell, it went up 5.9%.

So with that, most should be saying "Let's Go Brandon"!
 
And the entire increase (and then some more) will go to buying basic item - you know, gas, food, heating oil. Most will find themselves in a worse situation than before. I just cannot understand why you keep forgetting that very important piece. But hell, it went up 5.9%.

So with that, most should be saying "Let's Go Brandon"!
Since my SS goes right into the "Fun Money" pot, no need to evoke Brandon...
 
Since my SS goes right into the "Fun Money" pot, no need to evoke Brandon...
I was not referring to your financial status, it was a reminder of the folks that rely heavily on their SS in general and will now fall further back. But as you have asked, I will let it rest.
 
I was not referring to your financial status, it was a reminder of the folks that rely heavily on their SS in general and will now fall further back. But as you have asked, I will let it rest.
NP, I meant to type "no need for me to evoke Brandon".

For those that depend on SS as their primary source of $ in retirement, this "boon" isn't a real positive, just means there'll be less of an impact of the crazy inflation jump. Some continue to say it's "short term", but IMHO, that's a load of BS...
 
NP, I meant to type "no need for me to evoke Brandon".

For those that depend on SS as their primary source of $ in retirement, this "boon" isn't a real positive, just means there'll be less of an impact of the crazy inflation jump. Some continue to say it's "short term", but IMHO, that's a load of BS...
I share your opinion.
 
Well I'll be darned...

In the Land of the Godfather Comes a Ban on Them​

Part of the Catholic church in Sicily has imposed a three-year prohibition on naming godparents, arguing that the tradition has become merely a way to fortify family ties — and mob ties, too.

CATANIA, Italy — The mother had prepared everything for the baptism. She dressed her infant son Antonio in a handmade satin suit with tails and a matching cream-colored top hat glittering with rhinestones. She hired the photographers and bought the baby a gold cross. She booked a big buffet lunch for the whole clan at the Copacabana.

But as the parish priest in the Sicilian city of Catania went through the usual liturgy, calling on the family to renounce Satan and ladling holy water on the squirming baby’s head, one major part of the ritual went missing.

There was no godfather.

“It’s not right,” said Agata Peri, 68, little Antonio’s great-grandmother. “I definitely didn’t make this decision.”

The church did. That weekend in October, the Roman Catholic diocese of Catania enacted a three-year ban on the ancient tradition of naming godparents at baptisms and christenings. Church officials argue that the once-essential figure in a child’s Catholic education has lost all spiritual significance. Instead, they say, it has become a networking opportunity for families looking to improve their fortunes, secure endowments of gold necklaces and make advantageous connections, sometimes with local power brokers who have dozens of godchildren.

God parenting, church officials said, had fallen to earth as a secular custom between relatives or neighbors — many deficient in faith or living in sin, and was now a mere method of strengthening family ties.

And sometimes mob ties, too.

Italian prosecutors have tracked baptisms to map out how underworld bosses spread influence, and mob widows in court have saved their most poisonous spite for “the real Judases” who betray the baptismal bond. It is a transgression most associated with, well, “The Godfather,” especially the baptism scene when Michael Corleone renounces Satan in church as his henchmen whack all of his enemies.

But church officials warn that secularization more than anything led them to rub out the godparents, a Sicilian thing that’s been going on for 2,000 years, or at least since the church’s dicey first days, when sponsors known to bishops vouched for converts to prevent pagan infiltration.

“It’s an experiment,” said Msgr. Salvatore Genchi, the vicar general of Catania, as he held a copy of the ban in his office behind the city’s basilica. A godfather to at least 15 godchildren, the monsignor said he was well qualified for the role, but he estimated that 99 percent of the diocese’s godparents were not.

The break would allow the church some time to send Catania back to Catholic school, but Monsignor Genchi was not optimistic that it would stick. “It seems very difficult to me,” he said, “that one can turn back.”

In 2014, Archbishop Giuseppe Fiorini Morosini of Reggio Calabria, where the ’Ndrangheta mob is rooted, proposed a 10-year stop on godfathers, arguing in a letter to Pope Francis that a secular society had spiritually gutted the figure. That, he said, also made it ripe for exploitation by mobsters.

Archbishop Morosini said that a top Vatican official, Cardinal Giovanni Angelo Becciu, who is now on trial in the Vatican on money laundering charges, responded that all of Calabria’s bishops needed to agree before moving ahead. They did not.

But Archbishop Morosini said he kept bringing the issue up with Francis, who “showed himself very attentive” to it, and, in a meeting in May, told him, “‘Every time I see you, I remember the godfather problem.’”

The Rev. Angelo Alfio Mangano, of the Saint Maria in Ognina church in Catania, welcomed the ban, especially because it gave him a rest from spiritually questionable characters using “threats against the parish priest” to pressure him and others into naming them godfather.

Sometimes, he said, the position was used for social blackmail and usury, but mostly it became a method to enforce Sicily’s entrenched culture of ritual kinship.

“It creates a stronger tie between the families,” said Nino Sicali, 68, as he sliced a swordfish with a machete at the Catania fish market. When he was made a godfather, he said, he reciprocated by making his godson’s father a “compare” — or co-father — to his own children. Over the years, Mr. Sicali said he was obligated to help his struggling compare out financially. “He died owing me 12,000 euros,” he said.

Some families sought out godfathers who opened doors.

Salvatore Cuffaro, a former president of Sicily, said that he did not have many baptismal godchildren, “just about 20,” agreeing to only about 5 percent of requests. He was sought after, he said, for his “Christian principles,” demonstrated over decades of political life.

“Despite what some priests think, I paid attention to all of my baptismal godchildren” and instructed them to go to Catholic school, he said.

Mr. Cuffaro, nicknamed “Kiss Kiss” for his tendency to kiss everyone, served nearly five years in prison for helping alert a mafia boss that he was being wiretapped. He denied those charges and that a Mafioso had ever served as godfather to anyone on the island.

“At least in Sicily, where I have lived, this doesn’t exist,” he said. “It’s only a religious bond; there are no bonds of illegality.”

He worried that by getting rid of the tradition, the church was “throwing the baby out with the bathwater.”

Parents baptizing their children in churches across Catania on the first Sunday of the ban were likewise appalled at the loss of a beloved tradition.

“It’s shocking,” said Jalissa Testa, 21, who celebrated her son’s baptism at the Catania basilica by dancing as her husband serenaded a crowd of women waving white napkins. “In our hearts we know, and they will know, that he has a godfather.”

Marco Calderone carried his 6-month-old son, Giuseppe, past a newspaper clipping on the wall of the Saint Maria in Ognina church reading, “Baptisms and Christenings: Stop to Godfathers and Godmothers.”

“For them it might be abolished,” Mr. Calderone said. “Not for us.”

Afterward, the family posed on the church steps, and the family photographer (“You see the necklace on that baby?” the photographer said) called for the godfather to join.

“Salvo,” Mr. Calderone shouted, beckoning the unofficial godfather to join them.

Even the family that received special dispensation to have a godfather because a death in the family had delayed their previously scheduled baptism was vexed by the rule.

“I don’t understand why the church is doing this,” Ivan Arena, 29, who may be the last godfather of Catania, said after the baptism of his nephew, who was dressed in a three-piece powder blue suit and white coppola cap. “I’m for the old traditions.”

After that ceremony, the priest turned to the family across the central nave. The women shimmered in sequins and the men wore monkish mullets — short in the front, long in the back, shaved around the ears. They received no such allowance.

“What difference does it make,” said the proud father, Nicola Sparti, 24, who described his occupation as “a little bit of this, a little bit of that.” (“Flees from Carabinieri on a motorbike,” read a recent newspaper article about him.) “One day the godfather’s there and the next he’s gone. But a father is forever.”

Mr. Sparti and his wife then drove to the nearby city Aci Trezza for a photo shoot in front of the three majestic sea rocks that, legend has it, the Cyclops heaved at the fleeing Odysseus. They put Antonio in a miniature, remote-controlled white Mercedes and cheered as he cruised the port.

Above them, the Rev. Giovanni Mammino, the city’s vicar general, came out of the St. John the Baptist church after celebrating a christening. His diocese required forms from godfathers swearing that they were believers and not Mafia members. Unlike Catania, he said, his diocese had taken a middle road, allowing godparents, but not requiring them.

Now, people are slipping over the Catania border for baptisms.

“They keep coming here so that they can have the godfathers,” he said.

The Sparti family, though, had played by the rules and came only for lunch. They drove to the nearby Copacabana, where they celebrated with heaping plates of pistachio pasta, cake, gifts and generations of parents and godparents.

Alfio Motta, 22, Antonio’s uncle, watched it all from the D.J. console, thinking of what could have been.

“I feel like the godfather,” he said. “Even if I don’t have the title.”
 
Seriously, paying Consultant for Wall Pant Colors, Hanging Plants, etc??? I almost get the "Interior Designer" gig, but SPECIALISTS??? As for as Room Aroma Consultants?? Come over here when I pig out on Brussels Sprouts!!!

Some just have too much disposable income, desire for Instagram/Facebook/TikTok/Social Media Fame, and are willing to abdicate critical thinking, or any thinking to others...

Here's the headline, I won't dignify the NY Times article by posting it or the link...

Can’t Decide What Color to Paint Your Walls? There’s a Consultant for That.​

As we continue to spend more time at home, we can turn to experts for everything from decluttering to choosing houseplants or even custom-made scents for each room.
 
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Coast to Coast AM with George Noory

This Week's Weird News 10/8/21​


By Tim BinnallOct 8, 2021
f79fc341-a979-4863-81b0-eea1ddc6e07b


The Zodiac Killer possibly being identified, a drone light show that went wildly awry, and a man in Lithuania who ate over two pounds of metal were among the strange and unusual stories to cross our desk this past week.
A pair of classic mysteries found their way back into the news this past week by way of some eyebrow-raising potential breakthroughs. First, a 'lost' recording of an interview with Albert Einstein's assistant was unearthed and, in the conversation, Dr. Shirley Wright revealed that the famed physicist was enlisted to examine the Roswell wreckage and that the two of them were brought to a mysterious hanger where they saw the downed craft as well as alien beings. Meanwhile, a team of cold case investigators made worldwide headlines when they declared that they had identified the Zodiac Killer and pointed the finger at a man named Gary Francis Poste.
 
By far this past week's most bizarre story unfolded in Lithuania where stunned doctors removed more than two pounds of metal objects, like screws and nails, from the stomach of a man who told them he became compelled to eat the dangerous material after he had quit drinking. The unnamed patient explained that the strange affliction began about a month ago when he decided to embrace a sober lifestyle. However, in what is believed to be the result of alcohol withdrawal syndrome, he suddenly began scarfing down the various pieces of metal until he experienced abdominal pain and went to the hospital for help. Surgeons spent three hours removing the objects from man, who is now recovering and under observation in the hospital.
 
This is for @Chevy1 and points out what he's up against in the Classic Car Market, it ain't pretty as everyone wants a new toy, and the toys are not limited to the Muscle Cars...

Nostalgia Plus Time Equals a New Breed of Collectible Cars

That's not all that uncommon. One of the lowest priced, yet should-be-desireable cars on the market is the C4 Corvette. The less popular ones are in the $5K and under category. Yet they're still a Corvette and a fun toy for little $$$. Just don't expect them to be an investment for you. Give it to your grandkids and let them reap the benefits of time, rarity and nostalgia.
 
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