6 thoughts on “Signs Big Left Has Solved All The Real Problems

  1. It will be some time before I go to Minneapolis for dinner and some beers.

    In the summer I like to take out of town customers to Physco Suzie’s and sit out on the deck.

    If they make it through the Walz clampdown, and I hope they do, I sure hope they don’t charge their tiki bar theme.

    If they change, it’s another establishment I will not go to.

  2. FreschFisch: Suzies will likely make it through, but the owner closed down Betty Danger’s for good back in May. She’s connected and will likely be in the front of the line for money from the state and city when it gets handed out.

    On a side note, if you’re looking for similar places along the river, Sample Room is great and just a few blocks north of Psycho Suzies. And, Pyres Brewing is nearby as is 56 Brewing – both with great patios.

  3. FreschFisch: It will be even longer before I go to Minneapolis for anything. Moved to Texas. They still have the silly mask mandate, but if you go to a restaurant you can take it off to eat and drink. And maybe for once in over 30 years, I will be able to vote for a rep in the state or federal level who at least has a chance of getting elected that isn’t slim or none.

  4. I got out of St Paul and Ramsey after 29 years a year and a half ago.

    I’m ten or so years from retirement. I’m thinking the Black Hills of South Dakota or Sioux Falls area.

  5. FRESCH;
    Good for you! I’m leaning the same way. After all, if South Dakota is good enough for loser Mark Dayton to park his trust fund money, it’s good enough for me. Like him, I’m only to pay so much for a “better Minnesota”.

  6. This is as real as Polynesian culture gets: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JKwARgG6hiw
    It’s not truly authentic, tho. Hawaiian culture was erased in the early 19th century & then recreated in the 1870s. The recreated version is heavily influenced by western contact. Note that the female hula dancers in the video where long dresses.
    What does it mean to be authentic, anyhow? There are people in Hawaii who claim that the original Hawaiian culture was not completely erased, that it was passed on in secret through the generations while it was officially suppressed, but how do we know for sure? If some Kahuna says that a certain ceremony must be carried out in a certain fashion, how do we know that he is not just making it up as he goes along?

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