02
Peter Capaldi painting of Clara Oswald

03

It began snowing and has snowed every day in December.


05
Bitcoin hits $103,291.00

BTC hits $100K.

Macron vows not to step aside after fall of French government.

2 kindergartners in critical condition after gunman opens fire at school in Oroville California.

Medical Insurance CEO assasinated in Manhatten; Sharpie message on three bullets were "Deny" "Defend" and "Depose" referring to the way insurance companies deny claims. A large portion of America thought this was "a good start" while nervous medical insurance CEO's start wondering if there will be 13 of these incidents like there was with the London Gold Scandal.


08

"It is one big struggle when the CEO of a medical insurance company gets shot in NYC, as when Yemeni rebels block the Red Sea, Georgians fight for their independence, Palestinians seek liberation, Venezuela insists on electing its leadership, students in universities the world over protest America’s genocide enforcement, and people fight the twisted beauty models put up by Hollywood and the advertising and plastic surgery industries." - Alon Mizrahi


14
Boring machines are everywhere now

...cutting tunnels for underground rail systems. Besides Musk's Hyperloop, several countries are now completing ot srarting new subway tunnels.


21
Shane Ede dies at 77

RIP - Dec 17 1947 - Dec 21 2024


27
Tom Baker's dog

28
Nat Geo Photo of the year

29
Jimmy Carter dies at 100

"For decades, you could walk into Maranatha Baptist Church in Plains, Georgia on some Sunday mornings and see hundreds of tourists from around the world crammed into the pews. And standing in front of them, asking with a wink if there were any visitors that morning, would be President Jimmy Carter – preparing to teach Sunday school, just like he had done for most of his adult life.

Some who came to hear him speak were undoubtedly there because of what President Carter accomplished in his four years in the White House – the Camp David Accords he brokered that reshaped the Middle East; the work he did to diversify the federal judiciary, including nominating a pioneering women’s rights activist and lawyer named Ruth Bader Ginsburg to the federal bench; the environmental reforms he put in place, becoming one of the first leaders in the world to recognize the problem of climate change.

Others were likely there because of what President Carter accomplished in the longest, and most impactful, post-presidency in American history – monitoring more than 100 elections around the world; helping virtually eliminate Guinea worm disease, an infection that had haunted Africa for centuries; becoming the only former president to earn a Nobel Peace Prize; and building or repairing thousands of homes in more than a dozen countries with his beloved Rosalynn as part of Habitat for Humanity.

But I’m willing to bet that many people in that church on Sunday morning were there, at least in part, because of something more fundamental: President Carter’s decency.

Elected in the shadow of Watergate, Jimmy Carter promised voters that he would always tell the truth. And he did – advocating for the public good, consequences be damned. He believed some things were more important than reelection – things like integrity, respect, and compassion. Because Jimmy Carter believed, as deeply as he believed anything, that we are all created in God’s image.

Whenever I had a chance to spend time with President Carter, it was clear that he didn’t just profess these values. He embodied them. And in doing so, he taught all of us what it means to live a life of grace, dignity, justice, and service. In his Nobel acceptance speech, President Carter said, “God gives us the capacity for choice. We can choose to alleviate suffering. We can choose to work together for peace.” He made that choice again and again over the course of his 100 years, and the world is better for it.

Maranatha Baptist Church will be a little quieter on Sundays, but President Carter will never be far away – buried alongside Rosalynn next to a willow tree down the road, his memory calling all of us to heed our better angels. Michelle and I send our thoughts and prayers to the Carter family, and everyone who loved and learned from this remarkable man."

- President Barack Obama