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Paintings by Trayc Claybrook and Deanna Wood

 

Fort Worth Community Arts Center

May 8 - June 20, 2009

remnants of the painting that had to be redone because the wax pulled away from the board

Teardown/Buildup .... long time coming.

Paintings by Trayc Claybrook and Deanna Wood

 

Fort Worth Community Arts Center

May 8 - June 20, 2009

Philadelphia, November 15 – In response to a significant U.S. military buildup near Venezuela, over a dozen Philadelphia organizations joined more than 60 coordinated actions in 8 countries to demand “No War on Venezuela!” and to oppose growing U.S. intervention in Latin America and the Caribbean. The local peace and social justice coalition held a rally and march starting at City Hall and ending in front of a U.S. military recruiting center to call for the withdrawal of U.S. military forces from the region and for the establishment of a genuine Zone of Peace in the Americas.

 

The coalition asserts that the overt threats of regime change in Venezuela and Colombia constitute a blatant violation of international law and the sovereignty of nations. They draw a direct line between militarism abroad and repression at home, highlighting increased defense spending while critical domestic programs like SNAP benefits and healthcare face cuts.

 

The Philadelphia demonstration against U.S. imperialist aggression was organized and endorsed by Anakbayan, Black Alliance for Peace, Code Pink, Democratic Socialist of America, Free Congo, Freedom Road Socialist Organization, International Concerned Family & Friends of Mumia Abu-Jamal, Juntos, Koreans for Decolonialization Penn, Korea Peace Committee, Mobilization4Mumia, Philadelphia Palestine Coalition, Philly Bund, and Workers World Party.

 

The actions come as the United States deploys an aircraft carrier battle group, including destroyers, jet fighters, and nuclear submarines, to the Caribbean. Over 67 people have been extra judiciously killed by the US strikes on boats in the Caribbean so far. The Trump regime has openly called for the military overthrow of Venezuela's President Maduro and the replacement of Colombia's President Petro, following decades of hybrid warfare against the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela.

 

“This is a build-up to another endless U.S. war – a war to militarize the whole Western Hemisphere,” said Sara Flounders of the Workers World Party, a rally organizer. “Meanwhile, the use of Federal troops and thousands of ICE agents in raids and mass arrests, along with massive increases in health costs and cuts to government services, are an attack on all working people in the U.S.”

 

Activists condemn the U.S. government's justification for the escalation. Trump’s narrative of “narcoterrorism operations” have resulted in six recent missile strikes off the coast of Venezuela that have extrajudiciously killed over 67 people, with no due process. They argue this pretext masks the true economic motives behind the aggression.

 

“This move towards all-out war has nothing to do with drug trafficking, cartels or the wellbeing of Americans facing a drug crisis,” stated Joe Lombardo, Co-Coordinator of the United National Antiwar Coalition (UNAC). “Venezuela possesses the greatest known oil reserves in the world. The Venezuelan government refuses to be dominated by the U.S. and is determined to use its own oil, gas, and mineral resources for the benefit of its own people, not for U.S. corporations.”

 

The message from the growing movement is clear: it is time for the public to take to the streets to resist these government and corporate attacks on the people of Latin America and the Caribbean, and to stop the simultaneous militarization and repression of people within the United States.

 

About the Coalition:

This nationwide mobilization is supported by over 35 organizations: United National Antiwar Coalition, Venezuela Solidarity Network, US Peace Council, All-African People’s Party-GC, All-African People’s Party, Alliance for Global Justice, Code Pink, Chicago ALBA Solidarity, Nicaragua Solidarity Coalition, Peace and Solidarity Commission of the Communist Party USA, School of the Americas Watch, Task Force on the Americas, Alberto Lovera Bolivarian Circle, Freedom Road Socialist Organization, Minnesota Solidarity Network of the Americas, Sanctions Kill Campaign, Workers World Party, Periodismo de Verdad, Resist U.S. Led War, Honduras Solidarity Network, Cross Border Network, National Network on Cuba, Black Alliance for Peace, Anti War Action Network, Women Against Military Madness, Kawsachun News, Popular Resistance, International Action Center, Casa Baltimore Limay, Friends of Latin America. Veterans For Peace, Orinoco Tribune, Los Ronderos de las Redes, Diáspora Pa’lante Collective, Peoples Power Assembly, Rochester Committee on Latin America (ROCLA), Green Renaissance-Sovereign Rights Movement, Struggle for Socialism Party, Harriet Tubman Center for Social Justice

Evolución Abril 2019-Febrero 2020 en minifundio cortado en zona carretera Fragoselo afectada por #IIFF octubre 2017 #BuildUp

My second HDR taken a few days later.

 

Nikon D3000 with 18-105mm Lens at 52mm (35mm equiv = 78mm) and polarising filter

 

1/100s, 1/25s, 1/400s (HDR) at f/11, ISO 100 - with Tripod

He is building up his blocks today and soon he will be building up his own life tomorrow...while I am and will be always worried about the whole process.

View Large On Black

Philadelphia, November 15 – In response to a significant U.S. military buildup near Venezuela, over a dozen Philadelphia organizations joined more than 60 coordinated actions in 8 countries to demand “No War on Venezuela!” and to oppose growing U.S. intervention in Latin America and the Caribbean. The local peace and social justice coalition held a rally and march starting at City Hall and ending in front of a U.S. military recruiting center to call for the withdrawal of U.S. military forces from the region and for the establishment of a genuine Zone of Peace in the Americas.

 

The coalition asserts that the overt threats of regime change in Venezuela and Colombia constitute a blatant violation of international law and the sovereignty of nations. They draw a direct line between militarism abroad and repression at home, highlighting increased defense spending while critical domestic programs like SNAP benefits and healthcare face cuts.

 

The Philadelphia demonstration against U.S. imperialist aggression was organized and endorsed by Anakbayan, Black Alliance for Peace, Code Pink, Democratic Socialist of America, Free Congo, Freedom Road Socialist Organization, International Concerned Family & Friends of Mumia Abu-Jamal, Juntos, Koreans for Decolonialization Penn, Korea Peace Committee, Mobilization4Mumia, Philadelphia Palestine Coalition, Philly Bund, and Workers World Party.

 

The actions come as the United States deploys an aircraft carrier battle group, including destroyers, jet fighters, and nuclear submarines, to the Caribbean. Over 67 people have been extra judiciously killed by the US strikes on boats in the Caribbean so far. The Trump regime has openly called for the military overthrow of Venezuela's President Maduro and the replacement of Colombia's President Petro, following decades of hybrid warfare against the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela.

 

“This is a build-up to another endless U.S. war – a war to militarize the whole Western Hemisphere,” said Sara Flounders of the Workers World Party, a rally organizer. “Meanwhile, the use of Federal troops and thousands of ICE agents in raids and mass arrests, along with massive increases in health costs and cuts to government services, are an attack on all working people in the U.S.”

 

Activists condemn the U.S. government's justification for the escalation. Trump’s narrative of “narcoterrorism operations” have resulted in six recent missile strikes off the coast of Venezuela that have extrajudiciously killed over 67 people, with no due process. They argue this pretext masks the true economic motives behind the aggression.

 

“This move towards all-out war has nothing to do with drug trafficking, cartels or the wellbeing of Americans facing a drug crisis,” stated Joe Lombardo, Co-Coordinator of the United National Antiwar Coalition (UNAC). “Venezuela possesses the greatest known oil reserves in the world. The Venezuelan government refuses to be dominated by the U.S. and is determined to use its own oil, gas, and mineral resources for the benefit of its own people, not for U.S. corporations.”

 

The message from the growing movement is clear: it is time for the public to take to the streets to resist these government and corporate attacks on the people of Latin America and the Caribbean, and to stop the simultaneous militarization and repression of people within the United States.

 

About the Coalition:

This nationwide mobilization is supported by over 35 organizations: United National Antiwar Coalition, Venezuela Solidarity Network, US Peace Council, All-African People’s Party-GC, All-African People’s Party, Alliance for Global Justice, Code Pink, Chicago ALBA Solidarity, Nicaragua Solidarity Coalition, Peace and Solidarity Commission of the Communist Party USA, School of the Americas Watch, Task Force on the Americas, Alberto Lovera Bolivarian Circle, Freedom Road Socialist Organization, Minnesota Solidarity Network of the Americas, Sanctions Kill Campaign, Workers World Party, Periodismo de Verdad, Resist U.S. Led War, Honduras Solidarity Network, Cross Border Network, National Network on Cuba, Black Alliance for Peace, Anti War Action Network, Women Against Military Madness, Kawsachun News, Popular Resistance, International Action Center, Casa Baltimore Limay, Friends of Latin America. Veterans For Peace, Orinoco Tribune, Los Ronderos de las Redes, Diáspora Pa’lante Collective, Peoples Power Assembly, Rochester Committee on Latin America (ROCLA), Green Renaissance-Sovereign Rights Movement, Struggle for Socialism Party, Harriet Tubman Center for Social Justice

naked is still easier to clean than dressed

Rime ice buildup on a leafless shrub.

The last few bouts of snow, at least around this portion of our house, have fallen mostly straight down, leading to a layered effect around the empty planter pots I left on the picnic table.

Ice buildup on the Wolfe Islander III in February 2010

 

Samantha O’Keefe, TechCrunch Include and the Startup Battlefield lead a workshop on how to pitch your startup to press and investors workshop with BUILDUP at Galvanize in San Francisco.

 

More information about the workshop can be found here:

buildup.vc/learn-how-to-pitch-your-startup-to-investors-a...

 

Philadelphia, November 15 – In response to a significant U.S. military buildup near Venezuela, over a dozen Philadelphia organizations joined more than 60 coordinated actions in 8 countries to demand “No War on Venezuela!” and to oppose growing U.S. intervention in Latin America and the Caribbean. The local peace and social justice coalition held a rally and march starting at City Hall and ending in front of a U.S. military recruiting center to call for the withdrawal of U.S. military forces from the region and for the establishment of a genuine Zone of Peace in the Americas.

 

The coalition asserts that the overt threats of regime change in Venezuela and Colombia constitute a blatant violation of international law and the sovereignty of nations. They draw a direct line between militarism abroad and repression at home, highlighting increased defense spending while critical domestic programs like SNAP benefits and healthcare face cuts.

 

The Philadelphia demonstration against U.S. imperialist aggression was organized and endorsed by Anakbayan, Black Alliance for Peace, Code Pink, Democratic Socialist of America, Free Congo, Freedom Road Socialist Organization, International Concerned Family & Friends of Mumia Abu-Jamal, Juntos, Koreans for Decolonialization Penn, Korea Peace Committee, Mobilization4Mumia, Philadelphia Palestine Coalition, Philly Bund, and Workers World Party.

 

The actions come as the United States deploys an aircraft carrier battle group, including destroyers, jet fighters, and nuclear submarines, to the Caribbean. Over 67 people have been extra judiciously killed by the US strikes on boats in the Caribbean so far. The Trump regime has openly called for the military overthrow of Venezuela's President Maduro and the replacement of Colombia's President Petro, following decades of hybrid warfare against the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela.

 

“This is a build-up to another endless U.S. war – a war to militarize the whole Western Hemisphere,” said Sara Flounders of the Workers World Party, a rally organizer. “Meanwhile, the use of Federal troops and thousands of ICE agents in raids and mass arrests, along with massive increases in health costs and cuts to government services, are an attack on all working people in the U.S.”

 

Activists condemn the U.S. government's justification for the escalation. Trump’s narrative of “narcoterrorism operations” have resulted in six recent missile strikes off the coast of Venezuela that have extrajudiciously killed over 67 people, with no due process. They argue this pretext masks the true economic motives behind the aggression.

 

“This move towards all-out war has nothing to do with drug trafficking, cartels or the wellbeing of Americans facing a drug crisis,” stated Joe Lombardo, Co-Coordinator of the United National Antiwar Coalition (UNAC). “Venezuela possesses the greatest known oil reserves in the world. The Venezuelan government refuses to be dominated by the U.S. and is determined to use its own oil, gas, and mineral resources for the benefit of its own people, not for U.S. corporations.”

 

The message from the growing movement is clear: it is time for the public to take to the streets to resist these government and corporate attacks on the people of Latin America and the Caribbean, and to stop the simultaneous militarization and repression of people within the United States.

 

About the Coalition:

This nationwide mobilization is supported by over 35 organizations: United National Antiwar Coalition, Venezuela Solidarity Network, US Peace Council, All-African People’s Party-GC, All-African People’s Party, Alliance for Global Justice, Code Pink, Chicago ALBA Solidarity, Nicaragua Solidarity Coalition, Peace and Solidarity Commission of the Communist Party USA, School of the Americas Watch, Task Force on the Americas, Alberto Lovera Bolivarian Circle, Freedom Road Socialist Organization, Minnesota Solidarity Network of the Americas, Sanctions Kill Campaign, Workers World Party, Periodismo de Verdad, Resist U.S. Led War, Honduras Solidarity Network, Cross Border Network, National Network on Cuba, Black Alliance for Peace, Anti War Action Network, Women Against Military Madness, Kawsachun News, Popular Resistance, International Action Center, Casa Baltimore Limay, Friends of Latin America. Veterans For Peace, Orinoco Tribune, Los Ronderos de las Redes, Diáspora Pa’lante Collective, Peoples Power Assembly, Rochester Committee on Latin America (ROCLA), Green Renaissance-Sovereign Rights Movement, Struggle for Socialism Party, Harriet Tubman Center for Social Justice

Paintings by Trayc Claybrook and Deanna Wood

 

Fort Worth Community Arts Center

May 8 - June 20, 2009

What I saw from the driver's seat before I turned on the wipers.

Philadelphia, November 15 – In response to a significant U.S. military buildup near Venezuela, over a dozen Philadelphia organizations joined more than 60 coordinated actions in 8 countries to demand “No War on Venezuela!” and to oppose growing U.S. intervention in Latin America and the Caribbean. The local peace and social justice coalition held a rally and march starting at City Hall and ending in front of a U.S. military recruiting center to call for the withdrawal of U.S. military forces from the region and for the establishment of a genuine Zone of Peace in the Americas.

 

The coalition asserts that the overt threats of regime change in Venezuela and Colombia constitute a blatant violation of international law and the sovereignty of nations. They draw a direct line between militarism abroad and repression at home, highlighting increased defense spending while critical domestic programs like SNAP benefits and healthcare face cuts.

 

The Philadelphia demonstration against U.S. imperialist aggression was organized and endorsed by Anakbayan, Black Alliance for Peace, Code Pink, Democratic Socialist of America, Free Congo, Freedom Road Socialist Organization, International Concerned Family & Friends of Mumia Abu-Jamal, Juntos, Koreans for Decolonialization Penn, Korea Peace Committee, Mobilization4Mumia, Philadelphia Palestine Coalition, Philly Bund, and Workers World Party.

 

The actions come as the United States deploys an aircraft carrier battle group, including destroyers, jet fighters, and nuclear submarines, to the Caribbean. Over 67 people have been extra judiciously killed by the US strikes on boats in the Caribbean so far. The Trump regime has openly called for the military overthrow of Venezuela's President Maduro and the replacement of Colombia's President Petro, following decades of hybrid warfare against the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela.

 

“This is a build-up to another endless U.S. war – a war to militarize the whole Western Hemisphere,” said Sara Flounders of the Workers World Party, a rally organizer. “Meanwhile, the use of Federal troops and thousands of ICE agents in raids and mass arrests, along with massive increases in health costs and cuts to government services, are an attack on all working people in the U.S.”

 

Activists condemn the U.S. government's justification for the escalation. Trump’s narrative of “narcoterrorism operations” have resulted in six recent missile strikes off the coast of Venezuela that have extrajudiciously killed over 67 people, with no due process. They argue this pretext masks the true economic motives behind the aggression.

 

“This move towards all-out war has nothing to do with drug trafficking, cartels or the wellbeing of Americans facing a drug crisis,” stated Joe Lombardo, Co-Coordinator of the United National Antiwar Coalition (UNAC). “Venezuela possesses the greatest known oil reserves in the world. The Venezuelan government refuses to be dominated by the U.S. and is determined to use its own oil, gas, and mineral resources for the benefit of its own people, not for U.S. corporations.”

 

The message from the growing movement is clear: it is time for the public to take to the streets to resist these government and corporate attacks on the people of Latin America and the Caribbean, and to stop the simultaneous militarization and repression of people within the United States.

 

About the Coalition:

This nationwide mobilization is supported by over 35 organizations: United National Antiwar Coalition, Venezuela Solidarity Network, US Peace Council, All-African People’s Party-GC, All-African People’s Party, Alliance for Global Justice, Code Pink, Chicago ALBA Solidarity, Nicaragua Solidarity Coalition, Peace and Solidarity Commission of the Communist Party USA, School of the Americas Watch, Task Force on the Americas, Alberto Lovera Bolivarian Circle, Freedom Road Socialist Organization, Minnesota Solidarity Network of the Americas, Sanctions Kill Campaign, Workers World Party, Periodismo de Verdad, Resist U.S. Led War, Honduras Solidarity Network, Cross Border Network, National Network on Cuba, Black Alliance for Peace, Anti War Action Network, Women Against Military Madness, Kawsachun News, Popular Resistance, International Action Center, Casa Baltimore Limay, Friends of Latin America. Veterans For Peace, Orinoco Tribune, Los Ronderos de las Redes, Diáspora Pa’lante Collective, Peoples Power Assembly, Rochester Committee on Latin America (ROCLA), Green Renaissance-Sovereign Rights Movement, Struggle for Socialism Party, Harriet Tubman Center for Social Justice

old version

home for your family

collage, solvent transfer, oil, and encaustic

12" x 12"

2007

deanna wood

one-of-a-kind artist's book - copies, vintage wallpaper, wax transfer, encaustic

Paintings by Trayc Claybrook and Deanna Wood

 

Fort Worth Community Arts Center

May 8 - June 20, 2009

Fulham 2, Walham Green Dog Track filthy squatters 2. 28th December 2008, FA Premier League, Craven Cottage

 

Samantha O’Keefe, TechCrunch Include and the Startup Battlefield lead a workshop on how to pitch your startup to press and investors workshop with BUILDUP at Galvanize in San Francisco.

 

More information about the workshop can be found here:

buildup.vc/learn-how-to-pitch-your-startup-to-investors-a...

 

My poor cat has some tartar buildup on his teeth and before he winds up needing his teeth professionally cleaned and or pulled like Grendel does, the vet told me to brush his teeth. The first step to doing this was to get him to like the toothpaste (poultry flavored). So I tried to get him to lick it off the finger brush. Then I tried to get him to take a little off my finger. Finally I resorted to putting a little bit on his paw so he had no choice but to lick it. He took one lick and then shook his paw as if to say get it off! YUCK! Then when that didn't work he took another tiny lick. Now I'm going to get a wet cloth and wipe it off, not sure what to try next.

Paintings by Trayc Claybrook and Deanna Wood

 

Fort Worth Community Arts Center

May 8 - June 20, 2009

Of late, i have been noticing a lot of buildup of gas, probably due to the muesli

 

Startled the domestic help last morning by 💨ing noisily three times

 

St. Menon once sent a video that it's a sign of a healthy gut; will take that any day

 

Heard that Vinod Mehta of Outlook India, a fellow Gemini ♊ Snake 🐍, used to 💨 freely around the office

 

The Master says that Shame bit.ly/gdsxSVL

is one of the eight fetters in the realization of the Self

 

 

The other 💨 version comes in handy, when mosquitoes get under the blanket and go for your toes

 

One can say, paraphrasing the fighter pilot of Sioux descent, as in the Last of the Breed…ing Mosquitoes:

bit.ly/bsxLotBM

| "Go back and tell your grubs that this morning you met a SuSu worrier and he let you live because he had killed enough for the day"!

 

As far as I know, one guy was in contention for/won an Ig Nobel [en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Ig_Nobel_Prize_winners] for designing a blanket that absorbs 💨s

 

 

Amusingly, the Catcher has an incident:

g.co/kgs/9qWgZbM

| Where I lived at Pencey, I lived in the Ossenburger Memorial Wing of the new

dorms. It was only for juniors and seniors. I was a junior. My roommate was a senior. It was named after this guy Ossenburger that went to Pencey. He made a pot of dough in the undertaking business after he got out of Pencey. What he did, he started these undertaking parlors all over the country that you could get members of your family buried for about five bucks apiece. You should see old Ossenburger. He probably just shoves them in a sack and dumps them in the river. Anyway, he gave Pencey a pile of dough, and they named our wing after him. The first football game of the year, he came up to school in this big goddam Cadillac, and we all had to stand up in the grandstand and give him a locomotive—that's a cheer. Then, the next morning, in chapel, he made a speech that lasted about ten hours. He started off with about fifty corny jokes, just to show us what a regular guy he was. Very big deal. Then he started telling us how he was never ashamed, when he was in some kind of trouble or something, to get right down his knees and pray to God. He told us we should always pray to God—talk to Him and all—wherever we were. He told us we ought to think of Jesus as our buddy and all. He said he talked to Jesus all the time. Even when he was driving his car. That killed me. I just see the big phony bastard shifting into first gear and asking Jesus to send him a few more stiffs. The only good part of his speech was right in the middle of it. He was telling us all about what a swell guy he was, what a hot-shot and all, then all of a sudden this guy sitting in the row in front of me, Edgar Marsalla, laid this terrific 💨. It was a very crude thing to do, in chapel and all, but it was also quite amusing. Old Marsalla. He damn near blew the roof off. Hardly anybody laughed out loud, and old Ossenburger made out like he didn't even hear it, but old Thurmer, the headmaster, was sitting right next to him on the rostrum and all, and you could tell he heard it. Boy, was he sore. He didn't say anything then, but the next night he made us have compulsory study hall in the academic building and he came up and made a speech. He said that the boy that had created the disturbance in chapel wasn't fit to go to Pencey. We tried to get old Marsalla to rip off another one, right while old Thurmer was making his speech, but be wasn't in the right mood. Anyway, that's where I lived at Pencey. Old Ossenburger Memorial Wing, in the new dorms

I abhor skies without clouds; they seem so fake.

Like a chrome screen...

Paintings by Trayc Claybrook and Deanna Wood

 

Fort Worth Community Arts Center

May 8 - June 20, 2009

Ice buildup on a bush in our front yard

Weld buildup to restore the eye at the end of one of the tender brake pull rods to remove wear and a little bit of corossion. This will be machined soon to bring it back to 'as new' size.

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