



Here are some photos that I was able to shoot of the Washington Monument at night. I tried getting a couple different perspectives that would compliment the photos from my previous post of the Washington Monument during the day. If you notice in the background of the photos you will see the Lincoln Memorial and the Jefferson Memorial.
Category: Government
The White House at Night
During my last night stay in Washington D.C. I made the most of the remaining time I had there and went over to the White House to take some night photos. I wanted these photos to give a night perspective of the previous post I made which showed the White House during the day. I’ve narrowed all of the photos I took down to these four, but I just couldn’t choose the best from these photos.
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Lincoln Memorial
Walked to the Lincoln Memorial and gasp at the massive size. After thinking about it, I realized that it is quite fitting for how much impact Abraham Lincoln made on shaping the United States as a country.
Above Abraham Lincoln’s head it reads as follows:
“IN THIS TEMPLE
AS IN THE HEARTS OF THE PEOPLE
FOR WHOM HE SAVED THE UNION
THE MEMORY OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN
IS ENSHRINED FOREVER”
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Washington Monument
I enjoyed a pleasant walk around Washington D.C. I was able to get some good photos from different views of the Washington Monument. To be able to be there, see it, touch it, feel what it is like to be there, and be able to share my experience gives me a warm feeling.
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Capitol Building
Washington D.C. is home of many spectacular government buildings. Every time I see the capitol building I’m awestruck with the awesomeness, not only of the building, but also what it represents.
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The White House
San Diego Administration Center
Went by the San Diego Administration Center and I liked the architecture so I snapped a couple photos of the building.
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The American Health Insurance Situation
The medical community is unable to reach consensus on what to do with America’s health insurance situation.
The Allergists were in favor of scratching it, but the Dermatologists advised not to make any rash moves.
The Gastroenterologists had sort of a gut feeling about it, but the Neurologists thought the Administration had a lot of nerve.
Meanwhile, Obstetricians felt certain everyone was laboring under a misconception, while the Ophthalmologists considered the idea shortsighted.
Pathologists yelled, “Over my dead body!” while the Pediatricians said, “Oh, grow up!”
The Psychiatrists thought the whole idea was madness, while the Radiologists could see right through it.
Surgeons decided to wash their hands of the whole thing and the Internists claimed it would indeed be a bitter pill to swallow.
The Plastic Surgeons opined that this proposal would “put a whole new face on the matter.”
The Podiatrists thought it was a step forward, but the Urologists were pissed off at the whole idea.
Anesthesiologists thought the whole idea was a gas, and those lofty Cardiologists didn’t have the heart to say no.
In the end, the Proctologists won out, leaving the entire decision up to the assholes in Washington.
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Where Freedom Takes Flight: A Moment on the Waters of Coronado
The boat cut slowly across the calm blue waters of San Diego Bay, its wake tracing pale ripples that glimmered under the late-morning sun. The air smelled of salt and diesel and faintly of kelp — that familiar perfume of the Pacific. Ahead, the skyline of downtown San Diego stood like a jagged reflection of glass and steel, but my eyes were drawn instead toward the expanse of Coronado. As we neared the northern tip of the island, a collection of massive hangars and long, flat runways came into view. Naval Air Station North Island — the birthplace of naval aviation.
It’s a place I’d heard about for years, but seeing it from the water was something entirely different. There was no fence between me and the sight this time, no sense of being an outsider peering through a gate. Just open sea and open sky, and the quiet, steady rhythm of the boat’s motor beneath my feet.
As we passed closer, the hum of distant machinery carried faintly over the water. On the flight line, rows of Navy helicopters sat gleaming under the sun — their rotors still, their matte gray bodies marked with numbers and insignias that caught the light like silver scars. Even from the distance of the bay, they seemed alive. A few figures moved around them, mechanics in tan coveralls and cranials — small, precise motions that hinted at the immense complexity behind each of those machines.
It’s hard to describe the feeling that moment brought. From the deck of the boat, the world seemed peaceful — the sea calm, the wind gentle — and yet there was something quietly electric about that view. Those helicopters, even resting, carried an aura of readiness. You could almost feel the stored energy within them, as if they were holding their breath, waiting for the next mission call that would send them roaring into the sky.
Someone on the boat pointed and said, “Those are the birds the SEALs use.” I nodded, though I already suspected as much. The MH-60s lined up on the tarmac weren’t just any helicopters — they were purpose-built for operations that most of us will never fully understand. Seeing them there, so close, I couldn’t help but imagine where they’d been. Maybe some had flown over the mountains of Afghanistan, or skimmed the surface of black water in the dead of night. Maybe one had carried men who’d rescued hostages, intercepted smugglers, or carried out operations that would never be acknowledged publicly.
It’s a humbling thing to realize that some of the quietest, most unassuming corners of the world — like this sunny stretch of California coast — serve as the launching points for acts of courage that echo globally.
The boat drifted slightly as the captain throttled down, giving us a slower, closer pass. The sound of gulls mingled with the distant whir of an engine test somewhere on the base. Every now and then, a flash of movement caught my eye — a helicopter door sliding open, a technician crouched beneath a rotor head, a spark of light as someone welded or tightened something with a tool. It was the language of readiness, spoken without words.
I found myself wondering what it must feel like to be part of that rhythm — to work there, to live in a world where every sound, every task, every routine moment connects somehow to something far larger. Maybe one of those aircraft was being prepped for a training run with the Navy SEALs. Maybe it would later deliver supplies to a carrier or perform a rescue off the coast. The possibilities were endless, and the thought filled me with a mix of curiosity and admiration.
Could one of those be the same type of helicopter that carried SEAL Team 6 to Abbottabad to find Osama bin Laden? The question surfaced almost involuntarily, born of the quiet awe that the sight inspired. I remembered watching the news that night in 2011 — the world learning of a mission completed flawlessly, of justice carried out in the shadows. It felt surreal to think that the machines responsible for such history might now be resting just yards away, their engines silent, their crews going about another ordinary day on base.
The waves rocked the boat gently as I leaned against the railing, trying to imagine those same aircraft in motion — rotors spinning, engines screaming, shadows streaking across moonlit terrain. In those moments, I felt both small and connected — aware of how vast the machinery of defense truly is, and how it stretches quietly beyond the horizon of civilian life.
From this vantage, North Island looked like a living paradox. On one side of the base, sailors and pilots worked methodically around aircraft capable of both destruction and salvation. On the other, beachgoers strolled along Coronado’s golden sand, kids building castles just a mile away from machines built for war. The contrast was stunning — and deeply human.
As we continued along the shoreline, the boat angled closer. I could see the insignia of the “Eightballers” and “Seahawks” squadrons painted proudly on the helicopters. These weren’t just machines; they were extensions of a tradition more than a century old. North Island has been home to naval aviation since 1911 — when men like Glenn Curtiss and Eugene Ely were experimenting with the impossible dream of landing airplanes on ships. From those fragile beginnings of fabric and wood came generations of aviators who took to the sky from carriers that today roam the world’s oceans.
During World War II, this very base became a lifeline for the Pacific fleet. Thousands of pilots trained here before heading into the uncertainty of combat. They practiced takeoffs and landings on makeshift carrier decks, rehearsing maneuvers that would mean the difference between life and death. Many never returned, but their legacy lived on — etched into the DNA of every aviator who passed through North Island after them.
As I watched the modern descendants of those aircraft — sleek, gray, and bristling with technology — I realized that the spirit of those early pilots still lingered here. You could feel it in the stillness of the airfield, in the way every movement seemed deliberate, disciplined, focused.
A helicopter engine started up in the distance, and that familiar, bone-deep sound rolled across the water like thunder. The rotor blades began to move, slow at first, then faster, until they blurred into a shimmering halo. The reflection of the spinning blades danced across the bay, fractured by the ripples from our boat. I felt the vibration before I even heard the full roar — a physical presence, the sound of power awakening.
Watching it lift was mesmerizing. The downdraft scattered a plume of dust and sea mist, and for a heartbeat, it seemed suspended — weightless, almost graceful. Then, with a tilt of its nose and a surge of thrust, it climbed toward the open Pacific, disappearing into the glare of sunlight.
Everyone on the boat fell silent. There’s a kind of reverence that moments like that inspire — not just for the machine, but for the people behind it. Somewhere inside that helicopter, a crew was focused entirely on the task at hand, trusting each other completely, trained for every contingency. It’s a trust born from countless hours of maintenance, coordination, and shared discipline.
I thought of the sailors on the ground — the mechanics tightening bolts, the officers running checklists, the fuelers working in the heat to make sure that everything functions perfectly. Their work rarely gets celebrated, yet without them, nothing flies. There’s a quiet nobility in that — the understanding that heroism doesn’t always happen in a flash of glory; sometimes it’s in the repetitive, meticulous care that keeps others alive.
The boat began to pick up speed again, and the base started to fade from view. From this distance, the helicopters looked almost like toys lined neatly on a shelf. But I knew better now. Each one represented an enormous web of effort — designers, engineers, pilots, families, and centuries of collective innovation all converging into a single moment of flight.
As we glided toward the open bay, I looked back over my shoulder one last time. The sun was beginning its descent toward the horizon, casting the entire base in warm, golden light. The hangars glowed faintly, and the sea mirrored the sky in molten hues. For a brief second, everything looked peaceful, almost poetic — a place of calm that existed precisely because of the vigilance that never rested there.
I thought about the men and women who call North Island home — not just the elite SEALs or the pilots, but everyone who keeps the gears turning quietly behind the scenes. Their lives are bound to that flight line, to those helicopters, to missions that will never make headlines. And as the boat rocked gently under my feet, I felt a deep sense of gratitude — not the loud kind, but the kind that settles in your chest and stays there.
It struck me that freedom isn’t always about grand gestures or dramatic battles. Sometimes, it’s about maintenance logs, flight checks, readiness drills — about ordinary people doing extraordinary things so the rest of us can drift peacefully through the bay, enjoying the sunshine without fear.
The last image I saw as we turned back toward port was a helicopter hovering just above the runway, its silhouette framed perfectly by the fading light. It looked timeless — part machine, part myth, suspended between sky and sea. And in that moment, I realized something simple but profound: there are few sights more powerful than peace sustained by quiet vigilance.
As the shoreline of San Diego drew closer and the hum of the base faded behind me, I felt the kind of respect that words can barely hold. The people on that island — the pilots, the crew, the dreamers who built it all — were carrying the weight of a legacy that stretches far beyond any one mission or one lifetime.
And as our boat sliced gently through the golden reflection of the setting sun, I knew I’d remember that view — those helicopters resting on the edge of the Pacific, waiting, ready — as one of the most quietly powerful scenes I had ever witnessed.
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Political Dumb and Dumber

Kim Jong Un had no military experience whatsoever before Daddy made him a four-star general. This snot-nosed twerp had never accomplished anything in his life that would even come close to military leadership. He hadn’t even so much as led a Cub Scout troop, coached a sports team, or commanded a military platoon. So he is made the “Beloved Leader” of North Korea. Oh nuts!

The United States did the same thing. We took an arrogant phony community organizer, who had never worn a uniform, never ran so much as an ice-cream stand, and made him Commander-in-Chief. A guy, who had never had a real job, worked on a budget, or led anything more than an ACORN demonstration, and we made him “Beloved Leader” of the United States – Twice!
So if you think North Koreans are stupid…think about that.
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Donald J. Trump’s Presidential Address to Congress

Tonight I watched the Presidential address to congress and I have to admit that it was one of his better speeches. He didn’t seem to spew much of the rhetoric we heard on the campaign trail, but rather seemed to focus on what it would take to make America great again. One of my favorite lines was, “My job is not to represent the world, but to represent the people of the United States of America.” Some of the key issues he brought up was enforcing laws and supporting law enforcement officials. He brought up getting rid of Obama care and instead of government forcing people to purchase a government plan, they lower insurance costs so people can choose their own health care plans. A couple other key points are to create fair trade with other countries and lowering taxes on businesses. He also talked about getting rid of illegal immigrants with criminal records and keeping out immigrants that come from countries where proper vetting doesn’t take place in order to protect the safety of the American people. He also talked about America working with foreign countries to promote peace and prosperity throughout the world. He said the problems America is faced with are problems that we can solve and now is the time to dream big and bold for the success of the country.
This speech was about an hour long and from what I saw it was well received by the Republican party, but the Democratic party sat the majority of the time. There were several key points where everybody stood and clapped, but most of the time it was only the Republicans doing most of the clapping. I felt this speech was well delivered. It set a good tone and a good message to rebuild the infrastructure in the United States, bring back and encourage business growth, and ensure the safety of the American people. These are not bad values and they are not bad things to strive for. I look forward to seeing what accomplishments he is able to complete.
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45th President of the United States: Donald J. Trump
That was quite an election and Donald J. Trump will be the 45th President of the United States of America. I didn’t see that coming and it was a surprise to see that he pulled out a win. It definitely shows that American’s don’t agree with Barrack Obama and want to turn the country away from the direction he was taking the country. One major thing that I was surprised about was the lack of voter turnout. When I look through the numbers of every state it appears that on average only somewhere between 40-50% of people actually voted. That’s almost 60% of the country who didn’t vote. That’s a very big surprise for me. It was also surprising to see the republican’s held the house and senate and now the presidency too. That’s an all republican controlled government. Let’s see if they can get things passed and if congress will get back to work, as opposed to, the gridlock they maintained while Obama was president. I look forward to seeing the change, I look forward to seeing what changes will be made, and I look forward to seeing how great American will become.
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Donkey
The king wanted to go fishing. He called on the royal weather forecaster and inquired as to the weather forecast for the next few hours. The weatherman assured him that there was no chance of rain in the coming days.
So the king went fishing with his wife, the queen. On the way he met a farmer on his donkey. Upon seeing the king the farmer said, “Your Majesty, you should return to the palace! In just a short time I expect a huge amount of rain to fall in this area”.
The king was polite and considerate, he replied: “I hold the palace meteorologist in high regard. He is an extensively educated and experienced professional. And besides, I pay him very high wages. He gave me a very different forecast. I trust him.”
So the king continued on his way. However, a short time later a torrential rain fell from the sky. The King and Queen were totally soaked and their entourage chuckled upon seeing them in such a shameful condition.
Furious, the king returned to the palace and gave the order to fire the professional. Then he summoned the farmer and offered him the prestigious and high paying role of royal forecaster.
The farmer said, “Your Majesty, I do not know anything about forecasting. I obtain my information from my donkey. If I see my donkey’s ears drooping, it means with certainty that it will rain.” So the king hired the donkey.
And thus began the practice of hiring dumb asses to work in the government and occupy its highest and most influential positions. The practice is unbroken to this day and the Democrat symbol was born.























































