Scott Peterson

Blaise (imported)
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Re: Scott Peterson

Post by Blaise (imported) »

Dave (imported) wrote: Sun Nov 14, 2004 8:43 am Apparently the jury didn't believe the defense contention that it was a coincedence he went fishing 90 miles from his house the day his wife disappeared and months later her dead body turns up in the same fishing spot.

I agree. Talk about bad luck! Apparently, he did not fish where a fisherman would expect to find fish. I would not have gone out in those waters in that little boat. I would have stayed close to shore where the fish are.

Last night, Jay Leno had some great lines about Mr. Peterson. You can no longer kill your wife in California and get away with it. Good new for everyone but Robert Blake.

Apparently, he wanted more sexual partners than merely his wife. As Jay Leno notes, he now will get his wish. Bless the lad. ๐Ÿ”จ ๐Ÿ”จ ๐Ÿคฎ ๐Ÿคฎ

๐Ÿˆ ๐Ÿˆ
A-1 (imported)
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Re: Scott Peterson

Post by A-1 (imported) »

Dave (imported) wrote: Sun Nov 14, 2004 8:43 am Apparently the jury didn't believe the defense contention that it was a coincedence he went fishing 90 miles from his house the day his wife disappeared and months later her dead body turns up in the same fishing spot.

Yes, Dave,

I, too, thought that there was something FISHY about this story.

๐Ÿ™„

๐Ÿšฌ A-1 ๐Ÿšฌ
jemagirl (imported)
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Re: Scott Peterson

Post by jemagirl (imported) »

Blaise (imported) wrote: Sat Nov 13, 2004 8:35 pm I never found why anyone would want to live in California. There is little ecological diversity. You can camp at Big Sur (and I have stayed at the lodge on a state park there for a bit) and name every plant there is less than a week. It's pretty but not interesting.

If you look at just one area at a time there may not be much diversity however when looking at the state in its entirety, there is tremendous diversity. California encompasses a wide range of habitat such as deserts, coastal areas, wetlands, mountains, and rivers just to name a few. Each one of the areas has its own ecology.

As far as the comments about San Francisco, I think those are more related what sorts of things interest you as a person rather than the quality of the culture to be found there.

Jema
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Re: Scott Peterson

Post by Blaise (imported) »

jemagirl (imported) wrote: Sun Nov 14, 2004 5:31 pm If you look at just one area at a time there may not be much diversity however when looking at the state in its entirety, there is tremendous diversity. California encompasses a wide range of habitat such as deserts, coastal areas, wetlands, mountains, and rivers just to name a few. Each one of the areas has its own ecology.

As far as the comments about San Francisco, I think those are more related what sorts of things interest you as a person rather than the quality of the culture to be found there.

Jema

Yes, I agree.

Flying over the state from San Francisco southeast is a marvelous experience. You cross zones that change rapidly. The state does lack the immense biological diversity of a place such as Eastern Tennessee or South Florida. That does not make its own plants and animal less interesting.

I am writing about a personal reaction but I steal words from Joni Mitchell:

I call to the seagull

Who dives to the waters

And catches his silver-fine

Dinner alone

Crying where are the footprints

That danced on these beaches

And the birds that cast wishes

That sunk like stones

My dreams with the seagulls fly

Out of reach out of cry.

San Francisco has great schools and an intriguing history. It is surrounded by rich people who would (as we used to say) drive to the revolution in their (whatever expensive automobiles people drove in the sixites.) People were honest but desperate back then.

I recall reading in The Wall Street Journal several years ago how desperate people flee to San Francisco--not merely technically homeless people but physicians and other professional folks. When they arrive, they are merely alone and more desperate. I was not alone there. I was not even desperate. I had a good time--in San Francisco--but I found no good reason to be there. Political work in other places seemed more important than selling Coca-Cola or green beans--Eventually, I got to teach children in Louisiana. Further, I do prefer the East Coast to the West Coast. It is a matter of taste. On the other hand, I would love to attend Pacific School of Religion after retirement (it is a LGBT friendly place), but I am instead doing something more practical--buying a house in the East.

One of my nephews is a native of California. For a long time, he was the only non-Southerner in my family.

I doubt that most people in California are as empty as Mr. Peterson seems to be. Still, the place is stange to other people. Five months for a murder trial--that is nuts (and thus an issue for the board). I am not recommending a lynch mob, but five months! Nuts!

๐Ÿ”จ ๐Ÿ”จ

๐Ÿˆ
Riverwind (imported)
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Re: Scott Peterson

Post by Riverwind (imported) »

5 months in California. That is a fast and speedy trial. It takes at least 90 days to get through all the prelims. If its to be a jury trial add another 90 days. 5 months, not long at all.

San Francisco is one of the top ten cities in the world. not my oppion. You can find anything you want, food, oh my I miss the sea food. Go down the coast a little bit and you get to santa cruz, were you can go back in time to the 70s. Also good food, but then turn and go inland over the mountains, and you will drive through a Red Wood Forest. - I know you dont have them. Out in the big valley, is all farms then head into the serras, to the see the syquoia's

the largest trees in the world, they only are found in California. Palm Springs I got up one morning went and played a round of golf, then we went to the tram up to the top of the mt for lunch and was in a snow storm, back down to home again and went swimming. Tell me where in this country you can do that in one day and not drive over 40 miles.

I could go on.

Riverwind
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Re: Scott Peterson

Post by jemagirl (imported) »

Q:
Riverwind (imported) wrote: Mon Nov 15, 2004 9:00 am Palm Springs I got up one morning went and played a round of golf, then we went to the tram up to the top of the mt for lunch and was in a snow storm, back down to home again and went swimming. Tell me where in this country you can do that in one day and not drive over 40 miles.

I could go on.

Riverwind

A:Hawaii

:D A state that also seems strange to people who don't live there ;) You can go to the beach and to the top of Mauna Kea where people can and do ski and snowboard. It is the only place other than California that I have lived for an extended length of time.

Jema
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Re: Scott Peterson

Post by An Onymus (imported) »

Riverwind, you remind me of the abalone we used to get in San Francisco. In my opinion, when properly cooked, it is the best seafood available. Or was, to be more accurate. Red abalone, the best variety, is not available any more--a combination of overfishing and sea otter protection, decimated the population. I think you can still get some abalone from less esculent species, but it isn't at all the same, or nearly as good.

I'm not suggesting sea otters shouldn't be protected. Don't know what the solution to the problem would be.

Incidentally, along with Alaska, Montana, Hawaii, Arizona, and Colorado, California is described as one of the most scenic states. Try driving U.S. 395 some time, northward from the junction west of Victorville.
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Re: Scott Peterson

Post by Blaise (imported) »

Riverwind (imported) wrote: Mon Nov 15, 2004 9:00 am 5 months in California. That is a fast and speedy trial. It takes at least 90 days to get through all the prelims. If its to be a jury trial add another 90 days. 5 months, not long at all.

San Francisco is one of the top ten cities in the world. not my oppion. You can find anything you want, food, oh my I miss the sea food. Go down the coast a little bit and you get to santa cruz, were you can go back in time to the 70s. Also good food, but then turn and go inland over the mountains, and you will drive through a Red Wood Forest. - I know you dont have them. Out in the big valley, is all farms then head into the serras, to the see the syquoia's

the largest trees in the world, they only are found in California. Palm Springs I got up one morning went and played a round of golf, then we went to the tram up to the top of the mt for lunch and was in a snow storm, back down to home again and went swimming. Tell me where in this country you can do that in one day and not drive over 40 miles.

I could go on.

Riverwind

This is true. In Oregon, you can drive from the beach to ski areas but not in as short a distance as you can in California. The scenary is dramatic.

San Franscico is a fine place--it is simply not as rich as New York or Boston, or Chicago. However, of the few places I know, it is on my top ten list. The opera is excellent. The museums are good. The Exploratorium is excellent.

โ›ต โ›ต

Abalone is (was) delicious. West Coast oysters have little flavor--the imports from Japan have a bit more flavor. However, abalone is one of the world's great foods. I haven't eaten any since the mid-seventies. I miss it.

After a couple of Northeastern winters, I will be ready to try California again--no, not really.

:kittygray
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Re: Scott Peterson

Post by Blaise (imported) »

Q:
jemagirl (imported) wrote: Mon Nov 15, 2004 10:31 am A:Hawaii

:D A state that also seems strange to people who don't live there ;) You can go to the beach and to the top of Mauna Kea where people can and do ski and snowboard. It is the only place other than California that I have lived for an extended length of time.

Jema

In New Orleans, I knew people who had traveled widely. I asked them what one place I ought not miss. Hawaii was the answer.

I used to want to spend time in Alaska (I have never been there), but now health makes that seem an unwise course for me. I recall watching a television documentary about a canoe river trip on an river that flowed north into the Arctic Ocean. The scenary looked amazing.

As I age, I place Hawaii higher and higher on my list of places to visit. I like the idea of being a minority person there. ๐Ÿ˜„ ๐Ÿ˜„

All these self-important right-wing Republicans in Baton Rouge make me a minority, but I don't look as if I were. I look like the fundamentalists. ๐Ÿ˜ฟ ๐Ÿ˜ฟ ๐Ÿ˜ข ๐Ÿ˜ข ๐Ÿ•ต๏ธ ๐Ÿ•ต๏ธ :dong: :dong:
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Re: Scott Peterson

Post by jemagirl (imported) »

Blaise (imported) wrote: Mon Nov 15, 2004 3:23 pm In New Orleans, I knew people who had traveled widely. I asked them what one place I ought not miss. Hawaii was the answer.

I used to want to spend time in Alaska (I have never been there), but now health makes that seem an unwise course for me. I recall watching a television documentary about a canoe river trip on an river that flowed north into the Arctic Ocean. The scenary looked amazing.

As I age, I place Hawaii higher and higher on my list of places to visit. I like the idea of being a minority person there. ๐Ÿ˜„ ๐Ÿ˜„

All these self-important right-wing Republicans in Baton Rouge make me a minority, but I don't look as if I were. I look like the fundamentalists. ๐Ÿ˜ฟ ๐Ÿ˜ฟ ๐Ÿ˜ข ๐Ÿ˜ข ๐Ÿ•ต๏ธ ๐Ÿ•ต๏ธ :dong: :dong:

I lived in Hawaii for a little over eight years and loved every thing about it except for the economy which is heavily dependent on tourism. When Japan's bubble economy burst it was real bad news for Hawaii. Still it is a wonderful place to retire if you can afford it. If you ever get the chance to visit there I don't think you would be disappointed.

Jema
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