GIVE US THIS DAY OUR DAILY THREAD WELCOME.TO JANUARY 1ST THROUGH JANUARY 31ST 2026

  • #221
And in my house of many cats, I HAVE to find those pills before one of the cats gets his or her grubby little paws on them.

Hahaha! 🤣
I bet they are quicker!
What's on the floor is theirs 😁
It's the Law!
Purr-fect Law.
 
  • #222
On 14 January, 1784,

the United States Congress,
meeting in the Senate Chamber of the Maryland State House,
ratified the Treaty of Paris.

The treaty formally ended the American Revolutionary War
and established it as a free and independent nation.
 
  • #223
Hahaha! 🤣
I bet they are quicker!
What's on the floor is theirs 😁
It's the Law!
Purr-fect Law.
They’re MUCH quicker than I am!
 
  • #224
  • #225
In Australian news

ABC News Australia


Trauma medics warn over-60s against climbing ladders as 6,000 people hospitalised in a year​

 
  • #226
In Australian news

ABC News Australia


Trauma medics warn over-60s against climbing ladders as 6,000 people hospitalised in a year​

I believe that. I wouldn’t get on a ladder at my age if you paid me.
 
  • #227
Just received my purple cooling sheet fitted set.

But no heatwave now to try it out on :)

Only one parcel I'm waiting for now.
My beautiful nighties made from cooling material.
 
  • #228

GIVE US THIS DAY OUR DAILY THREAD THURSDAY JANUARY 15TH 2026

(Hey look I remembered ha)

ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY — January 15TH​


Weird • Dark • Crime • Bizarre​


History doesn’t take days off. Here’s what went wrong, got weird, or turned tragic on January 15.




1919 — The Great Molasses Flood​


A massive storage tank burst in Boston, releasing over 2 million gallons of molasses. A 25-foot wave tore through the neighborhood, crushing buildings, trapping victims, and killing 21 people. Survivors said the area smelled like molasses for decades. One of the strangest industrial disasters in U.S. history.




1947 — The Black Dahlia Murder​


The brutally mutilated body of Elizabeth Short was discovered in Los Angeles, posed and severed in half. The case remains unsolved and is still one of the most disturbing and infamous murder mysteries in American history.




1915 — Telephone Silence Sparks Panic​


A massive telephone outage along the U.S. East Coast caused widespread fear. Many believed the silence meant invasion, sabotage, or war. No internet required for mass hysteria.




2009 — Miracle on the Hudson​


US Airways Flight 1549 lost engine power after striking birds shortly after takeoff. Pilot Chesley Sullenberger safely ditched the plane in the Hudson River. All 155 people survived, an outcome aviation experts say should not have been possible.




1559 — A Royal Celebration With a Dark Undercurrent​


England celebrated the coronation of Elizabeth I, while rumors circulated that executions and disease were being quietly concealed so the festivities would not be disrupted. Even Tudor England understood optics.




1973 — Vietnam Ceasefire Announced​


The U.S. announced a ceasefire in the Vietnam War. While technically true, the violence did not end, and thousands more would die before the conflict truly concluded.




1929 — Birth of Martin Luther King Jr.​


Born into a nation deeply divided by segregation and racial violence, Martin Luther King Jr. would go on to challenge the very system he was born into.




1981 — Yorkshire Ripper Investigation Intensifies​


British police escalated efforts to catch the Yorkshire Ripper after years of investigative failures, ignored warnings, and false leads. By this point, at least 13 women had been murdered.




1992 — Mafia Loyalty Shatters​


Mob underboss Sammy Gravano formally entered witness protection after helping convict John Gotti. Organized crime’s code of silence took a permanent hit.




2001 — Wikipedia Goes Live​


What began as a free online encyclopedia became the world’s largest collection of knowledge, arguments, edit wars, and citation battles — all created by the public.
 
  • #229
  • #230

GIVE US THIS DAY OUR DAILY THREAD THURSDAY JANUARY 15TH 2026

(Hey look I remembered ha)

ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY — January 15TH​


Weird • Dark • Crime • Bizarre​


History doesn’t take days off. Here’s what went wrong, got weird, or turned tragic on January 15.




1919 — The Great Molasses Flood​


A massive storage tank burst in Boston, releasing over 2 million gallons of molasses. A 25-foot wave tore through the neighborhood, crushing buildings, trapping victims, and killing 21 people. Survivors said the area smelled like molasses for decades. One of the strangest industrial disasters in U.S. history.




1947 — The Black Dahlia Murder​


The brutally mutilated body of Elizabeth Short was discovered in Los Angeles, posed and severed in half. The case remains unsolved and is still one of the most disturbing and infamous murder mysteries in American history.




1915 — Telephone Silence Sparks Panic​


A massive telephone outage along the U.S. East Coast caused widespread fear. Many believed the silence meant invasion, sabotage, or war. No internet required for mass hysteria.




2009 — Miracle on the Hudson​


US Airways Flight 1549 lost engine power after striking birds shortly after takeoff. Pilot Chesley Sullenberger safely ditched the plane in the Hudson River. All 155 people survived, an outcome aviation experts say should not have been possible.




1559 — A Royal Celebration With a Dark Undercurrent​


England celebrated the coronation of Elizabeth I, while rumors circulated that executions and disease were being quietly concealed so the festivities would not be disrupted. Even Tudor England understood optics.




1973 — Vietnam Ceasefire Announced​


The U.S. announced a ceasefire in the Vietnam War. While technically true, the violence did not end, and thousands more would die before the conflict truly concluded.




1929 — Birth of Martin Luther King Jr.​


Born into a nation deeply divided by segregation and racial violence, Martin Luther King Jr. would go on to challenge the very system he was born into.




1981 — Yorkshire Ripper Investigation Intensifies​


British police escalated efforts to catch the Yorkshire Ripper after years of investigative failures, ignored warnings, and false leads. By this point, at least 13 women had been murdered.




1992 — Mafia Loyalty Shatters​


Mob underboss Sammy Gravano formally entered witness protection after helping convict John Gotti. Organized crime’s code of silence took a permanent hit.




2001 — Wikipedia Goes Live​


What began as a free online encyclopedia became the world’s largest collection of knowledge, arguments, edit wars, and citation battles — all created by the public.

The Molasses Flood always amazes me.

Anyone interested in the Yorkshire Ripper case of the 1970's-80's, especially the Police Investigation, 'Wicked Beyond Belief' by Michael Bilton is an excellent, thoroughly researched, book. Jaw-Dropping.
 
  • #231
  • #232
The Molasses Flood always amazes me.

Anyone interested in the Yorkshire Ripper case of the 1970's-80's, especially the Police Investigation, 'Wicked Beyond Belief' by Michael Bilton is an excellent, thoroughly researched, book. Jaw-Dropping.
I’ll check it out.
 
  • #233
I like to move it, move it.... 💃
Not only with a one way ticket 😁


#Physically Fit 👯‍♀️
1, 2, 3 start with me! 👍
 
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  • #234
GIVE US THIS DAY OUR DAILY THREAD. WELCOME TO FRIDAY JANUARY 16TH AND SATURDAY JANUARY 17TH 2026
Good Morning
So I fell asleep listening to an NDA that happened a Harvard trained neurosurgeon. He died and was flying on a butterfly wing. Then I fell asleep, woke up, and shot up in my bed like a rocket and screamed in my head "CRAAAAAP. THE DAILY THREAD." So here it is. Have a wonderful rest of your day.
If you are a Guardian today is our Zoom call from 12 Noon to 8 PM Eastern.
Here is the scoop. Hope to see you today.
TODAY, JANUARY 17TH = GUARDIAN ZOOM MADNESS
It’s EPIC.
It’s 8 HOURS.
It’s our MONTHLY GUARDIAN ZOOM CALL — and you’re invited!
Saturday, January 17
12 NOON – 8 PM Eastern
(Yes, really. No, you don’t have to stay the whole time 😉)IF YOU ARE A GUARDIAN YOU MUST REGISTER FIRST —
CLICK HERE to register
 
  • #235
GIVE US THIS DAY OUR DAILY THREAD. WELCOME TO FRIDAY JANUARY 16TH AND SATURDAY JANUARY 17TH 2026
Good Morning
So I fell asleep listening to an NDA that happened a Harvard trained neurosurgeon. He died and was flying on a butterfly wing. Then I fell asleep, woke up, and shot up in my bed like a rocket and screamed in my head "CRAAAAAP. THE DAILY THREAD." So here it is. Have a wonderful rest of your day.
If you are a Guardian today is our Zoom call from 12 Noon to 8 PM Eastern.
Here is the scoop. Hope to see you today.
TODAY, JANUARY 17TH = GUARDIAN ZOOM MADNESS
It’s EPIC.
It’s 8 HOURS.
It’s our MONTHLY GUARDIAN ZOOM CALL — and you’re invited!
Saturday, January 17
12 NOON – 8 PM Eastern
(Yes, really. No, you don’t have to stay the whole time 😉)IF YOU ARE A GUARDIAN YOU MUST REGISTER FIRST —
CLICK HERE to register
I loved that book!! Enjoy!
 
  • #236
one of these days I’m going to get over my initial shyness and join a zoom call. Be patient with me.
 
  • #237
one of these days I’m going to get over my initial shyness and join a zoom call. Be patient with me.
You can join in without appearing on camera .
 
  • #238
one of these days I’m going to get over my initial shyness and join a zoom call. Be patient with me.
There's nothing to be shy about. 1) you don't have to talk, 2) you don't have to be on camera (I don't own one), and 3) you don't use your real name when you register so no one knows who you are.

See Nothing to be shy about. :)

Come join us! We're in there now. :)
 
  • #239
Thank you all. I’ll get there.
 
  • #240
18 January

Winnie the Pooh Day 🥳

1768724439108.webp
 

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