San Carlos!

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We arrived here in San Carlos last night. The picture above is of our condo (the one in the center). It has two floors, with two balconies that have a great view of the ocean. This is probably the nicest (and largest) place we have ever stayed at here. All the better in light of it being one of the least expensive places we’ve stayed as well.

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We had some nice tarps to wrap everything up on the roof – which was a good thing given we did hit some rain on the way down. Having everything on the roof made for a much more comfortable ride.

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Today we have spent the majority of the day at the beach. The water is unusually warm and very comfortable. There wasn’t a cloud in the sky. There have been quite a bit of jelly fish – Tila ate one and then threw up the entire contents of her stomach about 30 seconds later. Yun was also stung by one on the foot which was painful. Despite the jelly fish, we had a lot of fun in the water, as did the dogs. Jeff and Beth brought their Irish Terrier Walcott. They spent hours swimming in the water retrieving toys.

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Later we visited the estuary that is near us and found a lot of crabs – unfortunately not big enough for dinner. We are having carne asada tacos for dinner tonight which will undoubtedly be awesome. Krystal and I intend on going diving early tomorrow morning which I am really looking forward to.

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Uganda

My mom is currently in Uganda and sent me some neat photos. She’s pretty easy to find in the photo below.

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bailando en Mexico

It’s 2:07am and Yunuen and I are driving back from Mexico. We just left her family in Nogales at a graduation party for Gabriel who recently completed his engineering degree. We had a lot of fun, despite Tecate being the only available beverage.

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Yun and I headed up to Catalina Foothills Church after work tonight to meet a number of pastors that are affiliated with BEAMM for a dinner. We met a lot of very interesting people working in various places along the border. We were sitting at a table with Sr. Aaron Zapata who is a professor and vice-president of San Pablo Seminary in Juarez. Yunuen asked Sr. Zapata if he was a theonomist (her attempt at humor) which immediately initiated a lengthy discussion on the topic. Sr. Zapata was educated at Reformed Theological Seminary in Jackson, Mississippi and was well studied. He even pursuaded Yun to translate a particular English work  to Spanish.

Below is a picture of me with Sr. Zapata and his wife Leticia with Miguel and me.

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New Nogales Cartel

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We spent the weekend in Mexico – a decision that came late Saturday night. It is always nice to get out of town, particularly after a stressful week at work. We had chilaquiles for breakfast which are always good (though seem to take forever to make). Miguel, Obed, and Josue came over to Yun’s parent’s house for carne asada along with their families. Carne asada remains my favorite meal and this was no exception!

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the plunder of the masses

bastiat1aI have recently begun Frederic Bastiat’s 2 volume set published by the Von Mises Institute that comprise his major writings with my reading group. Bastiat was a French economist and a proponent of a free-market. Murray Rothbard once commented, “Bastiat was indeed a lucid and superb writer, whose brilliant and witty essays and fables to this day are remarkable and devastating demolitions of protectionism and of all forms of government subsidy and control. He was a truly scintillating advocate of an untrammeled free market.” I have enjoyed his writings immensely and find it immediately relevant to our economic situation today.

Here is a quote from a segment I have recently read:

“It is in the nature of men to rise against the injustice of which they are the victims. When, therefore, plunder is organized by law, for the profit of those who perpetrate it, all the plundered classes tend, either by peaceful or revolutionary means, to enter in some way into the manufacturing of laws. These classes, according to the degree of enlightenment at which they have arrived, may propose to themselves two very different ends, when they thus attempt the attainment of their political rights; either they may wish to put an end to lawful plunder, or they may desire to take part in it.”

“It is so much in the nature of law to support justice, that in the minds of the masses they are one and the same. There is in all of us a strong disposition to regard what is lawful as legitimate, so much so that many falsely derive all justice from law. It is sufficient, then, for the law to order and sanction plunder, that it may appear to many consciences just and sacred. Slavery, protection, and monopoly find defenders, not only in those who profit by them, but in those who suffer by them. If you suggest a doubt as to the morality of these institutions, it is said directly — “You are a dangerous innovator, a utopian, a theorist, a despiser of the laws; you would shake the basis upon which society rests.”

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Beto’s Birthday

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Today was our friend Beto’s 23rd birthday – so we had plenty of Pacificos and Coronas! Mexicans have this unfortunate tradition of smashing the birthday person’s face in the cake – which as you can see from the photos below, wasn’t missed.

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black widows

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This is  a common sight when we come home. We can’t seem to figure out a way to discourage them from habitating outside our front door. We found some in the garage earlier today too. Fortunately, they’re normally not interested in coming inside (but there have been a few exceptions!).

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keys to our dog’s health

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Our dogs appear to be pretty healthy. We brush their teeth and clean their ears regularly. We brush their coats every day. We exercise them regularly (we call them blood runs because their feet sometimes are not in the best shape after 5-10 miles at a sprint in the desert). And we feed them really well.

When we adopted Scout, we were told he was used to eating Nutro’s Lamb and Rice which I highly doubt given the price (nearly $50/bag) and we adopted him from a resuce shelter. Nonetheless, we bought the Nutro and have continued doing so for over a year now.

The Nutro goes a lot further and is enjoyed a lot more as we mix the following crock pot concotion with each bowl of the dry dog food.

1 lb of chicken gizzards
1 lb of chicken livers
5 potatoes (2 russets and 3 reds)
1 cup of rice
1/4 cup bacon grease

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You can see this adds up to only a few dollars and the amount it makes is sufficient to last a week and a half when added to their dry food (we feed them each twice a day, so 4/bowls daily). This makes the expensive dry food last substantially longer. Not only that, but they love it.

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El Guero Canelo

coneloYun and I met with Ben and Lis for dinner tonight at El Guero Canelo which happens to be one of my favorite places. Interestingly enough, there are two locations now in Tucson. The one by our house is very Mexican looking, whereas the one we went to tonight on Oracle is very different. It was nice though and I love the food.

One of my favorite things with carne asada is Mexican Coke which is what I thought I was ordering tonight. To my disappointment, it was the same ingredients as American Coke (ie, corn syrup, not sugar) and not real Mexican Coke.

Corn syrup is not good for you. So why does American Coke use it instead of Mexican Coke? Because the Emperor god (ie, federal government) has a sugar program that is designed to inflate the price of domestic sugar to twice the world price. This government racket ends up costing American families over $2 billion dollars a year and is ultimately responsible for why soda companies (like Coke) choose the cheaper alternative of corn syrup over the healthier alternative of sugar (and is also why Mexican Coke tastes a LOT better).

We do not live in a free nation. The emperor god has put a limitation on the amount of sugar that can be produced in this country and the amount of sugar that can be imported. In so doing, the price of sugar is not a reflection of supply and demand, but rather the artificial result of government manipulation.

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