Tuesday, July 15, 2008

The First Philippine Diplomat: Felipe Agoncillo

My Great Great Grand Uncle:  Don Felipe Agoncillo's details.  LOL, I see his face in many of my cousins today hehe.

below is wikipedia.com's entry on Don Felipe

Felipe Agoncillo

A portrait of Felipe Agoncillo.
BornFelipe Agoncillo
May 261859
Taal, Batangas
DiedSeptember 291941
Manila
ResidenceTaal Batangas and Malate Manila
NationalityFilipino
Other namesDon Felipe, Lolo Pipoy
EducationBachelor of Arts
Known forHis legacy as the first Filipino diplomat.
Spouse(s)Marcela Agoncillo
ChildrenLorenza, Gregoria, Eugenia, Marcela, Adela and Maria
ParentsRamon Agoncillo and Gregoria Encarnacion

Felipe Agoncillo (May 261859 – September 291941) was the Filipinolawyer representative to the negotiations in Paris that led to the Treaty of Paris (1898), ending the Spanish-American War and achieving him the title of "outstanding first Filipino diplomat."[1]Outstanding student

Agoncillo was born on May 261859 in Taal, Batangas to Ramon Agoncillo and Gregoria Encarnacion.

At an early age, his parents already noticed his brilliant mind. He enrolled at the Ateneo Municipal de Manila where he was a consistent honor high school student and later transferred to the Universidad de Santo Tomás where he obtained his law degree in 1879 with an excellent grade. He was granted a Licentiate in Jurisprudence with the highest honors.

He returned to Taal to manage his family's properties after a year studying in Manila because his parents had both died.

[edit]Marriage

Agoncillo was already a judge and at the age of 30 when he was married to Marcela Mariño, a daughter of a reputed family in the same town. Six daughters were born to them: Lorenza (Enchang), Gregoria (Goring), Eugenia (Nene), Marcela (Celing)—named after her mother because they thought she will be their last child, Adela, who died at the age of three and the youngest Maria (Maring), who was their last child to survive and died on July 61995.

[edit]Charity

While in Taal, Agoncillo continued his legal services and gave charity to poor and oppressed Filipinos. He was so generous that he posted an inscription outside his office: "Free legal services to the poor anytime."[6]

Having heard by the parish priest of his activities and for preaching patriotic ideas, he was accused as anti patriotic, anti religious and was described as filibustero or subversive. He was later recommended to the governor-general for deportation.

[edit]Exile to Hong Kong

Forewarned by the plans of the governor-general, he sailed directly to Yokohama, Japan but briefly stayed and went to Hong Kong where he joined other Filipino exiles who found asylum when the revolution broke out in 1896. They temporarily sojourned at Morrison Hill Road in Wanchai and later became a refuge for exiled Filipino patriots.

When the signing of the Pact of Biak-na-Bato concluded, Gen. Aguinaldo joined to them. They initiated meetings in the Agoncillo residence on the months of April and March 1898 and Gen. Luna was one in the attendance.[7]

[edit]Diplomacy

After the signing of the truce, Agoncillo spearheaded the Central Revolutionary Committee and organized the propaganda office for General Aguinaldo's revolutionary government.

The Philippine Revolutionary Government commissioned Agoncillo as Minister Plenipotentiary to negotiate treaties with foreign governments. Agoncillo and Jose "Sixto" Lopez was sent to Washington, D.C.United States[8] to lobby foreign entities that Filipinos are well civilized people and capable of maintaining stable government[5] and to secure recognition of Philippine independence but US President William McKinley did not receive them. To gather sympathy to the Philippine cause, they addressed the American Episcopalian bishops.

After being ignored by the US president, Agoncillo proceeded to ParisFrance to present the Philippine cause at the peace conference convened between Spain and the US, where a meeting was to be held to discuss Cuba and the Philippines. Agoncillo tried to submit a memorandum but again failed. The people behind the meeting did not want to have any official dealings with him.[5] On December 101898, the treaty was successfully been signed.

Subsequently, Agoncillo's diplomatic activity incurred sum of money that he had used up all his savings going from one country to another presenting the case of the Philippines that he had even sacrificed his wife's jewelry.

[edit]Agoncillo's protest

Two days after the signing of the Treaty of Paris, Agoncillo returned to the United States and endeavored to block ratification of the treaty by the US. Although this was signed by the commissioners, it was not yet approved by the Senate of the United States. He filed a State memorandum to express that Filipinos must be recognized by the United States.[9] He presented a formal protest which was called Memorial to the Senate to the president and delegates of the Spanish-American Commission saying:

If the Spaniards have not been able to transfer to the Americans the rights which they did not possess; if the latter have not militarily conquered positions in the Philippines; if the occupation of Manila was a resultant fact, prepared by the Filipinos; if the international officials and representatives of the Republic of the United States of America offered to recognize the independence and sovereignty of the Philippines, solicited and accepted their alliance, how can they now constitute themselves as arbiters of the control, administration and future government of the Philippine Islands?

If the Treaty of Paris there had simply been declared the withdrawal and abandonment by the Spaniards of their domination --if they had such --over Filipino territory, if America, on accepting peace, had signed the Treaty, without prejudice to the rights of the Philippines, and with a view to coming to a subsequent settlement with the existing Filipino National Government, thus recognizing the sovereignty of the latter, their alliance and the carrying out of their promises of honor to the said Filipinos, no protest against their action would have been made. But in view of the terms of the Article III of the Protocol, the attitude of the American Commissioners, and the imperative necessity of safeguarding the national rights of my country, I take this protest, for the before-mentioned reasons but with the proper legal reservations, against the action taken and the resolutions passed by the Peace Commissioners at Paris and in the Treaty signed by them.[10]

Agoncillo's conclusion about the treaty was that it was not binding on the Philippine government.[6] In the memorandum, he clearly stated the reasons why Spain had no right to transfer the Philippines to the United States and that when the treaty was signed, Spain no longer held the Filipinos.

At that time, many Americans were also against the treaty, so they established the Anti-Imperialist League which opposed making the Philippines a colony of the United States. Afterwards, on February 41899, the Filipino-American war began; this turned on approval of the treaty of Paris.

[edit]Post Filipino-American war

On August 291900, he met with Gustave Moynier, an original member of the Committee of Five and ICRC President. Agoncillo sought recognition of the Filipino Red Cross Society as well as the application of the First Geneva Convention during the Filipino-American war.[11]

[edit]Return to Manila

When hostilities ended between Filipinos and Americans, he returned to Hong Kong and rejoined the exiled junta. Later, onJuly 151901, after American rule was firmly established in Manila,[7] he went back to the Philippines as a poor man and lived in his house in Malate, Manila together with his family.

[edit]Continuing service

While in Manila, he resumed his law practice and other business. He took the bar exam in 1905 and passed with a perfect score of 100 percent, an achievement which has remained unmatched until today. His examination papers have been preserved in the Filipiniana section of the Philippine Library and Museum.

In 1907, he was elected as the Batangas representative and represented that town, among others, in the Philippine Assembly.[12] He was once a defense of El Renacimiento whose editors were charged with libel by Dean C. Worcester. De Agoncillo was appointed as Secretary of Interior in 1923 during the administration of Governor General Leonard Wood and fought for the Filipinazation of the government service.[6]

[edit]Death

Agoncillo died on September 291941 in Manila Doctor's Hospital, Manila.

[edit]Words of wisdom

Agoncillo shared the following words of wisdom:[13]

  • Kailangan ang katapatan upang magkaunawaan. (Truth is needed to attain understanding.)
  • Kailangan ng mga sawimpalad ang pagkalinga ng mga higit na mapalad. (The less fortunate need care from the more fortunate.)
  • Kayamanan, oras, at kahit na buhay ay maiaalay ng taong nagmamahal sa bayan. (A person who loves his or her country can offer to it wealth, time or even life itself.

As a family friend and adviser of General Emilio Aguinaldo[2] and General Antonio Luna[3] during the critical times of the revolution, Agoncillo has been active in participating during that era especially when he presided the Hong Kong Junta—a group of Filipino exiles who met to plan for future steps in achieving independence.[4] His greatest contribution of the Philippine history was when he was assigned to negotiate foreign countries to secure the independence of the country considered as the most important assignment given by a General.[5]


Marcela Agoncillo was married to Don Felipe, a rich Filipino revolutionist and the first Filipino diplomat.[15] They were both thirty and Don Felipe was already a judge when they finally wed. Agoncillo moved from Taal to Manila where they lived together in a two-story house in M.H. del Pillar St., Malate, near the Malate church.[16][17]

Six daughters were born to them: Lorenza ("Enchang"), Gregoria ("Goring"), Eugenia ("Nene"), Marcela ("Celing", named after her mother because they thought she would be their last child), Adela (who died at the age of three) and the youngest, Maria ("Maring", who was their last surviving child and died on July 61995). Most of her daughters became teachers. Gregoria was the first Filipina to graduate from Oxford University.[16] After the graduation of the three elder daughters, they were offered teaching positions. Lorenza was given an appointment to teach in Malate Catholic School.[18] They so immersed themselves in their respective teaching careers that not one of them chose to be married.[16] Marcella Agoncillo cared for all of her daughters until they reached maturity. One of her favorite pieces of advice to them was to "live honestly and well, and to work hard and not depend on family property".[9]

Besides the legal services rendered by Don Felipe to the impoverished,[19] Agoncillo and her daughters observed every Thursday as a day of charity, when a queue of needy people seeking alms would form in the Agoncillo driveway. No one ever left their house empty-handed. Agoncillo would hand them a bag of rice in addition to the money she gave them. This practice lasted until the couple retired.[16]



My Agoncillo Family Roots



My Lola Rene (Mrs. Rene Frial Faeldonea whose name is mentioned on the engraved caption to the thimble) is my Grandma Gilda Agoncillo Frial Villanueva's sister and  a successful businesswoman from Dumalag, Capiz.  Lola Rene gave this thimble, actually a family heirloom, to Imelda Marcos during the heyday of the Marcoses.  A family heirloom lost from the family possession, but now available for the public to view at the Malacanang Museum.


The thimble was one of the thimbles used by Dona Marcella Marino Agoncillo to my Great Grandmother Maura Agoncillo Frial, a niece of Felipe Agoncillo, Marcella's husband.   Dona Marcella gave one of her thimbles to my Great Grandma when she was married to my Great  Grand Father.   The Agoncillo's  were a prominent and wealthy family from Taal, Batangas who were into the shipping business, among many other pursuits.   My Great Grandma Maura, was married-off to my Great Grandpa, Adolfo of the political Frial family who ruled the town of Dumalag, Capiz for many decades, well over a century, until recently.

Because of our maternal connection to the Agoncillo family of Taal, Batangas, many of us in our side of the family do not carry the Agoncillo surname anymore, but just the same, we are still very very proud of our noble forebears, Don  Felipe, the first diplomat of the Philippines (envoy to the United States) and Dona Marcella, the lady who sewed the very first Philippine flag.

We are now trying to rebuild our family tree and connect back to our Agoncillo relatives who may or may not anymore carry the Agoncillo surname.  So far, we've had major breakthroughs and we have found many relatives all over the Philippines, the United States (the US seems to be a favorite destination for the Agoncillos), the Middle East and Europe, where I am now.  

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Agoncillo%27s_thimble.jpg

If you are an Agoncillo or related to the Agoncillos, please reach me at mikeignacio@hotmail.com   so I can email you a copy of our family tree in progress.  Perhaps you can help us piece the puzzle together, or fill up the blanks referring to your side of the family.

- Mike Ignacio

May 26, 1859 - Birth of Felipe Agoncillo: First Filipino Diplomat

Today am posting about our family forebear, perhaps a great great grand uncle, Felipe Agoncillo (His daughters all died without heirs).   My Great Grandma Maura Agoncillo was a niece of Felipe, our country's very first diplomat.  . . . the fates surely know how things work, and somehow make me follow in his footsteps as I myself am a diplomat now.


I just found out that he was born on May 26th 1859.  i was born on May 25th not so long ago. 


:D 





He was born on May 26, 1859 to Ramon Agoncillo and Gregoria Encarnacion. Even at an early age, his parents already noted his extraordinary intelligence. He enrolled at the Ateneo Municipal where he was a consistent honor student. He later transferred to the University of Santo Tomas and obtained his Bachelor of Arts with an excellent grade. He was granted a Licentiate in Jurisprudence with the highest honors. After a year of law practice in Manila, he returned to Taal to administer his family’s properties as both his parents had died.  

In Taal, he rendered free legal services to the poor and oppressed. His activities raised the ire of the parish priest and some residents who accused him of being anti patriotic, anti religious and denounced him as a filibustero.

His deportation was recommended but he was forwarned. He briefly fled to Japan and transferred to Hongkong where he joined other Filipinos in exile. After the signing of the Pact of Biak-na-Bato, he headed the Central Revolutionary Committee as procurement office and propaganda agency of the Revolutionary Government.

When hostilities broke out between Filipinos and Americans, the Philippine Revolutionary Government commissioned Agoncillo as Minister Plenipotentiary to conclude treaties with foreign governments.

He and Sixto Lopez went to Washington DC but US President McKinley did not receive them. To drum up sympathy to the Philippine cause, they addressed the American Episcopalian bishops. Agoncillo proceeded to Paris, France to present the Philippine cause at the peace conference convened between Spain and the US but he was ignored.

Two days after the signing of the treaty, he presented a formal protest to the president and delegates of the Spanish-American Commission saying that Spain had no legal right or status with respect to the Philippines since the Spanish government was no longer in authority over the country and that the only authority existing was that of the Filipinos themselves.

Agoncillo tried his best to block the ratification of the Peace treaty – to no avail. On July 15, 1901, Agoncillo returned to Hongkong and rejoined the Junta and later returned to the Philippines after the Filipino American hostilities. In 1907 he represented Batangas in the Philippine Assembly. His legal brilliance shone in his defense of El Renacimiento whose editors were charged with libel by Dean C. Worcester. In 1923 during the administrtion of Governor General Leonard wood, he was appointed Secretary of Interior. He died on September 29, 1941

Sunday, July 13, 2008

Mike is watching . . .

Hancock. Right now. via the web.

(Is this close to how twitter works?)

Locked in

I was opening my door at the 7th floor of our Apartment Building after coming back from Sunday mass at Altitude Cent, when  I  heard this man's muffled voice, call for me.

"Monsieur, Monsieur s'il vous plais."(Mister Mister, please)

I looked at the hallway, I was sharing with the my neighbor at the other apartment, (there are only two apartments per floor), surprised because there was no one.   I looked at the empty elevator I just stepped out of, and I was sure no one rode up with me either.   But then I still heard the man call out to me still in the muffled voice, "Monsieur Monsieur, ici ici"  (Mister mister, here here)

Then I looked up to see if the ceiling port hole trapped some electrician . . .nope.  I checked to see the utility doors, none, no one. 

So I decided to go near the door of my neighbor. . . . True enough, it was he indeed.

He got trapped inside, locked in, by a defective key hole.  Yikes, Isn't that dangerous?

I tried to push against the door, turn the knob, put in my own key, to no avail.  

Finally he pushed his key to me, under the door.  and Voila, I was able to "free" him from that  rather claustrophobic moment.   Only he knows how long he was trying to get out.

I told him in my still basic French,   "Je crois que c'est un petite dangereux, Monsieur"   

He said, Oui Oui and said his thanks and Merci (Thanks) and locked himself inside again.

WTF? 

hehe Oh well.  

Carnappers rob Chavit's Daughter's SUV: Hala Lagot Kayo Kay Chavit!

These carnappers really need to watch their backs, they don't know who they're dealing with.  Chavit Singson's daughter, were they out of their minds!!!! Bwahahahaha.  
========================

Chavit Singson's daughter loses car to armed robbers 

By Marlon Ramos
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 16:51:00 07/13/2008

MANILA -- An 18-year-old teenager, who identified herself to police investigators as a daughter of former Ilocos Sur Gov. Luis "Chavit" Singson, lost her Toyota sports utility vehicle or SUV to armed robbers, who forcibly took the vehicle at gunpoint in Quezon City Sunday morning.

Kimberly Singson, of Valle Verde 1, Quezon City, went to the Anti-Carnapping Unit (Ancar) of the Quezon City Police District (QCPD) in Camp Karingal to formally lodge her complaint against the unidentified armed men.

Inspector Angelo Nicolas, QCPD Ancar chief, said the young lady identified herself as the daughter of Singson.

PO1 Michael Tuanquin, case investigator, said Singson still looked shocked and scared when she and her driver, Teresito Brinosa, gave their statement to Ancar investigators.

"She really looked terrified. She cannot even talk to us and provide the details of the incident," Tuanquin told the Philippine Daily Inquirer.

According to Tuanquin, Brinosa was waiting for Singson inside her black Toyota Fortuner (ZLY 910) in front of the Jollibee branch at the corner of Scout De Guia and Tomas Morato Avenue in Barangay (Village) Laging Handa where she had just taken her breakfast around 6:20 a.m.

He said as Singson went inside her Toyota SUV, which had a "Kalinga" license plate at the front, three armed men suddenly appeared from nowhere and dragged her out of the vehicle.

He said the car thieves, who were armed with an M16 assault rifle and two 9mm pistols, also ordered Brinosa to get out of the SUV.

One of the assailants, who used ski masks to cover their face, whipped Brinosa's forehead with the armalite butt when he tried to ward off the car thieves.

Tuanquin said the armed men quickly boarded the vehicle and sped away.

Nicolas said the QCPD commander, Senior Supt. Magtanggol Gatdula, personally instructed him to ensure the swift resolution of the case and the immediate recovery of the stolen vehicle.

He said they have been conducting a follow-up operation together with elements of the police Highway Patrol Group in Central Luzon.

"We believe the Dominguez-Bonifacio group is behind this carjacking case," he said over the phone, referring to a group believed to be based in Central Luzon.

Quezon City, the biggest and most populous city in Metro Manila, is infamously known as the carnapping capital of the country.

A few weeks ago, a Filipino-Chinese businessman was shot and wounded by armed men who took his vehicle in the village of Mariana.

Despite these recent robberies, Nicolas said they have been able to bring down the number of car thefts in Quezon City by almost 70 percent.

From a monthly average of seven cases in 2007, he said Ancar recorded only two carnapping incidents a month in the first six months of this year.

Saturday, July 12, 2008

Friday, July 11, 2008

And the World's Greatest Noble Fraud is . . . ELDA BEGUINUA from the Philippines


Self Styled  Noblewoman, Elda Beguinua, who originally moved to the London from the Philippines some 20 years ago, succeeded to fool em Britons and Scots all this time, claiming she was a descendant of a noble Spanish family exiled to the Philippines.

"Beguinua said she was the great-great-great-granddaughter of a Spanish nobleman who was ousted by the conquistadors in the 1300s and escaped to the Philippines with shiploads of gold bullion, the London Daily Mail reported."

She also claims to be related to the Royal Houses,the  Bourbons and the Hapsburgs and they had 80,000 tons of gold buried in some Philippine Caves.

Anybody who reads this would laugh at her claims, but not the tens, probably hundreds of Britons who blindly followed and believed her, giving her their entire life savings - enough for her to buy a Rolls Royce, and a partly Scottish Based title of Baroness,including the estate that came with it.

BWahahahahahaha.    You'd wonder if it was really her fault or those of the hundreds of willing victims who willingly gave her their money, like Duh. hahahaha bwahahaha bwahahaha bwhahahahahahaha.

as they say in the UK, isn't that just a wee bit too bloody dumb?

I don't even think this is a matter of national shame for the Philippines, every country has its share of  cracks, loonies and swindlers, but hey, a big part of her success is the incredible number of believers who actually made her an actual pound sterling millionaress by falling for her story BWAHAHAHA.  NOW THAT is more like a national shame for them, not us. BWAHAHAHAHA.

BWAhahahahahaHAHAHAHAH


here is the news clip from the Philippine Daily Inquirer.

Filipina is ‘barefaced contessa,’ lands in UK jail 


Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 03:12:00 07/12/2008


MANILA, Philippines—A Filipino fraudster who lied about needing money to access her “staggeringly vast” wealth to obtain her victims’ life savings has been jailed for five years in Britain, BBC News reported.

Elda Beguinua, 63, was born in the Philippines and first went to Britain 20 years ago.

Also known as the “Barefaced Contessa,” Beguinua claimed she was an aristocrat worth “£300 followed by 41 noughts [zeroes],” making her a “tredecillionaire,” the London Daily Mail reported.

The conwoman, who lived in a rented semi in Dulwich, South London, was found guilty early this month at Southwark Crown Court of a string of fraud charges.

Judge Jeremy McMullen said she had netted £2.3 million (P207 million) and could face deportation to the Philippines.

Beguinua wove an elaborate fairytale of sunken ships, ex-militia and golden nuggets to persuade dupes to help her release the first £250-million (P22.6-billion) installment of her fortune. They never saw their cash again.

She was given a two-year jail sentence in 1997 after trying to defraud banks of £16 trillion, claiming she owned 80,000 tons of gold—more than what has been mined in the past 150 years.

Following her release from prison, between 2003 and 2004 she used the aliases Dr. De Avila and Contessa Beguinua, to swindle people of £21,000 (P1.8 million).

She also claimed to be related to the Hapsbury and Bourbon royal dynasties, the BBC News reported.

Beguinua said she was the great-great-great-granddaughter of a Spanish nobleman who was ousted by the conquistadors in the 1300s and escaped to the Philippines with shiploads of gold bullion, the London Daily Mail reported.

She said the treasure was buried in caves in her native country guarded by former soldiers.

She also claimed she had hundreds of millions of dollars languishing in “57 banks in 33 countries.”

Guardians

According to the BBC News, when Beguinua first went to Britain 20 years ago, she surrounded herself with trusting “adherents” who she began to con, the court heard.

She explained she needed their cash to support “guardians” and pay lawyers to release her alleged wealth.

She soon had enough for a chauffeur-driven Rolls-Royce, a couple of bodyguards and, despite cooks and maids at home, frequent trips to expensive restaurants.

Her vulnerable victims and another who escaped her clutches were surprisingly complimentary about her in court.

They described her as having “terrific memory and a good knowledge on most subjects” as well as “easy to be with, made you feel she was something special, a great lady, strong personality, passionate.”

Beguinua, a twice-married mother-of-two was known to some of her victims as the Contessa de Avila, the BBC News reported.

Others knew here as the Baroness Beguinua, a partly Scottish-based title she bought in 1995 as “it is kind of beautiful to listen to when you are being called such,” the court heard.

She was convicted of a similar offence in 1997 when she claimed title to 80,000 tons of gold, which, had it existed, would have been worth one trillion US dollars.

She said the bullion belonged to the “illegitimate children” of the late dictator Ferdinand Marcos.

Humanitarian projects

The glamorous Beguinua hooked her victims by claiming she would use her vast wealth to fund humanitarian projects in the Third World, the London Daily Mail reported.

Barbara Solon parted with £5,000 (P452,000) after agreeing to help Beguinua secure her fortune. Bernard Cockton, who gave up a job as a senior construction engineer to work for Beguinua, handed over £16,000 (P1.4 million).

The final dupe, William Johnson, was offered a £500,000 (P45.2 million) job as a “world ambassador” by the Barefaced Contessa.

Johnson finally confronted Beguinua telling her he knew of her criminal past when she asked him for £50,000 (P4.5 million)

Palace, Harrods

Officers searching her house found a wardrobe-full of bogus documents that included a letter claiming she had 100 tons of gold bullion.

A letter addressed to billionaire steel magnate Lakshmi Mittal asked if he would sell her his £85-million (P7.6-billion) Kensington Palace home because she “must have it.”

Another letter revealed her wish to make Harrods’ owner Mohammed Fayed “an offer he could not refuse” for the world-famous department store.

But brazen Beguinua told the court she is a wealthy heiress and will prove her doubters wrong when her fortune arrives.

Guilty

Beguinua was found guilty of two counts of obtaining services by deception, five counts of obtaining property by deception, attempting to obtain property by deception and two counts of removing criminal property from England and Wales, Scotland or Northern Ireland between Feb. 14 and July 3, 2004.

Dressed in a white blouse, purple button-up jacket with a long crucifix necklace, she quietly muttered prayers as the verdicts were announced.

The jury failed to reach a verdict on one count of obtaining property by deception, and that count was ordered to lie on the court file.

Digressing . . .

I used to be very thin . . . as a kid, i was puny -- up till college even.   At my height of 5'9"  I used to tip the scales at 105 lbs.  

So my childhood friends and classmates don't seem to recognize me especially when they bump into me  after all these years.  (Some bullies from way back are just so dang short, you can just elbow their noses flat. :D)

Am not exactly obese right now, but I sure do need to lose some weight and the flab around the waist. 

So yep, this summer (summer's just started over here), I've sorta sworn to get into shape again . . . like run and go to the gym.


Driving to Work and Back

Except that I didn't really drive to work so I can go to work. After work, you see, the rain finally stopped and the sun was still up at 830pm, so I decided to take Mighty Thorr, (that's the name of my car) and with the GPS, I drove to my office.   From there, I set the GPS to point to the Embassy, passed it by, and then I went straight back home.   Not bad.  I'm gonna love driving here. (Belgium)
   
The thing is, their sense of "right of way" is all out of whack.   Everything to your right, has right of way.  except if there are jagged triangles on a corner, or when the intersection has traffic lights. 

Oh well, one's gotta get used to the way things are done in Rome, when you're in Rome. 


Signs of Life, Take 2


IMG_7921_marked, originally uploaded by Don Miguel, il Signorino.

This is take 2 of this shot, now with more life and color . . . it still doesn't do it though I think.