Joined June 2009
661 Photos and videos
Weekend breakfast at the Echo.
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Pate Williams retweeted
Replying to @visegrad24
Most unfortunate. Rockets are hard.
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Pate Williams retweeted
In 458 BC, Rome was on the brink of collapse. An invading army had trapped the Roman consul and his legion in a mountain pass. Panic spread through the city. The Senate did the only thing they could think of: They sent messengers to find a 60-year-old farmer plowing his field. His name was Lucius Quinctius Cincinnatus. He had once been a senator, then lost his fortune paying his son's bail. Now he worked his own four-acre plot just to feed his family. When the Senate's envoys arrived, they found him sweating behind a plow. They asked him to put on his toga so they could deliver an official message. The message: Rome was making him dictator. Absolute power. Total command of the army. No checks. No oversight. No term limit. He accepted. Within 16 days, Cincinnatus had raised an army, marched out, surrounded the enemy, and forced their surrender. The republic was saved. He had legal authority to rule for six months. He could have stayed. He could have expanded his power. He could have done what every other ruler in human history did when handed unlimited control. Instead, he resigned on day 16. He took off the toga, walked back to his farm, and finished plowing the field he'd left half-done. Twenty years later, when Rome faced another crisis, they called him back. He was 80 years old. He took command, crushed the conspiracy, and resigned again, this time after just 21 days. He died poor. On his farm. 2,200 years later, when George Washington was offered a kingship after winning the American Revolution, he refused and went home to Mount Vernon. The reason he was hailed as "the American Cincinnatus" is because Europeans literally could not believe a man who had won would willingly give up power. King George III, on hearing Washington would resign rather than rule, said: "If he does that, he will be the greatest man in the world." The lesson isn't that Cincinnatus was humble. The lesson is that for most of human history, the people most qualified to lead were the ones who didn't want to. And the moment a society starts rewarding those who chase power instead of those who flee from it is the moment the republic begins to die. Cincinnati, Ohio is named after him. Most people who live there have no idea why.
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Rocket launch and Italian food. Nice Wednesday.
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Big breakfast day. Metro Diner
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It is starting to become a Wednesday habit.
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Pate Williams retweeted
A pizzeria in Bergamo, northern Italy

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Third time here this week. I might have a problem.
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Game day at Metro Diner
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Back for more. Day 2 of the Echo.
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Hot chicken day. Yippee!
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Very nice sunrise this morning.
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Breakfast at the Echo. It is busy this morning earlier than usual.
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Heading home
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Final meal before the long drive home tomorrow. Good work week onsite in Jasper but I'm ready to go home.
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One day only rib special and I'm here for it Sonny's BBQ
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Really good mussels and clams dish tonight at Pomodoro.
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Medici Pizza is the best pizza in Gainesville. In my opinion.
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Second floor rail finally painted. That was the final piece remaining on the big summer house project.
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