Other than family pictures, etc., I've been working on a collection of the episodes of a show from when I was a kid in the late 80s, "Long Ago and Far Away", showing fairy tales from around the world in a variety of art styles and media, with James Earl Jones as host. I've found maybe 2/3 of the episodes so far. Every few years I do another sweep to try to find more.
There's no solution needed, since there isn't a problem to begin with. Individuals (should) have proportional representation in the House, and states have proportional representation in the Senate, which is how it should be.
Do you think Wyomingites deserve 66.7 times the representation in the Senate?
I happened to notice that it was $420.70 when I first glanced at it this afternoon and then spent the next 5 minutes watching the price fluctuate with my finger on the "Print Screen" button.
I've still been slowly working my way through Monster Hunter Freedom Unite for the PSP. It's hard as nails, but super chill and fun to take my time with. Highly recommended for fans of old school Monster Hunter, especially the ones who enjoy a bit of clunk in their gameplay.
The way I like to put it is that every single time you randomly shuffle a deck of cards, you are guaranteed to get an order that has never been seen before, by anyone in history. That will be the case for every person who ever shuffles a deck of cards for the rest of time.
I can only speak for his linguistic works, but it's odd how much clearer and more straightforward his earlier works are than his later ones. Syntactic structures and Aspects of a Theory of Syntax are easy enough that I'd even recommend them to Introduction to Syntax students, but starting with Lectures on Government and Binding things get increasingly obtuse to the point that I'd always recommend reading "translations" of his later works rather than the works themselves.
Edit for full transparency, since this comment is getting upvoted while Chomsky is getting blasted in the comments here: Don't get me wrong, all of Chomsky's linguistic work is incredibly brilliant. He single-handedly brought about a complete paradigm shift in the field of linguistics. G&B with all of the bells and whistles added by other researchers in the 80s and 90s is still the closest we've come to an actual explanatory theory of syntax, and X-bar theory is probably the single most elegant, ingenious innovation in the history of linguistics.
And that's just syntax. I haven't even mentioned how he and Morris Halle revolutionized phonology a few years later with The Sound Pattern of English, or how he also revolutionized grammar theory with the idea of context-free and context-dependent grammars the year before publishing Syntactic Structures, and all of this somehow still understates the enormous import of Chomsky's linguistic work.
If anyone has any questions about Chomsky's linguistic work, feel free to ask, and I'll respond as best I can.
Other than family pictures, etc., I've been working on a collection of the episodes of a show from when I was a kid in the late 80s, "Long Ago and Far Away", showing fairy tales from around the world in a variety of art styles and media, with James Earl Jones as host. I've found maybe 2/3 of the episodes so far. Every few years I do another sweep to try to find more.