Wednesday, October 15, 2014

Why it's better to live in American than anywhere else

A lot of folks across the globe do not view America with favor. But no matter how much disfavor they show, their hunger for everything American never really subsides. Their secret love for America lives on and they keep coming back to this land for a staggering number of reasons.

This is where the good grub is.

From curated cupcakes and unlimited refills to finger-lickin’ supersized burgers, American food spells B-I-G, affordable, and fast. The nation is also the home of varieties of culinary experimentation, like the world-famous cronut. All-you-can eat buffets proliferate in every street corner, which are uncommon in many countries.


Image Source: americabyrail.com

There’s endless freedom everywhere.


“Freedom is nothing else but a chance to be better,” Albert Camus once said. He proved his words right because so much about America is a result of the fight for freedom. There’s freedom of speech to freedom of religion. Not to mention the sheer number of what is legal in many states, which are unthinkable in several countries.

Things work based on convenience.


Having 24/7 pharmacies and drive-through fast food outlets is the standard in America. In other countries, this is impossible to have.

There’s unity in diversity.


America is a lodestone of different races, nationalities, religions, and genders. It attracts different people who, together, recognize various skills sets, orientation, backgrounds, and attitudes. This very same diversity encourages people to recognize things other than what they consider normal and usual. Putting one thing and another together, can create, generate, and innovate for the common good.
Once in a while, it’s nice to sit back and take pride in America and everything it offers. This veers the mind from inimical forces to focus on the good, instead.

Read more about American living on this Pete Scamardo Twitter account.

Sunday, October 12, 2014

REPOST: 3 spooky Halloween road trips in the Midwest

Hungry for a perfect getaway this Halloween? Be sure to bring a travel companion as this article from the Indy Star lists down three haunted places that you need to see.


Athens, Ohio - Moonville Tunnel (credit Athens County Convention and Visitor.jpg
(Photo: Athens County Convention and Visitor Bureau ) | Image Source: indystar.com



Every Midwest town has a ghost story or two, but some places seem to attract more ghostly activity than others.

In Paulding, Mich., locals report a mysterious phenomenon called the Paulding Light. In Decatur, Ill., the ghosts of bootleggers and theater stagehands haunt buildings throughout the city. And in Athens, Ohio, a former mental hospital is packed with the ghosts of disgruntled patients.

All three are perfect choices for a spooky Halloween road trip this weekend.

1. Paulding, Mich.

Located on Michigan's Upper Peninsula, the tiny town of Paulding is known for a phenomenon called the Paulding Light.

Pull up alongside U.S. 45 in the evening, and you're likely to see a series of mysterious lights, which appear to float about five feet in the air.

Legend says the lights are the ghostly lanterns of a railroad brakeman who was killed trying to prevent a train accident.

The Paulding Light appeared on Syfy's "Fact or Faked: Paranormal Files" in 2010, and the investigation found no source for the phenomenon.

But students at Michigan Technological University recently suggested otherwise, showing that the lights are actually the headlights and taillights of cars on a nearby highway. Because of atmospheric conditions, the light becomes distorted, giving it a ghostly appearance.

Despite that explanation, a steady stream of visitors still comes to see the phenomenon firsthand.

2. Decatur, Ill.

According to legend, Decatur has been doomed from the beginning, when it was built atop a cluster of Native American burial grounds.

In the 1850s, the town became known as Hell's Half Acre because of its brothels, distilleries and gambling activity. For decades it retained its reputation as a hotbed of political corruption, prostitution, bootlegging and other criminal activity, including plenty of murders.

Today, one of the city's most haunted spots is the Lincoln Square Theater, which opened in 1916. It replaced a hotel that had burned down the previous year, killing two men.

Locals say the theater is haunted by multiple spirits, including a vaudeville stagehand named Red.

The theater is one of several stops on the Haunted Decatur history tour (www.haunteddecatur.com), which has been named one of the "most authentic" ghost tours in the Midwest.

3. Athens, Ohio

Athens has been named one of the most haunted cities in America — perhaps because five of its cemeteries allegedly form the shape of a pentagram on a map.

The epicenter of ghostly activity is The Ridges, formerly a mental hospital. The ghosts of former patients are said to roam the halls. Locals have also noted unusual activity at the The Ridges cemeteries, where some graves were marked with patient numbers rather than names.

Ghost hunters also visit the Moonville Tunnel, which is allegedly haunted by a railroad worker who was killed there.

Hungry for more hauntings? Head to the West State Street Cemetery, where a stone angel presides over the graves of unknown soldiers. If you're lucky, you may catch her crying.

Go to this Pete Scamardo Facebook page for more travel destinations.