Tuesday, December 14, 2010

syria سورية‎

It seems Syria isn't going to get on board with the recent incendiary Pan-Arab revolution. Despite being winged by his father's hand-me-down bureaucrats, apparently the president's an alright guy. Either way, I think skynet is kindling its own ideas.


It took some time to uncover from the elusive media campaign, however - I eventually deduced that J-loc is the Middle Eastern wing of Skynet.


This is the location in which I speculate the critical computer chips to be located, the fountain water is maintained to a fraction of a degree.


Sources which I have communicated with on the subject have suggested that the chip may be contained within the arm of St. John the Baptist, inside that triangular prism (which would insinuate that the one located inside the Topkapı Palace in Istanbul, is a fake). Most evidence resides in Aleppo.

Aleppo

Aside from referential sci-fi allusions to the concepts of a hollywood franchise; Aleppo at times housed an aesthetic dimension akin to a sandcastle New York, with an energy that proved to rise above Damascus. And to reflect that, I have pictures of...the citadel.



...and the courtyard of the Al-Jamaa Al-Kebir (Great Mosque).


Lattakia

Essentially Syria's only port town; and thus beholder of a grand shipyard and enough apparent water to defend a circulating tea fountain.


But besides our hotel owner who relished Tin Tin with the glimmer of a seven year old boy (who lent out his concurrent library eagerly) and the Jetson's tower,


I failed to extract much from the place except a high quality pasta served at an establishment operated by men just nailing the French waiter cariacature.

Hama

Known for it's water-wheels. Old rickety things. But those dusk laden walks beyond the water-wheels.





I failed to capture the severed camel's head.

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