Tuesday, February 13, 2018

Happy Valentine's Day


It's a softer version of the Intercontinental Ballistic Missile (ICBM) weapon capable of carrying a nuclear warhead — it's an Intercontinental Ballistic Love Missile.

Standing at 14 feet tall on Eddie and Nancy Gines' Indianhead Drive front lawn, embellished with scarlet Valentine's Day hearts and Cupid decals, the "love missile" is far from calamitous.
  1. Inside an info-box are copies of its associated love manifesto, complete with "love action ideas": smile often; befriend neighbors; plant a tree; be there for someone.
    "Imagine a neighborhood, a community, a country, a world where love permeates all beings and things. Together we can make that a reality," the note reads.
    Cupid 1 is elder-care social worker Eddie Gines' labor of, well, love. He and his family spent three weeks building it from wooden pallets and air conditioning duct.
    The tongue-in-cheek prototype taunts North Korea's weapon of mass destruction. It's even equipped with its own "big red button," poking fun at the social media brawl between President Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.
    “Really, we have a powerful weapon already that would wipe out the weapons of mass destruction. And that's love," said Gines, 57. "We each have the capacity to be loved and share love, and an endless supply of our hearts and souls to share that.”

    No matter how much he'd like to, Gines obviously couldn't conjure up a real missile that would spread infectious love instead of destruction.
    But he could try his hand at a symbolic one.
    “There could be this fantasy weapon that could get us back to square one, I thought. That doesn’t exist obviously … so I got to think about it a little further," he said.
    Gines said he hopes the display inspires others to spread compassion.
    "Lately, with everything going on politically and the fracturing in the community ... the one thing that would really help all of that and maybe get us back on track is to focus in on love energy," he said.
    His wife, Nancy Gines, added, “We’re so focused on the negative things … that we forget to just reach out to each other. Put down your phones, put down your apparatus, wave when someone passes down the street.

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