The Feds are talking up a plan to require nutrition labels on booze, (beer, wine, liquor). Right, that will solve the obesity crisis. Everyone knows that alcohol is fattening, and not nutritious. Beer is beer, wine is wine, and liquor is liquor. There is no difference between brands, it's the alcohol that does the fattening. Alcohol is a fine fuel, lots of calories. Tasty too.
I figure this is a ploy to distract the newsies from things like IRS and Benghazi.
This blog posts about aviation, automobiles, electronics, programming, politics and such other subjects as catch my interest. The blog is based in northern New Hampshire, USA
Thursday, July 18, 2013
Whitey Bulger.
A witness in the Whitey Bulger trial turned up dead out in Lincoln. What is a Southie guy doing out in Lincoln? Lincoln is a tony, pricey, white bread suburb far outside Rte 128. The T doesn't run there. You gotta drive to get to Lincoln. Mobsters don't retire to Lincoln after they have made their pile. They settle in places like Melrose and Malden.
So if this stiff drove out to Lincoln and died of natural causes, or suicide, where is his car? If he drove out to Lincoln in a friend's car, surely a friend would not just dump the body by the side of the road. At least anyone who would do that ain't much of a friend.
One the other hand, friends of Whitey's might take the dead man for a ride, and Lincoln is as good a place to dump a body as anywhere.
Color this death highly suspicious.
So if this stiff drove out to Lincoln and died of natural causes, or suicide, where is his car? If he drove out to Lincoln in a friend's car, surely a friend would not just dump the body by the side of the road. At least anyone who would do that ain't much of a friend.
One the other hand, friends of Whitey's might take the dead man for a ride, and Lincoln is as good a place to dump a body as anywhere.
Color this death highly suspicious.
House Fly Day
Dunno why, but the house flies have been popping up all over the house. They are big and fat, and slow enough to hand swat. But it got so bad I resorted to chemical warfare. This resulted in a shower of dead flies all across the kitchen floor. I swept up a whole dust pan worth of flies, and an hour later I had to sweep the kitchen floor a second time and filled the dust pan again.
Wednesday, July 17, 2013
Asiana 214 Has Automation Trumped Airmanship?
Asiana 214, the 777 that crashed at San Francisco last week, came in too low and too slow, and hit the seawall at the end of the runway. Apparently the crew had set the autothrottle to hold the proper airspeed (137 knots) and for some reason the autothrottle allowed the airspeed to slack off too much. The crew didn't notice until it was too late.
They haven't said if the autothrottle failed, or wasn't set correctly, or for some software reason decided not to hold the setting. The Aviation Week article goes into some detail about the various modes of the autothrottle, in some modes, it doesn't work the throttles, and it can change modes on its own without notifying the pilot.
Autothrottle is a new fangled luxury. Back in my day, only the C141 jet transport had autothrottle, and that was part of the All Weather Landing System, unique to the C141. All the other aircraft had a plain old throttle lever, the engine power stayed where it was set by hand. And they all managed to land in one piece.
Speed on landing approach is critical. You want to come in as slow as possible. Slow makes it easier to get the wheels on the runway (as opposed to in the weeds), easier to get the plane stopped before running off the far end of the runway, and lessens the shock on gear and airframe. Too much shock breaks things and blows tires.
On the other hand, go too slow and the wing stalls, stops producing lift, and the aircraft falls like a stone. All control is lost. There is little difference between proper landing speed and stall speed.
It's hard to understand how the crew failed to check their approach speed, and notice that the autothrottle was playing them false. For that matter it's hard to understand why they used autothrottle at all. Was it me, with few hours in the 777, I'd tend to do things by hand, the old fashioned way, rather than find out what nasty bugs might lurk in a tricky newfangled autothrottle.
They haven't said if the autothrottle failed, or wasn't set correctly, or for some software reason decided not to hold the setting. The Aviation Week article goes into some detail about the various modes of the autothrottle, in some modes, it doesn't work the throttles, and it can change modes on its own without notifying the pilot.
Autothrottle is a new fangled luxury. Back in my day, only the C141 jet transport had autothrottle, and that was part of the All Weather Landing System, unique to the C141. All the other aircraft had a plain old throttle lever, the engine power stayed where it was set by hand. And they all managed to land in one piece.
Speed on landing approach is critical. You want to come in as slow as possible. Slow makes it easier to get the wheels on the runway (as opposed to in the weeds), easier to get the plane stopped before running off the far end of the runway, and lessens the shock on gear and airframe. Too much shock breaks things and blows tires.
On the other hand, go too slow and the wing stalls, stops producing lift, and the aircraft falls like a stone. All control is lost. There is little difference between proper landing speed and stall speed.
It's hard to understand how the crew failed to check their approach speed, and notice that the autothrottle was playing them false. For that matter it's hard to understand why they used autothrottle at all. Was it me, with few hours in the 777, I'd tend to do things by hand, the old fashioned way, rather than find out what nasty bugs might lurk in a tricky newfangled autothrottle.
Stand your ground protects us against criminal justice crazies
Eric Holder is on a tear about stand your ground laws in the aftermath of the dreadful Martin-Zimmerman case. He is claiming they promote violence.
Not true. Stand your ground laws were enacted to curb abusive prosecutors, like Holder. When they started to prosecute home owners who shot home invaders, motorists who shot car jackers, and store keepers who shot robbers, the public took alarm and passed stand your ground laws to put a stop to this atrocious behavior by the criminal justice system.
The laws usually read something like this. Use of deadly force is legitimate in defense of your home, your motor vehicle, your place of business, and any other place your have a right to be. The last clause was added to prevent weasel lawyers from twisting words and limiting the definition of home to exclude such things as rental property. You know how it is with weasels.
Stand your ground had nothing to do with the Martin-Zimmerman trial. When your opponent has you flat on your back and is pounding your head into the cement, retreat is impossible.
Not true. Stand your ground laws were enacted to curb abusive prosecutors, like Holder. When they started to prosecute home owners who shot home invaders, motorists who shot car jackers, and store keepers who shot robbers, the public took alarm and passed stand your ground laws to put a stop to this atrocious behavior by the criminal justice system.
The laws usually read something like this. Use of deadly force is legitimate in defense of your home, your motor vehicle, your place of business, and any other place your have a right to be. The last clause was added to prevent weasel lawyers from twisting words and limiting the definition of home to exclude such things as rental property. You know how it is with weasels.
Stand your ground had nothing to do with the Martin-Zimmerman trial. When your opponent has you flat on your back and is pounding your head into the cement, retreat is impossible.
Tuesday, July 16, 2013
The Senate Comprehensive Immigration Bill
The newsies have been going out of their way to avoid talking about what's in this bill. They are mostly in favor of it, but they ain't telling us what's in it. Here is my understanding of the contents.
1. Those 11 million or so illegal immigrants inside the country all become "Registered Provisional Immigrants" right off the bat. Before any border security measures. Nobody is talking about just what "registered provisional immigrant" means, but it probably gives them the right to stay in the country and the right to hold a job. And if you have that, who needs a green card? Let alone US citizenship?
Secondary issue, there will be a cut off date. You have to be inside the US before the cutoff date to become a registered provisional immigrant. Expect a huge rush into the country before the cutoff date. Expect everyone who comes in after the cutoff date to claim that they got in before the cutoff date.
2. Registered provisional immigrants can become real US citizens if they are willing pay serious money and put up with a lot of paperwork and mickey mouse over a lot of years. This is the "path to citizenship". It sounds sufficiently obnoxious as to discourage all but the most motivated. Besides, being a plain registered provisional immigrant is probably good enough for a lot of them.
3. We let in a lot more computer programmers and engineers on the "H1B" visas. High tech companies like this. We let in a lot more temporary unskilled workers to pick crops. Agri business likes this.
4. We hammer employers harder for hiring illegals. Unions like this. Unresolved issue, if every one inside the country is now a "registered provisional immigrant" will not the E-verify system say they are OK to hire?
5. We appropriate a wad of money for border fences, more border patrolmen, and some high tech welfare for surveillance camera's and drones. Maybe Obama spends the money on security and maybe he doesn't.
6. Maybe we revise the legal immigration system to favor the well educated, the young, over aged grandparents.
1. Those 11 million or so illegal immigrants inside the country all become "Registered Provisional Immigrants" right off the bat. Before any border security measures. Nobody is talking about just what "registered provisional immigrant" means, but it probably gives them the right to stay in the country and the right to hold a job. And if you have that, who needs a green card? Let alone US citizenship?
Secondary issue, there will be a cut off date. You have to be inside the US before the cutoff date to become a registered provisional immigrant. Expect a huge rush into the country before the cutoff date. Expect everyone who comes in after the cutoff date to claim that they got in before the cutoff date.
2. Registered provisional immigrants can become real US citizens if they are willing pay serious money and put up with a lot of paperwork and mickey mouse over a lot of years. This is the "path to citizenship". It sounds sufficiently obnoxious as to discourage all but the most motivated. Besides, being a plain registered provisional immigrant is probably good enough for a lot of them.
3. We let in a lot more computer programmers and engineers on the "H1B" visas. High tech companies like this. We let in a lot more temporary unskilled workers to pick crops. Agri business likes this.
4. We hammer employers harder for hiring illegals. Unions like this. Unresolved issue, if every one inside the country is now a "registered provisional immigrant" will not the E-verify system say they are OK to hire?
5. We appropriate a wad of money for border fences, more border patrolmen, and some high tech welfare for surveillance camera's and drones. Maybe Obama spends the money on security and maybe he doesn't.
6. Maybe we revise the legal immigration system to favor the well educated, the young, over aged grandparents.
Labels:
E-verify,
H1b visa,
register provisional immigrant
Monday, July 15, 2013
Poor Boeing
After the notorious lithium battery fires in the 787, trouble struck again. A parked 787 at Heathrow started smoking and the fire department was called to put it out. Nobody was on board at the time. Nobody has been talking about the cause of the fire. There is now a scorch mark on the top of the fuselage back toward the tail. The notorious lithium batteries are located elsewhere in the plane. This unfortunate accident was largely ignored by the US media in favor of covering the verdict on the Trayvon Martin trial.
Boeing is surely hoping that it turns out to be human error, such as the crew left the galley stove running after the last flight. The Brits are cooperating by not making any statements to the media. Rolls Royce makes the engines. Clearly everyone wants the 787 to succeed and they are doing the best they can to help the plane along in the face of terrible publicity.
Boeing is surely hoping that it turns out to be human error, such as the crew left the galley stove running after the last flight. The Brits are cooperating by not making any statements to the media. Rolls Royce makes the engines. Clearly everyone wants the 787 to succeed and they are doing the best they can to help the plane along in the face of terrible publicity.
Double Jeopardy
Amendment V. "Nor shall any person be subject for the same offense to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb."
They put this in the Bill of Rights to even things up. The government has the money to keep on trying for a conviction, long after any citizen has been driven into bankruptcy. So the Bill of Rights limits the government's efforts to ONE try. If the defendant gets off, then the government is forbidden to try again.
The Trayvon Martin partisans are soap boxing to hit Zimmerman with federal civil rights violations now that he has been acquitted. That's double jeopardy, pure and simple.
They put this in the Bill of Rights to even things up. The government has the money to keep on trying for a conviction, long after any citizen has been driven into bankruptcy. So the Bill of Rights limits the government's efforts to ONE try. If the defendant gets off, then the government is forbidden to try again.
The Trayvon Martin partisans are soap boxing to hit Zimmerman with federal civil rights violations now that he has been acquitted. That's double jeopardy, pure and simple.
No where to put violent madmen
They dropped him off at a Manchester hospital, Friday. A decision to commit him to the state mental hospital involuntarily was made. But the state hospital was full. So they left him in the ER. All night, all weekend. By Monday he was good and mad and assaulted an ER worker, breaking his jaw and knocking out four teeth. He them slugged a nurse hard enough to break her cheek bone.
In short, New Hampshire is so short on state hospital beds that dangerous nut cases are parked in hospital ER, awaiting a bed to open up.
Here we had a violent case who was bad enough to get committed, and NH didn't have anywhere to put him. They left him hanging around until he injured two people.
What chance do we have of committing a school shooter before he kills children?
In short, New Hampshire is so short on state hospital beds that dangerous nut cases are parked in hospital ER, awaiting a bed to open up.
Here we had a violent case who was bad enough to get committed, and NH didn't have anywhere to put him. They left him hanging around until he injured two people.
What chance do we have of committing a school shooter before he kills children?
Sunday, July 14, 2013
The View from the Ivory Tower
" No one now doubts the what the Arab public wants is elected constitutional government." So says this week's Economist magazine.
Is that right? Or does the Arab public just want life to suck less? The two worst cases, Egypt and Syria are running out of food, have run out of jobs, and feature armed terrorists running around loose. Both countries have failed to feed themselves, the only thing preventing mass famine is food imports, which they lack the money to pay for.
Has the Arab public given up on imposing Sharia law, driving the Jews into the sea, and exterminating the Shia (or the Sunni depending upon which side they are on)?
Me thinks the Economist is merely passing on the bloviations of properly raised young upper class Brits. I doubt any of their writers speak Arabic and has lived on the economy in say Cairo.
Is that right? Or does the Arab public just want life to suck less? The two worst cases, Egypt and Syria are running out of food, have run out of jobs, and feature armed terrorists running around loose. Both countries have failed to feed themselves, the only thing preventing mass famine is food imports, which they lack the money to pay for.
Has the Arab public given up on imposing Sharia law, driving the Jews into the sea, and exterminating the Shia (or the Sunni depending upon which side they are on)?
Me thinks the Economist is merely passing on the bloviations of properly raised young upper class Brits. I doubt any of their writers speak Arabic and has lived on the economy in say Cairo.
Saturday, July 13, 2013
The Fat Lady Sings
Jury just acquitted George Zimmerman. Maybe we can put this distasteful case behind us, now? Please.
Dawn over Marblehead
The clock radio came on, as usual this morning, and they are running a piece on a miraculous new educational concept. Radical it is. They mix athletics with class room teaching. I listened to a long learned discussion of the wonderful neurological effects, and how much more ready to learn to children are after exercise. They made it sound like the greatest innovation since Socrates.
Of course this is something any parent knows. Children are full of bounce and energy and you have to get 'em out of doors and run off steam if you want 'em to sit still indoors. I used to take 'em out down hill skiing. After even a half a day skiing Cannon, they would be so tired that they would fall asleep on the living room rug in front of the TV.
I wonder if the ed majors running our school still do recess.
Of course this is something any parent knows. Children are full of bounce and energy and you have to get 'em out of doors and run off steam if you want 'em to sit still indoors. I used to take 'em out down hill skiing. After even a half a day skiing Cannon, they would be so tired that they would fall asleep on the living room rug in front of the TV.
I wonder if the ed majors running our school still do recess.
Thursday, July 11, 2013
Child Abuse ???
The prosecution in the Trayvon Martin trial is beginning to doubt that they can make second degree murder stick. So they are adding some lesser charges that the jury might find easier to convict upon. The prosecutors are now charging Zimmerman with child abuse, 'cause Martin was under 18.
Child Abuse? Shoot a stranger dead out of doors and it's child abuse? Is this sort of crime that the good legislators of Florida had in mind when they passed the state child abuse law?
Ham sandwich nation.
Child Abuse? Shoot a stranger dead out of doors and it's child abuse? Is this sort of crime that the good legislators of Florida had in mind when they passed the state child abuse law?
Ham sandwich nation.
Bye-bye manufacturing jobs.
Sturm Ruger, a noted old line American firearms maker, announced that they will open a new factory in North Carolina, rather than expand their existing plant in New Hampshire. The company cited the lack of a right to work law in NH as one strong reason for building else where.
Damn. We nearly had right to work up here. It passed the house and senate only to be vetoed by former governor Lynch. We had enough votes to override Lynch's veto in the senate, and were only a dozen votes short in the house. Every union in New Hampshire, and a whole bunch for out of state, opposed right to work with every breath in their bodies. It would have passed without that die hard opposition.
Thanks, unions, for sending all those good manufacturing jobs off to North Carolina.
Damn. We nearly had right to work up here. It passed the house and senate only to be vetoed by former governor Lynch. We had enough votes to override Lynch's veto in the senate, and were only a dozen votes short in the house. Every union in New Hampshire, and a whole bunch for out of state, opposed right to work with every breath in their bodies. It would have passed without that die hard opposition.
Thanks, unions, for sending all those good manufacturing jobs off to North Carolina.
Must be 'cause of Global Warming
We now have alligators in New Hampshire. A three footer was captured yesterday in the Lamprey River near Portsmouth NH. A town police officer, assisted by a state fish and game warden captured the reptile alive. And a good thing for the alligator, summer may be nourishing up here, but I don't believe alligators can take it when the river freezes over in winter. Global warming hasn't gone that far, yet. This story made the front page of the Manchester Union Leader.
Up here we aren't that used to alligators yet. A three footer took two men to deal with it, and caused a front page story. Down in real alligator country, Florida, a nine foot gator showed up at an elementary school. The school resource officer, a strapping young blonde woman, all by her self, got a rope around its neck, flipped it upside down, and duct taped its jaws shut. We need some practice before we get that good at dealing with gators.
Up here we aren't that used to alligators yet. A three footer took two men to deal with it, and caused a front page story. Down in real alligator country, Florida, a nine foot gator showed up at an elementary school. The school resource officer, a strapping young blonde woman, all by her self, got a rope around its neck, flipped it upside down, and duct taped its jaws shut. We need some practice before we get that good at dealing with gators.
Wednesday, July 10, 2013
A Mailing from Annie Kuster
Annie is my democratic US rep. She did a constituent mailing, a duo-fold color post card. Had artwork showing Main St Littleton (my home town, close enough) the State house, the Ammonusuc River, the covered bridge up by the Flume.
Open it up and Annie promises to go to bat with federal agencies for you, expedite your grant requests, obtain service academy appointments for your children, obtain a greeting card from Obama, expedite your passport applications, offer internships in her office[s], issue official attaboys, and get high school students into the Artistic Discovery Contest. Lots of nice giveaways to voters.
Not a word about taxes, Obamacare, IRS, Benghazi, jobs, war on coal, cutting off subsidies to the Egyptian army, Keystone XL, sequester, Northern Pass, or any other reason to vote for her.
On the back page it says "This mailing was prepared, published, and mailed at taxpayer expense."
Way to go Annie.
Open it up and Annie promises to go to bat with federal agencies for you, expedite your grant requests, obtain service academy appointments for your children, obtain a greeting card from Obama, expedite your passport applications, offer internships in her office[s], issue official attaboys, and get high school students into the Artistic Discovery Contest. Lots of nice giveaways to voters.
Not a word about taxes, Obamacare, IRS, Benghazi, jobs, war on coal, cutting off subsidies to the Egyptian army, Keystone XL, sequester, Northern Pass, or any other reason to vote for her.
On the back page it says "This mailing was prepared, published, and mailed at taxpayer expense."
Way to go Annie.
Tuesday, July 9, 2013
Lifeline
The Daily Mail reports on a new blood test that will indicate how long you have to live. Robert A. Heinlein wrote a short story about this very idea, way back in 1939. In the story a fictional Dr. Hugo Pinero invented the technique. The story opens with Dr. Pinero invited to a scientific convention and getting trashed by disbelieving scientists. Pinero's invention plays hob with the life insurance business, who hire hitmen to do away with him and make the world safe for life insurance salesmen.
Science fiction comes to life, again.
Science fiction comes to life, again.
Monday, July 8, 2013
Trayvon Martin/George Zimmermann trial
The TV newsies are giving it wall to wall coverage, they put up a breaking news alert everytime the trial breaks for lunch. Then we have to suffer thru hours of opining about who is ahead, Florida law, judges instructions to the jury and other legal gobble-de-gook.
In actual fact, it's purely up to the jury. If they think Zimmermann was in fear of his life then it's self defense. If they think Zimmermann was stalking Martin, then it's murder. It's all about what you think. So we won't know until the case goes to the jury.
In actual fact, it's purely up to the jury. If they think Zimmermann was in fear of his life then it's self defense. If they think Zimmermann was stalking Martin, then it's murder. It's all about what you think. So we won't know until the case goes to the jury.
So did they set the parking brake?
Just north of here, the Canadians suffered a dreadful train wreck. Tank cars loaded with crude oil derailed in the center of town and burst into flames. Five are known dead, 40 are missing, and it's a good bet the missing are actually dead, but the fire was so fierce nobody got close enough to check. Center of town is burned out.
The railroad (Canadian National? Canadian Pacific? the TV didn't bother to say) says that the train was parked, the crew was catching up on sleep in a motel. It was claimed that "all safety devices were set". But somehow the train got loose and rolled into town.
There are a few questions unanswered. Unasked by clueful newsies.
Were the train brakes set, or just the engine brakes? Every car in a train has air brakes as well as a separate set of brakes on the engine. For ordinary operations (flat terrain, expected station stop) it's customary to use just the engine brakes. Train brakes are reserved for tougher situations like decending mountain grades. If the brakes on every car were set to park the train it is hard to understand how it could run away. If just the engine brakes were set, a run away is more likely.
Brakes are fail safe. Air pressure holds the brakes off. Should the train line leak, or worse, separate, the air runs out and the brakes go on.
Were the diesel engines left running? It's standard practice around here to leave them running, especially in winter, 'cause they might not start when cold. A runaway is more likely if the diesels are running, with nobody on board.
Oher interesting bit. The train was loaded with North Dakota crude headed for an Irving refinery in New Brunswick. Accident would not have happened if that North Dakota crude had been headed for a US gulf refinery thru the Keystone XL pipeline.
The railroad (Canadian National? Canadian Pacific? the TV didn't bother to say) says that the train was parked, the crew was catching up on sleep in a motel. It was claimed that "all safety devices were set". But somehow the train got loose and rolled into town.
There are a few questions unanswered. Unasked by clueful newsies.
Were the train brakes set, or just the engine brakes? Every car in a train has air brakes as well as a separate set of brakes on the engine. For ordinary operations (flat terrain, expected station stop) it's customary to use just the engine brakes. Train brakes are reserved for tougher situations like decending mountain grades. If the brakes on every car were set to park the train it is hard to understand how it could run away. If just the engine brakes were set, a run away is more likely.
Brakes are fail safe. Air pressure holds the brakes off. Should the train line leak, or worse, separate, the air runs out and the brakes go on.
Were the diesel engines left running? It's standard practice around here to leave them running, especially in winter, 'cause they might not start when cold. A runaway is more likely if the diesels are running, with nobody on board.
Oher interesting bit. The train was loaded with North Dakota crude headed for an Irving refinery in New Brunswick. Accident would not have happened if that North Dakota crude had been headed for a US gulf refinery thru the Keystone XL pipeline.
Sunday, July 7, 2013
Wall Warts multiplying like rabbits
Dunno where they all come from but, today's shop cleanup yielded 6 old wall warts, left over from forgotten gadgets I suppose. But perhaps they mate in the dark and multiply? Did I really have six wall wart powered gadgets? Even with gadget loving children to help?
Anyhow they are useful. One spare wall wart got my cable modem back on line a year ago, several others are powering the HO railroad. So I won't pitch 'em.
Anyhow they are useful. One spare wall wart got my cable modem back on line a year ago, several others are powering the HO railroad. So I won't pitch 'em.
Saturday, July 6, 2013
Innumeracy at San Francisco
The TV news has been going berserk about the 777 crash in San Francisco today. They had the San Francisco lady fire chief up in front of the TV. The question we all want answered, How many people made it off the plane alive? She didn't answer that question, and none of the newsies were smart enough to ask it. She did say that the airline reported 307 souls on board. She allowed as how 48 survivors were hospitalized and 192 turned up at the airport. That's only 240 people. What happened to the other 67? Did they fail to get off and burn to death when the plane caught fire? Did they wander off the airport in the confusion and take taxis to where ever they were going? Are they still wandering around in the tall grass off Runway 28L? Are they stuck in customs?
I expected a fire chief to know how to count. This one clearly didn't. Probably never did learn the new math.
Also kinda disgusting, all the officials called it "an incident". Here they have a burned out airliner still smoking on the runway, debris all over the runway, and they can't come right out and say "accident"? What's wrong with this picture?
I expected a fire chief to know how to count. This one clearly didn't. Probably never did learn the new math.
Also kinda disgusting, all the officials called it "an incident". Here they have a burned out airliner still smoking on the runway, debris all over the runway, and they can't come right out and say "accident"? What's wrong with this picture?
Does John McCain know anything?
John McCain was on NHPR this morning calling for cancellation of US aid to Egypt. I don't agree. Egypt's population decided they had had enough of the Muslim Brotherhood and Morsi, they staged protest demonstrations bigger than the ones that deposed Mubarak, the Egyptian Army took the hint and showed Morsi the door. Morsi and the Brotherhood had managed to throw most Egyptians out of work, ruin the tourist trade, and were getting ready to provoke a war with the Israelis.
And, you gotta understand who the Muslim Brotherhood is. They are an underground Islamist revolutionary movement that got started in the 1920's, with the objective of throwing the British out of Egypt. They were so violent that the British, Nasser, Sadat, and Mubarak had all outlawed the party and threw every brother they caught into jail. They are the best organized political party in Egypt, having had the last hundred years to get organized . The Brotherhood founded Al Quada, Abu Nadal, and the Palestinian Liberation Organization. The Brotherhood killed Anwat Sadat. Osama bin Laden started his political career with the Brotherhood. They are dangerous and they want us dead. There is no way we are gonna change their minds, we cannot kiss and make up, we have to oppose them.
After the "Arab Spring" demos last year, Obama helped throw Mubarak out of power. The Brotherhood moved right into the vacuum thus created and managed to gain a majority in the legislature and elect one of their own to the presidency. They have spend the last year driving the county underwater. Good work Obama.
Last week we had a stroke of pure unadulerated luck, the second Arab Spring, and the Egyptian Army has removed Morsi and the Brotherhood from power. The army was able to do this because it have been receiving sizable American money ever since the Camp David Accords back in the Carter Administration. This enabled the Army to pay the troops, buy rations, ammunition, spare parts and fuel, without having to pay off the Egyptian politicians. We made training spaces available in all the US military schools so most of the Egyptian officer corps has done schooling in the US. Some of our ideals have rubbed off on them. In short we have built the Egyptian Army up into the most powerful institution in the country, an institution that has the respect of their citizens and is sympathetic to the American point of view. It wasn't cheap, but right now, it looks like money well spent.
And the ever clueful John McCain wants to screw all this up by cutting of the money. Good work McCain.
And, you gotta understand who the Muslim Brotherhood is. They are an underground Islamist revolutionary movement that got started in the 1920's, with the objective of throwing the British out of Egypt. They were so violent that the British, Nasser, Sadat, and Mubarak had all outlawed the party and threw every brother they caught into jail. They are the best organized political party in Egypt, having had the last hundred years to get organized . The Brotherhood founded Al Quada, Abu Nadal, and the Palestinian Liberation Organization. The Brotherhood killed Anwat Sadat. Osama bin Laden started his political career with the Brotherhood. They are dangerous and they want us dead. There is no way we are gonna change their minds, we cannot kiss and make up, we have to oppose them.
After the "Arab Spring" demos last year, Obama helped throw Mubarak out of power. The Brotherhood moved right into the vacuum thus created and managed to gain a majority in the legislature and elect one of their own to the presidency. They have spend the last year driving the county underwater. Good work Obama.
Last week we had a stroke of pure unadulerated luck, the second Arab Spring, and the Egyptian Army has removed Morsi and the Brotherhood from power. The army was able to do this because it have been receiving sizable American money ever since the Camp David Accords back in the Carter Administration. This enabled the Army to pay the troops, buy rations, ammunition, spare parts and fuel, without having to pay off the Egyptian politicians. We made training spaces available in all the US military schools so most of the Egyptian officer corps has done schooling in the US. Some of our ideals have rubbed off on them. In short we have built the Egyptian Army up into the most powerful institution in the country, an institution that has the respect of their citizens and is sympathetic to the American point of view. It wasn't cheap, but right now, it looks like money well spent.
And the ever clueful John McCain wants to screw all this up by cutting of the money. Good work McCain.
Friday, July 5, 2013
Too young for fireworks
Did the Fourth of July thing. Barbeque burgers and hot dogs on the deck (Brother John's deck this time) Chewed the fat, reminisced about old times, drank some beer, put on some weight. The rain held off, just barely. Children are small, less than 1, 2,and 4. Grownups decided not to do fireworks, at least not this year. Maybe next year.
Thursday, July 4, 2013
Egypt is more important than it looks
Egypt is one center of the Arab world. (Iraq is the other). Egypt became Moslem back in Mohammed's time. To Moslems it is a holy land, not the holiest perhaps, but still holy. The University of Cairo has been granting degrees since medieval times. Arab fashion, art, literature, music, newspapers, all the cultural things are centered in Cairo. The rest of the Arab world looks to Egypt for leadership, for ideology, for news. Young Arabs are sent to Cairo for their education (at least those that are not sent to the United States). Egypt is a trend setter, an example setter.
Yesterday's overthrow of the Islamist Morsi regime is very important. It says, loud and clear, in an Arab voice, that Islamism is rejected by the mass of the Arab population. This is the best thing we could have hoped for. It may provide an example for the rest of the Middle East. Turkey in particular.
Egypt now needs a decent regime, run by decent men, to bring some order out of chaos, get their economy working again, well enough to avert famine, and get the security situation in hand sufficiently to bring the tourists back.
I have no idea which Egyptians are presidential timber. I don't read or speak Arabic, I have never been in the country. But State Dept or CIA ought to have some idea. At a minimum they should have a list of each Egyptian's standing, where he comes from, who supports him, where he was educated, what his political views are. The US ought to quietly contact these people, at least the ones that we think would do Egypt some good, and assure them of our friendship, offer them help. Lotta things we can help with, money, an internet presence, radio and TV broadcasting facilities, visas, air tickets, intelligence, arms and ammunition, economic development. All we have to do is guarantee secrecy.
Should it come out that El So-and-so is in the pay of the Americans, it's a death sentence for El So-and-so. CIA has a terrible record in this regard, and State isn't much better. Right now US military officers would be more convincing go betweens than anyone from the intelligence community.
Yesterday's overthrow of the Islamist Morsi regime is very important. It says, loud and clear, in an Arab voice, that Islamism is rejected by the mass of the Arab population. This is the best thing we could have hoped for. It may provide an example for the rest of the Middle East. Turkey in particular.
Egypt now needs a decent regime, run by decent men, to bring some order out of chaos, get their economy working again, well enough to avert famine, and get the security situation in hand sufficiently to bring the tourists back.
I have no idea which Egyptians are presidential timber. I don't read or speak Arabic, I have never been in the country. But State Dept or CIA ought to have some idea. At a minimum they should have a list of each Egyptian's standing, where he comes from, who supports him, where he was educated, what his political views are. The US ought to quietly contact these people, at least the ones that we think would do Egypt some good, and assure them of our friendship, offer them help. Lotta things we can help with, money, an internet presence, radio and TV broadcasting facilities, visas, air tickets, intelligence, arms and ammunition, economic development. All we have to do is guarantee secrecy.
Should it come out that El So-and-so is in the pay of the Americans, it's a death sentence for El So-and-so. CIA has a terrible record in this regard, and State isn't much better. Right now US military officers would be more convincing go betweens than anyone from the intelligence community.
Wednesday, July 3, 2013
Trip to Boston
The urge to shop rose up, and so I fired up the Mercury and drove down to Boston today. Left at 7 AM, got to my first shopping stop by 9. Talk about infrastructure. I93 down thru NH was in good shape. Not so in Mass. The contractor who laid the last coat of asphalt on the Mass end of I93 and Rt 128 took some cheapcut and the whole asphalt layer was peeling up, creating suspension wrecking potholes. Glad I'm retired and don't have to commute on that stuff anymore. I hit the big Salvation Army thrift store on US 1 and scored four decent shirts, a drinking glass, a muffin pan and a pyrex measuring cup. Then I got to Charles Ro, the Malden train store and scored a bunch of train stuff. Hit the Lincoln paperback book store on the way back and scored six paperbacks. All in all a reasonable day.
Stand your ground.
The newsies have been talking up the Florida stand your ground law. Zimmerman, who wanted to get into law enforcement, had taken a course in criminal law. The prosecution dragged in George Zimmerman's old professor, who testified that Zimmerman had done well in class, gotten an A in the course, and was well versed in the Florida stand your ground law.
The prosecution went on to accuse Zimmerman of shooting Trayvon Martin 'cause he knew the stand you ground law would make it OK somehow.
And they expect a jury to believe this? Zimmerman is flat on his back, with Martin beating his head against a cement sidewalk. Zimmerman, in fear of his life shoots Martin. Would anyone in Zimmerman's position be thinking about stand your ground, as opposed to save my life? Would not even the most gullible juror understand that?
What is the prosecution trying to do?
The prosecution went on to accuse Zimmerman of shooting Trayvon Martin 'cause he knew the stand you ground law would make it OK somehow.
And they expect a jury to believe this? Zimmerman is flat on his back, with Martin beating his head against a cement sidewalk. Zimmerman, in fear of his life shoots Martin. Would anyone in Zimmerman's position be thinking about stand your ground, as opposed to save my life? Would not even the most gullible juror understand that?
What is the prosecution trying to do?
Tuesday, July 2, 2013
Airlines used to be cool
Being an airline was once so cool that a Florida railroad renamed itself "Seaboard Air Line". It's stock shot up. This was back in the 1920's or 30's when the railroad was still steam powered.
Aviation Week did a piece on "Top Performing Airlines". In the short list of winners, we have such flight suggestive names as Copa Holdings, Ryanair Holdings, AMR Corp, Allegiant Travel Co. and Regional Express Holdings.
I guess Wall St thinks better of a company name suggestive of stock and bond trading, rather than a name that forthrightly announces the company's real business, supplying air transportation.
Aviation Week did a piece on "Top Performing Airlines". In the short list of winners, we have such flight suggestive names as Copa Holdings, Ryanair Holdings, AMR Corp, Allegiant Travel Co. and Regional Express Holdings.
I guess Wall St thinks better of a company name suggestive of stock and bond trading, rather than a name that forthrightly announces the company's real business, supplying air transportation.
Monday, July 1, 2013
Children are dying
The Washingtonian has a long piece on the problem. US manufacturers of trace elements essential to intervenous feeding are failing to keep up with demand. Premature babies in neo natal intensive care are getting sick and dying for lack of proper IV nutrition. Fingers are pointed in a number of directions, the drug makers, the FDA, the hospitals.
One thing the FDA could do, right now, on it's own authority, is let hospitals purchase the needed nutrients over seas, where they are plentiful. But this would upset US drug companies who fully support the FDA's ban on importing any kind of drugs or pharmaceuticals.
Another thing that would help is to allow the price of the stuff to rise. FDA and the insurance companies hammer down the price of drugs, to the point where there isn't any profit in making the stuff, so the drug companies stop making it.
One thing the FDA could do, right now, on it's own authority, is let hospitals purchase the needed nutrients over seas, where they are plentiful. But this would upset US drug companies who fully support the FDA's ban on importing any kind of drugs or pharmaceuticals.
Another thing that would help is to allow the price of the stuff to rise. FDA and the insurance companies hammer down the price of drugs, to the point where there isn't any profit in making the stuff, so the drug companies stop making it.
Sunday, June 30, 2013
FISA court upset by negative publicity
According to WAPO, the poor overworked judges of the FISA rubberstamp court are unhappy about their press treatment. This is the court that OK'ed all but 10 of 2000 requests to snoop.
I feel so sorry for them.
I feel so sorry for them.
Saturday, June 29, 2013
Taking the Fifth, Lois Lerner
Nor shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself. They had Lois Lerner of the IRS up in front of a Congressional investigating committee. She said " I didn't do anything wrong. And I'm taking the fifth".
Same committee has just decided that Lois's "I didn't do anything wrong" statement prevents her from taking the fifth, and they plan to grill her some more.
I don't approve. The fifth amendment is intended to prevent judges and prosecutors from forcing defendants to confess. As in "Sign this confession and we won't use this rubber hose on you any more." That's an important safeguard for us plain citizens against the criminal justice system. I'd rather let Lois Lerner slide by than give up on the fifth amendment.
In Lois's case, we ought to fire her and cancel her pension and her government health care. That would put the fear of God into that building full of bureaucrats. And her sidekick, Rose-something-or-other, ought to be fired too. That's well within the power of Congress. And it's constitutional too.
Same committee has just decided that Lois's "I didn't do anything wrong" statement prevents her from taking the fifth, and they plan to grill her some more.
I don't approve. The fifth amendment is intended to prevent judges and prosecutors from forcing defendants to confess. As in "Sign this confession and we won't use this rubber hose on you any more." That's an important safeguard for us plain citizens against the criminal justice system. I'd rather let Lois Lerner slide by than give up on the fifth amendment.
In Lois's case, we ought to fire her and cancel her pension and her government health care. That would put the fear of God into that building full of bureaucrats. And her sidekick, Rose-something-or-other, ought to be fired too. That's well within the power of Congress. And it's constitutional too.
Friday, June 28, 2013
A break in the weather
Yesterday dawned bright and sunny, and I decided to get on with a couple of household tasks that had been on hold, 'cause of days and days of rain. I stained the deck and mowed the lawn. Got both jobs done before sundown.
This morning I woke up to the sound of rain pattering on the roof. But I felt real good about the deck and the lawn. Rainwater is beading up nicely on the deck, and the lawn is cut too short to assault the house, at least for a few more days.
This morning I woke up to the sound of rain pattering on the roof. But I felt real good about the deck and the lawn. Rainwater is beading up nicely on the deck, and the lawn is cut too short to assault the house, at least for a few more days.
Thursday, June 27, 2013
From The Economist. Can Iran be stopped?
The Economist doesn't have a clue. They spend a lot of time discussing an Israeli air strike. They sort of conclude the because the Israelis have not laid down a "red line", they don't plan a strike. That's not how the Israelis do things.
The Israelis understand something that any parent learns pretty quick. Namely, never make idle threats. If you make a threat, you gotta be ready to carry it out. If you make a threat and then back down at crunch time, things get worse for you. One day Obama may learn this.
As far as carrying out an air strike on Iranian nuclear facilities, there is reason to doubt the Israeli Air Force has the capability to do an effective strike. Iran has a lot of sites, some of them are buried really really deep, no one knows if the Israelis know which sites are critical, and which are dummies. Iran has air defenses, and a suite of hot new Russian SAM's on order. I don't know how many aircraft the Israelis have, if they have the range and payload needed to do the job. I'm sure the Israelis have worked the numbers on an air strike, and the answer is probably, "We would have to be awfully lucky to carry it off".
As long as that's the answer, the Israelis aren't gonna make threats, 'cause they aren't sure they can make good on them. They may decide to throw the dice if things get sticky, but they won't make threats or announce their plans in advance.
There is one equalizer that doesn't get talked about much. The Israelis are believed to have nuclear weapons, although they have never made any such claim and are not known to have conducted a bomb test. If the Israeli's made the first strike on Iran with nukes, their odds go way up for them, you only need one hit with a nuke to take out damn near anything. However, the big boys (Russia and the US) have made it abundantly clear that they disapprove of use of nukes by anybody. Nobody knows just what the big boys might do, but nobody wants to find out either.
The Israelis understand something that any parent learns pretty quick. Namely, never make idle threats. If you make a threat, you gotta be ready to carry it out. If you make a threat and then back down at crunch time, things get worse for you. One day Obama may learn this.
As far as carrying out an air strike on Iranian nuclear facilities, there is reason to doubt the Israeli Air Force has the capability to do an effective strike. Iran has a lot of sites, some of them are buried really really deep, no one knows if the Israelis know which sites are critical, and which are dummies. Iran has air defenses, and a suite of hot new Russian SAM's on order. I don't know how many aircraft the Israelis have, if they have the range and payload needed to do the job. I'm sure the Israelis have worked the numbers on an air strike, and the answer is probably, "We would have to be awfully lucky to carry it off".
As long as that's the answer, the Israelis aren't gonna make threats, 'cause they aren't sure they can make good on them. They may decide to throw the dice if things get sticky, but they won't make threats or announce their plans in advance.
There is one equalizer that doesn't get talked about much. The Israelis are believed to have nuclear weapons, although they have never made any such claim and are not known to have conducted a bomb test. If the Israeli's made the first strike on Iran with nukes, their odds go way up for them, you only need one hit with a nuke to take out damn near anything. However, the big boys (Russia and the US) have made it abundantly clear that they disapprove of use of nukes by anybody. Nobody knows just what the big boys might do, but nobody wants to find out either.
Wednesday, June 26, 2013
Voter Fraud and same day registration
Used to be, much voter fraud was prevented by registration. On election day, they asked your name and looked you up on the voter registration list. If your name was on the list, you got to vote. Fairly airtight. Then in New Hampshire we put in same day registration, show up at the polls on election day, and vote whether you are on the list or not. The college kids at Dartmouth, UNH, and even humble Plymouth State loved it, didn't matter if you were an out of state student, you get to vote in NH elections. The real citizens of Hanover, Plymouth and Durham are completely swamped by hordes of college students on election day.
So now we are wrangling over various voter ID requirements.
So I asked a couple of local politicos about the chance of just repealing same day registration. They both said, "No can do, Federal law requires same day registration."
Is that right? Anyone know for sure?
So now we are wrangling over various voter ID requirements.
So I asked a couple of local politicos about the chance of just repealing same day registration. They both said, "No can do, Federal law requires same day registration."
Is that right? Anyone know for sure?
Stainless Steel is so dated.
There have been repeated rants in the home decorating, Martha Stewart, kind of press declaring stainless steel kitchen appliances to be dead, as dead as avacado green. This morning I saw a TV ad, showing a young couple, shopping for an icebox. They are in a store aisle, completely surrounded by stainless steel iceboxes. Like 20 of 'em. Reports of the death of stainless have been exaggerated.
The Supremes rule in favor of Gays today.
The Supremes overturned California Prop 8 which forbids gay marriage in the state of California. They did it on a technicality rather that come right out and say "The US Constitution Article such-an-such means gay marriage is legal". Probably they couldn't agree among then selves on such an interpretation. Instead they decided that the plaintiffs lacked "standing", a lawyer's way of throwing out lawsuits. And doing it this way, the ruling only affects California, it doesn't impose gay marriage on the non-gay marriage states, which would cause political outrage.
It also supports judge made law. It was a lower court that overturned Prop 8. That ruling is what got appealed all the way to the Supremes. The Supremes have said, "Doesn't matter what the voters say, we judges can make our own laws to suit ourselves." Real democracy that is.
On the real issue, I'm neutral, we have gay marriage here in New Hampshire, the legislature voted it in. There has been some grumbling, but the bulk of the citizens are going along with a state law passed by majority vote in the state legislature. The sky has not fallen.
While they were at it, in a separate case, the Supremes overturned most of the federal Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) Here at least, they ruled that DOMA violated the equal protection clause of the Constitution. They didn't mention that DOMA was as hard on lesbians as it was on gays. Far as I am concerned, that's equal protection, or at least equal prosecution.
But heh, they are the Supremes and we are stuck with 'em.
It also supports judge made law. It was a lower court that overturned Prop 8. That ruling is what got appealed all the way to the Supremes. The Supremes have said, "Doesn't matter what the voters say, we judges can make our own laws to suit ourselves." Real democracy that is.
On the real issue, I'm neutral, we have gay marriage here in New Hampshire, the legislature voted it in. There has been some grumbling, but the bulk of the citizens are going along with a state law passed by majority vote in the state legislature. The sky has not fallen.
While they were at it, in a separate case, the Supremes overturned most of the federal Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) Here at least, they ruled that DOMA violated the equal protection clause of the Constitution. They didn't mention that DOMA was as hard on lesbians as it was on gays. Far as I am concerned, that's equal protection, or at least equal prosecution.
But heh, they are the Supremes and we are stuck with 'em.
Monday, June 24, 2013
So What is a "Registered Provisional Immigrant"?
I first saw this phrase in an Email from my US Senator supporting the 1200 page Corker-What's-his-face amendment.
Sounds like all those 11 million or so illegals currently in the country become "registered provisional immigrants" (RPI for short) as soon as the bill is passed. Or as soon as they file a form down at the Post Office. Wanna bet all those instant RPI's gain the right to stay in the US and the right to work in the US? Once they have that, who needs a green card? I mean a lot of perfectly decent folk just want to hold a job, raise their families, and pursue a little happiness. Gaining US citizenship is of less importance to them, just as long as they can stay in the country and maintain a low profile.
So, after declaring everyone an RPI, why do we need E-verify or employer sanctions? I mean now that everybody is legal, sort of, why do we need by bang on employers about who they hire? Especially since we are still in the grip of Great Depression 2.0 and want to get unemployment down?
Sounds like all those 11 million or so illegals currently in the country become "registered provisional immigrants" (RPI for short) as soon as the bill is passed. Or as soon as they file a form down at the Post Office. Wanna bet all those instant RPI's gain the right to stay in the US and the right to work in the US? Once they have that, who needs a green card? I mean a lot of perfectly decent folk just want to hold a job, raise their families, and pursue a little happiness. Gaining US citizenship is of less importance to them, just as long as they can stay in the country and maintain a low profile.
So, after declaring everyone an RPI, why do we need E-verify or employer sanctions? I mean now that everybody is legal, sort of, why do we need by bang on employers about who they hire? Especially since we are still in the grip of Great Depression 2.0 and want to get unemployment down?
Saturday, June 22, 2013
He must be guilty of something
Snowdon was indicted on NPR this morning for swiping government property and espionage. Well they gotta charge him with something in order to ask the Chinese to extradite him. Surely revealing top secret stuff to the newspapers is against the law. At least back when I had a top secret clearance we all believed that revealing classified stuff was illegal. I don't know what lawyers would call such a crime, but there ought to be a name for it.
I don't quite go along with Dick Cheney and calling Snowdon a traitor. "Treason against the United States shall consist only of levying War against them or in adhering to their Enemies, giving them aid and comfort." Article III, section 3. The founders put this in the Constitution to forbid the British crown's practice of declaring anything that angered the King to be treason.
Snowdon's actions so far, although disloyal, don't quite rise to levying war, and the Chinese aren't exactly enemies of the United States. Competitors, critics, pains in the tail, no good nicks, but not enemies.
The radio went on to describe the Snowdon situation as "a beginning epic legal battle". Well, before that matters much, we have to get Snowdon into US custody. Somehow I don't think the Chinese are going to cooperate in that. And there isn't all that much we can do to pressure them.
I don't quite go along with Dick Cheney and calling Snowdon a traitor. "Treason against the United States shall consist only of levying War against them or in adhering to their Enemies, giving them aid and comfort." Article III, section 3. The founders put this in the Constitution to forbid the British crown's practice of declaring anything that angered the King to be treason.
Snowdon's actions so far, although disloyal, don't quite rise to levying war, and the Chinese aren't exactly enemies of the United States. Competitors, critics, pains in the tail, no good nicks, but not enemies.
The radio went on to describe the Snowdon situation as "a beginning epic legal battle". Well, before that matters much, we have to get Snowdon into US custody. Somehow I don't think the Chinese are going to cooperate in that. And there isn't all that much we can do to pressure them.
Friday, June 21, 2013
Farm Bill killed in House
The House voted down the 2013 US Farm bill by 234 to 195. Hurrah. The Farm Bill is the purest kind of pork. It takes my tax money and hands it out to farmers, most of whom are big corporations. The suits bought out the family farmers long ago. What money doesn't go to corporations goes to funding Food Stamps. Preliminary news reports are sketchy, but it sounds like this was a $ 1 trillion dollars over ten years bill.
Don't celebrate just yet. There is a good chance the combination of farm state votes and urban food stamps votes will pass a continuing resolution to keep the current farm program spending alive.
Don't celebrate just yet. There is a good chance the combination of farm state votes and urban food stamps votes will pass a continuing resolution to keep the current farm program spending alive.
Thursday, June 20, 2013
The Guns at Last Light
Rick Atkinson. This third history book carries the story from D-Day to defeat of Germany. It's thick, it's well written and reads nicely. It is the story of the US Army in WWII. Allies, air forces, navies, Soviets, war production, Ultra, etc you have to go somewhere else. It covers all the side shows in the European theater that most histories ignore. Here is the story of the second landing in France, the Colmar pocket, Market Garden, and the Huertzgen Forest. Now that all the participants are safely dead, it is possible to explore the political wrangling that was kept quiet for so long. As Atkinson tells it, Montgomery spent the war being insufferable, and Eisenhower spent the war suffering him in the interests of keeping the Allies allied. Also impressive is the sheer size of the war effort. The number of men sent into combat and the mountains of materiel (stuff) produced and shipped overseas to sustain the massive forces in the field is incredible even by the standards of 70 years later. It's a good read, right up there with Samuel Elliot Morison.
An Army and Dawn and Day of Battle, Atkinson's first two books are also good.
An Army and Dawn and Day of Battle, Atkinson's first two books are also good.
Wednesday, June 19, 2013
Suits never learn
Aviation Week interviewed Boeing CEO Jim McNerney.
Aviation Week: "In retrospect, was the amount of weight you saved with Lithium Ion batteries a case of too much risk for too little reward?"
McNerney: "It's not as simple as a weight-reduction-gone-awry conclusion because we get added capability from this battery, such as its capacity to quickly charge. In an all electric airplane, its a more capable battery.
Yeah right. Added capability is bafflegab. All a battery can do is supply electricity. As far "quick charging" and "all electric airplane", all the battery has to do is get the engines started. Then the aircraft runs off generator power. As long as the battery recharges before the engines shut down at the end of the flight, all is well.
In actual fact, some one at Boeing got carried away with the coolness of lithium batteries and did not bother to consider the fire hazard, which might not have been clear when the 787 was first conceived back in the late 1990's, but was pretty obvious by 2003 or 4. Everyone else in the industry dropped lithium battery plans after they started catching fire in the 787.
Aviation Week: "In retrospect, was the amount of weight you saved with Lithium Ion batteries a case of too much risk for too little reward?"
McNerney: "It's not as simple as a weight-reduction-gone-awry conclusion because we get added capability from this battery, such as its capacity to quickly charge. In an all electric airplane, its a more capable battery.
Yeah right. Added capability is bafflegab. All a battery can do is supply electricity. As far "quick charging" and "all electric airplane", all the battery has to do is get the engines started. Then the aircraft runs off generator power. As long as the battery recharges before the engines shut down at the end of the flight, all is well.
In actual fact, some one at Boeing got carried away with the coolness of lithium batteries and did not bother to consider the fire hazard, which might not have been clear when the 787 was first conceived back in the late 1990's, but was pretty obvious by 2003 or 4. Everyone else in the industry dropped lithium battery plans after they started catching fire in the 787.
Back to the Future, Obama style
NPR the morning announced that Obama wanted to negotiate a nuclear weapons reduction treaty with the Russians. Cool, but so 1970's. I mean nuclear deals with the Soviets were all the rage back in the 60's and 70's. But the Cold War is over, neither we nor the Russians have made an Dr. Strangelove noises for 20 years or more.
Did Obama decide to resurrect this bit of Cold War nostalgia 'cause he cannot think of anything better to do, what with scandals nipping at his heels?
Did Obama decide to resurrect this bit of Cold War nostalgia 'cause he cannot think of anything better to do, what with scandals nipping at his heels?
Tuesday, June 18, 2013
Congressional Testimony on NSA snooping
They had the head of NSA and his top assistants up in front of a Congressional investigating committee today. The NSA guys looked and sounded professional and honest, unlike some the the witnesses in recent days. They pretty much confirmed that NSA gathers all the telephone billing information in the entire world and keeps it plenty long enough. The NSA guys explained that they just gather the info up and store it on their computers and don't actually look at it except after jumping thru a lot of administrative hoops, largely NSA hoops, no FISA court. They went on to explain that they only keep overseas calls, not inside the US calls.
It all sounds good, and these individuals looked trustworthy. I wonder if they will look so trustworthy after some Obama appointments. Once the data is in NSA computers, they will look at it if they care enough.
And this is legal. The Supremes held some years ago that looking at telephone company business records is not a search or a seizure. Fourth Amendment does not apply, thus saith the Supremes.
Bottom line, if you make a phone call, NSA knows about it. They claimed they don't tap the calls, they just record the fact that the call was made. That's probably true, for now.
This effort costs plenty. I wonder if we wouldn't score more good intel by taking terrorists alive and grilling them, rather than killing them to avoid putting more terrorists into Guantanamo? And not shooting people dead after the phone number monitoring. fingers them.
It all sounds good, and these individuals looked trustworthy. I wonder if they will look so trustworthy after some Obama appointments. Once the data is in NSA computers, they will look at it if they care enough.
And this is legal. The Supremes held some years ago that looking at telephone company business records is not a search or a seizure. Fourth Amendment does not apply, thus saith the Supremes.
Bottom line, if you make a phone call, NSA knows about it. They claimed they don't tap the calls, they just record the fact that the call was made. That's probably true, for now.
This effort costs plenty. I wonder if we wouldn't score more good intel by taking terrorists alive and grilling them, rather than killing them to avoid putting more terrorists into Guantanamo? And not shooting people dead after the phone number monitoring. fingers them.
Monday, June 17, 2013
Aviation Week flies the A400M
After a long and troubled development history, reaching back to 1982, the A400M has received a European type certificate, which makes it legal to sell it and fly it. They program manager feels good enough about the aircraft to let journalists fly it. Aviation Week liked it. Easy to fly, quieter than existing transports even at takeoff power, big, fast as a jet liner, decent short field landings. It's bigger than the C-130 (which makes it a BIG airplane) but not as big as a C-17.
Thing that caught my eye was the high propeller RPM's. The old C-133 kept prop revs down to 100-200 RPM even at takeoff power. A400M has odd looking props (lots of short scimitar shaped blades) that rev up to 850 RPM. This probably eases the load on the gearboxes. The engines rev up to 10,000 RPM and the gear boxes have to stand up to 11,000 horsepower without breaking. The A400M gearboxes only need a 10:1 gear ratio. The old C-133 gearboxes, which gave a lot trouble, had to have a 100:1 gear reduction which is harder to do.
The Europeans are committed to buying A400Ms. The maker, Airbus, is naturally hoping for more export sales to cover the staggering development costs. According to Aviation Week, if you divide total program costs by the number of firm orders, it comes out to $170 million per aircraft, twice the cost of a C130.
Thing that caught my eye was the high propeller RPM's. The old C-133 kept prop revs down to 100-200 RPM even at takeoff power. A400M has odd looking props (lots of short scimitar shaped blades) that rev up to 850 RPM. This probably eases the load on the gearboxes. The engines rev up to 10,000 RPM and the gear boxes have to stand up to 11,000 horsepower without breaking. The A400M gearboxes only need a 10:1 gear ratio. The old C-133 gearboxes, which gave a lot trouble, had to have a 100:1 gear reduction which is harder to do.
The Europeans are committed to buying A400Ms. The maker, Airbus, is naturally hoping for more export sales to cover the staggering development costs. According to Aviation Week, if you divide total program costs by the number of firm orders, it comes out to $170 million per aircraft, twice the cost of a C130.
Sunday, June 16, 2013
What do we know about NSA snooping?
Well, listening to the TV we don't know much. Here is what they could do, especially after spending $1 billion on a fancy data center in Utah.
They can capture and save the billing records of every phone call on the planet. They call it "metadata", but it's the stuff of your phone bill, what numbers you called, how long you talked. This allows the feds or other snoopers to go into the system with your phone number and learn all the other phone numbers you have called, going back a long time. They claim it's just phone numbers, but that doesn't matter. Put your own phone number into Google and Google will return your name and address. You might have to pay a little money, but heh, the Feds have lots of money. If the Feds have a phone number, they can get the name without much trouble. I believe they used the system on the Boston bombers. It fingered an old associate of Tamerlan Tsarnaev. The FBI interviewed the associate and shot him dead during the interview. The FBI claimed self defense, the associate pulled a knife on them, they say.
Speaking of the Boston Bombers, the FBI had a solid tip from the Russians that the older brother was a terrorist. FBI claims to have interviewed Tamerlan Tsarnaev, but they didn't bother to pass the tip on to the local police, who usually have better local connections than Washington based FBI guys. Nor did they bother to put Tamerlan on a no-fly list, and they let him fly to Russia and back, and hobnob with Chechen terrorists without tipping off the Russians.
The Feds can read all your email, see what websites you visit, how often and how long, and see all your Facebook, Myspace and where ever postings. If you post anything on suspicious websites, that makes you suspicious too.
I don't think they can tap (listen to conversations) on every phone on the planet, yet.
NSA must have direct electronic connections into the phone system computers, as well as all the internet backbone companies. I heard the back bone companies on TV deny this, but I don't believe them.
This "FISA" court which is supposed to be "overseeing" NSA, approved all but 10 of 1824 snooping requests. That isn't a court, that's a rubber stamp.
I don't know where I stand on the NSA thing. One on hand, being able to drop Osama bin Laden's phone number into the system and see every one he phoned is clearly useful. On the other hand, dropping the phone numbers of anyone the administration dislikes, or conservative bloggers like me, into the system is scary. Plus Osama Bin Ladin gave up using phones after the ever patriotic New York Times revealed that NSA was tapping his satellite phone.
They can capture and save the billing records of every phone call on the planet. They call it "metadata", but it's the stuff of your phone bill, what numbers you called, how long you talked. This allows the feds or other snoopers to go into the system with your phone number and learn all the other phone numbers you have called, going back a long time. They claim it's just phone numbers, but that doesn't matter. Put your own phone number into Google and Google will return your name and address. You might have to pay a little money, but heh, the Feds have lots of money. If the Feds have a phone number, they can get the name without much trouble. I believe they used the system on the Boston bombers. It fingered an old associate of Tamerlan Tsarnaev. The FBI interviewed the associate and shot him dead during the interview. The FBI claimed self defense, the associate pulled a knife on them, they say.
Speaking of the Boston Bombers, the FBI had a solid tip from the Russians that the older brother was a terrorist. FBI claims to have interviewed Tamerlan Tsarnaev, but they didn't bother to pass the tip on to the local police, who usually have better local connections than Washington based FBI guys. Nor did they bother to put Tamerlan on a no-fly list, and they let him fly to Russia and back, and hobnob with Chechen terrorists without tipping off the Russians.
The Feds can read all your email, see what websites you visit, how often and how long, and see all your Facebook, Myspace and where ever postings. If you post anything on suspicious websites, that makes you suspicious too.
I don't think they can tap (listen to conversations) on every phone on the planet, yet.
NSA must have direct electronic connections into the phone system computers, as well as all the internet backbone companies. I heard the back bone companies on TV deny this, but I don't believe them.
This "FISA" court which is supposed to be "overseeing" NSA, approved all but 10 of 1824 snooping requests. That isn't a court, that's a rubber stamp.
I don't know where I stand on the NSA thing. One on hand, being able to drop Osama bin Laden's phone number into the system and see every one he phoned is clearly useful. On the other hand, dropping the phone numbers of anyone the administration dislikes, or conservative bloggers like me, into the system is scary. Plus Osama Bin Ladin gave up using phones after the ever patriotic New York Times revealed that NSA was tapping his satellite phone.
Saturday, June 15, 2013
Sequestering the STEM
Science, Technology, Engineering, & Mathematics (STEM). Due to the sequester, Obama wants to consolidate 226 separate federal STEM programs into a mere 110. These programs are scattered out between DoD, DHS, and NASA. Obama claims that overall funding would be hiked 6% after culling out half the programs.
Wow. All these cuts and we spend more money. And on such a worthy idea. Oh yes, the new program will increase participation by women and minorities in the STEM programs. How uplifting.
Too bad it won't do much to increase the number of US students taking STEM courses. Students decide which educational track they are going to take way down in middle school. Most of 'em decide to avoid STEM courses after being subject to a terrible one, taught by an ed major with no understanding or love for the subject. The ed major reduces the science course to memorization of fancy scientific vocabulary and the math course to tedious solving of equations. It doesn't take much of this kind of abuse to convince middle schoolers that math and science are hard and should be avoided.
No amount of federal STEM programs are going to repair the damage done to students by horrible middle school math and science teaching.
Wow. All these cuts and we spend more money. And on such a worthy idea. Oh yes, the new program will increase participation by women and minorities in the STEM programs. How uplifting.
Too bad it won't do much to increase the number of US students taking STEM courses. Students decide which educational track they are going to take way down in middle school. Most of 'em decide to avoid STEM courses after being subject to a terrible one, taught by an ed major with no understanding or love for the subject. The ed major reduces the science course to memorization of fancy scientific vocabulary and the math course to tedious solving of equations. It doesn't take much of this kind of abuse to convince middle schoolers that math and science are hard and should be avoided.
No amount of federal STEM programs are going to repair the damage done to students by horrible middle school math and science teaching.
Friday, June 14, 2013
Lease or Buy?
In a slow moment, I read thru the car ads delivered to my mailbox. The Chrysler dealer wasn't mentioning price in his ads, just monthly lease payments. Then in the fine print it said "Current Chrysler lease holders and other major makers lease holders only". Translation, no deal unless you already lease a car. Which lets out most people. But, the dealer must think people like to lease cars, otherwise why advertise lease terms that most people won't be eligible for? He could have advertised monthly payments, or even (shudder) the scary asking price.
In fact, why do dealers want to lease instead of sell? On a lease deal the dealer has to find the loan to pay the car company for the car. That's trouble and money. Why not just sell the car outright? Then the customer is on the hook for financing the deal.
One reason might be the lease terms are better for the dealer. I looked at one deal, a 39 month lease with 25 cents a mile for all miles over 25,000. Figure most people rack up 20,000 miles a year, 60,000 over three years. Between the lease payments and the extra mileage charges, that lease deal would pay off the asking price of the car (pickup truck in this case) in 39 months and the dealer still owns the truck. Nice dealer markup on that deal.
My car buyers advice. 1. Buy a late model used car. 2. Buy it outright, run it til it drops.
In fact, why do dealers want to lease instead of sell? On a lease deal the dealer has to find the loan to pay the car company for the car. That's trouble and money. Why not just sell the car outright? Then the customer is on the hook for financing the deal.
One reason might be the lease terms are better for the dealer. I looked at one deal, a 39 month lease with 25 cents a mile for all miles over 25,000. Figure most people rack up 20,000 miles a year, 60,000 over three years. Between the lease payments and the extra mileage charges, that lease deal would pay off the asking price of the car (pickup truck in this case) in 39 months and the dealer still owns the truck. Nice dealer markup on that deal.
My car buyers advice. 1. Buy a late model used car. 2. Buy it outright, run it til it drops.
Thursday, June 13, 2013
Grass Attack. Adventures in Lawncare
The rain finally let up today after four solid days. The grass was on the warpath. Once it gets too tall, the mower won't cut it, and then, Katie bar the door. So I took advantage of the break in the weather to get in a quick mow. The grass wasn't really dry enough, but my nice new mostly plastic Husqvarna reel mower was up to the challenge. When wet, the grass bends over and mats down instead of standing proud and getting cut off at the neck. And it sticks the the mower, everywhere. But I made it to the end, it doesn't look too raggedy, and we can survive more rain, which is forecast, starting this afternoon.
Dandelion control is still holding up. I only found two to pluck this morning. Getting 'em early did the trick this season.
Then we gotta keep mowing back the Wild Wood. Weeds, saplings, briars, raspberries and who knows what else, keep trying to invade the lawn, grow up tall, shade out the grass, and bring the woods up to the house. Mow those infiltrators right down to the ground.
Dandelion control is still holding up. I only found two to pluck this morning. Getting 'em early did the trick this season.
Then we gotta keep mowing back the Wild Wood. Weeds, saplings, briars, raspberries and who knows what else, keep trying to invade the lawn, grow up tall, shade out the grass, and bring the woods up to the house. Mow those infiltrators right down to the ground.
If the Republicans are this stupid they deserve to die
I swiped the title from this article by Ann Coulter. Ann can get a bit hard core, but here she makes a certain amount of sense. Ann is saying that the Hispanic vote isn't all that large, and Republican efforts to pass an immigration bill to woo the Hispanic vote are counterproductive. At least she has her numbers right. The Hispanic vote is perhaps 5%. The women's vote is 50%, and the Republicans lost women voters to Obama by a margin of 10%. If Romney had carried the women's vote he would be president right now.
If Republicans are looking for an ethic group to woo, women outnumber Hispanics by 10:1. And half of the Hispanics are women. We need some intelligent polling to figure out why women went for Obama and what would bring them back to voting Republican. I've heard a lot of talk about abortion and contraception and gun control and other wedge issues, but I'm not convinced that this talk means anything. Much of it comes from advocates who will say anything to advance their pet cause.
As for immigration, there are some things that ought to be done. Right now Congresscritters are trying to sell us a pig in a poke. I have no idea what is hidden inside that immigration bill. They plan to vote it thru and then we are stuck with it.
Things that ought to be done.
1. Honorable service in the US armed forces should grant citizenship.
2. We should favor immigrants who will contribute to the economy and pay their way over elderly parents of citizens.
3. The United States has plenty of room for more citizens, and a declining birthrate. We need immigration to keep our population up. Population decline, like much of the rest of the first world is undergoing, makes everyone poorer.
4. We don't want to fingerprint foreigners on the way in and the way out. It's degrading. That is hidden inside the pig-in-a-poke immigration bill. Checking their passports is enough.
5. Illegals currently inside the country are outlaws. They don't dare call fire or police at need lest they get deported. Employers pay them like dirt, when they hire them, which a lot of them don't. This situation is dreadful and we should be ashamed of it. I have nothing against legalizing the bulk of them who are just raising their families, holding down jobs, obeying the law and staying out of trouble.
If Republicans are looking for an ethic group to woo, women outnumber Hispanics by 10:1. And half of the Hispanics are women. We need some intelligent polling to figure out why women went for Obama and what would bring them back to voting Republican. I've heard a lot of talk about abortion and contraception and gun control and other wedge issues, but I'm not convinced that this talk means anything. Much of it comes from advocates who will say anything to advance their pet cause.
As for immigration, there are some things that ought to be done. Right now Congresscritters are trying to sell us a pig in a poke. I have no idea what is hidden inside that immigration bill. They plan to vote it thru and then we are stuck with it.
Things that ought to be done.
1. Honorable service in the US armed forces should grant citizenship.
2. We should favor immigrants who will contribute to the economy and pay their way over elderly parents of citizens.
3. The United States has plenty of room for more citizens, and a declining birthrate. We need immigration to keep our population up. Population decline, like much of the rest of the first world is undergoing, makes everyone poorer.
4. We don't want to fingerprint foreigners on the way in and the way out. It's degrading. That is hidden inside the pig-in-a-poke immigration bill. Checking their passports is enough.
5. Illegals currently inside the country are outlaws. They don't dare call fire or police at need lest they get deported. Employers pay them like dirt, when they hire them, which a lot of them don't. This situation is dreadful and we should be ashamed of it. I have nothing against legalizing the bulk of them who are just raising their families, holding down jobs, obeying the law and staying out of trouble.
Wednesday, June 12, 2013
Somebody loves Patent Trolls
Over at the Hoover Institute we have some lawyers defending patent trolls. They make the argument that patent trolling is merely specialization of labor. Some companies specialize in making steel, others specialize in flying passengers, patent trolls specialize in maximizing patent income for patent holders. Yeah Right.
In actual fact we have scary amounts of money sucked out of productive companies and poured down the maws of lawyers.
In actual fact we have scary amounts of money sucked out of productive companies and poured down the maws of lawyers.
Nice Immigration bill they got there. Wonder what's in it
Immigration bill is on the TV news. There was one shot of a Congressman picking up a state of paper 6 inches high. If they pass it, what will it do to us? Anyone know?
I'd feel better about it if it was limited to about 20 pages, double spaced and doubled sided, so I could read it and know what we were getting into. No way am I (or anyone else) is gonna read thru a 6 inch high pile of paper.
I'd feel better about it if it was limited to about 20 pages, double spaced and doubled sided, so I could read it and know what we were getting into. No way am I (or anyone else) is gonna read thru a 6 inch high pile of paper.
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