Its about 600 miles straight thru. I broke the trip by crashing overnight with an old old friend in Tarrytown NY. I have done it straight thru in one day, but that was with a relief driver. I looked at "infrastructure" on the way. Except for New York, the roads were in good shape. Fresh new asphalt in many places, some road work going on here and there. In New York, everything needed resurfacing, I84, I684, Palisades Parkway. The New Jersey state line was noticeable for the improvement in the pavement of the Palisades Parkway. Could it be, most of the media pundits leave in New York, and their constant cries for more infra structure spending are driven be the miserable state of New York roads? The rest of the way, NH, Vermont, New Jersey, Delaware. Maryland, was good.
The national motor vehicle fleet has some regional variations. Upstate in NH and Vermont, there is still a good portion of pickup trucks on the road. Less so as I went south. Presumably $4 gasoline has pretty much limited the use of pickups to those that really need them for work. Used to be, a lot of guys commuted to work in pickups. Not so much now. The two seater sports car is pretty much gone, I only saw a couple of them. No hot rods at all. Every one is driving four door little sedans, either ecoboxes, or Bimmer wannabes. My full sized Mercury Grand Marquis was pretty much the only one of it's type left. Merc was running good. Over the winter his gas mileage had dropped off to a measely 20 MPG. I gave it a new engine air filter, pumped up all the tires to rated pressure, and I got 25 mpg all the way down. Not bad for 100,000 miles and 11 years on the road.
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
Saturday, May 24, 2014
Thursday, May 22, 2014
Road trip to Washington.
I'm off to daughter's wedding in DC today. Posting may be a bit light til I get home.
Fire the bums
In response to the VA scandal, Congress passed a law giving the VA chief more authority to fire senior VA bureaucrats. If this is a real bill, one with teeth, it is a big step forward. Right now it is impossible to fire government workers. We couldn't even fire guys we caught stealing out of the base supply warehouse. This silly policy goes back to the 1880's civil service reform act. In the real old days, all government jobs were political, and each time the administration changed hands from democrat to republican and back again, there was a wholesale firing of all government workers. They were replaced with loyal party members of the winning side, resulting in a federal workforce strong on party loyalty, and little else.
They overdid it, and today, it is impossible to fire anyone. This system applies everywhere except the armed services.
We would get better government if we revised the civil service regulations to allow dismissal for cause. Cause must be documented. Conviction of a felony in court, espionage, politicking on government time, failure to get to work on time, sassing supervisors, and failure to pay lawful taxes, and gross incompetence are reasonable causes. Plus we need an up or out policy. Workers have to qualify, pass tests for, the next higher grade periodically. Workers who fail to get promoted, get laid off. Young guy joins up as GS-bottom-of-the-ladder grade. He has say three years to work up to GS-next-rung-on-ladder grade. If he cannot make it, he ain't worth keeping around. Every three years he has to make the next grade. Up or out.
Incidentally. The VA employees were on NPR this morning complaining of unfairness in the new law. The law only applies to the upper ranks of the VA, the janitors and such don't get hit.
They overdid it, and today, it is impossible to fire anyone. This system applies everywhere except the armed services.
We would get better government if we revised the civil service regulations to allow dismissal for cause. Cause must be documented. Conviction of a felony in court, espionage, politicking on government time, failure to get to work on time, sassing supervisors, and failure to pay lawful taxes, and gross incompetence are reasonable causes. Plus we need an up or out policy. Workers have to qualify, pass tests for, the next higher grade periodically. Workers who fail to get promoted, get laid off. Young guy joins up as GS-bottom-of-the-ladder grade. He has say three years to work up to GS-next-rung-on-ladder grade. If he cannot make it, he ain't worth keeping around. Every three years he has to make the next grade. Up or out.
Incidentally. The VA employees were on NPR this morning complaining of unfairness in the new law. The law only applies to the upper ranks of the VA, the janitors and such don't get hit.
Wednesday, May 21, 2014
Army Green
The US Army has spent 15 years and $100 million dollars developing a lead free bullet for the venerable M16 rifle. The new round, M855A1, uses a copper slug instead of a lead one. Actually the bullet is trickier than that, it has a hardened steel penetrator bolt down the center and a steel cap for armor piercing. The round is finally in service. The American Rifleman article didn't give the cost per round, the $100 million is non recurring up front R&D expenses. The article has a lot of deep riflery talk but apparently the new round works as well as the older one it replaces. They changed the propellant, raising muzzle velocity (good) and chamber pressure (bad). It will penetrate 3/8 inch mild steel at 350 meters which is impressive for a 22 caliber rifle. That ought to stop any vehicle short of a tank or APC.
I'm so glad we have the money to be so green. The lead in bullets is not harmful except when the bullet hits you.
I'm so glad we have the money to be so green. The lead in bullets is not harmful except when the bullet hits you.
Tuesday, May 20, 2014
Google Maps, enemy of the trees
I want to print a map, to take with me in the car. Can I just get ONE sheet printed? Noo. Everytime it prints the map and then wastes a second sheet of paper printing out the Google Logo.
The New York Times
For a national mouthpiece, they certainly have some quirks. They promote Jill Abramson to editor, and then fire her a few weeks later. That makes it a snakepit, where you have to constantly watch your back. Does not sound like a pleasant place to work.
This morning, on NPR, I hear that Jill still loves the Times, and has the Times logo tattooed on her back. Wow! Except for ugly bikers with "Harley" tattoos, I never heard of anyone with a company tat before.
Gotta be a weird place that Times.
This morning, on NPR, I hear that Jill still loves the Times, and has the Times logo tattooed on her back. Wow! Except for ugly bikers with "Harley" tattoos, I never heard of anyone with a company tat before.
Gotta be a weird place that Times.
Monday, May 19, 2014
Indict Chinese hackers or US executives?
The TV news is talking about indictments against Chinese hackers for hacking into US companies and taking trade secrets, classified info, and who knows what. We won't talk about jurisdiction here, indictments only have force if you can lay your hands on the miscreants. If they are in China, that doesn't work.
I'd like to know what is being done to executives in the US targets. If they had enforced proper security they would not have gotten hacked. For that matter, we could have words with Microsoft about gaping security holes in Windows.
I'd like to know what is being done to executives in the US targets. If they had enforced proper security they would not have gotten hacked. For that matter, we could have words with Microsoft about gaping security holes in Windows.
Sunday, May 18, 2014
So what is Boko Haram?
Well, since they been kidnapping school girls by the hundred, I'd call them terrorists. Hillary's State Department is taking flack 'cause they failed to put Boko Haram on the official terrorist list two years ago. But I heard Fox News call them "rebels" the other day, and NPR called them "militants" just this morning. Newsies need to wake up and smell the coffee.
Free Air
They used to offer it at gas stations. In the old days they would provide a neat little stand with a regulator. Just dial in the desired tire pressure, jam the air hose onto the tire valve, and kaching, kaching, you were pumped up. Even worked on my bicycle tires, before I got my driver's license.
So the other day I noticed trusty Mercury Grand Marquis getting a little soft and squirrelly on I93, going into Littleton. I eyeballed all the tires, and none of 'em looked soft. So I rummaged in the glove compartment for the tire pressure gauge that should have been there. No soap, gauge was gone into that great toolbox in the sky. So, I buy a new gauge at Walmart and go looking for a gas station with air, free or expensive, just air. I'm at the intersection of I93 and US 302 in Littleton, pretty active place with three gas stations. Only one of them has air. Seventy five cents a shot. Wimpy wimpy. I put it on the right rear which was 10 pounds low. The hang-on-the-outside-wall compressor racketed away but it wasn't putting much air in the tire. The seventy five cents ran out, it stopped racketing, but the tire still hadn't reached 35 psi. I had to fed it another seventy five cents to get pumped up.
So the other day I noticed trusty Mercury Grand Marquis getting a little soft and squirrelly on I93, going into Littleton. I eyeballed all the tires, and none of 'em looked soft. So I rummaged in the glove compartment for the tire pressure gauge that should have been there. No soap, gauge was gone into that great toolbox in the sky. So, I buy a new gauge at Walmart and go looking for a gas station with air, free or expensive, just air. I'm at the intersection of I93 and US 302 in Littleton, pretty active place with three gas stations. Only one of them has air. Seventy five cents a shot. Wimpy wimpy. I put it on the right rear which was 10 pounds low. The hang-on-the-outside-wall compressor racketed away but it wasn't putting much air in the tire. The seventy five cents ran out, it stopped racketing, but the tire still hadn't reached 35 psi. I had to fed it another seventy five cents to get pumped up.
Saturday, May 17, 2014
A lotta things to learn about Benghazi
Democrats on TV have been deriding the new Trey Gowdy Benghazi investigating committee. They say we know everything there is to know, there have been eight previous investigations, and everything is out on the table.
I beg to differ. Things we don't know.
1. Why were no troops or aircraft dispatched to rescue the people in Benghazi? We had time to get a drone (200 mph) over the consulate, why were jet fighters (1000 mph) not sent? Why were troops not dispatched, by helicopter or fixed wing? Who was responsible?
2. Why did Obama relieve two general officers in the theater of their commands that night?
3. Who turned down the requests for extra security that were made BEFORE the attack?
4. Who sent Susan Rice out on the talk shows peddling the internet video story. She didn't think that fairy tale up all by her self.
5. Why did acting CIA director Mike Morrel take the Washington analyst's internet video story over the story from the CIA station chief in Benghazi?
6. What was that massive CIA operation doing in Benghazi anyhow?
7. What orders did Obama issue that night? Were they in writing? If so let's see them.
I'm sure there's more, but these will do for starters.
I beg to differ. Things we don't know.
1. Why were no troops or aircraft dispatched to rescue the people in Benghazi? We had time to get a drone (200 mph) over the consulate, why were jet fighters (1000 mph) not sent? Why were troops not dispatched, by helicopter or fixed wing? Who was responsible?
2. Why did Obama relieve two general officers in the theater of their commands that night?
3. Who turned down the requests for extra security that were made BEFORE the attack?
4. Who sent Susan Rice out on the talk shows peddling the internet video story. She didn't think that fairy tale up all by her self.
5. Why did acting CIA director Mike Morrel take the Washington analyst's internet video story over the story from the CIA station chief in Benghazi?
6. What was that massive CIA operation doing in Benghazi anyhow?
7. What orders did Obama issue that night? Were they in writing? If so let's see them.
I'm sure there's more, but these will do for starters.
Friday, May 16, 2014
The A-10
Aka the Warthog. A ground attack plane, a jet powered version of the Russian WWII Sturmovic. It can fly low and slow, just what you need for tank plinking, has a honking big 30 mm Gatling gun, and lots of bombs and missiles. Nice straight wing, top speed around 400 mph. Twin engines so you can get home if one takes a hit. Came into service after Viet Nam, did a fantastic job in the first Gulf War. Best plane out there for ground attack. On the other hand, if you are flying an A10 and you get bounced by enemy jet fighters, you are in deep trouble.
The Air Force officer corps is pretty much all fighter pilots now that SAC has been disbanded. And fighter pilots want to fly fighters and do air to air combat. They like the white silk scarf fluttering in the slip stream and they all want to be the Red Baron. The idea of getting down into the ground fire and shooting up tanks has no appeal to fighter pilots.
This year Congress laid a heavy duty funding cut on all the armed services. It's actually a real cut, the services get less money than than they did last year. So, the Air Force looked around for things they could shut down or sell off, to keep the little money left them going into the F35 program. What to cut? How about that ugly old A10? None of us fighter pilots like it, if we get rid of it we can use the money saved to buy that hot F35 that we do like.
There has been some squawking from the Army and the Marine Corps, both of which like the A10. Nobody who saw A10s blowing Saddam Hussein's tanks away in the Gulf Wars is going to feel happy about doing without them.
The issue probably needs to be resolved in Congress, if Congress still has the ability to resolve anything.
The Air Force officer corps is pretty much all fighter pilots now that SAC has been disbanded. And fighter pilots want to fly fighters and do air to air combat. They like the white silk scarf fluttering in the slip stream and they all want to be the Red Baron. The idea of getting down into the ground fire and shooting up tanks has no appeal to fighter pilots.
This year Congress laid a heavy duty funding cut on all the armed services. It's actually a real cut, the services get less money than than they did last year. So, the Air Force looked around for things they could shut down or sell off, to keep the little money left them going into the F35 program. What to cut? How about that ugly old A10? None of us fighter pilots like it, if we get rid of it we can use the money saved to buy that hot F35 that we do like.
There has been some squawking from the Army and the Marine Corps, both of which like the A10. Nobody who saw A10s blowing Saddam Hussein's tanks away in the Gulf Wars is going to feel happy about doing without them.
The issue probably needs to be resolved in Congress, if Congress still has the ability to resolve anything.
Thursday, May 15, 2014
Politics is getting mean up here.
It's Wednesday night, the North Grafton Republican Committee is meeting, in the downstairs of the Gold House, Littleton's best pizza place. Gary Lambert, running for the US House of Representatives, has stopped in to speak to us, do a little campaigning. Gary is an old New Hampshire political hand, served in the NH senate, served in the Marines for 35 years, a nice guy.
About this time a young brunette, with a heavy camera bag slips into the room. I've never seen her before. But Mike Gilman and Gary do know her, address her as Morgan. She is a democratic party tracker, assigned to follow Gary Lambert and film any gaffe's he might make. Morgan is working with or for Annie Kuster's campaign. We ask her to leave, which she does.
Discussion turns on how Morgan found us. Apparently Gary had posted something to his facebook page from his smart phone that evening, and Morgan turned up about an hour after the post.
Wow. Pretty big time stuff. Gary Lambert isn't even the Republican candidate yet, he has yet to win the primary. That the democrats have the money, or the dedicated people with time on their hands, to track a fairly low level guy like Gary Lambert, suggests a lot of outside money is coming into the state. It's also probably a waste of resources by the Democrats. Annie Kuster has done little to nothing in office and is probably toast in November.
About this time a young brunette, with a heavy camera bag slips into the room. I've never seen her before. But Mike Gilman and Gary do know her, address her as Morgan. She is a democratic party tracker, assigned to follow Gary Lambert and film any gaffe's he might make. Morgan is working with or for Annie Kuster's campaign. We ask her to leave, which she does.
Discussion turns on how Morgan found us. Apparently Gary had posted something to his facebook page from his smart phone that evening, and Morgan turned up about an hour after the post.
Wow. Pretty big time stuff. Gary Lambert isn't even the Republican candidate yet, he has yet to win the primary. That the democrats have the money, or the dedicated people with time on their hands, to track a fairly low level guy like Gary Lambert, suggests a lot of outside money is coming into the state. It's also probably a waste of resources by the Democrats. Annie Kuster has done little to nothing in office and is probably toast in November.
A History of the English Speaking Peoples
Written by Winston Churchill. The first volume, The Birth of Britain, was started in 1939, seventy five years ago. Finally published in 1956. As most of you know, Winston Churchill had some other things to attend to between 1940 and 1945. I started to read it again yesterday.
The first volume starts with Caesar's invasion in 55 BC and goes up thru the Norman Conquest and the Plantagenet kings. Reading a history book this old, I was pleasantly surprised to find that Churchill's writing is pretty much up to date. I have read more modern histories of the period, specifically, Leslie Alcock's Arthur's Britain, and despite another thirty years of archaeology, the story stands pretty much the way Churchill wrote of it in 1939.
Partly of course, the few written records of the period, Caesar, Gildas, Bede, and Nennius, were well known to Churchill. The contributions of archaeology, although interesting, don't change the story much.
And Churchill writes well. This, probably the last book Churchill published, has his best writing. All writers of history always feel compelled to comment upon the history and the historical figures. Churchill's comments are the informed thought of an highly experienced man of affairs. He understands the need for economic growth, even during the Roman Empire. He knows of the need for effective military force to repel invasions and maintain civil order. He knows the importance of Christianity in history. He lovingly describes the growth of political institutions, especially Parliament, of which he was a member for better than fifty years. His viewpoint is balanced and insightful.
It's a good read. Check it out.
The first volume starts with Caesar's invasion in 55 BC and goes up thru the Norman Conquest and the Plantagenet kings. Reading a history book this old, I was pleasantly surprised to find that Churchill's writing is pretty much up to date. I have read more modern histories of the period, specifically, Leslie Alcock's Arthur's Britain, and despite another thirty years of archaeology, the story stands pretty much the way Churchill wrote of it in 1939.
Partly of course, the few written records of the period, Caesar, Gildas, Bede, and Nennius, were well known to Churchill. The contributions of archaeology, although interesting, don't change the story much.
And Churchill writes well. This, probably the last book Churchill published, has his best writing. All writers of history always feel compelled to comment upon the history and the historical figures. Churchill's comments are the informed thought of an highly experienced man of affairs. He understands the need for economic growth, even during the Roman Empire. He knows of the need for effective military force to repel invasions and maintain civil order. He knows the importance of Christianity in history. He lovingly describes the growth of political institutions, especially Parliament, of which he was a member for better than fifty years. His viewpoint is balanced and insightful.
It's a good read. Check it out.
Labels:
Birth of Britain,
Leslie Alcock.,
Winston Churchill
Wednesday, May 14, 2014
Money for Milfoil prevention
Op ed in the Onion Leader today. Milfoil is a lake weed, grows rapidly and can choke a lake to the point where you cannot swim in it, canoe in it, or fish in it. They described it as "invasive species" which is evil. The writer was pleading for more state money for Milfoil control.
Trouble is, the control measures amount to hiring divers to go down and pull up the weed by hand. Ow. My aching back. That sounds worse than pulling up dandelions by hand, only under water. And divers don't come cheap. I can see why the anti Milfoil crusaders are begging for more funding. There ain't enough money in the entire state of New Hampshire to pull up lakeweed by hand from underwater.
Somebody has to find an animal that eats Milfoil, or a herbicide, or a disease that attacks it, or something practical. Until then, forget it.
Trouble is, the control measures amount to hiring divers to go down and pull up the weed by hand. Ow. My aching back. That sounds worse than pulling up dandelions by hand, only under water. And divers don't come cheap. I can see why the anti Milfoil crusaders are begging for more funding. There ain't enough money in the entire state of New Hampshire to pull up lakeweed by hand from underwater.
Somebody has to find an animal that eats Milfoil, or a herbicide, or a disease that attacks it, or something practical. Until then, forget it.
Tuesday, May 13, 2014
Bills and Blegs
I still pay my bills by check, largely 'cause I don't really trust electronic payment. Witness the Target data breach disaster. So the mail comes in, and the bills and the blegs (letters begging money) pile up on my desk. Once a month I haul out the check book and pay them.
This month, I paid 9 bills and still had a huge stack of envelopes to open. So I counted.
Twenty one blegs total. Most aggressive blegger, the Republican party. with seven. Followed by the Tea Party and the NRA with 3 each. My old colleges, my old high school, Scott Brown, John McCain, and four local charities came in with one each.
To a certain extent I ask for this, I have in fact contributed to each of them in the past, so it's natural for them to come back to the well. Not that I give all that much, $35 is about my utmost. But I was surprised to find more blegs than bills.
This month, I paid 9 bills and still had a huge stack of envelopes to open. So I counted.
Twenty one blegs total. Most aggressive blegger, the Republican party. with seven. Followed by the Tea Party and the NRA with 3 each. My old colleges, my old high school, Scott Brown, John McCain, and four local charities came in with one each.
To a certain extent I ask for this, I have in fact contributed to each of them in the past, so it's natural for them to come back to the well. Not that I give all that much, $35 is about my utmost. But I was surprised to find more blegs than bills.
Monday, May 12, 2014
$20 Billion for new presidential helicopters?
Marine One is getting a little old. There was a program to replace it about 10 years ago, but terrible cost overruns led to program cancellation. The replacement was going to have electronic systems good enough to conduct a nuclear war from on board the chopper. And they kept on gold plating it until the project sank.
Well, they are at it again. The new program will get a new design from Sikorsky in Connecticut. For $20 billion overall, we get 23 gold plated presidential helicopters, That's nearly $1 billion per aircraft. That's totally rediculous.
All we need for a presidential chopper is one of what ever the service is flying. Give it a nice new paint job and maybe a couple of cushy seats in back. Take the aircraft from an operational squadron, something that has been flown long enough to get a good feeling about it. No fancy electronics. If the president just has to communicate in flight let him use his cell phone. And we don't need 23 of them, two, a primary and a backup is plenty.
$20 billion for special design, special build gold plated choppers, when the country is as broke as it is, just doesn't make sense.
Well, they are at it again. The new program will get a new design from Sikorsky in Connecticut. For $20 billion overall, we get 23 gold plated presidential helicopters, That's nearly $1 billion per aircraft. That's totally rediculous.
All we need for a presidential chopper is one of what ever the service is flying. Give it a nice new paint job and maybe a couple of cushy seats in back. Take the aircraft from an operational squadron, something that has been flown long enough to get a good feeling about it. No fancy electronics. If the president just has to communicate in flight let him use his cell phone. And we don't need 23 of them, two, a primary and a backup is plenty.
$20 billion for special design, special build gold plated choppers, when the country is as broke as it is, just doesn't make sense.
Sunday, May 11, 2014
Gumshoes and REMF's won't help.
The TV news is playing up the dispatch of a dozen American "experts" to Nigeria to "help" recover the kidnapped Nigerian girls. Sorry O, that won't help. Makes you look wimpy on TV.
What's needed is about a hundred good soldiers, and the helicopters to lift them. And a location. The location the girls are held at. The choppers land the troops just out of gun shot of the location, the troops move in and shoot anyone who fails to put their hands up in the air. Choppers provide fire support as needed. Then fly the girls out to safety. Repeat as necessary until all the girls are freed.
So why don't we do this? Do we secretly support Boko Haram? Lack of guts? Too many REMF's and not enough soldiers? Multiculturalism?
You don't know what REMF means? Old service acronym for Rear Echelon M_____ F_____.
What's needed is about a hundred good soldiers, and the helicopters to lift them. And a location. The location the girls are held at. The choppers land the troops just out of gun shot of the location, the troops move in and shoot anyone who fails to put their hands up in the air. Choppers provide fire support as needed. Then fly the girls out to safety. Repeat as necessary until all the girls are freed.
So why don't we do this? Do we secretly support Boko Haram? Lack of guts? Too many REMF's and not enough soldiers? Multiculturalism?
You don't know what REMF means? Old service acronym for Rear Echelon M_____ F_____.
Friday, May 9, 2014
Lick 'em or join 'em?
The Democrats are choosing between two options. The House of Representatives is forming a committee to investigate Benghazi, with Rep Trey Gowdy as chairman. Option 1 for Democrats. Refuse to participate, make it an all Republican deal, and then trash it as political witchhunting. Option 2. Put some Democrats on the committee who can slow things down, waste time, give the witnesses softball questions that make them look good, raise procedural objections, and in general water down the proceedings.
Which option to take? Option 1, abstention, only works if the public can be persuaded that there is nothing in the Benghazi story. Polls suggest that this won't work, they show a majority thinks Benghazi is a shameful scandal, being hushed up by the administration. Certainly the failure to send troops to the rescue, the firing of general officers who refused to call back rescue missions, the mysterious CIA operation set up in this sinkhole, the attempt to call it a political demonstration sparked by an obscure internet video, and the denial of security assets requested before hand by officials on the scene, go together to make an ugly and shameful story.
Option 2 only looks good for Democrats only if they decide Option 1 won't work.
Good Luck Democrats.
Which option to take? Option 1, abstention, only works if the public can be persuaded that there is nothing in the Benghazi story. Polls suggest that this won't work, they show a majority thinks Benghazi is a shameful scandal, being hushed up by the administration. Certainly the failure to send troops to the rescue, the firing of general officers who refused to call back rescue missions, the mysterious CIA operation set up in this sinkhole, the attempt to call it a political demonstration sparked by an obscure internet video, and the denial of security assets requested before hand by officials on the scene, go together to make an ugly and shameful story.
Option 2 only looks good for Democrats only if they decide Option 1 won't work.
Good Luck Democrats.
Thursday, May 8, 2014
Reform the Congress
As the November election approaches everyone is looking to see the Republicans take "control" of the Senate. Should that happen, Obama will have to warm up that famous pen, and veto stuff. And sign his own name to it. Right now, one man, Harry Reid, does the veto for Obama, in secrecy.
That should not be allowed in a democracy. Every Congressman ought to be able to submit a bill and have it voted upon. This business of the Congressional leadership's ability to silently trashcan bills they don't like ought to stop. For that matter, each house ought to be required to vote on every bill the other house passes.
And this business in the Senate where it takes two votes to do anything ought to stop. Right now they hold one vote one whether they will vote on it and a second one to actually pass it. This is ridiculous, wastes time, and obscures each senator's real actions. Plenty of slimy senators vote one way of the first vote and the other way on the second vote. You gotta be a real political junkie to figure out just what senator so-and-so is really doing up there in DC, out of sight of his district. Most voters don't pay that close attention, they have lives to life after all.
Then we ought to demand that each bill be read aloud on the floor before the vote on it. That will cut down on those 1000 page bills that no one understands. Any bill too long to read aloud is a bad bill. And any bill must be printed (letterpress on paper) and distributed to the press, the public and all Congressmen BEFORE it comes up for a vote.
Then we ought to adopt the Confederate States of America practice of demanding each bill laid before Congress must address a single topic, that topic to be announced in the title of the bill. No more riders. The Supreme Court ought to hold bills violating that rule are un Constitutional.
And English is the language of the United States, plain English. Fancy Latin words will invalidate any bill. Sentences must be active voice, subject-verb-object. No compound sentences. No outside references, clauses that read "in accordance with such-an-such" , where such and such is some other document. A bill ought to stand on its own, no external references, which nobody has the time to find and read.
That should not be allowed in a democracy. Every Congressman ought to be able to submit a bill and have it voted upon. This business of the Congressional leadership's ability to silently trashcan bills they don't like ought to stop. For that matter, each house ought to be required to vote on every bill the other house passes.
And this business in the Senate where it takes two votes to do anything ought to stop. Right now they hold one vote one whether they will vote on it and a second one to actually pass it. This is ridiculous, wastes time, and obscures each senator's real actions. Plenty of slimy senators vote one way of the first vote and the other way on the second vote. You gotta be a real political junkie to figure out just what senator so-and-so is really doing up there in DC, out of sight of his district. Most voters don't pay that close attention, they have lives to life after all.
Then we ought to demand that each bill be read aloud on the floor before the vote on it. That will cut down on those 1000 page bills that no one understands. Any bill too long to read aloud is a bad bill. And any bill must be printed (letterpress on paper) and distributed to the press, the public and all Congressmen BEFORE it comes up for a vote.
Then we ought to adopt the Confederate States of America practice of demanding each bill laid before Congress must address a single topic, that topic to be announced in the title of the bill. No more riders. The Supreme Court ought to hold bills violating that rule are un Constitutional.
And English is the language of the United States, plain English. Fancy Latin words will invalidate any bill. Sentences must be active voice, subject-verb-object. No compound sentences. No outside references, clauses that read "in accordance with such-an-such" , where such and such is some other document. A bill ought to stand on its own, no external references, which nobody has the time to find and read.
Wednesday, May 7, 2014
Scratch one university, Rutgers
Dis inviting Condolezza Rice as a graduation speaker shows a university locked in the grip of crazies. Condolezza Rice is an inspiring figure, a black woman, born into modest circumstances, who by pure ability rose to become US secretary of state, the third highest office in the land (after the President and the chairman of the federal reserve, and above the vice president). This is an amazing story, any university student should be inspired to emulate. Graduation speeches tend to stick with you, I can still remember some lines from my own graduation speech and that was a long time ago. I'm sure Condolezza Rice would have been memorable graduation speaker. And Rutgers drove her away.
Ringleader in the anti-Rice crusade is Rutgers professor Deepa Kumar. She "teaches" journalism and "media studies" what ever that might be. She writes about Islamophobia, imperialism, anti muslim racism. She appeared on Russia Today, a Russian government sponsored propaganda show bragging about her "victory" in driving Condolezza Rice off campus.
That Rutgers would have this kind of fruitcake on the faculty says a lot of things, all bad, about Rutgers.
Ringleader in the anti-Rice crusade is Rutgers professor Deepa Kumar. She "teaches" journalism and "media studies" what ever that might be. She writes about Islamophobia, imperialism, anti muslim racism. She appeared on Russia Today, a Russian government sponsored propaganda show bragging about her "victory" in driving Condolezza Rice off campus.
That Rutgers would have this kind of fruitcake on the faculty says a lot of things, all bad, about Rutgers.
Labels:
Condolezza Rice,
Deepa Kumar,
graduation speaker,
Rutgers
Tuesday, May 6, 2014
What would America fight for?
Cover story from The Economist, a London based weekly news magazine. Written from the point of view of Europeans, terrified that the Americans will let the Russki's eat them up. The article reaches no worthwhile conclusions. They don't know what the Americans might do. For that matter I don't think we Americans know what we might do.
With the exception of the Brits, the rest of Europe has disarmed, and can offer no more effective military resistance to a Russian invasion than the Ukrainians have. Plus, the Russians can turn off the heat all over Europe if they please, so the Europeans are timid about economic sanctions. In actual fact the Russians have more sanctions to lay on the Europeans than the Europeans have to lay on the Russians.
So far, the Russians are attacking an non NATO member, and are going to some trouble to disguise their land grab as another Anschluss, (the people really want to become part of Russia). After the Ukraine aggression has cooled off, say in a year or two, the Russians may try the same thing on a NATO member. Would the US live up to its treaty obligations and defend NATO members? The Europeans fear that we won't.
And if we don't, the Russians will move on Europe, country by country, and in a few years control everything up to the English Channel.
With the exception of the Brits, the rest of Europe has disarmed, and can offer no more effective military resistance to a Russian invasion than the Ukrainians have. Plus, the Russians can turn off the heat all over Europe if they please, so the Europeans are timid about economic sanctions. In actual fact the Russians have more sanctions to lay on the Europeans than the Europeans have to lay on the Russians.
So far, the Russians are attacking an non NATO member, and are going to some trouble to disguise their land grab as another Anschluss, (the people really want to become part of Russia). After the Ukraine aggression has cooled off, say in a year or two, the Russians may try the same thing on a NATO member. Would the US live up to its treaty obligations and defend NATO members? The Europeans fear that we won't.
And if we don't, the Russians will move on Europe, country by country, and in a few years control everything up to the English Channel.
Monday, May 5, 2014
So what is he guilty of?
A Florida high school student (I didn't catch his name off the TV) is in the dock for hacking into his high school's computer and changing other kids grades, for money. The TV showed him in orange coveralls and handcuffs. Clearly the prosecutor is preparing to throw the book at this teenage boy. Nice looking boy too, thick dark hair, combed neatly, regular features, slender, should have no trouble getting dates at school. Dates will be harder come by in the clink.
Clearly this is a practice to be discouraged. Changing people's grades, transcripts, medical records, land ownership records, bank account records, driving records, and you name it, should not be allowed. No way, No how.
But, what crime is this kid guilty of? It isn't robbery or burglary. It isn't murder, manslaughter, arson, barratry, assault, perjury, embezzlement, income tax evasion. Forgery perhaps? Traditionally forgery is printing false paper money, or creating other false documents. But we could expand it.
For once, I'm thinking we need to pass a law, criminalizing this sort of thing. Broaden the law to include altering records of any kind for profit. Give this crime a name, say fackery, for forging by hacking, Spell out the test of the crime, and the penalties. Give the judge some discretion to let first time offenders off with something less than prison, say probation or even a slap on the wrist
And let's have some penalties for officials who fail to take obvious security measures, such as requiring passwords to access sensitive records, demanding a password change every six months, keeping computers with sensitive records OFF the internet.
Clearly this is a practice to be discouraged. Changing people's grades, transcripts, medical records, land ownership records, bank account records, driving records, and you name it, should not be allowed. No way, No how.
But, what crime is this kid guilty of? It isn't robbery or burglary. It isn't murder, manslaughter, arson, barratry, assault, perjury, embezzlement, income tax evasion. Forgery perhaps? Traditionally forgery is printing false paper money, or creating other false documents. But we could expand it.
For once, I'm thinking we need to pass a law, criminalizing this sort of thing. Broaden the law to include altering records of any kind for profit. Give this crime a name, say fackery, for forging by hacking, Spell out the test of the crime, and the penalties. Give the judge some discretion to let first time offenders off with something less than prison, say probation or even a slap on the wrist
And let's have some penalties for officials who fail to take obvious security measures, such as requiring passwords to access sensitive records, demanding a password change every six months, keeping computers with sensitive records OFF the internet.
Sunday, May 4, 2014
340,000 layoffs equals 288,000 "new" jobs?
The Obama administration keeps touting figures for "new" jobs. They never did spell out what makes a job "new". I'm thinking that every single hire is counted as a "new" job. In the same week they claimed 288,000 "new" jobs, they also announced 340,000 new claims for unemployment benefits, i.e. 340,000 people got laid off. First thing anyone does after getting laid off is go right down and file for unemployment. Put the two numbers together and we lost about 52,000 jobs last month. They don't say that on the evening TV news.
They do say that GNP growth has dropped to just about nothing. 0.1% is the number given, which is so low it might as well be zero.
Obama doesn't talk about that either. At least he isn't blaming it on George Bush any more.
They do say that GNP growth has dropped to just about nothing. 0.1% is the number given, which is so low it might as well be zero.
Obama doesn't talk about that either. At least he isn't blaming it on George Bush any more.
White House Coorespondent's dinner
Getting a lot of press coverage this morning. Obama has a fancy dinner for all his lovers in the press. How is this news? We know the press loves him and covers for him.
Saturday, May 3, 2014
Up here trees are the enemy
Damn things keep growing, spreading, reseeding, putting up shoots, dropping leaves on the grass. Around the edge of my lawn, the brush and the saplings try to move in on the grass. Shade it, bury it in dead leaves, emit hostile pheromones. The trees were staking a claim to 4-5 feet into the lawn.
Can't have that, they will be tearing down the house next.
Hedge clippers, very good against the pricker bushes, the saplings, the low hanging branches. And lopping shears for the stuff too thick for the hedge clippers. And a rake, a metal leaf rake. I used to use a big bamboo rake but it isn't strong enough to tangle with the brush. Any how, I pushed the woods back a good 5 feet. Long live the grass.
Gotta wait for the grass to green up this year. At least I got it all raked and looking better before the trees leafed.
Can't have that, they will be tearing down the house next.
Hedge clippers, very good against the pricker bushes, the saplings, the low hanging branches. And lopping shears for the stuff too thick for the hedge clippers. And a rake, a metal leaf rake. I used to use a big bamboo rake but it isn't strong enough to tangle with the brush. Any how, I pushed the woods back a good 5 feet. Long live the grass.
Gotta wait for the grass to green up this year. At least I got it all raked and looking better before the trees leafed.
Friday, May 2, 2014
Meet and Greet Jim Rubins, running for US Senate
I'm doing a meet and greet at my place for Jim Rubins next Thursday 8 May 6 PM. Jim is a Republican running for US Senator for New Hampshire. My place is up at the top of Franconia Notch.
22 Ridge Cut Road
Mittersill
Franconia, NH 03580
The Mittersill driveway is a couple of hundred yards down the road from the Peabody Slopes parking lot at Cannon. You can get off I93 at the Peabody Slopes/Echo Lake/ State Rt 18 exit. It's one exit north of the Cannon Mt Tramway exit.
22 Ridge Cut Road
Mittersill
Franconia, NH 03580
The Mittersill driveway is a couple of hundred yards down the road from the Peabody Slopes parking lot at Cannon. You can get off I93 at the Peabody Slopes/Echo Lake/ State Rt 18 exit. It's one exit north of the Cannon Mt Tramway exit.
Obama fired general officers on the night of Benghazi
With the new Ben Rhodes email the Benghazi story is coming back to life. As was obvious at the time, Obama spun the story, from a terrorist attack to a political demonstration. The consulate held out under attack for seven hours that night. Plenty of time to send reinforcements. Commanders on the scene, General Carter Ham, and Admiral Charles M Gaouette were fired by Obama that night. No explanation has ever been given. Rumor has it that Obama fired them when they refused to recall rescue missions en route to Benghazi.
I noticed that while Bret Baier was roasting Tommy Vietor medium rare last night, he didn't ask about the firings of general officers with distinguished service records.
Put this together with retired Air Force general Robert Lovell, who testified before Congress that "We should have gone in."
I think the real untold story of Benghazi is that the armed forces attempted rescue missions but Obama ordered them to stop and return to base. I think Obama sacrificed four brave Americans to prevent an incident that would have made him look bad, and demanded some serious US intervention in Libya, which he did not want to cope with.
I noticed that while Bret Baier was roasting Tommy Vietor medium rare last night, he didn't ask about the firings of general officers with distinguished service records.
Put this together with retired Air Force general Robert Lovell, who testified before Congress that "We should have gone in."
I think the real untold story of Benghazi is that the armed forces attempted rescue missions but Obama ordered them to stop and return to base. I think Obama sacrificed four brave Americans to prevent an incident that would have made him look bad, and demanded some serious US intervention in Libya, which he did not want to cope with.
Microsoft does one more XP patch.
Despite months of XP whines about Microsoft cutting off upgrades and patches, a new "zero day exploit" (hole in Windows just discovered today) is so bad that M$ cranked out a patch for it. Actually the hole seems to be in Internet Exploder Version 8, rather than in Windows proper, not that it mkes much difference to us users. We don't care where the bug lives, we just want it squashed. Anyhow, if you fire up Windows Update, and wait, the Exploder patch will download and install.
Sexual Orientation
We have a push to amend the New Hampshire constitution to guarantee equality (or something) for "sexual orientation". Not sure just what sexual orientation means. Is it a new word for gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgendered? Actually I, and everyone else, assumes that anti discrimination laws already on the books covers them. Or is it a term that just covers boys who want to be girls and girls who want to be boys? And what equality does it offer? I can understand requiring equality in things like college admissions, apartment rental, hiring. But what about more intimate jobs such as live in house keeper, day care provider, or nanny?
Apparently the NH senate has passed the amendment (dubbed CACR 17) and it's now over at the House.
I'm dubious about the value of this one.
Apparently the NH senate has passed the amendment (dubbed CACR 17) and it's now over at the House.
I'm dubious about the value of this one.
Thursday, May 1, 2014
Citizen's ID cards
They used to be a characteristic feature of police states. Nazi Germany, Fascist Italy, North Korea, Red China, the Soviet Union, all issued ID cards, and woe betide the citizen who failed to produce his ID when stopped by the police. In America we have always taken pride in an open society, we don't have citizen's ID cards. When social security cards first came out they were marked "Not for Identification Purposes" just to emphasize that they were for social security benefits only.
Well that's faded out. Driver's licenses now have color photos. You better have yours on you should you get stopped on the road. You need to show ID to board an aircraft. You have to show ID to get a job. And now, we are moving toward demanding ID in order to vote. The democrats are pushing back against this, claiming that many citizens lack photo ID. This I doubt, everyone has a driver's license. The majority feels voter ID is a good idea to prevent voter fraud. Which it probably is.
But, I kinda like the old ways, when we didn't have to show our papers all the time. When we put in voter ID we are telling citizens, get ID if you want to vote. It's a step toward a police state.
Well that's faded out. Driver's licenses now have color photos. You better have yours on you should you get stopped on the road. You need to show ID to board an aircraft. You have to show ID to get a job. And now, we are moving toward demanding ID in order to vote. The democrats are pushing back against this, claiming that many citizens lack photo ID. This I doubt, everyone has a driver's license. The majority feels voter ID is a good idea to prevent voter fraud. Which it probably is.
But, I kinda like the old ways, when we didn't have to show our papers all the time. When we put in voter ID we are telling citizens, get ID if you want to vote. It's a step toward a police state.
Wednesday, April 30, 2014
Down with Toll Roads
After 60 years of a no-toll-road federal policy, the Obama administration is backsliding. They have been making noises that would allow states to put up toll booths on the interstate highways. Obviously the attraction of squeezing more money out of the people overcame the very sensible principle of freeways rather than toll roads.
Travel means business, sales, and money. It's good public policy to encourage travel and shipping. Tourists bring money, and spend it, all along the way and at their destination. Trucks bring every sort of good, which gets sold, for money. The more goods shipped the more money everyone makes. It was federal policy that freeways paid for themselves thru the increased business and economic activity. Discouraging travel and shipping thru road tolls costs us more in lost business than it returns in tolls.
Despite crying and wailing from the road contractors, US roads are in good shape, much better shape than say Canada. I drove around the Gaspe peninsula in Quebec once. It was a major road, a two lane provincial highway along the St Lawrence River. Only it had washed away to the point that only one lane was left. You don't see that in the US. Except for some really beat up roads around New York City, American roads are better than anywhere in Europe. We do not have an "infrastructure crisis" except in the minds of state highway departments and road contractors. Which has been used as an excuse to call for more money for "infrastructure". Road tolls might provide this extra revenue. So says the highway lobby.
I say we ought to stick to the freeways rather than toll roads policy.
Travel means business, sales, and money. It's good public policy to encourage travel and shipping. Tourists bring money, and spend it, all along the way and at their destination. Trucks bring every sort of good, which gets sold, for money. The more goods shipped the more money everyone makes. It was federal policy that freeways paid for themselves thru the increased business and economic activity. Discouraging travel and shipping thru road tolls costs us more in lost business than it returns in tolls.
Despite crying and wailing from the road contractors, US roads are in good shape, much better shape than say Canada. I drove around the Gaspe peninsula in Quebec once. It was a major road, a two lane provincial highway along the St Lawrence River. Only it had washed away to the point that only one lane was left. You don't see that in the US. Except for some really beat up roads around New York City, American roads are better than anywhere in Europe. We do not have an "infrastructure crisis" except in the minds of state highway departments and road contractors. Which has been used as an excuse to call for more money for "infrastructure". Road tolls might provide this extra revenue. So says the highway lobby.
I say we ought to stick to the freeways rather than toll roads policy.
B17 fighter plane?
That's what Fox News called it this morning. They were covering a decoration ceremony for some WWII Army Air Corps survivors. On missions over Germany their B17's got shot up and had to crash land in Switzerland. The Swiss "interned" them in conditions as harsh as a German POW camp. But since it was Switzerland, not Germany, the airmen were denied prisoner of war medals when WWII was over. Relatives worked long and hard to reverse this, and this morning the few airmen still alive were presented with their medals.
Aside from the Fox voiceover calling the B17 a fighter, all went well. How anyone could mistake the most famous American warplane, hero of movies such as Twelve o'Clock High, The War Lover, and Memphis Belle, as a fighter plane, reveals much about the shallowness of TV newsies. And this was on Fox, the best of 'em. Saints preserve us from what the bottom feeders like MSNBC are polluting the airwaves with.
Aside from the Fox voiceover calling the B17 a fighter, all went well. How anyone could mistake the most famous American warplane, hero of movies such as Twelve o'Clock High, The War Lover, and Memphis Belle, as a fighter plane, reveals much about the shallowness of TV newsies. And this was on Fox, the best of 'em. Saints preserve us from what the bottom feeders like MSNBC are polluting the airwaves with.
Tuesday, April 29, 2014
Get the Feds out of the Mortgage Business
The housing industry, realtors, builders, mortgage lenders, appliance makers, and others, back in Great Depression 1.0 persuaded Congress to give them a handout. They claimed a shortage of mortgage money was crimping the industry's wings, and housing was needed to provide jobs and "home ownership". And so our tax money was channeled into mortgages thru Fannie Mae. Actually, Fannie Mae made good money for many years. It borrowed at the low Federal T-bill rate because everyone believed that the US government would back up Fannie's bonds, and it loaned at the commercial mortgage rate, leaving a comfy profit margin. Fannie Mae even sold stock to private investors, with dividends paid out of the juicy profits. Fannie Mae (and its younger brother Freddie Mac) offered cushy jobs for retired politicians, and nice profits to investors.
In the 1980's Fannie got into, or started up, the "secondary mortgage market". In this deal, they would buy existing mortgages from the "primary" lenders, mostly banks. For a while this made money, but the side effects gave us Great Depression 2.0. The primary lenders found that they could make money on anything, do the mortgage, sock the buyer with hefty paperwork fees to do the deal, then sell the mortgage to Fannie. If the mortgage went bad, borrower skipped town, property wasn't worth the money in the mortgage, the primary lender didn't care. He made his money the minute Fannie bought the mortgage off him. And so the quality of the mortgages went down hill. Suddenly investors stopped loaning money to Fannie, and shortly after Great Depression 2.0 stalked the land, Fannie got taken over by the US treasury. $188 billion of your tax money was poured into Fannie to meet it's obligations.
With this sorry history, we ought to get the Federal government out of the mortgage business. There is plenty of private money to finance home buying. Remember, a mortgage is a VERY desirable deal for the lender. His loan is secured by real property, something tangible and salable. If the borrower defaults the bank gets the house. And, the borrower is highly motivated to make his payments. No spouse wants to explain to his partner why they and their children are getting pitched out into the street.
If private investors will buy US T-bills that only pay 3%, they will be happy to make an equally safe mortgage loan at 4.5%. They will be plenty of mortgage money if we give the mortgage business back to private banks. And we ought to forbid the selling of mortgages. When you make a mortgage you will own it til it's paid off. This will discourage doing mortgages that are bound to fail.
In the 1980's Fannie got into, or started up, the "secondary mortgage market". In this deal, they would buy existing mortgages from the "primary" lenders, mostly banks. For a while this made money, but the side effects gave us Great Depression 2.0. The primary lenders found that they could make money on anything, do the mortgage, sock the buyer with hefty paperwork fees to do the deal, then sell the mortgage to Fannie. If the mortgage went bad, borrower skipped town, property wasn't worth the money in the mortgage, the primary lender didn't care. He made his money the minute Fannie bought the mortgage off him. And so the quality of the mortgages went down hill. Suddenly investors stopped loaning money to Fannie, and shortly after Great Depression 2.0 stalked the land, Fannie got taken over by the US treasury. $188 billion of your tax money was poured into Fannie to meet it's obligations.
With this sorry history, we ought to get the Federal government out of the mortgage business. There is plenty of private money to finance home buying. Remember, a mortgage is a VERY desirable deal for the lender. His loan is secured by real property, something tangible and salable. If the borrower defaults the bank gets the house. And, the borrower is highly motivated to make his payments. No spouse wants to explain to his partner why they and their children are getting pitched out into the street.
If private investors will buy US T-bills that only pay 3%, they will be happy to make an equally safe mortgage loan at 4.5%. They will be plenty of mortgage money if we give the mortgage business back to private banks. And we ought to forbid the selling of mortgages. When you make a mortgage you will own it til it's paid off. This will discourage doing mortgages that are bound to fail.
Monday, April 28, 2014
Just one more thing for Republicans
Stop the NSA snooping of cell phones, all phones for that matter.
"The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probably cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized." Article IV. The "oath or affirmation" was language acceptable to the Quakers, who refused to take oaths as a matter of religious principle. Quakers would "affirm" their testimony, but would not testify under oath.
NSA is violating every clause of Article IV. They have no Warrant. They have no probably cause. Snooping every cell phone in the country is not "particularly describing the place to be searched".
It's creepy to know that government can check every person I ever telephoned, and probably where I was when I placed the call. Your (or my) political enemies could troll thru this record looking for dirt. Just accepting a phone call from some scum bag could do your rep, and your chances of winning an election, a lot of harm. How often have you picked up your phone and found some slimey robocaller on the line?
"The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probably cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized." Article IV. The "oath or affirmation" was language acceptable to the Quakers, who refused to take oaths as a matter of religious principle. Quakers would "affirm" their testimony, but would not testify under oath.
NSA is violating every clause of Article IV. They have no Warrant. They have no probably cause. Snooping every cell phone in the country is not "particularly describing the place to be searched".
It's creepy to know that government can check every person I ever telephoned, and probably where I was when I placed the call. Your (or my) political enemies could troll thru this record looking for dirt. Just accepting a phone call from some scum bag could do your rep, and your chances of winning an election, a lot of harm. How often have you picked up your phone and found some slimey robocaller on the line?
But they won't vote Republican
The Washington Examiner has a story about the Laborers International union, which naturally favors Keystone XL. The Examiner cites union outrage over the Obama administrations latest stall on the pipeline. But, despite outrage, the 557,000 member union never says to its membership "Vote a straight Republican ticket, that will get us Keystone XL and keep us off unemployment." Here is a clear cut case where Republicans can help the union but the union people cannot drop their lifelong loyalty to the democrats. These are clearly instinct voters, not thinking voters.
The Examiner goes on to explain the role of hedge fund billionaire Tom Steyer, who gave $50 million to Obama, and promised to raise another $50 million. Obama clearly values the $100 million more than he values 557,000 live and voting union members. I guess he figures they are all dumb enough to vote democratic no matter what.
The Examiner goes on to explain the role of hedge fund billionaire Tom Steyer, who gave $50 million to Obama, and promised to raise another $50 million. Obama clearly values the $100 million more than he values 557,000 live and voting union members. I guess he figures they are all dumb enough to vote democratic no matter what.
Sunday, April 27, 2014
The Big Enchilada, jobs, jobs, and more jobs.
And everyone likes this one. Turn the economy around, get hiring people, have jobs for everyone, enough jobs that workers can quit companies they don't like and be able to find another job. That will bring wages up.
But to win the election, the GOP has to spell out HOW it is going to achieve this nirvana. Voters want specifics. Such as:
1. Start the Keystone XL pipeline. It will get crude oil shipments off the rails and into a pipe. It brings oil in from one of our closest allies. It will lower the price of gasoline and furnace oil. It will allow US export of fuels to our friends around the world.
2. Repeal Sarbanes Oxley. This 1000 page law is welfare for lawyers, an intolerable burden on companies, and has driven merger and acquisition business out of New York. Getting rid of Sarbanes Oxley will make it easier to run a business, and business is what employs people.
3. Repeal Dodd Frank. Another 1000 page law, welfare for lawyers. Dodd Frank sets up ways for taxpayers to bail out firms "too big to fail". Replace Dodd Frank with some anti trust action, any company too big to fail is clearly a trust, and needs to be busted. Dodd Frank tells Wall St speculators that they can take any sort of risk, when things go bad Uncle will bail you out.
4. Reform corporate income tax. For instance, money earned overseas should not be subject to US income tax. Companies that make money overseas should be free to bring the money back to the US and spend it. Right now Uncle takes 35% of every dollar brought home from overseas. At this rate, it makes sense to leave the money in overseas banks earning a couple a percent rather than investing it back here at home. And, that 35% corporate tax rate is the highest in the industrial world. No wonder companies are sending jobs overseas, the taxes are lower.
5. Reform the US patent system. Right now no one can bring any new product to market without some patent troll suing for patent infringement as soon as the product makes a little money. Look are the $600 million award against Blackberry some years ago. Blackberry is filing for bankruptcy today. Patents are granted for ridiculous things, like whether it takes one click or two clicks to place something in an internet shopping basket. This constant threat of mickey mouse lawsuits makes getting a start up company off the ground harder. It's the start ups that employ people.
6. Remind every one that a $10 minimum wage doesn't put more money in worker's pockets, instead it throws them out of work.
7. Repeal the "Corporate Average Fuel Economy" (CAFE) requirements. Four dollar a gallon gasoline is all the incentive anyone needs to build fuel efficient vehicles. The current CAFE requirement of nearly 50 mpg makes new cars ridiculously expensive, leading to lower car sales and people refurbishing old cars to keep them running longer.
But to win the election, the GOP has to spell out HOW it is going to achieve this nirvana. Voters want specifics. Such as:
1. Start the Keystone XL pipeline. It will get crude oil shipments off the rails and into a pipe. It brings oil in from one of our closest allies. It will lower the price of gasoline and furnace oil. It will allow US export of fuels to our friends around the world.
2. Repeal Sarbanes Oxley. This 1000 page law is welfare for lawyers, an intolerable burden on companies, and has driven merger and acquisition business out of New York. Getting rid of Sarbanes Oxley will make it easier to run a business, and business is what employs people.
3. Repeal Dodd Frank. Another 1000 page law, welfare for lawyers. Dodd Frank sets up ways for taxpayers to bail out firms "too big to fail". Replace Dodd Frank with some anti trust action, any company too big to fail is clearly a trust, and needs to be busted. Dodd Frank tells Wall St speculators that they can take any sort of risk, when things go bad Uncle will bail you out.
4. Reform corporate income tax. For instance, money earned overseas should not be subject to US income tax. Companies that make money overseas should be free to bring the money back to the US and spend it. Right now Uncle takes 35% of every dollar brought home from overseas. At this rate, it makes sense to leave the money in overseas banks earning a couple a percent rather than investing it back here at home. And, that 35% corporate tax rate is the highest in the industrial world. No wonder companies are sending jobs overseas, the taxes are lower.
5. Reform the US patent system. Right now no one can bring any new product to market without some patent troll suing for patent infringement as soon as the product makes a little money. Look are the $600 million award against Blackberry some years ago. Blackberry is filing for bankruptcy today. Patents are granted for ridiculous things, like whether it takes one click or two clicks to place something in an internet shopping basket. This constant threat of mickey mouse lawsuits makes getting a start up company off the ground harder. It's the start ups that employ people.
6. Remind every one that a $10 minimum wage doesn't put more money in worker's pockets, instead it throws them out of work.
7. Repeal the "Corporate Average Fuel Economy" (CAFE) requirements. Four dollar a gallon gasoline is all the incentive anyone needs to build fuel efficient vehicles. The current CAFE requirement of nearly 50 mpg makes new cars ridiculously expensive, leading to lower car sales and people refurbishing old cars to keep them running longer.
Saturday, April 26, 2014
And, the GOP needs a platform for young people
The young voters are heavy internet users. They all believe that everything should be free. They want to download music, movies, ebooks, you name it, for free. There are some things we could do to make interneting more harmonious.
First, rewrite copy right law. Current copyright runs for the life of the author plus seventy years. We ought to cut that back to fourteen or seventeen years, like it used to be. That would take all the good pop music off copyright and allow downloading legally. My children's ipads are stocked with the great songs I remember fondly from my college years. That was more than seventeen years ago. The kids would love this. The labels hate the idea. Labels don't vote.
Then repeal the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, which permits all sorts of legal bullying by Hollywood and the labels. The kids would love this. Hollywood and the labels hate it. They don't vote.
Then repeal the age 21 drinking law that MADD rod rodded thru Congress twenty years ago. Make drinking age a matter of state law. The kids would love this. And, it would increase safety. Colleges ought to operate on-campus pubs. Students would prefer sipping a few, at a place where their friends might be. After having a few, they can walk back to dorm. Much safer than driving back to campus after a party. Not sure just who is against this idea, but someone is.
Social security and medicare reform. Most young people figure these programs will be gone long before they get eligible for them. They would be fine with some modest trim backs of benefits. They see FICA taking a big whack out of their paychecks, and they don't see any payback for themselves. They see it as a tax on them to support the elderly.
First, rewrite copy right law. Current copyright runs for the life of the author plus seventy years. We ought to cut that back to fourteen or seventeen years, like it used to be. That would take all the good pop music off copyright and allow downloading legally. My children's ipads are stocked with the great songs I remember fondly from my college years. That was more than seventeen years ago. The kids would love this. The labels hate the idea. Labels don't vote.
Then repeal the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, which permits all sorts of legal bullying by Hollywood and the labels. The kids would love this. Hollywood and the labels hate it. They don't vote.
Then repeal the age 21 drinking law that MADD rod rodded thru Congress twenty years ago. Make drinking age a matter of state law. The kids would love this. And, it would increase safety. Colleges ought to operate on-campus pubs. Students would prefer sipping a few, at a place where their friends might be. After having a few, they can walk back to dorm. Much safer than driving back to campus after a party. Not sure just who is against this idea, but someone is.
Social security and medicare reform. Most young people figure these programs will be gone long before they get eligible for them. They would be fine with some modest trim backs of benefits. They see FICA taking a big whack out of their paychecks, and they don't see any payback for themselves. They see it as a tax on them to support the elderly.
Friday, April 25, 2014
Republicans need a platform to win this year
Despite all the pundits claiming this is a Republican year due to misteps by the Obama Adminstration, I am worried. In 2012 Obama carried the women's vote by 10%. That was enough to win the election coast to coast. Women are half the voters. Republicans do poorly with young voters, and that can be fatal. As the seniors die off, the young voters take their places and if they are all democrats, we can kiss the GOP goodby.
Let's talk about women voters first. The Republicans need to get off the pro-life thing. For every pro-life voter we gain, we lose a young woman who fears getting pregnant and not being able to stop it. The party needs to stop backing all those little laws that chip away at abortion. The party doesn't need to switch over to a pro-choice stance, it just needs to stop talking about it. The ardent pro-life people will whine and cry, but in the end they will vote Republican. And a lot of younger women will too.
Health Care is a top issue with women, they are the caregivers who take the children to the pediatrician. Unlike men, women are more likely to go to the doctor when something hurts. Men are more apt to just tough it out, not wanting to loose pay or appear soft. So healthcare counts, big time with women. Obamacare is disliked by the majority of voters. But the Republicans have not offered an Obamacare replacement, probably because they cannot agree on what it ought to be. And Republican leadership has failed to get the party together on a plan, probably fearing that whatever they propose the media will savage them on it.
We ought to propose freedom for insurance companies. Any insurance company licensed to do business by any state in the union, is free to sell insurance in all fifty states. Right now, to sell insurance you have to get a license from the state you are selling in. To jump thru fifty sets of paperwork hoops to get licensed in fifty different states is beyond any company. So a lot of states, like New Hampshire, only have ONE insurance company doing business in the state. And, monopoly leads to price gouging. Voters would love the idea. Insurance companies hate it. Insurance companies don't vote.
We ought to propose freedom to import drugs. Any drug approved by the health authorities of decent first world countries (Canada, England, France, Germany, and some others) may be imported duty free and sold by drug stores. This would drop the price of prescription drugs a lot. Voters would love the idea. Drug companies hate the idea. Drug companies don't vote.
We need to clamp down on malpractice suits. Right now every doctor has to pay $100,000 a year for malpractice insurance, unless he wants to be sued into poverty. This is largely a matter of state law. Up here in New Hampshire we did something about malpractice which cut the rate in half. Other states could do likewise. Voters are OK with this idea. Lawyers hate it. Although lawyers can vote, there aren't all that many of them.
We need to scrap the regulations that force gold plating of medical facilities. For instance at Dartmouth Hitchkok the main building is topped by a gigantic row of air conditioners. Turns out, regulations require the hospital to hold temperature to 72 degrees plus or minus ONE degree. which is ridiculous, in addition to ridiculously expensive.
Let's talk about women voters first. The Republicans need to get off the pro-life thing. For every pro-life voter we gain, we lose a young woman who fears getting pregnant and not being able to stop it. The party needs to stop backing all those little laws that chip away at abortion. The party doesn't need to switch over to a pro-choice stance, it just needs to stop talking about it. The ardent pro-life people will whine and cry, but in the end they will vote Republican. And a lot of younger women will too.
Health Care is a top issue with women, they are the caregivers who take the children to the pediatrician. Unlike men, women are more likely to go to the doctor when something hurts. Men are more apt to just tough it out, not wanting to loose pay or appear soft. So healthcare counts, big time with women. Obamacare is disliked by the majority of voters. But the Republicans have not offered an Obamacare replacement, probably because they cannot agree on what it ought to be. And Republican leadership has failed to get the party together on a plan, probably fearing that whatever they propose the media will savage them on it.
We ought to propose freedom for insurance companies. Any insurance company licensed to do business by any state in the union, is free to sell insurance in all fifty states. Right now, to sell insurance you have to get a license from the state you are selling in. To jump thru fifty sets of paperwork hoops to get licensed in fifty different states is beyond any company. So a lot of states, like New Hampshire, only have ONE insurance company doing business in the state. And, monopoly leads to price gouging. Voters would love the idea. Insurance companies hate it. Insurance companies don't vote.
We ought to propose freedom to import drugs. Any drug approved by the health authorities of decent first world countries (Canada, England, France, Germany, and some others) may be imported duty free and sold by drug stores. This would drop the price of prescription drugs a lot. Voters would love the idea. Drug companies hate the idea. Drug companies don't vote.
We need to clamp down on malpractice suits. Right now every doctor has to pay $100,000 a year for malpractice insurance, unless he wants to be sued into poverty. This is largely a matter of state law. Up here in New Hampshire we did something about malpractice which cut the rate in half. Other states could do likewise. Voters are OK with this idea. Lawyers hate it. Although lawyers can vote, there aren't all that many of them.
We need to scrap the regulations that force gold plating of medical facilities. For instance at Dartmouth Hitchkok the main building is topped by a gigantic row of air conditioners. Turns out, regulations require the hospital to hold temperature to 72 degrees plus or minus ONE degree. which is ridiculous, in addition to ridiculously expensive.
Thursday, April 24, 2014
Pitch ball? Spit ball? This is news?
All over the TV news. A Yankee's pitcher had pine pitch on his neck. Strictly verbotten in baseball. Making the ball sticky is all kinds of against the rules. It's like pitching a spitball. News coverage is INTENSE. Must be a slow news day.
Long Island town has massive SWAT team
Been watching this on TV. A prank call brought out a 60-70 man SWAT team, all in black uniforms and black helmets, toting machine guns, equipped with armored Humvees. All this to a suburban home in Nassau county NY? Who/what did they expect to oppose them? Al Quada in New York? The Symbionese Liberation Army? The Suprano's? Sure looks like over kill to me. Lucky nobody got shot.
Could it be that once the town cops got funding for a SWAT team they wanted to use it for something?
For that matter, did the BLM send all those armed men to the Bundy ranch because they were on the payroll and had nothing better to do? Should federal bureaus (except the FBI) have armed agents at all? The proper procedure for a bureaucracy to apply force to citizens is to obtain a court order, and have local law enforcement carry it out. Not to dispatch their own private pug uglies to bust heads.
Could it be that once the town cops got funding for a SWAT team they wanted to use it for something?
For that matter, did the BLM send all those armed men to the Bundy ranch because they were on the payroll and had nothing better to do? Should federal bureaus (except the FBI) have armed agents at all? The proper procedure for a bureaucracy to apply force to citizens is to obtain a court order, and have local law enforcement carry it out. Not to dispatch their own private pug uglies to bust heads.
Wednesday, April 23, 2014
Time to ante up. 600 US soldiers vs 40,000 Russians
It's on the TV news. Despite the superior combat skills of US forces, somehow I don't think 600 guys have a chance against 40,000.
Tuesday, April 22, 2014
Do you believe in powdered alcohol?
Fox news has been running short pieces on this new product every hour or so during the day. This concept first appeared in a Harry Harrison science fiction story, one of the Stainless Steel Rat stories, many years ago. I'm not the world's greatest chemist, but I do know that alcohol is a liquid, and it will freeze, it will boil, but it won't turn into a powder. Could it be that gullible newsies, who never studied even high school chemistry, have fallen for an April Fools story?
Space-X lands a rocket booster, on land
The video is fascinating, a big rocket hovering on engine power and carefully backing down to the ground. Landing upright, all in one piece. Space-X hopes to lower the cost of spaceflight by soft landing and reusing the booster. Amusingly, the Fox News commentator keep referring to the rocket engines as "afterburners". Sorry Fox, an afterburner is a power boosting device applied to jet engines, not rockets. Afterburners can double your thrust, at the cost of horrible fuel consumption. Only military fighter planes are equipped with afterburners due to their ability to suck down fuel like a sewer pipe. To call the rocket engines of a booster afterburners reveals the depth of ignorance of the newsies.
Monday, April 21, 2014
Majoring in the Liberal Arts.
Major hand wringing article, The Liberal Arts are in Trouble. Enrollment is down, students are opting for majors that will get them a job after graduation. A lotta talk about the politicization of the liberal arts leading to self destruction. Departments where all the art and literature of the past is examined for sexism, racism, political uncorrectness and condemned for it. It doesn't take much of this kinda talk for students to get the point, and change majors. Who wants to major in something politically incorrect?
All is probably not lost. A liberal arts major is still appealing to vast numbers of students who cannot hack the math required for a STEM major. Not everyone can learn integral calculus, and with out calculus you aren't going anywhere in science or engineering. So if you are one of those mathematics "challenged" college students what are you gonna do?
First, understand that the liberal arts are English, foreign languages, history, art, philosophy, and music Know that gender studies, minority studies, physical education, theater arts, and journalism are not liberal arts, and have little to no prospect of landing any kind of job better than waiting tables after graduation.
Second, figure out what kind of job you can turn a liberal arts degree to. The college faculty see the mission of their department as training more college faculty. Which is a dead end jobwise. Typical college teaching jobs are "adjunct" professors, part timers, paid by the course taught, no health insurance, miserable pay, no chance of tenure. As a single guy or girl you can just barely get by on adjunct's pay. You will never pay off your college loans, afford a down payment, or marriage. Don't go there.
Think about an English major for careers in writing, sales, acting, computer programming, business. Foreign language can get you a job in any company that does business overseas. A company would rather rely upon American agents staffing their overseas offices than local nationals of questionable loyalty. History can lead into a teaching position, or the writing of history books. Check out a book store. You will find the history books given as much shelf space as anything else. Art or music majors are good for artists or musicians. Note, it takes some natural born talent to be a successful artist or musician. If you don't have any talent, best look elsewhere. Positions as art experts or music critics, like Pru Hallowell on the old Charmed TV show are few and far between.
Think over carefully before signing for those humungous college loans.
All is probably not lost. A liberal arts major is still appealing to vast numbers of students who cannot hack the math required for a STEM major. Not everyone can learn integral calculus, and with out calculus you aren't going anywhere in science or engineering. So if you are one of those mathematics "challenged" college students what are you gonna do?
First, understand that the liberal arts are English, foreign languages, history, art, philosophy, and music Know that gender studies, minority studies, physical education, theater arts, and journalism are not liberal arts, and have little to no prospect of landing any kind of job better than waiting tables after graduation.
Second, figure out what kind of job you can turn a liberal arts degree to. The college faculty see the mission of their department as training more college faculty. Which is a dead end jobwise. Typical college teaching jobs are "adjunct" professors, part timers, paid by the course taught, no health insurance, miserable pay, no chance of tenure. As a single guy or girl you can just barely get by on adjunct's pay. You will never pay off your college loans, afford a down payment, or marriage. Don't go there.
Think about an English major for careers in writing, sales, acting, computer programming, business. Foreign language can get you a job in any company that does business overseas. A company would rather rely upon American agents staffing their overseas offices than local nationals of questionable loyalty. History can lead into a teaching position, or the writing of history books. Check out a book store. You will find the history books given as much shelf space as anything else. Art or music majors are good for artists or musicians. Note, it takes some natural born talent to be a successful artist or musician. If you don't have any talent, best look elsewhere. Positions as art experts or music critics, like Pru Hallowell on the old Charmed TV show are few and far between.
Think over carefully before signing for those humungous college loans.
Sunday, April 20, 2014
Greatest Religious Movie of all Time
I saw a list of 'em on the Web the other day. Naturally, at the top was Cecil B. DeMille's Ten Commandments. It came out in the 50's. It's still going strong, they ran it on Channel 9 (WMUR) just last night. Then there was Ben Hur, Samson and Delilah, the Robe, and the Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe.
Oh really? I know everyone talks about what a cool Christian C.S. Lewis was, but I never thought of the Narnia stories as particularly religious. They were kid's books, and as kid's books used to do, they advocated good and disparaged evil. But evil in Narnia was vanquished by force of arms, and the Lion takes on the the Witch directly in the last chapter. I'm not sure if this is quite in accordance with Christian doctrine.
Oh really? I know everyone talks about what a cool Christian C.S. Lewis was, but I never thought of the Narnia stories as particularly religious. They were kid's books, and as kid's books used to do, they advocated good and disparaged evil. But evil in Narnia was vanquished by force of arms, and the Lion takes on the the Witch directly in the last chapter. I'm not sure if this is quite in accordance with Christian doctrine.
Easter Skiing
It's Easter, it's warm and sunny. Cannon is open for skiing. Parking lot is full, chairlifts and tramway are running. New England skiing is best in March they used to say. It's April in case you hadn't noticed.
Saturday, April 19, 2014
Amunoosuc Valley Railway Assn does the Spring Show
So we engaged the Haverill Middle School gym. We invited 30 vendors, sold them tables. Trailered the club modular layout up and unloaded it. We gotta recruit some younger members for this club. We had a good turnout for setup, but the bulk of the membership is getting too old and infirm to jackass the heavy modules out of the trailer and set them up. Let alone grovel around on the floor adjusting leveling jacks and hooking up electrical connections. In fact the entire model railroading hobby is suffering from a lack of new blood. When the doors opened on Saturday, the bulk of the attendees were elderly. A few grandchildren who loved every minute of the show. Very few young guys (or girls).
So I checked out the vendors and bought the makings of three new fun projects. I found a heavy freight steamer to pull my freight trains, a baggage car for my baggage and mail train, and a tank care for my tank train. For not much meney, I have the makings of hours of pleasant shop time.
So I checked out the vendors and bought the makings of three new fun projects. I found a heavy freight steamer to pull my freight trains, a baggage car for my baggage and mail train, and a tank care for my tank train. For not much meney, I have the makings of hours of pleasant shop time.
Friday, April 18, 2014
Looking for a Republican Presidential Candidate for 16
Unless we want four more years of Hillary, the Republicans need to win the presidency in two years. To get the country moving again, the economy growing again, people back to work again, we need to pass some legislation that Democrat presidents would never sign. We need to repeal most, perhaps all of Obamacare. We need to build the Keystone XL pipeline. We need to explore for oil and gas offshore and on federal land. We need to curb the EPA. We need to stop wasting money on pork and crony capitalism, the Highway bills, the farm bills, the green energy boondoggles. We need to start rolling back endless job killing regulations. We need to fire the endless federal SWAT teams.
To do any of this Republicans need to win the presidency. Hillary would veto ever one of this projects. To win, Republicans need a candidate. So far, the guys who make the evening news don't look very electable.
Start with Rand Paul. Nice guy, would enjoy having him over for drinks. But, he is an isolationist. Believes that American should withdraw to the continental US, and incur no expense, bear no burdens, and let the rest of the world take care of itself. Nice ideas, but the last time isolationism gave us WWII. If the US had joined the League of Nations, and exerted itself, Hitler could have been stopped, anytime up to 1938. We could have laid down the law to the Germans, even removed Hitler from office. The French and the British would have backed us up. But we didn't, and Hitler went on to set the entire world on fire. Look what Putin is doing to Ukraine right today. We ought to stop him. Rand Paul won't.
And, Rand Paul probably shares his father's fetish for a gold standard currency. I heard the elder Paul, ight up here in the Littleton Opera House, explaining how he would go back to a gold back currency. And throw the economy into a worse tailspin than it is now. To be fair, I haven't heard the younger Paul making goldbug talk, but I haven't heard him reject it either.
Chris Christy took a solid hit over the George Washington bridge lane closings. Too bad, but that's American politics, a blood sport. He's gotta do a whole bunch of recovery to be in the running.
Ted Cruz might be a possibility. He has a pretty good record. But I don't know enough about him and I suspect a lot of people outside of Texas feel the same way. He has two years to make himself better known.
Condi Rice anyone? I like her, but I suspect she will not run.
Jeb Bush? Nice guy, good family, but his father and his brother have held the presidency and giving it to a third member of the same family seems awfully like a hereditary monarchy.
We need someone....
To do any of this Republicans need to win the presidency. Hillary would veto ever one of this projects. To win, Republicans need a candidate. So far, the guys who make the evening news don't look very electable.
Start with Rand Paul. Nice guy, would enjoy having him over for drinks. But, he is an isolationist. Believes that American should withdraw to the continental US, and incur no expense, bear no burdens, and let the rest of the world take care of itself. Nice ideas, but the last time isolationism gave us WWII. If the US had joined the League of Nations, and exerted itself, Hitler could have been stopped, anytime up to 1938. We could have laid down the law to the Germans, even removed Hitler from office. The French and the British would have backed us up. But we didn't, and Hitler went on to set the entire world on fire. Look what Putin is doing to Ukraine right today. We ought to stop him. Rand Paul won't.
And, Rand Paul probably shares his father's fetish for a gold standard currency. I heard the elder Paul, ight up here in the Littleton Opera House, explaining how he would go back to a gold back currency. And throw the economy into a worse tailspin than it is now. To be fair, I haven't heard the younger Paul making goldbug talk, but I haven't heard him reject it either.
Chris Christy took a solid hit over the George Washington bridge lane closings. Too bad, but that's American politics, a blood sport. He's gotta do a whole bunch of recovery to be in the running.
Ted Cruz might be a possibility. He has a pretty good record. But I don't know enough about him and I suspect a lot of people outside of Texas feel the same way. He has two years to make himself better known.
Condi Rice anyone? I like her, but I suspect she will not run.
Jeb Bush? Nice guy, good family, but his father and his brother have held the presidency and giving it to a third member of the same family seems awfully like a hereditary monarchy.
We need someone....
Thursday, April 17, 2014
Federal HIghway Trust Fund going dry
This comes from Neil Cavuto on Fox. He had a couple of guests, one who called to close it down for good and one who called for pumping it up with more of my tax money.
Me, I think we ought to shut it down, cancel the federal gasoline tax that goes into the fund, and let the states take care of roads and bridges. The states do most of this already. The Federal Highway Trust Fund was started up under the Eisenhower administration. It earmarked all the federal gasoline tax money to building the interstate highway system. Well, the interstates are all built, have been for 30 years. So Congress critters dole out trust fund money to their districts whether it's needed or not. Congress critters love that part. And, surprise, the districts always find a way to spend it, all of it. When good old Tip O'Neill retired, his numerous friends in Congress decided do something nice for good old Tip. They funded the Big Dig in Boston, a $14 billion dollar tunnel under the center of town. The Big Dig was still being dug years after good old Tip died. It didn't do much to improve Boston traffic, but it did open up a lot of prime real estate in the center of town. Contractors all over Massachusetts loved the Big Dig.
The states have the resources to keep the country's roads and bridges in repair. Thrifty New Hampshire, with out either a state income tax or a state sales tax, keeps it's roads in better shape than bigger richer New York does. And, when the state government has to raise the money for road work, it tends to stick to necessary work and skip the frills. You can save a lot of money that way. And, state funded projects don't have to pay the inflated Davis-Bacon wage rates that federal projects do.
Me, I think we ought to shut it down, cancel the federal gasoline tax that goes into the fund, and let the states take care of roads and bridges. The states do most of this already. The Federal Highway Trust Fund was started up under the Eisenhower administration. It earmarked all the federal gasoline tax money to building the interstate highway system. Well, the interstates are all built, have been for 30 years. So Congress critters dole out trust fund money to their districts whether it's needed or not. Congress critters love that part. And, surprise, the districts always find a way to spend it, all of it. When good old Tip O'Neill retired, his numerous friends in Congress decided do something nice for good old Tip. They funded the Big Dig in Boston, a $14 billion dollar tunnel under the center of town. The Big Dig was still being dug years after good old Tip died. It didn't do much to improve Boston traffic, but it did open up a lot of prime real estate in the center of town. Contractors all over Massachusetts loved the Big Dig.
The states have the resources to keep the country's roads and bridges in repair. Thrifty New Hampshire, with out either a state income tax or a state sales tax, keeps it's roads in better shape than bigger richer New York does. And, when the state government has to raise the money for road work, it tends to stick to necessary work and skip the frills. You can save a lot of money that way. And, state funded projects don't have to pay the inflated Davis-Bacon wage rates that federal projects do.
Wednesday, April 16, 2014
Old Winter Driving Trick
Broom the snow off your car in the morning. Shining on bare car metal and glass, the sun will make the whole car warm to the touch, even when it's below freezing. The warmth will melt all the frost off the windows, make the car interior warm and cozy, and make the motor warm and happy to start. Much easier than chipping ice off the wind shield. If your battery is getting old and weak or your motor needs new plugs, the extra warm might just be the difference between getting started, and calling for a jump start.
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