Tuesday, December 4, 2012

English Muffins

A tasty breakfast.  I usually buy run of the supermarket house brand stuff, (Surefine) to save a few pennies, but I pay full boat for Thomas.  They are worth it.  I have given up on the fork torn muffin however.  They are tastier when divided into two equal sized pieces so they toast up evenly.  Fork torn too often gives one plump half and one skinny half which burns before the plump half is decently brown.  Bread knife sliced is the way to go.  There are plenty of nooks and crannies in a sliced muffin.
  Once sliced, a toaster is good, but buttering them and browning them under the grille is better.  I set the ding-ding timer for seven minutes and they come out just golden brown in my oven.  Just about the right length of time to let the coffee brew.

Monday, December 3, 2012

Have you ever heard of UN CRPD?

Well neither had I , until this morning.  The phone rings, and it's a robo caller urging me to call my senator to oppose it.  So I did a little web surfing and I find CRPD is a UN treaty on the rights of disabled persons.  If ratified by the Senate, it would replace all American law (the Americans with Disabilities Act mainly) with UN law.  Which is a good reason to vote it down.  Nobody knows what is in it.  Ratifying it would be buying a pig in a poke.  We have pretty good law on the subject, that was worked out in Congress some years ago and we are mostly satisfied with it.  It would be dumb to replace what we have with a mystery treaty written by the UN which is full of little countries that don't like us much.
   Apparently, in an effort to avoid dealing with the fiscal cliff, Harry Reid decided the CRPD is just what we need to pass in this lame duck session of Congress. 
   That's keeping the best interests of the United States in mind.  Good show Harry.

NH General Court gets started

I surfed down the NH legislature "bills pending" site.  Wow.  The 2013 session hasn't even started yet and we have 397 bills in the hopper.  NH seems to be a reasonably well run state and yet our gallant law makers have nearly 400 changes to NH law that they want to make.  So far all we have a titles, and the titles seem fairly innocuous.  There isn't text for them yet.  Some are harmless time wasters like a bill to establish a Franklin Pierce day.  There are likely some that are really bad ideas, but you wouldn't know it from the title.   

Sunday, December 2, 2012

Meet the Press

As usual I tuned in my Sunday pundits.  David Gregory had some democrats and republicans on Meet the Press, talking about the fiscal cliff.  He had Timmy "Turbotax" Geithner, US treasury secretary, claiming that his administration has planned trillions of dollar in spending cuts.  Then he had tax gadfly Grover Norquist on claiming that Obama wasn't offering a dime in cuts, but instead trillions in new spending.
   They can't both be right. One of them is lying.  The moderator, David Gregory, offered no help in sorting out who was the liar. Gregory isn't contributing to a useful debate so long as us viewers are saying, some one is lying, so nothing anyone says is worth listening to.  'Cause we cannot tell who is lying for sure, although we have our suspicions. .
   So what happens next?
1.  Congress fails to pass anything.  In which case taxes go up for everyone and some painful spending cuts take place real soon now.  This is called "going over the fiscal cliff".  Doing nothing is easier than doing something. 
2.  Congress does what Obama wants, passes a soak-the-rich tax hike. Most of us escape the tax hike.
3.  Congress does some serious spending cuts (Medicare reform) and gives Obama his tax hike in return for signing the spending cuts. 
   Place your bets. 

Saturday, December 1, 2012

Email ought to be as private as Snail Mail

Law enforcement, (and anyone else) should be required to get a warrant signed by a real judge in order to tap your email.  Or read old email left on  servers.  Email carriers should be forbidden to keep copies of email on their computers, and be required to erase records of transmission from sender to recipient as soon as the email  is delivered. 
  Investigations should be limited to emails sent AFTER the investigation begins and the warrant obtained, investigators should not be allowed to  read every email a subject sent since he grew old enough to type. 
   And even if this is made into law, the wise citizen will suspect cheating and never write anything incriminating in email.  Or facebook, or anywhere else. 
   This would be a good issue for the Republicans.  I mean who is in favor of cops snooping thru their email?
   Law enforcement will be agin it, but they always are.  Tapping email and phones with a warrant is enough, they will just have to make do. They don't need to troll thru every email the suspect ever sent.

Fashion for Men

The Wall St Journal now does pieces on men's fashion.  That must be the Rupert Murdock influence.  Anyhow the article had photos of young slender male models wearing stuff that would get them laughed at any place I ever worked and any school I ever attended.  And at any party I ever threw or attended.  There was the pegged lime green cargo pants with combat boots and a navy blue blazer.  There was a poorly fitting loud checked wool suit, belt up above the navel, and baggy everywhere.  There was a guy in a plain gray shirt and a matching plain gray turtleneck. 
   Any guy would have to be totally naive to turn up anywhere dressed like that. 

Friday, November 30, 2012

More Topic Changing

NPR is still pushing for an immigration bill.  They have a new twist this morning.  We just give them green cards without a "path to citizenship".  Translation: we let them in to work but we don't give them the vote.  Sounds like we make them second class citizens, eligible to pay taxes and work long hours, but not eligible to vote.  That's good old liberal NPR's idea, not mine.