Thursday, April 11, 2013

You can tell the amateurs from the pros

By how they hold their guns.  Watching TV clips from Syria, with young Arab guys showing off, firing light machine guns from the hip.  Looks cool and all, but anyone with actual shooting experience knows that you have to aim the gun in order to hit anything.  I learned that when I was 12 years old, shooting 22 rimfire at summer camp.  I guess they don't have summer camp in Syria. 
   

Milk not sweet enough?

Making the TV news, some dairies want to add aspartame to milk, and not mention same on the milk bottle label.  Fox is running an interview with a sincere looking dairy farmer, out in the barn, surrounded by contented cows, explaining why he would never ever add artificial sweeteners to his milk.
   So what is really going on here?  Milk is tasty and sweet. Even as a child milk tasted good and we drank as much of it as Mom would allow.  Mom never served chocolate milk, just the plain white stuff, and as kids we lapped it up.
   So why would a dairy want to sweeten an already sweet product more?   Could it be their cows were giving really horrible tasting milk?   The pasture is full of garlic and wild onions, adding a strange taste to the milk that needs aspartame to cover up?
   Do they think children like things really really sweet and they can increase sales by selling super sweet milk?  Don't they realize that milk is purchased by mothers, not kids, and mothers will buy natural and wholesome whether the kids like it or not? 
   Personally I like ingredient labeling laws so when I care, I can find out what's in it.  Seems reasonable to require dairies to list aspartame, and any thing else that's inside a milk bottle. 

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

College Stabbing Outbreak

With an Xacto knife???    Even though I managed to put a nasty slice into my thumb with a #11 Xacto blade the other day, it's hard to take an Xacto knife as a serious weapon.  The perp in this case admitted to having fantasies of stabbing people since elementary school.  How does one have fantasies with a plastic handle?  What ever happened to Excaliber, bowie knives, switch blades, KaBar, Gerber, or even cut throat razors? This perp clearly runs to low speed fantasies.  Probably just as well, if he had used a real knife he might have killed someone.

Things sure change fast around here

This morning the Economist was doing a reader survey to find out how we readers would react to the end of Saturday mail delivery.  The Economist arrives on Saturday as often as not.  They take adventage of the fact that little news occurs on weekends to keep their news fresh.  Either they arrive on Monday instead of Saturday, making their news two days older, or the change their publishing schedule.
   Not a couple of hours after filling in the Saturday delivery survey, do I read an AP news article indicating that US snailmail is backing off, and will keep Saturday delivery after all.   So much for all the Economist's planning ahead.
   According to the AP, USPS needs Congressional approval to cancel Saturday delivery and has finally wised up to the fact that they ain't gonna get that approval.  Nor are they gonna get the OK to close any post offices.
   Dunno what's gonna happen.  USPS is losing money, Congress won't let 'em cut service. I guess postal rates are going up again.  Right now mailing out the month's bills costs $10-20 in postage.  Maybe it's time to start paying the bills on the web?


Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Skyfall

I  know it's a little bit late to comment on this movie.  But I missed it in the theaters and only got to see the Netflix DVD last night.  It's OK, but only OK, even for a Bond flick.  Daniel Craig does make a decent Bond.  He has a hard face, that looks right for a professional secret agent.  The movie opens with Bond in hot pursuit of a villain.  Bond jumps aboard as the train pulls out and finds himself on a flatcar loaded with Caterpillar backhoes.  Bond starts up one of the backhoes and motors up to the next railcar flattening a few shiny new sedans that happened to be in the way.  Pretty soon Bond is fighting it out with the villain atop the moving freight train.  A pretty young sidekick has been driving furiously to keep up with the moving train.  She gets ahead, grabs her rifle, jumps out of the jeep, and attempts to help Bond by shooting the villain.  She never gets a clear shot, and when she fires, it's Bond who is blown off the top of the train.  Then they do the credits over a background of Bond sinking to the bottom of a river. 
   Well, we all know you cannot open a Bond movie by killing off Bond.  Some how he comes back to life and the rest of the movie is a lot of action.  They manage to resurrect the Aston Martin DB6  of Goldfinger fame, but in the final showdown scene it gets blown to bits.  They also manage to kill off M (Judy Dench) in the last reel.  Of the two, I will miss the Aston Martin more than Judy's hard-ass M act. 
  I keep thinking Bond needs to carry a better handgun than that Walther PPK.  If you are going to menace someone, you need a big handgun, a little lady's model just doesn't look all that serious.  Several scenes of Bond moving in on the bad guys waving the tiny little Walthers around just didn't look right.  American gangster Clyde Barrow liked to carry a sawed off BAR under his overcoat.  Bond ought to carry something serious too. Ian Fleming started Bond off carrying a 25 cal Beretta.  After a lot of fanmail from gun buffs, Fleming wrote a scene where M and the Armorer upgrade Bond to the Walthers.  Some Bond flick could redo that scene and upgrade him to something British, like a .455 Webley.  
  
  

Monday, April 8, 2013

Up Country Town Meeting

Our new democratic state rep, Rebecca Brown, held a town meeting last night at Wendles, a local sandwich joint.  Attending were about 20 democrats and yours truly.  Discussion ranged around the state.  Legalizing gambling drew a lot of attention.  The attraction is money.  Maggie the Hassan promised gambling would bring in $80 million.  Even the democratic controlled state house of representatives didn't believe this and the wacked Maggie's $80 million out of the budget revenue estimates. 
   Sue Forth, another state rep from I-don't-know-where mentioned that the teacher's union opposed the budget deal because it didn't have gambling revenue in it.  Sue said she didn't understand why the teachers felt that way.  A number of people in the audience piped up and said the teachers want gambling revenue to pay for their retirements.
   A lot of democrats present feel that NH needs more revenue.  That sounds better than "tax hike".  They pretty much understand about "the pledge"  (No broad based taxes).  So they like gambling.  Someone proposed putting a $1 a bottle tax on wine.  He claimed that would be enough balance the budget. 
   Rebecca floated the idea of tying Northern Pass to gambling, something like this.  "If you, the governor, will insist on Northern Pass burying the wires, we North country reps will support your gambling bill."  Response to this idea was no better than mixed.   Everybody present thinks burying a million volt transmission line is doable. 
    In real life it is so costly that they will find a right of way thru Vermont before they bury the wires in NH.  Nobody wanted to talk about all the property taxes the Northern Pass transmission line would pay to towns.  We oughta know up here.  Moore Dam taxes pay for a lot of stuff in Littleton.

Sunday, April 7, 2013

The forty knot sailboat arrives

Nifty pictures here.  It's totally cool, a big racing hydrofoil up planing on foils.  I think they are going to sail for the America's Cup in this crazy contraption.
   This is an idea that has been around for fifty years that I know of.  I read a book "The Forty Knot Sailboat" back in 1967.  The idea is to cut the water drag by getting the hull up out of the water and up on plane.  Doing it with hydrofoils gives a smoother ride than banging the entire hull from wavetop to wavetop.  Ordinary planeing hulls will beat them selves to pieces if they are planed in all but the calmest of waters, so the smooth ride bit is important.
   The 1967 book claimed that a hydrofoil sailing yacht would be faster than motor yachts, fast enough to outrun a storm.  The author said that conventional sailing yachts could do little to avoid a storm, they just had to heave to, batten down the hatches and spend a day or so getting bounced around by waves and drenched by rain.  Whereas a hydrofoil could sail fast enough to get out of the path of the storm and avoid getting shellacked by nasty weather.
    Off shore cruising, say a run across the Atlantic, is still a sailing yacht activity.  Motor yachts cannot carry enough fuel to venture offshore, unless they are as big as a small steamship.