Not much. He spoke for only 15 minutes, which is not much. He came on TV right at 9 PM as promised. Thinking this ought to be an important speech I took written notes. He did give a partial goal, to "degrade and destroy" ISIS, which is something of a question beggar. If you destroy them you don't have to degrade them. He did not say what we want to do with the land that ISIS has conquered already. He mentioned the US pullout of 140K troops from Iraq as if that was a good thing. "The US is safer, BUT we still face a threat." That's luke warm, on one hand things are safer, on the other hand the barbarians are at the gates. What's a citizen to think about that? Do we kick back and relax or do we go out and buy firearms?
"ISIL is not Islamic and not a state". That's a stretch. They worship Allah and they control more territory than the Bahgdad government or the Assad regime in Syria. He did call them terrorists, which is new for Obama.
Obama worried about ISIS fighters with US or European passports, who could fly into New York without visas. Doesn't worry me much, I'm sure pass ports can be bought somewhere if they need them. Plus with 3000 miles of seacoast and 5000 miles of land border, you don't need paperwork to get into the US. You just walk in, or come by boat. Little kids from Honduras can do it, so can anyone else.
Obama said we had flown 150 airstrikes against ISIS so far. Actually that's not too shabby, considering we have been at it for 30 days or less. That's about four airstrikes a day. Back in the Viet Nam war, my wing only managed two strikes a day, flying off a nice big air base with 10,000 foot runways, road and rail supply from Bangkok, daily Log Air flights and 90 fighter-bombers. It's harder when flying off an aircraft carrier.
Of course you want to do some checking. If, Obama said "air strike" when he actually meant "sortie" then we got trouble. 150 sorties isn't much. We used to fly 70 sorties a day out of Korat, going up to bomb "Route Pack 6" (Hanoi).
I did hear Obama say we would fly air strikes into Syria. I also heard him say another 475 troops were going to Iraq. That brings the troop total up to 1500 US troops in country. I also heard him say "no boots on the ground" which makes ISIS feel nice and secure.
Obama asked for Congressional support, type and kind unspecified. He did not ask for a declaration of war (we don't do those any more) or an Authorization for the Use of Military Force, or even a supplemental defense appropriation bill. If he doesn't ask for something, he won't get it.
Then Obama gave a lengthy riff about American exceptionalism, the first I've ever heard him do. He spoke of some great things from American history, and called them good.
This blog posts about aviation, automobiles, electronics, programming, politics and such other subjects as catch my interest. The blog is based in northern New Hampshire, USA
Thursday, September 11, 2014
Wednesday, September 10, 2014
We survived the New Hampshire primary
I went to the polls early yesterday. Voting had started off heavy for an off year primary. All the action was on the Republican side, the Democrats were all running unopposed, or at least with no serious opposition. When the polls closed we have Walt Havenstein handily beating Andrew Hemmingway for the governor's nomination. Walt is in his 50s, former CEO of BAE, a big Nashua aerospace contractor (started out as Saunder Associates in the 1960's, I worked there once). Andrew is a nice very young guy, really too young to be an effective governor, he simply hasn't been around long enough to develop the connections a governor has to have to be effective. Walt now has to beat the incumbent democrat, Maggie Hassan.
Scott Brown took the Senate nomination, with something like 50%, far ahead of Jim Rubin and Bob Smith. Polls predicted Scott's win. He looks to be the strongest guy going up against incumbent Jeanne Shaheen. I think Scott can take Jeanne, giving us a second Republican senator.
And, surprise, Marilinda Garcia swept the House nomination in my house district. She got 50%, with Gary Lambert trailing at 20 something %. This was unexpected. Marilinda has campaigned hard, and has enjoyed some heavy duty out of state support, TV ad buys. Certainly the strength of her primary victory makes her the strongest candidate we can put up against Anne Kuster, the democratic incumbent, who is looking kinda old and frumpy and dowdy. Marilinda is young, slim (very slim) and good looking.
In the other congressional district, Frank Guinta won the primary. Frank has some name recognition in the district. He has been mayor of Manchester (biggest city in the state). He has been US rep from that district, until Carol Shea Porter beat him two years ago. So it's a rematch, and who knows how it will come out.
The Democratic incumbents, Kuster, Shea-Porter, and Shaheen have been seriously critised in the press for NOT holding town meetings, get togethers with voters, with un rehearsed questions from the floor. Whereas the three Republicans have been out pressing the flesh with voters for months up here, they have been able to handle questions and just about all the voters have had an opportunity to meet them in person.
Scott Brown took the Senate nomination, with something like 50%, far ahead of Jim Rubin and Bob Smith. Polls predicted Scott's win. He looks to be the strongest guy going up against incumbent Jeanne Shaheen. I think Scott can take Jeanne, giving us a second Republican senator.
And, surprise, Marilinda Garcia swept the House nomination in my house district. She got 50%, with Gary Lambert trailing at 20 something %. This was unexpected. Marilinda has campaigned hard, and has enjoyed some heavy duty out of state support, TV ad buys. Certainly the strength of her primary victory makes her the strongest candidate we can put up against Anne Kuster, the democratic incumbent, who is looking kinda old and frumpy and dowdy. Marilinda is young, slim (very slim) and good looking.
In the other congressional district, Frank Guinta won the primary. Frank has some name recognition in the district. He has been mayor of Manchester (biggest city in the state). He has been US rep from that district, until Carol Shea Porter beat him two years ago. So it's a rematch, and who knows how it will come out.
The Democratic incumbents, Kuster, Shea-Porter, and Shaheen have been seriously critised in the press for NOT holding town meetings, get togethers with voters, with un rehearsed questions from the floor. Whereas the three Republicans have been out pressing the flesh with voters for months up here, they have been able to handle questions and just about all the voters have had an opportunity to meet them in person.
Tuesday, September 9, 2014
What Obama ought to say tomorrow night
He ought to set forth our objectives, our goals, in the Middle East. What America wants of achieve. You gotta sort out your goals before getting into methods (bombing, blockade, ground invasion, etc. Included as a goal, is who gets control of the ISIS controlled Iraq and Syria. Without goals, it's hard to enlist allies in a crusade. Might as well use the good old word that we all understand and the Arabs all hate.
Possible goals, listed from soft to hard.
1. Stay out of it. Let ISIS grab as much territory as it likes. Obama personally likes this one, but fears the voters will turn on him and the Democrats if he voices it.
2. Contain ISIS. Prevent them from grabbing more territory but let them live and keep what they have. Lotta people like this, it seems cheap and easy. It leaves a deadly enemy in control of a lotta oil, lotta land, lotta people. They could well bide their time, build up their strength and try something like 9-11 in a couple of years.
3. Destroy ISIS. Kill their leadership, drive their supporters into the desert, lay waste to their croplands, bomb their industry, "dehouse" their workers. Seize their oil fields, refineries and pipelines. Decide what to do with ISIS controlled territory. Give it to the Shia Baghdad government? set up a new Sunni government? give a goodly slice to the Kurds? Since ISIS controls a swath of Syria as well as most of Sunni Iraq, we will have to do something about Assad after we blow ISIS away and seize the ISIS lands in Syria.
Obama may not want to express a goal. Partly 'cause he fears he will be unable to get agreement on a goal that he likes, and partly 'cause he will get blamed if he fails to achieve a goal once he announces it.
My bet. Obama will not talk about goals, and at best he will discuss/advocate for, some air strikes, big enough to look good on TV, but not enough to really hurt ISIS. That will quiet down the domestic hawks. Then he will call for allies, European and Arab to step up to the plate and commit troops, aircraft, money and jet fuel. Which they will fail to do, 'cause they have no idea what the Americans are gonna do, and don't want to risk war unless they understand what's in it for them.
Possible goals, listed from soft to hard.
1. Stay out of it. Let ISIS grab as much territory as it likes. Obama personally likes this one, but fears the voters will turn on him and the Democrats if he voices it.
2. Contain ISIS. Prevent them from grabbing more territory but let them live and keep what they have. Lotta people like this, it seems cheap and easy. It leaves a deadly enemy in control of a lotta oil, lotta land, lotta people. They could well bide their time, build up their strength and try something like 9-11 in a couple of years.
3. Destroy ISIS. Kill their leadership, drive their supporters into the desert, lay waste to their croplands, bomb their industry, "dehouse" their workers. Seize their oil fields, refineries and pipelines. Decide what to do with ISIS controlled territory. Give it to the Shia Baghdad government? set up a new Sunni government? give a goodly slice to the Kurds? Since ISIS controls a swath of Syria as well as most of Sunni Iraq, we will have to do something about Assad after we blow ISIS away and seize the ISIS lands in Syria.
Obama may not want to express a goal. Partly 'cause he fears he will be unable to get agreement on a goal that he likes, and partly 'cause he will get blamed if he fails to achieve a goal once he announces it.
My bet. Obama will not talk about goals, and at best he will discuss/advocate for, some air strikes, big enough to look good on TV, but not enough to really hurt ISIS. That will quiet down the domestic hawks. Then he will call for allies, European and Arab to step up to the plate and commit troops, aircraft, money and jet fuel. Which they will fail to do, 'cause they have no idea what the Americans are gonna do, and don't want to risk war unless they understand what's in it for them.
Monday, September 8, 2014
Getting tough in the Model Railroad business
Model railroading as a hobby get started in the Great Depression, mostly 'cause the technology to make the little trains run only became practical by then. Two magazines, Rail Model Craftsman and Model Railroader got started way back then and until last month, both were still in business. Business was good enough to get both of them onto the magazine rack at Walmart, which is about as widespread a distribution as anyone can hope for. Both of them had plenty of advertising, in fact with the demise of local hobby shops, about the only way for small manufactures of specialty stuff to reach customer was thru ads in one or both magazines.
Well, something is changing. Rail Model Craftsman suddenly announced it was out of business. Boom. No warming, no mailing to subscribers, just an announcement on their website. Dunno what happened, Bad management? Insufficient ad revenue? Rising expenses? I don't know, and the few insiders who do know aren't talking.
Anyhow, a big upheaval in a small world. Does it mean that the hobby is shrinking? The crowds at train shows are mostly older geezers, a few grand children, not many middle aged guys.
Well, something is changing. Rail Model Craftsman suddenly announced it was out of business. Boom. No warming, no mailing to subscribers, just an announcement on their website. Dunno what happened, Bad management? Insufficient ad revenue? Rising expenses? I don't know, and the few insiders who do know aren't talking.
Anyhow, a big upheaval in a small world. Does it mean that the hobby is shrinking? The crowds at train shows are mostly older geezers, a few grand children, not many middle aged guys.
Sunday, September 7, 2014
Braveheart redux
Polls are showing the Scottish Nationalists may win the referendum and Scotland will secede from the United Kingdom. Save your Dixie cups, the South will rise again. Far as I know, the arguments for Scottish independence are all emotional and sentimental, reviving medieval heroes like William Wallace and peotry by Robert Burns. The arguments against are cold economic ones involving exports to the EU, converting to the Euro. Scotland is the thinly populated, poorer part of England, and cutting themselves off from exports to and subsidies from England is gonna hurt.
It will also hurt British pride, and reduce British influence somewhat, but probably not too much to withstand.
Wonder how it will work out? Up North of here, the Quebecois figured out that secession from Canada wasn't worth the pain. Took 'em 20 years to figure it out, but they did.
Film at eleven.
It will also hurt British pride, and reduce British influence somewhat, but probably not too much to withstand.
Wonder how it will work out? Up North of here, the Quebecois figured out that secession from Canada wasn't worth the pain. Took 'em 20 years to figure it out, but they did.
Film at eleven.
Beat the Press
They opened with an Obama speech (boring) and moved on to celebrate some US cities that they thought were doing well on their own, with out assistance (money) from Washington. They selected Oklahoma City, Tacoma, and Pittsburg. They had the mayors on, and a lot of happy talk ensued.
No numbers were ever mentioned. Like population, then and now, metropolitan domestic product, employment or unemployment, number of welfare recipients, municipal tax revenue, number of businesses, number of students per classroom, nothing of substance, nothing to show me that these carefully selected towns were doing any better than any other American city.
No discussion of business activity, manufacturing, what industries were important, what industries had moved into town. what new startups were in town, new industrial parks started, nothing about the town's business at all. Which is odd, it's business that makes a city tick. Business employs the citizens, pays the taxes, builds the buildings, and ultimately pays for everything in town.
Anyhow it was a nice puff piece for three favored mayors, but it wasn't real news.
No numbers were ever mentioned. Like population, then and now, metropolitan domestic product, employment or unemployment, number of welfare recipients, municipal tax revenue, number of businesses, number of students per classroom, nothing of substance, nothing to show me that these carefully selected towns were doing any better than any other American city.
No discussion of business activity, manufacturing, what industries were important, what industries had moved into town. what new startups were in town, new industrial parks started, nothing about the town's business at all. Which is odd, it's business that makes a city tick. Business employs the citizens, pays the taxes, builds the buildings, and ultimately pays for everything in town.
Anyhow it was a nice puff piece for three favored mayors, but it wasn't real news.
Saturday, September 6, 2014
Motherless bear cub picked up in Littleton
It's tough being an urban (or even suburban) bear. An irate homeowner connected his dumpster to 120 VAC after repeated bear chow downs in said dumpster. A lactating bear was electrocuted. This took place somewhere on Church St, back in June. Last Monday Fish and Game finally managed to round up the orphan cub for relocation
Let us hope that homeowner doesn't have any children or pets.
Let us hope that homeowner doesn't have any children or pets.
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