A charming and very British tale set at the turn of the century, 19th to 20th century that is. A well to do British father is arrested and jailed for unspecified crimes. His wife, in order to keep her children with her, decides to cut expenses to the bone. She sells the nice London house, and its furnishings, and moves the family to a humble place out in the country.
Arriving after dark in a strange place, the locals lend a helping hand getting them from the railway station to country place. As days go by the children strike up acquaintances with the railway workers and passengers. One thing leads to another, and the children persuade an elder and wealthy gentleman (played wonderfully by Richard Attenborough) to take an interest in their father's case and get him sprung from jail. Happy ending. Good warm feeling kind of flick. For rail fans like me, there are lots of good shots of British steam trains chugging thru the extra scenic British countryside.
The flick portrays an England of many social levels, and every one fits comfortably into his or her level and works to carry out his job to the best of his ability. There is a warm consensus about right and wrong, honor and duty. You get a feeling for the social glue that held England together thru the two terrible world wars to come. Nice feeling.
The feeling was strong enough to upset the lefty Masterpiece Theatre commentators. They tacked on a lecture at the end explaining that real railway directors were nasty people like Commodore Vanderbilt and Deacon Drew, the charming Richard Attenborough character never existed in real life. Which is too bad. I like the notion of benevolent men running the society. The idea for the movie came from a book by E. Nesbit published in England. Although I never read it, over here we had The Box Car Children, a different schtick, it was good enough to support seven different movies and TV shows since the early 1950's. Clearly the author's idea was pretty strong, and possibly closer to real than a that of a lefty American commentator.
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, January 1, 2015
Monday, December 29, 2014
I survived the flu
It came on the day after Christmas. I assume I picked it up from one of the six kids we had up for Christmas. It started out as a sore throat, and moved on to serious vomiting. That subsided by morning, but I decided to stick with clear liquids for the day, hot tea, jello, chicken broth, and Scotch. It was a very low speed day. One thing does work fairly well, Benadryl Allergy and Cold. It soothes the throat, opens up the nose, and makes things a little less miserable.
Saturday, December 27, 2014
Cops should not wear black uniforms
Hitler's SS wore black, with chrome trim no less. They looked fearsome. American police officers should wear blue, real blue, not a blue so dark it looks black, to show that they are civilian police officers, not SS thugs. They should wear police officer caps, with a brim, and the traditional eight sided cover, not the Air Force 50 mission crush, and not the Wehrmacht peaked cap, and not crash helmets.
Many, perhaps most, crimes are solved when someone gives the police a tip. If the public doesn't like the police they won't give 'em any tips. All professional police officers understand this and go to great lengths to establish good community relations.
Community relations can be difficult when the community has a high proportion of real criminals and wannabe criminals. I mean, the business of the police is to arrest criminals, and criminals don't like that. Best the police can do is contact the law abiding members of the community, clergy, store owners, business men, school teachers, boy scout leaders, citizens of good will, and establish some kind of rapport. Once established, use the rapport to communicate the police side of controversies to the community.
And, communities need to reduce the number of laws that they have the police enforce. For instance, the Garner death on Staten Island came about thru police (five officers no less) enforcing a law against selling loosies. Granted, the police were acting at the behest of neighborhood merchants who wanted Garner gone from in front of their establishments, but the loosey cigarette law gave a pretext for hassling an undersirable. Police should not get into enforcement and arrests unless real harm is being done. Unnecessary laws ought to be repealed before they cause trouble.
Many, perhaps most, crimes are solved when someone gives the police a tip. If the public doesn't like the police they won't give 'em any tips. All professional police officers understand this and go to great lengths to establish good community relations.
Community relations can be difficult when the community has a high proportion of real criminals and wannabe criminals. I mean, the business of the police is to arrest criminals, and criminals don't like that. Best the police can do is contact the law abiding members of the community, clergy, store owners, business men, school teachers, boy scout leaders, citizens of good will, and establish some kind of rapport. Once established, use the rapport to communicate the police side of controversies to the community.
And, communities need to reduce the number of laws that they have the police enforce. For instance, the Garner death on Staten Island came about thru police (five officers no less) enforcing a law against selling loosies. Granted, the police were acting at the behest of neighborhood merchants who wanted Garner gone from in front of their establishments, but the loosey cigarette law gave a pretext for hassling an undersirable. Police should not get into enforcement and arrests unless real harm is being done. Unnecessary laws ought to be repealed before they cause trouble.
Friday, December 26, 2014
Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Station
Vermont Yankee is an elderly medium sized nuclear plant which has been powering the Vermont/New Hampshire area for years and years. A while ago the owner gained a federal license good for the next twenty years. How ever they were unable to defeat the greenies in the Vermont legislature and gain a state license. And so the owners are gonna close Vermont Yankee this coming year.
NHPR ran a piece about this today. The reporter was concerned with job losses at Vermont Yankee. Nothing about where the electricity would come from, or what might happen to the outrageous electric rates around here. Nothing about other industries relocating to sites with more reasonable rates. Nothing about the real economic reasons for having a power plant. Like keeping the lights on.
Instead NHPR dwelt on the economic impact of loosing 1200 jobs at the plant. Wow. 1200 workers at a nuclear plant? That's a helova lotta workers just to keep the grass mowed and the plant painted. It's a nuclear plant, it just sits there and electricity comes out. You don't have to stoke the boilers or unload trainloads of coal. The reactors just run. There is some preventive maintanance, checks for leaks, calibration of instruments and the like but you don't need 1200 people to do that. Can you say featherbedding?
NHPR ran a piece about this today. The reporter was concerned with job losses at Vermont Yankee. Nothing about where the electricity would come from, or what might happen to the outrageous electric rates around here. Nothing about other industries relocating to sites with more reasonable rates. Nothing about the real economic reasons for having a power plant. Like keeping the lights on.
Instead NHPR dwelt on the economic impact of loosing 1200 jobs at the plant. Wow. 1200 workers at a nuclear plant? That's a helova lotta workers just to keep the grass mowed and the plant painted. It's a nuclear plant, it just sits there and electricity comes out. You don't have to stoke the boilers or unload trainloads of coal. The reactors just run. There is some preventive maintanance, checks for leaks, calibration of instruments and the like but you don't need 1200 people to do that. Can you say featherbedding?
Wednesday, December 24, 2014
Five Percent GNP growth in third Quarter
This is fabulous growth. The US has averaged three percent growth going back to the earliest figures we have. To get 5 percent means the economy is red hot. Is that real?
Do I believe these numbers? They come from Obama bureaucrats who have every incentive to shore up a crumbling Obama administration with some good news. The numbers are a "restatement". They issued earlier less rosy numbers back in October, what we heard yesterday was new numbers based on what? New data? Applying some "corrections" to old data? Mere pencil whipping? Who knows.
How did they treat domestic oil production? It has been going up, but the price is going down. Result, more barrels of oil shipped, less money taken in. How do they score this, as a gain or as a loss? Do they count things like stock trading and derivative gambling as part of GNP? How do they treat the greatly increased food stamp program? Is it a gain because more food money is spent? Or a loss because more tax money is taken away from honest taxpayers? How do they handle the increase in health care costs? Is it more production, or is it a greater drain upon taxpayers?
The basic idea, that the economy is growing a 5 percent a year is cool, I like it, everybody likes it.
Question: Is is real? Who knows? Surely not the newsies, they all grew up on new math and calculators, leaving them totally enumerate. The economists are not much better.
Do I believe these numbers? They come from Obama bureaucrats who have every incentive to shore up a crumbling Obama administration with some good news. The numbers are a "restatement". They issued earlier less rosy numbers back in October, what we heard yesterday was new numbers based on what? New data? Applying some "corrections" to old data? Mere pencil whipping? Who knows.
How did they treat domestic oil production? It has been going up, but the price is going down. Result, more barrels of oil shipped, less money taken in. How do they score this, as a gain or as a loss? Do they count things like stock trading and derivative gambling as part of GNP? How do they treat the greatly increased food stamp program? Is it a gain because more food money is spent? Or a loss because more tax money is taken away from honest taxpayers? How do they handle the increase in health care costs? Is it more production, or is it a greater drain upon taxpayers?
The basic idea, that the economy is growing a 5 percent a year is cool, I like it, everybody likes it.
Question: Is is real? Who knows? Surely not the newsies, they all grew up on new math and calculators, leaving them totally enumerate. The economists are not much better.
Tuesday, December 23, 2014
New Hampshire Director of Tourism
Victoria Mumble-Mumble was the name given on NHPR this morning. Newly appointed by governor Maggie Hassan. She had a bright young thing voice and spent her air time pushing a plan to increase out-of-state students in New Hampshire colleges. Not a bad idea, but you'd think the schools would have this obvious play pretty well covered by now.
They did mention a few numbers. Tourism is New Hampshire's #2 industry, bringing in $4.7 billion in revenue.
Not a word about skiing, hiking, snowboarding, fishing, snowmobiling, leaf peeping, or climbing, the real tourist draws in New Hampshire. No mention of the new state liquor stores on I93, the tourist railroads, Strawberrie Bank, or even funding for the highway rest areas. Our tax money at work.
They did mention a few numbers. Tourism is New Hampshire's #2 industry, bringing in $4.7 billion in revenue.
Not a word about skiing, hiking, snowboarding, fishing, snowmobiling, leaf peeping, or climbing, the real tourist draws in New Hampshire. No mention of the new state liquor stores on I93, the tourist railroads, Strawberrie Bank, or even funding for the highway rest areas. Our tax money at work.
Monday, December 22, 2014
NYC police officer slaying. Perp was a nut case.
My sincerest sympathy to the families of the two slain New York police officers. But, despite the torrent of criticism of Mayor De Blasio and Eric Holder, in actual fact, the killer was a nut case. Just his actions make that clear, first he shoots his girl friend in Baltimore, then he shoots two police officers in New York, and then he shoots himself. I'm not a shrink, but that has got to be, the actions of an insane individual.
And this insane killer was running around loose. Someone should have noticed that this guy was insane, and he should have been popped into the booby hatch and left there.
Trouble is, we shut down the booby hatches fifty years ago. So now insane individuals are left loose to commit multiple murders. It has gotten so bad around here that nut cases have spent weekends hand cuffed to beds in local emergency rooms, just because there is no where else to put them.
And this insane killer was running around loose. Someone should have noticed that this guy was insane, and he should have been popped into the booby hatch and left there.
Trouble is, we shut down the booby hatches fifty years ago. So now insane individuals are left loose to commit multiple murders. It has gotten so bad around here that nut cases have spent weekends hand cuffed to beds in local emergency rooms, just because there is no where else to put them.
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