We have bears up here in the North Country. Here are a few bears photographed from my deck. I am OK with bears, I keep my distance, the bears keep their distance, and we are all very happy. And I never put trash out on the deck. And I don't feed bears. Next town over, they had some hippy dippies living right down town and feeding bears from their garden apartment building. That town had to pass a town ordinance against feeding bears in town. My town has smarter residents, even the Massachusetts retirees know enough not to feed bears in town, or anywhere else for that matter. Bears are cool to have around. But you gotta remember that they are very strong, very fast, and always hungry, and totally wild. If they think you threaten them, or their cubs, they can become VERY nasty. And being wild animals, they are impulsive, and easily scared. You don't want to mess with a scared bear.
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
Monday, July 23, 2018
Bears over the years
We have bears up here in the North Country. Here are a few bears photographed from my deck. I am OK with bears, I keep my distance, the bears keep their distance, and we are all very happy. And I never put trash out on the deck. And I don't feed bears. Next town over, they had some hippy dippies living right down town and feeding bears from their garden apartment building. That town had to pass a town ordinance against feeding bears in town. My town has smarter residents, even the Massachusetts retirees know enough not to feed bears in town, or anywhere else for that matter. Bears are cool to have around. But you gotta remember that they are very strong, very fast, and always hungry, and totally wild. If they think you threaten them, or their cubs, they can become VERY nasty. And being wild animals, they are impulsive, and easily scared. You don't want to mess with a scared bear.
Middle Kingdom in the Middle East
Nice color picture in The Economist showing President Xi and an aide, reviewing a Saudi honor guard with MBS. MBS is wearing white flowing Laurence-of-Arabia style robes and sandals. Xi is wearing a standard western style dark business suit and a poker face, his aide is wearing a western style Chinese Army green Class A uniform. The Saudi honor guard are all wearing thick black full beards over jazzy western style military uniforms. Since the Chinese don't grow beards, much, I had to wonder what Xi was thinking about looking at all those thick black beards on the Saudi troops.
Sunday, July 22, 2018
Lynne Blankenbecker at the PBVRC Spaghetti Dinner
The Pemi Baker Valley Republican committee is a very active group, based in Plymouth. They put on a monthly spaghetti dinner, which is always well attended and fun to go to. Now that I am running for NH senate district 1, I went to the affair on Friday night, thinking to meet some voters, even though Plymouth is a little south of my district. For everyone's edification, NH senate district 1 starts at the Canadian border and runs south to a line of Bath, Benton, Woodstock, and Thornton. Any how I got to show my face and give my campaign speech.
Best speaker of the evening was Lynne Blankenbeker. She is running for US rep from Congressional District 2, the western half of NH, currently held by Anne Kuster, a fairly worthless democrat. Lynne has an impressive resume, service in both USAF and USN, attained the rank of captain in the Navy (Navy captains are much higher rank than Army or Air Force captains). Ran for and won a NH house seat way back in 2009. She spoke force fully and well Friday night. I was impressed.
Everyone ought to make an effort to hear Lynne speak. Her campaign website is https://www.blankenbeker.com. They will have a list of Lynne's speaking engagements. It's well worth your time to go hear her.
Best speaker of the evening was Lynne Blankenbeker. She is running for US rep from Congressional District 2, the western half of NH, currently held by Anne Kuster, a fairly worthless democrat. Lynne has an impressive resume, service in both USAF and USN, attained the rank of captain in the Navy (Navy captains are much higher rank than Army or Air Force captains). Ran for and won a NH house seat way back in 2009. She spoke force fully and well Friday night. I was impressed.
Everyone ought to make an effort to hear Lynne speak. Her campaign website is https://www.blankenbeker.com. They will have a list of Lynne's speaking engagements. It's well worth your time to go hear her.
Friday, July 20, 2018
Career Choice for college students.
Op Ed piece in last Saturday's journal entitled "Why do Women Shun STEM? It's Complicated". The writer is a female professor of engineering. She mentions a number of things, but she dwells on the effect of liberal arts faculty bad mouthing engineering and other STEM subjects to the students. Women students get told that STEM subjects just lead to jobs in cubicles crunching numbers. Which isn't true at all. Engineering is very creative, engineers get to create new things with their own hands, work the bugs out, and bring them to market. Beats selling life insurance or real estate all hollow. I am retired after fifty years doing electrical engineering, it was fun, and it paid well.
As a college student, you need to decide on your career after graduation. You need to do this early freshman year, by Christmas time at the latest. Once you have picked a career, then you must pick a college major that makes you employable in your chosen field. Career choice is tough. As a freshman you don't really know what the ropes are, most of what you do know is vague hearsay. What do you really want to do to make a living? So you talk to parents, friends, relatives, anyone about it. One caveat. Don't take advice from the faculty or your college advisor (who is also a faculty member). Reason is simple. Anyone who has pushed and struggled hard enough to become a professor of anything, is going to tell you that what ever it is that he/she is teaching is the greatest thing since sliced bread. That's just the way people work. College faculty think their job is to train up students to become professors just like they are.
Couple of things to know. First, teaching college isn't what it used to be. Most college courses are taught by part timers (adjunct professors they are called) who receive miserable pay and no benefits. And no chance of tenure. Second, there are a lot of things taught in college that are of little to no worth out in the real world. Majoring in "studies" (gender studies, ethnic studies, environmental studies, any kinda study) is a total loser. Anthropology, sociology, astronomy, art history, music appreciation, are not much better.
One good trick, read a biography of someone who followed the career path you might be thinking of taking.
As a college student, you need to decide on your career after graduation. You need to do this early freshman year, by Christmas time at the latest. Once you have picked a career, then you must pick a college major that makes you employable in your chosen field. Career choice is tough. As a freshman you don't really know what the ropes are, most of what you do know is vague hearsay. What do you really want to do to make a living? So you talk to parents, friends, relatives, anyone about it. One caveat. Don't take advice from the faculty or your college advisor (who is also a faculty member). Reason is simple. Anyone who has pushed and struggled hard enough to become a professor of anything, is going to tell you that what ever it is that he/she is teaching is the greatest thing since sliced bread. That's just the way people work. College faculty think their job is to train up students to become professors just like they are.
Couple of things to know. First, teaching college isn't what it used to be. Most college courses are taught by part timers (adjunct professors they are called) who receive miserable pay and no benefits. And no chance of tenure. Second, there are a lot of things taught in college that are of little to no worth out in the real world. Majoring in "studies" (gender studies, ethnic studies, environmental studies, any kinda study) is a total loser. Anthropology, sociology, astronomy, art history, music appreciation, are not much better.
One good trick, read a biography of someone who followed the career path you might be thinking of taking.
Wednesday, July 18, 2018
12 Strong 2018
Netflix brought this to me yesterday. It's a war movie, about a 12 man Special Forces team send to Afghanstan in the very early days after 9-11. They served as forward observers and brought in smart bomb air strikes that enabled the Northern Alliance to overcome the Taliban in a matter of weeks, after years of loosing to the Taliban. It's not bad, but not compelling. I didn't watch it to the end.
A lot of internet critics slammed it for political incorrectness, they wanted a movie to trash the US intervention in Afghanistan. This one portrays the American effort as good, and the special forces guys as heroes. Which is fine by me. Lots of action, explosions, fighting, not much dying. They hired the blackout camera man from Game of Thrones. He turned the lights out on the sets while filming, yielding the annoying but trendy black on black scenes where you cannot see anything.
Acting was only fair. Despite some name brand actors (Chris Hemsworth and Michael Shannon) the actors failed to really engage us audience folk. No really snappy lines of dialog, little background of friends, family, lovers, children. No good jokes. I couldn't related to any of the characters very well.
Overall a C movie.
Has anyone seen any Russian hacks on Facebook or Twitter?
For all the talk about Russians and Trump in 2016, I have not seen any examples of things the Russians did, posted, tweeted, or commented upon. So what did those alleged Russians do? Can I see it anywhere? For all the sound and fury, you would think there would be something that shows on the internet somewhere.
Monday, July 16, 2018
Drug pushing robo callers
Lately I have been getting them. There is the caller who tells me my shipment of pain killing drugs is ready for pickup. And the caller who asks if I am over 65 and suffering from arthritis pain. And the caller who offers me any kind of prescription pain killer under the sun, just come down to our friendly pain management clinic.
I wonder how much of the opioid crisis in New Hampshire is caused by telephone pushers of drugs.
I don't have caller ID on my land line phone, and the robo callers don't answer my questions about who they are and what their phone number is, so I don't really have anything worth reporting to law enforcement.
I wonder how much of the opioid crisis in New Hampshire is caused by telephone pushers of drugs.
I don't have caller ID on my land line phone, and the robo callers don't answer my questions about who they are and what their phone number is, so I don't really have anything worth reporting to law enforcement.
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