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
Saturday, September 15, 2018
Rape is a serious crime
And should be dealt with by the police and the courts. Not college kangaroo courts. The college kangaroo courts have a nearly perfect failure rate. Most students condemned by such bodies sue the college. And a lot of 'em are winning. Colleges would be ahead if the real criminal justice system handled cases of rape and "sexual assault" on campus, at least they won't get sued over the decisions of a real judge. For students, the regular criminal justice system is fairer than anything a bunch of "college administrators" can do.
Wednesday, September 12, 2018
Your Congress at work
Congress is voting to outlaw the selling of meat from cats or dogs. We really really need this. Every grocery store in the land has a meat case just stuffed full of dog and cat steaks. People grill them every weekend. Serious problem here, deserving of Congressional attention.
Some how the nation has endured since 1789 without this absolutely vital law. In actual fact nobody feels good about eating beloved house pets, and so it just doesn't happen. No law required.
Just another reason to throw the bums out in the coming November elections.
Some how the nation has endured since 1789 without this absolutely vital law. In actual fact nobody feels good about eating beloved house pets, and so it just doesn't happen. No law required.
Just another reason to throw the bums out in the coming November elections.
Monday, September 10, 2018
California law to require 100% renewable energy
The deadline in the law is 2045, 27 years into the future. If CA sticks with this, doesn't water it down when they discover how expensive it is, they are talking about putting in enough solar and wind generation to carry the entire load of the state. Trouble is, solar panels don't give juice after the sun goes down, and windmills don't give juice when the wind doesn't blow.
Which means, CA will have to maintain in operating condition, all the real power plants they have today, AND pay for building and installing renewable energy plants sufficient to carry the state wide electrical load, during daylight and when the wind is blowing. At night, and on calm days, the real power plants will have to keep the lights on state wide.
In short, CA is planning to spend enough money to install statewide renewable energy plants with capacity to power the entire state. Figure this will cost as much as the real power plants CA already has. This amounts to paying for two sets of electrical plants, one real, one renewable, instead of one. Which will double the costs, and then double electrical bills.
Of course, CA may back off after it becomes clear how expensive this is gonna be. They have 27 years in which to waffle.
Which means, CA will have to maintain in operating condition, all the real power plants they have today, AND pay for building and installing renewable energy plants sufficient to carry the state wide electrical load, during daylight and when the wind is blowing. At night, and on calm days, the real power plants will have to keep the lights on state wide.
In short, CA is planning to spend enough money to install statewide renewable energy plants with capacity to power the entire state. Figure this will cost as much as the real power plants CA already has. This amounts to paying for two sets of electrical plants, one real, one renewable, instead of one. Which will double the costs, and then double electrical bills.
Of course, CA may back off after it becomes clear how expensive this is gonna be. They have 27 years in which to waffle.
Sunday, September 9, 2018
First Amendment, why we have it
Been a lotta talk about the first amendment on the media, TV and internet lately. Lotta things said, most of 'em valid. "Congress shall make no law abridging the freedom of speech or of the press." But none of them gets right down to the meat of the matter.
The meat is simple. Without the first amendment, the government can call any speech it doesn't like treasonous, blasphemous, disloyal, seditious, unAmerican, or other bad name and zap, speaker gets jailed, which shuts him up. The founders believed in democracy, by which they meant every man could speak in support of his political ideas without fear of government reprisals. And without free speech, we don't have a democracy.
The meat is simple. Without the first amendment, the government can call any speech it doesn't like treasonous, blasphemous, disloyal, seditious, unAmerican, or other bad name and zap, speaker gets jailed, which shuts him up. The founders believed in democracy, by which they meant every man could speak in support of his political ideas without fear of government reprisals. And without free speech, we don't have a democracy.
Tuesday, September 4, 2018
Saving money on healthcare
America
spends 19% of GNP on healthcare. That is twice as much as any other
country in the world. After spending this ridiculous amount of money, our
health, as measured by infant mortality and life expectancy, is no better than
other first world countries. That also
means that American products are 19% more expensive than they might be, just to
pay the workers health care. Here is my list of things we ought to do
about the health care cost crisis.
1. Allow duty free import of drugs from any reasonable first world country, like Canada, the EU, and Japan. Many US rip off priced drugs can be bought overseas for half their US prices.
1. Allow duty free import of drugs from any reasonable first world country, like Canada, the EU, and Japan. Many US rip off priced drugs can be bought overseas for half their US prices.
2. Allow competition
in the health insurance business. NH
could pass a law saying that any American health insurance company, licensed in
any state of the union, can sell health insurance in New
Hampshire, no more paper work required.
3. Clamp down on the malpractice racket.
We could pass a law stating that prescription, manufacture, and administration
of any FDA approved drug or device is never malpractice, even if the FDA later
withdraws their approval.
4. Stop prescribing so many opioids. The Wall St
Journal says that 80% of Medicaid patients in West
Virginia and Kentucky
are getting prescriptions for pricey opioids. Which gets the patients hooked
on heroin when the opioid prescription runs out. This is a mixed issue, part
federal, part state, part medical profession.
5. Bring back “hospitalization only” policies. Back before Obamacare forbade them, you could
buy a regular, covers everything family plan for $12,000 a year. Or you could buy a $3000 a year
hospitalization only policy that only covered things bad enough and expensive
enough to put you in the hospital. With
the $9000 a year saving, you can pay for a lot of yearly physicals and
childhood earaches. For ordinary people,
with a little money in the checking account, hospitalization only is a good
deal.
Kavanaugh hearings off on snarling and backbiting
The hearing has senators interrupting senators, members of the audience screaming at the top of their lungs. Democrats moving to close the hearing because the truck loads of documents about Kavanaugh already delivered are not enough, they want to see 100,000 more documents. You would think the Kavanaugh's published rulings as a judge ought to be enough to figure out where he is coming from. Now they are off letting all the Senators on the committee have their say. That is expected to take the rest of the day. I'd be more interested in hearing what Kavanaugh has to say, but that doesn't happen until later this week.
Difference between Democrats and Republicans
Democrats are the party of more free stuff. Republicans are the party of the taxpayers.
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