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
Tuesday, December 25, 2018
Game of Thrones Season 7
I think this show is wearing out. Too bad, it has been fun. They killed off too many of the interesting characters. About all we have left are Denarys and Arya. The camera man is still on his turn-the-lights-out kick, producing totally black scenes, and a lot of scenes so poorly lit I cannot identify the characters in the scene. The sound man isn't doing very well. I cannot catch a lot of the dialog. They would do much better with the soundman from the newest Spiderman flick, I could understand every line of dialog the spidermen spoke. Why cannot Game of Thrones do as well? So far in season 7 they are bracing for the attack of the White Walkers from north of the wall. John Snow is trying to cut some kinda deal with Denarys and her dragons. Some great scenes of flying dragons spouting fire on enemy infantry and barbecuing them all. We don't see much of Denarys' Dothraki horde, although she has finally gotten them to Westeros. I got a couple of more episodes to watch, but so far nothing much has happened. Things move slowly.
Monday, December 24, 2018
Half the history books look like political rants
I am Christmas shopping at Gibson's bookstore in Concord NH. They have been in business a long time, and now occupy a fine big new building right on Main St. Good stock. Lots of books. I am browsing the history shelf. It struck me that at least half the books called history had titles and dust jackets suggesting either a political rant or a strong lefty slant. I wonder where the schools are going for textbooks these days. No sign of Morison and Commager, the college level go to US history book when I went to college. Or Bruce Catton. Or Shelby Foote. Or Winston Churchill.
Sunday, December 23, 2018
Buck passing, finger pointing, and Gov'mint shutdown
Congress is supposed to fund the federal government by passing appropriation bills, one for each department (defense, state, treasury, HHS, etc). Congress did manage to pass a few appropriation bills this year, but appropriation bills for a lot of paper pushing departments never got passed. And so they are furloughing their civil servants just in time for Christmas.
Let's blame that on footdragging by the Democrats and obstructionism by right wing Republicans. But if Congress had done its duty, we would not be having a shutdown right now. The Democrats like to wait til the last minute and then pass a "continuing resolution", one giant bill funding the whole federal government. The one giant funding bill is so big that nobody understands it, anything goes into it, and there are plenty of hiding places for juicy pieces of pork. Where as an appropriation bill for just one department can be understood (with a lot of study) and once understood, can be changed to give Congress some control over what each department can do.
This time the TV tells me that 75% of the government has been funded, and thus stays open. Only 25% is shutting down. The list of shutting down departments they flash on the TV screen seems to be mostly departments that don't do anything for citizens, and which we could do without, for ever. It's a little tough on the civil servants who are gonna miss a pay check at Christmas time. On the other hand, civil service jobs pay better and have better benefits and retirement than private sector jobs. And civil servants are mostly Democrats.
Let's blame that on footdragging by the Democrats and obstructionism by right wing Republicans. But if Congress had done its duty, we would not be having a shutdown right now. The Democrats like to wait til the last minute and then pass a "continuing resolution", one giant bill funding the whole federal government. The one giant funding bill is so big that nobody understands it, anything goes into it, and there are plenty of hiding places for juicy pieces of pork. Where as an appropriation bill for just one department can be understood (with a lot of study) and once understood, can be changed to give Congress some control over what each department can do.
This time the TV tells me that 75% of the government has been funded, and thus stays open. Only 25% is shutting down. The list of shutting down departments they flash on the TV screen seems to be mostly departments that don't do anything for citizens, and which we could do without, for ever. It's a little tough on the civil servants who are gonna miss a pay check at Christmas time. On the other hand, civil service jobs pay better and have better benefits and retirement than private sector jobs. And civil servants are mostly Democrats.
Friday, December 21, 2018
Congress lacks the stones to vote to keep the government open
Both House and Senate, facing important votes to keep the government running and fund President Trump's border wall, have failed to vote on the bill[s]. Instead they have been conducting meaningless "procedural" votes. The one in the Senate has been stalled, killing any Senate business for 4 hours now. A real vote is a vote to pass or kill the bill on the floor. Procedural votes don't do that, they soak up time, they give legislators the opportunity to vote one way on the "procedural" vote and the other way on the real vote, so they can tell their constituents both yes and no, I voted for it on the procedural vote and against it on the real vote.
If the government shuts down, blame it on totally opaque Congressional procedures that failed to bring the needed legislation to a real up or down floor vote. Lack of stones.
If the government shuts down, blame it on totally opaque Congressional procedures that failed to bring the needed legislation to a real up or down floor vote. Lack of stones.
Thursday, December 20, 2018
Wall Street Wails over 2.5% interest rate from the Fed.
The Fed bumped interest rates up by 0.25% to 2.5% overall. The Dow Jones dropped 400 points and every pundit is crying that the Fed is killing the recovery and throwing the country back into Great Depression 2.0. Right.
6% has been considered a proper interest rate, going back to medieval times. I remember my first house mortgage at 7 and 1/8th, way back in the 1970's, thinking at the time that I had a pretty decent mortgage rate. Far as I am concerned all the weeping and wailing over 2.5% is coming from modern snowflakes. Bring on that global warming and melt those crybaby snowflakes.
6% has been considered a proper interest rate, going back to medieval times. I remember my first house mortgage at 7 and 1/8th, way back in the 1970's, thinking at the time that I had a pretty decent mortgage rate. Far as I am concerned all the weeping and wailing over 2.5% is coming from modern snowflakes. Bring on that global warming and melt those crybaby snowflakes.
Sunday, December 16, 2018
Spiderman, the Spiderverse
Saw this yesterday in Lincoln with youngest son. Its long. It moves slowly. The animation and art work is good, fine images. Give the video folks a few more years and we will not be able to tell live actors from CGI actors. Aunt May is very convincing, in a few more years they will be able to slip her into a live action movie and we could not tell that she was not acted by a human. Sound man does good, I could understand all the lines. Camera man (CGI artists?) done good, all the scenes are properly lighted. It's animation all the way, no live actors at all.
Miles some-thing-or-other, is the teen age protagonist. He is drawn as black or Hispanic. He serves mostly as a punching bag thru out the film. He doesn't seem to have a mission, he doesn't do much, he gets dumped on, he seldom acts for himself. He has an impenetrable relation with his father (a cop) and an uncle who alternates between family member and masked villain. The artist doing Miles should have made him cuter, more like the ultra cute but nameless Spider girl.
Plot is strange. Some kinda inter dimensional door opens and Spidermen (and girls) from a dozen strange dimension turn up, including Peter Porker.
Only diehard Spiderman fans need to see this flick. It's too long and slow moving for kids.
Miles some-thing-or-other, is the teen age protagonist. He is drawn as black or Hispanic. He serves mostly as a punching bag thru out the film. He doesn't seem to have a mission, he doesn't do much, he gets dumped on, he seldom acts for himself. He has an impenetrable relation with his father (a cop) and an uncle who alternates between family member and masked villain. The artist doing Miles should have made him cuter, more like the ultra cute but nameless Spider girl.
Plot is strange. Some kinda inter dimensional door opens and Spidermen (and girls) from a dozen strange dimension turn up, including Peter Porker.
Only diehard Spiderman fans need to see this flick. It's too long and slow moving for kids.
Friday, December 14, 2018
Bimbo payoffs are now campaign finance violations???
Paying off a bimbo to keep her mouth shut is kinda slimey, and NOT an indicator of good moral character, but it ain't a campaign finance violation. Even Alan Dershowitz agrees with me on this point. Why this Cohen character, former fixer for Donald Trump, is pleading guilty to a campaign finance violation 'cause he cut the check[s] to one or two bimbos is a mystery to me. You would think an experienced lawyer/fixer would put up more of a fight in court. And for that matter, I'd expect Donald Trump to do more than he has to keep an old buddy/fixer out of jail.
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