The TV news is jubilating over Justice Department news/leaks about "improper" FBI testimony to the FISA court that caused said court to OK snooping on the Trump campaign during the election. Bear in mind that of the thousands of requests to snoop on American citizens only a dozen are rejected. 99.9% of all requests to snoop are approved. This is a rubber stamp. What's worse, the FISA court is secret. We don't know who the judge[s] are, where and when it meets, where it's records are kept, nothing. A FISA judge can rule any old which way and we citizens will never know. And they have rubber stamped a helova lot of snooping over the years.
We ought to shut the whole FISA court thing down. Intelligence and police agencies wanting to snoop will have to get their warrants from a real judge in a real court, one that tries cases and is open for business 9/5 five days a week.
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, February 27, 2020
Wednesday, February 26, 2020
Democratic Debate. A lot of bashing.
Politicians usually don't bash or trash each other, the thinking being that they might need the guy for something in the future. But at the last debate before the South Carolina primary and Super Tuesday they figured their only chance of winning was to convince the voters not to vote for The Bern. So The Bern had a lot lotta stuff dumped on his head this time. A lot of it was old old old. Some of it I didn't believe. I'm a Republican, I don't have to vote for any of 'em. Just between thee and me, I would love for the Democrats to select a candidate that would be easy meat for Donald Trump. The Bern will do just fine. Actually all of 'em look highly defeatable.
Monday, February 24, 2020
Is India a member of the Anglosphere?
The Anglosphere is an informal interest group that goes way
back, back as far as WWI, perhaps further.
Originally the Anglosphere was Great
Britain, the United
States, Canada,
Australia, New
Zealand, and South
Africa.
All English speaking British colonies or former colonies. There is no treaty creating the
Anglosphere. As one might imagine, Great
Britain and the United
States are the biggest and strongest
members, but the Anglosphere takes care not to trample on the smaller
members. Much of this is arranged in
informal settings. Since all the members
share culture and history, they all tend to think alike and that makes for
smooth and easy negotiations.
The Anglosphere fought WWII; they crushed the Nazis (with a lot
of help from the Soviets) and set up the post war world. The Anglosphere leaned pretty hard on the
Soviets to keep them in line and contain communism. They fought several small wars, Korea,
Viet Nam, and Singapore.
Tonight I am
watching the Indians putting on a show for President Trump’s visit. They are doing it right. The red carpet leading out of Air Force One
has a band and dancers, all wearing colorful native garb, and belting out the
tunes. A fleet of shiny black SUVs and limousines. I wonder if they are manufactured in India. India
has a decent sized auto industry. I could see the maker’s badge on the grilles
but I didn’t recognize it. It wasn’t a
Caddy badge. Indian Prime Minister Modi
was on hand. They did a motorcade,
heading for either the Taj Mahal or Gandhi’s place, both were mentioned. The streets were lined with cheering
Indians. Clearly a warm and enthusiastic
for President Trump.
Can we admit India
to the Anglosphere? The British ran the
place for a couple of hundred years and did a lot of Anglicization during that time. We certainly have more in common with, and
good feelings about, India
than we do toward China
or Russia. Since the Anglosphere is informal, we would
have to watch and see what happens. If India
supports the Anglosphere, and the other members talk with the Indians and gain
their support before doing things then India
is a working member. Which would be
good, India is
an important country. Indian science and
industry are strong enough to launch a Mars orbiter. India
is a big place both in land area and population. Many Indians speak English. They have a lot of good engineers, many of
whom work in US firms. They have a fine
national cuisine.
Saturday, February 22, 2020
Nevada can count. We have prelim results.
Looks like they know how to count in Nevada. The TV is giving early
returns at 5 PM. Say 20 % of the vote is in. Saunders is doing well,
45%, with Biden trailing at maybe 19%. Not bad Nevada. Here in NH we
don't give results until after the polls close at 7 PM. If this keeps
up, Saunders has it knocked.
Wednesday, February 19, 2020
Airbus fesses up to bribery to sell aircraft
From this week's Aviation Week. Airbus has agreed to pay a fine of 3.6 billion Euros to French, British and American authorities over a number of cases of bribing overseas government officials to buy Airbus aircraft. Airbus is not admitting guilt and the case never went to court. No Airbus employees are facing charges. Airbus is paying up to get every one off their case. The fine is substantial, Airbus annual revenues are 64 billion Euros for 2018, of which 5 billion Euros are earnings. So Airbus will notice those 3.6 billion Euros. It will hurt. The bribery acts occurred between 2008 and 2015.
One scam was a 5 million Euro bribe to Ghana to clinch the sale of C295 turboprop airlifters. At a guess the C295 is a bit smaller than our C130 Hercules and costs maybe 45 million Euro's each. Other bribery charges include a variety of mid east and far each airlines with names that mean nothing to me, two satellited deals and some military aircraft sales.
I am sure clearing this up makes Airbus' future more predictable. They can go out and sell, sell, sell while Boeing is all wrapped around the 737 MAX axle.
One scam was a 5 million Euro bribe to Ghana to clinch the sale of C295 turboprop airlifters. At a guess the C295 is a bit smaller than our C130 Hercules and costs maybe 45 million Euro's each. Other bribery charges include a variety of mid east and far each airlines with names that mean nothing to me, two satellited deals and some military aircraft sales.
I am sure clearing this up makes Airbus' future more predictable. They can go out and sell, sell, sell while Boeing is all wrapped around the 737 MAX axle.
Monday, February 17, 2020
What was the worst mistake [you pick it] made in WWII?
Common question on Quora. The worst mistake Japan made in WWII was attacking Pearl Harbor. Prior to Pearl Harbor America was deep into isolationism, the idea that we could stand proud here in North America while the rest of the world sank into chaos. Isolationism built on the unsatisfactory outcome of WWI and claimed that all we got out of WWI was profits for arms manufacturers (merchants of death they were called). Japan had been agressing against China, and was running Korea and Manchuria as colonies. We did not approve, and we had sent a lot of diplomatic nastygrams to Japan. We finally decided to stop selling crude oil and scrap iron to Japan. The Japanese could have replaced American sources of supply with oil from the Dutch East Indies, and scrap metal from somewhere. The Germans had invaded and occupied the Netherlands, the Dutch colonies were on their own. Should a Japanese task force conveyed a few Japanese bankers and their check books to the Dutch East Indies the Japanese could have acquired all the oil they needed. We would have sent them a few more diplomatic nastygrams, but there was no way we were going to intervene militarily. Japan could have done pretty much anything they pleased in Asia so long as they didn't attack American territory.
After Japan sank our battle fleet at Pearl Harbor isolationism vanished, poof, within a few hours. We were pissed off. We had a far larger population than Japan, we had a far larger industrial base, we were a continental power, self sufficient in just about everything. And we were mad. Japanese Admiral Yamamoto said at the time "I fear we have awoken a sleeping giant and filled him with a terrible resolve." He had that right.
As it was, the Pearl Harbor attack changed the course of WWII. We got our act together and clobbered both the Nazis and Japan.
After Japan sank our battle fleet at Pearl Harbor isolationism vanished, poof, within a few hours. We were pissed off. We had a far larger population than Japan, we had a far larger industrial base, we were a continental power, self sufficient in just about everything. And we were mad. Japanese Admiral Yamamoto said at the time "I fear we have awoken a sleeping giant and filled him with a terrible resolve." He had that right.
As it was, the Pearl Harbor attack changed the course of WWII. We got our act together and clobbered both the Nazis and Japan.
Sunday, February 16, 2020
Burning Bill Barr, Attorney General
The TV newsies have been dumping on Barr for listening to President Trump. That's wrong. The Dept of Justice, which the Attorney General runs, is a cabinet level department, just like State or Defense or Treasury. They work for the President, and the President is perfectly entitled and empowered to give them orders.
On this Stone case, where the president tweeted that 9 years was too long a sentence for a man in his 60's who had not broken any real laws, they convicted him of "lying to Congress". That is a Mickey Mouse charge. It just means a different of opinion between the Congress and Stone. Lying to Congress, lying to the FBI, and lying to the police should not be crimes. Ham sandwich nation. They aren't like perjury, lying under oath. And I think 9 years is entirely too long for a Mickey Mouse conviction. So does Trump. So does Barr.
The four prosecutors who want off the case and out of DOJ, they are all long service snivel service, fireproof lifers. These guys are all Democrats, and they enjoy doing anything they can to make life hard for the Republican Trump Administration. Let 'em resign. Good riddance to them.
I hear 1100 former (and perhaps current) DOJ employees have signed an anti Trump petition. Same goes for them. Died in the wool Democrats out to cause trouble for a Republican Administration. Fire 'em all. Cancel the pensions of the retired ones.
On this Stone case, where the president tweeted that 9 years was too long a sentence for a man in his 60's who had not broken any real laws, they convicted him of "lying to Congress". That is a Mickey Mouse charge. It just means a different of opinion between the Congress and Stone. Lying to Congress, lying to the FBI, and lying to the police should not be crimes. Ham sandwich nation. They aren't like perjury, lying under oath. And I think 9 years is entirely too long for a Mickey Mouse conviction. So does Trump. So does Barr.
The four prosecutors who want off the case and out of DOJ, they are all long service snivel service, fireproof lifers. These guys are all Democrats, and they enjoy doing anything they can to make life hard for the Republican Trump Administration. Let 'em resign. Good riddance to them.
I hear 1100 former (and perhaps current) DOJ employees have signed an anti Trump petition. Same goes for them. Died in the wool Democrats out to cause trouble for a Republican Administration. Fire 'em all. Cancel the pensions of the retired ones.
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