Sunday, October 31, 2021

So how do those containership ports work?

 Surely those big steel containers don't have paperwork showing where they need to go on the outside of the container somewhere.  Would not a few rough seas wash such paperwork overboard, or at least get it so wet as to be unreadable?  How do the crane operators, truckers, and railroad crews know where to send each container?  Clever computer programs that display the bill of lading for just entering the container serial number?  Do containers have serial numbers painted on the outside?  You would think they do, but I have never gotten close enough to see them. 

Ideally the crane operator would pull a container off the ship and drop it on a truck or a train and get it out of the port right then and there.  If they pile the containers on the ground in the port that slows things down.  The containers piled on the ground have to be picked up and loaded on trucks or trains sooner or later.  Which takes as much crane time as unloading them from the ship in the first place.  Faster is to unload the containers off the ship right onto trucks or trains and get the containers clean out of the port right then and there.   

I am thinking that a long train of double stack flat cars, pulling slowly along side the ship as the crane unloads is the way to go.  Only drawback is the train only goes to one place, so all the containers wind up somewhere like Salt Lake City from which they get sorted out and shipped to their owners.

And despite what union leaders say, the port can move more containers if it runs three shifts and operates 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. 

After Biden How can any American vote for the democrats?

 It has been only 10 months since Biden took office.  In that time he turned Afghanistan over to Islamic crazies, failed to get our non combatants and our Afghan friends to safety before pulling our troops out, hiked the price of gasoline from $2.10 to $3.40, clogged up the ports of LA and Long Beach, crushed GNP growth down to 2%, thrown a lot of people out of work with his vaccine mandates, and more bad stuff that I could think of if I took some more time.  This is just the stuff on the top of my head.

Not only is Biden a disaster, from whom we may never recover, the democratic party nominated him when there were a bunch of much better democrats (just about any democrat is better than Biden).  I say decent Americans ought to vote Republican to save our country, like the Republicans did back in 1860.

Friday, October 29, 2021

Wall St Journal is catching up

The mail person delivered the Journals for Tuesday, Wednesday and today.  No Thursday.  I started reading them.  The Tuesday edition has a long piece abput how ready the Taiwan armed forces are to repel an invasion from the communist mainland.  The piece concluded  that Taiwan's military was not very ready.  Not a word about navies.  Can the US Navy sink the communist invasion force while it is crossing the Taiwan Strait?  Does Biden have the stones to order our navy into action?  Is the US Navy, widely known for collisions  with merchant vessels (good seamanship there), competent enough to defeat the Chinese navy which will surely have orders to protect Chinese troop ships at all costs. 

Thursday, October 28, 2021

That giant freebie bill

The Democrats seem to be having trouble rounding up the votes to pass their $3.5 Trillion (or $6 Trillion or $1.75 Trillion versions).  Strange that the Democrats don’t have a name for this bill, other than its cost.  Seem to me that the Democrats packed every social welfare freebie scheme there ever was into the original version.  Trouble is, although there are Democrats who like this freebie or that freebie, there are no Democrats that like all the freebies.  And each such Democrat thinks they can get the price of the bill down by dropping the freebies that they don’t like.  I believe this is how they got the bill down to $1.75 Trillion from $3.5 Trillion.  How low can you go?

   Answer, you can go to zero.  The country has gotten along without any of the freebies in this bill since 1789.  We can get along just fine without this bill just about for ever. 

   It would have been more straight forward to propose a separate bill for each freebie and try and pass it.  Instead they jammed all the freebies into one gigantic bill on the theory that the more popular freebies would pull the less popular freebies thru.  With luck, we can defeat the whole d**n thing and save ourselves from a humongous tax hike.

Wednesday, October 27, 2021

My Wall St Journal didn't make it.

 Second day in a row.  Many of my posts are inspired by pieces in the Journal.  Best thing to arrive in the mail was Rail Model Craftsman.  The model railroad hobby is shrinking.  The hobby no longer attracts young boys.  Partly because the real railroads don't run in a lot of places, plenty of boys can grow up and never see a real train. Partly because the models have gotten very expensive.  There was a time you could buy a kid a complete HO train set for $39.95.  Now it is $139.95.  A single freight car model kit used to be $3.  Now they go for $30 and more.  

  It is too bad.  Model railroading taught electricity, carpentry, metal work, use of air brush, photography, track work, and model building. 

Monday, October 25, 2021

Taiwan

 Taiwan is a sizable country, with a lot of high tech industry, that is friendly to the United States.  It is an island, off the coast of China, and China thinks it ought to be part of China, under the control of the Chinese Communist party (CCP). Taiwan used to be part of China until 1947 when the communists took over China.  The Chinese nationalists, Chiang Kai-shek's party, retreated to Taiwan (Formosa it was called in those days).  China has wanted to regain control of Taiwan ever since 1947.  Only in the last few years has China become strong enough to make that a possibility.  

When Nixon and Kissinger did the opening to China back in the 1960's, one part of the deal that the Chinese insisted upon was for the United States to stop promising to defend Taiwan from Chinese attack. We have kept our promise to the Chinese on that subject.  Our state department called this policy "strategic ambiguity", we would not say we would  defend Taiwan but we would not say we would not defend Taiwan.  

The strait of Taiwan is 120 miles wide and deep enough to float aircraft carriers.  To defend Taiwan our navy has to move into the strait and sink all the landing craft loaded with Peoples Liberation Army soldiers.  The Chinese will use their navy to defend their troop ships and landing craft.  As of right now the Chinese have as many ships in their navy as we have in ours.  We need to build some more navy ships in order to have a bigger navy than China does.  

Biden just came right out and said we would defend Taiwan, which is the right thing to say, we need Taiwan.  To back up those words we need a navy strong enough to prevent the Chinese from landing troops on Taiwan. 

Sunday, October 24, 2021

Dreadful books are one reason kids aren't learning to read.

 

This evening Trey Gowdy said on his program that children’s school grades and scores have been falling since 2011.  He mentioned difficulties reading in particular.  I can agree with that, kids that can read, quickly and well, can learn everything else they need to know by reading about it.  A good deal of the loss I will lay at the feet of school teachers, who assign just dreadful books for the kids to read.  My youngest son had a good deal of trouble learning to read, so I did what I could to help him, including reading his assigned books so we could talk them over.  Most, perhaps all, of the assigned books were terrible.  “The Giver” about a distopia so harsh as to make 1984 look like summer camp. “Riding the bus with my sister” where the sister was autistic or something and the protagonist finally falls in love with the bus driver and marries him (Boring, extra boring).  “Of Mice and Men” assigned in 7th grade which is entirely too young for a story about sexual dysfunction.  “Fahrenheit 451” instead of Bradbury’s much better “Martian Chronicles”.  A looser story about the mujahadeen in Afghanistan in which the young girl protagonist’s favorite camel gets turned into K-rations for the mujh to eat.  I don’t remember reading a single book that was of interest to Youngest Son, or to me, and I do a lot of reading.    

   About the only good books from my childhood still in the bookstores are Tolkien and C.S. Lewis.  We have picked up the Phillip Pullman books, J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter books, and the Rick Riordan books, but that is about all.  We have lost Edgar Rice Burroughs (Tarzan and the John Carter Martian stories). Andre Norton, (lots of good science fiction),  Robert Heinlein, the greatest science fiction writer, L Frank Baum and Ruth Plumley Thompson, the Oz books, Fletcher Pratt, The Battles that Changed History, Bruce Catton, civil war. 

   In short assign the kids too many really dreadful books to read, and we have taken a lot of the good readable books off the market.