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August 31, 2009

Dem's "good war" not so good when it's theirs

Time for Barry to cut-and-run from Afghanistan? It certainly would fit the rest of his dictator-loving foreign policy. Leaking the latest unhappy command report to the Guardian, of all media, isn't grounds for confidence. Meanwhile, Michael Yon says there's already a crippling shortage of helicopters to ferry American troops around the mountains. Accidental? Or the beginning of the end?

UPDATE:  Meanwhile, ol' one-term Barry is looking more one term everyday.

Lord Ganesh

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One of Mr. B.'s best buddies is back from his annual family trip to see the in-laws his grandparents in India. So we'll thank the Hindu remover of obstacles and hope we can have a little bit of that rub off on us.

Rain expected

It's not on the local or national forecasts yet, but Accuweather's Joe Bastardi is predicting moisture coming into Texas this week from Jimena, the major hurricane (sustained winds of 145 mph!) the NHC is predicting to whack Baja California tomorrow night:

"The low level center may never fully come up, and peel away, but abundant mid and upper level moisture should come a calling."

Thanks, Joe, we'll take it! This sort of thing has happened before, but it's been a while.

UPDATE: By late Monday, Joe is still sticking to his forecast for us, but it's not explained. Meanwhile, Accuweather's Frank Strait sort of disagrees, saying we have only a slight chance of some storms by Friday. Deep South Texas he notes is already getting storms from Jimena, but, as for us in Central Texas, we'll just have to wait and see.

August 30, 2009

Burying Ted at Arlington

I have ignored the wall-to-wall media coverage of the death, the Valentine (and airbrushing) analysis and the funeral. It was easy to do because I rarely watch television or read newspapers anyhow. But when I heard that the ol' fraud would be buried in Arlington, well...

I know, as many people do not seem to, that Arlington National Cemetery is full of military paper-pushers who never spent two seconds in combat. It is not just heroic ground, despite the heroes who are buried there. But, really, now, Ted never served in the military, and he had zero to do with the assassinations of his brothers. (We can hope.) He doesn't deserve to be there just because he was part of one of the most ambitious, political and publicity-hungry families in American history. Bah.

UPDATE: I'm wrong. He served as a private in the Army, from 1951-53, after he was expelled from Harvard. But, according to this report, his daddy made sure he never had to fight in Korea.

Spin

I read the sequel Axis first, only because it was available at the library and Spin wasn't. Now I await Robert Charles Wilson's conclusion, tentatively titled Vortex. Spin is pretty incredible. Apocolyptic but plausible. If you read a lot of scifi, I mean. The idea that a mystery race of sentient biotech machines would seek to save Earth by enclosing it in a living membrane, then speeding up time beyond it.

But it's the coming-of-age, three lifelong friends' saga and love story between two of them that sticks with you. The scifi binds them, beginning with the night in their puberty when the stars disappeared (thanks to the membrane) and only reappeared when they were in their forties. A bit heavy on the government conspiracy stuff for my taste. As I have said elsewhere I believe in the government's innate incompetence, not it's all-powerful whatever. And the idea that peak oil is our doom is tiresome. But, as I say, neither of those subjects dims the human story, which lingers yet in my mind.

Axis was a worthy sequel, with just enough of a hint about the original folks to send me out in search of Spin, which was reward enough for the trouble. Second books in trilogies usually pale beside the first ones, but Axis didn't. Quite. The human tale was less compelling than in Spin, but worth the read. Now I await Vortex, curious to see how the sentient biotechs, called the Hypotheticals, will wrap it up.

August 29, 2009

Morning Glory Clouds

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You don't have to leave the planet to find weirdness. These tube clouds can move at sixty clicks an hour with no discernible wind to push them. They form every spring over Australia. The Seablogger says we also get them over the Midwest (and elsewhere in the world) the morning after a night of severe thunderstorms.

Harlem Air Shaft

No luck finding a YouTube of Duke's band charting HAS, but this cover outfit has the talent and spirit.

UPDATE:  Good quote here, which I will lift:

"And take my Harlem Air Shaft. So much goes on in a Harlem air shaft. You get the full essence of Harlem in an air shaft. You hear fights, you smell dinner, you hear the radio. An air shaft is one great big loudspeaker. You see your neighbor's laundry. You hear the janitor's dogs. The man upstairs' aerial falls down and breaks your window. You smell coffee. A wonderful thing, that smell. An air shaft has got every contrast. One guy is cooking dried fish and rice, and another guy's got a great big turkey. Guy-with-fish's wife is a terrific cooker, but the guy's wife with the turkey is doing a sad job. You hear people praying, fighting, snoring...I tried to put that in Air Shaft...." Duke Ellington, quoted by Dr. Ron Pen of the University of Kentucky.

Hubble's Ultra Deep Field

Get out your 3D glasses for a stirring, and a bit humbling, animation of about ten thousand of the other hundred billion galaxies out there in the black. More here.

Via Millard Fillmore's Bathtub.

August 28, 2009

The Old Farmer's Almanac is right

Sunspots, or their lack, really do affect global weather, and probably the climate as well. The Old Farmer's Almanac has for many years been basing its annual forecasts on a formula involving Sol's outbreak cycle, though frequently pooh-poohed by meteorologists. Hah.

Quang Pham

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I don't live in California, so I don't know much about this guy. But I like his Barry-like brand and the fact he's a Republican. But I especially like that he's a Vietnamese-American. Being a Marine veteran is nice, too, but the Vietnamese part is the best for me. Good luck Mr. Quang, though I suppose he has Americanized his name to put his surname last. Make that Mr. Pham. His autobio also looks compelling. As the work of a conflicted son of a former ARVN pilot who spent years in a reeducation camp, it should be. I'd vote for him if I could.

New Fi-Fi 321

Captain Dave, at more than ten thousand feet above the Llano Estacado. Life on the line continues.

More rain

More rain fell late yesterday and last night. The thunder drove me and Mr. B. out of the pool where we were playing basketball. I shoot and he blocks. Too well, lately. It poured for a few minutes, overwhelming the gutters. We might have almost an inch by now. I'm ready for the flash floods. That's easy for me to say. The rancho is on a hill, so nothing much will happen to us. Little ponding, maybe.

Charlie Rangel: The Tax Man is a Tax Cheat

Like Instapundit says, I'm sure AG Holder will be right on it. Unless being black is Charlie's free pass.

UPDATE:  Looks like it's finally the beginning of the end for CR.

August 27, 2009

Orion Nebulae

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Old School. The classic shot. At one thousand five hundred light years, it won't be a weekend trip.

Kid's got my number

Mr. B.'s homework assignment spiral notebook has a spot on the first page for his parents' phone numbers. He dutifully wrote in Mrs. Charm's office phone. For Dad he put the home landline number and wrote under it: "Never answers the phone, so don't bother."

Smart kid. Wish the sales callers would get the message, but they continue to call and I continue to ignore them. We've debated getting rid of the landline but are keeping it for the older relatives who don't have cell phones.

August 26, 2009

The rains came

Lovely sound of thunder-boomers and flashes of lightning tonight as Mr. B. went off to bed. We got a little rain out of it. Quarter of an inch, maybe. More is promised. I don't know about the neighbors, but I'm ready for the flash flood that usually follows a long Texas drought.

Ol' Ted's Public Option

Somehow I don't think naming Obamacare after the famously overweight boozer and skirt-chaser is going to boost the chances of it passing. Not even if, as Dan Riehl says, there are some new features:

"...amending it to include mandatory long distance swimming lessons, as well as CPR and breath control classes for all Americans. Apparently one young woman wasn't enough for Teddy. Now he can play a roll in the un-timely demise of more Americans than he could even count."

The Dems and their captive media may have loved the deceased hypocrite, but many Americans did not. So it's still going to be pass-it-at-your-political-peril for those up for re-election next year.

Teddy, the incoherent liberal

"For all the talk of how much he cared for the weakest members of society, the fact is he helped kill tens of millions of the most vulnerable."

Think Viet Nam, Cambodia, Iraq, aborted babies, Mary Jo Kopechne, etc. I will, once again, defy convention and skip the hagiography for the dead liberal senator who I always found, at best, a curious fellow. The Brothers Judd, above, include a bit of the usual Big Media swoon, along with their biting commentary. Nevermind one-term Barry's equally incoherent praise.

I saw ol' Ted in person several times. He was enormously corpulent. Jowly. He was always campaigning for more tax money for more issues to "fight" more problems. Did he ever create a single thing on his own?

Via Random Jottings.

UPDATE: Teddy the boozer in his cups. Via Instapundit. And...

Tilt

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The latest global warming scare? The warming oceans (that aren't, actually, warming) could cause the Earth's normal tilt of 23.5 degrees from the vertical to increase. Then what? They don't say. But when it comes to Pap & Tax (otherwise known as Cap & Trade) the U.S. Chamber of Commerce is lobbying for a wait-a-minute debate on what could cause our drift into a Third World economy.

Via Watts Up With That.

UPDATE: Good analysis of the fraud by Norman Rogers, a former Zero Population Growth activist who remembers that exaggeration and scare stories produced membership in ZPG far better than facts.

MORE: Peter D. Ward and Donald Brownlee explain, in their 2002 book The Life and Death of Planet Earth, what an increased tilt might mean: "...if we tilted too much, or if the tilt shifted, our climate would become more extreme or be thrown into chaos. This may have happened to Mars, in fact, allowing that planet to lose its oceans."

Getting Spirit out of the sandtrap

When all you've got on Mars is a six-wheeled rover, and no prospects of getting a person there in the next generation or two, there's no end of ingenuity you won't come up with to get the blessed thing out of the sandtrap it's driven into. Especially when you have no certain idea of what the sand is actually like.

A Texan in Auschwitz

"Someone told me a few months ago that Auschwitz would be a life-changer for me, and they were right, but I would like to emphasize that it is a good change. In the six weeks since I was there, the majority of my previous petty concerns have stopped mattering to me, completely...It has been a very surprising and welcome change. My experience of life is different, in a good way."

August 25, 2009

You, dear, are over your Biblical limit

For shame, Mrs Petrowski. Costing Obamacare so much unnecessary expense. Well, Dr. Barry knows just what to do. Let's go up on the hospital roof and, uh, look at the stars. Or something. Biting humor from Iowahawk.

UPDATE: The things Obamacare is meant to solve remain unsolved by the Brit's national health system.

Drought buster

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Here's a bit of hopeful weather prognostication. The rains haven't started falling yet. But the LCRA's Bob Rose says they might by Friday. The Purple Sage outside his office already is in bloom.

The New Deal's NRA myth

I'm reading Amity Shlaes' The Forgotten Man: A New History of the Great Depression. It led me almost immediately to a debunking of one of the enduring myths of the New Deal: the idea that FDR's National Recovery Act of 1933, which set production quotas and prices for industry and small business, was strictly voluntary.

Shlaes shows how the NRA, in fact, nationalized everything by bringing twenty-two million workers under its five hundred and fifty-seven basic legal codes. Then the NRA sent out inspectors to make sure employers were complying. The Justice Department prosecuted companies that refused.

"All across the country, the NRA was being litigated," Shlaes writes on page 223 of the paperback edition. Three Jewish butchers in Brooklyn finally brought down the house of cards. They were indicted on sixty felony counts of violating the "voluntary" codes. When they lost in the lower courts, they appealed and won a unanimous victory in the Supreme Court in 1935.

"...some 500 cases against people charged with breaking NRA codes were now to be dropped," Shlaes writes on p. 245.

Instapundit says Socialist Barry should read the book. At least he should read the NRA part of it. When he has time. He's busy at the moment golfing with one of his tax-cheat enablers.

Social Security in decline

Unlike millions of other seniors, I can live without the cost-of-living increases in Social Security payments. For one thing, I won't have to face concomitant rising Medicare premiums so long as Mrs. Charm is able to keep me on her employer-supplied health insurance. But the implicit threat of SS's impending demise really is angering.

Some of those who are too young to get the checks seem to think it's free money, a kind of welfare payment for being old. It's actually reimbursement, of sorts, for all those years the government merrily deleted social security taxes from my paycheck. I'm convinced that it would not be in the red if the pols hadn't been stealing money from it all these years for their pork and lobby payoffs.

August 24, 2009

Whole Foods still whole

The so-called boycott, begun after the CEO offered an alternative to Obamacare, seems to be a bust. The Austin-born chain's stock price is trending up and the parking garage, at least in Chicago, is almost full.

Longhorns football

Everything is looking good this season for Texas, with AP ranking the guys No. 2 in its pre-season poll. The bookies also are in line. Now. All, that is, except their wimpy non-conference schedule. Too many creampuffs, which could come back to haunt them when strength-of-schedule considerations come into play. The "toughest" apparently will be, wait for it, Wyoming. Geez Louise.

August 23, 2009

Climate Engineering

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A proposed robot vessel for "whitening" clouds to adjust the global thermostat by reflecting sunlight back into space. From a report by UTexas mechanical engineering professor J. Eric Bickel that some think is quite mad. Bickel says this and other methods outlined to stop "global warming" would be cheap at just $9 billion and could be reversed if anything goes wrong. What could go wrong?

The bear of small brain

Winnie the Pooh is now banned in Russia. Winnie the Pooh with a swastika, that is. Huh? The lunatic Musselmen already were giving Pooh and Piglet a hard time.

Gerbilism: must be all those fact checkers

Big Media prides itelf on being better edited than blogs which, generally (including this one), aren't edited at all. So why is Newsweak saying “Republicans stood together against Social Security and Medicare, and when those programs proved popular, opposing them left a residue of distrust for the GOP.”

Oh, that's just Eleanor Clift, the Helen Thomas of magazine gerbilism. These Democrat shills are history-challenged and always have been. Fortunately there's the blogs to correct them, including the item that eighty percent of Republicans backed Social Security and Medicare was co-sponsored by a Republican and backed by a majority of them. Dan's right, Eleanor should replace Helen. If only for the comic relief.

The Ellie Rucker Chair?

There is life after journalism. Especially for the deep of pocket.

Ellie, consumer columnist for the daily many years ago who is now retired in San Antonio, apparently has endowed an academic chair: The Ellie Rucker Clinical Psychology Professor in Psychotherapy Training. Way to go, Ellie!

Obamalot

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August 22, 2009

Unintended health consequences

Ross Perot's 1992 giant sucking sound soon will be "the sound of Grandma going to one of the scores of new hospitals in Tijuana, Nogales, and Ciudad Juarez that will cater to Americans getting around the restrictions of ObamaCare. Yes indeed, the President’s health care plan will do wonders for the Mexican economy."

Heh.

Via The Passing Parade.

August 21, 2009

Thought for the Day

"The bad news is that North Korea can hit the U.S. with nukes. The good news is that they can only hit San Francisco and Seattle."

Via Premier Betty.

August 20, 2009

Mr. Boy's MRI

He had one this morning, at the Dell Children's Hospital, in search of something that might, or might not, be wrong. They put him under anesthetic so he could hold still inside the hole of the big donut for thirty minutes to an hour. He came out of it okay, just groggy and dehydrated. They gave him a popsicle and let him sleep a while. At home he lay on the couch and watched cartoons all afternoon.

The worst part, for us, was waiting in the outpatient-surgery waiting room. There were several other couples, presumably waiting out something more serious than an MRI. One couple I remember especially. The woman looked stunned. The man looked angry, which I took to be anger at fate. Another man was crying. He had his head down by his knees, trying to hide the fact. The woman was stroking his back. Tough morning. Tougher for them. We got off easy. This time.

Opacity

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Except when, uh, he prefers otherwise. Like when he wants to cripple American electricity. But watch yourself out there. Even Flickr is now censoring some who dare criticize him.

August 19, 2009

Baghdad dying. Again.

It's an old rule. American soliders win a war. American politicians lose it. It's a wonder anyone serves.

Blood libel

It never takes long for another libel against the Jews to surface. Mankind's oldest scapegoat. This time, it's a Swedish tabloid. No surprise. The Swedes did lots of business with the Nazis until Hitler began losing the war.

Killing grandma

Or, in my case, dad. Sarah's aptly-named "death panel" has been removed from the Senate bill but it remains in several House versions. Moreover, the IT precursor to the grandma-killing panel, called the Center for Health Outcomes Research and Evaluation, is already law--craftily enacted in the so-called stimulus bill, according to leftist civil libertarian Nat Hentoff.

The Little Debbie Death Match

What lengths some people will go to revile a mere confection. Me, I still prefer Twinkies. There's no indigestion quite like the one they perpetrate.

But anything has to be better than these Japanese candy drops that taste like, wait for it, hamburger.

Via Dustbury.

August 18, 2009

Comeuppance

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A new use for the Obamalot brand, while the lies continue from the BSer-in-chief. Note: The Cafe Press version of this bumper sticker comes with an exclamation point.

Via Bill Whittle.

Single-payer blues

The Dems are seeking a single-payer health system, while the closest available example unravels:

"Doig says there are some 'very good things' about Canada's health-care system, but she points out that many people have stories about times when things didn't go well for them or their family. (Canadians) have to understand that the system that we have right now - if it keeps on going without change - is not sustainable,' said Doig."

Via Instapundit.

August 17, 2009

We are star stuff

An old story, panspermia. But always nice to have fresh evidence. This time, it's from a comet.

USPO blues

People I know hereabouts avoid the U.S. Post Office at all costs. Here's why:

"It's like you have left fast-moving Manhattan and zapped yourself into the Deep South in 1934. Picture a drowsy moment in 'To Kill a Mockingbird.' A clerk who has finished with one customer takes a good long pause to settle herself, exchange pleasantries with friends, arrange her workspace and so forth before she lights up the little box and asks for the next customer. If you arrive at her window before she has turned on this light, she will curtly send you away. Don't crowd her! You're just the customer."

That's a description of a post office in NYC but it's a perfect fit for our neighborhood p.o., except we have stamp machines. Imagine that, we're ahead of NYC. Ours, however, is scheduled to close.

Parrott gun

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Named for the man who invented it, not the bird. Parrotts were rifled cannon used on both sides, though mainly by the Union. They also figure in my Civil War novel which, so far, has garnered six rejections out of ten query letter submissions. Lots more to go before I give up, though.

August 16, 2009

Dropping the "public option"?

Even if that proves to be the case, in a truncating of Obamacare, and it would be welcome, there are, nevertheless, plenty of other government-intrusive, central-planning and rationing schemes still afloat.

AND:  Stunts like these pulled by Houston's idiot congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee don't help a bit.

To the edge of space

Six years ago Mrs. Charm, Mr. Boy and I bought the rancho from a couple who were moving away from Texas. She was a homemaker. He was an airline pilot who had flown U-2 spy planes before he retired from the Air Force. I won't mention names, they'd probably not like me to.

I've read about the U-2 so I have some idea of what it is like to work in full pressure suit at seventy thousand feet--more than twice as high as jetliners cruise. But, until now, I'd never seen the curvature of the earth from a U-2's cockpit, out there on the edge of the black. Magnificent view really.

Via Flightblogger.

Ana and Bill

Where to, oh storms? To Texas, hence, to shed a little rain upon our cracking, dusty drouth? As the Seablogger notes, none can say:

"We cannot model and hope for more than partial accuracy ten days out, yet politicians profess to be panicked about models of the climate a century hence. Some of them are simply grabbing for money and regulatory power. Many others believe — like the idiot Senator from Michigan, Debbie Stabenow, who thinks she can feel global warming when she flies."

So, unlike the idiot senator and her other credulous colleagues, we'll just have to wait and see.

August 15, 2009

Weenie

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Barry's Burger King czar

His U.S. Surgeon General Regina Benjamin, no less. Judging by her own problem with obesity, it's obvious she's doing more than advising the burger chain. Fries with that? Heh.

Seedy cruise ship

I habitually avoid enterprises that charge for water, as all cruise ships do. In fact, having heard the expression "cruise ship prices" this doesn't really surprise. Sounds awful. Especially the lack of soda pop machines. How declasse can you get?

Via Simply Jews.

August 14, 2009

Whole Foods boycott

Years ago, when the organic foods chain had just one store in Austin, it seemed wildly overpriced to me. But the Birkenstock crowd loved it. Now some of them are boycotting it because its CEO John Mackey dares oppose Obamacare. Oops.

Don't Tread On Me

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Via Instapundit.

Sarah wins one: the death panels removed

Sarah Palin may not be a candidate for a national anything yet, but she's already whooped Barry on his so-called health care reform. She named the end-of-life provision in the proposed bill a "death panel" for the sick, the elderly and the disabled. Barry, rather inexplicably for a president, a species that usually tries to stay above the fray, fought back in public. Sarah stuck to her guns. Now the Senate is removing the provision from its version of the bill. Go gettum, Sarah!

UPDATE:  She isn't satisifed, however. I love the way she's using the intertubes to get her voice out.

Miss Universe

I notice that even Instapundit, venerable libertarian blogger extraordinaire, has recently added a little sex to his aggregated links from time to time. Power Line has been doing it forever with their Miss Universe nods, complete with biggerizable thumbnails. I won't go that far on this family blog. But I will link to them. A little spice is nice.

Leaving The Alamo

My self-published book of short stories, available for free in pdf in the upper part of the sidebar on the blog's main page, or for a mere eleven bucks in paperbook at the link above it, has a new fan. Lucky for me, he even posted an appreciation on his own blog. Thank you.

August 13, 2009

Watermellon Thump

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Just about every town in Texas has a water tower and some can't resist painting theirs, for fun or to attract tourists. This one, end-on from a distance, resembles a striped blimp. But it's actually Luling's watermellon ad for their annual Thump, when the watermellon crop's in. Nice town, Luling. A railroad still runs through it. They even decorate their oil field pump jacks.

August 12, 2009

The Purple Sage does it again

It's only been a week since the area's Purple Sage bushes began blooming, forecasting a rain event within a week to ten days. Bingo. The rain cameth today. The ol' Barometer Bush is a winner. Again. Plant a few and you won't need the Weather Channel.

Health care is not a right

Barry says it is. So do Nancy and Harry and Barney and Henry and all the rest of the non-productive.

John David Lewis, Duke U. prof of philosphy, politics and economics, says it isn't true:

"There was no right to such care before doctors, hospitals, and pharmaceutical companies produced it. Health care is a service, which we all need, and none of us are better served by placing our lives and our doctors under coercive bureaucratic control."

Read it all.

If the pols persist in saying that, in fact, it is a right, then I can think of a few others that should be as well. Car repair should be a right. And paid vacations. And flying in private jets the way the congresscritters and presidents get to do it. No? Gee, why not?

Rain and cool

Got home from the condo at Port A couple of hours ago. Met with heavy rain approaching the city from the south on 183, and a few showers within since then. Forecast to continue until nine p.m. or so. Cooled things off quite a bit. It's eighty degrees at the moment. Forecast is back to a hundred and one tomorrow, tho.

August 08, 2009

Ella Rose

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Mr. Boy's newest cousin, born to one of his first cousins, which makes Ella Rose his second cousin.

Off to the beach

Off to Port Aransas today through Wednesday, where the National Weather Service forecasts highs in the eighties and twenty percent chance of showers through the period. Sure hope they're right.

What a nice break it would be from the triple digits here. On the other hand, the humidity is above ninety percent which will push the heat index above one hundred. Port A cam aimed at part of the beach will tell the tale.

UPDATE:  The humidity was high, but it felt cool nevertheless, especially at night. Didn't rain once. We got the rain coming home on the 12th, just outside of Austin.

Why Obamacare? Dem jobs

The whither we know. Waxman-the-ferret, et al. But why? Nevermind the contradictary nonsense about how the system is broken but, oh yes, you'll get to keep your part of it all the same. This fellow, Daniel Hannan, southwest England's rep in the European Parliament, has the answer, though you have to listen to the whole thing to get to the point. But it's not painful, except when you imagine our future under Obamacare.

The Brit health care system, Hannan says, employs 1.4 million managers. Making it the third largest organization in the world, after the Red Army and the Indian National Railway. Think of how many more managers our National Health Care system will have, and, like most federal employees, they will be ninety-percent Democrats. Get the point now? Obamacare is a hiring hall for his party.

August 07, 2009

Peak oil is a lie

The next time you read or hear the phrase "peak oil," usually as part of some politician's blather about how we need more solar cells and windmills, just think of this alternate: "North Dakota Oil." Not that there aren't still naysayers.

Via The Seablogger.

UPDATE:  Here's another for instance.

AARP: Deaf

This eight-minute clip shows the main reason I trashcan AARP fliers when they come in the mail. It's not really about seniors. It's about whatever the execs and their lobbyists want to do with the dues money. And they proved it Tuesday in Dallas.

UPDATE:  About sixty thousand others also have gotten the message and stopped paying their dues. Or are switching. Competition is good.

In search of distant planets

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Kepler, the robot spacecraft named for the sixteenth century astronomer who founded celestial mechanics (though today's astronomers like to forget he made his living casting horoscopes), has confirmed the previous discovery of a Jupiter-sized giant in its first workout in the black. Still to come: finding new planets, especially habitable Earth-size ones. None are imaged directly, but inferred by the dimming of their star/sun as they pass in front of it.

The Imperial Congress

Besides being the dumbest box of rocks on the planet, our thieving congressional reps also are the most hypocritical. First the Pelosi excoriates auto industry execs for flying in private planes. Then she scolds the health insurance execs for making a profit that her eminence considers excessive.

Now she wants her own air force to ferry her and her colleagues around the world, so they don't have to rub shoulders with the common people on commercial flights. These are the Democrats, the party of the little guy? As one rude sticker puts it: "Pelosi is Italian for Dumbass." Off with their heads!

Rejected query letters

I've had a few. This is from an agent queried by J.R.R. Tolkien about his YA novel "The Hobbit.":

"This might be a good place to mention the apparent gender imbalance in the work. There would appear to be just a slight deficiency of female characters in the story. To put this another way, there are none - zilch - zero. There are men with hairy feet, men with long beards, men with pipes, men who can see in the dark - there are even men who can turn into bears. There are men of every size, shape and smoking habit imaginable, but the closest you come to a female character is the inclusion of several slightly effeminate elves. This just won't cut it in today's publishing world."

Oh, no, no gender imbalance. Perish the thought. And let's have a story that looks like Middle Earth!

August 06, 2009

Barry's permanent dissident database

Another first for the historical president. Not one that most presidents would want, though:

"A secret and more or less permanent dissident database--in America! That's quite an accomplishment for an administration still in its seventh month. It seems longer, somehow."

Seems longer because he's been in the media day after day after day. The man never shuts up. 

Pretty country

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Pasture near Bledsoe, Texas, west of Lubbock, in the Panhandle. From this realtor's site. Probably taken one spring, long before the current drought. Or drouth, as the oldtimers used to say.

Mr. Boy's dictionary

Biggerize. The opposite of Minimize. You know, those symbols in the upper right corner of your browser. Previous entries.

Guilty of fishy emails: Me, too.

"...the White House recently invited loyal citizens to report when they receive 'an email or see something on the web about health insurance reform that seems fishy' to the official e-mail address flag@whitehouse.gov. Loyal citizens are to report fishy comments to Linda Douglass, someone who looks suspiciously like Krupskaya [Lenin's wife], or Nurse Ratched."

Via Power Line.

Doctor Zero also has a good post on why some of us so look forward to next year's congressional elections. Which, of course, is why Barry and the Dems are hurrying to pass everything they want now.

Meanwhile, "Fishy friends? Turn them in!" Bonus: Know Your Town Hall Mob Agitators!

Russell Wheat's market report

Fellow OC-504-68 candidate and graduate Russell Wheat of Canyon Lake was, and is, our resident funnyman. His last market report:

 "...helium was up, feathers were down, paper was stationary, elevators rose, escalators continued their slow decline, Coca Cola fizzled, toilet paper reached a new bottom, diapers remained unchanged." 

Look, up in the sky

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As usual, astronomers are predicting more Perseid meteors than usual. Unusually, for a change, they may be right. According to Spaceweather.com: "A filament of...dust [from Comet Swift-Tuttle] has drifted across Earth's path and when Earth passes through it, sometime between 0800 and 0900 UT (11 - 12 am CDT) on August 12th, the Perseid meteor rate could surge to twice its normal value...The [above] profile is based on...debris stream models..."

A useful reminder (for those of us who live under the urban halo) that we live on a planet, which is rotating about a thousand miles an hour (at the equator) while trucking five hundred forty million miles around Sol at about sixty-seven thousand miles an hour. And don't forget that Sol is moving around the center of the Milky Way galaxy, while the galaxy itself is just one of many, widely-separated "islands" drifting through the black of intergalactic space.

Funny, I don't notice any unusual motion. Do you?

August 05, 2009

Buy Miss Mermaid's book

MissMermaid, stormcarib.com's hurricane correspondent from Tortola in the British Virgin Islands, is laid up in the hospital. Her legion of fans are passing the hat and urging purchases of her book Hurricanes and Hangovers.

For a Booksurge product it's doing very well in Amazon sales, and their amateur critics speak highly of it. If you ever wondered what life in the islands was like, she tells it. My interest stems from reading stormcarib every summer for the latest in the latest hurricanes. None yet this year.

The Purple Sage is blooming again

"For the past couple of days, I’ve noticed the purple sage bushes are blooming [again] here in Austin.  As I’ve mentioned before, these particular bushes often bloom about a week to ten days before rain develops around the area...They must be sensing something our forecast models are not seeing at the current time. I’ll be very interested to see what develops in the week to ten day forecast."

Yep. Highs have been running several degrees above a hundred lately and seems likely to stay that way.

Via LCRA meteorologist Bob Rose.

Space Elevator Games

The helicopter that was to hoist the one kilometer cable "beanstalk" for the entrant "crawlers" to climb has proved unable to hold the thing taut. So the games that were to have started today at Edwards AFB in California have been delayed "at least" a month. Pity. But it was an ambitious plan. It ain't rocket science. It might be harder.

August 04, 2009

Alamo Chapel

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For those who have never been there, or have been but have forgotten what it looks like inside. No Texas blog can have too many pictures of the Alamo. Although I believe this was taken before the souvenir-trinket cases at the far end were removed to a separate building elsewhere on the grounds. Then, the flags of all the states and countries the defenders came from were scrunched into a tiny room to the left of the entrance. They now line the walls here in the outer room. More such pictures, inside and out, old and new, some you've probably never seen, are available here.

Postal progress, maybe

Our neighborhood post office, Chimney Corners, is on a list of seven hundred the U.S.P.O. may close due to a budget crunch. I have to say that we would hardly miss it, except for the stamp machines.

For a long time we've used the UPS store nearby. Much quicker service, nicer clerks, more expensive probably but maybe not by much. We would miss our nice mailman. I suppose he would be gone, too. Course we pay most of our bills online, like half the rest of the country. Part of the P.O.'s problem, no doubt.

Stupid legislative tricks

From the, "If it ain't broke, government will fix it until it is" department:

Congress has banned "distributing children's books printed before 1985."

Why? Because the ink might contain lead. Are our pols brilliant? They probably only watch TV anyhow.

Via Instapundit.

Indianola

Researching the ghost town of Indianola, once the second-busiest port (after Galveston) on the Texas coast, which figures in a book of Texana I'm writing, I found this good site. Then-Secretary of War Jeff Davis shipped his thirty-two experimental Egyptian camels through the port on Matagorda Bay in 1856. They proved relatively useless. Among other problems, their feet were too tender for the rocky West Texas soil. But some people still like to experiment with them.

Joker Barry

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Racism? A year ago Vanity Unfair published one of these on President Bush. Nobody complained then, of course. I think it looks good on him. When middle class taxes rise, they'll know it, too.

UPDATE:  The WaPo thinks it's racist. Whoa, now there's a surprise.

MOPing up Iran's nukes

When the Hildabeast runs out of chatter, this is waiting in the wings to be loaded on the B-2 and B-52.

August 03, 2009

Multiculturalism on trial?

Oh, no, we can't have that. No problem. Barry stuck with the video and canceled the audio and it all went away. It's not, after all, about resolving anything. The race game must not be challenged.

Obama was really born in...

...wait for it...are you ready?...are you sure you're ready?...okay now...here it comes: Area 51!

August 02, 2009

The Lioness Program

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I'm a little late to the program here, this program anyhow. But it's worth noting, and, as we see above it's not just a Marines deal, but an Army one as well. I knew we had women fighter and gunship pilots, and women medics and armed women at security checkpoints. But I was floored by Michael Yon's latest report showing an apparent woman rifleman on a Brit patrol in Afghanistan. I figured it was new. El Coqui, a commenter at Black Five, set me straight. The Brit woman was a Royal MP, along to search women suspects. EC pointed me to the Lioness program. Now we know.

Lloyd Doggett gets the word(s)

"Just Say No," the Tea Party crowd chanted at him in South Austin yesterday. He's a lot more used to chants of "No Justice, No Peace," which is his preferred kind of crowd. But he seemed to be a good sport about it. Not running away, not hiding in his car. I don't agree with his politics--it'll take a lot more than chanting to get him to vote against Obamacare, for instance--but I have to admit Lloyd's a reasonably nice fellow.

UPDATE: Power Line's headline "Blue Doggett Democrat" seems to be meant to be cute. Lloyd is super liberal, and no Blue Dog of any kind.

What the Dems risk changing

1. Americans have better survival rates than Europeans for common cancers.
2. Americans have lower cancer mortality rates than Canadians.
3. Americans have better access to treatment for chronic diseases than patients in other developed countries.
4. Americans have better access to preventive cancer screening than Canadians.
5. Lower-income Americans are in better health than comparable Canadians.
6. Americans spend less time waiting for care than patients in Canada and the United Kingdom.
7. People in countries with more government control of health care are highly dissatisfied and believe reform is needed.
8. Americans are more satisfied with the care they receive than Canadians.
9. Americans have better access to important new technologies such as medical imaging than do patients in Canada or Britain.
10. Americans are responsible for the vast majority of all health care innovations.

Via The Hoover Institution at Stanford, thanks to House of Eratosthenes

Where are the space aliens?

One of the favorite games of Mr. Boy's cub scout den, especially in the woods on camping trips, is to each get a stick and go hunt for aliens. Not the illegal sort, but the outer-space variety.

Most of it, of course, is spurred by Star Wars and similar epics. But it's not as if scientists haven't given it some thought. In fact, a lot of thought. For instance, the SETI program.

Three good essays on the subject are here, here, and here. I think they're out there but, like most of the humans and the aliens in Poul Anderson's Starfarers, they may well have long since turned inward in favor of exploring themselves.

Via Instapundit.

The immortal Miss Ellie

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Mr. Boy's spirit animal, this stuffed elephant, recently had her first bath in nine years. Followed by a tumble dry. It was Mrs. Charm's idea. Get rid of her familiar smell, the thinking went, and Mr. B. would be less inclined to carry her about and sleep with her. Not that we mind that, especially, but he still sucks his fingers, despite our best efforts to stop it, and her comfortin presence seems to play a role in it. Anyhow, it didn't work. The precocious pachyderm, Miss El, remains immortal. And the rising fourth grader's finger sucking, alas, continues.

August 01, 2009

Skype loss?

The last time I bought a new headphone for the Skype system, the salesman at Radio Shack claimed most people his age (i.e. in their 20s) used Skype instead of landlines. If so, they must make up a good part of the intertubes phone service's 450 million customers who will be calling the old landline company if a lawsuit comes out the way Swedish company Joltid wants it. It would be a pity, for sure.

Pap & Tax

While the Dems proceed with their potentially economy-busting climate change taxation scheme, the so-called Cap & Trade, more scientists are fleeing from the global warming fraud behind it. The latest are some members of the American Chemical Society, which bills itself as the world's largest scientific society. And more on it here.

Via The Seablogger

UPDATE:  Meanwhile, a new Henrik Svensmark paper out today concludes that "a link between the sun, cosmic rays, aerosols and liquid-water clouds appears to exist on a global scale," meaning that an active sun decreases the amount of low-lying clouds which influences the warming of the earth far more than any CO2 increases. The sun's recent inactivity thus may have influenced the current global cooling, and the northeast's Year Without A Summer.

Black boxes search goes on

The French research vessel, the Pourquoi Pas? (the Why Not?) is still searching for AF 447 and its black boxes, an effort due to end in mid-August. Now Airbus is offering to pay for another search after that.

Zephirine Drouhin

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Something to brighten the day. The Bourbon antique Zephirine Drouhin at the rancho.

Miscellaneous

 * Not sure how CGHill gets "Land of Cheerfulness" out of Terra Vigoris, but I like it and the moon shot is awfully nice.

* From wedding meme to divorce parody in one week! Must be an intertubes record of some kind.

* Ann has done some supremely weird things with the look of her blog, but this one is nice. I still can't get into her comments, however. Curse Google forever.

* Tikirobot has some strange stuff, but, so far, none are funnier than this bicycle river jump video.

* Not many people (I would guess) know that the Marx Brothers got their comedy start in Texas.

* And, speaking of Texana, it's pretty cool that my old friend Texas archeologist Tom Hester has given Birdie Rose, who died one day shy of her ninth birthday in 1879, a special kind of immortality on the web.


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