Saturday, December 24, 2011

See Ya After the First





It's ġéola.  I am not really interested in spending any time during the next week wallowing around in the gloom, looking for nuggets of life that I find meaningful or distasteful.  


I think that I will eat a little too much, spoil my children a little, talk with family and friends, go to work and hold down the fort on the slow week between the holidays.  


I'll throw out some predictions for the year coming up on the First, then get back to my normal post rates of around 4 posts a week. 


Wishing you and yours happiness.  I and mine are certainly going to try for it. 

Thursday, December 22, 2011

Riddle Me This

How the hell did this happen?

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-16292244

I can see one, but 69 of the damn things heading off to China to be reverse engineered?

This will be covered up, but there is a mighty stink under this one I would bet.

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Jails



Dave Cohen over at Decline of the Empire published this piece yesterday.

Now, what I think is that not that more folks are getting arrested by the police, but the system is now so self-referential and the records keeping so detailed is that every arrest is detailed in extreme.

I got thrown in a couple of jails in my wild and wooly youth.  Good luck finding any record of those encounters.  The folks at Muscle Shoals tossed me in theirs after the bar fight and released me the next morning (you get back to your base straightaway boy, you give us a call when you get back there and you put your First Sergeant on the phone).  Or a little town in Southern Colorado, Fruita (I tossed that damn weed in the snow last night...now get outta here and don't let me see you again).

No the difference now is the cops.  Where they used to be peoples friends and fathers and neighbors first and took a hand in the alternate mercies and punishments that are part and parcel of being an adult.  They now are just cops, nothing else.  They are an arm of the state.

I really miss the old way, where they would deal with you as an adult to a kid.  Now they just arrest.

I know that the world has changed.  I realize we probably can't go back.  But I do miss it.

Monday, December 19, 2011

Get Some



Get some cash aside folks.

The way that I would approach it would be to sit down and figure out how much your true basics cost.  Now, be ruthless here.   Your bank/landlord won't be able to kick you out for a month or so (bare minimum) and it will take a while for folks at the electric and gas company to shut you off (months if you play "the pay some money and promise" game).    Same with your car, same with your credit cards.

I think that the true basics are food, and to a certain degree fuel.

Get some cash set aside to navigate a month or three of uncertainty.

The global economic system is looking pretty sour right now.  Truth be, it is as bad as I have ever seen it.  2008 looks pretty easy compared to what we will be going through, if worse comes to worse.

The banks are held together with bubble gum, baling wire, and accounting tricks.  Governments are in huge debt, and there appear to be ominous rumblings coming from any number of sources.  For the first time, I would start thinking seriously about the possibilities of bank runs in the year coming up.

Now, I am not saying pull out all your savings and put them in your mattresses, makes for poor sleep, though in my case it wouldn't even cause a bump in my pillow, let alone a lump in my mattress.  What I am saying is have some actual cash money to navigate strange times.  The technical word for one of the likely scenarios is deflation.  Getting hold of cash is difficult in this setting.   Having a bit of cash about will make it easier to navigate the oddness that may well come our way.

I used to be a silver bug, but got out of the game.  If things stay smooth for a while, I may go and buy a couple of rolls of quarters and dimes.  But that is all.

I hold by my premise that a full pantry is the best savings.  I wouldn't recommend going full-LDS just yet, but being able to get through a month or so with only minimal grocery shopping will allow a lot of flexibility in your life

Saturday, December 17, 2011

Same as the rest of us



There have been a couple of posts that really got me going the past couple of days. First one is this one that lays out the issues from the perspective of the bottom end of the socio-economic spectrum.  There is an abbreviated version over at Financial Armageddon that I prefer, as sometime Zerohedge drives tack with a sledgehammer.

The other one is a touch more insidious.  Jesse has always been a favorite of mine.  Jesse speaks for the moneyed interests who have a feeling of responsibility and duty.  I have always felt that Noblesse Oblige is a emotion only felt by the noble.  I respect him highly.  But Jesse is now in a bit of a snit because it looks as though people who have stored their gold and silver bars in the vaults of vipers now may lose some of their money.  The horror.

For the most part, there were very few grandmother's retirement nest eggs in the list of investors at MF Global.  I am certain that they kept a few on retainer so that they could appear to be serving a pubic interest, but the truth of the matter is that this was a fund set up by a predator (read here Corzine) who wanted to parlay his financial (ex-Goldman-Sachs) and political (ex US Senator, ex-New Jersey Governor) influence into an even more insufferably huge wealth pile.

The people who raced to throw money at Mr. Corzine were the financial equivalent of jackals to Mr. Corzine's wolf.  When the wolf took their money, they were/are aghast at the idea that someone would use them so luridly.  Jesse of course finds the idea reprehensible (which it is) but come on, in the immortal words of Sister Anna Rita (Eighth grade English)  if you run with a bad crowd, you most certainly will eventually end up in trouble.

Look, the system here in the land of the free (etc., etc, etc) has been financially and morally bankrupt for a while.  Jesse has been one of the best chroniclers.  I think that here in blogoland, we should not concern ourselves so much with the huge losses obtained by the wealthy (leaving them still wealthy, but less satisfyingly so), but instead, chronicling and working to help the truly needy who are so starkly chronicled by Mssrs. Durden and Panzer

Friday, December 16, 2011

Friday Fare

Man, I can't resist.  I talked with Locutius today.  Kirk and Spock on the front burner

 





Thursday, December 15, 2011

A bit of a rant here...so sorry



I fucking HATE people who bring the little annoyance dogs in a bag everywhere with them.

You puling, insecure pieces of shit who need a toy dog to substitute for your stupid fucking binky and security blanket?  For fucks sake, grow the fuck up.  The fucking stupid animals that you make so goddamn dependent and worthless are nothing but poorly bred rats.

Fuck you, you don't get to take them into a hospital because you like them and you are so pathetically insecure that you need a fucking worthless piece of shit animal to make your sorry ass feel better.

If you try to tell me that the thing is a fucking service dog, you can kiss my big fat rosy red ass.

Fuck You.  Go out and suck a tailpipe and put the worthless piece of shit animal to sleep while you are at it.

Assholes

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Read this now and please get all of your friends to read it as well

http://languagelog.ldc.upenn.edu/nll/?p=3629

This phrase just blew me away

We are living, he observed, in the age of the assholocracy.

Prognostications



Since it is that time of the year....I am putting out my last year's look into the crystal ball for review and ridicule.

Oh wait...I chickened out last year.

I will try to be less cowardly this year.

The year before I did pretty well.  except for the stock market, which is being held together by....Hell I don't know, it still doesn't make a lick of sense.

If everyone who reads this would be so kind as to send in your big prediction for next year, I would appreciate and note it during my predictions.  Low-lying fruit will be mocked as cowardly, alien space babies running for President under the Republican banner would be more along the lines I am thinking of this year.

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Home Feelin' Poorly



I took a page from my co-worker's playbooks and spent the day at home because I didn't feel well.

Now, I can't really say that I was sick, but I sure as hell felt like crap.  I am normally a furnace, hell, I wear t-shirts in the winter rain here without complaint.  But yesterday I felt crappy and cold the entire day.  It looks to me as though the old immune system has been waging war on my behalf.  It also appears that it has a worthy opponent.

So today is drinking herbal teas and urinating.  I am also slugging down vitamins and resting.

Ferdinand Braudel is the read for the day.  Hell, it has been the read for years now on quiet days.  I cannot think of a better exposition on how we got to where we are.   I am asking you all to go out and take the rest of the winter to absorb the book.   Get an idea of where we came from and how we go here.  I cannot think of a better way to prep.

Civilization and Capitalism, 15th–18th Centuries, 3 vols. (1979) English translation by Siân Reynolds


The Structures of Everyday Life (vol.1) 
The Wheels of Commerce (vol. 2)
The Perspective of the World (vol. 3)


Just for giggles, please don't buy it online.  Go to a by-god bookstore and let them relieve you of your money.  Sure, it will cost more, but you will be doing the right thing

Bourgoisie



A country was once accused of being a "Nation of Shopkeepers" by a bad man.  This sobriquet was not well thought of at the time, but, like most unwanted nicknames and descriptions, it rang pretty true.  But what causes my gorge to rise even more is that we are now a nation of poseurs and consumers.  A nation of shopkeepers at least had some value, we cannot even claim that.

Russell has been somewhat somewhat fascinated recently about my admission that I am a "person of mass".   He seems to have misconstrued my being miffed at Cuntsler (sic) for his ongoing denigration of anyone who likes their vittles a bit too much.  He mistakes my distaste for Mr. Kunstler's ongoing tirades describing his revulsion for the less-than-svelte who inhabit his perfect world for the self-flagellation for being a big ol' corn-fed boy.

But Russell did make me think, and for that, I am truly grateful.  His links to Chuck Robb's articles about dentistry made me think even more.   Seeing my documented distate for cosmetic orthodontia

Our consumer driven economy, with Madison Avenues flickering images of perfect people laughing merrily in perfect settings are now part and parcel of our national self image.   When you read Mr. Robb's description of the prerequistites for the "Global Middle-Class", it reads to me as a lengthy infomercial for the American Dental Association.  I do agree heartily with his recommendations about taking care of one's teeth yourself, but the description of teeth the size and color of white porcelain saucers rang quite true.

For some reason, as a country and a culture, we are so shallow as to believe that what a person looks like is somehow indicative of their worth as a person.  Actually, it is a two-headed monster, with the other head being the idea that wealth is a indicator of a persons value.  I have recently been indoctrinated into the cult of the Kardasians with a hysterical laugh-filled primer by Rita, the clerk at Safeway's on Main Street.   No wonder these bimbos are so popular, they are rich, shallow, and beautiful.  Everything that the bulk of America strives to be.

I am now coming to the conclusion that the things that Mssrs. Kunstler and Robb speak of are our biggest problems.  Where the Brits may well have been a nation of shopkeepers, we are a nation of shallowness, with our needs and desires defined by people who wish to sell us shit and enslave us with debt\, with success being defined by appearances.

I doubt if our descendants will think too highly of us when they review our actions and our morals.  But, I think that they will be too busy trying to put back to right the extraordinary mess we are leaving to obsess too much over our shallowness

Sunday, December 11, 2011

Preppin'

There is every reason right now to be paranoid.

Doesn't mean that one has to be stupid about it.  Stoneleigh and Illargi have made a concrete suggestion that may be useful.   I think that I will be taking some of this wisdom home.

The real problems is that the world is way out of our control (by our, I mean us unwashed masses).  It also appears that control is slipping from the fingers of those we elected/hired to mind the store while we ran our lives.  Limey-boy Cameron is having a sissy-boy-slap fest with the little loser from France.  Merkel is trying on her Ilsa Koch outfits, and the idea of democracy in Italy and Greece has been vetoed by their corporate masters.

Our democracy is kinda becoming a surreal joke.  Obama is trying to cast himself as Roosevelt the Elder, having been an abysmal failure as Roosevelt the Younger.  The Republicans front runner is Newt fucking Gingrich, and Ron Paul is still "unelectable" as he goes about telling the truth.

So right now, I am going to concern myself with things like coats for boys and presents for little kids.  I am going to be kinder to the folks with food stamps cards who can't add, and I am going to keep waking up every morning and going to work.

Time to get some popcorn and watch some football.  I'll finish reading last weeks news today.

Life goes on.

Friday, December 9, 2011

Sorry That I Haven't Written Anything

Nothing is really all that interesting to me right now.

I'll try again next week.

John

Monday, December 5, 2011

Senatus consultum ultimum



Europe is a mess.  It will be interesting to see just how much pull the moral and intellectual descendants of   Baron Von Rothschild will have on the end game.  Bankers have not always won out.  Just ask the folks who loaned to the Valois and Bourbon.

The amount of money in play is mind numbing.  It really isn't fathomable by anyone.  It is a pile big enough that if it lights will burn down the house.  I can't imagine that our banks would survive.  Not that the idea bothers me much now, but I also have a good idea that with the banks going down hard, my life would not be made easier in the process.  Matter of fact, my life might well be pushed over into the "damn difficult" column.

I have structured a life where I think that I will be able to whether the storm.  Belts will have to be tightened further should the SHTF, but hell, there is a lot of slack in the belt.  I can get along with a lot less and really have a pretty damn good life.




Sunday, December 4, 2011

Being Careful


If you are reading this on an old beat up computer, running a decrepit operating system, you are probably OK by me.  Linux would be fine by me, even an older Mac running system 9 would make me pleased, and if, for some odd reason, you are running BeOS or BSD, I am truly honored.

What is starting to scare me is the Apple iTunes store and the knock-offs that are coming down the pipe.   I have around a grand spent over the tears on the Apple store buying music that I liked.  But with the advent of the iPhone and the new spiffy iPad there there is a disquieting trend.  The corporations that have been fighting for dominance have now all taken the path of the walled garden.

I would strongly recommend that you read this article over at the Harvard Law School.

Look, I gotta agree with the guy.  What we need is some angry nerds.  But nerds have always been such a small segment of the population that even if they got angry, I doubt that it would account for much.

What we need instead is a bit of fear.  Look folks, the big boys like Amazon, Google, Apple, and Microsoft and creating these walled gardens for the same reason that folks set up feed lots.  They aren't there for the benefit of the occupants.


Saturday, December 3, 2011

Taking longer



I am spending this morning on the other blog. I started the project in shameless imitation of John Michael Greer's "Stars Reach", but ran into a case of serious writer's block. I am now trying to catch up on the writing and reacquaint myself with the characters.

The only current thing that I really have to comment on is the following.  A hat tip to the folks over at ZeroHedge.  I only changed the formatting to make it easier to understand.

Here are the four most important data points and charts from today's job report: 

  • the civilian labor force declined from 154,198,000 to 153,883,000, a 315K decline despite the civilian non-institutional population increased (as expected) from 240,269,000 to 240,441,000: always the easiest way to push down the unemployment rate. Percentage wise this was a drop from 64.2% to 64.0%: the lowest since back in 1983. 
  • Naturally, this would mean that the people not part of the labor force rose, and indeed they did by 487,000 to a record 86,558,000 from 86,071,000. 
  • This also means that more people are looking for a job: and indeed, the number of "Persons who want a job nowrose by 192K to a record 6.595 million.
  • And lastly, confirming the behind the scenes disaster of the US jobless picture, the average duration of unemployment rose to a new record 40.9 weeks from 39.4 weeks previously. And that is your "improving" jobless picture in a nutshell. 

Friday, December 2, 2011

I can't tell you how many times I listened to this

On My head phones (Koss, of course) with the amp and the speaker in my locker.  The extension cord running over to my bunk.

Bitter cold outdoors in either Hohenfels or Grafenwohr.

Kept me alive


Thursday, December 1, 2011

Written off-line using Gedit on Monday the 28th.

I always get up earlier than strictly necessary in order to pour a couple of cups of coffee down my gullet and to get all my shit into one dufflebag before I head out to work for the day. Lately that time seems to be used in reading headlines on my favorite bitching sites on the web and getting my nose out of joint because of the antics that the world is going through.

Today I woke up and there was (gasp) no Internet connection from my router. Coffee still flowed down my throat (I forgot to set up the coffeemaker last evening and I had to settle for some pretty skanky instant coffee instead). The world appears to be the same walking out the door. My life on a day to day sense does not appear to be negatively impacted by the loss of bits flowing through the router.

So now it is Tuesday the 29th. This time the coffee was made and the Internet was on. No real big difference in the day to day activities. But I decided that it would be mentally healthier for me to drop off the web and get to work writing.

The end lesson of the past couple of days is that the web and the news media that you get through trolling through the internet doing what some folks euphemistically refer to as "research" is really the same distraction that the mainstream media offers us. Just a different flavor. Plopping your big nasty butt next to a laptop and surfing is just as mind numbing as the CBS evening news.

I get too caught up in the "big picture". It is just such a sexy beast. But in truth, you have to keep the desire to keep checking on it to a minimum. I think that I have to get a grip on it again. Back to once a week reads and keeping the internet "research" to a minimum.

Back to writing the novel

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Myths



First there is this read.

The myth of renewable energy | Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists

You see, if you want the truth, you have to go first to folks who can actually count past three and don't have a skin in the game.  These are getting more difficult to find by the day.  The Bulletin is still on my "fairly truthful list" with only a reasonable modicum of self-serving and propaganda.

The data supporting the use of renewables was always there for anyone to see.  The big problem has always been that renewables were not efficient, nor sufficiently energy-dense, nor gave sufficient EROEI to make them anything but a  placebo for those in anxious denial of their toy being taken away.

Look, electric cars won't cut it, corn-powered cars won't cut it, algae diesel cars won't cut it.

The only thing that folks don't want to see is that their cars will be going away.  Thirty years from now there will not be a quarter of the cars on the road that we have now.  Just ain't gonna happen anyway else.

This will put us back at the point where we we fifty years ago.  I went out and dug up data from the FedGuv, and in 1950, there was one car for every 3.5 people.  This seems about right to me.  Now there is a car for every 1.24 persons.  Sounds bloody absurd to me.  So, what I figure is that over the next thirty of so years, we will drop to around one car for every four persons.  Lets figure the population will be around 350 million at that time, so we will drop to around 80 million cars.  This way we will lose around 160 million cars off the road.

The cars that remain will be efiicient, except for the ones which tote the rich folk around.  There have never been that many rich folk.  1% is about right, and the fuel use average will probably go up to 70/80 mpg range.   When you factor in the loss in numbers and the gains in efficiency,  we will probably use in the range of 3 million barrels a day for transportation vs the current 14 million barrels a day.

Because in the end, energy will make us throw away our toys.

Monday, November 28, 2011

Extinction and Other Such Balderdash



So, Survival Acres is a great read.  But sometimes folks get a bit revved up and go saying things that are just plain silly.  I was over at Trout Clan Campfire and read this and then went to survival acres and read this.

Guys, there will be a lot less of us soon (soon being in a hundred or so years) but extinction?  Really?

The way that we are living has to stop, there has to be a bunch of us gone, but that doesn't translate into extinction.  That is just classic overshoot and reset.  Granted, there will be worse case-scenarios where we lose 90% off the population, but that will just bring us back to levels seen in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.

Earth abides, and man will abide with it.  This idea of extinction is unworthy of thought really.  There is always a small chance of it, asteroids occur.  But I think the same frame of mind that makes one lean toward believing in a vengeful God is the same frame of mind that makes one long for extinction.

It is a desire to smite "evil".  It is the fucking Calvinist horseshit that infected this country early and hard is what plays here.  It is the same shit that made people burn witches to save them and allowed slavery to occur because the slaves were predestined to damnation anyway.  It is the same shit that makes folks long for extinction of your family of man.

It is a desire to have everything erased so that "good" can take hold.  Sorry folks, that dog just won't hunt.  What is seen as good and evil is just personal taste for the most part.  Zero-sum games like resources and riches are transient things that move around according to subtle variations in rules and circumstances.

The big trouble here in blogoland is that we are a bunch of folks raised at the pinnacle of an empire.  We have come to believed that our self-indulgent, fatuous, and excessive lifestyle is the only means of survival available.  It is not, it is just all that we have ever known.  It is also wildly divergent from the lifestyle of 90% of the current world population, let alone the 99.5% of all humans who ever lived.

What will happen is that populations will recede.  Probably won't be all that sudden.  Lifespans will shorten, famines will reappear, women will stop having too many babies, men will stay unmarried.  Oh, there will be some fast slides as wars and  such play their hand.  But there will always be someone surviving.

I think that the key is to make it be you and yours, not them and theirs.




Saturday, November 26, 2011

Strategist, Strategy, Tactician, Tactics


Here in America, we are at the beginning of a dialogue.  The dialogue consists of opposing sides in the millenniums-old argument  concerning the structure of a political economy.

The political economy is the sea that we swim in on a day to day basis.  It doesn't have any particular nobility in and of itself.  It is not a sentient being.  It appears to be just be the expression of the sum of the methods used by individuals to further themselves in a country.

Now, as soon as I said those two words in the same sentence, some of you will turn off the ear switch and navigate away from this page.  The phrase has distinctly Marxist tones in this day and age.  When you mutter the words represented by the fell runes "political economy", you are a member of the liberal elite, mouthing parlor-pinkisms into the vulnerable ears of the Hoi Polloi.

But we are now in the thrall of a government of corporations.  Our erstwhile democracy has been usurped by a cabal of corporate chieftains whose sole motive is the maximization of their own wealth and the power and prestige of their corporations.  That is our government.  The republic that is our ideal is a sad thing, being somewhat akin to the heavy facepaint on a whore.

Here in the US, we have a system which appears to center on large institutions which service the upper quartile or so of the country.   The benefits of the current system are collected by the top from the bottom of the pyramid.  There is a limited flow in and out of the protected top tier, but this is kept at a minimum, probably to provide a simulacrum of opportunity.

So really, what we have is a political economy that is predicated on farming the lower classes to enrich the rentier class.  The rich have purchased the corporations and lawmakers to create a seamless front that is currently impregnable.  But the more that the upper class strip-mine from the rest of us, the more delicate and vunerable the edifice will become.  It really doesn't take that much effort to squint your eyes and imagine the Ancien Regime and the Jacobins coming to your town soon.

The recent Occupy movement claims to represent the 99%.  I really think that the percentage really is more in the 60-75% range.  The remaining middle class realizes that their access to a pretty good lifestyle depends on staying in the good graces of the corporate masters.   They also are the folks who have the education and contacts to perhaps make the move into the corporate-master career field.

What is probably going to happen is that the Occupy movement will go to ground for a while.  If they have a lick of sense and any organizational skills whatsoever, they will work heavily on recruitment, training, and strategy.  Get through the winter and start again in the spring.

Things are going to continue getting dicey.  Keep your head low and stay out of the cross-fire is my only advice.


Thursday, November 24, 2011

Happy Thanksgiving



Thanks everyone for reading this stuff.

Thanks for comment and keeping me on the straight and narrow.

Thanks to my regular reads for the ideas.

Thanks to Fox News for showing me the wrong way.

Thanks to my kids for keeping me sane.

Thanks to my little world for keeping me alive and kicking.




Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Police



First:  Here is the article

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5iFB27Cxw9P5tjIij1_UNsryussWg?docId=b72ae00653b24152a26ca5892b08c2a4

Now; I am stunned at this part:
After reviewing the video, Kelly said he observed at least two cases of "active resistance" from protesters. In one instance, a woman pulls her arm back from an officer. In the second instance, a protester curls into a ball. Each of those actions could have warranted more force, including baton strikes and pressure-point techniques. 
"What I'm looking at is fairly standard police procedure," Kelly said.

Curling in a ball to protect yourself constitutes a reason to beat the shit out of a person?  Pulling your arm away?

The police are getting out of control in some areas.  Keep an eye on your own public servants to insure that they don't join this madness.

Monday, November 21, 2011

Bob Schieffer is a dick

OK, I have given more money to Ron Paul than I have ever given any candidate.  There:  Financial Disclosure

I am not one of the Ron Paul Rabids (RPR, trademark pending).  I think that he would be, at best, a mediocre president, but everybody else who is running would be flat out terrible.  Ergo, he is the best of breed in this sorry pack.

The MSM hates him, because he gives lie to the bullshit that they have been purveying for the last ten years.

Bob Schieffer tried desperately to catch Congressman Paul (note that he never addresses him as such) wrongfooted and failed miserably.

He is a dick

Sunday, November 20, 2011

Oh yeah

The Semantics of Equity, (or, a rambling post full of non sequiturs)



Because we have managed to make it all confused.  The nature of that confusion cuts to the core of our country's schizophrenia.

n. pl. eq·ui·ties

1. The state, quality, or ideal of being just, impartial, and fair.
2. Something that is just, impartial, and fair.
3. Law
  • Justice applied in circumstances covered by law yet influenced by principles  of ethics and fairness.
  • A system of jurisprudence supplementing and serving to modify the rigor of common law.
  • An equitable right or claim.
  • Equity of redemption.
4. The residual value of a business or property beyond any mortgage thereon and liability therein.
5.
  • The market value of securities less any debt incurred.
  • Common stock and preferred stock.
6. Funds provided to a business by the sale of stock.

________________________________________

You see, the same word that we use to define justice is the same word that we use to define the acquisition of wealth and status.

What one part, by far the larger part of our country wishes is the emphasis on definitions one and two.   (BTW, we will call these folks the "current losers") The have this odd idea thatthe system should  be just, impartial, and fair.   Our fellow losers own just a very small part of the country and there appears to be a concerted effort to relieve us of the remainder which lies in our hands.

To the country's current owners, this is a very bad dream.  The corporations and the wealthy have made a holy mission out of the extraction of wealth from the aforementioned "losers" and their whole hearted opposition to any idea of fairness in the tax code or the playing field brings them out in a cold sweat.

I really think the thing shifted into high gear with the good old standby, "the ownership economy".  This was a seismic shift in thought back there in the late 90's and early "oughts".  What you owned was your value.   Oh granted, there have always been those who felt that only those who owned something was deserving of the vote, but now we are getting back to it.

So the whole purpose of this hastily-wrought piece of fluff is a reminder that maybe, just maybe, we are primarily doomed as a Republic because we can't seem to differentiate between concept of fairness and the imperatives of "mine".

Saturday, November 19, 2011

Apparently this guy is the current republican frontrunner



It is going to be a monumentally bad election

First there is this.

The guy is a sleazebag in every way.  No wonder the right is so enamored with him.

From Wikipedia

Ethics sanctions
Gingrich is the only Speaker of the House to have been disciplined for ethics violations.[63]
During his term as Speaker, eighty-four ethics charges were filed against him; eighty-three of them were dropped.[64] The remaining charge concerned a 20-hour college course called "Renewing American Civilization" that Gingrich had taught through a tax-deductible foundation, Kennesaw State College Foundation. Allegations of tax improprieties led to two counts "of failure to seek legal advice" and one count of "providing the committee with information which he knew or should have known was inaccurate" concerning the use of a tax exempt college course for political purposes. To avoid a full hearing, Gingrich and the House Ethics Subcommittee negotiated a sanctions agreement. Democrats accused Gingrich of violating the agreement, but it was forwarded to the House for approval.[65][66] On January 21, 1997, the House voted 395 to 28 to reprimand Gingrich, including a $300,000 "cost assessment" to recoup money spent on the investigation.[67][68]
The full committee panel did not agree whether tax law had been violated.[69] In 1999, the IRS cleared the organizations connected with the courses.[70]

And the capper:

Gingrich addressed his past infidelities by saying, "There's no question at times in my life, partially driven by how passionately I felt about this country, that I worked too hard and things happened in my life that were not appropriate."[128][129]

Far be it from me a to claim a perfect life.  But this guy is big time fucked up.

Over to John Stewart for his take

The Daily Show With Jon StewartMon - Thurs 11p / 10c
Indecision 2012 - No Really, They Can't Decide
www.thedailyshow.com
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Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Monday, November 14, 2011

Nittany

Man:  I am so disgusted by the Penn State mess that I could vomit.

I really have no love of college football.   I played at Utah for 3.2 years and left without a tear.  The game is corrupt and self serving beyond belief, but I never, ever thought that it could be taken this far.

If I were the trustees of that college, I would close the program for good.  If a school takes a fucking game so seriously that pedophiles are protected to save the reputation of the program, that school and program cannot be saved.

I really hope my kid goes to a small school


Sunday, November 13, 2011

Oil is Back At $100

Forget all the nonsense that you are hearing about saving this or bailing out that.

45 minutes long.

Worth every second of your time


Saturday, November 12, 2011

Gnawing at the bit



OK:  This one here will require a touch of thought.

Common Dreams, which is my absolute favorite hippie-dippie newsource (and this is by no means a pejorative term, merely descriptive) have come out with the following article.

https://www.commondreams.org/headline/2011/11/09-5

Now, they are dissing the scientist as "never worked on nuclear weapons".  I will give them that one.  But for Gods sake, lets look at what he does for a living.

Nanodiamonds.

What that means is that this guy has probably more working knowledge in the application of conventional explosives than just about anyone.  He could probably design an implosion squeeze system for a nuclear weapon in his sleep.

What I think is that Iran is trying desperately to gain access to a nuclear deterrent.  Hell, with our record of invading countries and Israel's record of sabre-rattling and attacks, they would be fools not to do so.

But I really can't see how this would effect us.  The genie is out of the bottle.  I am more worried about the Russian arsenal and the interface between India and Pakistan than some vaporware "bomb" that the Persians are trying to develop.

So, what we are seeing here is an attempt to discredit a source for political purposes.  But the political issues that we must deal with are not well served by this kind of specious attacks.

Friday, November 11, 2011

Back Writing on a Day off


Just haven't been into it this week.  The whole damn thing is going apeshit in slow motion and the games that the bankos and the politicos play are getting stale.  I am tire of commenting on the same.

The local environment is saner and constrained.  Much easier to get a handle on.  Money is getting tighter week by week.  Getting by is getting more of a tightrope act.  Such is life.  Things will probably get worse before they get any better, better learn to deal.  Mostly life lately has been the formulation of strategies to make do with less.

You see, that is going to be the fate for a while.  It will be a fate shared by a majority of the folks you and I know.  The rules will be quite simple.  Make do with less, perhaps a lot less.

I am kind of irritated at the prospect.  Being a crabby old man who has watched the game being played for a long time,  I can turn my 20-20 hindsight to the rear and see where the mistakes were.  I missed a lot of the opportunities to make my nest plusher at this point.  But in truth, the things that I might have had that others call their own are the things that are in play right now.

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Sunday, November 6, 2011

Saturday's Important Stuff

Guy Fawkes Porter
Guy Fawkes Porter





BJCP Style and Style Guidelines
12-B Porter, Robust Porter


Min OG: 1.048 Max OG: 1.065   
Min IBU: 25 Max IBU: 60   
Min Clr: 22 Max Clr: 42  Color in SRM, Lovibond



Recipe Specifics

Batch Size (Gal): 5.00 Wort Size (Gal): 5.00
Total Grain (Lbs): 12.00      
Anticipated OG: 1.064 Plato: 15.58
Anticipated SRM: 25.5        
Anticipated IBU: 43.3      
Brewhouse Efficiency: 75  %   
Wort Boil Time: 60  Minutes   



Pre-Boil Amounts
Evaporation Rate: 15.00  Percent Per Hour   
Pre-Boil Wort Size: 5.88  Gal   
Pre-Boil Gravity: 1.054  SG 13.35 Plato


Formulas Used
Brewhouse Efficiency and Predicted Gravity based on Method #1, Potential Used.
Final Gravity Calculation Based on Points.
Hard Value of Sucrose applied. Value for recipe: 46.2100 ppppg
% Yield Type used in Gravity Prediction: Fine Grind Dry Basis.

Color Formula Used: Morey
Hop IBU Formula Used: Rager

Additional Utilization Used For Plug Hops: 2 %
Additional Utilization Used For Pellet Hops: 10 %


Grain/Extract/Sugar
% Amount Name Origin Potential SRM
12.5 1.50 lbs.  Crystal 80L    1.033 80
4.2 0.50 lbs.  Chocolate Malt America 1.029 350
83.3 10.00 lbs.  Pale Malt(2-row) America 1.036 2

Potential represented as SG per pound per gallon.

Hops
Amount Name Form Alpha IBU Boil Time
0.50 oz.  Willamette Pellet 14.70 33.9 60 min
0.50 oz.  Cascade Pellet 5.75 6.8 30 min
0.50 oz.  Cascade Pellet 5.75 2.7 10 min


Extras
Amount Name Type Time
0.25 Oz  Irish Moss Fining 15 Min.(boil)


Yeast

Mine Own Yeast...Fermentis and Nottingham mixed and passaged a couple of times


Water Profile
Profile:   
Profile known for:   
Calcium(Ca): 0.0 ppm
Magnesium(Mg): 0.0 ppm
Sodium(Na): 0.0 ppm
Sulfate(SO4): 0.0 ppm
Chloride(Cl): 0.0 ppm
biCarbonate(HCO3): 0.0 ppm
pH: 0.00


Mash Schedule
Mash Type: Single Step   
Grain Lbs: 12.00   
Water Qts: 24.00 Before Additional Infusions
Water Gal: 6.00 Before Additional Infusions
Qts Water Per Lbs Grain: 2.00 Before Additional Infusions

Rest Temp Time
Saccharification Rest: 148 120 Min
Mash-out Rest: 0 0 Min
Sparge: 0 0 Min

Total Mash Volume Gal: 6.96 - Dough-In Infusion Only
All temperature measurements are degrees Fahrenheit.