How to improve your life and save the world.
Thursday, February 5, 2015
Time to plant
The snow is up to the windows but I've
already had my hands in soil. I started three varieties of leeks;
King Richard for summer, Pandora for late summer and Bandit for fall
and wintering over. I have also planted parsley and scallions. I
figured out a great way to grow scallions. I plant one to two dozen
seeds in each compartment of a 6-cell flat, put the flat in a plastic
bag to keep the soil moist until the seeds germinate and then just
let them grow in the flat for about 8 weeks when I transplant the
cells to the garden. I don't separate the individual plants just plop
the whole cell in the ground. For the restaurant I do this about
every three of four weeks and when they want a bunch of scallions I
just pull a whole bunch, wash them, cut off some of the root and put
a rubber band around them. It amazes me how many years it took me to
become this clever.
Tuesday, October 21, 2014
Largest peace symbol
Before we invaded Iraq I started mowing a peace symbol in my field which Air Force One flew over when "W" visited Kennebunkport. I have kept the symbol mowed ever since. It is over an acre in size. To see it google 802 Bald Hill Road Wells Maine. The marker is not quite on the right place but if you center the largest field you can see and zoom in you can see the symbol at the back of the field.
Thursday, March 13, 2014
Happy Easter-- another Orvie story
I don’t care much for church goin’.
Mom likes to go but the church she likes to go to is in town which she would
have to drive to and would cost gas money she doesn’t want to spend and,
besides, there’s lots to do on the farm so she doesn’t really have time. Mostly
I like that she doesn’t go because she usually cooks a big dinner on Sundays.
She took me to the church in town
Easter. It’s a nice church with big stained glass windows. Mom said it was
stained glass but I can’t figure out how you can stain glass and it was all
different colors and shapes making up pictures of people in the Bible I guess.
In front of where we were sitting
were a whole bunch of gold pipes standing on end, all different sizes some of
them as big around as our toilet vent pipe and different lengths, too. Mom said
they were organ pipes and that I’d hear the sound come out of them when the
music started and, boy, did I! That music felt like it was inside of me
vibrating my pipes and then a bunch of people came in and lined up right in
front of the pipes and they waited a little while and then they let out a whoop
and started singing. It sounded nice and then everybody stood up and started
singing the same song from books that were right in front of us. I took out a
book and mom handed me the one she was singing from and pointed to the place
where the words were but I didn’t really get into it.
The minister got up and read from
the Bible about Jesus getting killed and how his mother went to the grave
and…no, wait, it wasn’t his mother; it was another woman named Mary. I guess
that was a pretty common name back then and anyway he was gone from the grave.
It was a pretty interesting story. Then they found him walking around though
they didn’t recognize him at first and I wondered what he was wearing since the
stuff he had been buried in was still in the grave and later when Thomas, who
said he wouldn’t believe it until he saw it did see Jesus and he put his hand
in the hole that had been poked in his side and blood and guts had poured out.
Anyway after he read this story he sat down and the organ played and some men
passed around trays with little glasses of grape juice and other men passed
around trays with little squares of white bread and Mom told me to hold the
bread and juice. Then when everybody had some the preacher got up again and
told us the grape juice was Jesus’s blood and the bread was his body and we
were supposed to drink his blood and eat his body which I thought was pretty
yucky but I did it. Then there was some more singing and then the preacher got
up and gave a speech about Jesus and going to heaven and that Jesus was sitting
on the right hand of God and that we could all go to heaven because Jesus had
showed us the way. Tell you the truth I was pretty glad to get out of there.
On the way home Mom asked me how I
liked it and I said it was OK. I didn’t really like it except for the windows
and girls and women dressed up in dresses and stocking and their hair all done
up pretty. What I didn’t like was that I had to get dressed up in a suit and
tie. My grandma gave me the suit for my birthday and said it was my birthday
suit which got everybody laughing and so it’s always called my birthday suit
which is a joke because everybody says I’m in my birthday suit when I’m naked
‘cause that’s the way I was born. I think my other grandma started that back
before I can remember.
Dad asked what I thought of church
and I told him the windows were awful pretty and I described the organ pipes
but I thought the rest was pretty boring. I told him I wasn’t too happy about
drinking Jesus’ blood after Thomas had stuck his finger in it which made him
laugh. It seemed like he already knew the story. I asked him what he thought of
heaven and he said he didn’t think much of it. He said he was busy enough
worrying about this life to get involved with another one which made sense to
me.
Wednesday, February 19, 2014
Instinct -- an Orvie story
I'm writing another book, this one about a boy growing up on a small farm in the 1940s. His name is Orvie and these are his stories.
Dad docks my allowance a nickel for
every Colorado potato grub he finds Ya see, if I can find and squash all the orange
bunches of, what-a-ya-call-it, eggs, I guess, before they hatch there won’t be
any of those red things hatching out which is what eats the potato leaves. You
wouldn’t believe how much they can eat and how fast they grow. Why I’ve seen it
where there was just stems left. That was before Dad had the idea of hiring me
to go after ‘em. I can spot the eggs easy enough, they’re bright orange, but it
sure would be easier if they laid ‘em on top of the leaves. I gotta to pull
back every plant on both sides to check for the buggers. Once they hatch the
bastards head for the top of the plant to eat where, of course, they are easy for
Dad to spot and he checks the patch every day.
My dad isn’t a bad guy. If I do a
real good job on the egg clusters once a week in normal weather and twice a
week if it is nasty hot, I can kill all of them before they hatch. Besides, I
can tell when dad is getting ready to do his tour of the gardens and get out
there ahead of him just squashing any grubs that I missed. He usually leaves
his inspection of the potato rows ‘til last and I don’t think he counts all the
ones he sees. I’ve seen him squash a few without saying anything or docking my
pay.
I gotta tell ya, that is tedious
work though--bending and looking under the leaves. I try to keep my mind off
the heat and the mosquitoes. Mostly I think about Ginny. She’s not my
girlfriend. I don’t even talk to her ‘sept maybe “hi”; but she just pops in my
mind a lot. She’s on my school bus and I try to work it out so I’m right behind
her when we get on the bus coming home and on a really good day I’ll be able to
sit behind her; that way, when I’m getting into my seat, I can bend over real
close and smell her hair. Gosh, I can smell it now.
She lives on a horse farm nearly
five miles away. Last week I rode my bike over to her house, well, to the end
of her lane. Her house is down a long lane and all their fields have white
fences around them. I was hoping I would see her; maybe she would be out
brushing her horse and I could just ride down her lane and say “hi.” No luck. I
just sat there on my bike rocking back and forth wishing I could at least catch
a glimpse of her. She has the most wonderful really blond hair.
I get paid for picking cucumber beetles. That’s the allowance
that gets taken out of. Pretty good allowance, I’d say. It only took me two
years to save up for my bike. I’m saving up for a car now. I don’t get docked
for any cucumber beetles my dad finds. They’re a lot trickier because you can’t
see their eggs and when they are grubs, that’s before they turn into beetles,
they are underground. Worst of all potato beetles don’t hardly ever try to get
away so they’re easy to squash but when cucumber beetles see me they usually
stop moving but as soon as I move toward them they fly or drop or run. Ya gotta
wonder how they know I’m after them; and why do they do different things? And
how am I going to get down this row without being bored out ‘a my tree?
When I’m not thinking about Ginny I
get to thinking about the beetles. I’ve got this game I play with the ‘em; I
pretend they’re my friends in another life. Well, it’s not exactly another life
it’s like if life was a pinball game? I would be the pinball? But I’d also be
playing the pinball game but as the pinball I wouldn’t really know that
someone, actually myself, would be playing the game. Awe, well, I hope you get
it. Now in this game it’s not just me and my pinball. In this game I am the
star of the show but my friends can also come into the game as different
characters.
So my friends are watching me in
the game in the cucumber patch, like they are hanging around the pinball
machine, and one of them says, “Let’s go play hid and seek with Orvie.”
“Count me in! I’m going to freeze
when he comes along so he won’t see me,” says another.
“That won’t work. Have you
forgotten the yellow stripes on your back? You’d have a better chance if you
dropped off the leaf.”
“I’m going to do a Peter Pan and
fly away,” says a fourth.
Got to admit that’s a pretty good
strategy but the one I hate the most is: “I’m going to run down the stem. If he
tries to squash me, the spikes on the stem will hurt like hell.” Now you see,
that’s not real friendly.
I wouldn’t exactly say that hide
and seek (and thinking of Ginny and a car) make the job fun but it does help
pass the time plus now I’m wondering if instinct really is something like that.
I haven’t heard of a better idea.
Tuesday, March 26, 2013
Bad Words
When my grandson accused me of
using a bad word I learned my son-in-law had told his son that “stupid” is a
bad word. I quoted George Carlin to my son-in-law: “no such thing as bad words,
bad thoughts, but no bad words.” He disagreed and we left it there though I
have been thinking that the so called “bad word” could be an opening for
discussion of why it was used; what was meant; might it be hurtful, etc.
I hadn’t seen Mike for a dozen
years though we had been corresponding since college—first mail and phone and
now mostly email. We were heading for his house from the airport when I, for
some reason, said something like, “Birthers” are stupid. When I concluded my
mini-rant there was silence from Mike and then he said, “My son and I have a
word we use when a discussion should be stopped. We say “football”. Pause. “Football”.
I said no more at the time. Mike
keeps his thoughts pretty close. Over the years I have asked for his political
opinion and it has usually differed from mine though thoughtfully and not
radically different which is why I had barged into the birther issue, I really
hadn’t imagined he would believe someone could become President of the US
without unquestionably having been born in the US.
Before my visit ended I learned that he thought Obama was part of a conspiracy.
That thought hadn’t occurred to me so I put my mind to it.
I’ve read enough Robert Ludlum to
be able to imagine someone getting into the birth certificate files in Hawaii
and inserting a forged document. It would probably be even easier to insert a
birth announcement in the newspapers and to change the records in the hospital.
I’m sure there are modern day G. Gordon
Liddys around but who hired the person or persons to carry out the
conspiracy and when was it initiated and why?
Why, I suppose is a quest for power.
Someone or some group like Americans for an Americaner Way or My Way or the
Highway wants to own a president. They see the speech Obama makes at the
Democratic Convention in 2004 and think, this is a guy we could probably
control and we could probably get him elected so they go to work...damn, that
doesn’t work because Obama had already written his memoir loaded with information
about his life that could be checked; unless the memoir was not quite true. In
that case the power-seeking group does some fact checking and finds that he
lied about his birthplace. They go to work to fix the problem.
It’s actually more difficult to
figure out how Obama could have been born outside the United
States since his mother was never out of the
country until he was six years old.
Unlike my grandson I don’t have a
father to sit me down and discuss my use of the word “stupid” so I’ve had to
give it some thought on my own:
Thought one) assumptions are always
dangerous. Tread softly.
Thought two) “Stupid” is not a word
that should be applied to an individual or even a group of individuals. If done
directly, it is sure to raise hackles. If done indirectly (behind the back), it
is dishonest.
Thought three) I’ll try but there
are times…
Sunday, March 17, 2013
Porcupines and gardens
I thought it was groundhogs eating
my broccoli until the day I saw a porcupine up on hind legs munching happily.
In my opinion the only good thing about porcupines is that they don’t run away
relying on their quills for protection. The fisher is their only predator;
fishers have learned to grab the porcupine’s nose, flip it over and attack its
unquilled belly. Few porcupines have learned that Homo sapiens have learned how
to shot a gun. The porcupine was still munching away when I returned. One down but I soon learned that was just the tip of the problem.
Porcupines
are generally nocturnal. Trying to protect my crops I pitched a tent next to
the garden. Sure enough the animals woke me; I shot two in the Brussels sprouts
and one in the apple tree that night. It took two years and about a dozen
porcupines shot before I found an electric mesh fence that worked well for a
couple of years. I thought the problem was solved. Since it is a bother (not
much of one but nonetheless) and who wants to do something that isn’t
necessary, I decided to wait until I had a problem before putting it up. At the
first sign of damage I put up the fence but this time the animal managed to get
through the fence.
The
porcupines won time after time. All they had to do was find a place they could
get their nose under the fence and the quills would insulate them the rest of
the way. I pegged the fence down where they got through and they found another
way in. I pegged all the places they might be able to get through and they dug
down far enough to make it. I got a motion detector camera thinking if I knew
when they visited I could be waiting for them. There was no pattern to
visitations. I got a motion detector that would turn on a light. That didn’t
work.
If you have
a problem with porcupines, I think I can help. Things you need to know: 1)
they like to eat corn, cauliflower, broccoli, Brussels sprouts, apples, pears
and the bark on trees, 2) they mostly eat at night but can sometimes be seen in
the garden or eating grass at sunset 3) I’m convinced they can communicate
something as complex as how to get under an electric fence 4) they are
excellent climbers and if you are looking for them during the day, your best
bet is to look up.
Solution:
1) The electric fence is great. I have 20 inch VersaNet from www.premier1supplies.com Put it up before the animals get a taste of
your garden because once they find such delicacies they will be persistent in
getting through. If they get through the fence, put it outside the garden on
mowed sod as it is harder for the animals to dig under.
Solution 2.) If the garden is close to the house and
you have a gun, get a motion detector and set it up to pick up motion in the
area they will be interested in. Set it up so the motion detector turns on a
radio in your bedroom. You also need to have the motion detector turn on a
light as it will not work with a radio alone.
I hope you
don’t have a problem as great as mine. I am still killing 6 to 10 porcupines a
year.
Monday, February 4, 2013
Benghazi flap
From
my conservative friend in Ohio:
I’m
very angry over the Benghazi fiasco, but I am
absolutely astounded that the liberals around the country (yourself included)
are not.
The Benghazi
flap (not the incident but the flap that you support and are angry liberals are
not) is primarily political; an attack on the Democratic President and on a
potential future Democratic President. Before you throw up your hands or throw
up please consider your reaction to previous terrorist attacks.
April 18, 1983
a suicide bomber drove a truck load of explosives into the US
embassy in Beirut killing 63, 17 of
them were Americans. Of the Americans killed, eight worked for the Central
Intelligence Agency, including the CIA's top Middle East analyst and Near East
director, Robert Ames, Station Chief Kenneth Haas and most of the Beirut staff
of the CIA. President Regan said that the attack “will not deter us from our
goals of peace in the region.” Senator Goldwater said, "I think it's high
time we bring the boys home."
Did you feel similarly after the October 23, 1983 terrorist attack in Beirut
that killed 241 American servicemen? U.S. President Ronald Regan called the
attack a "despicable act” and pledged to keep a military force in Lebanon.
Secretary of Defense Casper Weinberger, who had privately advised the
administration against stationing U.S. Marines in Lebanon,
said there would be no change in the U.S.'s
Lebanon policy.
Did this make you very angry?
December 12, that same year, a suicide truck bomber drove
through the gates of the US
embassy in Kuwait City
killing 63. It would have been more if the bomb hadn’t misfired. Three
terrorist attacks in one year! Were you outraged that nothing had been done to
protect our embassies in dangerous places after the first attack? I don’t
recall liberals attacking Republican President Reagan either.
Feb 26, 1993
World Trade
Center bombing, first terrorist
attack on US
soil killed six and injured over 1,000. Were you angry at the Democratic
President Clinton?
August 7, 1998
two US
embassies in East African were bombed by al Qaeda killing 223; 12 were
Americans. President Clinton ordered missile attacks in retaliation one of
which knocked out a pharmaceutical factory. The administration said there was
ample evidence the factory was producing chemical weapons, but a thorough
investigation after the missile strikes revealed the intelligence to be false.
I don’t recall an uproar from the right or left.
October 12, 2000
seventeen American sailors were killed in the terrorist attack on the USS Cole.
Did you feel the same about any of these as you feel about Benghazi?
My feeling about all of them is pretty
much the same, sadness over the loss of life and hope for a better future.
Thursday, January 24, 2013
How Congress can cut spending
Line item expense reduction
Ronald Regan and Bill Clinton both
asked for line item veto power in State of the Union addresses but the Supreme
Court has ruled it unconstitutional because it circumvents a power vested
in Congress. I suggest the concept should be used by Congress to decrease
federal spending. Here’s how it might work:
Wire the House Chamber with
“voting” buttons that will record each congress person’s vote. When a button is
pushed by the congress person their vote is recorded and available to anyone to
see so that a voter or a newspaper can easily find out how any individual has
voted. The total is displayed in the Chamber at the time of the vote.
Both Houses of Congress meet
together as for the State of the Union. They are
informed beforehand on what will be voted on that day giving lobbyists and
voters time to fill their ears with biased information or, less cynically, to
inform themselves more fully on the issue. There will be no discussion or
debate during the meeting. A question will be projected on a screen for all
including the television cameras to see and then the vote will be taken. The
results of the vote, totals, will be projected for all to see. Television pundits
can comment to their audience.
An Example: Congress and the media
are told the farm bill will be up for spending cut review in a week. On the
fateful day Representative and Senators take their seats and log into the
network that they are present. The issue flashes on the screen:
Crop Insurance
Over the past decade taxpayers have
paid $59.5 billion
Your vote”
A. no
change
B. eliminate
for wealthiest farmers
C. reduce
premium subsidy
D. eliminate
federal subsidy of crop insurance
If the vote for A or D is 60% or more that vote carries. If
B receives 41% or more another vote screen is displayed:
Define
“wealthiest farmers.
A. grossing
over $5 million annually
B. grossing
over $2.5 million annually
C. grossing
over $1 million annually
D. grossing
over $500,000 annually
If C receives 41% or more:
Reduce premium
from current 62% to:
A. 50
%
B. 40%
C. 25%
D. 10%
The congressional delegation from Rhode
Island might vote to eliminate the subsidy while the
delegation from Nebraska will
most likely vote for no change. This system is far from perfect since lobbyists
might well tell the Rhode Island
folks that they will make a significant contribution to their campaigns if they
vote no change. Perhaps we should allow them to vote for a secret vote. If the
substantive vote was one their constituents, we the people, didn’t like, someone
running against them would have them on record as voting for a secret vote.
This is a rough proposal with room
for refinement but the basic idea is the best shot we have at making serious
budget cuts. Both Republicans and Democrats have refused to get specific about
budget cuts because any specific cuts will stir up a hive of reaction and no
elected person wants to stick their hand in the hive.
I do think that corporate welfare
could be cut without loosing votes--gross contributions from the corporations
that now unduly influence our congresspeople but not votes. I would sure like
to know if my congressional delegation voted to keep subsidizing Exxon just to
name one of the very profitable companies our tax dollars subsidize.
Thursday, January 10, 2013
Genetically Modified Salmon
FDA poised to approve genetically engineered salmon despite unknown risks to human health. Inevitable accidental release of transgenic fish into the wild could devastate native fish populations and ecosystems!
I used the following link to submit my comments to the FDA
http://app.streamsend.com/c/17771811/11320/mwzfwTR/9pOA?redirect_to=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.regulations.gov%2F%23%21submitComment%3BD%3DFDA-2011-N-0899-0001
One must wonder what the point of the FDA is if it allows something so potentially dangerous to our health as genetically modified food without extensive testing. Your past record is bad enough. It should be clear that a) many people don’t want to eat genetically modified food that you haven’t tested (The industry should be urging you to test the safety of these foods. That they aren’t should be a red flag for you.) b) The industry fights every effort to label GM food; another indication they know there are problems. c) Most importantly GM crops have already escaped into the wild. You must know that genetically modified salmon will. If you allow it, ultimately, salmon will be contaminated world-wide.
Please, please, please don’t do this.
For more information:
http://app.streamsend.com/c/17771811/11318/mwzfwTR/9pOA?redirect_to=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.cornucopia.org%2F2013%2F01%2Faction-alert-genetically-engineered-salmon%2F
I used the following link to submit my comments to the FDA
http://app.streamsend.com/c/17771811/11320/mwzfwTR/9pOA?redirect_to=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.regulations.gov%2F%23%21submitComment%3BD%3DFDA-2011-N-0899-0001
One must wonder what the point of the FDA is if it allows something so potentially dangerous to our health as genetically modified food without extensive testing. Your past record is bad enough. It should be clear that a) many people don’t want to eat genetically modified food that you haven’t tested (The industry should be urging you to test the safety of these foods. That they aren’t should be a red flag for you.) b) The industry fights every effort to label GM food; another indication they know there are problems. c) Most importantly GM crops have already escaped into the wild. You must know that genetically modified salmon will. If you allow it, ultimately, salmon will be contaminated world-wide.
Please, please, please don’t do this.
For more information:
http://app.streamsend.com/c/17771811/11318/mwzfwTR/9pOA?redirect_to=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.cornucopia.org%2F2013%2F01%2Faction-alert-genetically-engineered-salmon%2F
Tuesday, January 8, 2013
Strap on your weapons
I chided my friend for getting a concealed weapons permit “as
a deterrent”, he said, and I suggested a better deterrent would be if he
strapped it on his hip. Right here in Portland,
Maine someone apparently thought my idea
was a good one and wandered around the city carrying a loaded AR-15. The police
received 65 calls but, since he was doing nothing illegal, they could not even
get his name. Imagine the Wild West with assault weapons—Wyatt Earp, Jessie
James, Tombstone, OK
Coral. Imagine the good old days with today’s weapons. Surely one of the three
cowboys Wyatt shot in 30 second at the OK Coral would have gotten him first.
The NRA got all upset because a newspaper printed the
addresses of all those with gun permits in its reading area. Hey, NRA, we keep
hearing that owning a gun was a good idea for protection and that it would be
less likely nutcases would open fire in a school if there were armed people
there. If you believe that you ought to believe that letting people know you
were armed and dangerous would be a pretty good deterrent. Wouldn’t criminals
take a list like that and decide those were the houses to avoid?
Instead the reaction has been that publishing the list has
made it dangerous for the gun owners. What?! The neighbors without guns are
going to attack with baseball bats? Or will those with guns start attacking
others with guns, you know, like a feud.
Assault weapons should not only be banned, they should be confiscated.
That would do little to reduce the nearly 30 deaths by guns that occur daily in
our great country but it would slow down the insane.
Tuesday, January 1, 2013
Eric Weiner, an author I highly recommend
Eric Weiner has given me great pleasure in two books, The Geography of Bliss and Man Seeks God. There is nothing better
than learning good stuff from a thoughtful person with a good sense of humor.
Toward the end of his quest it dawns on him: “God is to
religion as food is to a menu. Both the menu and the religion suggest a variety
of options, and while the waiter can make recommendations, ultimately the
choice is ours. To say you know God because you are religious is like saying
you have dined well because you read the menu.”
I can’t imagine anyone not enjoying Mr. Weiner’s books.
Labels:
Eric Weiner,
happiness,
happy,
heaven,
humor,
philosophy,
self-knowledge
Monday, December 17, 2012
Put an armed person in every school.
Geraldo Rivera opined that there should be armed guards in
every school or, at least, have someone, the principle, a janitor, a history
teacher, with a gun. This is a bad idea on so many fronts but take just one.
Turn Sandy Hook into a video game and
give the principle a gun and you play the principle. You hear gun shots,
breaking glass and someone coming down the hall. Do you, gun in hand, open the
door? Would you be able to shoot the man with the automatic weapon before he
shot you? Would you have an automatic weapon, too, and just spray bullets
through the door without seeing the intruder, without any care for any other
person who might be in the hall?
Let’s change the game and give the gun to the janitor. He
hears shots, grabs his gun and goes running. He sees the principle lying in a
pool of blood and hears shots from a classroom. He runs to the classroom and
shoots the man with the gun. Good job! Only ten kids dead instead of twenty.
My idea is to eliminate automatic weapons, that is, weapons
that fire continuously as long as you hold down the trigger. If this guy had to
pull the trigger each time he fired it would have slow him down. He would not
likely have put so many rounds into the principle and each of his victims. Unless
he was an excellent shot there would probably have been more survivors and he
would not have been able to shoot as many people. Sure demented people and/or
people who have been desensitized by shoot-um-up video games will still be
around and will still do horrible things. Sure we should try to keep any gun
out of the hands of the demented and we should do something about the
desensitizing effect of some video games but the number one, hands down, action
we should take is to make it illegal to manufacture, sell or own any weapon
that fires multiple rounds with one pull of the trigger.
I have asked the members of my congressional delegation to
sponsor such legislation. Now!
Sunday, December 9, 2012
US debt, defict
A letter from my sister
A few weeks have passed since the election, and what is
happening is all pretty boring. I am getting turned off from
politics. All that hype about Benghazi and now Egypt and Syria…it is so
depressing, in particular with regards to America becoming involved.
America has its own
problems. America is deeply in
debt. Why the hell does America have to lend
money or provide military support to other countries unless we are OK
ourselves? Gosh darn, we are not OK! Our debt is humungous!
Now as you know I don’t know anything about economics, but I simply cannot
understand why the US for example
continues to lend enormous amounts of money to other countries when we are in
debt ourselves. It is just so
disgusting, I am about to crawl back into my shell.
Dear Sister Chris,
Unplugging the news is not a bad idea, especially if you are
getting riled up. I did that for several years and it was great. However, if
you want to stay in touch there are better sources than FOX news. If you can
get the News Hour on public television or news on public radio, you will get a
much more balanced and intelligent report. If not on television, I'm sure you
can get them on the internet.
The debt is a problem. When George W. sent taxpayers back their money because,
he said, it was our money and we should get it back, he should have used it to
pay down a chunk of debt because the debt was ours too. At the time I
commented that he was planning to destroy the government by starving it. Then
came the wars, one with some justification the other for no reason than to
further bankrupt the country. Then came the recession.
There is an interesting thing about the federal government.
It makes money when people make money since it taxes income. Thus when someone
buys a dinner at our restaurant, we pay income tax on what is left over after
expenses. The expenses include buying food and booze and paying employees. The
employees pay taxes on the money we give them as do the purveyors on the money
we pay them and they in turn pay money to the people who supply them and so on.
This is why stimulus programs, though turning up on the expense side of the ledger, make sense on the income side.
I have been an advocate for getting out of debt for many
years. I would love to see a balanced budget amendment but, if put into place
without a long range (not too long) plan to reduce the current debt load, it
would probably put us into a depression. A part of that plan needs to be
putting money in the hands of people who will spend it because the more money
changes hands the more revenue the country gets. That is part of the President’s
plan (stimulus spending) Cutting government programs that put government
workers out of work is recessionary. That is also part of the Presidents plan and
the Republican; it better be balanced with stimulus which the Republican plan
is not. Giving money to people who will spend it will help growth.
Whenever someone talks about cutting foreign aid as part of deficit
control they are either stupid or blowing smoke. Write them off. The money we
give to foreign countries is minuscule, less than 1% of the federal budget. I
won't go into reasons for it as you can Google US foreign aid as percent of
budget to find answers.
Labels:
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Republicans,
right wingnuts,
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wealthy
Monday, November 19, 2012
FOX again
People who think FOX is “Fair and balanced” should not watch
it because they will buy the distortions, inaccuracies and lies; but for those
who know that this is entertainment, not news, it can be fun.
Lou Dobbs has his own show on FOX
which I haven’t watched but he is frequently brought in to other shows for his
political insight. A persistent theme on FOX is ridiculing Obama supporters for
blaming Bush for all the problems of the past four years, especially the
economy. It gave me a good laugh when he said last Friday that the economy is
coming back because of the Bush tax cuts which President Obama wants to do away
with. My initial bubble of mirth came from the hypocrisy that Bush should not
be blamed for anything bad but he should be credited with anything good. Here
is Lou blaming Obama for wanting to raise taxes on the wealthiest because their
low taxes are the reason the economy is rebounding.
That’s also
funny because the tax cuts came in 2001 yet they somehow did nothing to avert
the recession that began in December 2007 and by the time Obama took office
unemployment was up to 7.8%. It had gone up steadily from 5% to 7.8% in Bush’s
last year in office. Now, in November 2012 Lou, credits The Bush tax cuts with
turning the recession around. I mean, come on, that’s funny.
I recognize
that saying the economy is “rebounding” is an overstatement since unemployment
is really just back to where it was when Obama took office but in the ensuing 4 years it got as high as
the scary 10% figure.
Since I do
try to be fair I’ll tell you that unemployment in 2006 and 2007 was below 5%;
so we could point to the tax cuts made 5 years before as being responsible for
those two years. But then, again, unemployment when Bush was elected was
3.9% (4.2% when he took office but I
couldn’t resist mentioning that it was below 4% for the 4 months prior to his taking
office and went above 5% for the four years after the tax cuts.
I can hear
Lou now, “Don’t confuse me with facts; my mind’s already made up.” That should
be the FOX theme rather than fair and balanced.
Labels:
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unemployment,
wealthy
Legalize drugs
I want to
go on the record, along with ultra conservative William F. Buckley Jr., that drugs
should be legalized. http://old.nationalreview.com/buckley/buckley200406291207.asp
The article
I’ve linked to was written in 2004 but Mr. Buckley first wrote about
legalization of drugs in 1996. You might enjoy this youtube interview.
Reasons for legalizing drugs:
1. Eliminate this source of money for criminals
2. Tax it
3. Regulate it through licensed outlets that would have an
investment and a license to protect which would deter them from selling to
minors.
4. Millions of dollars saved in law enforcement
5. Better use of law enforcement.
6 Millions saved that is now spent on incarceration.
Marijuana is at the forefront of discussion these days. The primary
argument against legalization of marijuana is that it leads to more dangerous
drugs. I have not been able to find any research that supports that claim,
however, intuitively I can see how it well might—that is, as long as it is
illegal. Some who sell marijuana might well be tempted to expand their product
line and sell more dangerous drugs thus someone buying marijuana illegally is
likely to be introduced to a salesperson offering crack, coke, heroin… whatever.
The following links give two views on pot vs booze.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/norm-stamper/420-thoughts-on-pot-vs-al_b_188627.html
Anyone who
looks at pot vs booze and still thinks liquor should be legal, as it currently
is, and that marijuana should be illegal, as it currently is, is getting their
information from a very suspect source. We tried making booze illegal and made
Al Capon very rich so going that direction would not be smart. Legalize
marijuana at least and think seriously about putting all drugs under federal
regulation.
Thursday, November 15, 2012
Attention FOX "News" aficionados
Attention FOX “News” aficionados, I
assume you are Republicans as I once was. If you care about your party, if you
hold the view that smaller government is best, that government that does less
is best, that government should be fiscally responsible; you need to stop
getting what FOX puts forward as news and try some other sources. FOX was and
remains so wrong about the last election from their pundits being 100% wrong in
pre election predictions to their analysis of why Governor Romney and so many
other Republicans lost the election.
What I’m hearing on FOX now is that
it was demographics; they need to get the Latino vote by bringing in Republican
Latino stars like Senator Rubio. There is no discussion about how Romney had to
turn himself into a pretzel to get support from the Tea Party and social issue
folks and then try to untwist himself to appeal to the rest of us. There are
some good Republicans out there. John Huntsman would make a fine president in
my view and Cristy would probably do a good job; certainly his straight from
the shoulder persona is appealing. If O’Riley and Hannity could get their heads
around the concept, they might be able to bring enough focus to make it
possible for the Republican Party to become a positive force in our government but
I see no interest at FOX for bringing us together and they are enough of a
force to make divisiveness work. Clearly some Republican politicians in
Congress get all their news views from FOX. Perhaps all the conservative media
(Murdoch Media) and their Congressional followers want is to keep government
from working. I see some of them nodding their heads. Unfortunately, they
really don’t have a concept of what that would mean…to them personally.
FOX folks are found of saying that
they are the most watched news. I will listen more carefully the next time I
hear the claim to make sure they are saying “on cable” which is true; they have
more viewers than MSNBC or CNN however MSNBC and CNN combined have more viewers
which is significant when you consider that FOX stands alone for biased
conservative television. If that is what turns you on, you have only one
source. All other sources--CNN, MSNBC ABC, CBS, NBC and PBS--by FOX’s definition
are “liberal media”. FOX does have more viewers than MSNBC which is liberal
biased television, not many more viewers but that, at least, is a reasonably
fair comparison.
FOX’s liberal media might better be
called corporate media as they all, even PBS, rely heavily on corporate sponsors/advertisers.
There is even evidence that mainstream media has been influenced by the federal
government (I’m thinking of the lead-up to our preemptive attack of Iraq which
cost over 4,000 American lives.)It may be impossible to get unbiased news but The News Hour on PBS and National Public Radio are pretty close and checking in on the biased folks can be helpful as long as you balance them yourself.
Wednesday, May 9, 2012
Are Maine Voters Crazy?
My friend from Ohio
wrote: What’s with the recent election … Ron Paul? Can he even find Maine
on a map? Considering the mild winter, the good folks of the north
woods can’t even claim brain freeze. They’ll have to go some to
match Minnesota … Wrestler for
Governor and gag writer of US
Senator … However, this is a good start. So, what gives?
Dear Old Right-wing Nut Friend:
I gather you support Mitt which is fine; I think he has the
potential to be a reasonably good president. But if not Mitt, who was your “anybody-but-Mitt”
front runner—Gingrich, Santorum?
All things considered I think the good Republicans of Maine
(you do realize you are questioning Republican voters?) made a fine choice. It
was unfortunate that the Republican establishment apparently, to the Paul
supporters who followed it all very closely, pulled some fast ones on the vote
count of the local caucuses. The Paul supporters, those I know at least, are
very dedicated. When I talk with them they sound a lot like you. They certainly
pulled a good surprise on the establishment folks at the state convention.
I’m rather proud of Maine’s
voting record in the 40 years I’ve been here. Senators Cohen and Mitchell were
two of the best Washington has
ever seen and Senator Muskie… well you probably don’t like the Clean Air Act
and the Clean Water Act so I guess you think we Mainers were brain dead giving
him 4 terms in the Senate. Of course his tears did knock him out of running for
President. I guess it’s a darn good thing Republicans are allowed to cry otherwise
your Rep Boehner might have to go back to the family bar.
Our current governor, however, is reason to question our
voting acumen but he got less than 40% of the vote.
I’m proud of our two current Senators, both Republicans.
Unfortunately Olympia couldn’t
stand the partisanship and who could blame her after working on health care
reform for months only to be told by Republican leadership to lay off and then
having Boehner say repeatedly that Republicans were left out of the debate. The
good news is that Independent Angus King is running for her seat and I’m sure he
will win. He was one of two Independent governors we have had and was the best
governor of all in the past 40 years. He has a great sense of humor and a great
record. He is a friend and I love him.
In a way I wish I lived in Ohio
so I could join you in your throw-the-bums-out voting pledge but our
congressional delegation is really quite good.
Monday, April 9, 2012
Defining Love
I was on the ladder painting the house when a nearby religious radio station overpowered NPR and I heard someone railing against homosexuals.
I was amazed at how much hatred I was hearing. The evangelist said God defined homosexuality as a crime and further that God requires death for homosexuality. I started down the ladder but before I could retune the radio this same person said that he loved homosexuals. He mused, “How can I love these criminals who should be put to death? I love them because Jesus teaches that we should love our neighbors and even our enemies.”
“How sad,” I thought. “That person doesn’t understand love.” But then I thought, what is my understanding of love? I turned off the radio and climbed back up the ladder to think that over.
It certainly didn’t seem loving to condemn someone to death or call him a sinner saying he would go to hell. That seemed more like hate than love yet he saw no contradiction in what he was saying. As a Christian he knew that he was supposed to love everyone even his enemies. Did he understand the notion of loving everyone in some way I didn’t? It seemed that he was just using the word without giving it any meaning. Try as I might I couldn’t come up with any nature of love that would allow such harsh judgment. However, labeling what he was saying as hateful sure wasn’t getting me any closer to my understanding of love.
When I climbed off the ladder I went straight to my dictionary but no definition was particularly helpful even in describing my love for my wife, Barbara. Closest was “strong passionate affection” but my feeling for Barbara is much more than that. When I tell her I love her I mean I will do my best to never make her unhappy. The definitions for the verb “love” all started with “to have”. Shouldn’t love be an active verb? If so, what action? The dictionary tells me that to run I should move my legs rapidly. I’m not expecting to find a graphic definition like that for love but maybe there should be some reference to the body. We are fond of thinking of love as coming from the heart. Have we placed the seat of love in the heart because we don’t think we have any control over loving? Love and the heart don’t really have any connection. To love our neighbors or our enemies has got to be a conscious action. If someone sticks a gun in my ribs and says give me your money, I can’t see ever getting to some higher plane of consciousness in which I will be flooded with a feeling of love for this guy. It will take some work, some thinking to get over my gut feeling.
Nose still in the dictionary I look for definitions for two words similar to love (venerate and like) and the opposite of love (hate). These definitions all begin with “to regard” and the definition of to regard is “to think of with a particular feeling”.
Hate, venerate and like are things we do in our mind. While feelings are involved, still, we have some control.
Affection figures heavily in the definitions for love. Back to the dictionary. “Affection n 1. a settled good will, love, or zealous attachment: as the affection of a parent for his child. Good will could describe my desire to never make Barbara unhappy but it still doesn’t go far enough. Not only is it important that I not make her unhappy I wish happiness for her at all times from all angles. The same for my children. Ditto for my friends. In fact, I don’t wish anyone ill will. But the definition is not just “good will” but “settled good will”. Apparently, by this definition, there has to be some history involved with affection.
I could also say I have a “zealous attachment” to my immediate family but I wouldn’t say I am zealously attached to my friends. Are there different kinds of love? Did I love my father the same as I loved my mother? Do I love my son the same as I love my wife? Do I love my daughter the same as I love my son? As I think about these real relationships I realize that my feelings for each are different. Feelings! Do I feel the same about my father as I feel about my mother? My son as my wife? My daughter as my son? No. My feelings are different. My emotional response when I think of each is different.
What of the love for my neighbor or my enemies as expressed in The Bible. I don’t see anything in the definitions of love or affection that addresses love for everybody. Then it occurred to me that perhaps there was just one love, or rather a core love, a trunk from which the various forms of love branch.
On the ladder the next day I didn’t seem to be any closer to understanding love and then it occurred to me that what bothered me about the radio preacher was his judgment of homosexuals. I thought of my yoga teacher, a vegetarian which she carries to a judgment of all animals that eat other animals. She also preaches universal love. I once asked her if she loved hawks.
“Yes, but I don’t love how they eat. I wish they would learn to eat nuts and berries.”
“If you love them, shouldn’t you accept their nature, their being, as it is?”
Acceptance. Yeah. Can I imagine love without acceptance? No. Acceptance must be in the definition of love I’m looking for.
At some point in every session my yoga instructor tells the class to breathe in good thoughts, among them unconditional love. Of course love should be unconditional but, hold on a minute, is there even such a thing as conditional love? What might be a condition of love? I love you as long as you don’t kill someone. What kind of a friend would that be? If you kill someone, you will need my love more. Would I abandon a friend in the time of greatest need? Even traditional wedding vows deny conditional love—“to have and to hold, for better or for worse, for richer, for poorer, in sickness and in health … until death do us part.”
Love must be unconditional acceptance. That covers the problem I had with the radio evangelist. If he accepted people’s sexual orientation or preference, he wouldn’t be judging them. It is something that I can actually do if I put my mind to it.
I’m still working on this core definition for the verb to love. I’m sure unconditional acceptance is necessary. A warm feeling also seems like a good addition at least for those with whom I come in contact—maybe not the guy with the gun. I’m also thinking that respect would be a good addition. These are all things that I can actually strive to do.
Getting away from my judgment that the radio evangelist doesn’t understand love is difficult. I want to rationalize and say that I accept him but I judge his belief. I certainly don’t hate him. I have no illusion that I could change him. I have thought about him, given him a family, found respect for his commitment to his beliefs accepted that he believes he loves his neighbors and his enemies and through this empathy exercise I have developed something of a warm feeling toward him. He must be good at his job to have a radio show. He probably brings hope and solace to many. In a way he is my enemy because of the hatred he preaches. Loving my enemies is tough.
All this thinking about love has helped me get over road rage. When someone pulls out in front of me now I’m just thankful I was able to slow down without an accident. It has done wonders for my blood pressure; much better than the days when I would ride up on the back of the offending driver and turn on my lights. Once, with the whole family in the car, I turned on the windshield wipers by mistake in my road-rage. “You sure showed him, Dad.” That has become a family joke.
I may never learn to love my enemies but I certainly enjoy driving more now that I have accepted that bad driving practices do not make bad people and I am making progress with my feelings for the evangelist.
Monday, March 26, 2012
Pity the Poor Rich
When my son was born we were living below the poverty level. I’m bragging because it was more or less intentional. I grew up lower middle-class (After my father left when I was 13 my mother went back to work as a teacher and raised me with no child support.) Currently my wife and I are middle to upper middle-class. When she wants to buy something that before our changed circumstances would have given me grief which I would pass on to her I now say, “No problem, we’re rich.” which she hates to hear me say.
Am I happier “rich” than poor? Not at all, in fact, I believe the years we lived below the poverty level were the happiest of my life. I believe the reason was that I was doing meaningful things: raising food for my family, cutting, splitting and carrying wood to keep us warm, making do on a shoe-string, fixing things that broke. I had occasional part-time jobs during that period but as a bartender, for example, making a good drink or making a customer laugh or getting a big tip did not provide much satisfaction. Earning enough money to pay for utilities, insurance and the like was necessary but didn’t have the same instant payback in satisfaction over an accomplishment as work around the farm had. Getting through a very busy shift in which I was so busy the time went by in a blur was satisfying, doing a good job perhaps better than most others could have done it, felt good; but so much of the job was, well, just a job, whereas fixing a leaking water pipe, rebuilding the mower carburetor, raising, slaughtering, and butchering the beef that would feed the family for a year, growing, harvesting, canning, pickling, freezing and otherwise storing enough vegetables and fruit to feed the family for a year; ahh, nothing I did before or have done since provided that kind of satisfaction.
The difference now? Someone comes and picks up my riding mower to perform annual maintenance and to fix anything that breaks. There is no pride in that. I tell myself I am providing work for others; my financial good fortune is trickling down and that’s a good thing, isn’t it? It’s good for the economy, right? Plumbing was my least favorite home maintenance job but I did it and though I hated squirming around in the crawl spaces under our house and hated it even more when I turned on the water and found that one of the joints I had soldered had a leak and I would have to drain the water and dry the pipe before I could try again; but when the joints were good I came close to doing cartwheels. Now we call a plumber.
I was healthier when we heated with wood. It was our only source of heat for 20 years. Carrying half a dozen armloads of wood in every day in the winter kept me fit during the time of year when there wasn’t a lot of exercise. We still have the stoves and a woodshed full of wood but we also have an oil burner. I don’t have to carry in wood all winter so I hardly do it at all. Burning oil doesn’t make me feel good but, what the hell, I’m rich. Do you think that is an excuse for lazy?
Perhaps my years below the poverty level helped me avoid ethical problems studies have found with the rich.
Thursday, March 15, 2012
Integrity
The pundits say Greg Smith who left Goldman Sax in a very public way will have trouble getting another job on Wall Street. If I were in a position to hire him for a Wall Street firm, I'd be offering him a job right now. Following is part of the op-ed appearing in the New York Times.
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/14/opinion/why-i-am-leaving-goldman-sachs.html?_r=1&ref=business
"It might sound surprising to a skeptical public, but culture was always a vital part of Goldman Sachs’s success. It revolved around teamwork, integrity, a spirit of humility, and always doing right by our clients. The culture was the secret sauce that made this place great and allowed us to earn our clients’ trust for 143 years. It wasn’t just about making money; this alone will not sustain a firm for so long. It had something to do with pride and belief in the organization. I am sad to say that I look around today and see virtually no trace of the culture that made me love working for this firm for many years. I no longer have the pride, or the belief."
He is the kind of person Wall Street needs.
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/14/opinion/why-i-am-leaving-goldman-sachs.html?_r=1&ref=business
"It might sound surprising to a skeptical public, but culture was always a vital part of Goldman Sachs’s success. It revolved around teamwork, integrity, a spirit of humility, and always doing right by our clients. The culture was the secret sauce that made this place great and allowed us to earn our clients’ trust for 143 years. It wasn’t just about making money; this alone will not sustain a firm for so long. It had something to do with pride and belief in the organization. I am sad to say that I look around today and see virtually no trace of the culture that made me love working for this firm for many years. I no longer have the pride, or the belief."
He is the kind of person Wall Street needs.
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