Glass Half Empty

April 17, 2013

I don’t usually think of myself as a glass-half-empty kind of guy. As staunch supporter of the rights guaranteed citizens by the US Constitution, I should be overjoyed that the Senate failed to pass their background check legislation today by a 6-vote margin. Still, I can’t help wondering how the forty-six Senators — who at some point took a solemn oath to uphold the constitution — took the position they did today. I wonder, what do the words “the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed” mean to those oath takers?

The choice of the word infringed is interesting, don’t you think? It immediately brings to mind exactly this kind of nibbling at the edges, knowing they can’t get away with the whole slice at one go. I hope next election day, we can make the halls of Congress half-empty of those oath breakers.

Programming is Complete

April 13, 2013

http://www.infowars.com/californians-sign-petition-to-ban-and-confiscate-firearms/

Unintended Consequences

April 5, 2013

Kudzu
(Kudzu photo by Scott Ehardt)

Do you ever consider the history of unintended consequences? One instance that comes to mind for me, is the introduction of the mongoose into Hawaii. I served aboard the Fast Frigate USS Whipple in the ’70’s. The Whipple’s home port was Pearl Harbor. During that period, I learned about the introduction of the Indian Mongoose to the Hawaiian Islands in the 1880’s. The idea was to control rats that were proving to be pests on the sugar cane plantations. It sounded like a good idea. Others who had tried it before in Jamaica claimed it was a faultless plan. Trouble is, rats are nocturnal. The Indian Mongoose is not. The hungry mongoose does, however, like bird eggs. To this day, they endanger many bird species on the Islands. Rats are unabated.

Kudzu, a vining plant that was introduced from Japan into the United States at the Japanese pavilion in the 1876 Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia is now spreading at the rate of 150,000 acres annually, in the South. It grows fast, choking native vegetation.

Today, I was testing a power supply circuit that on its own worked well. But coupled with another power supply circuit on the same design, exhibited strange behavior on power-up. This interaction will require a fair amount of detailed study to explain. Whether the “fix” proves feasible, remains to be seen.

My point is that man is not as smart as he thinks himself. Unintended consequences abound. We all know examples. So why, does the majority think that the proper course of action is to eschew the wisdom of the ages. Why do so many think that big government programs to legislate every aspect of human life is the way to the ideal utopia?

Our forefathers knew from experience, that rule from an unfettered monarchy propagated an unending and unprofitable series of unexpected consequences upon the general populace. This is a lesson that has been trained out of the modern generation by educators who serve the powers that be. (They are paid by the government, remember.)

Maybe it’s time to start thinking about the “monarchy” in the U.S. We have been largely indoctrinated to believe that we could vote occasionally, and our freedoms would be preserved. But look. Are your elected officials doing what you think is good? Or are they simply serving themselves at your expense? Do they claim the Constitution is an outdated document? That Constitution is all that stands between you your serfdom. Will you wake up and defend it? Will you remember the prevalence of unintended conseqences?

dbm2dbuv11.png

March 7, 2013

dbm2dbuv21.png

March 7, 2013

Peculiar

January 23, 2013

Always interested in what drives “top blogs” on WordPress, I note that “theobamadiary” is always in that list.  But, I find many things about that blog peculiar.  First, the clicking on the ‘about’ link for the usual author “Chipsticks” produces a dead-end “4o4 error”.  Secondly, many commenters names are oft repeated.   Maybe they have nothing else to do, so they hang out and make comments.  Still, that doesn’t reflect the commenter’s behavior on any other blog that I can find.  Then, unlike any other blog on WordPress that I examine, there are no live links for comment posters.   A blogger couldn’t follow one of these posters, if she wanted.    Those links are a major driver to get blog followers.  How does this blog get regular followers without allowing links to commenter’s blog posts?  Can I pay WordPress to keep my blog in the “Top Blogs” roll?  Perhaps most intriging of all, is the amazing photo access the blog has inside White House functions.

The commenters are unusual, in that they are the most adoring group you would ever want to meet.  Fawning, actually.  Like that old frontier folk tune, ‘never is heard a discouraging word’.  Even I, even-natured as I am, get pointedly desenting comments from time to time.

The top entry on the “blog roll” is Whitehouse.gov.  Is that a coincidence?  Just call me a skeptic.  Maybe the author would freely admit his position of access, if ony the “about” link wasn’t dead.  I doubt, however, that he/she would confirm my suspicion that the posts and the comments originate from the same office.

I invite any of the commenters to theobamadiary to offer any proof whatsoever that the source of that blog’s comments is not actually inside the White House, and not produced professionally using my taxpayer dollars. For that matter, I’ll take a comment from WordPress staff explaining how the normal links to commenter’s blogs are defeated.  If the writer is in the White House public relations office, aren’t you proud of your work?  Own it.

Writewild

Recommended Reading

January 13, 2013

For those who have not seen the other side of life, this article will take you as close as you can get without going to see.  I was quite taken by the accuracy of the descriptions of the people in the two of these places that I have also walked (Philippines and Solomon Islands).

For those who have seen, a reminder never hurts.

http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/01/13/we-have-met-the-1-and-he-is-us/

Stand Together

January 8, 2013

Are you one who feels  cowed by the bully known as the federal government?  Bullys do their evil by intimidation.  They exercise the power to oppress by isolating one hapless victim at a time. Here is an example of how to put an end to such tyranny:

http://www.in.gov/apps/lsa/session/billwatch/billinfo?year=2013&session=1&request=getBill&docno=230

Chicken?

December 20, 2012

While John Boehner and Barack Obama play chicken on the edge of the fiscal cliff, most seem to fail to recognize they are driving their respective cars by remote control, like drone pilots. Unfortunately, the passengers in those careening vehicles are us. We will all suffer from the tax hikes and many will suffer from the spending cuts that were devised simply to be unpalatable to the Congress. We need more Tea Party conservatives in the House and fewer clowns. Don’t you think we would learn to vote on principle?

Continuity – The Very Definition of Progressivism

December 18, 2012

6)     American citizens defenseless against (possibly future) repressive government.

5)      “Gun control” inneffective against resourceful madmen and criminals

4)       Now past the pressures of election for the second term,  President Obama will “actively support” efforts by Democrats to reinstate a federal ban on assault  weapons next year, the White House announced on Tuesday.

Press secretary Jay Carney said the president would back Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) when she introduces legislation at the opening of the next Congress to ban certain assault weapons in the United States.

Carney said the president would also support other gun-control efforts, including legislation to close the “gun show loophole” on background checks and prevent the sale of high-capacity ammunition clips. (The Hill 12/18/2012)

3)     Sandy Hook Elementary Shooting (December 14,2012)

2)      Obama reelected with 51% of the popular vote.  (November 6, 2012)

1)       “You never want a serious crisis to go to waste,” (Rahm Emanuel, quoted in The Wall Street Journal, November 21, 2008)


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