Category Archives: General

The Confederacy

Apropos of the latest news coming from, among other places, Charlottesville, a personal observation.

I’ve mentioned before that I was born in a communist country which my parents fled from.  I spent my formative early years in a country that could best be described as having a system very close to European Socialism.  I then moved to a country that was a right winger’s wet dream: A country that had almost no taxes and therefore no civil services to speak of, was heavily catholic and outlawed abortion, and was incredibly, depressingly, terrible.

I then moved to and settled into the United States, which I’ve always felt had the best of all worlds.

But when I first moved to the U.S. and was enrolled in a boarding school in Jacksonville, Florida, I was taken aback when I saw things like this…

Image result for confederate flag on pickup truck images

This is not, by the way, a photograph I took back then, but it represents the type of things I saw.  Not everywhere, mind you, but enough to wonder why.

For to me, my entire life up until the moment I enrolled in that sophomore year of High School, the Confederacy was always viewed -I thought anyway!- the wrong side of history in the years leading up and after to the Civil War.

They were, after all, fighting for one thing: The ability to keep owning slaves.  That couldn’t be viewed as a good thing to people, right?

So why was it that I was seeing people hanging the Confederate Flag here and there and displaying it on their pickup trucks/cars?

And I wondered, young though I was, how the African American population must feel upon seeing these flags here and there.

Times have changed, thankfully, since then.  I’ve been to Jacksonville very recently and I don’t see these types of displays at all.  Then again, I’m not living there so whatever I’ve seen has been based on sticking around the city a few days at a time.

Later on I came to understood the mythology built around the “lost cause” of the Confederacy.  But this mythology avoided mention of the issue of slavery and, instead, focused on the Civil War being somehow about “state rights”.

It was still bewildering because I impossible to not associate the Confederacy with slavery.

Today, as the “alt-right” and the Nazi’s have much of the nation’s attention, I’m finding it interesting to see the push back.  I suppose the old physics notion of every action having an equal and opposite reaction applies to people as well.

So yesterday some people took aim at a statue commemorating “the boys who wore gray” (the article is by David A. Graham and is found on The Atlantic):

Durham’s Confederate Statue Comes Down

Here’s the full video of the event as it happened:

The backlash to the backlash.

Interesting times.

Charlottesville…

It’s tempting to say the usual lamentations and pointed criticisms…

But its also mind-boggling to witness the news regarding Charlottesville over the weekend along with the response from our “President” afterwards.

One life was lost when angry, ugly rhetoric gave way to -yes, oh yes– a terrorist act.  Our “President”, so quick to condemn any act, whether terrorist or not, that has even the faintest association with other nationalities or cultures, nonetheless found it near impossible to condemn Neo-Nazis that were marching over the weekend and, specifically, the Neo-Nazi who was responsible for killing Heather Heyer.

It’s… there just aren’t words.

No words at all.

To the family of Ms. Heyer, my sincerest condolences, for what its worth.

There remain a lot of good people out there and it remains my fervent hope that this darkness plaguing us will lift.

Soon, hopefully.

Great timing…

Getting political here, again…

So yesterday our President had some hair raising things to say about North Korea… words that made him sound a lot like North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un, the man who his words were directed at!

And coincidentally and over on the cable channel Starz, they happened to be playing Dr. Strangelove Or How I Learned To Stop Worrying And Love The Bomb.

Seeing Sterling Hayden’s insane General Jack D. Ripper had me in a cold sweat.

Suddenly, the film wasn’t quite as funny as before.

When can I get my Model 3…?

The Tesla Model 3, their least expensive/most affordable electric vehicle, has hit the streets!  Well, 30 of them, anyway.

For those who haven’t seen them, they look like this:

Image result for tesla model 3

The fact that 30 vehicles have been released may not sound like much but Elon Musk, the CEO of the company, boldly predicts we’ll be getting much more of the vehicles in the coming months.

He better hope this will be the case because, according to this article by Seth Fiegerman and presented on CNN…

Tesla now averaging more than 1800 Model 3 reservations a day

Its easy to be cynical and knock the limp numbers (so far) of Model 3’s available but, according to the article, Mr. Musk anticipates 1500 more vehicles produced in the third quarter (which we’re in) and, following this, 10,000 vehicles per week through the end of the year and into the next.

Which still means that if you’re pre-ordering the car, it will take a while to get your hands on it.  There are reportedly 450,000 pre-orders and, with the new orders coming in and assuming you decide to pre-order yours, you’ve got to wait through to the 4th quarter and, further assuming the 10,000 vehicles per week thing winds up being right, you’ll have to wait another 44 or so weeks before getting your own Model 3.

What’s most encouraging about all this is that there sure seems to be a big demand for these vehicles.

As I’ve said before, I’m happy with anything that’ll get us off combustion engines.

So, like…

…did anything interesting happen last night?

POLITICS FOLLOW… beware!

Obamacare Repeal Flames Out In The Republican Senate

Incredibly, it was John McCain who wound up being the vote to end this latest round of “repeal and replace”.  The same John McCain who was brought in hastily from surgery (and diagnosis of having brain cancer), to supposedly be the vote to bring this over the hump.

However, yesterday, Senators McCain and Lindsey Graham gave what I thought was a pretty bonkers news conference where they talked about what a farce the “skinny” repeal bill was and how Mr. Graham, in particular, was reluctant to vote for it unless assured it wouldn’t be passed by the House “as is”.

Mr. Graham: If you feel the bill is a farce and don’t want it passed, then don’t vote for it.

Which, in the end, is what Mr. McCain did.

Though very much liberal in much of my ideology, for many years I’ve felt Mr. McCain was a Republican one could at least reason with.  In more recent years, I have to be honest, I felt he was losing it.  The presidential race against Barack Obama saw him nominate Sarah Palin for the VP role, which in my estimation was not only a stupid move but probably played a big part in his eventual loss.

It’s been said “Obamacare” will eventually fail.  I hear this is an exaggeration.  I also hear that many of the states that have the biggest problems in this era of the Affordable Care Act (which is the proper term for Obamacare), have problem because they didn’t want to implement the full extent of the ACA’s provisions.

I don’t know.

What I do know is that I experienced Canada’s “socialized” medicine… and it was freaking great.  I’ve experienced some of Europe’s socialized medicine as well, and frankly, it too is great.

I don’t like this Darwinian system we’ve had up until the ACA.  I don’t like the idea of people potentially going broke later in life or as a result of some kind of catastrophic medical need.

There are better ways to go and, sadly, the world outside our borders seems to have embraced this quicker than we have.

Perhaps with this later failure both parties will finally -finally!– get together and form a coalition that actually improves upon the ACA rather than trying to gut it.

Perhaps.

Sign of things to come…

Found this article by Chris D’Angelo over at CNN.com…

Boss of Coal-Hauling Railroad says “Fossil Fuels Are Dead”

Hunter Harrison, the CEO of freight railroad CSX Corporation, represents one of the largest railroad companies that haul coal around the country and, for him to say the above is certainly thought provoking.

Whenever I delve into politics, what often bugs me the most is that people tend to have a certain predisposition to information and are often unwilling and/or unable -or even worse, outright lie- about other views.

I’ve pointed out before that I lived through the earlier days of the desktop home computer revolution.  This began, roughly, in the very early 1980’s and my very first computer was an Atari 800…

Image result for atari 800

There she is, in all her glory and with the cartridge bay open (the computer could have two -count ’em- two cartridges placed within the system simultaneously!  (Never mind that I don’t think there ever was a need to have more than one in at a time)

Computer systems have come a hell of a long way since those heady days of the early 1980’s and I’m certain if I offered anyone the choice of going back to that old Atari 800 or using the latest iPhone the choice would be laughably one-sided.

Which is why it frustrates me to see us still using fossil fuels and coal when clearly there are other, cleaner ways of getting our energy.

Ironically enough, it is because of the success of things like cell phones, laptops, etc. and the desire to make better and better batteries for them that has lead to what appears to be this new energy revolution.

Because we needed better and better batteries for our smaller computer gadgets, we’ve developed batteries and battery technologies which have, in turn, uses beyond the cell phone or laptop.

Thus after too many years of extremely slow growth, it appears the electric car may finally replace the old combustion engine.  Solar power, too, is becoming a much more significant piece of our energy grid as is wind power.

And then you have people like Mr. Harrison, whose company operated within the fossil fuel industry, coming out and noting he has to think ahead and that his manner of business is on the outs.

Incredible.

And, moreso, it gives me hope that we can finally start cleaning this planet in earnest.

After all, why would anyone want to live in a smog filled, dirty world?

Missing couple found… 75 years later

This is one of those articles that is both fascinating, heartbreaking, and, in a way, pleasant in that the remaining living relatives have some closure in what’s left of their lives.

From CNN, the following article by Zoha Qamar, which tells us about…

Missing Swiss Couple Found Frozen In The Alps After 75 Years

At the risk of stepping all over the article, here’s two passages which recount what happened:

Marcelin, 40, and Francine, 37, Dumoulin went missing on August 15, 1942, after leaving to milk their cows in a meadow near their home. They never returned to their family, including their six children.  A worker found the frozen bodies of a man and a woman last week during routine maintenance. The corpses were preserved in the receding Tsanfleuron glacier, near a slew of trendy ski resorts at 2,600 meters (8,500 feet) above sea level.

 

The corpses are indeed believed to be that of Marcelin and Francine and it was thought they fell through a crevasse and froze to death.  Thanks to the receding glacier -perhaps a result of global warming- their corpses were discovered.

 

As  heartbreaking as the story is, the fact that these now grown and elderly children finally get to know what happened to their parents must be a relief to them, if nothing else.

Health care…

Beware…

…Politics…

One of the primary chants from the Republican party, and perhaps what got them as far as they have (ie, the Presidency, Senate majority, and House majority), was the statement that they would “Repeal and Replace” the Affordable Care Act (ACA), ie “Obamacare”.

The tactics were effective because they preyed on people’s fear of the unknown and, alternatively, it was difficult for the Democratic Party to defend a bill that was as complex as it was.

Many have stated the ACA, as written, has its problems and, I’m quite certain, it has.

But not having any form of health care coverage seems, in this day and age, a major governmental failure.

Perhaps now that the latest Republican attempt at “their” healthcare system has failed, more even heads can come together and strengthen this system.

Well, that was quick…Amelia Earhart, redux

Last week and to breathless reporting the History Channel presented a documentary centered around the discovery of a photograph, presented below and supposedly a once top secret image…

A new History Channel special claims this photo is proof Amelia Earhart and Fred Noonan were in the Marshall Islands after their plane disappeared.

Which, when one zoomed in on the people in the center of the dock, those same folks at the History Channel felt were Amelia Earhart and her navigator, Fred Noonan…

Some experts believe the figure highlighted at left is Fred Noonan and the person sitting, facing away from the camera, is Amelia Earhart.

I’m not going to lie: I found the story as fascinating as most everyone else out there curious about Amelia Earhart and her fate.  In fact, I wrote about it here but noted that I doubted the photo displayed what the History Channel thought it did.

Since it was reported the photograph had once been “classified” and, further, that the person who reportedly took the photograph was eventually executed as a spy (I can’t help but wonder if that part of the story was outright fabrication, considering the below), I suspected that the subject matter was more likely the vessel in the background rather than the few people on the dock.

Now, a few days later, a blogger has burst the History Channel’s bubble and you can read all about it in this article by Ruth Graham and for Salon.com…

A blogger exploded the Hot New Theory of Amelia Earhart with 30 minutes of Online Searching

What did Kota Yamano, the blogger in question find?  From the article:

the History Channel’s analysis now seems to be crumbling under 30 minutes of internet research by one military history buff. Kota Yamano, a Tokyo-based blogger, found the same photograph printed in a Japanese-language travelogue published in 1935, almost two years before Earhart and Noonan disappeared. The caption underneath the photo says nothing about the identities of the people in the photograph, which apparently depicts a regular old harbor, rather than a harbor and two missing celebrities.

Whoops!

Here, presented within an article about the same subject by Yoko Wakatsuki and Ben Wetcott for CNN, is that same photograph as it was shown in the book published two years before Amelia Earhart disappeared, and when she was no-where near the Pacific…

This photo was reportedly published in 1935 by Futabaya Gofuku Ten.

Ah well.

It was fun while it lasted, a whole two or three days.

Electric cars…will they be the future?

It’s looking more and more like we’ll be moving from combustion engines toward electric vehicles -and, I suppose, self-driving vehicles- in the very near future.

This article by Brian Khan and for Salon.com notes…

The world is on the brink of an electric car revolution

The two biggest factors are: 1) Tesla is about to release to the general public their highly anticipated, and low cost, Model 3 (retail is around $35,000), and 2) Volvo has stated that by 2019, a mere two years from now, all the cars they release will be electric in one form or another (ie hybrid, electric, or any combination of the above).

As for me, I’m currently very happy with my car but I’m hoping that when the time comes to get my next vehicle, it might just be the Tesla Model 3.

The world is on the brink of an electric car revolution

Handsome car, IMHO!

Fascinating times we live in!