Tuesday, November 11, 2008

'Progressive Taxation? I think mine is more about progress..

 As an advocate of the Flat Tax (but an advocate that realizes accountants, the IRS, and lawyers have too much to lose to ever let it happen), I wrote this in response to someone who advocated steeply progressive taxation.  They believe the rich need to pay a lot more.  I don't think that progressive taxation is just unfair to the wealthy, but to everyone.  Here was my response:

"You don't see it at work in the real world... Union guys turning down work they want because they'll lose most of it in taxes if they get bumped... Under the table jobs for a lot of blue collar workers so they won't get bumped up - it isn't just the taxes on the other job, its the affect on the main one.  I know of a contractor who makes $35/hr and his boss charges $50/hr. for him.    The contractor works as much as possible outside the loop now - he makes no more, the homeowner saves a little, the boss loses money, the gov. loses money in taxes and fees...  Why?  Why would the contractor do that when he makes no more?   Because if he does it through his boss he'll get bumped to a new bracket and lose out.  THAT is the real world. "

" Rather than say every citizen should pay the same (as we all have the same army, same roads, etc.) if you want to say that someone makes 100 times what you do then they should pay 100 times what you do then I agree.  But 'Progressive' Taxation is un-American.  That said, I could still get behind it IF it were on an extreme income...  ie, EVERYONE under $35,000 pays nothing (as they are just getting started or need every penny they earn to live).  At $35,000 to $55,000 the population would pay 5% (to ease into paying taxes.   From $55,000 to $350,000 we would all pay 10%.  From $350,000 to $1,000,000 we would pay 20%.  Over $1,000,000 a year you pay $35%. "

"Would it make people earning $950,000 stop and think about a yarly salary increase?  Sure would. But how many are getting that?  And those that get more than $1,000,000 per year in compensation usually make substantially more or it is based on performance (through bonuses).  Would some not take the 'raise'?  Maybe, but the money would then be reinvested somewhere rather than taken in compensation.  The gov. wouldn't get it in taxes but it would still help the economy.  Meanwhile, everyone from $35,000 on up would be encouraged to work more, work harder, try to get ahead, etc.  The increments would be small enough that the raise or additional work would not be chewed away, and those we need to encourage to work harder and take risks would be the benefit of their risks and hard work, not see it get taken in taxes."

I'm sure there are holes in the plan and I still think a straight 10% (or whatever) Flat Tax would be better as it addresses corporate taxes as well, but it is far better than what we have now.

 

Thursday, October 30, 2008

A Friend's Synopsis

I wish I wrote this but a very good friend did...  Eloquent and pithy, I think:


__


I do not root for failure. I also do not say my country right or wrong. The invasion was a mistake because Hussein was already defeated and completely contained. He kept his psychotic people under control, through fear but so what? That was their problem. Finding and eliminating Bin laden and Al Qaeda was our problem. Hussein also kept Iran in check. Now none of this is happening. IT WAS A MISTAKE! Now when we leave it will fall apart but that was not the case before w. went in and his father and his men knew that. HOWEVER, if you go, employ the Powell doctrine. Kick ass, take control not allow an army to be disbanded and therefore spring up as a series of tribal insurgent armies supplied with arms we were unable to secure. THIS WAS A MISTAKE! This is horrible for our country! It never should have happened. Wrong from it’s conceit, it’s justification which was all lies, it’s concept, it’s design and lack of follow through. The world is either horrified or emboldened by our now clearly seen weakness. We can not fight simultaneous wars even when in the same region. We cannot afford this war, especially when giving massive tax cuts at the same time. So let’s enrich another enemy, China. Fucking brilliant! Wrong in it’s ENTIRETY!

I do not root for my country to fail. I do not turn a blind eye to its folly. An American victory would have been to vanquish the Taliban and shown for however long it may have lasted that a religion of such monstrous intolerance and backward looking yearnings for the human race would not be allowed to establish itself in the league of nations. That is not the future for mankind. Al Qaeda would not have been so strong if we cut off it’s head and it would not have so many new recruits. We should have gone after the root cause of this conflict and tried to see what could be done to improve. We should follow the money to Saudi Arabia and choke that off.

            Now of course the situation is this: When we leave, whenever we leave Iraq, it falls apart. Iran steps into the vacuum. Everyone hates us, our children died for nothing, the Iraqi oil is doing us no good but w, sure showed his father who was the better man.

            I can not live up to Christ’s mandate. I can never forgive this asshole, I hate him and always will. You know why? It is because I love and root for the best of the United States of America. This is not it.

Avanti WineFridge

Just a complete rant that I will take down if the company makes this right...  If not, I'll post that, too, as well as a link to a website I'll set up.

(11/9/08 - NOTE:  They have sent a new unit which - so far - is working well; details below)

Anyway...  

Ordered an Avanti wine fridge mid January 2007 on-line while buying appliances for a kitchen remodel at our house...  It was delivered in February and installed mid March 2007.  
It stopped working while we were on vacation in July 2007.

After calling the seller (to find out they didn't do repairs) and then Avanti (who referred me to a local repair place for warranty work) we called A-Z Appliance.  They came out in August 07, took one look and said they couldn't fix it as it was the electrical panel and 'those always go bad".  They would order parts but 'they are terrible about shipping quickly".

The part was ordered but was back ordered and unavailable..  until December of 07.  A-Z came out and installed the part and left (no one was home).  

Obviously it still didn't work.  

Two weeks later they were back out to check it out.  They said it would have to go back to the shop... but they couldn't take it as the truck was full.  Later that week theyame out and took fridge in for repair.

I finally got them to bring it back in mid- Feb.  Happy to finally have a working wine fridge instead of a gaping hole in the cupboards as we did over the holidays, we were frustrated but finally satisfied customers.

The unit worked 3 months and stopped by the end of May, again.

After numerous calls to A-Z who wasn't sure what they could realistically do any longer, they said unit is defective with an internal leak and cannot be repaired.  A new one would be necessary.  With both A-Z and myself calling Avanti, in early August, Avanti called me to say unit cannot be repaired, per a discussion with the repairshop, and that new one is necessary.  I was to send $10. (?!) to them to do so.

Check sent the next day on 8/7.

Check was cashed by Avanti on 8/13.

By late Sept., I called A-Z and Avanti wondering why I had not heard anything.  Unable to get any answers, leaving many messages, I finally spoke to someone on 10/1 at Avanti who said it had been too long  and that the item was out of warranty!  No fridge was to be sent, despite cashing check, despite acknowledging it cannot be fixed, despite it never working correct and being out of service for all but 6 or 7 months of the 20 months I had it...

Getting past a customer service representative I spoke to Meaghan, ' a manager'.  After telling her the problem she said she would talk to A-Z to have them confirm the issue and would call me back.  I told her that no one ever called back and I spent a lot of time on hold at Avanti... She promised she would call back by the end of the day.

Obviously, she didn't.

I called that eve, the next day, and other times all week.  Always told I was being transferred in, it alwys was put on voice mail and no one ever called back.

Totally frustrated by the worse customer service I have ever heard about, I asked for her 'boss' and was told to speak to David ______ (head of dept., supposedly).  He instructed me to fax/mail a copy of the sticker from the back of the wine cooler to him and a new cooler would be sent out.  I pulled the unit myself, and then both faxed and mailed it.

Having heard nothing by the end of the month again, I called on 10/30 to check the status.  More time on hold to get through, more time on hold after speaking to a rep and giving her the RA number for the issue...  After being put on hold for some time, the rep returned and  told me she could not even locate the RA number for my problem!  

I asked to speak to David and was given - surprise - his voice mail.  I left yet another message.

As of 3pm I have not heard back from anyone...  We'll see.

More to come, I'm sure...
---
I received a call later that day from a customer service representative who asked if i would be home the following week, lol.   She mentioned I would receive a call from a trucking company about delivery as the wine fridge would be sent right out.

Sure enough, I received a call from a trucker the following week who wanted to bring the unit by.  I pulled the current one out, and wrestled it down the stairs myself in time for the new unit to show up that afternoon.   Bringing the new one in and setting it up (they are 54 bottle units, I believe) it appears to be working well.  While I wish the original unit had worked properly in the first place and that it had not taken so long to get the problem resolved, in the end they did do the right thing, thankfully... 

Sunday, October 26, 2008

What Sarah Palin Has Taught Us



October 24, 2008, 7:00 a.m.

An Instructive Candidacy
What Sarah Palin taught us about ourselves.

By Victor Davis Hanson

Soon this depressing campaign will be over, and we can reflect on what we learned from our two-month introduction to Sarah Palin.

Clearly, it is more than we would have ever wished to know about ourselves.
E - That a small percentage of us can b fooled by winking women with nice legs?


First, there turns out to be no standard of objectivity in contemporary journalism. Palin’s career as a city councilwoman, mayor, and governor of Alaska was never seen as comparable to, or — indeed, in terms of executive experience — more extensive than, Barack Obama’s own legislative background in Illinois and Washington.
E - Nor should it be. 'Councilwoman'?  Mayor of a town so small it could fit in most high school stadiums?  Governor of the most remote and unpopulated state in the country and one of the most remote areas of the world?  Titles and positions don't get you votes.  Abilities do.  She has none.


 Somehow we forgot that a mother of five taking on the Alaskan oil industry and the entrenched male hierarchy was somewhat more challenging than Barack Obama navigating the sympathetic left-wing identity politics of Chicago.
E - Somehow this fluff piece overlooks that a well educated and intelligent member of Congress who can build coalitions and lead people is far more qualified than a hockey mom who has done nothing but get elected based on looks, had a small scandal already, and been appointed to a post she is unqualified for based on nothing more than her gender and ability to appeal a the fringe group who doesn't look deeply but is satisfied with one issue.


So we seem to have forgotten that the standards of censure of her vice-presidential candidacy were not applied equally to the presidential campaign of Barack Obama. 
E - Absolutely unequal.  He has been scrutinized for 4-6 years and she couldn't stand up to 2 months.  He can handle himself with anyone and she would be eaten alive and is unable to stand up to a Today Show host.


The media at times seems unaware of this embarrassment, namely that their condemnation of Sarah Palin as inexperienced equally might apply to Barack Obama — and to such a degree that by default we were offered the lame apology (reiterated by Colin Powell himself) that Obama’s current impressive campaigning, not his meager political accomplishments, was already an indication of a successful tenure as president. The result is that we now know more about the Palin pregnancies — both of mother and daughter — that we do the relationships of Tony Rezko, Bill Ayers, Reverend Wright, and Father Pfleger with our possible next president. 

Indeed, the media itself — in private, I think — 
E - Nice of him to speak for all that he disagrees with...


...would admit that while have learned almost everything about Tasergate and the Bridge to Nowhere, we assume that at some future date a publicity-starved, megalomaniac Rev. Wright will soon offer his post-election memoirs, detailing just how close he and a President Obama were. Or we will learn Barack Obama and Bill Ayers, as long-time friends, in fact, did communicate via phone and e-mail well after Ayers had told the world, about the time of 9/11, that he, like our present-terrorist enemies, likewise wished he had engaged in more bombing attacks against the United States government. And the media never wondered whether a Palin’s falling out with those who ran Alaska might have been more of a touchstone to character than Obama’s own falling in with those who ran Chicago.
E - While you would like to judge Obama by 2 or 3 of the millions he has dealt with, searching for something - anything - that will hurt the campaign, she can be judged on her own proven lack of ability and honesty.


While Gov. Palin’s frequent college transfers and Idaho degree are an item of snickering among pundits, none of them can claim to care much about Barack Obama’s own undergraduate career. To suggest that he release his undergraduate transcript is near blasphemy; to scribble that Sarah Palin’s Down Syndrome child was not her own is journalism as we now know it. 
E - Have any reputable journalists said that?  

To care that Joe Biden is vain, with bleached teeth, the apparent recipient of some sort of strange facial tightening tonic, and hair plugs is deservedly mean and petty; 
E - Yet this author will say it willingly.  NOT PETTY AT ALL, LOL.


...to sneer that the Alaskan mom of five bought a new wardrobe to run for Vice President is, of course, vital proof for the American voter of her vanity and shallowness.
E - Ah, she is simply buying b new outfits.  He is shallow and vain.  Got it.


Second, there does not seem to be much left of feminism any more. Of course, feminists once gave liberal pro-choice Bill Clinton a pass for his serial womanizing of vulnerable subordinates, and Oval Office antics with a young female intern. But they gave the game away entirely when they went after Gov. Palin for her looks, accent, pregnancies, and religion, culminating in assessments of her from being no real woman at all to an ingrate — piggy-backing on the pioneer work of self-acclaimed mavericks like themselves. 
E - Sorry.  Feminism was proven by her being turned down.  It showed that talent and issues and brains is what matters, not boobs.  Feminists should vote on talent and issues, not on any woman just because they are a woman.


Feminism, it turns out, is no longer about equal opportunity and equal compensation, but, in fact, little more than a strain of contemporary elitist identity politics, and support for unquestioned abortion. Had Gov. Sarah Palin just been a mother of a single child at Vassar rather than of five in Alaska, married to a novelist rather than a snow-machiner, an advocate of pro-choice, who shot pictures of Alaskan ferns rather than shot moose — feminists would have hailed her as a principled kindred soul, and trumpeted her struggles against Alaskan male grandees. 
E - If she was not a woman picked to look pretty but repeat what she was told to, a woman picked on talent and not the fact she was anti-abortion to appeal to the far right, she would have had a chance.  No woman who wants equal rights thinks that picking a backwoods hockey mom - simply because she wears a dress - advances any of their causes.  And this writer's complete misunderstand and misrepresentation of it shows he doesn't have a clue.


So there was something creepy about droves of irate women, in lock-step blasting Sarah Palin from the corridors of New York and Washington, when most of them were the recipients of the traditional spoils of either family connections, inherited money, or the advantages that accrue from insider power marriages. Indeed, very few of Palin’s critics on their own could have emerged from a small-town in Alaska, with an intact marriage and five children, to run the state of Alaska.
E - A former beauty contestant who gets elected to office by oil workers being compared to any real politician is silly.  Inflating her accomplishments and belittling others wins no points or votes.


We have come to understand that — for a TV anchorwoman, op-ed columnist, or professor — it would be a nightmare to birth a Down Syndrome child in her mid-forties, or to have had her pregnant unwed teen actually deliver her baby. 
E - Foolish and stupid comment.  She has been praised for both and its been hands off on any complaints about her daughter.  Empty whining.


In the world outside Sarah Palin’s Wasilla, these are career-ending blunders that abort the next job promotion or book tour— or the future career of a prepped young daughter on her way to the Ivy League.

Third, from the match-up of Joe Biden and Sarah Palin, we discovered that our media does not know anything about the nature of wisdom — how it is found or how it is to be adjudicated. For the last eight weeks, Palin has been demonized as a dunce because she did not, in the fashion of the class toady with his hand constantly up in the first row, impress in flash-card recall, the glasses-on-his-nose Charlie Gibson, or clinched-toothed Katie Couric. 
E - She has been recognized as a dunce because she doesn't know the issues or facts, doesn't know she doesn't know, and is even too stupid to parrot back the slogans the McCain camp has tried to teach her.  They now know what a fool she is and have instructed her to speak on 3 or 4 issues and disregard any other question asked as she is incapable of learning the response they want her to make.  It is proof even her boss, McCain, realizes how bad she is.


Meanwhile Joe Biden has just been Ol’ Joe Biden — which means not that he can get away with the occasional gaffe, but that can say things so outrageous, so silly, and so empty that, had they come out of the mouth of Sarah Palin, she would have long ago been forced to have stepped aside from the ticket.
E - She couldn't repeat his gaffes as they have more than 1 syllable words in them.


Factual knowledge? Biden, in the midst of a financial meltdown on Wall Street, apparently thinks that the last time it happened in 1929, we heard FDR rally us on television. And such made-up nonsense came in the form, as many of Biden’s gaffes do, of a rebuke to the supposedly obtuse George W. Bush.

Sobriety? Biden now admits that dangerous powers abroad will immediately test a President Obama. He warns that the results of such a crisis will be very disappointing to the American electorate, and thus Team Obama/Biden will need loyal supporters to rally as their polls sink. Yet remember that Biden himself has been a fierce and opportunistic critic of Bush, who despite a frenzy of congressional demagoguery, initiated the successful surge and ignored the very polls that the for-the-war/against-the-war Biden so carefully tracked. More importantly, if an Ahmadinejad, Chavez, or Putin ever had any doubts about carving out new spheres of uncontested influence, they may entertain very few now.
E - They are getting stronger now.  And Palin, who can't stand up to a newscaster, would be eaten alive.
  

Veracity? If one were to think that Biden’s past brushes with plagiarism, inflated bios, and falsehood were exceptional rather than characteristic, the last two months confirmed otherwise. For all the false recall, it is hard to remember anything he said in his Palin debate that was true, whether describing the status of Hezbollah in Lebanon or his own past remarks about the wisdom of burning coal. 
E - What I do remember is that he debated and answered questions asked, instead of giving canned responses apropos of nothing they were speaking about.  
  

Silliness? Imagine the following outbursts, mutatis mutandis, from the mouth of a Sarah Palin — “
John McAmerica,” “a Palin-McCain administration,” “Senator George Obama,” “Congressman Joe Biden,” who is both “good looking,” and “drop-dead gorgeous.” Or “I guarantee you, John McCain ain’t taking my shotguns. . . . If he tries to fool with my Beretta, he’s got a problem. I like that little over and under, you know? I’m not bad with it. So give me a break.”
E - Give me a break. Of Biden winked and repeated canned statements and stumbled and mumbled and was locked away until the debate trying to memorize soundbites or said he wouldn't debate but would just say whatever he wanted on whatever subject he wanted... IF he did that he would have been torn apart.  Yet she gets praise for the debate because she didn't drool on herself.


Or “I mean, you got the first mainstream African-American who is articulate and bright and clean and a nice-looking guy.” Or “Mitt Romney is as qualified or more qualified than I am to be vice president of the United States of America. Quite frankly he might have been a better pick than me.” 

The list could go on ad nauseam. But we got the picture. Biden has devolved from the ridiculous to the unhinged, confident that in-house journalism would understand that the law graduate with 36 years in the Senate was simply being Joe, while a Sarah Palin, who flinched when asked to parse the Bush Doctrine, was a Neanderthal creationist.
E - Talk about spin!  Digging up all the ridiculous stuff from Biden and overlooking Palin repeating, word for word, foolish responses to different questions asked by Couric...  


 I thought by now the You-tubed exchange of a Congressional Finance Committee hearing between the pompous Harvard Law School graduate Barney Frank and the conniving Harvard Law School graduate Franklin Raines — at the proverbial moment of conception of the financial meltdown — would have put to rest the notion that graduation from law school was any proof of either wisdom or morality.
E - It proves nothing.  Saying a Harvard degree means nothing is nothing but pandering to the foolish.


I don’t know whether Sarah Palin would make a great vice president. 
E - Fortunately the majority of the country does.


But I did learn that by the standard of John Kerry’s pick of John Edwards, and now Barack Obama’s choice of Joe Biden, as running mates, she is wise and ethical beyond their measure.
E - And I have learned that in a long record of foolish picks for VP candidates by both parties, John McCain stooped to a new low in poor judgement.


Thursday, May 15, 2008

Musing ...

While we want to think that we are a composite of our ideals and beliefs, we are - in reality - a composite of our actions.

Monday, May 12, 2008

The Caucus System and Delegates


Below is an excerpt from an e-mail debate:

BA - Do anyone of you believe in the party system?
EE - Yes. It has its flaws but I do think it works better than any others. I think the partys do need to change though, to become the COnservative and Liberal Parties rather than cloak them behind Democrat and Republican labels.

BA - Do you actually know what the dem or rep platform is?

If you say yes then tell me how how they don't put it together until the convention
EE - The problem is that the party should let the nominee set the platform as he/she is who the public wants. Instead the party sets the platform and supposedly the nominee is to work for that goal.


BA - No one has the balls to rock the system. The party system should be over same with the electoral college.
EE - Again, it has its flaws but has worked better than any other. It needs some changes, but I do not think it should be tossed. As far as the electoral college, I think the whole country should have primaries on the same day. The system where a candidate gets knocked out because he didn't do well in Utah and New Hampshire when they might win in Ohio and Pennsylvania is ridiculous. Barring that, we need a system where delegates vote on the public behalf. For example: Joe, Jim, and Fred are running for office and Fred and Jim are very, very similar in views. Joe is very different. Joe wins 40% of the vote. Jim wins 39% of the vote, and Fred wins only 21%. If all votes go to the winner of the state, 60% are unhappy. If Fred drops out and it comes to a fight, his delegates should be able to support Jim. We need a system that addresses that... one where you are locked in for your candidate as long as they are in, but can switch if they drop out or are voted out.

Just one man's opinion.
K - You are not alone my good man.

Sunday, May 11, 2008

40 Tips For Better Life

From a site I stumbled upon... I have added comments (in green) where I thought appropriate.

40 Tips for Better Life - 2008

1. Take a 10-30 minute walk every day. And while you walk, smile. It is the ultimate anti-depressant.
E - Not sure about this one but I have heard it often...
2. Sit in silence for at least 10 minutes each day.
E - Even if its in the car while you drive. Try not turning on the radio for 10 minutes. Or use the last 10 minutes before you fall asleep to think.
3. Buy a DVR and tape your late night shows and get more sleep.
E - Watch those you really want to see when you have time, instead of watching the other garbage and staying up to see late night programs. I may stay up late but never to just watch television.
4. When you wake up in the morning complete the following statement, ‘My purpose is to __________ today.’
E - Or at least think about what you would like to accomplish or what you would like changed. Then do something about it.
5. Live with the 3 E’s — Energy, Enthusiasm, and Empathy.
6. Play more games and read more books than you did in 2007.
7. Make time to practice meditation and/or prayer. They provide us with daily fuel for our busy lives.
E - More good advice I don't listen to... Yet.
8. Spend time with people over the age of 70 and under the age of 6.
9. Dream more while you are awake.
10. Eat more foods that grow on trees and plants and eat less food that is manufactured in plants.
E - Everyone 'wants' to look good and be fit. But it doesn't come by accident. If you take the easy road and make the easy choices (eating sugary and fatty foods, not exercising) then you will shorten your life and eventually look like someone who eats sugary and fatty foods and doesn't exercise. It isn't rocket science.
11. Drink green tea and plenty of water. Eat blueberries, wild Alaskan salmon, broccoli, almonds & walnuts.
E - Avoid things with saturated fat, Crisco, etc. If it doesn't spoil or break down, why would you want it in your body surrounding your organs and floating through your veins? Does that even sound like a remotely good thing?
12. Try to make at least three people smile each day.
13. Clear clutter from your house, your car, your desk and let new and flowing energy into your life.
14. Don’t waste your precious energy on gossip, OR issues of the past, negative thoughts or things you cannot control. Instead invest your energy in the positive present moment.
E - Probably the most important step here. It goes well with Step 40.
15. Realize that life is a school and you are here to learn. Problems are simply part of the curriculum that appear and fade away like algebra class but the lessons you learn will last a lifetime.
16. Eat breakfast like a king, lunch like a prince and dinner like a college kid with a maxed out charge card.
E - Unless, to you, that means boxed Mac N Cheeze ;-)
17. Smile and laugh more. It will keep the negative blues away.
18. Life isn’t fair, but it’s still good.
19. Life is too short to waste time hating anyone.
20. Don’t take yourself so seriously. No one else does.
21. You don’t have to win every argument. Agree to disagree.
22. Make peace with your past so it won’t spoil the present.
23. Don’t compare your life to others’. You have no idea what their journey is all about.
24. No one is in charge of your happiness except you.
E - Sure things can always get better or less stressful. But do not let that make you unhappy where you are now.
25. Frame every so-called disaster with these words: ‘In five years, will this matter?’
E - And "Can I change this so that it won't matter so much?"
26. Forgive everyone for everything.
E - FOrgive even if you can't forget.
27. What other people think of you is none of your business.
28. Remember God heals everything.
E - God or Time, whichever. Everyone has bad events befall them. Don't let them continue to drag you down any more than they have to.
29. However good or bad a situation is, it will change.
30. Your job won’t take care of you when you are sick. Your friends will. Stay in touch.
31. Get rid of anything that isn’t useful, beautiful or joyful.
32. Envy is a waste of time. You already have all you need.
33. The best is yet to come.
34. No matter how you feel, get up, dress up and show up.
35. Do the right thing!
E - Not because someone will know. Not because you feel God is watching. Not because you'll get credit. Do it on principle and to make yourself a better person that you yourself can be proud of.
36. Call your family often.
37. Each night before you go to bed complete the following statements: I am thankful for _______. Today I accomplished ____.
38. Remember that you are too blessed to be stressed.
39. Enjoy the ride. Remember this is not Disney World and you certainly don’t want a fast pass. You only have one ride through life so make the most of it and enjoy the ride.
40. Laugh when you can, apologize when you should, and let go of what you can’t change.
E - And, of course, Treat others as you want to be treated. Do not do things you wouldn't want done to you.

America Has Alzheimer's

Why is it that we remember all of WWII and how we saved the world but seem to forget what has happened over the last 5 years?

Maybe we just refuse to deal with our shortcomings and would prefer to sweep them under the rug. Maybe that is it. It would explain why we remember finally being dragged into a European battle and leading the reversal of mis-fortune to retake Europe and free it from the Fascist grip, but we forget that we recently we lost thousands of men, women, and children, a large portion of a city, and one of America's greatest and most unique cultural experiences.

"What? Huh? Where?", you ask?

NOLA. New Orleans.

The fact it didn't immediately come to mind by all who read this rant proves my original statement.

Then again, maybe it is because we, Americans, seem to have an optimistic nature. Maybe we would simply prefer to remember how we helped rebuild Japan and Europe after the Second World War but are forgetting how devastated we were after we were attacked on 9-11. We prefer to think of ourselves and remember ourselves as compassionate allies instead of victims.

Could be.

Either way, no matter what the collective reason, I do not think it is good for the American fabric. I don't think we should be dwelling on the bad, no. But I do think we need to be reminded of our sorrows and of our shortcomings until we are healed both physically and emotionally.

Until we fix the scar on America that is New Orleans we should run pictures of its rebuilding nightly on the news or as Public Service Announcements. We should not forget the city, its inhabitants, or slack in the rebuilding of our brother's homes.

Until we deal with the root causes of the WTC bombings and come to grips with what we must do, we should run pictures of that horrible morning each night on television. Now I won't expound here on what that solution is: War with those that supported it or debate and talks with those that hate us and wish us harm... I am not advocating either way of handling the situation here; I am simply stating that we are still firmly in the grips of its aftermath but are losing site of what happened back then. Sure we all remember it, right? But do we remember how we felt that morning? Do we think it couldn't happen tomorrow? Again? Unless you can tell me that watching a video of the attack and deaths of the 3000 men and women wouldn't move you, still, then you have to admit it has been pushed back in our minds and hearts and is no longer of utmost importance as it was on 9-12. We have not fixed the problem or healed from its wounds. We have simply pushed it to the back of our minds.

I could go on, but there are too many examples.

What our ancestors did was terrific. Unbelievable. They certainly earned the nickname 'The Greatest Generation'. But its time for present Americans to stop taking credit for it and to start changing the world for the better ourselves.

You decide which actions should be taken and in what direction we should head.

Sunday, April 27, 2008

There Is NO Excuse ...

iPhone.

AT&T/Cingular.

Supposedly the partnership between the two companies would rewrite the cellphone industry, right?  Up until now the phones were given away by the carriers to get the public's business.  The carriers were in charge and told the cellphone makers what they wanted, which features, etc. to put in the phone.  Then, for a nominal charge, you would pick your phone and sign a long term contract of one or two years depending on the discount you wanted.  The carrier would write the true cost of the phone into the contract's monthly cost.  Over the one or two year period of the contract the customer would be paying for the phone (ie, rather than buy a $340. phone, the customer pays $100 for that phone and the other $240 is paid for by bumping up the monthly plan by $10 a month with a two year commitment). 

This is the way the cellphone industry works, has worked, and all parties seemed comfortable with that: the cellphone makers, the carriers, and the public.

Then, along came Apple.

They made a phone that was so good, had so many features and was so slick to use that customers no longer picked from whichever phones their carrier offered, but signed on to whichever carrier they had to use in order to have an Apple iPhone.  Apple got to sell their shiny phones.  AT&T took a small percentage of the sales price and also got a lot of new customers with shiny new two year contracts. 

Most industry analysts saw how that turned the cell networks on their heads.  Instead of figuring what cheap phones they could offer to boost their bottom line while still attracting customers or retaining their old customers, suddenly they all want new and shiny cool phones.  They realized the public wants great phones and will pay for them ... if they are good enough.

A complete turn around, right?  Customers no longer picking phones based on plans, but picking plans based on what phone they want.

Thinking about it all tonight, I have one issue with it all:  Somewhere in that new equation, the plan price and contract requirements haven't changed.  

If the carriers are no longer needing to make up the cost of the phone they gave away in the beginning of the relationship, why aren't the monthly costs reduced by that $10 - $20 a month?The customer still pays the higher rates charged by the companies that supposedly had to have those rates to not lose money on the promotional phone give-ways, yet those customers are also now buying a phone and paying full price.

Also, if the carriers do not need the one or two year commitment to pay for the phone discounts, they are making a profit right from Day One, correct?  We were told that the long term contract was because of the phone costs and they needed that commitment to make their costs back - if you terminated the contract early, you had to pay them monies toward the phone.  We all thought that fair as it was obvious you couldn't get their 'free' (or heavily discounted) phone and then not let them make the money back by using them for a certain period of time, right?

But if they are making money from Day One and do not need to make back monies over time, why do we still have to sign a long term contract?  We don't do that for home phones.  We don't do that for any other service where the service provider is not providing equipment or trying to get back up front costs.

So for the public, we have the same monthly fees and the same long term requirement to use a service we aren't sure we'll like, yet have higher up front costs.

Sounds like the companies are making more profit and the public is getting screwed.

And what is new about that?



Monday, April 14, 2008

Boiled Dinner

While not a fan of boiled dinner, this was sent along by a great friend who is a stellar chef and swears it would convert me.

I post it all for you to check and try:

TimeBomb’s Boiled Dinner

  1. Large Smoked Shoulder (7+ Lbs)
  2. One large or two small heads plain cabbage
  3. Two med Spanish onions
  4. One Lb carrots
  5. One stalk Leeks
  6. Three Lbs potatoes
  7. Four garlic cloves
  8. Three Bay Leaves
  9. Pepper Corns
  10. Butter, parsley, salt & pepper

Rinse the shoulder under cold water and place in pot large enough to cover completely with cold water. Add bay leaves, pepper corns and garlic (smash garlic first) and bring water to a simmer. Do not allow water to boil.

Simmer for two hours covered.

Wedge the cabbage into quarters or sixths depending on size and add to pot.

Split, wash very well and chop leeks and add to pot.

Allow ten minutes to pass

Peel and chop onions and add to pot

Peel & cut carrots and add to pot

Allow ten minutes to pass

Peel and cut potatoes and add to pot.

After 20 minutes, uncover. Potatoes should be fork tender. Remove shoulder to platter and tent with foil to keep warm.

Using a slotted spoon, remove vegetables to an additional large platter and add ¼ stick of butter, salt & pepper.

Mustard sauce.

Use several tablespoons of Dijon mustard with one tablespoon of coarse grain Dijon. Add chopped parsley, pepper and reserved fluid from both the meat and the vegetable platter, stir and serve.  

Recommended Books

And as I recently posted a few films that were recommended to me that I have not seen, with the recommendation, I thought I would do the same for some books.

Again, I have not seen hem and cannot vouch for them...  I am copying the recommendations here so that I can keep track of them and that others may benefit from the critique as well.

 

Brooklyn Follies (great writing, style and themes)

by Paul Auster

 

From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. Nathan Glass, a retired life insurance salesman estranged from his family and facing an iffy cancer prognosis, is "looking for a quiet place to die. Someone recommended Brooklyn." What he finds, though, in this ebullient novel by Brooklyn bard Auster (Oracle Night), is a vital, big-hearted borough brimming with great characters. These include Nathan's nephew, Tom, a grad student turned spiritually questing cab driver; Tom's serenely silent nine-year-old niece, who shows up on Tom's doorstep without her unstable mom; and a flamboyant book dealer hatching a scheme to sell a fraudulent manuscript of The Scarlet Letter. As Nathan recovers his soul through immersion in their lives, Auster meditates on the theme of sanctuary in American literature, from Hawthorne to Poe to Thoreau, infusing the novel's picaresque with touches of romanticism, Southern gothic and utopian yearning. But the book's presiding spirit is Brooklyn's first bard, Walt Whitman, as Auster embraces the borough's multitudes—neighborhood characters, drag queens, intellectuals manqué, greasy-spoon waitresses, urbane bourgeoisie—while singing odes to moonrise over the Brooklyn Bridge. Auster's graceful, offhand storytelling carries readers along, with enough shadow to keep the tale this side of schmaltz. The result is an affectionate portrait of the city as the ultimate refuge of the human spirit.

 

 ** The Tender Bar (loved the characters – who hasn’t known an “Uncle Charlie?)

by J.R. Moehringer

 

From Booklist

*Starred Review* People don't buy memoirs to read about happy families. And yet, for those who read a lot of memoirs, it can still be startling to learn both how many people have unhappy families--and how quickly we become inured to those people's pain. It's a rare writer who recollects his trials with clarity and dispassion, giving us not voyeurism but a good look at ourselves. Moehringer, raised poor by his melancholy mother, found himself looking for male role models wherever he could find them--often among the regulars at Publicans, a Manhasset, Long Island, bar that sounds a bit like Cheers with swearing. A Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, he recalls events as disparate as losing his virginity and getting his first newspaper job (at the New York Times) with a newsman's imperative to get the story. The reconstructed dialogue can be a bit cinematic, but that's a quibble. Funny, honest, and insightful, The Tender Bar finds universal themes in an unusual upbringing and declares a real love of barroom life without romanticizing it too much.

*** March (terrific premise,  insight into the times, heartbreaking in spots)

by Geraldine Brooks

 

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. Brooks's luminous second novel, after 2001's acclaimed Year of Wonders, imagines the Civil War experiences of Mr. March, the absent father in Louisa May Alcott's Little Women. An idealistic Concord cleric, March becomes a Union chaplain and later finds himself assigned to be a teacher on a cotton plantation that employs freed slaves, or "contraband." His narrative begins with cheerful letters home, but March gradually reveals to the reader what he does not to his family: the cruelty and racism of Northern and Southern soldiers, the violence and suffering he is powerless to prevent and his reunion with Grace, a beautiful, educated slave whom he met years earlier as a Connecticut peddler to the plantations. In between, we learn of March's earlier life: his whirlwind courtship of quick-tempered Marmee, his friendship with Emerson and Thoreau and the surprising cause of his family's genteel poverty. When a Confederate attack on the contraband farm lands March in a Washington hospital, sick with fever and guilt, the first-person narrative switches to Marmee, who describes a different version of the years past and an agonized reaction to the truth she uncovers about her husband's life. Brooks, who based the character of March on Alcott's transcendentalist father, Bronson, relies heavily on primary sources for both the Concord and wartime scenes; her characters speak with a convincing 19th-century formality, yet the narrative is always accessible. Through the shattered dreamer March, the passion and rage of Marmee and a host of achingly human minor characters, Brooks' affecting, beautifully written novel drives home the intimate horrors and ironies of the Civil War and the difficulty of living honestly with the knowledge of human suffering.

**** ... Not that there isn't room for testosterone fueled emotion among men... Certainly not the pabulum of "a beautiful journey" but I trust you both enough to make the following recommendation: Wally Lamb is an author who wrote "She's come undone" 1992 & "I know this much is true" 1998.  In the graveyard where I live an anemic library forced me to pick up "I know this much is true" despite the Spandoau Ballet title and the Opra book club sticker. It is one of the most extraordinary books I've ever read (I just finished it yesterday) It is not the type of book I would normally glance at but I'm looking forward to reading his first book.  No big deal but this book really affected me.  The book is about two identical twins. One becomes a paranoid scitzo. Their biological father is unknown and the step dad is abusive. Life has battered the "well" twin to point that his marriage is over. He has an old memoir that his Sicilian grandfather wrote and he has it translated to English in an attempt to understand himself. Answers ultimately come but not from expected sources and not always the one's he wants but redemption, forgiveness, and absolution are played out in this emotional human drama. Very well written. 


Recommended Films ...

Here are some films which I have not seen and their recommendations...  some of which are inside jokes and will not make sense, some of which will none-the-less.  

If you don't get the humor, oh well; I do.  ;-)

With no salutes to those who made the recommendations, and in no particular order:

Have you seen “Before the Devil Knows your Dead” with Ethan Hawk and Phillip Seymour Hoffman?  Sydney Lumet – who is older then dirt – directed and makes me think I could walk back into Bert’s place with six dollars.

** I recently rented "High Country" starring Charlize Theron.  Comrade Chip (Rocco Zizza) has a cameo role as the high school teacher.  Talk about art immitating life... - Messican

*** Ended a perfect day by seeing an almost perfect little film tonight;  go see 'Once' -A small movie of nuance, great subtle performances by unknowns and full of some amazing music and lyrics that stir the soul. Loved it. 

**** Nancy and I watched an ultra violent extremely funny and absurdly entertaining movie Sat. night. “Smoking Aces.” Check it out and let me know if you agree.

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

16 Rules To Live By

EE - Okay, here is a repeat of someone's repeat  (boy, I am either too, too busy or getting lazy!  lol).


Ladies and Gents,


I found an article today that like most, I cannot take credit for writing.  But like always, the things I tell you on this blog will not be things that I have come up with, but which the human population of the world has come up with.  We all want to live and we are always looking for motivational things in our life.  We want things that inspire us and make us feel better or work harder as a person.  I know everyone believes this and wants this.  That why I bring you these self motivating rules from a source that isn't utilized or looked at often by people or at least I think so.  The article comes from GoDaddy.com and it was written by the owner Bob Parsons.  Bob, is a unique individual with years of experience and talent.  He currently owns a major corporation from the ground up. I do not know him personally, but he looks like a man every man would in some way like to aspire to.  He came out with these rules for his daily life.  After looking over them, I have implemented them in my daily life and strived to achieve what only some people dream of.  I hope you will look at them the same way.


1. Get and stay out of your comfort zone.

I believe that not much happens of any significance when we're in our comfort zone. I hear people say, "But I'm concerned about security." My response to that is simple: "Security is for cadavers."


2. Never give up.

Almost nothing works the first time it's attempted. Just because what you're doing does not seem to be working, doesn't mean it won't work. It just means that it might not work the way you're doing it. If it was easy, everyone would be doing it, and you wouldn't have an opportunity.


3. When you’re ready to quit, you’re closer than you think.

There's an old Chinese saying that I just love, and I believe it is so true. It goes like this: "The temptation to quit will be greatest just before you are about to succeed."


4. With regard to whatever worries you, not only accept the worst thing that could happen, but make it a point to quantify what the worst thing could be.

Very seldom will the worst consequence be anywhere near as bad as a cloud of "undefined consequences." My father would tell me early on, when I was struggling and losing my shirt trying to get Parsons Technology going, "Well, Robert, if it doesn't work, they can't eat you."


5. Focus on what you want to have happen.

Remember that old saying, "As you think, so shall you be."


6. Take things a day at a time.

No matter how difficult your situation is, you can get through it if you don't look too far into the future, and focus on the present moment. You can get through anything one day at a time.


7. Always be moving forward.

Never stop investing. Never stop improving. Never stop doing something new. The moment you stop improving your organization, it starts to die. Make it your goal to be better each and every day, in some small way. Remember the Japanese concept of Kaizen. Small daily improvements eventually result in huge advantages.


8. Be quick to decide.

Remember what General George S. Patton said: "A good plan violently executed today is far and away better than a perfect plan tomorrow."


9. Measure everything of significance.

I swear this is true. Anything that is measured and watched, improves.


10. Anything that is not managed will deteriorate.

If you want to uncover problems you don't know about, take a few moments and look closely at the areas you haven't examined for a while. I guarantee you problems will be there.


11. Pay attention to your competitors, but pay more attention to what you’re doing.

When you look at your competitors, remember that everything looks perfect at a distance. Even the planet Earth, if you get far enough into space, looks like a peaceful place.


12. Never let anybody push you around.

In our society, with our laws and even playing field, you have just as much right to what you're doing as anyone else, provided that what you're doing is legal.


13. Never expect life to be fair.

Life isn't fair. You make your own breaks. You'll be doing good if the only meaning fair has to you, is something that you pay when you get on a bus (i.e., fare).


14. Solve your own problems.

You'll find that by coming up with your own solutions, you'll develop a competitive edge. Masura Ibuka, the co-founder of SONY, said it best: "You never succeed in technology, business, or anything by following the others." There's also an old Asian saying that I remind myself of frequently. It goes like this: "A wise man keeps his own counsel."


15. Don’t take yourself too seriously.

Lighten up. Often, at least half of what we accomplish is due to luck. None of us are in control as much as we like to think we are.


16. There’s always a reason to smile.

Find it. After all, you're really lucky just to be alive. Life is short. More and more, I agree with my little brother. He always reminds me: “We’re not here for a long time, we’re here for a good time!”


Looking over these rules, they are more for the entrepreneur than anyone else but due to their over all value, they are very good rules. I would like to hear of any other rules people live by, please speak up.


Sam Stone

Monday, April 7, 2008

20 Websites That Can Change Your Life

I thought this was a great site:  http://www.lyved.com/life/20-websites-that-can-change-your-life/  and wanted to pass it on here:

_____

 20 Websites That Can Change Your Life


This post was sponsored by: www.AptoHosting.com - High Quality Shared Web Hosting! Starting at $6.95 per month.


The internet has changed all of our lives, hopefully in a more positive direction. You can use these sites just for entertainment or you can use them to change your life. Many of them you visit all the time but it’s time to look at them another way and harness their power.


*These are in no particular order.


1 - Facebook - Facebook allows you to reconnect with old and new friends. In the case of Lori Haas, facebook helped Lori reunite with her son that she gave up for adoption when she was just 17. (Full Story)


2 - Myspace - This is the most popular social network on the web, even though it has the most spam. Some absolutely hate myspace, but others have used it to launch their careers. Many singers and musicians have achieved “overnight” success using the network. Like facebook you can connect with friends but myspace makes it easier for networking with people you don’t know and create new business contacts.


3 - Digg - many will agree with this choice, while others will strongly disagree. But Digg can open you up to a whole new realm of news. You can visit the homepage once a day and instantly become up to date on what’s going on in the world. You can use Digg to your advantage, find the latest trends in business or find articles on improving your life.


4 - Kiva - Kiva is a lending site that helps entrepreneurs in developing countries finance their ventures. It doesn’t take much to help someone out. By changing others you can change yourself.


5 - Lifehack.org - Lifehack can help you get things done. This blog has in depth articles on all things that do with productivity.


6 - YouTube - If you want to work in the entertainment industry, YouTube is a great way to get your feet wet and at a very low cost. You have an audience of millions of people at your disposal.


7 - Google - This is an obvious one. I really don’t know how we lived without Google in the early days of the internet.


8 - Twitter - Twitter may someday save lives by people quickly alerting others of dangerous situations to avoid. During the California fires, people used Twitter to let friends know that they were safe. You can also use Twitter as a way to help with your business networking by knowing where your business contacts are at.


9 - eBay - eBay can save you a lot of money but can also bring you immense opportunities. You can easily create an online business that reaches millions of buyers. Many people have very successful million dollar enterprises using ebay.


10 - Ancestry.com - This website can help you piece together your family history. By understanding the past your can change the future. * Many readers have expressed concerns about the business practices of Ancestry.com. Please read comments below and be sure to check any complaints about Ancestry.com or any other business before working with them.*


11 - Zen Habits - This blog is similar to Lifehack.org by offering simple productivity to get the most of your life.


12 - Craigslist - You can find almost anything on Craigslist. It’s a simple site but can simply change your life.


13 - Post Secret - The Post Secret project shows you that we’re all very much the same. It can also show you that others may have worse problems than the ones your facing.


14 - LinkedIn - You can use LinkedIn to network with professionals from all areas of business including Fortune 500 companies.


15 - TED.com - This website is full of various videos from TED conferences and has biographies on some of the greatest thinkers of present time. Presentations from successful people such as Tony Robbins, Richard Branson, Jeff Bezos, Bono, Seth Godin, and Jane Goodall. Most videos are a few minutes long but can empower you for years to come.


16 - Wikipedia - Not everything on Wikipedia is accurate but there is so much information on almost every topic possible. Don’t know about something, just look it up on Wikipedia and within a few minutes you can be informed.


17 - The Fastlane to Millions - This is a relatively new and small forum for those who are or aspire to be entrepreneurs and millionaires. The members are very positive and want to help each other get the most out of life.


18 - Second Life - This virtual world may seem like a virtual waste of time but some people such as Anshe Chung have found opportunities limitless on Second Life. Anshe has become a millionaire by buying and selling virtual real estate.


19 - Quoteland - You can visit Quoteland and read hundreds of quotes that will give you a fresh perspective and change your life in minutes. If you have an open mind.


20 - 43 Things - 43 Things can be a great way to achieve your goals. You can post your dreams and aspirations for all to see. Having that type of pressure can be very positive for you, helping you continue till you reach your goals.


* 21 - Stumble Upon - This has been requested by readers to be added to the list. Stumble Upon can change your life and help you discover so many new websites you would never be able to otherwise.


* 22 - del.icio.us - This site has also been demanded to be added to the list. So since many have found Lyved via del.icio.us, it must be an addition. Maybe someone from del.icio.us can change their life after visiting Lyved.


What sites have been most beneficial to you or changed your life? Leave a comment below.


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