Month: February 2015

Wednesday, 18 February 2015

10:16 – Barbara is still driving the 4X4 to work. She called this morning to let me know she’d arrived safely and said that the main roads were in good shape but there’s still ice on some of the neighborhood streets. When I took Colin out this morning, all four feet skidded out from under him and he went down. I suspect there’ll still be quite a few fender benders today.

We finished series two of Mr. Selfridge on Amazon Prime streaming the other night and we’re now about halfway through series five of Justified. Next up is series two of Vikings. I like having both Netflix and Amazon streaming. When we start to run short of stuff on Netflix we watch Amazon and vice versa. At about $15/month combined for both of them it’s a no-brainer to have both.

Someone posted a link to Another Perspective : The Case Against IMMINENT Economic Collapse, which gets it mostly right. The only exception is the author’s comment on the eurozone, which in fact is imploding right now. But the euro is not the dollar. The federal government can create as many dollars as it needs, instantly and at any time. That means the dollar can’t suffer a sudden collapse. What it will suffer is a gradual loss in value because of ongoing high inflation, which is essentially a tax on anyone holding dollars or dollar-denominated debt. That’s why I expect a slow but inevitable slide into dystopia rather than a sudden economic collapse. That’s also why I’d prefer to hold most of our assets in things like property and physical goods rather than in dollars or, worse, in electronic values in a bank database.


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Tuesday, 17 February 2015

08:13 – We got about what was forecast. An inch or two of snow, with sleet and freezing rain on top of it. Barbara just left for work. The neighborhood streets are a mess, but she should be able to make it out in 4WD. The main roads are plowed and salted. The high today is to hover right around freezing, which’ll melt some of the ice just enough to make things really slippery.

I’m writing and working on kits today.


14:56 – I see that the Danes have finally named the dead gunman who murdered two people and wounded several others in two attacks in Copenhagen at a free speech event and a synagogue. I was surprised to learn that this piece of filth’s name was Omar Abdel Hamid El-Hussein, which sounds muslim to me. Even our own president, Barrack Hussein Obama–which also sounds muslim to me–tells us that these repeated attacks are random and have nothing to do with islam. It’s obviously just coincidence that the victims are those who have criticized or ridiculed islam and even more coincidental that these terrorists’ bullets seem to hit a lot of Jews.

I also see that Benjamin Netanyahu, the Prime Minister of Israel, is encouraging European Jews to relocate to Israel, where they’ll be safe(r). Netanyahu is being roundly criticized by European leaders for his remarks. Apparently, those leaders have forgotten that European Jews have already been the victims of one Holocaust within living memory and want them to stay put for round two. I think any European Jew, including UK Jews, who can possibly emigrate would be crazy not to do so. If not to Israel, then to Canada or the US.

Back before 9/11, I remember talking with and exchanging emails with my late friend, Bo Leuf, who was living at the time in Malmö, Sweden. According to Bo, even 15 years ago the muslims were turning Sweden into a hellhole. Cops were afraid to patrol areas of the cities that were infested by muslims. Swedish men were being attacked and Swedish women raped by these scum, and nothing was ever done about it. It wasn’t even reported by the press. Here it is 15 years later and this plague has spread and worsened dramatically. The western democracies treat muslims as being above the law. In many cases, literally. Rather than being prosecuted for their crimes in national and local secular courts, these criminals are often turned over to shariah “courts”, which of course don’t punish them at all.

I just wonder how long it will be before the lid blows off. People in western democracies know that their “leaders” are lying to them. They know that islam is the problem. They know that a high percentage of muslims are criminal scum, and that most muslims who are not active terrorists are would-be terrorists, or at least sympathizers. Of course there are secular “muslims” who don’t actually believe in islam, but they’re a tiny minority. And when the lid finally does blow off, those secular “muslims” will be tarred with the same brush. Perhaps literally.

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Monday, 16 February 2015

08:16 – Barbara is off to work. Colin is inconsolable. He watched out the front door as she drove away. The weather forecasts agree that we’re supposed to get snow starting mid-afternoon. Estimates range from 2″ to 5″ (12.5 cm), possibly changing to sleet late this evening. Local schools are closing two hours early.

She’s driving the Trooper. During winter weather, I’m much more comfortable with her driving a 4X4, and one that outmasses the average car on the road by a factor of about two. I know from experience what happens when a vehicle of 2X mass collides with a vehicle of 1X mass. It’s not pretty for the smaller vehicle. The Trooper also carries a comprehensive emergency kit, comprising one large duffel and two medium ones.


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Sunday, 15 February 2015

08:11 – It was a bit breezy here last night. I’m guessing the winds were gusting close to 60 MPH (100 KPH). One of our our large rolling bins blew over and rolled across the driveway at the back of the house. We have lots of fallen branches in the yard. Power failed only briefly here mid-evening, but as of 11 last night there were about 6,000 homes in Winston-Salem without power. Right now, it’s 14F (-10C) with a stiff breeze.

Forecasts are now calling for a couple inches (5 cm) of snow starting tomorrow afternoon and into tomorrow night, with the dreaded “wintry mix” on Tuesday. Barbara returns to work tomorrow. She’ll drive the Trooper, the back end of which carries an extensive emergency kit, including lots of warm clothing and blankets. It’s difficult to imagine a situation in which she’d be stranded on the way to or from work, but then the thousands of people who ended up stranded for days on Atlanta freeways last winter probably thought the same thing.


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Saturday, 14 February 2015

08:38 – Another blast of cold weather has arrived in Winston-Salem. Our high today is to be around 50F (10C), but then for the next several days highs are to be around freezing. Lows are to be mid-teens to low-20’s F (-10 to -5C), falling to the single digits F (~ -14C) later in the week.

I’m doing laundry this morning, as well as repacking our vehicle emergency kits. Barbara is to return to work Monday, and the forecast for Monday and Tuesday includes frozen precipitation. We live in the lee of the mountains, so as usual no one will know for sure what type or how much until it actually arrives. We could get nothing at all, or we could get a winter storm severe enough to shut things down. Barbara will drive the Trooper, but even so I don’t want her risking a fall walking from the parking deck to her office and back if it’s icy.


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Friday, 13 February 2015

08:51 – Friday the 13th falls on a Friday this month. Barbara’s recovery continues. She’ll continue practicing driving over the next few days before returning to work on Monday. I just got back from walking Colin. It’s 23F (-5C) with a stiff breeze.

Congratulations to our friend Steve Childers, who just completed the Herschel 400 list. Barbara and I started working this list more than ten years ago, but quickly gave up on it. From our light-polluted region and using only a 10-inch telescope, it quickly became obvious that we had no chance at bagging all 400 objects on this list. Even the brighter objects were extremely difficult to see. Steve’s 17.5-inch telescope gave him a chance at bagging all 400 objects on the list, but even with three times the light gathering ability of our 10-inch it must have been extremely challenging, to put it mildly. But Steve’s persistence over the last ten years or so let him get it done. Steve joins a very small group of amateur astronomers who have successfully observed and logged all 400 of these objects.


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Thursday, 12 February 2015

08:09 – Barbara is much more cheerful now that the doctor has approved her returning to work. Colin and I will miss having her home all day.

We’ll probably never know what actually happened in that shooting in Chapel Hill Tuesday, but my guess is that the three muslims who were killed ganged up on Mr. Hicks and he was forced to shoot them to defend himself. If he was in fear of his life, he was certainly entitled to use deadly force in self defense.


09:17 – I finally finished the first book in Matt Bracken’s Enemies Trilogy last night. All I can say is that he completely misses the point. His bogeyman is “left-wing” elements of the federal government. The real enemy is the federal government, period. It has simply grown far too powerful. Even well-intentioned politicians and bureaucrats, of whom there are many, take well-intentioned actions that inevitably have evil consequences. Their goal is not to chip away at the freedoms of US citizens; that is merely the result of those actions. I am reminded of Lord Acton’s famous letter to Mary Gladstone.

I cannot accept your canon that we are to judge Pope and King unlike other men, with a favorable presumption that they did no wrong. If there is any presumption it is the other way against holders of power, increasing as the power increases. Historic responsibility has to make up for the want of legal responsibility. Power tends to corrupt and absolute power corrupts absolutely. Great men are almost always bad men, even when they exercise influence and not authority: still more when you superadd the tendency or the certainty of corruption by authority. There is no worse heresy than that the office sanctifies the holder of it.

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Wednesday, 11 February 2015

08:36 – Barbara is doing well. We’ll do some driving practice over the next few days. It wasn’t an issue when she had her left knee replaced in October 2011, but a right knee replacement can affect driving. As her physical therapist said, it’s not so much the ability to press the gas or brake pedal as the ability to switch rapidly between them. So we’ll start in an empty parking lot and work our way up to residential streets and then main drags.

I see that NBC News hopes to salvage its superstar. They’ve suspended Brian Williams for six months without pay, hoping that will be long enough for viewers to forget that Williams is apparently a pathological liar. If I were NBC News management, I’d assign Williams for the next six months as an embedded reporter with ISIS forces. The worst that could happen would be ISIS beheading Williams or burning him to death. That prospect shouldn’t scare Brian “Rambo” Williams, since he’s already been a big hero everywhere from the Middle East to New Orleans during Katrina.


12:03 – There are two AT&T cherry-picker trucks parked in front of our house right now, connecting fiber. We should be able to sign up for their gigabit service in the next month or two, if we decide to do so. I may instead just bludgeon TWC into discounting our current cable Internet service on a month-to-month basis. I figure it’s actually worth about a fifth of what we’re paying for it now.


16:27 – We just got back from the doctor, who approved Barbara to drive and to return to work Monday. She’s delighted, and I’m sure the people at her office will also be delighted. We’ll practice driving over the weekend so she can get used to working the brake and gas pedals with her knee, which is still not 100%. It probably won’t get back to 100% for at least six months and possibly a year. But everyone is happy, except Colin, who’s now used to her being home all day every day.

She’ll be getting back to work just as the cold weather returns. Temperatures are forecast to fall over the next several days. Monday’s high is to be below freezing and the low 14F (-10C).

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Tuesday, 10 February 2015

08:06 – Barbara is doing well. Assuming the doctor approves, she’ll probably return to work next week.

I built a new batch of chemistry kits yesterday, lacking only the wire gauzes. I have a few of those on hand, which should be enough to carry us until the new shipment arrives. If not, I’ll just ship the kits without and send the wire gauzes separately when they arrive. Today I’m going to get started on a new batch of biology kits, which we’re running low on.


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Monday, 9 February 2014

09:22 – OMGWO inventory strikes again. I was attempting to build a batch of chemistry kits yesterday but I couldn’t find the wire gauzes that go in each kit. My inventory records claimed I had 302 of the things in stock, but that was last updated in September. I’m pretty sure I haven’t built that many chemistry kits since September, so I should have at least some of them still around somewhere. I’ll keep looking, but I cut a PO yesterday for 300 more, along with a bunch of other stuff. I do have a few of them, so I should be able to build enough kits to hold us until I find the others or the new order arrives. Meanwhile, I’ll go ahead and build the batch and label the ones that are missing the gauze.

I’m running low on pipe tobacco. Back in mid-November I’d placed my usual order for five pounds, which usually lasts me three months or so at roughly an ounce a day. The same stuff I ordered three months ago is now 50% more expensive, which seems a bit extreme. I told Barbara that if the price keeps going up I’ll start growing and curing my own.


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