Sunday, March 20, 2011

Sore muscles, Hot Water, McCarthy was right and Toffee shows off

Your muscles will tell you when you have done too much. And yesterday I did too much.

So the plan to come home from church and start digging in the garden was trashed. My legs feel tight and sore and my arms weigh too much. So I worked on one of the outside security lights, to no avail. Then I decided to go under the house and open the air vents, turn on the deck's water faucet and give everything a look see.

Durn.

The drain from the downstairs water heater's safety pan, which exits under the house, was dripping water. A trip to the water heater confirmed that it was leaking. So the question now is, can I get it replaced before the leak becomes terminal?

Maybe I can sell the idea to the History Channel. "Poker Player's Hot Water Needs." "Maybe a Flash of Drip??"

I hang out on some newspaper forums. They are really the National Enquirer of forums. And while the average threads usually become "You're dumb. No you're dumb," after a few comments, occasionally you see some good writing and solid logic. And of course the always present claim that the Right is a McCarthyite. That is supposed to shut down all discussion.

Actually McCarthy's base claim, that there were communists in the government, was proven. Try reading "Venona, Decoding Soviet Espionage in America," by Hayes and Klehr, Yale University Press.

It is the story of how the NSA broke the Soviet's diplomatic code and didn't reveal it for years and years as it was an valuable tool. It was finally revealed, long after the collapse of the Soviet Union, when pushed by Senator Moynihan (Democrat) and fleshed out with KGB files from the old Soviet Union. It is full of names, dates, places, lists, etc. It is not a political book, and is somewhat dry reading unless you are interested in facts rather than political positions.

McCarthy's problem was the method he chose, and a desire by the establishment Republicans to not rock the "good ole boy" system. (Kinda reminds us of the present establishment Repubs and the Tea Party, eh?) Plus many Democrats, fearful of being saddled with the fact that this had happened on their watch, defended anyone named or investigated.

But we now know the government was filled with some spies, fellow travelers and useful idiots. Not unlike now, only now they are more open.

As part of my self imposed rest this afternoon I flipped over to TCM just as it was starting to broadcast Woody Allen's "Sleeper."

Allen doesn't score with the premise that he has been frozen for 200 years and is then brought back into a world he knows nothing about. But he does have a few good lines that are more satire than jokes. And it is amazing how much the government of 2173 reminds me of the various things the Left is doing only 38 years later.

Humor has never worked well in science fiction. Saving civilization is serious business, whether from aliens, climate change or Republicans.

There have been attempts, though mostly centered on fantasy rather than scifi. Charles Myers gave us:


Imagination
October 1954

Toffee existed in Marc Pillsworth's imagination but had a habit of becoming real and causing more problems for Pillsworth than she solved. Perhaps she served as the model for "I Dream of Genie."

Myers wrote 15 Toffee stories, most with the same plot line. The humor was more Genie than Groucho.

The kicker in all of this is that under his pen name of Henry Farrell he wrote "Whatever Happened to Baby Jane," the screenplay "Hush...Hush Sweet Charlotte" and many other screen plays and novels. This is somewhat backward in that most authors used their pen names for pulp fiction and their real name for the slicks.

Imagination was founded in 1950 by Ray Palmer who had just started "Other Worlds." With issue #3 it was acquired by William Hamling who had been the editor of "Fantastic Adventures," the companion to "Amazing Stories" while Palmer had been its editor.

In September 1954 Hamling launched:


IT was, to my knowledge, the only scifi/fantasy magazine launched with the intent to feature "saucy" humorous fantasy fiction. Hamling gave up after 3 issues and the last 25 issues were standard space opera.

submit to reddit OnTwitter I am Lesabre1

"Unlimited tolerance must lead to the disappearance of tolerance. If we extend unlimited tolerance even to those who are intolerant, if we are not prepared to defend a tolerant society against the onslaught of the intolerant, then the tolerant will be destroyed, and tolerance with them." - Karl Popper

“Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants. It is the creed of slaves.” - William Pitt

"Logic. There is little logic among the cultural elite, maybe because there is little omnipresent fear of job losses or the absence of money, and so arises a rather comfortable margin to indulge in nonsense." - Victor Davis Hanson

Saturday, March 19, 2011

Baseball and robots and king sticks

Beezboll practice is too much for old men. Particularly when they want you to pitch batting practice.

Ouch. If it's bad tonight.... in the morning it will be a woweee.

And yes, I've done the hot shower and two Advils bit.

But I do love to watch the kids play. They hustle and slide and hit and pitch and throw.

I can remember doing that. Well, almost remember. Except we didn't have $60 gloves, $30 bats and at least 50 balls. And cleats? Ya gotta be kidding. If we had a ball with its original cover, a pair of tennis shoes and a bat that was only cracked (but taped carefully!) we felt great.

And we never had batting helmets. Didn't need'em. Well, I did hit Joe C in the head with the bat but it was an accident. No matter what his Mother thought. Besides, he walked a bit sideways even before the unfortunate event... err accident.

After we tired of baseball we would often play "King Stick." This consisted of finding a stick of about 30 inches, sharpening the point and slinging it into the ground. Others would come and try knock yours over, or better yet, split it. There were certain rules and protocols that had to be followed. Any violation could result in direct retaliation of the pushing, shoving, fist slinging kind. Helped get us ready for growing up into the Cold War.

I once had a stick made out of an oak shipping crate that I found behind Holmes' funeral home. I worked for hours sharpening it and declared it was empowered with death rays from the casket it had been shipped in all the way from Memphis. Being oak it was super hard and was never defeated. But I lost it over the winter of 1950. Probably wound up as kindling for the Warm Morning stove that heated the house. But by spring we were into kites and tops and no one knew I had been disarmed.

After practice Grandson and I did the MacDonalds trick. A double quarter pounder and a big shake for him and a Big Mac for me and he ate half my fries. Greater love has no Grandfather than to give up half his fries to the boy who eats continually and anything left near him.

Grandfather is still in AARP. It's politics suck but it offers such wonderful fringe benefits. Among them is this list of the 10 worst places to retire. They are, from the awful to the bad:

Illinois, California, Rhode Island, New Jersey, Ohio, Wisconsin, Massachusetts, Connecticut and Nevada.

Well, hellooooooo. As Brother Dave Gardner said, "You ever hear of anybody retiring Up North?"

I was surprised to see Nevada in the Top Worst Ten but the article says its real estate market is bad. Worst foreclosure rate in the nation. Uh.... I wonder if the author understands that you want to retire to a place where $200K will buy you 4000 sq feet in a gated community... Probably not.

Sarcasm aside.....

IF UT DOESN'T FIRE AD HAMILTON THERE IS NO JUSTICE!


1. A robot may not injure a human being or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm.

2. A robot must obey any orders given to it by human beings, except where such orders would conflict with the First Law.

3. A robot must protect its own existence as long as such protection does not conflict with the First or Second Law.

And, of course, that comes from Issac Asimov who not only laid out future history for thousands of years, invented ethics for robots.

Now, if we could just adopt them for our politicians.

submit to reddit OnTwitter I am Lesabre1

"Unlimited tolerance must lead to the disappearance of tolerance. If we extend unlimited tolerance even to those who are intolerant, if we are not prepared to defend a tolerant society against the onslaught of the intolerant, then the tolerant will be destroyed, and tolerance with them." - Karl Popper

“Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants. It is the creed of slaves.” - William Pitt

"Logic. There is little logic among the cultural elite, maybe because there is little omnipresent fear of job losses or the absence of money, and so arises a rather comfortable margin to indulge in nonsense." - Victor Davis Hanson

Friday, March 18, 2011

Getting ready for spring

I haven't written a thing here in 4 days. I think I'm suffering from news overload. The ME is collapsing, gasoline prices are climbing, Japan is deep trouble, the economy remains mired in a deep recession.... A man can only stand so much...

Think I will jet off to Rio..... and did I tell you about my Final 4 picks??

Wait! That's the Prez's thingee.

Can you imagine this shit? For a while I was trying to figure out if Obamie was evil or stupid. Now I know he is just an empty suit. Oh, I know he has enabled some evil people but he isn't. He is just stupidly empty.
Thankfully he will be gone... that is if the Repubs don't do something equally stupid.... Like nominating Romney..



Obama Party

79 degrees and lovely. Spent most of the day cleaning the front yard. Back and side tomorrow after ball practice. I actually broke a sweat and discovered I have too much belly fat.... despite all that treadmill work.
Perhaps the supper table work overcame the treadmill work.

Played some poker this week. Poor results. Flopped one set... of Aces and was beaten by a lady who called my raise and went heads up with a diamond draw... One of the Aces was a diamond. She couldn't beat 2 Aces. But she could beat my 3 Aces. Such is life in the fast lane.

I was just watching Haley Barbour on C-Span2 talking to Repubs in Iowa. Yeah. Friday night and I'm watching C-Span2. I have no life. Thank goodness I couldn't foresee this happening 30 years ago or I would have probably cut my throat... Well, not really but I feel the need for saying something dramatic.

He was just full of plain old commonsense stuff. But his best was a quote from Fred Smith, founder of FedEx. "The main thing to remember is to keep the main thing the main thing."

I like Barbour. He speaks Southern. And he has no chance at getting nominated. And that is a shame. A damn shame.

And if UT doesn't fire AD Hamilton then there is no justice in the world.

I like this from Mike L!

GENERAL PUBLIC NOTICE:
Please be advised I am sick to death of receiving questions about my dog who mauled 3 Muslims sitting on a rug next to my back wall, 6 illegal's wearing Obama T-shirts, 4 Democrats wearing Pelosi T-shirts, 2 rappers, 5 phone operators who asked me to press #1 for English, 9 teenagers with their pants hanging down past their cracks, 8 customer service desk people speaking in broken English, 10 flag burners, and a Pakistani taxi driver.

FOR THE LAST TIME ... MY DOG IS NOT FOR SALE !!!


Yeah, I know. Very unpc.

More political stuff.

The Repubs bragging about the spending cuts they have made reminds me of the old (vulgarity alert!) joke about the mouse that is riding on the rear of an elephant. They are having sex. At the conclusion the mouse asks:

"Did I hurt you, honey?"

Sorry about that. Now I will return to the clean cut old man you know me as.

But not all is bad. Now we find that lawyers can be replaced by computers.

And what's the results?

The computers seem to be good at their new jobs. Mr. Herr, the former chemical company lawyer, used e-discovery software to reanalyze work his company’s lawyers did in the 1980s and ’90s. His human colleagues had been only 60 percent accurate, he found.

NYTimes link

I opine that the computer will also give you more sympathy for its screw ups.

Computers have long been a staple of science fiction. Perhaps the most famous in the movies was Hal in 2001.

This, of course, is not a computer.

Startling Stories
March, 1951
This is obviously a girl, and any 13 year old who was not attracted to her but instead to a computer would obviously rule all of us 13 year olds who gazed longingly at her in March of 1951.

BTW - Leigh Brackett was married to Edmond Hamilton so I guess you can say this was a family affair issue.

And the artist was (Who else?) Earle Bergey who died in 1952. His style was distinctly lurid and he is known as the inventor of the brass bra. Perhaps he was who Howard Hughes was trying to imitate.

submit to reddit OnTwitter I am Lesabre1

"Unlimited tolerance must lead to the disappearance of tolerance. If we extend unlimited tolerance even to those who are intolerant, if we are not prepared to defend a tolerant society against the onslaught of the intolerant, then the tolerant will be destroyed, and tolerance with them." - Karl Popper

“Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants. It is the creed of slaves.” - William Pitt

"Logic. There is little logic among the cultural elite, maybe because there is little omnipresent fear of job losses or the absence of money, and so arises a rather comfortable margin to indulge in nonsense." - Victor Davis Hanson

Monday, March 14, 2011

Bits and pieces 3-14-11

If it bleeds it leads. So we will be contiually harranged about what may happen at the nuclear power plants.

In the meantime our media will ignore the real interesting story of how well the Japanese people are dealing with this, and why they are doing so.

But then that would require real knowledge, introspection and study.

Something the press has never done well, if at all.

I worked for two very large Japanese corporations in the twilight of my career and what I discovered was that almost everything I had been told about the Japanese was not true. While they were polite, almost to a fault in some cases, they didn't suffer fools very well. And while they respected age, age was supposed to be able to demonstrate it deserved that respect. And while they were patient, they expected results based on what you you were willing to committ to.

Three very good "traits" if you ask me.

Over the 11 years since I left I have lost track of all of them. Several I know remained in the US. Others returned home. I pray they are all well.

In the meantime back in the Land of the Big Gedunk. (That's CONUS in Navy speak.)

The prols are becoming even more restless.

Source: TalkingPointsMemo.com

New York Federal Reserve President William Dudley on Friday tried to calm people's nerves about rising food prices by reminding them that other products -- like iPads -- are getting cheaper.

"Today you can buy an iPad 2 that costs the same as an iPad 1 that is twice as powerful," Dudley said in Queens, Reuters reports. "You have to look at the price of all things."

But better iPads don't put food on the table, audience members reminded him. "When was the last time, sir, that you went grocery shopping?" one person asked. And, perhaps most succinctly, another told him, "I can't eat an iPad."

Link

The article goes on to air the Fed's claim that we can expect a 4% food price hike this year.

Somebody is lying, or else they can't factor in a 75% run up in energy costs to the price of food. Somehow I think the former is the correct answer.

Returning to things more personal, as if the cost of eating could be less personal........

I have seen two old friends leave us behind in the past 6 weeks.

The herd thins.

And I listen more intently to any rustle in the weeds that surround the old body. "Here there be Tygers" is what they use to write at the edge of maps showing unknown lands. And we all have an unknown land in our future.

Where did the time go?

With all the wars and devastion going on I find it difficult to find a sci fi story that out does reality. Maybe one that has a story about how mankind will always forge ahead.


Planet Stories
September 1953

And that would be "The Ark of Mars," by Leigh Brackett. I have no memory of the story, but the theme was that mankind would overcome all problems. I think that is why I liked scifi. I was as poor as a church mouse and had to work to just have spending money.

But I knew I was going on to better things.

BTW - Brackett was also a screen writer. Next time AMC shows "Rio Bravo" look for her name in the credits at the end of the film.



submit to reddit OnTwitter I am Lesabre1

"Unlimited tolerance must lead to the disappearance of tolerance. If we extend unlimited tolerance even to those who are intolerant, if we are not prepared to defend a tolerant society against the onslaught of the intolerant, then the tolerant will be destroyed, and tolerance with them." - Karl Popper

“Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants. It is the creed of slaves.” - William Pitt

"Logic. There is little logic among the cultural elite, maybe because there is little omnipresent fear of job losses or the absence of money, and so arises a rather comfortable margin to indulge in nonsense." - Victor Davis Hanson

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Lest we forget

Four murdered in Israel.
submit to reddit OnTwitter I am Lesabre1

"Unlimited tolerance must lead to the disappearance of tolerance. If we extend unlimited tolerance even to those who are intolerant, if we are not prepared to defend a tolerant society against the onslaught of the intolerant, then the tolerant will be destroyed, and tolerance with them." - Karl Popper

“Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants. It is the creed of slaves.” - William Pitt

"Logic. There is little logic among the cultural elite, maybe because there is little omnipresent fear of job losses or the absence of money, and so arises a rather comfortable margin to indulge in nonsense." - Victor Davis Hanson

Your tax dollars at work


Link

You gotta hand it to Big Business. They sure know how to work Big Government.

ATLANTA — The price of preventing preterm labor is about to go through the roof.

A drug for high-risk pregnant women has cost about $10 to $20 per injection. Next week, the price shoots up to $1,500 a dose, meaning the total cost during a pregnancy could be as much as $30,000.

That's because the drug, a form of progesterone given as a weekly shot, has been made cheaply for years, mixed in special pharmacies that custom-compound treatments that are not federally approved.

But recently, KV Pharmaceutical of suburban St.Louis won government approval to exclusively sell the drug, known as Makena (Mah-KEE'-Nah). The March of Dimes and many obstetricians supported that because it means quality will be more consistent and it will be easier to get.

None of them anticipated the dramatic price hike, though — especially since most of the cost for development and research was shouldered by others in the past.

snip

But Snow and others said someone is going to have to pay the higher price. Some of the burden will fall on health insurance companies, which will have to raise premiums or other costs to their other customers. And some will fall on cash-strapped state Medicaid programs, which may be forced to stop paying for the drug or enroll fewer people.

"There's no question they can't afford this," said Matt Salo, executive director of the National Association of Medicaid Directors.

Salo and Snow said they do not know how many state Medicaid programs currently pay for Makena, which as a generic was recommended by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists.

Aetna will continue to pay for the drug, Armstrong said, but it will be an expensive pill to swallow. Aetna currently covers it for about 1,000 women a year, so the new federal endorsement is likely to cost an estimated $30 million more each year.

snip

Ther-Rx and its parent company became involved about three years ago and acquired rights to the drug from a Massachusetts company named Hologic Inc., said Divis, who is also Ther-Rx's president.

To get FDA approval, the company is spending hundreds of millions of dollars in additional research, including an international study involving 1,700 women, Divis said. The FDA last month signed off and gave Makena orphan drug status. That designation ensures Ther-Rx will be the sole source of the drug for seven years.

The March of Dimes, which gets hundreds of thousands of dollars in funding from Ther-Rx, celebrated the approval in a press release, saying if all women eligible for the shots receive them, nearly 10,000 spontaneous premature births could be prevented each year.

"For the first time, we have an FDA-approved treatment to offer women who have delivered a baby too soon, giving them hope that their next child will have a better chance at a healthy start in life," said Dr. Alan Fleischman, the organization's medical director.

As for the cost, he said the drug maker's financial assistance program will ensure no eligible woman is denied the drug due to inability to pay.

Some doctors said they were happy getting the cheaper version from compounding pharmacies, and Aetna's Armstrong said she was unaware of any quality concerns.

Still, doctors will use the Ther-Rx brand, in part because of legal worries.

Not that they have a choice: Last month, KV sent cease-and-desist letters to compounding pharmacies, telling them they could face FDA enforcement actions if they kept making the drug.

So let me see. We had a generic that worked so the FDA created a non-generic by fiat and the price went out of sight.

And politicians actually wonder why we have no faith in the government.

submit to reddit OnTwitter I am Lesabre1

"Unlimited tolerance must lead to the disappearance of tolerance. If we extend unlimited tolerance even to those who are intolerant, if we are not prepared to defend a tolerant society against the onslaught of the intolerant, then the tolerant will be destroyed, and tolerance with them." - Karl Popper

“Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants. It is the creed of slaves.” - William Pitt

"Logic. There is little logic among the cultural elite, maybe because there is little omnipresent fear of job losses or the absence of money, and so arises a rather comfortable margin to indulge in nonsense." - Victor Davis Hanson

Saturday, March 12, 2011

School on how to talk Italian


Hat tip to whoever sent me this.


submit to reddit OnTwitter I am Lesabre1

 "Unlimited tolerance must lead to the disappearance of tolerance. If we extend unlimited tolerance even to those who are intolerant, if we are not prepared to defend a tolerant society against the onslaught of the intolerant, then the tolerant will be destroyed, and tolerance with them." - Karl Popper

“Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants. It is the creed of slaves.” - William Pitt

"Logic. There is little logic among the cultural elite, maybe because there is little omnipresent fear of job losses or the absence of money, and so arises a rather comfortable margin to indulge in nonsense." - Victor Davis Hanson