From Pine View Farm

March, 2013 archive

Ryan’s Hope 0

Paul Ryan as leprechaun hoping for pot of gold at end of GOP budget rainbow

Via Bob Cesca’s Awesome Blog.

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Facebook Frolics 0

On the way to the MySpace space:

According to the Pew Research Center’s Internet and American Life Project, more than three-fourths of teenagers have a cellphone and use online social networking sites such as Facebook. But educators and kids say there is plenty of anecdotal evidence to suggest that Facebook for teenagers has become a bit like a school-sanctioned prom – a necessary rite of passage with plenty of adult onlookers – while apps such as Snapchat and Kik Messenger are the much cooler after-party.

More about the shiny new things at the link.

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Droning On 0

The Roanoke Times predicts dollar signs.

With parts easily found on the Internet, a determined drone aficionado could build a strong unit capable of carrying a 50-pound payload 3 miles and back, said Ellis, who is aware of the potential downside of that much capability in the wrong hands.

On the other hand, Ellis has been approached by business people with a vision to sell legitimate aerial services. One was a home inspector who wanted an alternative to climbing roofs for inspection. Another was a wedding photographer.

Once drones are approved for commercial use, “it’s going to generate a massive number of business opportunities for people,” Ellis said.

I used to work with a dron—never mind.

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Firebugs 2

I grew up on Pine View Farm in Northampton County on the Eastern Shore of Virginia, the peninsula between the Chesapeake Bay and the Atlantic Ocean, the bit of land that makes the Chesapeake a bay.

Shoremen do not forget the Shore. It is part of us wherever we go.

You know the peninsula.

It’s the one that Virginia Tech left off its map of Virginia on its helmets for one game many years ago. (For only one game. The Eastern Shore alumni–and they are many–were not happy. They protested with their wallets. Virginia Tech may not remember, but we do.)

The world is divided into two parts.

The Shore and “across the bay.”

You are from one or from the other.

We always joked, “Virginia forgets about us except for taxes and elections.”

The Shore has two counties, Accomack and Northampton. (Southampton is on the Western Shore, that is, “across the bay.” We used to play them in high school sports. It was a damned long drive in a school bus to get to the games with the cheerleaders in the back of the bus and no canoodling–too many kids for canoodling and I would have missed out on any canoodling anyway. Dammit. If I knew then what I know now . . . . oh, never mind.)

Accomack is on fire.

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“An Armed Society Is a Polite Society” 0

Be polite in the big box.

Bucks County Coroner Joseph Campbell said Sunday that 58-year-old Mark McCarpy of Levittown died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the chest.

Authorities say he entered Dick’s Sporting Goods in Fairless Hills after 7 p.m. Saturday and asked to see a shotgun and ammunition. McCarpy pulled out a handgun , later found to be unloaded , and ordered the worker to undo the shotgun’s gun lock. He then barricaded himself inside a bathroom.

Also, when you go to college, be polite to your roommates:

While UCF (University of Central Florida–ed.) police were on the way, officers received a 911 call for a male with a gun in the residence hall.

Police found the male dead from what appears to be a self-inflicted gunshot wound. It was not immediately clear if the male is a student.

(snip)

Law-enforcement officers investigating the incident found a handgun, an assault weapon and and improvised explosive devices, a campus spokeswoman said.

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QOTD 0

Jerry Garcia:

Constantly choosing the lesser of two evils is still choosing evil.

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Cat’s Eye 0

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No Sympathy for Empathy 0

Much like Historiann, whom I cited yesterday,* Jonathan Chait is not impressed with Senator Rob Portman’s about face on gay marriage, asking whether it is pro-gay, or simply pro-Portman.

Buried in the article is this nugget:

The signal failure of conservative thought is an inability to give any weight to the perspective of the disadvantaged. It’s one thing to argue that society can’t afford to provide all its citizens with access to health insurance. It’s quite another to dismiss the needs of the uninsured because the majority has insurance. In his acceptance speech at the Republican National Convention, Paul Ryan dismissed universal health insurance as “a new entitlement we didn’t even ask for.” The construction was so telling — “we” meant the majority who have access to regular medical care and would rather not subsidize those who don’t.

The Republican Party, the party of “I’ve got mine.”

____________________

*When I wrote the post and scheduled it to post today.

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Hawkocrites, War and Deficit Depts. 0

Excerpt:

Here’s a very simple economic formula that works: People who supported the Iraq War don’t ever, ever, ever get to complain about deficits or spending.

Via C&L.

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Droning On, or Not 0

What’s in a name?

Virginia Tech apparently thinks, “quite a bit” (emphasis added).

In addition to its work with robots and unmanned ground vehicles, Tech experiments with pilotless aircraft both to improve the technology of the platform and develop specific applications.

Improving the study of agricultural disease and the assessment and mapping of special environments, such as forests and explosion sites, are major project drivers.

(snip)

These flying machines, the accessories such as cameras and sensors that they carry, and the control mechanisms are referred to by Tech engineers as unmanned aerial systems — UAS for short — and not “drones.”

Drones, unmanned aircraft, model aircraft with electronics are here to stay. They can no more be made to go away than, in their times, the automobile or the choo-choo.

They need to be regulated and restrained, as were the automobile and the choo-choo.

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The (Job) Creationism Myth 0

CPAC version.

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Update from the Foreclosure-Based Economy 0

Outside investors scarf up properties.

The New York investment fund had buyers in 11 metro Atlanta counties for auctions that March day. Since November, it has bought more than 200 properties in the region, and has its sights on 2,500 more.

As the metro housing market begins to rebound after a dizzying fall, investor-buyers like Fundamental REO are driving an outsize share of the activity. Their purchases help stabilize prices but also foster concerns about the longer-term effect of neighborhoods filled with bulk-purchased homes owned by out-of-state investors.

Last fall, investor-buyers accounted for 26 percent of all Georgia home purchases, according to research by the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta. Once attended mainly by smaller mom-and-pop buyers, monthly county foreclosure auctions have — since last summer — been overrun by industrial-scale buyers with millions to spend.

Not good news.

I can’t find the links right now, probably because the stories have passed into the archives of my ex-local rag, but in Philadelphia, many vacant and dilapidated properties are owned by New York investment outfits who are just sitting on them. (Others, of course, are owned by the city, which got stuck with them when the owners disappeared, and by local citizens down on their luck.)

Remember, it’s the New York boys who got us into this mess with their phony securitized mortgage bags of air.

More at the link.

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The Hollow Men 2

Much fuss attends Senator Rob Portman’s about face on the issue of gay marriage now that it affects someone he personally knows and cares about.

Historiann is not impressed.

If only every state house representative, state senator, governor, U.S. congressperson, U.S. Senator, and president whose daughters have had abortions would come out in support of abortion rights! Of course when it’s their kid, they see the need for the procedure to be regulated, safe, and readily available. If it’s you or your kid who needs an abortion? Well, you might as well lay back and try to enjoy that vaginal probe.

Whatever. I’m done with that old Pharisee, Rob Portman, and his “faith tradition” of screwing over every one of his constituents to whom he’s not related.

She has a point.

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Roach Coach 0

And here I always thought that term was reserved as playful slang for mobile hoagie vendors.

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QOTD 0

e. e. cummings:

Always the beautiful answer who asks a more beautiful question.

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Swampwater 0

The swamp gas continues to stink.

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Cocktailgate 0

Amidst public fainting spells about the percentage of Wisconsinites (Wisconsians?) reputed to be binge drinkers, Jim Stingl offers a helpful diagnositic checklist. A nugget:

If you go to Miller Park and forget to walk into the stadium for the game, you might be a binge drinker.

If you look at a map of Wisconsin and think the Door County peninsula looks like a bottle opener, you might be a binge drinker.

If you find all the girls (or guys) really do get prettier at closing time, you might be a binge drinker.

All seriousness aside, as much as I like my tipple, I find the present glorifying of sports palace “tailgate” parties to be a bit outre.

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A Miscast Spell 0

If you can’t play by the rules, change the rules.

The sometimes vexing question of where and when to add an apostrophe appears to have been solved in one corner of Devon: the local authority is planning to do away with them altogether.

Later this month members of Mid Devon district council’s cabinet will discuss formally banning the pesky little punctuation marks from its (no apostrophe needed) street signs, apparently to avoid “confusion”.

The news of the Tory-controlled council’s (apostrophe required) decision provoked howls of condemnation on Friday from champions of plain English, fans of grammar, and politicians. Even the government felt the need to join the campaign to save the apostrophe.

It is not surprising that the Tory (that is, English conservative) party would exercise such Sherlockian Watsonian logic.

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Devolution 4

From the “Party of Lincoln” to the “Party of Nathan Bedford Forrest.”

They aren’t even trying to hide the racism any more.

Chancey Devega comments (follow the link for the rest of his ascerbic, but quite trenchant comments):

Why does the Tea Party GOP consistently fail in its efforts to reform their racist habits and bad ways? The answer is not complicated. White racism and contemporary conservatism are intertwined in the Age of Obama and the post-civil rights era. Asking the Tea Party GOP to publicly disavow the white racists in its midst, and to sever all ties with racist conservatives (white, black, and Other), would be like amputating your foot with a spoon coated in wasabi and without either anesthesia or a tourniquet. It ain’t gonna happen. Such willpower is beyond the reach of most mortals.

More at Think Progress.

Via The Richmonder.

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The Party of Privilege 0

Robyn Blumner remembers that the Davis-Bacon Act, which mandates that federal contractors pay the prevailing wage in their areas, was sponsored by a Republican Representative and Senator, then signed by a Republican president.

That was then.

Now fast forward to Mitt Romney on the campaign trail in Michigan last year when he promised that, if elected, he would “fight to repeal Davis-Bacon” starting on “Day One.”

That was one of Romney’s top priorities. Because in the United States, where wages have stagnated for more than 30 years, nothing is more important for the president than to try to erode worker pay even more. Take that, 47 percenters.

But Romney was not breaking new plutocratic ground, just toeing the party line. Today’s GOP believes its solemn duty is to mow down workers’ rights and wage protections. The onslaught is incredibly well organized, particularly at the state level where the well-manicured hand of the American Legislative Exchange Council is all over it.

The Republican Party, now more than ever the party of privilege.

Read the rest.

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