For Lawyer With A Gun, who posts the news that he's now a proud daddy, and for my own son who now has his first, the best baby instructions evah:
Ya'll have pleasant Sunday...
In the World of the High Tech Redneck, the Graybeard is the old guy who earned his gray by making all the mistakes, and tries to keep the young 'uns from repeating them. Silicon Graybeard is my term for an old hardware engineer; a circuit designer. The focus of this blog is on doing things, from radio to home machine shops and making all kinds of things, along with comments from a retired radio engineer, that run from tech, science or space news to economics; from firearms to world events.
With regard to number 2, you might say "since when did the Fed give a damn about the little people?"; I would just say it's not so much that they are concerned about political backlash (although they might like the power Obama has granted them) as much as being lashed to the back of truck and dragged through the streets - or lashed to the nearest streetlight or phone pole. You should RTWT. If you've got the nerve.
- The Crisis coming from Europe will be far, far larger in scope than anything the Fed has dealt with before.
- The Fed is now politically toxic and cannot engage in aggressive monetary policy without experiencing severe political backlash (this is an election year).
- The Fed’s resources are spent to the point that the only thing the Fed could do would be to announce an ENORMOUS monetary program which would cause a Crisis in of itself.
In a recording of the 911 call, released by police Thursday, an upset Orion told the dispatcher, "Somebody came into our house, and we shot them." She went on to say: "She came in, and we started screaming at her to leave and she kept coming in."Ms. Ripple was apparently not very seriously injured, although hospitalized for a at least a few days. In the scale of things that could have happened to her, this is not a bad outcome.
Orion told the dispatcher that the woman was sitting up and talking on her phone after the shooting but seemed "kind of stoned or something" and wouldn't answer questions.
At specific step rates stepper motors often experience an undesired reaction called resonance. The indications are a sudden loss of torque with possible skipped steps and loss of synchronization. Resonance is inherent in the design and operation of all stepping motors. Slow stepping rates combined with high rotor inertia and elevated torque produce ringing as the rotor overshoots its desired angular displacement and is pulled back into position. Resonance arises when the step rate coincides with rotor ringing, typically about 100 to 200 steps/sec. Unable to overcome the combined effects of both load inertia and ringing, the motor skips steps and loses torque and synchronization.If microstepping doesn't stop resonance issues, it has been found that changing the speed or the inertia, usually with some sort of extra load, will cure resonance. I've seen washers stacked up, and even custom thingies.
There has been a lot of talk, including here, about the police state we are becoming, or that we are. Can we agree to put this aside today and pay respect to those who gave their all? This feeling isn't universal; I have seen references that those veterans who gave the ultimate sacrifice didn't do that for us, they did it for the government. They did what they were told. And that observation was delivered in a way to diminish that sacrifice.
That war is "the extension of politics by other means" is credited to Clausewitz in the 1800s. It seems to me the author is right in assertion these men (almost invariably they are men) did what they were ordered to do but terribly wrong in overlooking the sacrifice.
Every week I'm personally torn up by some mis-deed I read about carried out by the police or corrupt governments. Many are cataloged online, such as at this new home. Others I stumble across; there are so many stories of injustice that they appear everywhere, not just on the news, but in comments to other pieces. Many have been cataloged here on my pages (for example).
But it's a simple act to pause, pay respect, remember the men of Omaha Beach, Chosin, and Operation Redwing - among hundreds of such places. That these men were conductors of US foreign policy does nothing to diminish their honor. They gave their all for the men there with them. But they gave more. They gave us the chance to represent them.
The whole point of a DoS attack is to keep the server so busy it can't post the page to legitimate users...Update from (Avalanche) Lily Rawles (21:48 MST):Apparently there's a racist in Texas that has threatened JWR's livelihood and attacked SurvivalBlog. The following is a quoted excerpt from the threat as sent to me directly from Lily. She asked that I leave out the cursing and I will happily oblige."It appears to have been a "pinging" DOS attack, most likely instigated by the man in Texas that anonymously sent me this little missive, last week:
So DON'T reload or refresh the SurvivalBlog homepage or you'll be adding to the "traffic" which is crushing SB. Take a deep breath and come back tomorrow.Rawles says they hope to have this fixed by Monday, although DNS fixes may take up to another day. Worth reading the whole thing at Orange Jeep Dad.
They ordered me to turn around and put my hands behind my back. They handcuffed me. They shouted questions at me: IS THERE ANYONE ELSE IN THE HOUSE? and WHERE ARE THEY? and ARE THEY ALIVE?Patterico could have been killed by the police. The police came expecting an armed murderer and could have gone all Jose Guerena on him.
I told them: Yes, my wife and my children are in the house. They’re upstairs in their bedrooms, sleeping. Of course they’re alive.
Federal tax forms filed by convicted terrorist Brett Kimberlin’s tax-exempt non-profit Justice Through Music Project (JTMP) show that the 501(c)3 group collected $1.8 million in gifts, grants and other contributions during its first six years of operation. An analysis using database research indicates that more than $300,000 of that sum came in the form of grants from tax-exempt foundations, including the George Soros-connected Tides Foundation, the Fidelity Investments Charitable Gift Fund, the Barbara Streisand Foundation, and the Heinz Family Foundation, connected to Democrat Sen. John Kerry’s wife.McCain, by the way, had to leave his home for an undisclosed location after blogging about Kimberlin. "Someone" called McCain's wife's employer to complain that McCain was "harassing" him. Since his location was known, prudent avoidance measures (Cooper's code orange) led him to find someplace else to stay.
The big difference between the official deficit and standard accounting: Congress exempts itself from including the cost of promised retirement benefits. Yet companies, states and local governments must include retirement commitments in financial statements, as required by federal law and private boards that set accounting rules.As Katie says to end this piece,
Math is hard when you're not adding all the numbers...
The silk microfiber-protein composite matrices mimic the mechanical features of native bone. These include the stiffness of bone's interior matrix and the surface roughness that enable differentiation of human mesenchymal stem cells from bone marrow to achieve bone formation. The team found that, combined with the inherent strength of silk fibers, the compressive properties inside the scaffolds were enhanced by the structure's compact fiber reinforcement.By the way, did you notice that we both broke L1? It turns out to be a common fracture in cyclists that get run down.
This town’s police department is conniving with the federal government to circumvent Massachusetts law — which is less permissive than federal law — to seize his livelihood and retirement asset. In the lawsuit titled United States of America v. 434 Main Street, Tewksbury, Massachusetts, the government is suing an inanimate object, the motel Caswell’s father built in 1955. The U.S. Department of Justice intends to seize it, sell it for perhaps $1.5 million and give up to 80 percent of that to the Tewksbury Police Department, whose budget is just $5.5 million. The Caswells have not been charged with, let alone convicted of, a crime. They are being persecuted by two governments eager to profit from what is antiseptically called the “equitable sharing” of the fruits of civil forfeiture, a process of government enrichment that often is indistinguishable from robbery.Wait...The government is suing an address? They're suing an inanimate object? How can an inanimate object be sued? More to the point, why would they want to? For the money, of course. It appears the Tewksbury Police Department has the most to gain, so they must be the ones behind it. They just managed to get a less scrupulous than average Federal Prosecutor to go along with them (and I suppose that's not a really high bar). What's the justification? Why, the War On Drugs, of course!
Since 1994, about 30 motel customers have been arrested on drug-dealing charges. Even if those police figures are accurate — the police have a substantial monetary incentive to exaggerate — these 30 episodes involved less than 5/100ths of 1 percent of the 125,000 rooms Caswell has rented over those more than 6,700 days. Yet this is the government’s excuse for impoverishing the Caswells by seizing this property, which is their only significant source of income and all of their retirement security.The Caswells are represented by the Institute for Justice, a "libertarian public-interest law firm". They add some details on the governmental attacks on private citizens.
The government does not allege that the Caswells have done anything illegal. But under civil forfeiture laws, innocent people can lose their property—with no compensation whatsoever—if the government believes it was used to “facilitate a crime.” So unless the Caswells can prove in court that they did everything they could do to prevent crime on their land, the motel—everything they have worked their lives for—will become the government’s property. In short, civil forfeiture treats law abiding citizens worse than criminals, presuming them guilty until they can prove their innocence—a heavy burden for any property owner against the power and resources of the government.This is shades of the tales we hear elsewhere, like the California FTB going after any individuals they could find a bank account number on and raiding the account for "unpaid taxes". They also bill people from several hundred dollars to a couple of hundred, assuming they'll just pay it, or think it's not worth getting a lawyer to fight. They don't go after the corporations that will have teams of lawyers to fight. Governments bully small guys who can't afford teams of high-powered lawyers. They're easier to screw over.
.....
Of course, the Motel Caswell is not the only property in Tewksbury that has had run ins with crime. According to police logs, the Motel 6, the Fairfield Inn, and even the nearby Wal-Mart and Home Depot parking lots have similar problems. But those properties are corporate-owned, which means the government would have to fight teams of lawyers to take them. And, importantly, the Caswells own their property free and clear, which makes them the perfect target for a government interested in policing for profit: the Caswells are vulnerable and their property is valuable.
Back in March, while researching the repeal of some anti-gun ordinances, I stumbled across an Orlando City Council agenda item that grabbed my attention. It was, on its surface, just a mundane action item for the annual contract renewal of a city employee. But this city employee’s job title was, well, unique…The job was filled by one Linda S. Vaughn. Ms. Vaughn is "paid a salary of at least $60,000 per year by the City of Orlando using grant funds provided by the Chicago based Joyce Foundation in collusion with New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s Mayors Against Illegal Guns. She also receives city medical, dental and leave accrual benefits at taxpayer expense". Note that although the position was largely funded by the Joyce Foundation, the city did put up about $24,000 of taxpayer's money for the rest of her pay and expenses. As Sean puts it on All Nine Yards,
“Approving Employment Contract for the Grant-Funded Position of Mayors Against Illegal Guns Regional Coordinator.” City of Orlando Website
Even if the Illegal Mayors and the Brady Bunch provided 100% of the funds it would still be private/public collusion of the worst kind. Could you imagine the scathing editorials, cries of corruption, and the lawsuits that would be filed if the City of Orlando were to put Marion Hammer on staff as their NRA Regional Coordinator?According to this thread on The High Road, Linda was known for trying to create illegal gun sales: I suppose she assumed she was a "junior detective" and could arrest the people she entrapped. They include an ad she ran in Shotgun News where she claimed to be selling her deceased husbands guns and "...just wish to see them in the hand of his fellow enthusiasts:"
"Linda" was quickly outed as Linda S. Vaughn, the Southeast Region's Senior Associate Director for the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence United with the Million Mom March. The fact that the phone number she listed was her Brady/MMM office number didn't leave much doubt as to her identity.So not only is the city of Orlando paying tax payers money to her, they're paying it to an unindicted criminal.
Gloria Culver said, "It didn't take much to figure what this was, it was nothing but bait to get some guy to fall for 'maybe' an illegal weapons transfer. She underestimated experienced gun owners! BIG TIME!" Ms. Culver also made it a point to call Ms. Vaughn herself, and told her that she would be reporting her to the BATFE for posting a misleading ad. (As of this writing, no charges have been filed.)
Once I put these facts all together, I went in to my closet and put on my wookie suit. Then I took the red pill, locked and loaded, and dove in to the rabbit hole trying to see how far it goes. On Friday I came screaming out of the other end flying at mach 3, pissed off, pissed on, and with my wookie suit in flames.Go read. And if you live in Florida, consider clicking on that link to Florida Carry over on my right bar just below the blogrolls. It will take you to their website where you can join, like many of us have. Florida Carry is going to follow this and try to get the situation changed. All of us should look into this wherever we live, because it can't possibly just be in Orlando.
The Mommy Files does its best to provoke righteous indignation and gets some traction with a random British father, who in a rather un-English display of temper whines that "it's just wrong, wrong, wrong." Yet even the developmental psychologist the blog consults cannot muster much concern. "Play is play," the doctor states, adding that research has not shown that playing with toy guns can lead to aggression. But, argues the blogger, these guns are realistic. "They're not realistic," responds the doctor. "They don't shoot. These guns are related to the impulse to create, not the impulse to kill."Pretty bad to go into PSH over Legos, for cryin' out loud... but it's San Francisco. What can you say?
A new study suggests that imposing a fat tax on unhealthy food and drinks could help slim down expanding waistlines....It. Is. None. Of. Their. F**king. Business! I don't care if it untwists scoliosis, reverses hair loss, cures cancer, defeats the Nazis and puts men on Mars, it is none of their business what free people eat.
Researchers said a fat tax could drop obesity rates by 3.5 percent and prevent 2,700 heart-related deaths a year. The study also urged subsidies for healthier foods and veggies to make them more affordable.
"I'd pay 20 percent. It's worth it,” one woman said. "I would eat a lot more healthy just to save more money.”Listen, if you're so undisciplined that you need to pay the government 20% tax to keep you from eating things you believe you shouldn't, you shouldn't be allowed out of the house, or near sharp objects. You obviously have no brain. (By the way, it's an old journalist tactic to make up unattributed quotes like this. You should always consider a "some say" or this "one woman said" attribution to mean "this reporter said" or "the guy at the next desk said").
This is clearly derived by dividing the ubiquitous nutrition panel 2000 calories per day by three. The fundamental problem with this is there isn't a single "fact" in this panel that's a fact. As I published here last July:How much is too much?
These USDA recommended limits were used to measure against main entrees:
No more than . . .
667 calories
35% of calories from fat
10% of calories from saturated fat
767 mg sodium
The other big problem I have with this [note - removing obese children from their homes - GB] is the fact that medicine is exceptionally bad at treating obesity. I (and many others) would suggest that the diet the doctors are recommending is probably the cause of the kids' obesity. Would it surprise you to know that a leading researcher who has been studying obesity for decades believes dieting may be the cause of most obesity? A couple of weeks ago, I wrote a piece on some truths about diet and fitness that are hard to get out. It's not a stretch to say that if you're like most people who haven't studied this, everything you think you know is probably wrong. [emphasis added this time - GB]For instance, in the book I'm reading now, The Art and Science of Low Carbohydrate Living, (a fascinating read for those who like rock hard science) researcher Steven Phinney, M.D., Ph.D., reports that they've determined optimum sodium intake for adults on a very low carbohydrate diet is around 5 grams per day - over twice the USDA recommended maximum. The 10% saturated fat number is no more than a guess. Despite decades of bleating about restricting it, saturated fat is not associated with increased risk for heart attacks. Saturated fat behaves very differently depending on which exact fat you're eating, and what else you're eating with it. The 35% total calories from fat has no more hard data behind it than saying "eat three meals a day". And calories certainly can't be the same for a small woman or an NFL lineman. It's all a very worthless set of numbers, presented as a rigorously derived scientific standard that all meals should be measured against.
Did you get that? This Doctor, President of the American Society of Hypertension, said that we don't even know that if we tell the public to cut their salt consumption that it won't hurt them. So the fed.gov can't even say, "cut your sodium because even if it doesn't help blood pressure, at least it won't hurt you"; we don't know that. But the FDA is going to do it anyway. Michael Alderman, President of the American Society of Hypertension, Department of Epidemiology and Social Medicine, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Br Med J 1997; 315: 484-5The USDA limits on calories, sodium, fats and whatnot shouldn't be taken any more seriously than a random pile of numbers. I find it ironic that as millions of people in Europe shift to an LCHF (Low Carb High Fat) diet and are improving their health, so many people that there are butter shortages, our country wants to tax fat consumption.
A new study by R.L. Polk & Co. shows that the overall percentage of hybrids sold into the new vehicle market has fallen from 2.9 percent to 2.4 percent over the past three years. Moreover, approximately two-thirds of hybrid owners who returned to the market in 2011 did not buy another hybrid.The 33% who did buy a second hybrid ends up being a smaller number - 25% - if you take out the Toyota Prius. Either the Prius is the best hybrid on the market, or they simply have the best brand loyalty. Or both.
There's a moment in the movie Revenge of the Electric Car when a Popular Mechanics magazine editor says, "The scariest part is, can they get the cost of the batteries down?" If you watch the movie, that's about as close as you'll get to a real technical debate on the future of electric cars.And that's the problem. There are two sides: engineers trying to bend the problem enough to come up with good solutions, and consumers who think the companies are holding back solutions.
At the film's end, we see a "good news" montage of successes for GM, Tesla, Nissan, and Abbott (the EV converter). Tesla's stock soars, and its massive DOE loan comes through. GM rolls out the Volt. Nissan gets a $1.4 billion loan to build Leafs, and Abbott's business recovers from a devastating fire.Battery research is slow compared to the semiconductor "internet speed" we're used to. Think of how a battery works: two different materials give and take electrons at a voltage potential determined by the way the universe was put together. All of the simple combinations have been tried and new ones are being researched daily. The limits, though, are imposed by the universe. In semiconductor work, the same materials are always worked on, the techniques for putting down dopants and photoresistive masks is all that changes.
Danny DeVito joins the montage long enough to remind us that we've left the Dark Ages. Another actor, Adrian Grenier, tells us that he can't wait for the electric car era. "The innovations are here now," Grenier says, smiling brightly. "Bring them to me. I want to play." The viewer is left to wonder what Grenier might think of today's paltry electric car sales figures.
Battery development is hard, slow work. Throwing loads of money at it will help, but it will not make it happen overnight, as so many EV proponents have predicted. "There are no specific moving parts in a battery, but it's one of the most complicated things to develop, in terms of all the things happening inside," Luis Ortiz, chief operating officer of Liquid Metal Battery Corp., told us. "You've got multiple materials trying to come together in one place. It's volatile. And there are a lot of opportunities for things to go wrong." Liquid Metal Battery, an MIT spinoff, builds grid storage systems.One of the conclusions of the Revenge of the Electric Car is that we are heading in that direction. Like it or not; ready or not, we're moving. The first ones are likely to be, honestly, crap. Those are on the road now and will be for some time to come. They're the ones spontaneously catching fire that you read about. Even if perfect batteries were available now, the conversion will take time, because the power grid will need to be expanded and industries adapt (as they always do).
The park's popular ice-cream stand was unexpectedly shut down by state officials over the weekend, after the stand's operator made building improvements at the site without getting permission first.See, they discovered that Mr. Duffy had done "improvements" to the buildings without paying his tribute to the state for their blessings, so the state officials (in this case, properly referred to as "Mass-holes"), deprived of their licensing fees, responded in the only way they know: armed and in force. I'm sure they would look at you as if you had the proverbial lobsters crawling out of your ears if you questioned what good this process did for anyone involved, other than the state. And then they'd ask you if you had a permit for the lobsters in your ears out of season and fine you for not having it.
Mark Duffy, who has operated the dairy farm at the state-owned park for 26 years and has a lease with the state to run the stand, said armed Environmental Police officers showed up at stand on Friday evening and stood guard throughout the weekend, turning away customers craving delectable sundaes and frappes. [emphasis mine - GB]