STILL CRAZY AFTER ALL THESE YEARS

January 3rd, 2011

I wish I had a nickel for every time our criminal justice system has left me shaking my head in wonderment.  I could retire early, or at least retire.  Still crazy after all these years, we still insist on returning violent people from prison to neighborhoods and expecting a different result.  The notion of the “Greater Good” left the equation a long time ago in favor of saving money.

Every New Hampshire resident knows the name Michael Briggs.  He was the Manchester Police Officer killed…shot to death…by Michael Addison, a young but violent career criminal.  No deeper irony, and no stronger message, could ever be authored greater than the facts themselves.  Officer Briggs, just years earlier, had administered life-saving measures to the young Addison who had just been shot himself in a melee.  In a heartbreaking twist of fate, the same young man would fatally shoot that same Policeman years later.

“Still crazy after all these years” could apply to the parole boards and the criminal justice system that insists on returning predators and violent criminals back to the streets.  New Hampshire just passed legislation that would shorten the prison terms of many violent criminals and send them to a parole board which is mandated to approve the parole.  Cool, huh?

Our Ostrich approach to violent criminals yielded more bad fruit on December 26th when Woburn, Mass. Police Officer John Maguire was called to a robbery in progress at a Kohl’s Department Store.  Women were being held as well during the hold up and it was quickly turning into a hostage situation.  During the fracas, Officer Maguire was killed by Dominic Cinelli, a recently paroled career criminal.  Recently paroled, somehow, from the midst of a three-consecutive life-term sentence!  How does that happen?  The parole board had voted 6-0 to grant parole based on his “strident improvement” during incarceration.

So…a “Life Term” really means “life” until a daffy parole board crosses your path.  Cinelli had a criminal record dating back to 1976 which included armed and unarmed robbery, aggravated assault and battery. and assault and battery with a dangerous weapon, among others.  Now…while I appreciate those “strident improvements”, because I don’t want to hurt anyone’s feelings, but is there a point…ANY point…where, as a society, we can collectively agree when we have a “throw-the-key-away” situation.  This would be one of them.  Cinelli should have served at least one of those three life sentences, and John Maguire would be alive today.  Our Courts have become worthy of a Monty Python trademark as we continue to get played like a “blind man playing Scrabble with Gypsies”, as Dennis Miller would say.

Is there a point where we have lost enough innocent victims to repeat offenders that average citizens will band together and demand…yes, demand, that our judicial system actually begin to play a role in the effort to keep citizens safe.  It has become silly, absurd even, the dance between law enforcement trying to keep criminals off of the street, and a court and prison system that seem determined to counter that effort.  And naturally, we, the taxpayers foot the bill.

It is to the legal world what Ethanol subsidies are to Energy…still crazy after all these years.   Happy New Year.

WHY NO HYDRO?

December 27th, 2010

Everytime gas prices rise a couple of cents, the media is all over it.  Invariably, however, #2 oil, from which heating and diesel fuels are derived, go up by staggering amounts every Fall, just in time for the winter heating season.  The rise in diesel fuel prices affects my business directly and currently costs upwards of 150 dollars per day, per truck.  A few years back, when diesel prices approached $5.00 per gallon, it crippled the trucking industry.

After that nightmare, it takes a bigger price hike to get our attention, but the one constant that remains is that our nation is still vulnerable to the fickle nature of world oil prices.  Gaining independence from oil should be a national priority, and there are a number of reasons why.

First, as we watch our economy continue to teeter on the brink of disaster, we must ask ourselves…”where is the next industrial, manufacturing, or technical frontier?”  We have become a service economy but a great nation can’t survive on that alone.  We build barely anything here anymore, and not since the high-tech boom have we seen a really churning economy.  Energy is necessarily one of the next big frontiers.  We should be leading the way.

Second…the planet.  If you’ve read my stuff for any length of time you’ll know I’m not a “Global Warming Nut”, but I do believe that the burning of fossil fuels has had an effect on the atmosphere, and therefore the planet as a whole.  What bothers me most about the GW argument is that it has become politicized.  I have to maintain a little cynicism for someone like Al Gore who turns the cause into a living, but still travels by private jet, lives in a mansion, and has a carbon footprint bigger than Sasquatch on steroids.  Still, I do believe it is morally imperative to be good stewards of the planet, and to not roll the dice on a gamble as large as the inhabitability of Earth.  The atmosphere is remarkably thin in comparison to the size of the ball it protects, and I don’t believe it is implausible that the amount of oil we’ve been burning for the last century or so has taken some ill effect on it. And, beyond the effects of burning oil, think “Gulf Oil Spill” to see the dangers of harvesting oil.

Third…some of the answers are right in front of us.  While I don’t see electric cars that are practical, or solar panels that provide a reasonable cost vs. benefit ratio, I do see, just to our North, over 100 years of successful production of electricity from rivers. This is not a big gamble on some crazy scheme. It works, and we know it.

Fourth…National Security.  Oil has played too big a role, for far too long, in foreign policy decisions and probably even wars.
That, alone, should be impetus enough for a national resolution to ween ourselves off the gooey substance.

Why is there no substantial hydroelectric effort in this country?  Canada has mastered the art and I have marveled at the simplicity and efficiency of their hydro plants.  Remarkably maintenance free, clean and reliable, these massive facilities are manned by a skeleton crew.  I watched a documentary on one of them once, and one of the workers stated that there was simply no need for a staff of hundreds.  The water pours in, turns the turbine, the turbine turns a generator, and the water pours out and back into the river.  The Decew Falls 1 hydro plant, built in 1898, still produces power today and hasn’t missed a day.  Not like a nuclear plant, with a relatively short life, and then a massively expensive dismantling project with radioactive waste that continues to be an expense and hazard for future generations.

In 2004 Canada was the top hydro power producer in the world.  Today, Manitoba, Quebec and British Columbia derive 75% of their electricity from hydro power.  There are two basic types of plants, “run-of-river” which diverts a portion of the water from a river and runs it through the plant, or “impound” type where a dam is built to harness the waters power.  There are many of both types in Canada, still functioning after many years of trouble-free operation.

Sometimes in life, we over-complicate things and while meeting America’s energy needs for the future is not simple, this part of it certainly could be.  Perhaps a good place to start would be a federal streamlining of the permitting process along with some kind of tax initiative for start-ups.  The most difficult question to answer might simply be this…what are we waiting for?

THE RISING TIDE

December 20th, 2010

Just before midnight on Thursday the House voted on the massive new legislation that will extend the infamous Bush Tax Cuts for another two years and extend unemployment benefits for many of the jobless across the country.  The vote, among other things, forced me to re-write my weekly column.  No sooner had the ink dried on my column, which took to task the many elected officials who were still supporting a ridiculous litany of earmarks, a vote was passed with much more favorable terms.

Republicans are giddy, and with some reason, although I don’t think there is anything to get too euphoric over here.  The bill’s cost is $858 billion and it will all be borrowed and piled onto the steaming heap we all refer to fondly as our “National Debt”.  More accurately, it is the debt of our children and grandchildren, a transgression we will all have to reckon with on our own terms at some future date.

Still, it was a bi-partisan effort and it includes many terms favorable to finally stabilizing our economy.  Changes to Capital Gains that will aid working families and small businesses.  Changes to the Estate Tax, a financial resource that liberals practically drool over.  It bridles the governments natural desire to come in after a death and clean out the check book.  These are all good things.

Moreover, the message sent across the country at the polls in November seems to have actually, possibly, resonated in Washington.  I believe we can thank the Tea Party movement for this.  In my deleted column I had complained that many of the new comers, though not yet yielding votes, had been rather quiet about the incredible load of earmarks tucked into this legislation.  Two hundred grand to “study” maple syrup in Vermont.  Three million for a Polynesian Rowing Museum in Hawaii.  No…I’m not making it up.  It is exactly this kind of insipid spending that has millions of Americans foaming at the mouth.  I was happy to receive an email from Kelly Ayotte’s headquarters late last night that she, along with eleven other GOP Senate-elects, had sent a letter to President Obama excoriating the pork barrel spending.  Good stuff.  Finally.  Could the line-item veto actually be a possibility in 2012?

None of it is coincidence and every American who attended a Tea Party gathering or voted for a Tea Party-supported candidate should be proud.  Your voice was heard.  Politicians are finally being held accountable and the November blood-bath is the sole reason.  Ensconced politicians were thrown to the curb.  That gets some attention on The Hill.  Imperative now that we stay focused and be sure the trend continues.

Democrats are largely split on this bill and Obama is losing some supporters, but even he realized he was boxed in here.  Not since Herbert Hoover have taxes been raised during a deep recession and we need look no further than the history books to see how that worked for us.  Businesses across the country are looking for some sign of stability.  This may give them a ray of hope.

I know I’m relieved, just a little, to know that there will not be a tax increase on January 1st.  More important, at least for me, is that it is accompanied by a serious effort to reduce spending.  The earmarks are a good place to start.  But as incoming House Speaker “Weepy John Boehner” pointed out, there is still a long way to go if we want to pull this economy out of the hole, and that means much more significant cuts in spending.  We need to go through the ledger the way a new CEO does when he comes in to turn a business around.  You don’t cut with a scalpel, you cut with  a chainsaw.

It’s a step in the right direction…a nod to the rising tide of disenchantment with bloated government, and reason enough to have hope.  Don’t forget, though…it’s another trillion bucks on the Chinese Credit Card.   Merry Christmas.

BUSH ON BUSH

December 13th, 2010

Sorry to dash your hopes, but, no…this is not the salacious column on lesbianism you’ve all been waiting for.  Let’s call it a “Bush-League Opinion Merchant’s” take on President George W. Bush, or “Little Bush” as some like to call him.

I have always admired the Bush family, especially the elder, who was also rather soft spoken and demure belying his history as one of the country’s youngest aviators.  He was shot down, too, and was as rough-and-tumble as the rest of them in his time. It broke my heart when I saw him crumble in tears, standing next to Jeb during a speech in Florida, defending his son’s decisions as President.  How hard it must be for a father, watching his son get hammered by the media day after day. They are a tight family. Moreover, they are respectful people, smart, well-humored, and the type you would wish for as neighbors.

The younger Bush struck me as aloof.  Kind of a regular-Joe type of guy.  I never thought of him as a magnificent President, but I thought he was unfairly trashed by the media, and I do think he did a tremendous job during, and in the wake of, September 11th, 2001.  He was exactly what the country needed.  A firm, steady hand…determined not to have the event capsize the country, sincerely heartbroken for the country and the victims of that day, and equally determined not to have it happen again under his watch.  It didn’t…and that is noteworthy.

Early on, during his first campaign, I also never bought into the notion that he was an idiot.  He was a fighter pilot, afterall, and although he never flew in combat, the fact that he mastered the trade well enough to do so, easily disqualified him as being “stupid” in my book.  Instrument flying and the type of training one has to endure to be qualified to fly those machines in combat, and just the fact that you’re trusted with that machine…well…that’s an exclusive club and not one inhabited by dimwits.

Still…he wasn’t the kind of guy that commanded, at least for me, a passionate feeling one way or another.  A good guy and an above-average President, surrounded by the same stench and corruption that is stuck to Washington like old wallpaper, wallpaper being the easier of the two to remove, by the way.

But something is happening as I hear from the former President as he makes his tour promoting his new book, “Decision Points”. I’m liking the guy more than ever.  He has been a class-act since leaving office.  You haven’t heard a peep from the guy.  I’m sure he’s enjoying the downtime, but it is also a sign of his upbringing.  Demure, in a word.  He has kept his opinions largely to himself as I believe he feels it is undignified to constantly be chirping about the new President.  We are, sadly, so used to Presidents who leave office and hit the $100,000. speech circuit and cling to the limelight like a washed up vaudeville act, that when someone leaves and behaves like an adult, we don’t know what to make of it.

I admired Ron Reagan but didn’t pay much attention to politics when he was in office.  Later though, after his death, I read excerpts of the published letters he had written to Nancy.  I was taken aback by the depth of his compassion, what a sensitive man he was.  As I look back at his Presidency, I wish we could have him back.  In hindsight he was everything a President should be.  Firm, stoic, alternately light-hearted or irate.  A dashing man, larger-than-life, who held up well on the world stage.
It was not until much later though, that I began to appreciate the depth of the man.

So it is becoming with “W”.  I saw him doing an interview where he spoke about the moment he decided to quit drinking…that he knew alcohol could not be a part of his life.  I could relate…I quit drinking about 25 years ago.  Bush spoke about being at a dinner party with Laura, his parents and a few other couples.  He was pretty lit, and asked one of the wives what “sex was like after 50…”.  Laura was steamed, his parents were mortified, and forks were dropping all over the room.  It was funny as Hell as he told it, but also poignant and he got a little emotional recalling it.  Interesting.

He spoke about the day of September 11th, of course, and the much-maligned “classroom scene” where he was reading to a class of young children when the news from New York was whispered in his ear.  Again…emotions come to the surface.  His explanation is sensible and exactly what I expected it to be.  I think, in fact, that many of us would have reacted the same way…and for the same reasons.  Again, interesting, hearing for the first time, what that day was like for our President.

All in all, I’m looking forward to reading the book.  I’m more thankful, however, that the book somewhat accidentally served as a vehicle to allow the country a closer look at this guy.  He seems like a good egg to me and I’d be happy to spend an afternoon piling brush with him down at the ranch.  I bet he was a fun guy to throw a few back with too.  I’m also thinking…especially as I watch our current President flip like a circus seal…that we were lucky to have him on watch during those difficult years for the country.

Even the title of this book is a little aloof.  “Decision Points”.  Oh well…what else could he have called it?  “Everything You Ever Needed To Know About Bush”?  Nah…they would have had a field day with that.

DEATH AND TAXES

December 5th, 2010

Two things you can’t escape, it has always been said, are death and taxes.  Until recently, taxes were generally considered  the lesser of the two evils.  Soon, it may become a toss up.  As Americans buckle, household by household, under the weight of a decaying economy, an ever-increasing cost of living, rampant unemployment, run-away energy costs, and now a federal government that is looking for left-overs like a raccoon in a garbage can…well, death sometimes looks like the more tenable option.

Now, after ten years, we are down to the wire on whether or not to extend the Bush-era tax cuts, first legislated back in 2001.
Never mind that our President has had two years to address the issue, his fecklessness has again led to a quagmire.  As I have written many times, it was his inability to vote “yes” or “no” during his brief stay in the Senate that concerned me most, and we have seen that reticence to commit many times during his Presidency.

It’s as though this guy has two speeds…”bulldoze” and “drift”.  Health Care reform?  Get the bulldozer.  Trials for terrorists in New York City?  Bulldozer. Arizona flexing muscle on immigration reform?  Bulldozer, please.  Raise taxes during a deep economic recession?  Drift.

No wonder Americans are pulling their hair out.  First, this should be an easy call.  This is not the time to raise taxes on ANYONE.  And these are not tax “cuts” by the way, it is simply a matter of not raising taxes.  The problem for liberals is that they feel the “rich” are getting away with something.  Only the ability to keep more of the money they earned, left over to reinvest or spend on consumer goods, like a car or a boat or a new home…you know…stuff that creates jobs.  More stunning, liberals believe that the “average” American will be left unscathed.  Not true.  A single person, or couple, making 80K per year, will be giving an average of $900.00 per month to the government if the tax cuts are not extended or made permanent.  That’s just under 11 grand per year, and that’s just your federal tax.

Add to this the tax we pay at the gas pump, sales taxes, meal taxes, registrations and permits, state taxes, property taxes and, well…you get the picture.  We are not far from the point where there is so little left over that going out the door in the morning to toil away at work begins to look a little silly.  No wonder so many of the unemployed want benefits extended another year.  Most of them are doing better than they ever were.  Three years to find a job?  Welcome to Generation X.

Aside from the Gang-Tax that most of us already endure, what is most astounding here is the indecision.  Either way, Obama loses here.  By extending the cuts he further alienates his base.  By eliminating the cuts he almost assures us of a plummet on Wall Street on January 1st.  Financial experts are lining up to post their warnings of the potential fallout from this.  Businesses are on hold with their planning.  Could you plan your budget for next year not knowing what your expenses will be?

The most frustrating part of this is that the vacillating on the part of this administration on this issue, and because  no decision has been rendered ( as of this writing), the Internal Revenue Service has been forced to notify CPA’s that the tax cuts will expire on December 31st.   The IRS sends notices in early December with changes and various errata and because, absent a decision, they must assume the cuts will expire, they must proceed accordingly.

Here’s the fun part.  We will all have to pay taxes as though the cuts expired and then, should they be extended, will then have to petition the IRS for a refund on the difference.  That should be enjoyable.  Furthermore, the IRS announced already that they expect refunds to be slow this year because of the extra burden imposed by notification and then, possibly, rescinding those same notices.

Ahh…government efficiency at it’s best.  These are the same folks who are running health care now.  How does that make your stomach feel?  Of course, if you’re a member of the increasing number of Unions that are being granted “waivers” from ObamaCare, you may be spared, but of course there will be no “waivers” for the rest of us.  Just penalties and fines.

Pay attention here.  This is what “no leadership” looks like.  We will be seeing plenty more of it over the next two years.  Republicans, too, should pay attention.  I am already agitated that the freeze on earmark spending seems unable to meet muster.  Are you kidding me?  There are, apparently, Republicans just voted in who didn’t get the message.  No problem…the rest of us are taking names, and, I expect, that we will be just as eager to throw you out with the rest of them two years hence.

PALINTOLOGY

November 28th, 2010

Hold on…it’s not a mistake.  I’m not talking about Paleontology, the study of prehistoric life, instead I’m interested in what is apparently a far more interesting science…the study of all things “Palin”.

I anticipated with unbridled glee the debut of the new television series, “Sarah Palin’s Alaska”, and not because I was looking forward to more aerial footage of the last frontier.  In fact, I’ve only caught portions of the first few episodes and it seems to be about what I expected.  Not riveting, but good family-fare and an interesting glimpse into the life of America’s future First Family.  It harkens back to the more wholesome programming of yesteryear and I give her credit for doing it.  Not that she wasn’t getting enough “credit”, a handsome per-episode paycheck and even more visibility.  The most enjoyable part of the show, however, has nothing to do with the program itself, but instead the wholesale panic it sent through the “elite-left” community.  Has anyone, especially in politics, ever inspired greater vitriol and disdain from her detractors?  Man, I love watching them all stammer, grunt and huff and puff.

May I say first, that I am not a Palin cultist.  I like her, I like her family, and if I had to choose tomorrow between her and our current President, she would get my vote all day long.  There are things about her I find a bit grating, though.  Nothing major, but some of the mannerisms, and sometimes her voice, are a little off putting.  Still, at the end of the day, she has shown leadership skills as Governor, is self-made, and stands firmly behind her beliefs, not bending them when it is expedient, and those are all qualities I like.

Her daughter’s fling with “Dancing With the Stars” ( a program I associate with Waterboarding), drew all kinds of attention and may have been a mistake in the end, in my opinion.  No doubt, Bristol’s parting words that “winning would be like giving a big middle finger to all the people who hate my Mom…”, seemed drawn from an episode of “Trailer Park Boys”, but then again, I’ve got kids and I’ve had my head in my hands more than once over public statements they have made.  In a way, I find those mistakes kind of endearing, but the kid could use a little finishing, if you get my drift.

What I like most about Sarah Palin is John McCain.  In hindsight, she may be the most brilliant product of his political career.  When I first heard her name as VP, I was wondering if McCain had accidentally ingested Ecstasy.  The more I heard about her, the more I liked her and in just a few days I was seeing what McCain had seen.  And that “pick” had McCain written all over it.  It may be the only decision they let him make in the waning months of his campaign, but I think he knew the Obama machine was unbeatable and went for a shake-up.  He got it.  From her first speech at the convention, arguably one of the most dynamic political speeches in history, right up until now, she has been on the top of the political heap, wielding super-natural influence.  And I love the way McCain did it, just like a fighter pilot with a wing on fire, he had one last missile under his good wing and he let it rip…and her name was Sarah Palin.

Love her or hate her, she shows no signs of letting up.  She is incredibly savvy with the media, using her books and now her program to shuffle the deck.  She keeps everyone guessing.  She has said she will run in 2012 if there is nobody else running who reflects the conservative values as she sees them.  Smart.  Teach the dog to heel without attaching the leash to yourself.
I think the field of Presidential contenders will soon begin to flourish and I expect there will be people that could give her strong competition.  And why would she want to subject herself to it?  She’s got a nice thing going on up there and a new television show with ratings that are through the roof.

I know I’ll be watching, or, at least until they begin filming “Chris Christie’s New Jersey”.  Now there’s a series…

FREEDOM DIMINISHED

November 21st, 2010

As with so many events in life, it sometimes takes years for the ripple effect to finally wash a little sand between our toes.  Such is the case with the events of September 11th, 2001.  I remember thinking that day, among many other things, that this tragic event would change the country forever, change air travel forever, and cost us a fortune.  The latest “upgrade” in security at our major airports is yet another reminder of how many ripples have yet to reach the shore of reality.

Last year, when they first began introducing the full-body scanner at airports, the airwaves were packed with commentary.  Another notch in the belt of diminished freedom.  In the wake of the “Shoe Bomber”, the “Underwear Bomber” and rumors of the “Enlarged Breast Bomber”, it was inevitable that security would get beefed up even further.  On the occasions when I have to fly commercially, I am always pulled aside, probably because of my Sicilian complexion.  It irritates me, but my ire is always directed, quietly, back at the original terrorists who caused all of this.  I understand the angst of the airlines.  I understand the implications of it happening again…how horrific it would be, and the finger-pointing that would ensue.

What I don’t understand is the approach to security.  It can come as no surprise to Homeland Security that lots of folks are going to have a major problem with being groped and essentially photographed naked as a price to pay for flying.  It has become bad enough without the security measures, given the airlines scaling back on every comfort.  I expect to find wooden crates instead of seats and carpeting ripped out to save on fuel almost any day now.  What used to be an adventure to be savored has become more akin to travelling by covered wagon, and comparatively enjoyable.  Add watching my wife and children be groped and X-rayed to this equation and Fung-Wah Bus Lines looks better all the time, even with the occasional roll-over or roadside fire.

But this is the New America and even what I’ve described so far would not be arcane enough for our new politically-correct-selves.  We shun the pragmatic and effective approach that Israel uses…profiling…in exchange for a “Pin-the-Tail-On-The-Donkey” approach.  Every tenth passenger if the moon is full, or every seventh passenger if it’s raining out.  This, of course, leads to complete strangers in weird uniforms feeling-up Grandma and making 3 year-old girls cry as they head to Disney with Mom and Dad.  In short…it’s absurd.  We have a pretty solid description of the terrorists of 9/11.  I’d be looking for people like that, not Swedes and Australians.  “But Timothy McVeigh was a White guy!”  Yeah…I get it, but he was still an anomaly.  There is nothing to say that a Jewish Grandmother won’t blow up a plane, but it wasn’t Jewish Grandmothers murdering pilots and hijacking plans on 9/11.  If you lose your dog in New Hampshire you don’t begin the search in Colorado because “he might be there, too”, unless you’re an idiot or your name is Janet Napolitano.

The silliness, sadly, doesn’t end there.  While TSA officials are busy doing cavity searches on Aunt Mary, the plethora of cargo that rides directly underneath you on every commercial flight, remains largely unchecked, and has since 9/11.  Some folks may be surprised to know that, in addition to your luggage, airlines carry mail for the U.S. Postal Service, packages from any number of sources, and who knows what else.  How ridiculous is it to be strip-searching women and children at the very same time that countless boxes and bags are being loaded onto your airplane.  Does this make sense to anyone outside of Washington, D.C.?

We have enjoyed wide open Freedom in this country for decades at an enormous cost, and still listen to people complain daily that it is not “free” enough.  That freedom was taken advantage of, exploited, on 9/11, but to curl up into a permanent fetal position and shiver is not the way back. If that’s the plan, let’s park the airplanes now and get it over with.  If we want true security, let’s institute some common sense.  Our borders remain open with a virtual sign reading “Criminals Enter Here”, while at our airports average Americans are spread-eagle on the tarmac.  Brilliant.

I have no desire to learn about gravity by getting blown out of the sky in an airliner.  I want my family to be safe flying commercially, but let’s either check everything that goes on the plane, or at least use our resources intelligently.  Most people I know could simply watch people boarding a plane and single out the ones who look a little off.  This is what Israel does, they talk to people, ask a few questions…get a feel for the demeanor.  And it is effective and sensible and leaves hurt feelings about “profiling” out of the equation, as it should.

In the meantime, if I were you, I’d be more cognizant of the fact that airplanes, technological marvels that they are, are still contraptions.  Nuts, bolts, aluminum, carbon composites, wires and lots of plastic.  And they fly along 6 or 7 miles high at five or six hundred miles-per-hour.  The temperature outside is routinely 20 – 30 degrees below zero.  A decompression in the plane at that altitude would give you about ten seconds to get your oxygen mask on before you passed out.  That’s why the flight attendant tells parents to put theirs on first, otherwise you’ll be unable to help your children.  A decompression at altitude is also a great way to clean an airplane, because everything bigger than dust, and dust too, will be sucked out in a flash.

I know a mechanical  emergency is a lot more likely than a terrorist emergency and neither one is very likely at all. So, when I fly, I’m not watching for someone’s breasts to explode.  I’m watching the people who aren’t paying attention to the safety briefing because they’re “too cool for school”.   I remember them because I know they’ll be useless in the event of an emergency.  They’ll be screaming and asking where the exits are and how to open the emergency doors.  They’ll be complaining about the service during the flight, not understanding that the attendants are not really wait staff, they could do all that with vending machines, the attendants are there to manage the cabin during an emergency.

And the next emergency, in my opinion, will come not from a passenger with a bottle rocket in his pants, or a commercial pilot who wasn’t groped before getting on the plane (how ridiculous…the pilot is flying the plane, if he wants to take it down he doesn’t need an explosive), but instead will come from a tiny cardboard box in the cargo hold.  If only Janet had thought of that.

THE ETHIC OF WORK

November 15th, 2010

In the wake of the mid term elections, there is renewed clamor amongst the political ranks.  A new round of hammering against the Tea Party, former President George Bush on a book tour is pumping new energy into the “blame-Bush” campaign, and a in general the discourse has been cranked up a couple of notches.

Not surprisingly, I have conversations about politics with friends on a regular basis, and one of the things that always amazes me is the differences some of us have regarding welfare and entitlement programs.  We have created a subculture here that expects free stuff and they want it now.  They also want more of it, be it food stamps, subsidized rent, education aid or health care.  Believe it or not, I don’t want people dying on the street and I don’t want hungry or uneducated children.  I do want, however, the folks receiving the handout to understand a few things.  America entitles everyone to one thing.  The freedom to succeed.  That’s a big deal.  There are few countries that offer that to everyone, unencumbered.  That’s why everyone, from every corner of the Earth, wants to come here.  For the chance at a better life.  Folks like me who complain about giving more and more and more of what we earn, have good reason.

A brief summary of my journey might help others see why I feel that way.  I don’t recount this to pat myself on the head, because my story is the same of thousands and thousands of others.  It is similar to the people I have worked and lived around for my entire life.  But it might give some people a glimpse into a world they have never known.

My father came home from Germany, having served in the Army during World War II, to find that the money he had been sending home had been spent by an unreliable relative.  Nonetheless, after marrying, he and my mother bought a small farmhouse in Milford where they raised sheep and chickens. My father drove truck during the day, worked in a machine shop at night, and eventually began his own importing business which became very successful and provided his family a very comfortable life.  Not an unusual story from that generation, but the common thread among folks in that time was a strong work ethic.  I don’t think as many people understand the level of endurance and perseverance required to attain that kind of a life.  Indeed, many now feel they are entitled to it.

I was a parent at eighteen so right out of High School, rather than college, I went to work for a local excavation company.  I learned heavy equipment operating, I learned to read blue prints and I learned how to do site development. I also bought a snowplow and a plow route from an employee of his, and 30+ years later I am still in the snowplowing business. Later, I left there for a local builder who had me manage the sitework end of his construction company.  All the permits, laying out sites for homes, keeping track of the budget end as well as equipment maintenance.  I worked hard, was loyal, and eventually he allowed me to rent his equipment on the weekends while I began to do some work on my own.  Generous of him, knowing where it would lead.

Not long after that I bought my first bulldozer and backhoe along with a small dump truck.  I was off and running.  Just a few years later I had eight employees and a bona fide “small business.”  It was a ton of work and I missed much of my first two boys growing up.  Weekends meant meeting with customers and doing estimates for new work, as well as keeping equipment up and running for the following week.  I made a good living, but I worked for it. I have 40 hours in by Wednesday, and that’s the way it has always been.  I wouldn’t know a 40-hour week if it bit me in the….well, you know.  During the winter it was, and still is, routine to work all day, have it snow, and the go plow snow for anywhere from 24 – 48 hours without sleep.

I remember countless times, lying underneath heavy equipment trying to make a repair, at 3 A.M. in the middle of a blizzard, on the side of the road or in a parking lot somewhere.  I could write a book about those episodes alone.  Some of it, truly, as I look back on it, I wonder how I survived it.  On the other hand, nearly everyone I knew then worked with the same relentless vigor.  That’s how we were raised.  Work hard, play hard.  Work extra hard while you’re young, put some money away, and provide the best life you can for your family.

I’ve paid and paid and paid my share of taxes and insurance premiums. Fine.  But when we reach a point where the government is saying they now need half of what I make…I bridle.  And so do a lot of other people.  See, I don’t mind paying a fair share and I don’t mind helping those who are less fortunate.  But I don’t want to help those that are simply lazy.  I don’t want to help those who can’t or won’t work because of substance abuse problems.  I abused plenty of substances in those days and still got to work the next day.

And I don’t want to give it away to people who feel “entitled” to the stuff I worked for just because they’re in America.  And there a lot of people who feel the same way.  Are we wrong?  Does that make us the “bad guy”?  I don’t buy it.  If I was going to give any extra money away, it would be for a publicity campaign to educate this new generation on exactly what kind of gumbo it takes to make it in the world.  Not interested?  That’s fine too.  But you live within your means, and let me live within mine.  But when your need for free stuff, and our governments willingness to give you more and more of it, means that I have to work harder and harder for less and less…well…then we have a problem.

I hope this makes it a little easier to understand where the angst comes from.  I am so tired of  hearing about the “wealthy” and how cheap they are, how Republicans don’t want to give anything to anyone, and how the liberals want to level that playing field.  Don’t look to me for a shovel and a rake for that leveling job.  Mine are already worn out from a lifetime of actual work.  Get it?

INDIA ON 2 MILLION DOLLARS A DAY

November 7th, 2010

Please peruse my latest travelogue, “India On 2 Million Dollars a Day”, which outlines some of the more modest accommodations and attractions for a frugal yet fun filled vacation to India.  Wow.  Not since High School when a friend urged me to “try these mushrooms” have I felt so out of sorts.

The election results were at once exhilarating and unsettling.  New Hampshire certainly sent a resounding message and the country, I believe, will benefit greatly with the service of Kelly Ayotte.  I have felt all along that she is Palin on steroids.  A depth of intellect, a stellar background, a strong family and deep New Hampshire roots.  Watch her closely as I believe she will be a quickly rising political star.

Vermont gave us more Leahy.  No turnover there and no great surprise.  Harry Reid kept his mojo and to our South, the incredible Barney Frank had a resounding win.  His competitor, Sean Bielat did well for a new comer…nothing to be ashamed of.  Yet it is unsettling, remarkable really, how Massachusetts quickly returned to the status-quo after giving us Scott Brown.  One nearly has to believe that the vote is more a result of the “democratic machine” getting out the vote, by such means as giving many Union members the day off to go out and drag people to the polls, as it is a true reflection of the will of the people.

Moreover, it is astonishing to me that so many people would re-elect someone as rude, obnoxious and vapid as Barney Frank.  He finally admitted, just weeks ago, to knowing that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were in trouble long before the mortgages hit the fan.  There is no doubt that he was a key player in actions that led to the deepest housing crisis since the Great Depression.  Supporters point to various hallmark legislation he has had a hand in over the years, but c’mon…he’s been there thirty years!  Look back at your own life over thirty years.  I’ll be your accomplishments in your career are tenfold his.  But how come you’re not vacationing on a private jet?   Incredible.  They came in droves to send him back to Washington.

It’s no wonder though, that there is such disagreement on the direction this country should be heading.  Our own President, after watching his own party get pistol whipped in the mid-terms by an electorate that is mad as Hell over excessive spending, embarks on a 200 million dollars a day vacation to Spain.  People will say…”that figure’s not accurate”, and it might not be, but I’ll bet it’s close.  There’s a fleet of forty aircraft assigned to the vacation.  There’s a hundred million right there.

It’s the disconnect with the people that is so utterly unbelievable.  This President could get an overnight 15% bump in his approval ratings by simply issuing this statement:
“Although the President and his family are afforded great and luxurious retreats courtesy of the American Taxpayers, my family and I have decided that for the remainder of my term in office, we will vacation at Camp David or places inside the United States to lessen the burden of our travel on the taxpayer and to be sure the money we do spend is spent here.  We understand that our life following the Presidency will afford us both the means and the time, to travel extensively at a much lower cost.”

Imagine how far that would go?  But it is beyond him, or anyone in this administration, to even think about something like that.  I really believe that.  The disconnect is that broad.  And that’s what is so good about what happened Tuesday.  Across the country, common-sense, decent people were elected to serve the public.  It was a good showing, a good beginning to something bigger.  Next question…2012?

ON A RAIL

October 31st, 2010

“Run ‘em out of town on a rail!”  I wonder where that came from?  I remember it from an ancient Jimmy Stewart movie, but currently I am hoping it becomes the national battlecry at the voting booths on Tuesday, November 2nd.  Speaking of “rails”, our own favorite New Hampshire Porkmeister, Paul Hodes, is thinking in terms of rails recently.  I wrote just last week about Jeanne Shaheen bringing home a few million for some “affordable housing” program, exactly the kind of spending many Americans wish to freeze at the moment.  Now comes Hodes brandishing another federal check for a 2.5 million dollar “study” for rail service from Concord, NH to Boston, MA.

I would love to see rail service between those two cities.  Who doesn’t love trains?  Yet, again, this is another example of the kind of cavalier spending of hard-earned dollars that is driving so many Americans nuts.  I continue to be astonished at the blind eye turned towards the folks who, by and large, earn the dollars that fill that federal checkbook.  I continue to hope that on Tuesday the message gets delivered to Washington, D.C. in the only form of text they are able to understand.  Votes.

Anytime I hear “feasibility study” and “federal funding” in the same sentence my comedian ears go up like a small deer hearing a twig snap in the distance.  If I had one wish, it might be to see the fiscal spread sheet on how that 2 1/2 million gets spent.  I’ll bet it would make your hair stand on end.  Yet these kinds of “small” expenditures get awarded in droves everyday across the country and we barely bat an eye at the word “million” anymore.  Probably some consulting group owned by the nephew of some representative who will spend a few hundred bucks on legal pads and present a leather-bound presentation two years from now that is mostly soil and aerial maps with little train tracks drawn in here and there.  “Here’s how to get to Boston by train…”.  Thanks for the check.

If any of us ever saw the minutia of where these earmark bills originate and end we would probably stick ourselves in the eye with an ice pick.  If I were ever representing citizens in Washington, God forbid, my first initiative would be a Fiscal SWAT Team that ran through every government agency with trimming shears the size of a battleship.  We all know the waste is there.  Ridding ourselves of it is the hard part. The “train to Boston” study is a perfect example of a giant weed.

I could take a dozen friends with hiking boots and tax maps and in three weeks present more information than that 2.5 million will ever get us.  And then there is the spending.  The rest of us are working harder for less, trimming from the household budget like an aircraft with three engines on fire…jettison everything that’s not bolted down.  Incredibly, the government and our barnacle-like politicians still don’t get it.  They come home covered with bacon fat and expect a parade.  Those days are fading fast.  The folks are on to you.  We’re finally saying “stop”.  You can take a third of what we make.  You can’t take it all.  Moreover, you better start spending it like you went out and earned it shoveling driveways…like a lot of unemployed engineers and architects will be doing this winter.

Run ‘em out of town on a rail, folks.  Don’t get complacent.  This isn’t done.  Harry Reid should be smoked by now with the mess and havoc he has created, but the fact is, it’s a close race.  Barney Frank will most likely be re-elected.  What a shame.

I can’t speak for you, but the only train I’m interested in right now is the one carrying corrupt and entrenched politicians off into the sunset.  Go vote.