Celebrating an 86th birthday with my dad over the weekend

Posted By on January 26, 2015

DadCatRon150124sWe celebrated my dad’s birthday this past weekend with pizza and conversation at my brother and sister-in-law’s in home. While it is difficult to see my dad getting older and more feeble, I’m still thankful he is able to enjoy time with his family. His spirit is good, although for the first time in my life am seeing him with a “less than positive” attitude about having a birthday. For years my dad joked about living to 140 … and while that is still a possibility … his optimism is no longer as strong as it once was. Aging issues aside, I do enjoy the twice a week visits (my goal) with him at his house, but recognize that he will not be able to stay “alone” much longer. The time is near where decisions will need to be made on what comes next. My brother Ron is semi-planning to have him come live in Tipp City (not too far from Sidney) … but it is going to be a big decision. Ron and I have initiated the process by convincing dad to visit for a couple of weekends using winter and convenience as an excuse … but writing is on the wall.

Book: The Rape of NanKing – The Forgotten Holocaust of WWII

Posted By on January 25, 2015

I picked up a book, The Rape Of Nanking: The Forgotten Holocaust Of World War II, published in 1997 and written by the late Iris Chang. I decided to read it after a bit of Twitter sparring with CBJapan1 and his/her “allegation of lying” about rapeofnankingcoverthe book and movie Unbroken, as well as how America recorded the history of the Japanese brutality in China and treatment of U.S. soldiers. There is a small but noticeable number of political and mostly conservatives in Japan who continue to deny the atrocities committed by Japanese soldiers. They have been actively rewriting and purging history regarding the Empire of Japan’s warring with their enemies, treatment of POWs and in the Nanking Massacre, Chinese civilians in 1937. Most Americans who have studied the Pacific theatre of WWII know how brutally American POWs were treated and may not realize that there is an active group of Japanese deniers still excusing this today.

I was familiar with Chang’s NYTimes Bestseller in the late 1990s, but didn’t give much attention to events prior to America going to war with Japan. I’ve heard the stories and know about the AVG Flying Tigers and Japan’s war with China (history and aviation interest), but not so much about the extent of the atrocities Japan inflicted on the Chinese civilians … probably not something that is going to enhance my faith in humanity?

Here’s an edited page from a PacificWar.org.au website and Japanese War Crimes:

The Japanese invasion of China in 1937

Having already seized and annexed China’s Manchurian region (1931) and Jehol province (1933), the Japanese were waiting for a pretext to invade and occupy the whole of China. That pretext came in July 1937, when tensions between Chinese troops and Japanese troops engaged in military exercises on occupied Chinese territory produced an exchange of firing near Peking (now Beijing). The Japanese used this incident as an excuse to wage all out war against China.

BURIAL ALIVE AT NANKING (NANJING) 1937

Chinese at Nanking (now known as Nanjing) are being buried alive by grinning Japanese troops who are competing with each other to invent new and more horrible ways to kill Chinese whom they regarded as sub-human. This photograph was taken by a Japanese and processed in a Japanese-owned photographic shop. A Chinese photographic technician made copies that were smuggled out of China.

Japanese armies invaded China’s northern provinces and quickly captured the ancient Chinese capital Peking (now called Beijing). In the conduct of this war, the Japanese adopted a policy of deliberate savagery in the expectation that it would break the will of the Chinese to resist. Although poorly trained and equipped, the Chinese army and communist irregulars put up strong resistance to Japan’s armies which enjoyed overwhelming superiority in numbers, training, and weapons. The Japanese troops responded to Chinese resistance to their invasion by embarking on an orgy of murder, rape, and looting that shocked the civilised world at that time, although it has now been largely forgotten in many Western countries where the rigorous teaching of history is becoming a neglected discipline.

While fighting was continuing in northern China, the Japanese launched a second front at the city of Shanghai on the eastern coast of China. Despite determined resistance by Chinese Nationalist troops, the Japanese captured Shanghai in November, 1937. As if to make an exhibition of their brutality to the Western world, the Japanese marched hundreds of Chinese prisoners of war down to the Bund, or river bank, and slaughtered them by machine-gun in full view of horrified observers aboard foreign ships moored in the river. Having captured Shanghai, the Japanese were then able to move up the Yangtze River and lay siege to the Nationalist capital Nanking (now called Nanjing).

It is not possible to document here the full extent of the horrors experienced by China at the hands of the Japanese between 1937 and 1945. Those who are interested in a detailed treatment of this terrible episode in China’s history will find it in the books of Lord Russell of Liverpool, Iris Chang and Laurence Rees that are mentioned at the end of this chapter. I will mention here only the Rape of Nanking (now called the Nanjing Massacre) which is the best documented of Japanese atrocities in China owing to the presence of Western observers who were eyewitnesses to the mass slaughter, rape and looting that the Japanese inflicted on the unfortunate population of the Chinese capital.

The Japanese murder, rape, loot, and burn in Nanking (Nanjing) 1937

The Japanese were infuriated by the strength of Chinese resistance, and when China’s Nationalist capital Nanking fell in December 1937, Japanese troops immediately slaughtered thousands of Chinese soldiers who had surrendered to them. The Japanese then rounded up about twenty thousand young Chinese men and transported them in trucks outside the city walls where they were killed in a massive slaughter. Japanese troops were then encouraged by their officers to loot Nanking, and slaughter and rape the Chinese population of the city.

For six weeks, life for the Chinese in Nanking became a nightmare. Bands of drunken Japanese soldiers roamed the city, murdering, raping, looting, and burning at whim. Chinese civilians who were stopped on the street, and found to possess nothing of value, were immediately killed. At least twenty thousand Chinese women were raped in Nanking during the first four weeks of the Japanese occupation, and many were mutilated and killed when the Japanese troops were finished with them.

The Japanese troops were encouraged by their officers to invent ever more horrible ways to slaughter the Chinese population of the city. When the bodies of murdered Chinese choked the streets and the gutters ran red with their blood, the Japanese were forced to refine their methods of slaughter in the interest of preventing the spread of disease. Batches of Chinese civilians were rounded up and herded into slaughter pits. Here the grinning Japanese soldiers would either bury them alive, hack them to death with their swords, use them for bayonet practice, or pour petrol on the victims and burn them alive. The bodies of thousands of victims of the slaughter were dumped into the Yangtze River until the river was red with their blood. After looting Nanking of anything of value, the Japanese started fires that gutted one third of the city.

Independent foreign observers of the Rape of Nanking, including a German businessman and Nazi Party member named John Rabe, were appalled to see Chinese civilians, both men and women, the elderly, and tiny children, put to death by Japanese troops with horrifying brutality. Rabe tried to save as many Chinese as he could by creating a safety zone on his estate. He appealed to Adolf Hitler to intervene, but the Nazi leader rebuffed his appeal. Convincing independent proof of the horrifying scale of the Japanese massacre at Nanking emerged in 1996 with the publication of John Rabe’s diary record of the massacre.

Japanese soldiers appeared to be quite willing to be photographed with raised swords beside their intended victims, in the act of bayoneting their victims, and posing with their dead victims in the slaughter pits. The atrocities committed by Japanese troops at Nanking were widely publicised by foreign observers, including newspaper correspondents. When the Japanese high command became aware of the full scope of the horror perpetrated by Japanese troops at Nanking, it went to considerable lengths to destroy evidence of the atrocity.

Iris Chang gives a very detailed account of the extent and appalling nature of the Japanese atrocities in Nanking in her book "The Rape of Nanking" (published 1997). The horrifying photographs in her book survived the attempt by the Japanese high command to cover up the Nanking atrocities because the perpetrators entrusted the "happy snaps" recording their vile behaviour to a Japanese-owned photographic shop in Shanghai for processing. A Chinese employee secretly made extra copies and smuggled them out of China.

The judges of the International Military Tribunal for the Far East (also known as the Tokyo War Crimes Trials) were prepared to accept that at least 200,000 Chinese civilians and prisoners of war were slaughtered by the Japanese in the six weeks after Nanking fell. The judges were also prepared to accept that the death toll would be much higher if estimates of the number of Chinese burned alive by the Japanese in mass slaughter pits and bodies dumped in the river were added. Non-Japanese historians are prepared to accept that the slaughter at Nanking could have reached as high as 370,000 victims.

The appalling brutality displayed by Japanese troops at Nanking was by no means unique. It has been estimated by historians that several million Chinese civilians and prisoners of war were murdered in the course of Japan’s undeclared war on China between 1937 and 1945.

Despite photographic and independent eyewitness evidence, the Japanese government still refuses to acknowledge or permit Japanese schoolchildren to be told the full story of the slaughter, rape and looting that took place at Nanking in 1937. In recent years, the Japanese government has made a small concession to the weight of international and local criticism of this censorship by permitting brief and vague references in history textbooks to the Rape of Nanking (Nanjing Massacre), but the atrocities are described as the "Nanjing Incident" and the text suggests that the victims died during the battle for the city, and not in a horrifying massacre that took place during the six weeks that followed the fall of the city to the Japanese.

Even these small concessions to historical truth are now coming under attack in Japan from militarists and neo-nationalists. The neo-nationalists, who include Japan’s Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi, prominent members of Japan’s parliament, and senior academics such as Professor Nobukatsu Fujioka of Tokyo University, believe that these concessions have gone too far, and that school textbooks should be censored to delete all references to Japanese war guilt and atrocities, and to instil national pride rather than shame.

Looking forward to Land Rover SUVs with diesel engines

Posted By on January 24, 2015

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The auto shows across North America are in full swing for the winter of 2015 and while keeping an eye to what is coming is always interesting, there are a few quiet stand outs that have peaked my interest.

The capable and respected (AND fairly expensive) Land Rovers have always been interesting, but in the United States, they are not diesels. Things are changing as two of their SUV models will have diesels in the fall of 2015 according to reports from the North American International Auto Show and they will be followed by the entire Land Rover line up in coming years. The new 2015 Land Rover Discover Sport CUV will be particularly interesting with a diesel and base pricing on the gasoline models are actually lower than expected (strong dollar and exchange rates, perhaps???)

Land Rover will offer consumers the option of fuel efficient diesel powertrains in two 2016 model year luxury SUVs, the Range Rover and Range Rover Sport. The Range Rover HSE Td6 and Range Rover Sport HSE Td6 SUVs will deliver 25 miles per gallon combined*, a 32 percent improvement over the supercharged V6 gasoline engine, and reach a high of 28 miles per gallon on the highway*.

LINK

TechFriday: Clear your head by clearing the Mac desktop

Posted By on January 23, 2015

If you are an Apple Macintosh user and have been living with a cluttered desktop, give the free program Hocus Focus a try … if you like it, make a donation.

hocusfocusscreenThe purpose of the small program is to automatically hide unused but opened applications and windows so it is easier to focus on the task at hand. I regularly have a dozen or so windows and apps open on my 27” iMac and clutter is something I’ve learned to live with … until now. I liberally use the cmd-h and cmd-TABBER in order to rotate into the correct program, but having automatic timers for cleaning “certain” windows from the desktop is helpful.

For example, I run a virtual hocusfocusrunningWindows 7 PC desktop using Parallels to display a live screen of stock tickers and charts and often work on top of it with other applications. Sometimes its just the Apple Messages app or the calculator a program that doesn’t need to stay “on top”… but one I don’t mind keeping open. What is nice about Hocus Focus (its predecessor was Houdini) is that each profiles can be customized and apps given different time parameters for “hiding.”

My only only nit is that I run a full virtual window for all the PC based applications rather than the Coherence mode (not sure how Hocus Focus handles that?) and so everything in the Parallels window is either all hidden or ALL showing. This is probably more of “my problem from 30 years of using Macs” than a problem with the software. I assume each Coherence window could be managed separately and might have to give it a try … someday, but not now. Time will tell IF I opt to change my ways … but for now if you are using a cluttered Mac, give Hocus Focus a try.

Memories: Deep Impact Mission inside Comet Tempel 1 #TBT

Posted By on January 22, 2015

kandfriendhelmetsMy wife has been busy cleaning out our closets and getting rid of “old stuff.” One the the items dates back in 2003 and brought back memories of my “space girl.” 

My daughter Katelyn was inspired by science and particularly by an adventurous NASA, space exploration and astronomy. In part, her interest could have been our sending her to Space Camp when she was young, but also like many sponge-brained youngsters, exploration and space is an excellent way to inspire … and is a great educational tool too. Besides pursuing the sciences at school, she also saved her own money to buy a high quality telescope. She spent many evenings (early morning too) blanketed up in the backyard looking up (the times I was will her are treasured as well). Brenda also found the homemade red-lens flashlight for reading and writing in order to protect her night vision while the dark. Another “old stuff” item deepimpactmission_kfc2003was the Deep Impact Mission certificate when NASA planned (2003) and succeeded a couple years later (July 4, 2005) to impact the Comet Tempel 1. (See Deep Impact PDF)

Besides Katelyn heading to Space Camp and having aspirations to be a NASA Flight Surgeon, she also spent a high school summer at the University of New Mexico in the NASA Sharp (Summer High School Apprenticeship Research Program) working on Immunosensors … fortunately it was just before the program’s (and NASA’s) demise. We were fortunate to still have such educational internships available. I wonder just what will inspire the next generation of scientists, engineers, doctors and explorers? We as a nation need to inspire and challenged our youth “for good” … I for one wouldn’t mind seeing some national pride and incentives that cause us to dream big.

More of the same from President Obama after the SOTU

Posted By on January 21, 2015

After taking notes during the State of the Union address I went to bed disgusted rather than hopeful … even though I knew in advance the direction President Obama would be saying in his address. Call me sentimental or just hopeful, but I really thought that after the mid-term elections where, “make no mistake, his policies were on the ballot,” that we might see a sotu2015President Bill Clinton moment … and as much as I disliked President Clinton during his 8 years in the White House, when push came to shove, he did put the country before before politics; I’m not so sure about this administration putting the country first, as much as I want it to be.

I will give President Obama credit, he does carry himself with a confident swagger, something that is missing from his foreign policy. Of course it comes off as arrogant and self focused. Listening to his  “I” and “me” gets a little old, but is probably calculated by his advisors and speechwriters and is genuinely Barack Obama.

stateoftheunioncongress2015

As for those who know public speaking, they praise the delivery and the weaving of stories and real people throughout the delivery. It was good, but also added to the length – a total of 61 minutes. The president also avoided questionable current events such as the political coup taking place in Yemen even though the administration recently pointed to Yemen as a victory against terror. The pomp and circumstance of the congress was also within keeping with our tradition, as the applause interrupted the 649s word address some 76 times. The president used his wit to get in a couple cracks about campaigns and winning (Vine below).

As for the non-starters (I hope) with congress … bigger government handing out more entitlements requiring more tax dollars; Obama is recycling the Robin Hode (just learned that spelling) idea that proposes more social fairness by taking from those who have in order to redistribute to those who have less – income redistribution. It is hard to believe that after 200 plus years succeeding because of limited government and free market capitalism that some believe prosperity can come from a top-down big government approach. Don’t they know that all governments that capitalism (socialism and communism) have failed?

The playbook is old – find something that sounds good like 2 years of free community college education, mandatory paid sick leave, child care, higher minimum wage … and set up an even bigger bureaucracy in order to administer and tax those who have in order to pay for it (at what is always an inefficient government inflated rate). The proposed new taxes will come from three areas:
1) tax inherited assets (death tax)
2) raise the capital gains to a top rate to 28% 
3) charge large institutions and banks a fee to discourage borrowing

But as a Jordan Weissmann writing for Slate put it in his article Progressivism on the Cheap

… economic populism may not sound especially enthralling—especially in a seventh-year State of the Union address, where presidents can pretty much let their imaginations run wild. But it may be the most the left can realistically hope for in the near future. As long as today’s GOP hangs on to at least one chamber of Congress, major progressive reforms to the tax code will remain DOA on Capitol Hill.

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Obama voters want money from his stash (mp3) – October 2009

Bridge being dismantled collapses in Cincinnati blocking SB I-75

Posted By on January 20, 2015

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The Twitter updates last night kept me up late than usual as I contemplated how this would impact traffic on I-75. The heavy construction north of Cincinnati has been challenging the last year or so and having the old Hopple Street overpass pancake collapse on the southbound heavily traveled interstate highway is going to be a problem. Officials stated that I-75 would be shut down for at least 48 hours and travelers should make alternate plans. I’m sure they will reroute thru traffic, but that will still make for difficult commutes and travel.

A construction worker died and a tractor-trailer driver was injured as his truck smashed into the fallen bridge section. Thankfully police were already on the scene and able to stop traffic and prevent further accidents and injuries.

Rebuilding a brake caliper on the W123 Mercedes Benz 300D

Posted By on January 20, 2015

MBCaliper_150118_SealRemoval

Once I priced a rebuilt brake caliper the 1982 Mercedes Benz 300D Turbodiesel, I knew I would be rebuilding the the caliper this past weekend, especially since the seal kit was only $9.00 on eBay. The project was pretty straight forward, but removing the old “baked” on seals was not as easy at one might have thought.

MBCaliper_150118_RemoveCaliper MBCaliper_150118_Tire

No doubt I’ve been living on borrowed time considering just how much brake fluid was leaking after looking at the tire and from the feel of my spongy soft brake pedal … although I justified that a quick pump of the pedal would get the clamping pressure up enough to stop the car. The only time I started to worry was when the “low fluid” light would pop on the dash lights … thankfully I had an extra bottle in the trunk.

MBCaliper_150118_PreCleaning MBCaliper_150118_DentalTools

Nevertheless … it was past time to correct my unwise behavior. After removing the caliper from the car … and cleaning up the grungy mess … I put a couple of my late father-in-law’s dental instruments to use. My daughter thought her grandfather would be “mortified” when she asked what I was doing this weekend, but I think he would have been pleased to see them re-purposed.

MBCaliper_150118_RemovalCompressedAir

I used a bit of compress air to loosen each piston … hold the opposing one in place or use a spacer between them … when slowly pressuring the caliper (above or all photos here). Once removed, inspect the pistons and the cylinders for corrosion or any pitting. I cleaned up the old pistons with a bit of 3M abrasive pad and it looked as good as new when I was finished.

MBCaliper_150118_RemovedPistons MBCaliper_150118_CleaningPistons

Reassembly was also a bit challenging. The inside seals fit perfectly after cleaning out the groove, but the Teflon dust seal isn’t all that flexible and just didn’t fit the way I think it should. With a little refitting and pre-lubrication with brake fluid, the cylinders ease back in place. I tested the movement with compressed air before refitting to the car and filling with brake fluid to be sure all was working as it should.

After reassembly and bleeding with my Pela 6000 vacuum, the brakes were solid and stops were as straight as could be. No leaking and no fading … “I love it when a plan comes together” as Hannibal Smith (George Peppard’s character) would have said … although to understand that line you would have to remember Stephen J. Cannell’s The A-Team in the 1980s.
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Shake it Off video starts the 2015 year with millions of views

Posted By on January 19, 2015

One can’t help but smile watching the Dover Delaware Police cam video with one of their officers lip syncing to “Shake it Off” by Taylor Swift. That said, one of my videos infringed on an Oprah Winfrey segment years ago and YouTube takes down my account and deletes over 100 of my personal videos spanning years of car repair and family … yet permit this segment with an entire copyright protected song?

NFL Playoffs … and then there were two

Posted By on January 19, 2015

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Football was on call for Sunday afternoon and evening with the final two NFL playoff games. First was perhaps the most exciting game I’ve watched in a long time seeing the conservative play-calling of the Green Bay Packers dominate the first 3 quarters of football. Then last years Superbowl champs lead by Russell Wilson came roaring back in the 4th to take the lead only to have Aaron Rogers move the Packers into field goal range making it a 22-22 tie. This took the game into overtime. In OT the coin toss had the Seahawks with the ball first and for the only possession they needed to score a TD and win the game 28-22.

The second game wasn’t even a contest as the playoff experienced New England Patriots destroyed the Indianapolis Colts … it was never a game. NE 45 – Indy 7.

Superbowl XLIX in Arizona is set for February 1st … it should be an interesting game.

Desultory - des-uhl-tawr-ee, -tohr-ee

  1. lacking in consistency, constancy, or visible order, disconnected; fitful: desultory conversation.
  2. digressing from or unconnected with the main subject; random: a desultory remark.
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