President Clinton had an interesting interview on CNBC

Posted By on June 5, 2012

presclintoncnbc120605Although I’m not a big advocate for President Clinton, I do respect his intellect and ability to navigate the politics and the economy more than the current POTUS. Maria Bartiromo on CNBC had an interview which was both political (stumping for the Dems) and reasonably accurate when it comes to the dealing with the stalled economy. President Clinton was able to simplify a strategy in a way that neither President Obama or Governor Romney has been able to communicate. His three points are easy to sell to the average voter, make logical sense to a wide swath and fit the attention span of those who 99% of the time really don’t care about politics.

1) Economic growth, 2) Spending Restraint and then 3) Additional revenue.

He also indicated that they these three things need to come in the right order to “avoid anything that contracts the economy.”  The commonsense talking points of “bringing the deficit down after the economy rebounds” and that we need to “take advantage of low interest rates now” because when the economy rebounds we’ll be sure to see much higher rates most likely sell better to Democrats, but they probably make sense to all but the far right conservative.

Part 1: Maria Bartiromo CNBC with President Clinton – 11:15- June 5, 2012

When addressing the issue of unions I thought he also had a sellable and almost Republican position: “Shared prosperity in good times and shared sacrifice in the bad times.” Of course these are all just “talking points” and a bit more challenging to put into action … but I think he could get the America people behinds his position better than Obama … I’m not so sure about Romney’s clarity just yet? An interesting quote that doesn’t bode well for President Obama was …"the most important thing in this election is what will President Obama do and what will Gov. Romney do with the economy and how will they deal with people who disagree with them, will they be divide and conquer, or would they be, ‘let’s bring everyone together’?" (link) I think we know how well Obama has been “leading” in this regard after his 3-1/2 years.

Part 2: Maria Bartiromo CNBC with President Clinton – 10:58 – June 5, 2012

Happy 30th Anniversary Brenda – Great Memories

Posted By on June 5, 2012

I’m “archiving” a few old photos and want to thank my wife Brenda for 30 wonderful years (our 30th anniversary is today June 5); I’m looking forward to another 30 brendarich31years_syears with her and watching our children build their lives and memories.

As many family and friends will agree, 30 years goes by pretty fast … at least until we look back at all that has happened. From our wonderful year of engagement (photo left from 1981) and spending way too much time trying to figure out how we could see each other a few more hours … to planning our wedding, honeymoon and buy first house together. I was teaching and going to graduate school at Miami University (SW Ohio) and she was starting her first year of work in Cleveland (NE Ohio). I remember high long distance phone bills and many long drives in my little 1977 Honda Civic … this was before they grew up (it has a 1200 cc engine and 12” wheels but thankfully was thrifty on fuel!)

Writing down everything I could say regarding our wonderful 30 years would take forever … so I think I’ll just say Happy Anniversary and retire a couple of the photos I’ve carried in my wallet for the last 30 years. They are getting pretty ragged and will last longer scanned and saved (below). Happy 30th Anniversary Brenda.

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Brenda and Rich in 1981, in the mid-80s and with Katelyn and Taylor in the mid-90s. (hmm … I’m feeling old.)

The Transit of Venus on the evening of June 5th 2012

Posted By on June 4, 2012

A rare astronomical event takes place tomorrow and should be viewable (weather permitting) for those with the correct “sun gazing” equipment or reflective techniques. (I recall the old pinhole in foil and shoebox as a kid) This will be the last time our generation will see Venus pass between the earth and the sun — The Transit of Venus — unless you’re still around in December 2117. Unfortunately even if the sky is perfect in the evening in North America, the size of Venus compared to the sun is tiny. A better view will be with some magnification … maybe tune into the NASA webcast fro Mauna Kea Hawaii.

http://sunearthday.nasa.gov/webcasts/nasaedge/

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A rock: Lazy weekend cross-post

Posted By on June 3, 2012

Shared as a “keep alive” social networking accounts post this weekend and figured that I would add my “tombstone” photo (joke) … well at least the hunk of granite was priced like a gravestone.

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> Really, how many dollars did I just spend on this rock in order to cover a stump?

Midwest cattle farmers complain of government ‘spying’

Posted By on June 2, 2012

Have we really expanded government to the size that the EPA is flying airplane (and probably drones) to monitor farms? If they have that many resources how about using them on our southern border rather than looking at “manure.”

KANSAS CITY, Missouri (Reuters) – Cattle farmers complained on Wednesday that a federal agency is “spying” on their operations by flying airplanes over Midwest cattle feedlots to see if they are complying with clean water regulations.
The livestock producers and some members of Congress from rural areas want to know why the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is using airplanes to monitor whether feedlots are obeying the Clean Water Act.

“The federal government has literally resorted to spying on producers,” said Kristen Hassebrook, natural resources and environmental affairs director for the Nebraska Cattlemen.

Her association advised two U.S. senators and three members of the U.S. House of Representatives from Nebraska in drafting a letter to EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson on the matter. They said the aerial surveillance raises privacy concerns and they question the statutory authority for the flights.

Hassebrook said inspections and photographs from high in the air may result in faulty assumptions about whether a feedlot is operating properly, which could expose the owner to unfounded allegations.

Feedlots are where cattle are kept in confinement and fed intensively until they are ready for slaughter. Because there are usually large numbers in a limited space, the accumulation of manure needs to be disposed. The waste can pollute ground water.

The EPA defended the flights on Wednesday as part of its effort to enforce the law, which sets standards for how cattle feedlots are to dispose of manure to avoid pollution.

“EPA uses over-flights, state records and other publicly available sources of information to identify discharges of pollution,” said a statement issued by the EPA’s Kansas City regional office. “In no case has EPA taken an enforcement action solely on the basis of these over-flights.”

EPA has for 10 years used flyovers to verify compliance with environmental laws on watersheds as a “cost-effective” tool to minimize inspection costs, according to the statement.

The EPA did not say how long the feedlots have been under aerial inspection, but Hassebrook said her group believes it began in 2010.

The EPA held a meeting in West Point, Nebraska, in March to discuss the flyovers in Nebraska and Iowa, Hassebrook said. About 125 cattle producers attended the meeting, she said.

The letter from the Nebraska members of Congress raises questions about the frequency of the flights, who gets inspected, what becomes of pictures or video and whether the EPA is also looking for violations unrelated to the Clean Water Act.

“Nebraskans are rightly skeptical of an agency which continues to unilaterally insert itself into the affairs of rural America,” congressman Adrian Smith of Nebraska said in a statement on Tuesday.

Farmers have been at loggerheads for years with the EPA over everything from water pollution and greenhouse gas emissions, to dust in the air from crops and fields. The nation’s largest farm organization, the American Farm Bureau Federation, last year sued the EPA, and several states have complained about what they call excessive regulation.

The EPA defends the regulation as necessary to protect the environment.

(Editing by Greg McCune and Eric Beech)

Investors sour on downbeat of negative economic news

Posted By on June 1, 2012

The Dow’s gains for the year have been officially wiped away.

After thinking 2012 might be the year we work our way out of the long recession, the job numbers tell otherwise. After all the debt-financed stimulus, continued wasteful spending and inefficient use of tax receipts coming from Washington DC … confidence is slipping and so are the economic numbers. worstdayof2012forstocksToday’s stock market decline is making it the worst day of the year.

Companies have little reason to hire long term employees as the disincentives and risk to hire outweigh the incentives. The current administration continues to target job creators as the enemy and looks to them as a target to increase taxes. If anything, leadership in the Obama administration is either missing or adversarial when it comes to stimulating private business. I’m not sure America can survive another downturn … or even has time to wait until next year with the hope there might be a president who understands the economy, how to inspire businesses to risk capital and create jobs.

Disappointing job numbers send stock market futures south

Posted By on June 1, 2012

Numbers being release this Friday morning are making an already bad month of May an even more frightening June beginning. Jobs creation, payroll and now even the unemployment rate has risen. The yield on the 10-yr Treasuries hits an unbelievable low of 1.5% yield. Weak throughout. 

WASHINGTON—U.S. job growth slowed sharply in May, the latest indication that the economy has lost momentum.

Nonfarm payrolls grew by a 69,000 last month, the Labor Department said Friday, the smallest gain in a year. The unemployment rate, obtained by a separate survey of U.S. households, ticked one-tenth of a percentage point higher to 8.2%, the first increase in nearly a year.

Economists surveyed by Dow Jones Newswires expected a gain of 155,000 in payrolls and for the jobless rate to remain at 8.1% in May.

Compounding an already weak report, March and April payroll gains were revised down. Nonfarm payrolls increased by 77,000 in April, compared with the previously reported 115,000, and March payrolls grew by 143,000 versus a previously reported 154,000..

Posted via email from RichC’s posterous

A little light humor for the day

Posted By on May 31, 2012

gotitbackwards

I would make a few jokes about this … but it would be sure to offend someone AND I’m sure you can think of a few on your own.
Winking smile

Kayak surfing Nelscott Reef in Oregon

Posted By on May 30, 2012

Living on the edge when it comes to navigating natural hazards in the breaking ocean isn’t for the average kayak surfer … one mistake and not only will the sea and reef grind your plastic boat to bits … it most likely would do the same for flesh and bone.

Tao Berman kayak surfing at Nelscott Reef, Oregon, USA. 2012.

"There is something about knowing a mistake can have pretty severe consequences that makes moments like these feel extra special," says champion extreme kayaker Tao Berman, who waited four years before all the pieces fell together to kayak surf this monster wave at Nelscott Reef, located about a half mile offshore in Oregon.

Berman took on big-wave surf kayaking to keep challenging himself after setting three world records and mastering freestyle kayaking. But the kayaking legend has hung up his competition paddle: "So far retirement has been great," he says. "I’ve been spending time with my nine-month-old daughter and doing lots of sports."

Getting the Shot

Nelscott Reef is one of the toughest breaks that photographer Richard Hallman has ever shot, he says. It has a rough entry point leading to 15- to 20-foot waves. “The only way out to greet this beast is through the most gnarly, freezing, shark-infested beach break,” he says.

Shooting from the channel between the north and south reef, Hallman was able to capture Berman kayaking the wave. “On one wave in particular, we watched for a breathless moment as Tao got caught inside a massive wave," Hallman says. The kayaker was torn from his boat, a rare occurrence for the pro. “One of the rescue teams came over and said Tao was asking for me," recalls Hallman, a former ER nurse and EMT who thought his skills might be needed to aid Berman. “When I got there, [Berman] just wanted me to document his bloody nose. He’s a tough customer.”

Hallman used a Canon 1D Mark IV with a 70-200mm lens and an Aquatec waterhouse.

LINK

Memorial Day hits some deeper than others

Posted By on May 29, 2012

TandFriendsInTheRain120528 Interception120528l

I didn’t want to let this story get away from me so I will post it after Memorial Day. Taylor had a few friends over this weekend and they enjoyed the sunshine, played football in the rain, cooled off in the pool and watched a couple movies. Brenda and I are thankful our kids “still” come back home and glad they don’t mind being around us; we even included them in our cookout last night – and thankfully we had enough food to feed them! That said, I do get a little “old man ornery” once in a while … something I regret (I need to work on that.)

But that’s not the point of this post. A friend of Taylor’s, Joe St Romain, served as a Marine and left the group for a few hours to take care of a personal Memorial Day obligation. Although Joe (now in college) still enjoys what we all take for granted, he also has a deeper understanding of what our freedom and liberty costs. I’m including the story that he shared with his Facebook friends … Taylor read it to us … and I wanted to include it here. The story is about Joe’s friend Edwin Gonzalez – you’ll get the point after reading below.

So today is memorial day. It’s the day where we honor those who fell, so we could live free. I would ask that you take a few minutes of your day, and read this, so that you can learn just a little bit about my friend, Edwin Gonzalez.

My story with Edwin begins at Marine Corps base Camp Lejeune, North Caroline. edwingonzalezI had changed duty stations, and was checking into 1st Battalion, 8th Marine regiment, a Marine Infantry unit. I was assigned to Bravo Company, 1st platoon, which is where I met Edwin for the first time. Edwin was not a Marine. He was a Navy Corpsman. See the Marine Corps does not have medics, or people that work within the medical field. Instead, we use Navy personnel to fill those billets within our ranks. The difference between Edwin, and most other Navy Corpsmen was that he had chosen to go “to the green side,” which basically means, he went to a school specifically designed to train Corpsman to work, live, and fight with Marines.

From the moment he introduced himself to me, I knew I like the guy. He had a sincerity about him; you just knew that he genuinely gave a shit about you. Talking to Edwin, I never felt like he was just going through the motions. The first time we ever really hung out off base, was at another buddies house out in town. Everyone was drinking, and I was getting to meet most of the guys in my Platoon for the first time. I spent a long time talking with Edwin. Getting to know him, and vice versa. He told me he hailed from Miami, Florida, where “the bitches were so fine.” He told me about all these near death experiences he miraculously survived growing up, earning him the nickname “Superman,” amongst his friends. I later found Edwin that night, passed out on the couch. As any good Marine buddy would do, we all proceeded to draw dicks, and other vulgar words and pictures all over his body. I used to have a video of this, but it has long since been lost.

Me and Edwin became close in the months leading up to our deployment. In Iraq, we became brothers. Edwin, and those who I served with there, are as family to me as my own flesh and blood. Me and Edwin talked about everything. Where we came from, where we wanted to go. All the dumb, fucked up shit we planned to do when we got back to the states, and all the different varieties of alcohol we were going to drink in excess (Edwin was partial to Corona). We went and lifted together, ate together when we could, sat around and watched movies together. We became great friends, but then again, you couldn’t meet Edwin and not become best friends with him. Thats the kind of guy he was. He would do anything for you. A real shirt of his back kind of guy.

Even before our deployment was over, rumors started to spread of our next deployment. Everyone was saying “Afghanistan.” See for me, this was the end of my service. I would be out of the Marines three months after we returned to the states. Edwin would follow shortly after. We started talking about re-enlisting, or at the very least, extending our contracts to deploy again, this time to Afghanistan. We said we would do it. We both would. Edwin’s extension happened rather quickly, and he was all set to re-deploy with 1/8 once again. I, however, waited until I got back to the states to start the process of extending my contract. Trouble was, as soon as freedom was in sight, and I had beer to drink, and girls all over the place, I never actually extended. College seemed way more appealing. I had backed out of our pact, left the Marine Corps behind me, and moved back to Ohio. Edwin stayed with 1/8, and when the day came, deployed with them to Afghanistan.
Hospital Corpsman Edwin Gonzalez, who was 22, was killed in action on October 8th, 2010, while conducting combat operations in the Helmand Province of Afghanistan.

There is a hole on this earth. It exists where Edwin once filled it. There is a whole in my heart, which will remain until the day that I die. I have yet to know a better man than Gonzo, nor do I ever think I will. Even to this day, and as I write this, I find myself overwhelmed, and fighting back the tears. In a way, I blame myself for what happened; as irrational and illogical as that may be, anyone who has served understands this type of guilt. I’m sure I always will blame myself to an extent, even though I know there was nothing I could have possibly done. Every day I think about Edwin, and the man he was. Every day I live my life to very best I can possibly live it, so that I may make him proud. I have to live my life for two now, to be the man that he never got the chance to be. However, no matter who I am, or what I become, I will only ever be close to half the caliber of person he was. I love you Edwin Gonzalez. More than this world will ever know. You will always and forever be Superman to me. Rest easy brother. I will see you again in time.

This Memorial day, wherever you are, whatever you are doing, and whoever you are with, I would ask this small favor of you: Please spend a few moments in silence, and think about my friend Edwin, as well as all the men and women who have made the ultimate sacrifice for this country. They are the are the reason that this nation has not fallen into darkness. They are the reason we live free. Greater love hath no man that this, that a man lay down his life for his friends.

Your measure is not found in how much time you have on this earth, but what you do with the time that you have.
Happy Memorial day everybody.

Thanks for sharing this Joe … and thanks for your service.

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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