Category Archives: Uncategorized

ON A PERSONAL NOTE

You may have notice that my writing has been sparse of late.  I passed my 80th birthday this year and priority had to be given to the management of many changes taking place on the personal front, all good except for the need to sell my airplane.  It is the plane pictured on the banner of the blog.  That photo was taken at the factory on January 4th, 2002.  It has been a very good ten years.

When the plane is sold there will be a new scene on the banner but the theme and content of the blog will not change.  When you are out browsing, I hope you will continue to stop by Random Thots from time to time.  The door is always open and there will be goodies on the table.

Bob B 2PZ

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911 may we never forget

Here at Random Thots we often call the New York Times to task.  To be fair, the Times also does some wonderful work.  We borrow from them today because they have written a series of 911 tributes that is beyond our meager resources to produce.

To catch her early flight on Sept. 11, Amy E. Toyen arose in Boston at 4 a.m. so she could arrive in New York City at 6:45 a.m., in plenty of time to attend the trade show in Windows on the World at 1 World Trade Center. Ms. Toyen, 24, was demonstrating a software product of her company, Thomson Financial in Boston, when her fiancé, Jeffrey Gonski, got a call at 8:58 a.m. — his caller ID showed it was her cellphone — but when he answered, no one was there.

They were engaged to be married next June 16. Mr. Gonski had met Ms. Toyen at their alma mater, Bentley College in Waltham, Mass., and had managed to pull off an elaborate proposal. Last spring he planned a vacation with her to Canada, then surprised her at the airport with a flight for two to Ireland — her favorite place. Then he stunned her again by proposing there, in a romantic locale on the Dingle Peninsula. How could she possibly have said no?

“We had just ordered her wedding dress,” said her father, Martin Toyen. “She was so happy in her life — a woman in love, who loved her job.

The one thing I will not forget was a cell phone conversation from a young Asian girl talking to her mother and complaining of the unbearable heat. Cast modesty aside, her mother said, take off your top. The girl replied, I can’t. I tried, but it’s melted into my skin and my skin comes off with it.  Then the building fell.

911 is very real to me. I keep my photo ID for Building 2 on my desk.  We should never forget.

HALF TIME IN THE LOCKER ROOM

When the New England Patriots are ahead 32 to 6 at half time, do you suppose coach Belichick gathers the players in the locker room and says “Great job guys!  It looks like we’ve won it!  They won’t catch up, so relax guys, just enjoy the second half”.  Of courses not.  In a mellow voice, the coach congratulates the players for a good start then he screams at them to get out there and play twice as hard until the game is completely over lest they blow it in the second half.

Our American Freedom team is clearly well ahead in the game against the Washington Tyrannists, and we are playing on their home turf at that.  But it’s only half time.  We must double our efforts in order to hold on to the lead we have.  There is no time to relax. Speak up, speak out, speak loud.  More ears are willing to listen to you than has been the case for quite some time.  If you open the eyes or turn the head of just one person you have done your part.  Imagine… if each American Freedom fan opened the mind of just one Washington Tyrannist fan,… imagine, just imagine what the result could be.  Be your own Tea Party.

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DISASTER IN THE GULF OF MEXICO

Two man-made disasters have hit the Gulf of Mexico in the last year and a half.  One largely corrected itself through the miraculous forces of nature with some helpful assistance from government cleanup programs.  The second disaster continues to fester and is only getting worse.  Mother Nature is powerless to do anything about the second disaster and only fools expect Washington to fix that which Washington broke.

We are talking first about the oil spill caused by lax safety standards on the part of British Petroleum that led to an accidental oil spill, and then about the ill conceived drilling moratorium that followed it.  The second disaster was no accident.  It was wrong headed intentional action taken by Barack Obama against strong advice from the panel of engineers chosen by the President himself.

The engineers report was so clear and emphatic and contrary to the President’s agenda that the administration saw fit to falsify the report.  We reported the fraudulent act here and here at the time.

As of now, ten rigs have left the Gulf of Mexico and gone to locations in Egypt, the Congo, French Guiana, Liberia, Nigeria and Brazil.  Three more are expected to leave and eight new rigs that were slated for the Gulf have been re-directed elsewhere.  Thousands of jobs have been sacrificed, millions of barrels of domestically produced oil have been forfeited, our dependence on foreign oil has increased, and there is less tax to collect.  Correction: less revenue to be earned.  The Democrats have done away with taxes.

DOO WOP “JITTERBUG MARY DOES THE ROCK AND ROLL” by the DEL VIKINGS

This is for the youngsters out there, those under 50.  Before Rap, there was Doo Wop. Here’s a sample. It will make the youngster’s laugh and the oldsters smile.

Click on the radio to play the video. Beware, the quality of the picture is pre-technology.

CLICK ON THE RADIO IMAGE TO PLAY THE VIDEO

OBAMA’S DEBT SPEECH and THE POWER OF THE BULLY PULPIT

Only a President can demand and get an hour or so of prime time on television to tell his side of the story without rebuttal. Only this president picks reporters from a pre-pared list. Not one reporter asked a grilling question. Need I explain why?

This morning and ABC News reporter did an excellent job covering Obama’s speech. Her article was an accurate and objective account of what the President said. But the Presidents words were in Washington Speak; here are some translations.

Finally disclosing the details of the plan, the president said the White House offered more than $1 trillion in cuts to discretionary spending, $650 billion in cuts to  entitlement  redistribution programs and, in return,  asked Republicans for $1.2 trillion in additional  revenues  taxes by  eliminating loopholes  changing the tax code and  engaging in tax reforms  increasing taxes.

While the president admitted Democrats wanted  more revenue  higher taxes than they had initially  offered  wanted, he said that spending cuts were at least as significant as those put forward in the bipartisan proposals.

Students of Orwell’s “1984” and Random Thots “Propagandic” will instantly recognize that the word taxes has been thrown down the Memory Hole. People no longer pay taxes, the government earns revenue.

The president declared that Boehner walked away from the deal

Yes, that’s what the President said from his bully pulpit. Boehner said it was the President who walked out. But that didn’t get much coverage.

“If you don’t have revenues, the entire thing ends up being tilted on the backs of the poor [who pay no taxes] and middle-class families.  And the majority of Americans don’t agree on that approach,” he added.

Actually, it is the GOP position that is the most favored according to this Rasmussen poll of likely voters.

They are going to have to explain to me how it is that we are going to avoid default,” Obama said. “And they can come up with any plans  that they want  except for the ones they want and bring them up here and we will work on them.

 Of course Obama threw in a few lines about corporate jets, a threat to seniors Social Security, how the rich have more money than they need and all that usual stuff. With this show to watch, who needs Barnum & Bailey?

PAUL KRUGMAN’S CASH CON

This article was first published in the American Thinker blog on July 6, 2011 as Krugman’s Con. It is reprinted here with Mr.  Krugman’s statements indented for easier reading.

KRUGMAN’S CON
by Robert R. Barker

Taking Paul Krugman apart is such a simple task.  No other person can be so wrong so many times on so many things in just a single sentence.

Watching the evolution of economic discussion in Washington over the past couple of years has been a disheartening experience. Month by month, the discourse has gotten more primitive; with stunning speed, the lessons of the 2008 financial crisis have been forgotten, and the very ideas that got us into the crisis – regulation is always bad, what’s good for the bankers is good for America, tax cuts are the universal elixir – have regained their hold.

No one ever said “regulation is always bad,” except a few Democrats when they want to slander conservatives.  Good regulation is part of the Rule of Law applauded by the Right.  Only bad regulations are bad, and there are plenty of them.

No one ever said “what’s good for the banker’s is good for America.”  Here Krugman seems to be making a play on a famous comment Charlie Wilson’s made in 1955 when he was president of General Motors.  Wilson is said to have said — What’s good for General Motors is good for America.  But there’s one problem.  Wilson never said that.  What he actually said was quite the opposite — What’s good for America is good for General Motors.  It was a statement of acquiescence that the Left twisted to look like one of arrogance.  Are we to believe that the Nobel Prize winning economist didn’t know that?

No one ever said tax cuts, or the lack thereof, had anything to do with the 2008 financial crisis.  Very few voices have called for tax cuts since 2008.  What the Right argues is that raising taxes during periods of recession can be disastrous.  If the Bush tax rates had not been extended, tax rates would be higher in 2011 than in 2010.  Only a Democrat could call that a tax cut.

Why should anyone believe that handing even more money to corporations, no strings attached, would lead to faster job creation?

This sort of notion is born of the belief that all money belongs to the government.  The issue here is not about money given to corporations by the government; it’s about how much of the money a corporation earns should the corporation be allowed to keep.

Consider first the arguments Republicans are using to defend outrageous tax loopholes. How can people simultaneously demand savage cuts in Medicare and Medicaid and defend special tax breaks favoring hedge fund managers and owners of corporate jets?

“Outrageous tax loopholes” is such an oft repeated mantra of the Left that it should be hyphenated.  A loophole is an unintended path of avoidance.  What Krugman is alluding to is the accelerated rate of depreciation offered as an incentive for investment in equipment.  It was part of the stimulus package promoted by President Obama.  It’s not a loophole; it was very much intended.

That only covers the first 3 paragraphs of Krugman’s article.  It’s enough.