SteveG’s Posts


After Dinner Diplomacy, What’s Next for Obama and GOP?

Real Clear Politics has the article After Dinner Diplomacy, What’s Next for Obama and GOP?

Wisconsin’s Sen. Ron Johnson, a former accountant and Tea Party favorite, told reporters the conversation was lively when the subject turned to Medicare. Obama, he said, conceded aloud what his own budget blueprints lay out – that Medicare, the government’s health coverage for the elderly, is projected to bleed red ink in the future because of rising health care costs and an aging population.

Johnson quoted the president as telling the dozen senators at the Jefferson Hotel that “the American people, most of them, just don’t understand it. They think with Medicare, that’s their money. And to a certain extent it is: one dollar they put in, and get 3 dollars back in benefits.”

Listening to Obama lament Americans’ confusion about whether Medicare beneficiaries tap their own or other people’s money, Johnson said he urged him to spread some light and not just heat.

“You have a unique position,” the senator recalled telling Obama. “If you are going to solve these problems, the American people are going to have to understand it. You can go out and educate people to prepare them for the reforms that are absolutely necessary.”

This has got to be the scariest article I have ever read.  One can only hope that Sen. Johnson is a complete loon and misheard what President Obama said.


Why There’s a Bull Market for Stocks and Bear Market for Workers

The Nation Of Change has the Robert Reich article Why There’s a Bull Market for Stocks and Bear Market for Workers. He does give answers to the question the headline poses, but you’ll have to use the previous link to read the answers yourself.

I am going to concentrate on two things he said so that I can make some point or other.

Corporate profits are claiming a larger share of national income than at any time in 60 years, while the portion of total income going to employees is near its lowest since 1966.
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Rarely before in American history have public policies so blatantly helped the most fortunate among us, so cruelly harmed the least fortunate, and exposed so many average working Americans to such widespread insecurity.

Of course I’d like to change the policies that afflict the afflicted and help the helped.  However, about 30 years ago I realized what I had to do to protect myself while waiting for the change.

I knew I wouldn’t become independent being just a wage slave – pretty good wages though they were.  I knew that the money was in being an owner, not a worker.  So I have steadily been learning and practicing buying companies through stock purchases.  In other words, I invested a lot of the wages I earned so that I could grow out of being a wage earner.  I am now retired, so I think I have succeeded, so far.  Of course the only real test of whether or not I succeeded will be if my wife and I can live a comfortable retirement until we are both gone.  Which ever one of us goes last might be able to spike the ball at the one yard line and claim victory.  That’s the closest we will come to knowing success while we can still know anything.

The only point of this is to show that I am not fighting for progressive causes because I will be a loser without them.  I am fighting for progressive causes in order for the world to work better for future generations.  My generation of this immediate family will be OK (I hope) whether or not I get my political wishes.  I wish I could say the same for future generations.  If I were sure about the future generations, maybe I could live without caring what the politicians let the extremely wealthy do to this country and the rest of the world.


Mozilla puts native PDF viewer in Firefox 19

I bet you have been wondering why the interface to PDF files in Firefox suddenly went to pot.

CNet has the article Mozilla puts native PDF viewer in Firefox 19.

I finally found the solution to bring the real Adobe Reader back to Firefox.

In Firefox go to “Tools->options->Applications”, and change the setting for “Portable Document Format (PDF)” to “Use Adobe Acrobat (in Firefox)”

If you haven’t found the trick to linking to pdf files on your local computer and have them come up in an imbedded Adobe Reader in Firefox, you just need to add the type parameter to your HTML anchor

<a type="application/pdf" href="localFile.pdf">
 

Markey, Lynch submit signatures for U.S. Senate

WWLP carried the story Markey, Lynch submit signatures for U.S. Senate.

Markey supporters delivered more than 52,000 certified signatures to the state’s Elections Division to get his name on the ballot. This Wednesday is the deadline to submit at least 10,000 certified signatures to qualify for the U.S. Senate special election.

This is a definite sign that the campaign is starting off strongly.  I handed in 23 signatures from Sturbridge collected by me and by Jackie Wells.


Warren critics, take note

You are not going to believe this, but The Boston Herald has the piece Warren critics, take note by columnist Margery Eagan.

Those who like to deride her as the “fake Indian” should know: Freshman U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren has done more for your wallet in the past two weeks than Scott Brown did in two years and most of Congress has managed in their entire careers.

If you don’t believe that the above words could be printed by this newspaper, click on the link I have provided to verify that I did not get this from some alternative world.  You gotta love the subheadline “Rookie senator on warpath in clash over banking regs”

I would love it if many of the people who fought against us over the election of Elizabeth Warren came to realize that Elizabeth Warren is a good Senator for them as well.

Thanks to reader DonF for forwarding this article to me.


Oh, by the way, you ought to read the comments on this article on The Boston Herald. The trouble that these news media, The Boston Herald and Faux Noise, that once you convince your readership of the lie, you have no hope of convincing them of the truth.

I like to think that the difference between The Boston Herald and The Boston Globe is that on the ladder of intelligence it goes from the bottom to the top like this, The Boston Herald readers, The Boston Herald writers, The Boston Globe writers, The Boston Globe readers.  (I am only joking on the square when I question the intelligence of some people.)


Schrödinger’s Cat Found Alive After 78 Years

The TG Daily has the article Schrödinger’s Cat could be visible after all.

Researchers at the University of Rochester and the University of Ottawa have used a comparatively new technique to directly measure for the first time the polarization states of light. Their work has implications for the weird Uncertainty Principle, which states that certain properties of a quantum system can be known only poorly if other related properties are known precisely.

It is hard to figure out what is really going on here in an article written in the popular press, but it is an intriguing possibility that big changes are coming in the field of quantum physics.

According to WikiPedia

Schrödinger’s cat is a thought experiment, sometimes described as a paradox, devised by Austrian physicist Erwin Schrödinger in 1935.

That’s how I figured that the cat had last been seen 78 years ago.

Maybe the article Canadian researchers take a sneak peek at Schrödinger’s Cat and a step toward a quantum computer in the Canadian National Post will add a bit more to understanding this.

“I can’t say that we’re getting around the Uncertainty limit, because within quantum mechanics there is no getting around it,” said Mr. Salvail.He cautioned that explaining such things in words risks “losing the subtleties that are captured in the mathematical expression” of the theory.

“We’ve kind of gone back and exploited the subtleties in the Uncertainty Principle,” he said. “It’s strange, but so fascinating.”


I have read the above WikiPedia link more thoroughly now.  Even though I had previously read a book (twice) about  Schrödinger’s Cat, I don’t remember reading the explanations of why it wasn’t a problem at all.   It seems so obvious now that a Geiger counter is the very measurement that collapses the wave function and eliminates the uncertainty.  I can’t understand why Einstein and Schrödinger would have such a long discussion about this thought experiment.  If there is no conceivable way to measure whether or not the event happened in order to trigger a macroscopic event, then there is no paradox.

I have to keep in mind the quote above,  ‘explaining such things in words risks “losing the subtleties that are captured in the mathematical expression”’.  There must be some subtleties that I am missing here that kept Einstein and Schrödinger occupied for so long with this seeming paradox.


Video of Presentation of the Petition to Keep the Moratorium on Municipal Incinerators

Thomas Creamer, Chairman of the Sturbridge Board of Selectmen, has put together an excellent edited video of the presentation of the Petition to Keep the Moratorium on Municipal Incinerators in Massachusetts.  He has edited in a lot of material to back up what the participants discussed at the presentation. (The deadline for signing the petition has passed.)


I’d like to comment on Mary Redetzke’s remarks about the ideal incinerator producing nothing but carbon dioxide and water from simple hydrocarbons. Reaching this ideal behavior is far more difficult than you might think if you don’t think very deeply about this.

Simple hydrocarbons contain no other elements than hydrogen, carbon, and oxygen. There is no real-life waste stream that contains only simple hydrocarbons. To capture all other elements but these three from a waste stream is close to impossible. The other elements in the waste stream are not convertible into carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen by any chemical reaction. Converting one element into another involves nuclear reactions which would release so much energy, that they would blow up the incinerator and the surrounding area for miles around if such nuclear reactions could be achieved, which they cannot.

If some genius did somehow come up with such a process, then it could be explained and it could be demonstrated on a small scale in a laboratory. Until that explanation and demonstration is possible, no life-sized incinerator should be built to use an imaginary technology that probably cannot ever exist.

Not until the politicians and appointed officials can make such demonstrations and explanations publicly available and widely known should there be any change to the moratorium.


Fitchburg State incinerator plan aired

The Worcester Telegram and Gazette has the story Fitchburg State incinerator plan aired. If you get all the way to the bottom of the article, you will see:

At the DEP’s regional office in Worcester, recycling advocates from Central Massachusetts Progressives and local officials from Central Massachusetts delivered more than 400 comments on the proposal.

Steven S. Greenberg, an engineer and one of the founders of Central Massachusetts Progressives, said the new technologies the DEP is talking about are a mystery.

“I’m surprised at this change in policy because of this supposedly new technology,” he said. “It would be nice if MassDEP would tell us what it is, because I’m an engineer and I have no clue what new technology can turn matter into something else. If they got it, they should tell us. It is not like a state or national security secret.”

And the state accuses us of trying to mislead the public.  They’ve got the fantastic claims.  They need to back up those claims with some cold, hard facts.


The Video that Bradley Manning says Pushed Him to Upload to Wikileaks

The Real News Network has this series of interviews that was done starting on May 12, 2010. Now that Bradley Manning is getting to explain why he did what he did, this is a must see series for right now.

It is the best explanation that I have seen of what it is like to learn to be a soldier.

The first segment is this video below:


Josh Stieber, a member of the army company that came upon the Iraqis murdered by the US helicopter crew, discusses the Wikileaks video and army training that makes killing civilians acceptable

  1. The Video that Bradley Manning says Pushed Him to Upload to Wikileaks
  2. Training makes killing civilians acceptable Pt2
  3. Training makes killing civilians acceptable Pt3
  4. Training makes killing civilians acceptable Pt4

My training in the Army in 1967 during the Viet Nam War Era is completely consistent with what Josh Stieber says in these interviews. Part of the difference between what Stieber went through and what I went through is that I was a lot older when I went through basic and advanced infantry training than what Josh was. I did not have nearly the difficulty that Josh did in understanding what was going on with the training I was being given. I understood that the racism and dehumanizing of the enemy was probably a necessary part of preparing me to be a good soldier and to survive my tour of duty. However, since I could understand what the training was trying to do and I had to reject what it was trying to teach me about the enemy, I knew that I would probably not survive being in combat.

I was lucky in that I already had finished college and had a degree in Electrical Engineering. I managed to get an assignment as an engineer at Frankford Arsenal in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania for the rest of my tour of duty after training. The closest I came to combat was when our company commander at the arsenal volunteered our services to the local police to quell the riots after Martin Luther King, Jr.’s assassination. Fortunately, the local police had the good sense to decline the offer.

If I have the time someday, I might explain why I have a sense of pride in the fact that I was threatened with the charge of mutiny punishable by death while I was in Philadelphia. I sometimes have nightmares of being drafted again into the Army at my current age, whatever age that might be at the time of the nightmare. I keep saying, “Look at my record. Are you sure you really want me back?”