Cleaning Out My Coyote

If you don’t read Coyote Blog you should.

This latest failure of Green Jobs in Seattle is just a hint of the gems you get from the coyote:

Last year, Seattle Mayor Mike McGinn announced the city had won a coveted $20 million federal grant to invest in weatherization. The unglamorous work of insulating crawl spaces and attics had emerged as a silver bullet in a bleak economy – able to create jobs and shrink carbon footprint – and the announcement came with great fanfare.

McGinn had joined Vice President Joe Biden in the White House to make it. It came on the eve of Earth Day. It had heady goals: creating 2,000 living-wage jobs in Seattle and retrofitting 2,000 homes in poorer neighborhoods.

But more than a year later, Seattle’s numbers are lackluster. As of last week, only three homes had been retrofitted and just 14 new jobs have emerged from the program. Many of the jobs are administrative, and not the entry-level pathways once dreamed of for low-income workers. Some people wonder if the original goals are now achievable.

Yeah.  Let’s use guns to remove private property from productive people to give to the government so they can spend $20 million on 14 jobs.

Of The Voluntary And The Involuntary

I have often asked people who are interested in helping people why they don’t walk to their neighbor’s house and at threat of gun or sword, take their money and give it to those people who they feel are in need and are worthy.

The answer is obvious.

Then I ask them what if they elected enough lawmakers to pass a low that made armed robbery legal if done for the purpose of giving to those who are deemed worthy.

They usually take away the beer they just offered and make me leave their house.  I’m weird though, always have been.

Which makes me rejoice when I hear this via Coyote:

It’s amazing to me how many people think that voting to have the government give poor people money is compassion. Helping poor and suffering people is compassion. Voting for our government to use guns to give money to help poor and suffering people is immoral self-righteous bullying laziness.

People need to be fed, medicated, educated, clothed, and sheltered, and if we’re compassionate we’ll help them, but you get no moral credit for forcing other people to do what you think is right. There is great joy in helping people, but no joy in doing it at gunpoint.

People try to argue that government isn’t really force. You believe that? Try not paying your taxes. (This is only a thought experiment — suggesting on CNN.com that someone not pay his or her taxes is probably a federal offense, and I’m a nut, but I’m not crazy.). When they come to get you for not paying your taxes, try not going to court. Guns will be drawn. Government is force — literally, not figuratively.

I don’t believe the majority always knows what’s best for everyone. The fact that the majority thinks they have a way to get something good does not give them the right to use force on the minority that don’t want to pay for it. If you have to use a gun, I don’t believe you really know jack. Democracy without respect for individual rights sucks. It’s just ganging up against the weird kid, and I’m always the weird kid.

Speak it brotha!

America

Is it possible that we have forgotten that America is the most powerful, most advanced, wealthiest  and most admired country in allll the world?

If it IS possible, how do we fix the education of our children?

If it ISN’T possible, the same question applies.

Where Spending More Is A Feature – Not A Bug

Duke.

Leading hospital in the nation; if not the world:

Durham, N.C. — Babies born with a skull deformity can get help from Duke University Hospital surgeons who are the first in the state to perform a minimally invasive procedure to fix the problem.

Open surgery, which is standard to correct the problem offers great results, but a lot of blood loss and some permanent scars are associated with it.

Catherine will become the first infant in North Carolina to undergo an alternative surgery, which uses two small incisions and endoscopic cameras.

“The visualization now with our optics is so good with high definition that we can see … just beautifully,” Duke neurosurgeon Dr. Gerald Grant said.

I bet’cha this procedure is WILDLY popular in Singapore, Japan, Sweden and Norway.  Not to mention such medical hotspots as Poland, Cuba and Hungary.

But because those countries rate ahead of us on such meaningful statistics as quality of potato soup and rocks per square farmland yard they rank ahead of the United States in Health Care stats.

As if.

Differentiation

I’ll betcha a cold 6-pak of your IPA of choice that “Day 911” has massive significance in the Obama administration.  While the irony is awesome, it’s the day that Obama dipped below Reagan in Approval Rating for the first time since nominal amounts early on.

Reagan began growing on day 739.  Obama began sinking on day 836.

And he’s not done yet.    Up next:  Carter.

If You Don’t Know – How Do You Know You Don’t Know?

At the risk of summoning Don, I have to ask the question in light of this information:

Raleigh, N.C. — An 89-year-old Raleigh man accused of voter fraud said he was trying to prove a point by casting two ballots.

“I think the election system is pathetic,” Leland Duane Lewis said Wednesday.

On Oct. 29, 2010, Lewis said he voted early at the Optimist Center in Raleigh.

“I voted on the front of the ballot – just the front,” he said.

Lewis said he wondered how easy it would be to get a second ballot, so he went to his regular polling place, St. Raphael’s Catholic Church, on Election Day. He said he gave his name and address to precinct officials and was given a ballot.

“So, I voted the back of the ballot,” he said. “They should’ve had information that said, ‘Hey Mister, you voted.'”

Nice.

So, a man, able to vote early on one day and then, on election day, goes to his regular polling place, is able to vote again.  But our system isn’t broke.  And how do I know it isn’t broke?

Because I don’t know it’s not broke.

Or something like that.

Why Government Won’t Shrink

Just put this in the file of “I’m for the bill as long as I don’t pay.”

Under Rep. Darrell Issa’s bill, the 40 percent discount that nonprofits have been getting for the postage rates on their mailings since Congress authorized it in 1951 would be reduced by 5 percent a year, and to 10 percent after six years.

Advocates for nonprofits say they support all the proposed changes, except for the nonprofit provision.

As far as I know, this has nothing to do with Left vs. Right.  Just big vs. small.  Me vs. they.

Gross.

Two Things

  1. North Carolina is beautiful.
  2. This is the best $0.99 I’ve spent in years:

Check out the rendering of those photos. That’s two separate shots; before and after.

I Wasn’t Talking To You

I know what I’d say to this guy.

Hurricane Season 2011: July Review


I’m a little late on this post, but, on the other hand, there hasn’t been a lot to write about concerning this topic.  True to form, the Atlantic hurricane season has begun slow.  For the few years that I’ve been following this, it’s par for the course.  Start slow and then really gear down as the season moves into “adulthood”.

So, where are we?

The predictions for 2011 are:

  • Tropical Storms: 18
  • Hurricanes: 6-10
  • Major Storms: 3-6

And we are at:

  • Tropical Storms: 4
    • Arlene: June
    • Bret: July
    • Cindy: July
    • Don: July
  • Hurricanes: 0
  • Major Storms: 0

In short, for the whole of July, we are just 3 more tropical storms further along than we were in June.

And through July of 2010?

  • Tropical Storms: 2
  • Hurricanes: 1
  • Major Storms: 0

So far, 2011 is a little more active than 2010, but only if you count named storms and not hurricanes.