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Pelosi lets cat out of bag on climate

"We have so much room for improvement," she said. "Every aspect of our lives must be subjected to an inventory ... of how we are taking responsibility."
 
Did Pelosi challenge China on its human rights abuses?
 
No.
 
Did Pelosi address any issues having to do with china's relationship to North Korea and their belligerance?
 
No.
 
Did Pelosi confront China on its own failure to reduce its own carbon emissions (since China is the #1 carbon polluter in the world)?
 
No.
 
Did Pelosi address any concerns about her GITMO contradictions?
 
No.
 
Pelosi DID take the opportunity to let everyone know what the true agenda of the "climate change" alarmists is - control over every aspect of our lives!
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Finally, Che buttons for the hippie in your life

This is too awesome NOT to post a pic of:  (Warning! Language may be a bit offensive)
 
Che Killed People, You Trendy Douchebag , , One Dozen , 1 Inch Buttons
 
Headline shamelessly stolen from Hot Air.
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Biden insults Air Force grads

The perfect statement from a moron who has no earthly concept of what the military is for:
 
He urged them to "think beyond the theater of battle" and spoke of other challenges including global warming and improving education and health care.
 
"A modern military needs great warriors, yes. But it also needs strategic thinking," Biden said.
 
He said the Earth is "a planet in peril, set in a direction that must be altered."
 
Can you frickin believe this?!  Our Vice-President, at a time when this nation is at war, when military men and woman are dying to defend this country, is more interested in telling newly minted Air Force officers they need to work on other challenges like global warming and health care? 
 
"Earth is a plent in peril"?  Is the assumption here that these future officers are getting Ol Joe's brand of blame Americanism his boss is so fond of hashing around?  Who has placed the planet in peril Mr. Vice-President?  Could it possibly be the Islamists?  Maybe thugs like Hugo Chavez?  How about mentioning, oh I don't know, that the communist North Koreans now have attained the capability for detonating nukes you slobbering idiot!  Are the NorKs even remotely responsible for placing the "planet in peril"?!
 
ARGhhhhhhhhh!!  ***pulling my hair out***!!! 
 
***slamming my head into my desk***!!!
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The "Huckleberry Finn Initiative"

What is the grand plan from the Obama administration to combat global warming?
 
Is it some massive technological innovation on par with the Manhattan Project?
 
Perhaps they have discovered some new means of producing energy on par with "cold fusion"?
 
Surely, Obama's Nobel Prize winning physicist Energy Secretary Steven Chu has discovered some out-of-this-world means of saving us all and preserving Mother Gaia?
 
 
He said lightening roofs and roads in urban environments would offset the global warming effects of all the cars in the world for 11 years.
 
If you look at all the buildings and if you make the roofs white and if you make the pavement more of a concrete type of colour rather than a black type of colour and if you do that uniformally, that would be the equivalent of... reducing the carbon emissions due to all the cars in the world by 11 years – just taking them off the road for 11 years," he said.
 
This is the 21st century equivalent to President Carter telling all of us to "put on a sweater" to save energy!  Paint your roof white?  Seriously?  And in doing so we would save as much energy as if all the cars in the world disappeared for 11 years?!
 
They must just hand those Nobels out like so much candy if this is the best a Nobel winner can come up with, especially if we're dealing with such a "crises" like climate change.  Honestly, this guy has the stones to make such a big deal out of climate change, how it's such "crises situation" - and they pick the "Hucklberry Finn Initiative"?  A moronsayswhat?
 
Interestingly (or rather, tellingly), this isn't being reported in the American media
 
You have to wonder is these people even believe their own crap anymore.
 
UPDATE:  I feel the need to add a bit of clarification.  Painting things white would indeed make the surface more reflective, thereby reducing the amount of radiant energy absorbed by certain materials.  Even Bjorn Lomborg, an environmentalist and believer in global warming (though not a fanatical "alarmist" like, say, Al Gore) has said the same thing - paint everything white and heat absorbtion would decrease.
 
That being said, the idea that doing this in any meanigful amount to cause the kinds of global temperature change as suggested by Secretary Chu is what is laughable.  A scientist should know this and uttering anything different other than in a toungue-in-cheek manner is disengenuous.
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Sunscreen use proves global warming

 
So I want to ask climate deniers like Andrew Bolt “Do you wear sunscreen?” If you answered ‘no’ to this question then you have every right to be skeptical of climate science, along with other shaky principles like gravity and photosynthesis. However if you answered ‘yes’ to wearing sunscreen then you better make it a secret, as the basic science of climate change is just as solid as your sunscreen use.
 
I sent a comment which has yet to be posted that if one puts on a jacket outside when it's cold, then that action is proof of an impending ice age.  I have yet to receive a response.
 
The guy is trying to make a bigger point by faulty analogy.  He is attempting to say that since the warming affect of CO2 was discovered in 1896 - a true, verifiable sceintific fact (just as sunscreen has been proven to inhibit the absorbtion of certain types of UV radiation), then the assumptions made by green advocates on "climate change" are also true, verifiable facts.  He also attempts to use Venus as an example of a runaway greenhouse affect (which it is).  There are a few problems with this guys statements:
 
1.  Earth is not Venus. (For a debunking of greehouse theory alarmism, go here.)
 
2.  The fact that CO2 does indeed have warming affects in the environment is true up to a point.  There are others modalities and processes at work in our environment than simply the presence of CO2 which climate alarmists always manage to disregard.  In fact, one can readily see that increases in atmospheric CO2 concentrations does not result in catastrophic temperature increases.  In point of observable fact, it results in very llittle (if any) temperature increase.
 
As with most other assertions from "climate alarmists advocates scientists", this guy can hardly contain his activist and 'green' agenda driven bent.  If the best this guy can come up with to prove the theories of climate change is to state that sunscreen use somehow proves it, I would hate to see his other work. 
 
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My last Memorial Day on active duty

I got up first thing and put out the flag of the United States and flew the POW/MIA flag in remembrance of those still unaccounted for.  I spoke to my dad for a bit - he served twenty nine years in the military, fought in world War II and was a medic in the military hospital at Ben Hoa air base in Vietnam.  He turns eighty-six this year btw.   
 
My brother-in-law Jimmy just came back to the states after three years in Italy.  He is also in the Air Force.  We picked him up when he flew in on Friday.  I have two other brothers-in-law who are also on active duty:  Tony, who is in the Air Force stationed at Patrick Air Force Base in Florida and James, who is in the Army and stationed in Virginia.  Both my family and my wife's family are long standing military families.  There has been a Steely on active duty in the Air Force since its inception in 1947 (my son continues the tradition in a few weeks). 
 
I have spent twenty-two years in service to my country:  Twenty-two Memorial Days, Veterans Days, Independence Days, etc. 
Most people barbeque, have cookouts, watch war movies, etc.  I did those things too, but Memorial Day is supposed to be a time of reflection.  As with many other things in the culture today, it has become a shadow of what it should be.  
 
Nowadays, it seems there are few who keep the meaning of things.  It is those few who understand the traditions, who understand the sacrifices, to whom the meaning is more than some vague concept of a "holiday" or day off from work.  Memorial Day is supposed to be a time of remembrance and reflection, not celebration (at least not celebration as much as it has become).  We have Veterans Day for celebration.  Some chose to celebrate and this is fine, I don't mean to denegrate those who do.  Remember the meaning of the day though before you start up the grill or get that pot of beans going on the stove.
 
Fly your flag.  Add a line of thanks to our honored dead at your prayer before the meal.  Head to your local cemetary or military cemetary (if you have one) and place a flag near a gravestone.  Spare a few moments to remember those who laid down their lives or passed on giving the best part of their lives in this nations service.  Memorial Day isn't about brats and ribs and potato salad.  It is about Honor, remembrance, reverance and thanks.
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Terminator: Salvation Movie Review

The Terminator movie franchise is a good one, if nothing more than for pure entertainment value.  I remember seeing the first Terminator movie in 1984 at the theater and it was a great experience.  The effects of course are dated now, but the movie still holds up as a sci-fi/action classic.

The second movie, Terminator 2: Judgement Day wasn't bad either.  A great action movie, full of high dollar special effects and reprising the roles for Arnold Scharwzenegger and Linda Hamilton.  It had a logical conclusion point, yet left the franchise open to sequel as is the standard operating procedure in Hollywood for big blockbusters anymore.  Sequels are rarely better than the first, but T2 was a worthy sequel.

The third movie, Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines pushed things a bit to far, though it was an entertaining movie.  The worst thing about the movie is that it seems to have taken itself too seriously.  The reach backs to the first two movies were also contrived.  Like I said, it was entertaining enough, but as a movie in the franchise, it is the worst by far.

The newest addition to the Terminator franchise isn't much better.  Well, to be fair it is better than T3.  Let me say this up front, wait for the movie to come out on DVD to see it.  Unless your just hell bent on seeing the film in the theater, your money is better spent on the DVD or awaiting a true summer "blockbuster" to come out.

It's not a bad film and Christian Bale does a great job of resurrecting the character of John Connor from the ash heap of wimpiest "saviors of mankind".  Seriously, this is one of my biggest problem with the John Connor character.  He is a pouting, self-pitying crybaby, especially in the third Terminator movie and in the short lived TV show.  John Connor is supposed to be the savior of mankind but they named the TV show after his mom!?  How does that strike you for a vote of confidence against the John Connor character?

Spoilers Follow:  The worst part is the newest incarnation is still rehashing the same story, basically that a Terminator must intervene to assist Connor at just the right moment so everything works out.  Big Plot Hole:  The war has been raging for over a decade, yet mankind still has the ability and resources to use A-10's and helicopters/gunships as air support against the machines.  This is a direct contradiction to the "feel" or the first movie where the remnants of mankind are clawing through the dirt, living in underground bunkers, exposing themselves only as needed to fight the machines.  In this movie, apparently Skynet is perfectly fine with allowing the humans to maintain airbases, landing fields and above ground facilities?  One of the most glaringingly laughable holes in this movie is the Terminators are drawn to the sound from an old car stereo playng music, but apparently can't find the rebel above ground flightline which launches aircraft and performs flightline ops.

There is a "Transformers-esque" feel to a battle scene with a massive Terminator.  It looks and acts like a more mechanical Transformer than a Terminator.  The sound of the big T's main weapon though sounds like it came right out of the previous Transformers movie, though it does sound a bit like the main gun sound from the Martian vehicles in the most recent incarnation of The War of the Worlds (the one with Tom Cruise, which wasn't very good btw.)  The main point in this scene is nothing seems original, just rehashed from other movies.

There is a feel to big summer blockbusters and Termiantor: Salavation just doesn't have it.  The new Star Trek movie has the feel of a blockbuster and is a great movie, though it too has pushed these re-imaginings of previous series too far.  As a grand re-imagining of the franchise T:S fails, though it would stand ok as a action movie all by itself.  For a great slashing of some real problems with the Terminator franchises "universe", follow this link:  5 Reasons the Terminator franchise makes no !@#$%^ Sense

Addendum:  Hollywood has had a problem for many years that most of what comes out of there is old, rehashed pap.  Remakes like The Day the Earth Stood Still, War of the Worlds, etc. are not good vehicles for remakes because the originals were just that.  They also had another element which made them unique - an element of social commentary or alagory which helped to make them hits in their time and have helped them endure the test of time.  I will make an exception for the 1978 remake of The Invasion of the Bodysnatchers.  It was more of a horror/suspense movie than simply a sci-fi movie as alagory for Cold War paranoia.  Hollywood has tried doing the same in more recent times by attaching an environmental type message to TDTEST, but it fails since the message is contrived and the public doesn't buy it.  There is so much more which could be done with some sci-fi storylines.  Star Trek is a huge "universe", why not make a "Star Trek" type movie about another species or do something else with the 'verse?  One of the things which made the new Star Trek movie enjoyable was I didn't feel like I was simply sitting through a two hour long TV episode.  There wasn't a lot of alagory in it; I didn't feel like someone behind the camera or writing the script was trying to make some kind of deep, quasi-intellectual social point.  People don't go to the movies (at least they don't go to sci-fi movies) particularly "blockbuster" types to get a lecture on inter-species race relations.  If I want that, I'll pop in an episode of the TV show and watch it at home.  If Hollywood is going to keep these franchises going and insists on remaking movies (there is a remake for Red Dawn coming out, as well as Footloose!  Yes, Footloose!) then do something different with them or let them go. 

Don't waste your money on it at the theater, though it would be fine to watch at home after it is released on DVD.
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The Media, as described in Atlas Shrugged

As much as I disagree with Ayn Rand's perspective on religion and faith, I love how prescient she was in matters of the degradation of society.  In the following paragraph, an excerpt from Atlas Shrugged, she describes the Media as it is today.  What makes this prescient?  The fact she wrote this prior to 1957:

The reporters who came to the press conference in the office of the John Galt Line were young men who had been trained to think their job consisted of concealing from the world the nature of its events.  It was their daily duty to serve as the audience for some public figure who made utterances about the public good, in phrases carefully chosen to convey no meaning.  It was their daily job to sling words together in any combination they pleased, so long as the words did not fall into a sequence saying something specific.

A more damning description could not be written today about the sycophantic media.  Was Ayn Rand really "prescient" in the sense she had some omnipotent insight into the future, or did she simply understand the nature of humanity and culture, especially when individualism begins to give way to collectivism?  Perhaps the media have always been what they constantly profess not to be - biased automatons purely driven by agenda?

When a Keith Olberman can get away with actually blaming the former vice-president for 9/11, indeed accusing the former vice-president of culpability in the 9/11 deaths; when Mr. Olberman can spout every type of the most insane and irrational invective at anyone other than those truly responsible and use his "position" in the media as cover for his inanity, simply vindicates Mrs. Rands contempt for the "media" and makes her words written over half a century ago more true today than ever.
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From Atlas Shrugged

Summary:  The following is from Hank Reardens anniversary party.  Francisco d'Anconia has arrived at the party.  He is being asked about his actions with a copper mine he had owned in Mexico.  Francisco is a "covert agent" as it were.  He plays the field and mingles with the collectivists out in the open, mocking them for their beliefs, but hiding his true intentions behind a "playboy" type irresponsibility.  This makes him despised by both the collectivists as well as those who are still fighting for their companies in the face of increasing government intervention and outright nationalization.
 
The discussion this excerpt comes from is when Francisco is questioned about what happened in Mexico.  Francisco had purchased a useless copper mine at great expense, staffed it and made it seem as if it were turning a profit, again at great personal expense to himself.  The government of Mexico seized the property thinking they would be making a great profit from the mine, not knowing the mine was useless.  Francisco had done what he did on purpose, knowing the mine was useless and did it to stick it to the Mexican government and make a greater, though initially subtle point about the seizure of private property, nationalization and to make a point about "the greater good."  I'm going from memory on this, but I think I got the jist of it.
 
Francsico shook his head regretfully.  "I don't know why you should call my behavior rotten.  I thought you would recognize it as an honest effort to practice what the whole world is preaching.  Doesn't everyone believe it is evil to be selfish?  I was totally selfless in regard to the San Sebastian project.  Isn't it evil to pursue a personal interest?  I had no personal interest in it whatever.  Isn't it evil to work for profit?  I did not work for profit - I took a loss.  Doesn't everyone agree that the purpose and justification of an industrial enterprise are not production, but the livelihood of the employees?  The San Sebastian Mines were the most eminently successful venture in industrial history:  They produced no copper, but they provided a livelihood for thousands of men who could not have achieved in a lifetime, the equivalent for what they got for one days work, which they could not do.  Isn't it generally agreed that an owner is a parasite and an exploiter, that it is the employees who do all the work and make the product possible?  I did not exploit anyone.  I did not burden the San Sebastien Mines with my useless presence;  I left them in the hands of the men who count.  I did not pass judgement on the value of that property.  I turned it over to a mining specialist.  He was not a very good specialist, but he needed the job very badly.  Isn't it generally conceeded that when you hire a man for a job, it is his need that counts, not his ability?  Doesn't everyone believe that in order to get the goods, all you have to do is need them?  I haven't carried out every moral precept of our age.  I expected gratitude and a citation of honor.  I do not understand why I am being damned." 
 
I re-read this this morning in a book I'm reading, The Ayn Rand Reader.  Thought this particular paragraph speaks well to the prevailing philosophy from Washington today, especially as it pertains to what seems to be turning into the outright nationalization of the American auto industry.
 
If you haven't read Atlas Shrugged, you need to.  Now.
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Rounds Out! in the Wall Street Journal

One of my blog posts is in the Wall Street Journal online addition.  See the blurb here.

Yeah, it takes some navigating to get to and technically it is just a link to one of my posts, but still kinda cool!

Blog it up folks!  Since I've been blogging, I've been linked from Slate, The Washington Post, now the Wall Street Journal.  You never know where your posts or links to your posts may end up so get your voice and opinion out there!



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Waste

Upon retiring from active duty after twenty-two years in the United States Air Force, I am frustrated by what I perceive to be some new idea of what leadership is as opposed to what it should be.  Before continuing let me acknowledge that I am far from perfect.  Some of my ideas may seem archaic, perhaps even barbaric.  But they are my thoughts and beliefs - take them as such and feel free to comment, good or bad.  This post is a bit different dealing with some of my pet peeves on some particular areas the military wastes money.  Again, these thoughts are my opinion only.

The military wastes a lot of money.  A lot.  Like any area of government, the funding for military operations comes from taxpayer (citizen) money.  The military is however the only department of government which will see its budgets cut depending on administrations and the "winds of politics."  Even so there are many programs the military (and I'll speak of the Air Force here) where money and personnel are wasted.

 

I am about to commit a cardinal sin by actually naming names of programs on which the Air Force wastes millions of dollars every year.  I am also committing a cardinal sin by being unabashedly un-apologetic for doing this.  If you ask anyone who has known me for any length of time, they will tell you that I am not just making this up from whole-cloth - I truly wish this stuff would go the way of the dinosaur.

 

"Tops in Blue."  Seriously?  The United States Air Force actually feels the need to pay, staff and support a talent show and corresponding entertainment tour?  What is even more ridiculous is that the Air Force refers to TIB as an "Expeditionary Entertainment Unit"!  WTF!  TIB is a song and dance troupe which tours the world doing USO style shows for troops and civilians worldwide.  This isn't necessarily a bad thing in and of itself, but why do we have a USO if the service is going to have its own version of it?    The job of those in the military is "to kill people and break things", not perform tacky entertainment shows on the government dole.

 

The Air Force Thunderbirds.  Have you ever seen the Thunderbirds?  They can do great things with an F-16.  Personally, I feel these folks should be doing those great things onto the heads of the enemies of America.  The Thunderbirds pilots are touted as "the best the Air Force has to offer."  If that's true, then why are the second stringers out killing bad guys?  Millions of dollars in personnel and maintenance alone are wasted on the Thunderbirds which the operational Air Force could be using to perform the mission.  The mission of the Air Force isn't to entertain the public, it is to protect and defend the nation.  Flying a fighter jet (which was built to shoot down enemy fighters and drop bombs on bad guy’s heads) at an air show isn't the mission.  Addendum:  You could probably add the airshow onto this category as well.  If an air show is held irrespective of active-duty military involvement, something like the Confederate Air Force (or some such organization) then I'm all for it.  If active-duty military assets are used, then it's a waste of resources, plain and simple.  If you don't think it is, ask yourself the question "What is the payoff?"  Some might say it's a recruiting tool.  Please.  In my twenty-two years in the Air Force (the last six plus years working with basic trainees), I have never heard anyone say they joined the Air Force because they saw the Thunderbirds (or went to) an air show.

 

Air Force "Bands."  Beyond a national "Air Force Band" there is no need for them.  People are recruited into the Air Force strictly to play in a band.  I am not making that up.  A "national" band I can see, regional or base bands specifically to do "band" stuff is a waste.  If an installation wants to have a band, then recruit from your personnel pool and let people do it as an additional duty.  This is the way it was done for centuries.  Bringing in people specifically for "band" is ridiculous and frankly, insulting.  I joined the military to serve my country.  Some people joined to serve their country by playing a trombone.  Re-read those last two sentences and see which one makes more sense to you.

Changing Uniforms.   The Air Force has been in existence for (almost) 62 years.  In that time frame, there have been over 100 "uniform boards."  A uniform board looks at changing uniforms, making corrections to uniforms, updating, adding to, deleting from uniform combinations, etc.  The Air Force has had three "utility" uniform combinations since I've been in - the "fatigue" or "greens", the battle dress uniform (BDU) or classic "camouflage", and now the Airman Battle Uniform (ABU).  Collar brass (the collar U.S insignia worn on the collar of the service dress jacket) has changed four time:  subdued (non-shiny) U.S. with a circle around it, shiny U.S. with a circle around it, shiny U.S. without a circle around it, now back to shiny U.S. with a circle around it.  The Service Dress jacket has changed three times:  The original coat, the current coat (most people refer to it as McPeak's Folly), and now the upcoming "Heritage" coat which is cut exactly the same as the "original" coat with the addition of a cloth belt.  The addition of a PT uniform, which is being changed after only three years.  What's the big deal?  The Air Force has wasted millions of dollars annually convening uniform boards for things they should have taken into account from the beginning.  This waste not only hits the taxpayer but will also impact the service members bottom line; if a uniform change come out after the member receives their clothing allowance, then they have to absorb the expense out of pocket.  A lot of the uniform changes which have come down have been changed back and forth (as illustrated above) and it seems the Air Force is just changing things for the sake of change.  It is wasteful and ridiculous.  As Gunny Highway says, "Let's keep it simple.  You've got your boots on, you can walk into combat."

 

Now, let the curses and howls of protest rain down upon me...

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Iran's missiles of peace

Since Iran has emphatically stated its nuclear program is for "peaceful purposes" can we not then assume their ballistic missile program is as well?
 
Surely no one in this or any other country would begrudge the Iranians the means to simply develop peacful technologies like ballistic missiles, right?  Honestly, what motives would Iran have for developing these technolgies if not for peace?  No one would think there were any alterior motives for Iran developing ballistic missile technologies parallel with their nuclear program, right?  The Iranians are simply re-establishing a centuries old tradition of scientific discovery quenching the human thirst for knowledge, right?
 
Naturally, President Obama and his administration have been clear as crystal in their denunciation of Iran's nuclear program and stand by their rhetoric of doing everything in this nation's power to halt the proliferation of nuclear weapons, right?  But since Irans' intent is peaceful energy production and space exploration, this administration doing anything rash would be out of the question and this whole discussion is moot anyway.
 
Be well my friends, everything is right in the world if only you look at it from an liberal alternate perspective.
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Cap & Trade will negate CAFE

The administration is heralding the new CAFE standards and the resultant money and energy it will save.  Of course there is little concern that new CAFE standards will increase the cost of a new car by at least $1,300.  This concern is waved away by the logic that yes, there may be some up front extra cost to the consumer, but that money will be saved "over the life of the car" in the fuel which the driver won't have to buy.  On the surface, this makes sense.  Below the surface however is the 800 pound gorilla in the room.
 
The "cap and trade" policies this administration will implement will make any supposed "savings" on CAFE so much smoke and mirrors.  Cap and trade necessarily increases the cost of energy.  Across the board anything having to do with the production, distribution, R&D, etc. for energy will increase.  Fuel (gasoline/diesel) costs will necessarily increase as a result.  There goes any such supposed savings over the "life of the car" in fuel costs, the very justification being used to sell the CAFE standards to the American people.
 
Additionally, cap and trade will increase the cost of the new car over the now touted $1,300.  Building a car, even new 'smart cars', hybrids, whatever, is a very energy intensive endeavor.  Cap and trade will cause the cost of energy used in vehicle production to increase, increasing the cost of the vehicle overall, which will get passed on to the consumer eventually as well.  If you break down the increased energy cost over every part which gets produced at other plants before assembly, you can see the whole notion that the government is doing what they are doing to help people "save money" is laughable. 
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Katrina 'victim' still whining

 
An insurance settlement plus $41,000 taxpayer dollars plus what she says she's been putting into her house on her own and it's still not ready to move back?  Her home wasn't even destroyed!  It was damaged from flood waters, but it is still standing.  Standing four years after the hurricane and she still lives in a FEMA trailer.
 
This is what gets me.  If you read the story, it's all about how FEMA is "kicking her out" of the government trailer she's been living in for almost four years.  Not one mention of where has the money she received gone?  Not one question about why she is still there if things are so bad?  No details about how badly the house was damaged or what has been done to fix it?  No questions about why this person didn't take the money she received from insurance and Uncle Sam and move?  Also no mention about what she has been doing to turn her life around.  FEMA set these people up for free.  She's been working for years since the hurricane, yet she hasn't been able to get her home up and ready to live in?  Please.
 
Additionally, no thanks mentioned in the article to the government for putting her up for four years or for the money she received from the taxpayers.  I'm sorry, I have no sympathy.  In stories like these it's the details they leave out which leads me to believe she squandered most of the money she received and has been biding her time, milking things for as long as possible.  Move on with your life and quite relying on someone else to take care of you.  We've given you four years and you wasted it.  You're on your own from now on.
 
This is the result of reliance and dependence on government.
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More on Leadership

Upon retiring from active duty after twenty-two years in the United States Air Force, I am frustrated by what I perceive to be some new idea of what leadership is as opposed to what it should be.  Before continuing let me acknowledge that I am far from perfect.  Some of my ideas may seem archaic, perhaps even barbaric.  But they are my thoughts and beliefs - take them as such and feel free to comment, good or bad.

 

A take on the term moron which I stole from Glenn Beck.  The military is rife with supposed "leaders" which are nothing but "managers" or what I term "careerists."  These people are more worried about their personal aggrandizement than mission accomplishment or their subordinates.  Their ultimate goal is the accumulation of rank and personal "power."  These folks are destructive because they only seem to have input on subordinates when it's a negative, they "knee-jerk" every perceived infraction, they have almost no sense of context and almost invariably take others words over their own people.  What makes these folks even more destructive is they "talk a good game" They are the first out of the gate in lecturing about Core Values.  They give great speeches and other talks on "leadership".  Almost everything they say is technically correct, but they have about as much credibility as a politician speaking about ethics.  Most people act out of a sense of personal need from time to time, it is human nature.  I am talking about those who consistently put their own needs (their personal careers) ahead of everything else. 

 

Hypocrites are the "swine flu" of the military.  Most of the time they are simply a nuisance, they pop up, cause some problems, but with some simple "hygiene techniques" or a "quick trip to the doctor" you can get them out of your life quickly.  Sometimes however (usually the higher the rank or the more senior the position) the hypocrite can cause serious damage, perhaps even "kill" the morale of the individual or even the entire unit.

 

Let's say we're enforcing "standards."  "Standards" when referring to the military means enforcing the military basics:  fitness, dress and appearance, customs and courtesies, enforcing regulatory guidance, to name a few.  Let's say we have a unit of folks who are told they must have a uniform inspection.  No big deal.  The rationale for the inspection however is what gets peoples dander up.  Suppose a junior ranking person failed to show at a military formation in the proper uniform; this person was called out by a senior base military leader.  The junior member tells the senior member they don't have a portion of the particular uniform in question.  The junior member has been in the military for a few years and should have all of the appropriate uniform combinations they are required by regulation to have.  The junior member is at fault for failing to abide by this regulation and showed poor judgment by not correcting the deficiency in a timely manner.  The only thing the junior member did right was admit they messed up (took responsibility). 

 

Once that junior member gets back to his unit, what is the reaction from his unit's senior leadership?  Not only to hold the junior member accountable, but to punish the other one hundred members of the unit.  The assumption was made since this junior member made a mistake, there was obviously a problem with his immediate supervision and leadership, the problem was systemic, therefore everyone needed to be held accountable for this one person’s mistake.  In this particular instance however the first assumption was that everyone had some kind of problem (which wasn't the issue) instead of one guy making a mistake (which was the problem.)  The question from a leadership position should be:  What happened, why, and what to do about it?  An effective leader does not punish one hundred men for the infraction of one.  An effective leader then does not attempt to disguise said punishment under the auspices of enforcing "standards." 

 

Addendum:  This is a good time to point out where individual responsibility comes into play.  What does an individual supervisor (low or mid level, or heck even a high level sup) have control over in his particular subordinates life?  Is the supervisor responsible for how the subordinate spends his off time?  Does the supervisor have ANY kind of control over how the subordinate spends his money?  Beyond duty performance or direct duty related stuff off duty, I would contend the supervisor is not responsible nor should they be.  For example: If a subordinate writes bad checks and gets in trouble for it, how in the world is that the supervisors fault?  Beyond offering personal advice when asked (or offering it sometimes by interjecting it into conversation, etc.) and trying to be a "good example" for his subordinate, a supervisor has no control over what a subordinate does off duty (the only caveat to that is if the supervisor is with the subordinate when something happens).  There is a tendency today to hold supervisors accountable for the actions of their subordinates.  Supervisors nowadays are standing right next to their subordinates when called on the carpet and receiving a piece of a butt-chewing they shouldn't be getting at all.  This has a tendency to breed resentment and can lead to micromanagement (more on that below).  Another problem is the military has become "help happy" - providing every measure of assistance for every conceivable event which could negatively impact a person’s life.  Perseverance and the individual "working things out" isn't even part of the textbook anymore I don't think.  Sometimes a person just needs "some time alone" and work things out for themselves.  There is an automatic assumption that it couldn't possibly be the individuals fault when something bad happens.  This is something which the military has absorbed from the civilian culture.  There is an overriding tendency to "blame" anything but the individual.  Eroding individual accountability has been nothing but a detriment to both the civilian world and the military.     

 

Back to my point:  Now assume this same senior leadership for this unit deals with an outside agency on a regular basis.  Yet these same senior leaders do not hold this outside agency to the standards of written regulatory guidance as it deals directly with the accomplishment of our particular military mission!  This speaks to a larger point, hypocrisy.  When one group of military members is held to a standard and another group is not (by the same senior military leaders) you lose credibility on every front when you try to enforce standards across the board.  It's a matter of consistency.  A leader cannot foster loyalty or followership when applying standards inconsistently.  If you add in the perception of favoritism, you create divisiveness as well.  It's also a matter of proportionality:  Is punishing one hundred men for the infraction of one man proportional to the infraction?  If it is not, then the leader’s judgment is also called into question by his subordinates.

 

Micromanagement is the death knell for loyalty.  It also kills trust.  If a subordinate cannot trust their leader to allow them to do their job without constant supervision, "butting their nose in", then why should the subordinate feel obligated to be loyal to the leader?  The subordinate will feel they aren't trusted.  If a leader can't inspire trust, in fact kills it through micromanagement, your result will be robots who will not "think outside the box".  The micromanager kills initiative.  If a subordinate feels they aren't trusted, they will simply show up to work and won't do anything without first being told to do it.  In these cases, the subordinate will give the "leader" all the rope they need, metaphorically speaking.  Eventually a mistake will be made.  The micromanaging leader will attempt to shift blame to the subordinate (since this type or "leader" refuses to take responsibility).  The subordinate in this case will have made sure to CYA:  they will provide plenty of evidence that the mistake was the cause of the leader and was probably directly caused or at the very least exacerbated by the micromanaging.  The "leader" will be hung up to dry and the subordinate will have learned that it's better to be vindictive than to "mow through" a bad leader awaiting the greener pastures which will eventually come.

 

In my experience, there is never a need for micromanagement.  Some might argue that if you have a new troop (or employee), you must micromanage them - they don't know what they are doing.  This isn’t micromanagement though; this is simply supervision or "leadership."  A new person needs to know they aren't on their own.  They need constant guidance and supervision.  They need to be led until such time as they demonstrate otherwise.  Once the "bird has flown from the nest" however, it is time for the leader to step back and see what happens.  If a micromanager gets hold of a new person, the person could very well be ruined and become embittered from an "early age"; a symptom of poor leadership which could take years to correct.
 
More to follow.
 
Clarification on "micromanagement:: One of my commentors makes a good point about micromanagement being part of the military.  This is true to a certain extent.  However, the military has spent a considerable amount of money training me and teaching me to be a effective leader.  When I (or others in my position) are not allowed to make a decision, or continually have our decision second-guessed or overrided for no reason other than a superiors insecurities, this is what I mean by micromanagement.  I also have a responsibility to ensure my subordinates at all levels learn the tenets of leadership whenever possible.  I can "look over my subordinates shoulder" all the time, but this will have a negative effect on the person in question in the long run.
 
It is true that the military runs from a "rigid command structure."  It is a misconception persons in the military simply act from some kind of "programmed behavior" and simply parrot command dictats.  Thanks Mrs. AL for the thoughts...
 
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