Archive for November, 2011

Nov 29 2011

The company you keep……

So often is the virgin sheet of paper more real than what one has to say, and so often one regrets having marred it. ~Harold Acton.

Back in August of last year-I reminded Phib and others what a real douchebag Andrew Breitbart is and was. His “Big” blogs are nothing but written excrement-and now my Canadian Counterpart seems to have also discovered that fact:

The above is a pretty funny video and I recommend it to you all. But I didn’t just post it because it’s hilarious. There is a larger point here. Specifically, if you read an Andrew Brietbart blog expecting anything even remotely approaching the truth in history or politics, you may as well be straddling the hood a fucking Datsun on Sepulveda Boulevard yourself. All of the “Big” blogs are like dating sites for people who shouldn’t be allowed out of their homes without electronic monitoring. If, however, you enjoy having your stupidity force-fed to you, I can’t recommend the House of Brietbart more highly. You’ll feel at home there.

While there are many posts and articles at Breitbart’s blogs that are worthy of disdain-I have to agree with the Canadian-Kevin Mooney’s defense of Oliver North is right down there with really stupid articles.

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Nov 29 2011

Haze Grey and underway?

Published by under Chinese Commie Bastards

The ex-Russian carrier Varyag is all spiffed up , with no place to go.

I find the tow line attached to the stern particularly interesting. And as the article points out she is making very little wake. When she can actually get underway and cross the 12 mile limit, then maybe we can be concerned. If the world was properly ordered-a flight of USN aircraft would be flying across her bow as soon as she entered international waters-but I don’t think we do WASEX’s any more.

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Nov 28 2011

The Ja’s have it!

Published by under Die Deutsche Leben

It would seem the Leute have gesphrochen:

The people of Baden-Württemberg have spoken: In a referendum on Sunday voters backed state funding for the controversial €4.5-billion Stuttgart 21 rail project.

58% of voters voted in favor of the project-ensuring it would go forward. The opponents wasted no time updating their signs today. As I was driving back to work after an abortive attempt to get the “good” car out of VPC jail (It had not yet arrived in Stuttgart-contrary to what I had been told), I saw signs had banners affixed to them saying in German, “You just spent Six billion.”.

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Nov 26 2011

The party of Nein.

Published by under Die Deutsche Leben

The S.O. and I went into Stuttgart tonight to visit the Weinachts Markt. It had only opened on the 23rd-so every thing was new and fresh-and with it being a Saturday night, it was more than a little crowded. It was made even more so because of the fact that 9000 people showed up in the Schlossplatz earlier in the afternoon to hold one final rally against Stuttgart 21. ( You can see the general sentiment in the blurry I-phone picture on the left, a light spelling out the word “Nein” on the tower of the Stuttgart Hauptbahnhof.) What better way to spend the day than to protest a multi-million Euro project and then eat curry wurst and drink Gluwein?

I’m not sure who is going to win the referendum ( the thinking is the state of Baden Wurtenburg will out number the citizens of Stuttgart who are opposed to the project-so S-21 will win). But it was fun to be out among the crowds.

There were people all around-the Greens had a big tent up on Konigsstrasse and then when you turned the corner by the big bookstore ( whose name I cannot remember right now)-you hit the Christmas market.  Located right next to the Landesmuseum they had the usual assortment of Wurst stands and booths selling things. Rotewurst and Bratwurst became our dinner. Sadly-no beer, since I had to park the car at the S-bahn station due to the cold. ( And it is getting cold now).

In one sense, we are pretty lucky. The “locals” say that last year it snowed the day after Thanksgiving and you didn’t see ground again till after the new year. So far no snow-but perhaps it is just waiting till the day we move into our house this coming week.

But there are worse ways to spend a Saturday afternoon/evening.

In a further note-on the lines of how we are spending money like water-we bought the final 220V appliances we need.  Transformers are of course an option-but I think for high power items that draw a lot of current-its probably better to bite the bullet. So we have been making the circuit of electronics stores. Today was “pick a microwave day”.  We got a good one-but its not near as big inside as the one we had back in shopping mall. But its big enough.

The other challenge is to ensure the internet and satellite TV work before I leave on my trip. We have eschewed anything to do with AFN-rather in a particularly abhorrent thing for  me, spending money on a Sky Network dish. ( I still hate Rupert Murdoch)-and our place will come with access to German TV via the dish the other tenant uses. I think that is just as well-save for the fact that it will preclude watching the NFL. I am hoping to work around that nag by having our big TV work and I can stream NFL games to the tube.

Except-thanks to the fact that Kabel BW is not out to our place in the country side ( The S.O. got the vote here-I wanted to be in the city), our internet will not be as fast as I would like. ( only about 17 mb/s-I wanted at least 50-100). The down side is that it may take three weeks to get set up. This being because they have to coordinate with Deutsche Telecom. I thought by giving them almost 10 days notice things would time out just right-but alas not so fast. Kudos to Torgas at the Media Markt, who helped me through all of the options and made a lot of phone calls to find out what was and what was not available.

Now its home and time to watch Mario Barth. Don’t ask me why-but the S.O. has taken a liking to watching German TV-even though she has little idea what is being said. She likes Mario Barth because he does a lot of joke with animals-at least on this show they did, including herding sheep on stage. On the plus side for me-his female assistant is pretty sweet.

Just another Saturday night.

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Nov 25 2011

The week that was……

Published by under Fun things!

The science project is holding together (for now)-and so we took it to go down to the local Weinachts Markts. Not as big as the ones in central Stuttgart-but more a homey feeling in them. We went back and forth to two, one in a town near where we will be living. Made for a good dinner-Bratwurst mit Brotchen.

We move into our place next week-and hopefully “the good car” will be delivered by then. It is required to be delivered on Monday. So far I have heard nothing from the folks-except that the car arrived in Bremerhaven.

It better get here soon. I’ve got places to go-and people to see.

On the other hand, one of the saving graces of living here is not having to hear all the whining about the Supercommittee’s failure to do its job. All I have to is wait around for the layoff notices to come around.

Since yesterday was Thanksgiving-I thought I would post this little gem from Jimmy Kimmel, who put together this clip of a Charlie Brown Thanksgiving with voice overs from the GOP debates:

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Nov 22 2011

Science Project……..

Published by under Uncategorized

Well, every man needs a hobby right?

Regrettably, I think I may have stumbled on to one I didn’t want, namely this (very) used 1998 BMW 750IL I bought.

Y0u fucked up! You trusted an Army Major

And now-as I am rapidly discovering, the BMW 7 series of the 90′s is one of the cars people love or hate. The people that love them, seem to be mechanically gifted. The people who hate them don’t have 20,000 dollar limits on their Mastercards. While I have a basic foundation of car work I can do-to say I am able to do any type of major repair is more than a stretch-its an outright lie. And as it turns out-these beasts require a lot of TLC.

It is not that car doesn’t run well-it does. However like any car with 277,980 KM on it, it has shall we say, some “quirks”. Since I have to wait for my tools-I am conducting an inventory of what I can do myself and what will have to be done at the Auto Shop. I’ve got recommendations for three German mechanics-who all are said to be competent, honest, and reasonable on price. Its looking like I will have to find out once we get in.

In the meantime I have become and avid reader of BMW Forums on line.

Not that I want to, but I will have to if I want to sell it any time soon.

The beauty of BMW’s is they perform well (when repaired properly). The bad thing about them is two fold IMHO: 1) Too many of their systems are electric and 2) the motor itself is complex. ( Especially when it is 12 cylinders).

Now we went through some growing pains with the previous BMW 528 in Shopping Mall. Over time it worked out, and became a fine performing automobile. I am hopeful this one will do so too.

But hope, is not a way to get to the autobahn.

Stay tuned……………

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Nov 20 2011

Unwilling or unable……

Published by under American Society

To understand the root causes of the Occupy Wall Street protests-or why, no matter how much pepper spray or billy clubs you use-the genie may not go quietly back into the bottle.

That’s not to say that the OWS movement does not have its problems-and it seems clear to me now that its time to move to phase two. Pack up the tents and transition to political activism. The point has been made and is out there-people, even those who don’t want to, have started thinking about income inequality.

Even those who have nothing but contempt for the ideas that the protesters espouse.

The critics, the really virulent ones, tend to fall into the easy route of stereotypes, that the OWS folks are nothing but lazy degenerates. Dipshits like Malkin and the especially vile John Hinderaker of Power Line, have beaten this thread again and again.

Still others lament the fact that there are thousands of young people out serving the empire in hell holes like Afghanistan and Iraq-and getting no attention. The point that seems to be lost in the telling-is that many of those serving Soldiers, Airman, Sailors and Marines are equally as much a part of the 99%, they are losing the economic battle. If not right now-potentially down stream when the excitement stops, but the the earning has to continue.  For every technical expert-there are also others who are not able to translate their skills into useful civilian careers. And if they stay the course-they become trapped by the decisions they did not make earlier in life-because they enjoyed the service they chose. Those people who lament the lack of coverage of their sacrifices ignore another obvious fact. That for many those sacrifices are not doing anything to benefit the country in the long term. They aren’t even doing that much to benefit the people they are supposed to be helping. Certainly the 1% who are benefiting from their efforts, are not out there on the front lines. There is no money in it. They went to the trading floor instead.

If there actually is anyone out there who believes we should be focused on closing the income gap no matter the cost to growth, I’ve never met them. There are however, plenty of folks who worship at the altar of growth at any cost-no matter how much inequality it generates. People like Paul Ryan, who would rather throw your Grandmother under the bus-than do anything constructive to help them.

This is why I think its decision time for the OWS folks. They need to emulate the tea sniffers to a degree-and make politicians afraid of them. In that regard they are failing to a great degree. They have made the headlines-but they need to impact the political process if their is going to be the type of changes to the laws that underpin the rise of income inequality.

The people who are zeroing in on the idea of the OWS folks as just lazy, filthy deadbeats-who took the wrong major in college, are missing the point. Ultimately, income inequality impacts growth-and so puts the hard work they brag about at risk too. Without a level playing field for the middle class, capitalism, although maybe the best system, won’t survive without actual workers. With all the industry and manufacturing being shipped overseas , for the sake of the bottom line, we don’t stand a chance.

Furthermore-without a fair set of regulations, capitalism it is not by itself a stable system. Capitalism rewards those who are good at making money and punishes those who are not. Left to its own devices, capitalism devolves into a small class of fabulously wealthy people and a much larger class of serfs. In the absence of some countervailing force, feudalism is a stable economic state, but capitalism is not.

When the government serves to counter the natural tendency of capitalism to concentrate wealth, it stabilizes capitalism. Such actions include minimum wage laws, child labor laws, environmental laws, OSHA regulations, allowing unions to form and protecting them, progressive taxation, social security, medicare, medicaid, etc. Too much government intervention is in itself a problem, but we are so far from that, it’s not relevant. Our problem right now is that the lower 99% has so much less money than it used to, it can’t buy the goods and services created by the top 1%.

And that’s a problem even for the snarky set.

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Nov 17 2011

Scouting mission.

Published by under Uncategorized

Just got back from returning the rental car. The other car is still MIA somewhere in the Atlantic. It did not take this long to get things back from Japan.

So I took the car into town, dropped it off and took the train back. As is my want-I did not come straigth home. Discovered a couple of great watering holes and a good place to eat dinner.

Pix to follow.

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Nov 15 2011

A chill in the air.

Published by under Die Deutsche Leben

Today was the first day I had to scrape ice off the windshield-before driving to work. I am quite sure it won’t be the last. The consolation was that for the first time in 5 days-there was no fog in either the morning or afternoon.

The fog is what is unique to me. I had been in Germany in the winter before-so I know the days are short. But the times I had been here TAD or for vacation, I had very seldom seen fog like you see here in the morning. They say its just the predecessor to the snows that are sure to follow.

Work and life wise-developments continue apace. We are still waiting for our car to get here-which is proving most annoying. Our stuff is here-but not our car. I am in the process of scoping out a second car to buy this week.

I hate buying used cars. I hate the dance involved. The meeting someone and being polite-while all the while being suspicious of his every move and motive. I hate the bargaining, where you underbid his price by a lot, he gets mad and you finally arrive somewhere in the middle. I hate having to crawl over the car and the disturbing worry that as soon as the money has changed hands-the car will fall apart. I think this car is a pretty good one-we have looked at it and driven it three times now. I still can’t stand the experience. If I had my way-buying a car would be like buying a TV. You shop around for the one that has the right price and features and you buy it. No haggling-you either like the price or not.

But of course used cars don’t work that way. Like people, some are well taken care of and perform well, others have not been given the TLC they need and are likely to bite you at the first opportunity. Like women-they look nice at first-and seduce you-and then when the deal is done, they stop giving you pleasure. They become just another factor in your life to deal with. ( Exactly like a woman).

I’m getting my feet into work-and slowly starting to feel productive but I think its going to be a while before I understand what the ins and outs are of working here. Still, the scenery on the way in and out is nice. It will be even better when we move in to our house in a couple of weeks.

And then there is the money. It is still hard for me to wrap my head around spending in Euro. Its kind of like Japan-you don’t realize you are spending a fair amount of money till you hit “update” in Quicken. I keep wondering what is going to happen if the Euro collapses. DM for everyone?

Going to a meeting of the ski club here. They are already skiing in Switzerland-but my ski stuff is in the main shipment. I am glad the SO cajoled me into buying a proper winter jacket. I did not want to buy it at first-but its proving more worth the money with each and every day.

And tomorrow as Scarlett said: ist ein anderes Tag.

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Nov 13 2011

One additional point……

Published by under Navy

Concerning Admiral Clingan.

The Navy is busier than snot-but good guy or bad-Admiral Clingan and the rest of the flag leadership are guilty of crossing a line that never should have been crossed in the first decade of the 21′st century. He is now in a position where he sanctions ships and squadrons  and individual Sailors staying deployed longer than six months.

The Navy has come full circle. In the 1970′s and the early 1980′s-the Navy I came into would extend a deployment at the drop of a hat. Thus-I had the “privlege” of spending an additional six weeks on Satan’s Flagship (CV-666) boring holes in the Indian Ocean, while they decided it was “safe” to transit the Suez Canal after Sadat’s assassination. ( Apartheid or no-a port visit in Capetown would have been OK with me).

Then in the mid 1980′s the Navy woke up to the damage the long deployments cause-and by the end of the decade, PERSTEMPO was something the Navy actually took seriously. It took a decision by the Chairman of the JCS himself to extend a carrier battlegroup-and it better be for only the best of reasons. We pretty much held to that through the 90′s.

Then along came Uncle Vern.

Deployments of 8, 9, even 11 months became suddenly acceptable. War on terror and all that, you know. Gotta make sure those brand spanking newe F-18 E’s and F’s get into the fight.

If the Navy wants someone to blame for its increased OPTEMPO-it needs to look in a mirror. The decisions acquiesced to by the leadership-of which I was once a part, have created as much of our problems as anything else.

And now Clingan is a part of that continuing trend-whether he admits it or not. The only service to stand up to the Rumsfeld machine on deployment lengths was the Marines. They held to 7 month deployments and told the SECDEF they cannot and would not become the Army.

They had the right idea.

The Navy, sad to say, lacked the cajones to say the same.

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Nov 12 2011

Not understanding the question that was asked.

Published by under The Long Game

I am no longer an active commenter over at Lex’s place-but I still take the time to peruse his scribblings, if for no other reason than to try to grasp the thinking of the “conservative” class-and help to codify where and how their thinking has gone off the rails. I would love to continue to comment there-however I can no longer abide the close minded thinking that occurs, and the increasingly rude and misguided attacks that seem to immediately rise up if one deviates from what is the “accepted” wisdom. It should also be pointed out that I have no use for people who will not allow trackbacks or links to his articles-just because he believes he resides on some type of higher moral plane than I do. I too am a retired Naval Officer, Naval Flight Officer and a member of the naval aviation community, with just as much right to my opinions and thoughts, as he is. That I have drawn a much different conclusion from the evidence of history and current events does not mean that my thoughts are not worthy of inclusion. It’s hardly a consistent viewpoint from a blog that prides itself on the “quality” of its discussion. Accordingly, it seems best to abide by Thumper’s rule-if you don’t have anything nice to say, don’t say anything at all.

However, from time to time, I come across something  so misguided, that I cannot stifle my urge to comment. Lex’s recent comments regarding the upcoming super-committee fiasco and the inevitable draconian cuts that will occur when they fail to come to a budget agreement-particularly in the defense department. Lex takes exception to Walter Pincus asking a reasonable question in regard to Admiral Clingan’s recent testimony regarding the unsustainability of the current level of naval employment. Lex says its knee jerk-I happen to think its a more than reasonable question to ask. Namely, ‘How much is enough?“-when it comes to the level of Naval deployments. Which ones are essential and which ones could be reduced?

Let’s start with Admiral Clingan’s example of how overextended the United States Navy is today:

“In total, 152 of the Navy’s 288 battle force ships were underway or forward-deployed on March 19,” Clingan said, adding that the service was operating “at an unsustainable level.”

Actually the story is much worse since in addition to the ship’s and their crews, there are somewhere between 10,000-13,000 Sailors engaged in the abominable Individual Augmentation program. Clingan cites 8000-but that only includes Iraq and Afghanistan, and ignores the continuing and growing appetite to have more bodies and more bodies in divergent beautiful spots to be deployed to such as Djioubouti, GTMO, Bahrain, and some closer ones too-like Kosovo. When you say 8000, the real “body tax”  of people screwed affected by the program is closer to double that, since replacements have to be identified and put in the training pipeline.

Pincus asks the reasonable question, namely isn’t a great deal of this strain on our fighting fleet self induced?

But wait a minute. Does Clingan really want to call March 19 typical, with the United States fighting two wars, beginning another, and providing assistance to a unique natural disaster in Japan? Or is he suggesting that more than two heavy military engagements at one time, plus a major foreign natural disaster will be the norm? And what about those other 136 ships?

Now I will concede to Lex that Pincus’ questions about the remaining 136 ships is steeped in real ignorance of the mechanics of how trained and ready combat vessels to be deployed become that way. However both Lex and Pincus are not asking the deeper question, one directly related to the budget / debt “crisis”: Does “Pax Americana” really provide our nation the benefit we think it does? And more importantly, in light of our refusal to provide and maintain sufficient revenue streams to pay for both guns and butter-can we really afford to continue to be world’s policeman in all the world’s oceans?

It would seem Lex comes down wholeheartedly on the side of guns-by way of this slightly snarky comment:

The cuts would amount to about $1.2 trillion over ten years starting in 2013, and would have devastating effects on the military’s modernization, operations, manpower and maintenance accounts, which have already slashed $400 billion from their spending projections for the next decade. Enough to fund a few dozen more Solyndras, at least. (So-called “mandatory” spending accounts would not be affected. This is where the lion’s share of the unsustainable federal spending increases threatening to bankrupt the country will occur. Unlike discretionary accounts, mandatory spending automatically indexes for inflation each year, and does not require congressional re-authorization.)

Butter it would seem, in the form of providing a society worthy of defending and providing a reasonable set of services designed to improve the quality of our national life, seems to be not that important an expenditure at all. Or at least he implies that in a rather backhanded way. Because if you are going to be jumping wholeheartedly on the bandwagon of “its the spending stupid”, then by implication-if you accept the premise that Pax Americana is worth spending money on, and needs to continue; but you don’t want to raise tax revenues to pay for it-then cuts have to come from the side of “butter”.

Pincus actually is closer than Lex is to getting to the deeper question both our government and our populace need to come to grips with:

1) Can we, or should we,  continue this level of employment around the world? If so, what is the real benefit to the only people who really matter in this budget equation? ( American Citizens).

2) If it is a decision that we decide to continue, then we need to come to the second question-what kind of society do we want at home for the citizens who must pay for “Pax Americana”. And do we really want to give up the things we will have to in order to pay for that “Pax” ?

Truth in advertising, I have rejected for the better part of a decade, Lex’s notion that Pax Americana  keeps “an inherently unstable world in a state of trembling balance”. I believe that fully 50% of our actions in the last 15 years have contributed to that instability rather than contained it. Certainly the War in Iraq and the last 7 years in Afghanistan have done nothing to make the world safer for American citizens. And other actions such as Libya would have come to a conclusion one way or another without our “help”-certainly in the manner we actually provided it, the costs were drug out for longer than should have been necessary.

And if in fact the United States cannot afford all of its domestic budgetary commitments-then it becomes evident to me, that Pax Americana is a luxury we also can no longer afford.  Even if we choose to return to the world of 1896 with no social safety net, no food or drug standards, and no premise that the government has a  responsibility to provide a foundation of an acceptable quality of life for its citizens.

“But what will happen to us from those who wish to harm our nation?”, you ask. A good question-and one that probably begs the notion that a robust and deployable defense is very much a necessity.  But if it is a necessity-which it clearly is, you need to find the resources to pay for it, and more importantly it has to serve a purpose. That purpose to be to defend a nation worthy of that effort. In particular if we wish to maintain a nation centered on a capitalist ideal. I firmly believe a social safety net goes part and parcel with the a well functioning and properly regulated capitalist economy.  The safety net was a reaction to the lack of living wages given to the American worker throughout the 1800s. The capitalist and wealthy leaders of today do not like the safety net because it takes from their profits and earnings and gives it to the average person. In the past their predecessors knew they at least had to play the game and act like they supported it. Thanks to the naked selfishness of today’s brand of conservatives-it is become no longer unfashionable to voice publicly the desire to destroy the benefits gained through over  50 years of effort. So now-granting those benefits is something our moneyed class are obviously and historically unlikely to do on their own.

The wars of the last decade have come at a tremendous cost, a cost much greater than what the cost of a “war tax” ( bemoaned by Lex) which would have not only kept the wars on a cash and carry basis-but would have shown the average American the real costs, economic and human of a policy of war without end, amen. That alone might have forced the requisite outcry to bring those efforts to a much speedier conclusion.

And the fact that those wars are on distant shores, contrary to Lex’s assertion, are really not of any real benefit to us.  Its not a feature as he suggests, its an anachronism, a vestige of the peculiarly American post WW-II trait of having all of the burdens of Empire with none of the perks. At least our British cousins got land to claim and native vestal virgins to take advantage of.  Thanks to our throwing our European allies under that bus some 54 years ago, we don’t get that luxury. The multi-polar world that is now unfolding is one we are powerless to stop from developing, no matter how much we think we are able to. We set off on this path in the 50′s and now are too far down the path to change it. Also-contrary to his assertion, great nations vested in deep entrenchments overseas, tend not say no to wars of choice, they tend to find reasons to make them a necessity.

Like it or not-if you want to keep a forward deployed presence in the world oceans, then you have to pay for it. And that will require, like it or not, tax increases as well as targeted budget cuts in the right areas. I personally believe there is a middle path when it comes to national security, just as I believe there is a middle path that will preserve Social Security and Medicare-and perhaps also move the nation down the path to the level already achieved by all of the other major industrial nations, universal access to health care for all Americans. It will require a certain amount of overseas retrenchment-but it need not look or feel like isolationism. We have commitments we have to keep-but we need not seek to expand them. And there are commitments that never should have been made or have long ago out lived any usefulness-and are worthy of abandonment. Leaving Iraq is something long overdue, so too is leaving Afghanistan.  Both nations-in different ways- are useless to us now. Our work there was done when we toppled their previous governments, now they have to find their own path,and we should leave them to their own devices. There are other ways to work influence events in both the Gulf and Africa, than having literally boatloads of people trapped in encampments in Kuwait and Djiobuti. Certainly the size of Ft Apache in Bahrain could be sizeably reduced. And I will continue to question the need for the increased number of domestic staffs we have created. ( This comes back to the baggage of having more flags than ships).

Certainly the money is out there to accomplish that middle path. When one lives in  or comes from a country where there top 1% controls an astronomical percentage of the nations wealth-and that wealth increasingly fails to be finding it’s way to trickle down to its average citizens, something is clearly wrong with that country.  I’ll come back to my point-for the United States to be a “shining beacon on a hill” it actually has to shine. It tends to tarnish the light beam when other nations are able to well accomplish the societal goals that we should be able to. However we choose not to.

The world has changed, and changed dramatically. The knee jerk reaction is to  tenaciously cling to a status quo that no longer serves the national interest, not to question those who have expressed the proper questions. Its not Pincus who has jerked his knee-it is those who somehow think March 19, 2011 is any rational way to run a Navy.

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Nov 11 2011

For the record…..

When it comes to women-I still have a quantifable case of what can be described, and is written about, of “Yellow Fever“.

However, I think its important to be broadminded-especially when you are living in Europe:

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Nov 11 2011

So you think you are having a bad day?

Published by under Navy

It could be worse.

Courtesy of the Jaded Major, here is a collection of really bad days. What is interesting-I actually was witness to three of these mishaps when they happened, no lie! I’ll bet a lot of you folks who were in Naval Aviation in a previous life can say the same thing.

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Nov 10 2011

Mada isogashii.

Published by under Die Deutsche Leben

Or in German: Noch damit beschäftigt.

I got some interesting and good news yesterday. Namely that I will be traveling in the near future-back and forth across the Atlantic and the Mediterranean-all in one month. Whoo Hoo! Let the frequent flyer mileage counters spin.

The S.O. and I put the finishing touches on the lease for our house today. We are excited about where we are going to live. Its in a small village-but its got a lot of beautiful countryside-and a gasthaus just down the street. Beer within walking distance! Whoo hoo again!

I have found a totally rocking FM station that I listen to on the way to work. Die neue 107.7–a station that plays rock and roll from the good years of rock and roll. I was hooked when they played “Cocaine”. No, not THAT Cocaine by Eric Clapton-but the original song. Which most people don’t realize was written by JJ Cale. The understated coolness of JJ & even his band is so lost on most, especially in today’s pop culture of pablum-fed clones-who have no idea of what real “progressive rock” is. JJ Cale wrote the original and Clapton thinks he is a genius. Which he is.

Plus I get to listen to German news and traffic reports-I figured out today what “Blitz reports are”. They are where the station does a great favor to the citizenry by telling folks where the traffic cameras are. ( To be “blitzed” is to get shot by a traffic camera-your ticket is in the mail.). Good listening practice.

Tomorrow-being an American holiday. Its off to Hohenzollern Castle-which is about an hour from here. Cool.

With luck-you will not hear politics from me for two days………

Maybe.

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Nov 08 2011

Stuttgart 21

Today I had to drive across southern Stuttgart to continue the long and laborious process of getting set up here. Thanks to the miracle of my new GPS-I was able to find a pretty decent route that took me away from the “STAU” (A German word every one learns here-it means traffic jam). Along the way I drove through several suburbs towards Mohring. Along the way I came across a lot of signs like this:

In other words-opposing Stuttgart 21. Stuttgart 21 is a massive — and massively controversial — railway and urban-development project for the city proposing to lower the tracks to below ground, renovate the historic train station and reclaim abotu 100 hectares of land in the city limits. It is expensive ( 4 billion Euros). The project has three main parts: creating a high-speed railway connection to the city’s airport; transforming its main railway station from a terminus station to a through station; and creating a 60-kilometer high-speed rail line between Stuttgart and Ulm, nearly halving travel times between the two cities to only 28 minutes.

The project has been heavily opposed by a disparate group of folks. Some just object to the cost and some are more focused on the historic nature of the Hauptbahnhof. These folks have even tried to get the train station designated as a world heritage site. (To no avail).

It is expected that there will be weekly demonstrations-and perhaps daily in the week leading up to the election on the 27th of this month. The Green party has benefited from all the opposition, picking up a lot of  seats in the Landtag for Baden Wurttenburg.

You see mostly signs urging a No vote-but you do see a lot urging a Ja vote too.

It will be interesting to watch over the next few weeks.

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