Wednesday, December 09, 2009

Drunk driving accidents down

In Ohio in 2007 there were 1,255 traffic fatalities, 389 (31%) were alcohol related. We made headway in 2008--that dropped to 1,190, 356 fatalities, or 30%. A change in one year of 8.5%. Of course, if it was your wife, daughter, son, or dad killed or injured by a drunk driver feeling invincible, that figure runs about 100% doesn't it? Even worse and more dangerous than drunk driving, is allowing teen-agers to drive before age 18. Even riding with a teen makes life more dangerous for the passengers, whether or not he's driving!

Per mile travelled, you're safer in urban areas than rural. In fact, the worst stats are for those states with the wide open spaces--except Utah, bless their tea totalling, Mormon livers.

"State impaired-driving laws have been enacted in all 50 States and the District of Columbia that make it illegal for a driver or a motorcycle rider with a BAC of .08 or above to drive a vehicle. In 2008, the alcohol-impaired-driving fatality rate declined from 0.43 fatalities per 100 million VMT in 2007 to 0.40 in 2008. In 2008, Montana had the highest alcohol-impaired fatality rate in the Nation – 0.84 fatalities per 100 million VMT while Vermont had the low-est rate in the Nation – 0.16 per 100 million VMT. In 2007, Montana had the highest alcohol-impaired fatality rates in the Nation – 0.93 – and Utah had the lowest alcohol-impaired driving fatality rate – 0.21 fatalities per 100 million VMT. Traffic safety facts"

And the man who probably saved more Americans from death by car crash was Robert McNamara of Kennedy/Vietnam fame and "inventor" of the seat belt. He was both safety and fuel conscious when not many others were.
    "Soon after taking over at the Ford Division in 1955, McNamara had gone way out on a limb by adding several safety devices to the 1956 model and then making them the focal point of the marketing campaign. By today’s standards it was a modest effort. The 1956 Ford’s five-part Lifeguard System included two standard features, a deep-dish steering wheel that gave way in a crash and safety latches that kept doors from springing open on impact. Three options also were offered: front seat belts anchored to a steel plate; a padded instrument panel and padded sun visors; and rearview mirrors with backing that reduced glass fallout when shattered. Also, the front and back seat supports were redesigned to reduce the possibility of their coming loose in a crash." American Heritage
I used a seat belt for the first time in the mid-50s when I worked for a feed company and the owner had a sporty Ford.

If Europe wants to continue paying guilt money

And that's what Copenhagen-Hopenchangen is about. Be my guest. European countries had colonies all over the world, including North America, South America, Africa and Asia. The guilt money that France and the UK have poured into the various corrupt African dictatorships could sink a fleet of Somali pirate ships, but it hasn't done a thing for the people. There are many books on this topic, written mostly by liberals--government, non-profits, and NGO officials. All the money does is prop up goosestepping, military regimes. And we aren't much better. Our own environmentalists have been killing Africans for years through our misguided, misdirected anti-DDT programs. Far more Africans have lost lives and livelihood through bleeding heart (for animals and insects) liberal-environmentalists than ever made it through the swamps and jungles to the coastal areas with their African captors and on to the slave ships owned by Europeans to be sold in the Islands and the future United States. And now they are about to do it again, only to all of us this time.

If Obama wants to help some Africans, let him begin with his own extended family. The Obama Diaspora. Although one brother is following in his footsteps and will write about book about. . . nothing except being an Obama.

Here in Ohio

Much of the upper Midwest is covered in snow today. Here in Ohio it is 51, but we'll soon get your wintry blast, but not the blizzard. About every 5-10 years we get a blizzard--although Iowa and Nebraska would laugh at it.

Also in Ohio yesterday the state put a murderer to death with a single injection. The official announcement on the radio sounded a bit like a weather reporter announcing a new gizmo.

I don't support the death penalty--why should we the people sink to the low of a common criminal? However, if I did, I would have chosen his method. Ken Biros got off and out much too easy, and he was convicted close to 20 years ago. After killing Tami Engstrom, he dismembered and mutilated her and scattered her body parts here and there in Ohio and Pennsylvania.

A wordsmith? Hardly!

Tina Brown writes: "It's a strange paradox for a great wordsmith, but when Obama makes an important policy speech these days he leaves everyone confused."

Only guilt-ridden, diversity obsessed liberals who'd probably never listened to a really good black preacher thought Obama was a great wordsmith. So he gave one inspiring, crowd-weeping speech in 2004--and even then there were detractors (in his own party, probably PUMAs) who noted that speech had been around the block many times when he was drumming up votes for his Senate run.

Nuance? Sub-text? Really! How about this one. He's a marxist (aka progressive, socialist, communist). Do your homework, folks.

Obama's Fog of War by Tina Brown

It's in my DNA

When I retired October 1, 2000 I was faced with a unique and wonderful challenge: TIME. A gift of twenty-four hours every day to use any way I wanted. Time is money, and I became an instant millionaire, a winner of the lottery. Unlike most women I knew, I really didn’t have any hobbies, just a variety of interests. I’d always liked writing and art, animals and travel, religion, history and science, but especially research got my blood flowing to the brain. That interest in everything is probably what drew me to library science first as a staffer (high school and college in the 50s), then a professional (University of Illinois and Ohio State University in the 60s). That career is a never ending quest for information in a logical progression, and because I was an academic librarian, publication was a requirement for promotion and tenure. However, both my mother and grandmother were researchers in their own way--so it's in my DNA.

For 30 years I’d been dabbling here and there with genealogy, looking through scraps of paper and family Bibles each time I visited my parents. In the mid-1990s, I even signed up for a pass to use the genealogy sources at the Ohio Historical Society. In 1993 I wrote down the recollections of my father and aunt, “Tales from Pine Creek” and created a family recipe book to use at a 1993 reunion of the 100 or so descendants of my grandparents. However, once I had the time, I soon learned that genealogy is more than a hobby, it’s an obsession requiring more devotion and days than I had left. From time to time, I do look through the records I’ve accumulated and I read the newsletter from Rootsweb, a wonderful resource for anyone interested in beginning this fascinating hobby, step by step from the beginning. December's issue was on one of the newer research tools, DNA testing:
    The most common test used today is for the Y chromosome. Males are tested because only males inherit a Y chromosome. Y-DNA testing is surname-based with a specific surname (and variant spellings) included in a project. Surname projects will generally have a group of people whose results indicate that they share a common ancestor. The degree of the match helps to pinpoint the approximate number of generations separating a person from the shared ancestor. Common surnames may have many separate groups whose results indicate they descend from different ancestors.

    Although only males can be tested for Y-DNA, females can use a surrogate male relative, usually a brother, for testing purposes. The surrogate male must share the top line of the pedigree with the female relative, usually represented by the father's surname. DNA tests, for genealogical purposes, must be taken from a living person. Most tests are self administered by swabbing the inside of your cheek – no blood, no needles!

    mtDNA testing is for everyone (male and female). All children inherit mtDNA from their mother. mtDNA isn't a chromosome like Y-DNA. It comes from the egg contributed by our mother. This type of test tells us about our straight maternal line -- the very bottom line of a pedigree form. Finding a relative based on your mtDNA is quite rare.

    Y-DNA and mtDNA tests will provide us with information about our paternal and maternal "haplogroup." Our haplogroup tells us about our deep ancestral origin.

    These are the only portions of our DNA that are inherited "intact" from one parent or the other. This means they can be traced back to a specific ancestor and the results compared with others. DNA won't identify the common ancestor. That element is left to the paper records we've gathered in our traditional research.

    Keep in mind that Y and mtDNA tests only tell us about the very top and very bottom lines of our ancestry -- a tiny fraction of our overall ancestry. These tests will not tell us about our father's mother's, or our mother's father's, ancestors. For another explanation, see the Ancestry blog entry.

Tuesday, December 08, 2009

Party like it's 1875

"Barack Obama, understanding the histrionics required in climate-change debates, promises that U.S. emissions in 2050 will be 83 percent below 2005 levels. If so, 2050 emissions will equal those in 1910, when there were 92 million Americans. But there will be 420 million Americans in 2050, so Obama's promise means that per capita emissions then will be about what they were in 1875. That. Will. Not. Happen."
George Will, Washington Post

"Some climate scientists compound their delusions of intellectual adequacy with messiah complexes. They seem to suppose themselves a small clerisy entrusted with the most urgent truth ever discovered. On it, and hence on them, the planet's fate depends. So some of them consider it virtuous to embroider facts, exaggerate certitudes, suppress inconvenient data, and manipulate the peer-review process to suppress scholarly dissent and, above all, to declare that the debate is over.

Consider the sociology of science, the push and pull of interests, incentives, appetites and passions. Governments' attempts to manipulate Earth's temperature now comprise one of the world's largest industries. Tens of billions of dollars are being dispensed, as by the U.S. Energy Department, which has suddenly become, in effect, a huge venture capital operation, speculating in green technologies. Political, commercial, academic and journalistic prestige and advancement can be contingent on not disrupting the (postulated) consensus that is propelling the gigantic and fabulously lucrative industry of combating global warming."

The praying cat



We had a good time discussing Dewey the library cat last night at book group. Dewey certainly has a second, maybe third life, and is making Vicki a rich woman, something that doesn't happen often to small town librarians. She's just returned from Turkey promoting the book, has a possible movie in the works, a children's Dewey came out in September, and she has a new boyfriend. Oh yes, she has a new cat, Page Turner, which was found by a library staffer (the board won't let them have any more cats) as a cold, wet kitten, and is now quite large. But you can look in its eyes and see it isn't Dewey.

Dear Brown, Voinovich and Kilroy

What's the point of our having elected senators and representatives, if you guys sit back and let the regulators do your job with no laws passed?

USAToday: "The latest step by the government to regulate carbon dioxide emissions saddles industry with uncertainty and potentially higher costs, industry groups said Monday after the Environmental Protection Agency declared carbon dioxide a health hazard.

The EPA's decision paves the way for new regulations on carbon dioxide emissions from power plants and factories even if Congress doesn't pass legislation to do so."

During the campaign, Obama promised he would raise energy costs for every American home and business, thus destroying jobs. Unfortunately, this is one promise he intends to keep. What else can this man do to worsen the economy? How about another job summit and invite more job destroying union reps?

We exhale CO2. I wonder if he know that?

Retired Old Men Eating Out--ROMEOs



Actually, this group is The Pump House Guys, a group of artists, but they are retired and they go to lunch together. I just thought it was a cute name, but I think it belongs to another group. They are seen here at the art show currently at The Church at Mill Run, honoring one of their deceased members, Fritz Huffman, called "Fritz Huffman and Friends." The show runs from November 12 through January 5, 2010, Sunday-Thursday, 8:30a.m.-4:30 p.m. (Mill Run is closed Friday-Saturday.) Fritz' family provided the t-shirts at the reception.

Monday, December 07, 2009

Obama's safe schools czar--Kevin Jennings

You might want to read this. It's a porn list for children. From Maggie's Notebook:
    Kevin Jennings, Barack Obama's failed "safe school czar" has a recommended reading list for children of all ages. What has been revealed is sick and perverted, and until you read this, you simply cannot image what Jennings recommends as appropriate for school children in this country. I implore you to read and pass it around. Contact Congress, your schools and specifically the White House.
More at Breitbart TV--teaching children about "fisting." Jennings, Obama's choice to lead us to safe schools, created the Gay Lesbian and Straight Education Network (GLSEN). Although supposedly GLSEN's mission is to discourage harrasment of gay children, it appears to any observer that its mission is to promote pornography and creating sexually ready children for men who like little boys. And who enjoys reading about first grade boys performing fellatio, other than older boys and men desiring boys? Sounds like child porn to me. Do we need this in schools?

Really, this administration is just a wiggling, squirming swarm of mischief and mayhem. You hardly know which rock to peek under next!

The most biased Climategate story I've heard

This morning driving to the coffee shop (and again on the way home) I heard a story on NPR by Richard Harris about "climategate." It was so appallingly biased I almost couldn't believe that even NPR, darling of the left, would put it on the air. "The deniers" who don't believe in AGW (man caused warming through CO2) were depicted as knuckle dragging, politically motivated morons who couldn't think their way through a kindergarten playground maze. I hope you all remember the next time we're asked for money through one of their boring, happy clappy, fund raisers.

Now the MSM is using the word "stolen" to describe the damning evidence that the so-called scientists e-mailed, distorted, and prevented from making it into daylight. When the story first came out on Nov. 20, they ignored it. When they realized it could be serious, they started with the word "hacked," you know, like Sarah Palin's e-mail was hacked--don't think they said it was "stolen." Actually, it's pretty clear this was the work of an inside "whistle blower," usually someone admired by the left, unless it's their team that gets the whistle and a penalty.

Harris never mentions the thousands of scientists who've been denied a voice, who have web sites, who've been sounding the alarm for years as they've been denied access to peer review journals, places at symposiums, or the lush government grants. He doesn't note the lost, destroyed, or paltry evidence for AGW. Money? Politics? He can only find the trail when it is coming from the other side, as though the thousands of bloggers and amateurs are being bought by big energy interests (who, by the way, are the same folks funding and supporting all the green angles).

And he's on his way to Copehagen. Wonder who's paying his way?

Dewey the library cat

Tonight our book club will be discussing Dewey; The small town library cat who touched the World by Vicki Myron and Bret Witter (Grand Central Publishing, 2008). It was my nomination back in May when we chose this year's books, so I am the discussion leader. And, if I must say so, I'm well qualified for this one, unlike when I did 1776 or Alexander Hamilton. I am a retired librarian, a former resident of two small towns in the midwest, and a current cat lover. In fact, my own cat is so intuitive, she's hardly left my lap since I began rereading Dewey in preparation for this event. I think she suspects competition. And she's right. She's a wonderful cat with her own personality and quirks, but she's no match for The Dewkster.

Everything you need to know about the basics of this book is on the front and back cover. The cat, the town, the world, Vicki, and the marketing blitz. I didn't do any internet searches to confirm my own ideas until after I read it. I didn't care for the book that much my first time through, but really enjoyed it while preparing for tonight. I originally read it in March when we were on our Holy Land Cruise and I was trying to fall asleep on the very rough seas--didn't work--so I only skimmed it. Asking an Iowa cat to compete with the Steps of Paul and the Pyramids is too much.

Those of you who've never worked in a library, particularly a public library, will probably skip over the library history and details--I loved it; if you've never lived in a small town you'll miss the places Vicki evens some old scores--I saw that immediately; if you haven't raised kids and been through that pulling away time when they are teens--that cuts like a knife--other parts may not be so meaningful; if you didn't grow up or live in the rural midwest, you may be puzzled that some people think flat acres of corn in deep black soil is as beautiful as the ocean or mountains. However, if you have a "companion animal" in your home, or remember one fondly from your childhood, you'll identify with all the Dewey stories which is only about one third of the book, the rest of it being about Vicki and Spencer, Iowa.

Dewey enters the library world on January 28, 1988 at about 6 weeks old, and died on November 29, 2006 and that's a very long life for a cat. But he lives on today in book tours and radio interviews with Vicki, a children's book that came out this fall, a young adult book not released yet, a sequel, and someone is working on the script for the movie, possibly with Meryl Streep playing Vicki. Dewey has made Vicki very rich and famous, and probably the target of jealously and envy back home. You go girl! You've done more to explain how the library world works than a hundred "how I did it good" articles in library journals.

Shoot the old people

No, not that way, says Zoanna. Remember to take more photos of those important family members. A penchant for pens. When I go back and look at old photos, I'm so aware that when you only had 27 or 36 photos to a roll, you used them sparingly, and then perhaps didn't develop them until months later. Zoanna thinks that computer hard drives may be 100:1 kids to older relatives. No babies here to take pictures of, but if I were guessing buildings to people. . . it would be about that.

Here's one of my favorites of the "old folks at home,"--my grandparents with their nine children in 1972 (no date, but that would have been their 60th wedding anniversary). I used this on a family cook-book cover in 1993. Four in this photo are still living, and I sent them Christmas cards today.

Sunday, December 06, 2009

Crimes against humanities

"The economic downturn is having a dramatic and deleterious effect on historical societies, libraries, museums and other cultural institutions around the country. A combination of plunging endowments, reduced grant and foundation support, and budget cuts on the federal, state and local levels has led to job losses, service cuts, and outright closures from coast to coast." There's more.

And with Democrats hunting down the "rich" to hound them at every turn--health "reform," cap and trade--destroying the people who create jobs, and inviting the unions to a job summit, we can expect even more institutions that depend on donations and charity to struggle, cut hours, or close.

Non-union teacher must pay union dues anyway

Darren over at Right on the Left Coast (that's California in case you didn't know) is not a member of a teacher's union, but to keep his teaching job he has to pay $1,000 as his "fair share" for the representation he doesn't want. Then he has to apply for a rebate to get back that portion of his non-dues that they spend on non-collective bargaining--i.e., political lobbying. 55% of his rebate comes from NEA--it spends over half of its dues influencing/supporting left wing politicians and 28.6% comes from CTA, and the rest from his local. What a screwed up system. Link. Many states have this "fair share" provision. I think Ohio is one of them, but don't know for sure.

Churches provide many benefits to the community; maybe non-members should be assessed for their non-participation and non-worship.

At the Freedom @ Work blog they suggest that Obama's job summit should have included more Right to Work laws:
    "For many years, U.S. Labor Department data have shown that states with Right to Work laws on the books have far faster private-sector job growth than states that do not protect employees from federal policies authorizing the termination of workers for refusal to pay dues or fees to an unwanted union.

    Between 1995 and 2005, private-sector jobs in Right to Work states increased by a net 20.2%. That’s a 79% greater increase than the relatively small increase in private-sector jobs experienced by non-Right to Work states over this period. Link.
But that would make too much sense. If he were interested in creating jobs instead of killing them, why did he invite the unions?

Sarah did the right thing: Dan Fagan

"Sarah Palin has within her power to bring about great change in our nation. She can do this by ushering in a Republican resurgence in Congress. . . and derail Mr. Obama’s runaway spending and his socialization of America."

"Did she make the right decision in quitting? Will she end up better serving her country on the road campaigning for others instead of being tied down to the Alaska governor’s job? Does the Republican Party have a better chance of taking back the house and senate with Palin on the campaign trail? Could Sarah Palin end up saving our republic because she quit as governor? You betcha!"

Read the whole article from Alaska Standard here.

Saturday, December 05, 2009

The Lakeside Christmas Party

It's tonight. Always fun to see our old friends. We meet at Wesley Lodge, enjoy a dinner, and usually sing carols or have a program or both. Many have already closed their cottages for the year, but we don't since ours is a "real" house with plaster walls, gas furnace, storm windows, etc. We bought it from the original owners who were year around residents. If the sun is out, our porch acts as "passive solar." I'm taking along the book "Dewey," the story of the Iowa library cat because I'm leading a discussion at book club on Monday and need to review, since I read it in March. This time around I'm looking at it much more closely and enjoying some of the stories even more, like Dewey's special relationship with a handicapped girl, Crystal.

I moved my winter coats from storage (a downstairs shower we never use) yesterday. It's time. I'm hoping to get a little walking in along the lake. It actually stays warmer longer there because of the lake--but boy is it a killer walk in February or March! This will be our first road test for our new van, purchased a week ago.

I was checking a weather blog yesterday and it looks like Ohio and the eastern U.S. will be having a fairly mild winter, but Illinois and Indiana, where we have so many relatives and friends will really be blasted. My "guest blogger" Murray has already gone to his Florida home--said it got cold very early in Illinois, or maybe he's just got old bones like the rest of us.

There's an excellent letter in today's Dispatch written by Kim Pickett on the importance of libraries in hard times and how they serve the community. If you get a chance, take a look. I think they only stay up a short time. Unfortunately, she weakens her good points with the last two paragraph by moralizing. Judges the one she says is being judgmental. And closes with some phony stats that were going around when unemployment was 4.5%. Could be wrong, but I'm guessing she's left of center. But other than that, she really knows her stuff.

Update from party: Big turn out!


Friday, December 04, 2009

Water not oil is priceless and scarce--biofuels won't save us

CABS, the Ohio State bus system, received a one star green fleet certification from the Ohio Green Fleets Program on August 13, 2009 for using B20 biodiesel in all its transit buses and para-transit vans. CABS began in September 2003 with its first soy B20 fueled bus and by June 2006, extended B20 to all its fleet of 27 transit buses on 6 different routes.

The Ohio Green Fleets Program is part of CleanFuels Ohio, a non-profit funded by the U.S. Department of Energy. CleanFuels Ohio. It was created with federal money in 2002--so this isn’t a recent development, it‘s a Bush Administration program. However, V. P. Joe Biden stopped by in August to announce that this Bush era alternative fuels program was receiving stimulus funding. The CAB accomplishments preceded that announcement.
    “the U.S. Department of Energy has awarded $11.04 million in economic stimulus funding to Clean Fuels Ohio's Ohio Advanced Transportation Partnership through the U.S. DOE Clean Cities Grant program. Funds will be used to support the deployment of 283 alternative fuel and advanced technology vehicles plus refueling infrastructure for 26 government and private sector partners throughout Ohio. Including matching support from local partners and additional industry supporters, the award embodies an investment of nearly $30 million in alternative fuel vehicle and infrastructure projects across the state.”
So now, while millions of people are struggling in third world countries for enough to eat, and the most valuable commodity we have is water, a major input for biofuels, we worsen the condition of millions by putting soy and corn products in our gas tanks. Doesn’t anyone remember the food riots of just two years ago? It doesn’t help the environment, and we knew even before Climategate that global warming isn’t caused by humans. I’m all for a clean environment and more efficient fuels, but you don’t have to read too far into the biofuel publications to see we’re going backward with expensive inputs, more water usage and waste water, and pollution.

How to stimulate the economy--NOT


"In January 2008, the United States economy employed 138.1 million people and the unemployment rate stood at 4.9%. But the powers in Washington thought deficit spending could boost a slowing economy, so Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) passed and President George Bush signed a $168 billion economic stimulus bill made up of temporary tax cuts and increased mortgage grantees for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

By January 2009 that economic stimulus worked so well that the U.S. economy had lost 3.5 million jobs and the unemployment rate stood at 7.6%. Again the powers in Washington thought deficit spending was the answer, so Speaker Nancy Pelosi and newly minted President Barack Obama dialed up $787 billion in temporary tax cuts and permanent spending increases. Ten months later, the U.S. economy has now shed another 3.59 million jobs and the unemployment rate stand at 10%."

And since none of that worked, they'll make a third stab at it. They're rejoicing that job loss fell--and yes, that's better than the alternative, but the unemployment rate fell from 10.2 to 10 percent in part because 98,000 workers left the labor force. The bigger problem is no job creation. What employers, when faced with the uncertainty and higher taxes that the health "reform" is promising ("tax" used 183 times) wants to call back workers or expand? The only places in the USA not hard hit are the suburbs of Washington--Virginia, Maryland, etc.--where workers are needed to fill the posts required to distribute your tax money and buy bottled water for congressional staffers. In Ohio most of the "recovery" money has gone to Democrat districts. So we'll just get more of the same ineffective, high cost nonsense.

[The Foundry and Morning Bell, Dec. 4, 2009]

Climategate--it's no joke

Rex Murphy of CBC on the pettiness and turf wars of the CRU. "Science has gone to bed with advocacy, and both have had a very good time. . . The stink of intellectual corruption is overpowering."



"CRU is not the universe of climate research, but it is the star. These emails demonstrate one thing beyond all else: that climate science and global warming advocacy have become so entwined, so meshed into a mutant creature, that separating alarmism from investigation, ideology from science, agenda from empirical study, is well nigh impossible. Climategate is evidence that the science has gone to bed with advocacy, and both have had a very good time: - that the neutrality, openness, and absolute disinterest that is the hallmark of all honest scientific endeavour has been abandoned to an atmosphere and a dynamic not superior to the partisan caterwauls of a sub-average Question Period.

Climate science has been shown to be - in part - a sub-branch of climate politics."