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-Signs, Portents, and the Weather-
This Biannual in Emergency Preparedness, Part 2
by swksvolFF

As a follow-up to last week's general home inspection and basic storm preparedness, this is again a running forum. It is my impression that many here at Rantburg have been, in some form or another, in a tight spot. There are no bad questions. Challenge or disagree, this is the time for a person to find out if the idea is sound or Good Idea Fairy pellets.

Emergency Escape from a Structure
We talked about last week. Again, it is up to you to assess and ass out of your own unique situation. I will bring up some general guidelines.

Two ways out of every room. There was good discussion about those of you who have multiple story houses about having an escape ladder. Remember, it is the smoke/fumes which will do a person in before the heat. The smoke itself will be hot in its own right. Stay as low as possible, even crawling, as the situation dictates. It could be your stairwell has turned into a chimney. In any structure, it could be an outlet fire right outside the bedroom door.

You have to assess occupant's ability vs. window. Physical fitness, physical height, mental ability. Bless us all, but if you have a young one who freaks out over spiders and has not practiced an escape then we have a problem. Infants, aged, physical and/or mental disabilities, even temporary illness must be considered. You must be honest, even if only to yourself.

The occupant must be able to unlock the window, remove any obstacles such as a screen, open the window by themself, and maneuver through. Do not guess this one, actually practice it. If occupant must escape via emergency ladder or other apparatus/technique, practice that as well as safely as possible. I know, "train to failure then beyond," but perhaps the first time a person is on a rope ladder unattached to the ground it should not be off of the side of your house.

Next choice is breaking the glass.

**stop for a second**
Let us take a look around first. Now, let's say it is night time and the power is out, you and whoever else is trapped are in the room for an escape. Do you have a flashlight? Did you shut the door? Did you block the gap(s) between the door and jam? Those actions will buy you time and not only keep you from stepping on Legos, that flashlight will help you find your way out and can signal for help (why having a dedicated flashlight for each bedroom is good for even just power outages). That window isn't opening when it has before...try the locks again, just because.

So, we are breaking the window then. If your plan is to give it the Peoples' Elbow you have surprises at a very bad time. I know someone who did it wrong and he ended up at the hospital and could have lost something. Obviously we do not want to end up looking like the losing entry at a BBQ, but try to avoid unnecessary injury - there is plenty going on already, right? Never mind if the next step is swaying down a ladder.

Here is a video, take a look and see what works and what does not. Remember, we are in our PJs in a dark room which is starting to smell like smoke and the smoke detector beeping is starting to cause a headache.

We will start here.

Obviously most of us do not have such a nifty tailor, and only the really cool kids have a fireman's pike in their bedroom (technically, what he has is not a pike, looks like a hammer of sorts).

There are various opinions on how to break a window, sometimes all are right, discuss.

He started in a top corner, go across, then down the sides along the sill. We want to go through this window so go across the bottom as well to knock out that glass.

He is off to the side - for some reason broken glass tries to get to a person, try to limit your exposure. Hey, this is the fun part. Go into a room and play MacGyver. All we are trying to do here is break the glass while limiting the chance of glass getting on us. Got a lamp? Dresser drawer? How about throwing a trophy and breaking the glass then using a clothes hanger to clean the edges? A glass punch is effective but again that takes us close to the glass so perhaps some good gloves as well. Talk it through, have fun with the kids - we are not trying to give them night terrors, and make sure they know not to practice breaking the window. Seriously, make sure they know not to practice breaking the window.

Now this only works for regular olde glass glass. If you have that triple pane stuff, or storm rated, whatever, read the manufacturer's instructions. There may be a certain corner which has to be hit first, and may require a dedicated, specialized tool. Make sure those windows open easily every time, otherwise you are waiting for a heavy power tool from the rescue truck, the time to deploy, then the actual work. That is a lot of weight on the wrong end of the balance.

Before exiting the window, place something over the bottom sill so you do not scrape yourself on any broken glass. A bed comforter is the best example, a rug would work, anything to protect yourself as best as possible.

Shelter in Place
OK, now we are officially having a bad day. Let's not make it worse.

I will leave it to a more poetic writer to describe what it is like in full SCBA performing search and rescue. We are hot, we are dumping adrenaline, it is noisy, and we have very limited visibility. For the kids: do NOT hide in the closet, do NOT hide under the bed, or worse in the bed under the covers.

Make sure you did not lock the door when you closed it - check for heat first, this is no time to throw hamburger on a hot skillet - use the back of the hand and try the door before testing the doorknob. Lay flat on the floor as close to the door as comfortably possible. If you think you hear the rescue team, this is a time it is ok to scream like a banshee. Be findable in case you freeze (perfectly understandable) or pass out (fumes from today's household are very dangerous). This is no time to lose it, it may be an endurance test. Panic and/or constant yelling will not only wear you out, you will inhale fumes at a higher rate. Perhaps you have a whistle in the ziplock baggie containing the emergency flashlight?

Y'all who make it outside to the rally spot, if someone is missing it is up to you to tell the responders somebody is in the house, where s/he/they might be, and how to get there. Do NOT go back into the structure, let the people with the equipment and heavy tools do their work.

The trick is to keep thinking. That is not necessarily the same thing as not panicking, bad things are happening. It doesn't necessarily mean go as fast as possible, that is how mistakes happen. You have to be efficient with your time and you will give yourself the best chance possible.

I'm not going to lie, I have a couple mental tricks I use when I feel my gears start to slip. Mine is mine, but it could be scripture, it could be spelling your name backwards, heck it could be trying to imagine what a frog fart sounds like - whatever works.

The best is practice. If you have that rhythm, that muscle memory. Practice can make up for a lot of shortcomings. Never give up. Have a plan, but be flexible. It is my experience things rarely go exactly as planned; make one of the few things to go right is everyone lives.

At this point the forum is open, especially for y'all in urban settings - I have no practical experience in apartment complexes etc. Thank You.

Link is to Fire Safety Source - Escape Ladders
Not an endorsement, but a good place to start.
Posted by: swksvolFF || 03/20/2016 00:00 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  For small kids/pets, they make harness/bag systems that you can use to lower them to the ground. The most important factor in this is that you are physically able to lower them all the way, not halfway and then drop them. They are especially useful in multistory apartment buildings but my wife and I are considering getting one for our two story house for the munchkin.

I hadn't thought much about breaking the window, since there's alot of furniture I could simply break to use but the wife would have trouble with that. Given I have 4 hammers, moving one upstairs to the munchkins room isn't a bad idea. We also plan on having a fire extinquisher in each bedroom.

Lots of good useful information in these discussions.
Posted by: Silentbrick || 03/20/2016 7:37 Comments || Top||

#2  A simple change in the weather - an otherwise dry climate suddenly receiving a lot of moisture and causing the sill to swell, or an ice storm - may make a window difficult to open.

Or, like I had to, on account of being in scorpion and black widow territory, in addition to brown recluses, an old window had to be sealed.

If I were a guest in my house, had to get out, and did not know that window is sealed, I have at least practiced 'what could I use?' Or at a hotel, office, restaurant, so forth.

Personally I think a hammer is a great choice. Someone without much strength can strike with the claw and break a window out, and the armpits, if you will, and other surfaces can be used to clear shards from the sill. Just want to make sure that we are off to the side and striking as high and to the edge as possible so chunks of glass are not falling on our hands/wrists/forearms/face.
Posted by: swksvolFF || 03/20/2016 12:40 Comments || Top||


Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Putin's long game has been revealed, and the omens are bad for Europe
[The Guardian] While European leaders believe they are edging towards a solution to the refugee crisis after securing a deal with Turkey, another power watches closely from afar: Russia.

A tweet from its foreign ministry spokeswoman said much this week. "The migration crisis has been caused by irresponsible attempts to spread western-type democracy to the Middle East," was the message from Maria Zakharova, hours before EU leaders were set to convene in Brussels. It didn’t just reflect Moscow’s well-known resistance to anything that smacks of western-driven regime change -- it was also meant as a rebuke.

Russia has been accused of "weaponising" the refugee crisis as a way of destabilising Europe -- a claim recently reinforced by Nato’s top commander in Europe. That assertion may well be disputed. What is beyond doubt is the continuing need to know what Russia is thinking, and what goals it might pursue as it watches the EU confront multiple crises.

To get a glimpse into Vladimir Putin’s mind, it's worth reading the recent writings of his foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov. In a long article published this month by the Moscow-based magazine Russia in Global Affairs-- translated here into English -- Lavrov spells it out with clarity. What Russia wants is nothing short of fundamental change: a formal, treaty-based say on Europe's political and security architecture. Until Russia gets that, goes the message, there will be no stability on the continent. The key sentence in the article is this: "During the last two centuries, any attempt to unite Europe without Russia and against it has inevitably led to grim tragedies."
Posted by: Besoeker || 03/20/2016 00:00 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  To get a glimpse into Vladimir Putin’s mind

You have to study history in general, and Russian history in particular. Of course, the study of history (including evolution) is #1 enemy of Transnational progressivism (or any other ism).
Posted by: g(r)omgoru || 03/20/2016 4:53 Comments || Top||

#2  Putin's long game has been revealed, and the omens are bad for Europe

Europe had two chances the last century and appears to have wasted them. The free American Military Insurance Policy has run out. They can take their virtue show with them to the new Dark Age.
Posted by: Procopius2k || 03/20/2016 9:08 Comments || Top||

#3  Delightful how closely this tracks season 4 of House of Cards. Pending election, close Republican race, weak SoS, Russian surrogates withdrawing, bombings in Turkey and advancing US boot strategy.

All scripted and played in 2014.
It's like I'm watching a rerun, again.
Posted by: Skidmark || 03/20/2016 19:22 Comments || Top||

#4  Europeans don't need Russia, they're doing a bang up job of destabilizing themselves.
Posted by: Abu Uluque || 03/20/2016 20:24 Comments || Top||

#5  See also GROONG > [Sputnik News] SARKOZY: "NO PLACE FOR TURKEY IN EUROPE [insensible], RUSSIA IS [now] MORE EUROPEAN".

Sarkozy argues that Turkey is great Muslim Nation + Civilization, only part it is geographically located in or near Eastern Europe, the rest is in Asia Minor.
Posted by: JosephMendiola || 03/20/2016 22:57 Comments || Top||


India-Pakistan
Attacks on journalists
[DAWN] ON Wednesday, the courts in Karak district, Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa
... formerly NWFP, still Terrorism Central...
, awarded life imprisonment and a fine of Rs5 million to one of the men accused of gunning down in cold blood journalist Ayub Khattak on Oct 11, 2013.

While grief cannot be assuaged, that the long wait for justice -- nearly two years in this case -- is finally over and the murderer is behind bars may bring much-needed closure to the family of Mr Khattak.

The circumstances of his death say much about the dangerous terrain journalists in this country must traverse in the pursuit of their duties.

Mr Khattak had been a news hound for the daily Karak Times and had published a story regarding drug smuggling and the sale of illicit substances in the area, as a result of which police action was initiated.

According to the counsel for the complainant, after delivering several death threats, the defendants intercepted Mr Khattak’s cycle of violence that day and shot him dead at point-blank range.

If the circumstances of the killing tell a story, so does that of the sentencing. That the trial took two years to wind through the justice system is regrettable enough.

But even more of an indictment is found in the fact that Mr Khattak’s case is only the third one in the country’s history where the killers of journalists have been identified, apprehended and convicted.

Since 2000, well over 100 journalists and media workers have been killed in Pakistain in the course of their duties. But trial and conviction has been achieved only in the cases of Daniel Pearl and Wali Khan Babar, and now in the case of Mr Khattak.

No wonder, then, that those who would harass and intimidate journalists -- be they criminals, gunnies or even elements within the state apparatus -- operate with brazen impunity.
Posted by: Fred || 03/20/2016 00:00 || Comments || Link || [6 views] Top|| File under: Govt of Pakistan


Pak-India peace process
[DAWN] THE imminent trip by a Pak investigation team to India is both necessary and history-making. The Pathankot air force base attack in early January was a grim episode that could have yet again derailed dialogue between Pakistain and India.

It goes to the credit of the governments of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Pak Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif
... served two non-consecutive terms as prime minister, heads the Pakistain Moslem League (Nawaz). Noted for his spectacular corruption, the 1998 Pak nuclear test, border war with India, and for being tossed by General Musharraf...
that the Pathankot attack did not cause the rupture that it could have and both governments have kept the channels of communication open.

Yet, nearly three months will have passed since the attack by the time the Pak investigation team arrives in India later this month.

In the meantime, the Comprehensive Bilateral Dialogue both countries so boldly agreed to late last year has all but stalled. It is time for that process to begin and, therefore, it is disappointing that a meeting on the sidelines of a Saarc summit in Nepal between Adviser on Foreign Affairs Sartaj PrunefaceAziz
...Adviser to Pak Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif on National Security and Foreign Affairs, who believes in good jihadis and bad jihadis as a matter of national policy...
and Indian Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj did not go far beyond talk of the Pathankot probe.

Resumption of dialogue -- or, technically, the start of the Comprehensive Bilateral Dialogue -- hinges on two things. In administrative terms, the foreign secretaries of India and Pakistain must meet to determine a schedule for meetings of the various dialogue sub-groups and determine how a first round of talks will move ahead.

So far, the two governments appear reluctant to announce a date for the foreign secretaries’ meeting, suggesting a link to progress on the Pak side of the Pathankot investigation.

In political terms, Mr Modi and Mr Sharif will need to invest their time and capital in dialogue -- both to ensure that it restarts and, subsequently, to nudge bureaucratic negotiations towards results. Thus far, both leaders have only demonstrated a willingness to take risks in meeting each other -- but not the willingness or confidence to actually move dialogue forward. That must change.

Necessary and welcome as prime ministerial interactions are, they must go beyond tentative ideas. When Mr Modi and Mr Sharif next meet, the emphasis must be on substance. Regional hopes for peace could soon turn to a familiar disillusionment if the two prime ministers reduce their meetings to desultory photo ops.

Perhaps what India needs to recognise is that dialogue should not hinge on any single issue, especially if that issue is a bad boy attack meant to derail dialogue.

Moreover, the terrorism threat in the region can only be combated by joint action by Pakistain and India -- and dialogue alone offers the opportunity to create a robust framework for joint action against militancy and terrorism.

Yet, Pakistain needs to acknowledge the centrality of terrorism to India’s concerns about its relationship with Pakistain. The recent sharing of intelligence with the Indian national security adviser by Pakistain was a positive step. Faster action on the Pathankot and Mumbai attacks would send a stronger signal yet.
Posted by: Fred || 03/20/2016 00:00 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under: Govt of Pakistan


Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Slicing and dicing the data: Who is committing the attacks?
This isn't a lone wolf intifada, it's a Hamas intifada

[Ynet] New study by terrorism expert claims that Israel is not dealing with individual attackers, but rather a coordinated effort led by Hamas, which is an expert in covering its tracks. The defense establishment, however, is still convinced this is an intifada of 'lone wolves.'
Long (3500 words) presentation of a number of different views on the thing, with lots of statistics including those published by Hamas.
Shin Bet: Several Palestinian terrorists had applied for Israeli residency

[IsraelTimes] Security service says recent West Bank transplants were behind a number of attacks, claims PA taking advantage of troubled Palestinians

Several Palestinians who carried out terror attacks had recently received — or were in the process of applying for — residency status in Israel, the Shin Bet security service said on Wednesday.

Under Israeli law, West Bank Palestinians who have family members in Israel can apply for residency status, in a process known as family reunification.

“The family reunification process, which is based in humanitarian concerns, allows Palestinians with relatives who are residents of Israel to enter [the country] without incident,” the Shin Bet said.

“But recently it has stood out that a number of terror attacks have been carried out by those who have received this status,” the service said in a statement.

Abd al-Malik Saleh abu Kharoub, one of the two terrorists who carried out a shooting attack in Jerusalem on Wednesday, had recently received residency status through this program and was living in Kafr Aqab at the time of the attack, the Shin Bet said.

Fouad Tamimi, who was shot as he carried out a drive-by shooting in East Jerusalem on March 8, which left two police officers seriously injured, had an application for residency status in a compartment of the motorcycle he was driving during the attack, the security service said.

At the time, he’d been illegally residing in the Issawiya neighborhood of East Jerusalem.

Another recurring trend among the attackers, which has only become more apparent with time, has been underlying psychological disorders and personal problems that may have led to these violent, terrorist activity, the Shin Bet said.
Call it suicide by IDF...
Fadwa Abu Tir, a 21-year-old mother of five who tried to carry out a stabbing attack against Border Police officers in the Old City of Jerusalem on Tuesday had been suffering from depression for years, the Shin Bet said.

A 14-year-old Palestinian girl went out to stab Israeli troops in January, reportedly after having an argument with her parents, in what many considered a case of suicide by cop.

Late last year, Halawa Alian, from Husan, shocked Israelis when she was caught on a CCTV camera calmly approaching a security guard at the nearby Beitar Illit settlement, only to suddenly take a knife out of her purse and attempt to stab him.

According to Husan residents, Alian had been arguing with her husband for months and had a difficult home life.

The Palestinian Authority and terror organizations, through “wild incitement,” have been “influencing these people with personal problems,” the Shin Bet said. And this had “pushed them to carry out acts of terror.”

In the nearly six months of the ongoing wave of Palestinian terrorism and violence, 29 Israelis and four foreign nationals have been killed. Nearly 190 Palestinians have also been killed, some two-thirds of them while attacking Israelis, and the rest during clashes with troops, according to the Israeli army.
Posted by: trailing wife || 03/20/2016 00:00 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  The Palestinian Authority and terror organizations

IMO, PA is the biggest terror organizations (bigger than ISIS) of them all.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru || 03/20/2016 4:57 Comments || Top||


Say hello to ‘Carlo,’ the cheap, lethal go-to gun for terrorists
[IsraelTimes]
BLUF:
Carlo submachine guns are locally made out of repurposed materials, based as much on American mail order designs from the 1970s and '80s as Carl Gustav's original design. Most are smooth bore, so low accuracy and short distance, and relatively inexpensive (smoothbore $796-2500 vs. rifled $2500-3800). This compares to a real American M-16, which can cost upward of $15,000 in the West Bank.

But, Ynet points out, while the guns are locally made, the bullets are stolen.
Posted by: trailing wife || 03/20/2016 00:00 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  the bullets are stolen

Bullets can work without a cartridge?
Posted by: g(r)omgoru || 03/20/2016 4:58 Comments || Top||

#2  It sounds like the answer is probably no, g(r)omgoru. But the Ynet article uses ammunition once, and thereafter says bullets.
Posted by: trailing wife || 03/20/2016 8:46 Comments || Top||

#3  I'm very upset.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru || 03/20/2016 9:44 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Culture Wars
Body Mass Index - maybe not so good
You've just returned from your morning run and you're rustling through your snail mail when you receive some shocking news: Your health insurance premium is increasing by 30 percent. You've been deemed a health risk and are being charged accordingly.
Well, some of us have knees that would not permit a morning run.
Yet you're the picture of health: A run is part of your daily routine, you passed your last physical with flying colors, and kale is your favorite food.
If kale is your fav, you should pay more.
This must be some sort of mistake. But you read the fine print to discover that your employer has decided that the most accurate measure of your health is your body mass index, or BMI, which is derived by a formula that compares your weight to your height.

Even though you're a paragon of health, at 5-2 and 164 pounds, your BMI places you within a range considered "obese." So your insurance company and your employer have determined that you are no longer among the "healthy."

This may sound Orwellian, but the federal government is working to make it common.
We're from the Government and we're working to make Orwell a prophet!
Recently proposed rules by the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission would set clear guidelines for employers to use metrics like BMI to charge higher-BMI employees more for their health insurance. The apparent goal of these rules is to get higher-BMI employees to reduce their weight, a standpoint based on the assumption that such individuals must uniformly face poor health. Our research, however, suggests that this assumption is flawed and these rules will not accomplish this goal. In fact, the proposed rules could yield the opposite results.
Whaaaa? Unintended consequences? More studies! More grants!
BMI is a problematic metric. It was invented more than 200 years ago by a Belgian mathematician named Quetelet, who based it on what he called the "average" human: a white male in Europe in the early 1800s. BMI also gets human biology wrong; it fails to distinguish between bone, muscle or fat. You've probably heard about athletes, including the starting lineup of the Super Bowl-winning Denver Broncos, being "obese" by BMI standards, even though they're very obviously in great shape. National Public Radio called the BMI formula "mathematical snake oil!"
And if you can't trust NPR, who would you trust?
Our next challenge was to come up with an ironclad definition of "healthy." For our analysis to have credibility, we had to have a definition that would be difficult to attack on scientific grounds. We dove into the research literature to look for different definitions and found quite a few. We chose the definition that set the highest bar for health and used six different metrics including blood pressure, blood sugar and cholesterol. These index the health of a person's heart and blood vessels, risk for diabetes and inflammation.

After crunching the numbers, the results were stunning. BMI did not map onto the real markers of health. Some 34.4 million of the 70 million-plus Americans categorized as "overweight" by BMI were perfectly healthy. That's 47 percent. The chances of BMI being a good predictor were not much better than flipping a coin. And 29 percent of Americans rated "obese" under BMI were healthy as well.

Those numbers mean that more than 54 million healthy Americans would be unfairly penalized under the EEOC rules.
Or taxed. Subsidizing some other group. But I suspect the common progressive base groups are overweight and unhealthy. Maybe this is a plan to trim the welfare roles?
Our analysis uncovered another pitfall of BMI: 21 million individuals in the "normal" BMI range ‐ those who would be considered perfectly healthy by employers and insurance companies ‐ were actually unhealthy according to the criteria. These are people who would likely have higher health costs but who would skate by without added penalties under the new EEOC rules. More alarming, the fallacious assumption that "normal" BMI individuals are healthy could mean they wouldn't get preventive care or that important diagnoses could be delayed or missed altogether.
I wonder if 85% of those are "non-progressive"? Nah, the progs aren't that smart!
Clearly, BMI needs to go. We hope our analysis is the final nail in the coffin for this flawed measure.

The obsession with BMI is really a symptom of a larger issue: a national infatuation with weight that not only affects how people in power define health, but also perpetuates an entrenched stigma against heavier people.
People in power are part of the problem? This from a California university study?
We've run many studies in our labs showing that this weight stigma gives rise to situations that make it hard for people to be healthy. We've shown, for example, that experiencing weight stigma makes individuals eat more high-calorie snack foods and feel less confident in their ability to maintain a healthy diet. These are things that are bad for you no matter what you weigh.
Hey, cool! It's not my fault! For a second, I thought I was personally responsible!
We've also found that people who experience weight stigma have higher levels of the stress hormone cortisol. That's a problem because cortisol increases a person's drive to eat unhealthy foods, and sends a signal to the body to start storing visceral fat. That's a type of fat that sticks to your organs and won't necessarily make your body bigger, meaning it flies under the radar of BMI. It's also the type of fat that increases your risk for diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
So how do get a pill to lower cortisol?
Our cultural obsession with weight has led us to misguidedly prioritize numbers on the scale over important modifiable health behaviors ‐ eating, exercise and sleep. Beyond leading us astray from health, this obsession perpetuates the stigma attached to heavier bodies, which is itself an impediment to health.

The evidence is clear: It's well past time to forget about weight, both as a marker of a person's health and as a marker of a person's standing in society.

The authors are an assistant professor of psychology at UCLA and a doctoral candidate of psychology at UC Santa Barbara..
Posted by: Bobby || 03/20/2016 11:47 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Trying to shove 100 percent of the population into a check box evaluation isn't going to work except for those checking the box.
Posted by: Procopius2k || 03/20/2016 12:25 Comments || Top||

#2  The speech writers consider their work as poetry, also making Douglas Adams a prophet.
Posted by: swksvolFF || 03/20/2016 13:44 Comments || Top||

#3  Here is the deal: I will pay 30 percent more but if I live another thirty years I want all my premiums back with interest.
Posted by: Airandee || 03/20/2016 13:55 Comments || Top||

#4  Minorities are Morbidly Obese more often. I'm guessing they won't have to pay the increase. Tax-payers will have to subsidize them
Posted by: Frank G || 03/20/2016 17:37 Comments || Top||

#5  Not weight. Pooling of vague-Ized physiological detail by commercial operators acting as NGO surrogates is the danger. Mixing BMI as a cardiac indicator with insurer actuary tables and age thresholds gives employers in 'right-to-work' states a license to RIF without the apparent liability of a age filtered cost containment purge.
Posted by: Skidmark || 03/20/2016 19:08 Comments || Top||

#6  Funny inline though.
Posted by: Skidmark || 03/20/2016 19:09 Comments || Top||


Government
Suburbanites should stop considering Baltimoreans the ‘other folks’
[WASHINGTONPOST] A city of a thousand headlines. The race battles, police brutality and streets with empty storefronts and boarded-up houses paint a picture of Baltimore that isn’t as shining as its tourism website tells you.
The Inner Harbor's a tourist destination. Three or four blocks away you'll be relieved of any money you've got in about five minutes. You might be killed in minute six.
But what happens when even other Marylanders won’t back up the city?
Why should we?
I live about 15 miles outside Baltimore in the suburbs of Harford County.
My ZIP code used to break out to Baltimore. I'm just south of the city limits.
When riots began after the arrest and death of Freddie Gray last spring, all school-sponsored trips to Baltimore City were suspended. The ban was lifted after the riots and protests subsided, but it was reinstated in January after what Harford County deemed "threats to safety." Baltimore officials were frustrated for obvious reasons.
"Hey! There ain't no more money comin' in!"
"Harford County Public Schools is doing an enormous disservice to its students and families with this bizarre policy," Del. Brooke E. Lierman (D-Baltimore) said.
My daughter-in-law's restaurant burned last year. Junkies had cleaned out anything salvageable literally before the ashes had fully cooled. She lives about four blocks away, in a "nice" neighborhood. She can't leave anything out on her porch because the junkies will steal it. I don't know how many times her house has been broken into while she's been away. That sort of thing might have something to do with the "bizarre" policy.
Howard Libit, a front man for Baltimore Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake (D), said, "We are afraid the lesson being taught to the children of Harford County is to fear the city, and that is disappointing."
There's a reason y'gotta drive to the county for the pharmacy.
The policy indeed promoted a sense that the city was too unsafe or unfit for the dear children of Harford County to visit.
Visit, maybe. Don't spend much time there. Don't leave the Inner Harbor or Little Italy.
Not only did the obvious race distinctions come to mind,
... to people who get published in the Washington Post. I don't know if she got published in the Baltimore Sun (Light for All is its motto). Nobody reads it anymore.
but so did the idea that Harford County was "above" Baltimore City.
In the sense that Lancaster, Pennsylvania, is "above" someplace in Lesotho.
If a group of kids from the suburbs isn’t allowed to go to the aquarium because of safety issues, why is nothing being said about the students who have to walk those same streets to get to school?
Lots is said about them. Reams of paper have been generated about them. Billions and probably trillions of bytes have been generated. The populace keeps voting the same set of crooks into office, based on political party.
Every politician pleads that we come together, hand in hand,
People have ceased caring about them.
but if the local government can’t stand by trips to the Maryland Science Center, are we ever going to get anywhere as a nation?
We can get anywhere we want as a nation. Baltimire City continues to stew in its self-pitying juices. Ptui.
After I reached out to the Harford County school board,
She called and bitched and probably threatened to sue them.
the policy on field trip bans was reversed. I was overjoyed that members changed their position because of opposition from both communities, but I was still troubled by the county executive’s comment on the lifting of the ban: "It affords our students a great opportunity not only to see those institutions but also the learning aspect of seeing how other folks live." Can we really join together as a state if neighbors describe neighbors as "other folks"?
The neighbors have trash-strewn streets and open narcotics trafficking. Every time I drive to a VA appointment I have to run a gauntlet of beggars. Same street corners, starting with the one directly in front of Ravens Stadium, each block up Martin Luther King Boulevard. Bring the kiddies to see.
Maybe what I’m about to say sounds like something straight out of a Bernie Sanders
...The only openly Socialist member of the U.S. Senate. Sanders was Representative-for-Life from Vermont until moving to the Senate for the rest of his life in 2006, assuming the seat vacated by Jim Jeffords...
promo, but as a white, middle-class high school student from the suburbs, I am disturbed that they are separating me and "other folks."
Go live with the "other folks" for a week or two. Pick a "nice" neighborhood.
This isn’t just a small tiff among local governments; it’s a piece of a much larger issue facing the United States. There is a great divide among rural and urban communities. But we can’t begin to fix what ails Baltimore until we see ourselves as one.
Baltimire used to be a nice city. Nobody's gonna fix it but the city administration, and so far it's made it worse.
Posted by: Fred || 03/20/2016 00:00 || Comments || Link || [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  The solution seems to be from the Left's perspective is to move people from the city to nice neighborhoods. To enjoy the ambiance and become good neighbors and so on. They were privileged anyway. They didn't earn that. Share the wealth. Women and children less the men. This is what was proposed by a nut in our neighborhood(Montgomery Co.). Even had raw sewage dumped in their yard. They didn't last long. They couldn't convert anyone to their ideas.
Posted by: Dale || 03/20/2016 10:20 Comments || Top||

#2  The idea used to be proposed regularly, back when I used to read the Baltiore Sun. Moving them to Gilford, they'd pick up the habits of the rick folks and then become rich themselves.

There was even a proposal to resettle some of them on Gibson Island, which is an island off the coast with a gate and a privately-owned bridge in Chesapeake Bay where you can buy a fixer-upper for about a million five if you can find one.

That was about the time I stopped taking The Sun, so I don't know what they're proposing lately. Forcing CVS to build a store on every block, maybe.
Posted by: Fred || 03/20/2016 14:29 Comments || Top||

#3  Baltimore Wildlife: "We need prey...bring money. Raycisssts"
Posted by: Frank G || 03/20/2016 16:51 Comments || Top||

#4  They didn't do Harford County for The Wire*, did they?

*btw - one of the best series on inner democrat city crime I've ever seen
Posted by: Frank G || 03/20/2016 17:05 Comments || Top||

#5  The writer is a UNICEF Voices of Youth blogger and American Society of News Editors national teen adviser at Patterson Mill High School.

A self-hating "community organizer" who, when she gets raped and mugged, will blame her White Privilege™
Posted by: Frank G || 03/20/2016 17:35 Comments || Top||

#6  The Baltimorians adopt the ghetto gangsta culture including dressing different, speaking different and acting different than the normal folks and now they're pissed their otherness is driving people away. They actively threaten the community they are angry with. Cause, meet Effect.
Posted by: Hellfish || 03/20/2016 22:53 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Culture Wars
This Week in Books - March 20, 2016
Neptune's Inferno
The U.S. Navy at Guadalcanal

James D. Hornfischer
Bantom Books, 2010

The third book of Mr. Hornfischer's pacific trilogy is nestled chronologically between Ship of Ghosts and The Last Stand of the Tin Can Sailors.

Mr. Hornfischer wastes no time getting into the story, and in doing so, asks the reader to have at the least a passing knowledge of events leading to this encounter. Although Mr. Hornfischer covers topics concerning land battles, his focus is upon the notable and conflict changing naval engagements.

Mr. Hornfischer's work is at times both condensed and personal. The research is thorough, the stories documented and well referenced, and it includes many photographs (in the hard bound copy). The instances blend into each other so seamlessly I would humbly suggest this is his best work, not to take away from the drama of Ship of Ghosts or the well written Last Stand of the Tin Can Sailors.

Mr. Hornfischer does not fail to set the stage: (Page 37)(Lack of proper formatting/accents is my error; spelling, especially Japanese, I triple checked.)

Named Port-de-France on its annexation by France in 1854, Noumea featured a spacious inner harbor in Dumbea Bay. It was slow to develop. Nearly a century later, it had but a single large pier, and the marine railway serving it could handle only small vessels. Its yard could not repair damage such as Japanese battleships were likely to inflict. Arriving ships sometimes found no harbor pilots to guide them in, which was unfortunate seeing as the channels into Great Roads, the outer harbor, passed through a treacherous barrier reef ten miles to seaward and old French mines were known to be about. The progress of the world seemed to leave Noumea behind. The energies of even the most vigorous empires seemed to fade in the fronded South Pacific.

American logisticians came to see that their cargoes would have reached Guadalcanal faster if they were routed through the more capacious facilities in Auckland, more than a thousand miles farther south. Noumea's principal value lay in its potential. Its location would be the foundation of everything that would follow. If it was located too far south to serve as a staging and support area for operations in the Central Pacific, but not far enough to the rear to be an arsenal secure against all enemy threats, American military surveyors found it was the best place in Oceania from which to manage Operations Pestilence and Watchtower. Reasonably close to both New Zealand and the east coast of Australia, it was a natural way station for flights originating in the eastern Pacific. The island was large enough for several armies to garrison there. Great Roads, well sheltered by reefs, could accommodate almost every U.S. warship in the Pacific.

As Mr. Hornfischer notes, this is an interesting time for sailing, as it sits after the age of wind and before, what we now know and they did not, the age of nuclear power. Fuel had become a priority even over water and food. Logistics was now critically important, making this theatre important to both the Allied Forces and the Japanese; perhaps even most important to the Australian/New Zealand peoples.

Mr. Hornfischer is fair to all involved, which makes this good book even better. Even for someone familiar with events, Mr. Hornfischer writes in a manner which cloaks the outcome we know as history, and those who were present only knew as 'what next?'.

This is not a book for the young or timid; it gets to the bone. (Page 71)

On the Astoria, Keithel P. Anthony, a water tender, was racing through the machine shop, aiming to reach the ladder that descended to the number three fire room, when a powerful kinetic force seized the whole bulkhead in front of him and swung into his path. He was standing there perplexed, his way blocked, when a lieutenant named Thompson found him and said, "There are men in the forward mess hall who need help. Will you go with me?" Anthony assented and, strapping a gas mask over the top of this head, was preparing to venture forward when another explosion bedazzled him. "The lights went out and there were millions of sparks everywhere - like electrocution. I was knocked out and don't know how long I laid there on the deck. When I came to, there wasn't a soul moving in the compartment."

When Anthony saw Lieutenant Thompson again, he was dead, "blown clear through a wire mesh and his body wrapped around the main steam stack." His left arm and leg useless, bleeding and in severe pain, Anthony entered the machine shop and found bodies two-men deep. He wondered how he had survived, and soon found that is was only because he had somehow managed to snap the chinstrap of his gas mask that he would live with the curse of being a sole survivor. Poisonous gases killed everyone else. Anthony pulled himself through an escape hatch to the main deck by the starboard side galley. "I sat there and listened to hits coming in from left and right overhead. Everything was burning."

Mr. Hornfischer is not writing a gruesome novel, he is setting the precedent that these occurrences happen every time a ship is hit, and it leads to a quite rapid exchange of events which allows the reader to imagine, if so chosen, the ordeal of the individual sailor. Mr. Hornfischer remains attentive to the larger theatre. (Page 264)

By midmorning on November 12, three hundred miles north of Guadalcanal, Abe arrayed his force into battle formation. The light cruiser Nagara led the two battleships, with destroyers arrayed like shields off each bow. By 4 p.m., cruising at eighteen knots, they were within two hundred miles of the island. Abe's flagship, the Hiei, catapulted a floatplane to explore the sound ahead. As dusk fell, Abe's force pressed ahead into a heavy bank of storm clouds. Then the rain began. Hara, commander of destroyer Amatsukaze, would write, "In all the years of my career, I never experienced such a rain. It was completely enervating." One of Captain Hara's ensigns said he would rather fight the Americans than the rain. For a time, the storm drifted south with the task force, concealing it from snooping eyes. Abe dismissed the concerns voiced by his staff that poor visibility would make stationkeeping difficult and risk the integrity of his formation. Abe had confidence in Rear Admiral Susumu Kimura, flying his flag in Destroyer Squadron 10's lead ship, Nagara. He was reputed to be one of the Imperial Navy's top navigators. Abe's vindication came when the floatplane pilot reported more than a dozen enemy warships off Lunga Point - Callaghan's force. If the rains cooperated, the Japanese force might avoid detection altogether. "This blessed squall is moving at the same speed and on the same course we are," Abe said. "If heaven continues to side with us like this, we may not even have to do business with them."

If you have a knowledge of Ironbottom Sound, this book will add to your knowledge; if you do not, it is an excellent detail. (Page 387-388)

These newcomers to the Ironbottom Sound surface striking force, most of them reassigned from carrier escort duty, were a bit like replacement troops going to the front lines from rear-area antiaircraft battalions. They wore the same uniforms and wielded the same weapons, but they weren't wise in the bitter discipline of close combat. None of the four cruisers had had any part in the four surface actions fought in Savo Sound to this point. It could not be said, either, that they were commanded by the officer best equipped to prepare them for that new type of fight. The only surface force flag officer alive who had fought and beaten the Japanese Navy, Willis Lee, was back in port with his squadron, tending to the Washington at Noumea. Though both were veteran cruiser commanders, neither Kinkaid nor Wright had fought a night action before, nor executed a tactical plan as they were now designing.

They departed Espiritu Santo's Segond Channel anchorage at 11:30 p.m. on November 29, following a van composed of the destroyers Fletcher, Drayton, Maury, and Perkins. When they reached the eastern entrance to Lengo Channel at nine forty the next night, Wright's task force encountered some friendly transports. Augmenting his tag team, Halsey ordered two of their escorts, the Lamson and Lardner, to fall in astern the Northampton. And so another pickup squad with fresh leadership and big ideas headed north toward its destiny.

I have very little to add to the conclusion; the book stands on its own. If you are familiar with Stephen Ambrose, I set this work right next to D-Day.

As a parallel topic for y'all gamers, the board game Axis and Allies: Guadalcanal is a decent pick-up. Having an actual knowledge of events adds deeply to what is, in my opinion, a fairly well done historical board game.

Link is to Amazon's Neptune's Inferno.
Posted by: swksvolFF || 03/20/2016 00:00 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:



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Two weeks of WOT
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Thu 2016-03-17
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Wed 2016-03-16
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Tue 2016-03-15
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Mon 2016-03-14
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Sun 2016-03-13
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Sat 2016-03-12
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Fri 2016-03-11
  US strikes IS group chemical weapons capabilities: Pentagon
Thu 2016-03-10
  Afghan woman kills 25 Taliban rebels to avenge her son's murder
Wed 2016-03-09
  Infighting among Taliban leaders leave 26 dead in Herat province
Tue 2016-03-08
  Drone strike kills 15 Daesh militants in Nangarhar
Mon 2016-03-07
  Hassan al-Turabi, Sudan's Islamist idealogue, dies at 84
Sun 2016-03-06
  Saudi Says it will Take Arms Bound for Lebanon
Sat 2016-03-05
  Taliban says will not take part in Afghan peace talks


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