Insanity in America
Feb. 18th, 2010 06:35 pmIt's a rampant disease that seems to strike primarily among the far right. Following the example of Timothy McVeigh, another lunatic has attacked a building in Texas. He did it by flying his private plane into the building kamikazi style, apparently because IRS offices were located there. *shakes head* Teabaggers are loonies. Too bad his name wasn't Muhammad or something so the right could blame him as an "Islamic terrorist."
Gasoline prices are once again behaving irrationally in this area. After a couple of months of wild fluctuations and absurd differences of as much as 21 cents/gallon between neighboring towns, today they are all the same. Literally, down to the last tenth of a cent. In order for this to happen, Harvard prices had to come down by 6 cents during the week, while Marengo prices went up by 12. There is no way to explain this by market or futures fluctuation, because those go only one way at a time. I suspect the price was fixed by mandate from the oil companies somehow.
Weather here was so warm today that puddles were forming on top of the old snow. This included puddles in front of Dutch doors on the barn where the horses go in and out. Sure enough, the water was drawn up between the bottom door and the sill where it froze, making it very difficult to open those to let the boys in this evening. I expect the same problem in the morning letting them out.
We are not, however, having the kind of flooding we had two years ago. That was fueled by record snow accumulations that melted all at once. This has been a repeated thaw and freeze that is ruining road surfaces but leaves our land relatively dry.
Found myself doing art memes on DA. Huh. I haven't done that sort of thing since... jeez... high school I think. Hope I'm not regressing already.
Gasoline prices are once again behaving irrationally in this area. After a couple of months of wild fluctuations and absurd differences of as much as 21 cents/gallon between neighboring towns, today they are all the same. Literally, down to the last tenth of a cent. In order for this to happen, Harvard prices had to come down by 6 cents during the week, while Marengo prices went up by 12. There is no way to explain this by market or futures fluctuation, because those go only one way at a time. I suspect the price was fixed by mandate from the oil companies somehow.
Weather here was so warm today that puddles were forming on top of the old snow. This included puddles in front of Dutch doors on the barn where the horses go in and out. Sure enough, the water was drawn up between the bottom door and the sill where it froze, making it very difficult to open those to let the boys in this evening. I expect the same problem in the morning letting them out.
We are not, however, having the kind of flooding we had two years ago. That was fueled by record snow accumulations that melted all at once. This has been a repeated thaw and freeze that is ruining road surfaces but leaves our land relatively dry.
Found myself doing art memes on DA. Huh. I haven't done that sort of thing since... jeez... high school I think. Hope I'm not regressing already.
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Date: 2010-02-19 02:33 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-02-19 02:51 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-02-19 04:13 am (UTC)And denying that he was a Teabagger, when he left behind a manifesto right along those lines - well what else can they do but go into denial about that too. :-P
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Date: 2010-02-19 07:13 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-02-19 11:02 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-02-19 11:04 am (UTC)I've got a friend who wants to try figuring out his heritage, since he believes he's got some native American ancestors. Unfortunately, he has no idea where to start, so I promised I'd ask you if you could give a few quick pointers. I remember you were digging for your own roots at some point (and you probably still are).
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Date: 2010-02-19 04:21 pm (UTC)"Numerous" = one
...but then Bush hasn't been that popular with Republicans for at least a couple of years now. You don't get a 29% approval rating without bipartisan dislike.
Joe Stack did the "founding fathers" bit, and the "no taxation without representation" bit. His problems with the IRS go much farther back than either Bush or Obama, or even Bush Sr., but I'm sure he wouldn't stand out from the rest of the teabaggers if he was with them.
no subject
Date: 2010-02-19 04:38 pm (UTC)The Clean Air Act and related laws create a patchwork where two gas stations a few miles apart can be required to sell different mixtures of gasoline because of local pollution. It has been pointed out several times that simply forcing every jurisdiction to use what is considered the "cleanest" mix, even though producing that mix is more expensive, would lower prices overall because refineries would be making 20 different mixes, and distributors wouldn't have to keep track of which goes where.
I have absolutely no idea if that factors into the two towns you monitor, but it might.
Another is that different jurisdictions can have different "pollution taxes." That's not what they're usually called (I believe in our state it's called a "Waste Disposal Tax"), but different business activities are charged different rates depending on the hazardousness of substances they store and sell. It's possible that if those towns are in different counties, that one county charges a higher rate, for instance.
Again, I have no idea if that's the case.
Finally, there is the tried-and-true "what the market will bear" and there is plenty of evidence that most consumers don't spent much time or effort going out of their way to find a lower price. Just because you are willing to check the price at a place a few miles away doesn't mean that most folks will break out of their usual driving routine if it takes them by one station and not the other.
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Date: 2010-02-19 05:04 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-02-19 05:07 pm (UTC)This guy was bitching and moaning about having to pay taxes, yet he had enough money to fly a private airplane? I'm lucky I can buy insurance and gasoline for an automobile, and I don't feel I have a right to complain about federal taxes. It's the local taxing bodies who are wasting incredible amounts of money. And guess what? In my county they are 100% Republican.
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Date: 2010-02-19 05:09 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-02-19 05:11 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-02-19 05:20 pm (UTC)However, doing any genealogy starts out the same. You must go backward starting with your own parents. You can't work in the other direction.
Some starting resources are listed here:
http://www.harvard-diggins.org/drtest/node/3
I would recommend getting a beginner's book such as Genealogy Basics Online or The Online Genealogy Handbook and working right through it. There's a lot to learn and understand.
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Date: 2010-02-19 05:22 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-02-19 05:27 pm (UTC)Actually, as of this morning, Harvard prices have risen by ten cents from yesterday, so they are once again significantly higher than Marengo.
This is a rural area, with no extra clean air or other pollution rules beyond the statewide ones that apply to everyone.
My guess is that yesterday the Harvard stations finally realized that they were losing business by setting their prices so high, and having heard that Marengo was at $2.44 while they were at $2.63 they gave in and split the difference. At the same time, Marengo stations found that their supply price had risen and they raised their prices. Now this morning Harvard stations also reflect a supply price increase by jumping their own prices back up ten cents.
In essence, after watching this for months, I conclude that Harvard's stations, several of which are owned by one person, are just plain greedy and charging the highest price they can get away with. They are first to increase their price and last to lower it. I suspect too that the independent station in Harvard is subject to threats and arm-twisting if he doesn't keep his price within a few pennies of the others.
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Date: 2010-02-19 05:33 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-02-19 06:11 pm (UTC)Of course this won't make us safer. A few years ago there was a case of a teenager who after learning on Microsoft's Flight Simulator, stole an airplane for a joyride. I suppose you could immediately machine gun airplanes that engage in unauthorised engine starts or something, but terrorists would just find other targets.
*This alone would decimate large segments of general aviation. Gliders in particular are not only VFR flying, they're also extremely weather dependent, and even the best forecasts aren't accurate enough three days out.
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Date: 2010-02-19 06:21 pm (UTC)Surely all three of the planes on 9/11 had flight plans too, and I'm sure none of them said "Crash into XYZ building at approximately 10 am" or anything of the sort. Yet the events still happened. Once you're in the air, who knows whether you're following your flight plan?
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Date: 2010-02-19 07:06 pm (UTC)Of course you could eliminate Visual Flight Rules, but we've already covered that miserable option.
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Date: 2010-02-19 07:33 pm (UTC)So this guy must have been in controlled space, though. Surely there's a city airport there and close enough that he should have been seen on radar and/or in contact with someone. So even that didn't keep him from what he did.
I don't see any way to "security" this sort of thing away so it can't happen. Instead we have to fix our broken culture that continues to encourage people who think his way and even idolize them as "mavericks" (like Sarah Palin... ewww.)
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Date: 2010-02-19 08:14 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-02-19 08:28 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-02-19 08:50 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-02-19 08:54 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-02-27 07:19 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-02-28 01:07 pm (UTC)