Archive for the ‘general’ Category

Don’t lose your Volkswagen key

Tuesday, May 26th, 2009

I have a teenage daughter who loses things. A couple of months ago, she lost my car keys while driving it to visit with friends. I had to go to the Toyota dealer and wait an hour while they made a new key for my car. My daughter also has mishaps with her car and it was scheduled to be dropped off at a body shop for significant body work today. However, my daughter flew to Tucson last weekend, where we have another house and where she recently finished her first year of college. She took the only key to her car with her. Now, her car sits in the driveway useless. I used to have an extra key for her car and kept it in my car for emergencies. She found it about six months ago and it hasn’t been seen since.

I called the VW dealer and asked if a key could be made from the VIN number since we (I) bought the car there. No, I was told. I would have to have the car towed to the dealer for a key to be made. I called Volkswagen of America and was told the same thing. It seems that a key has to be “matched” to the car and that can only be done at the dealer. Supposedly, this is for greater security but I cannot for the life of me understand why this is. A car is a car. I own it. I can prove that. Why, in an emergency, cannot a key be made for the car ? I don’t care if it is a temporary key.

What I need is the name of a good car thief. I suspect it would take him (or her) about 20 seconds to get the car started and ready to drive. There are other reasons why I will not buy another Volkswagen (I have bought four for kids) but this one caps the story.

The worst airline in the world

Friday, March 20th, 2009

Apologies to Keith Olbermann (Did I say that ?) but Michael Totten has a hilarious story about flying on Alitalia. If anybody wants to know what the health care system Obama will design is like, read this.

A fifty year-old Italian man in a fedora started screaming at both of them.

A man standing next to me chuckled.

“Do you understand what he’s saying?” I said.

“I’m from Argentina,” he said, “but I speak Italian. That man is cursing like you wouldn’t believe.”

Mr. Enraged was screaming like you wouldn’t believe – wild-eyed, nostril-flared, spittle-flecked screaming.
Listening to him and imagining which curse words he used he was entertaining, but mostly the guy came across like a belligerent jerk. The two Alitalia employees on the receiving end of his tirade weren’t responsible for our predicament. The baggage handlers were on strike, but the counter employees were still on the job.

Later, though, I realized that Mr. Enraged was just ahead of everyone else. The rest of us booked on the flight to Chicago would learn soon enough that a huge number of Alitalia’s employees absolutely deserved to be screamed at.

It’s a hilarious story as long as you didn’t have to live through it.

The cruise was about more than eating

Sunday, November 16th, 2008

My wife and I spent a week on the National Review post election cruise.

That is Half Moon Cay and the ship did offer a lot of eating. However, that wasn’t all we did. Cindy had a ball driving a jet ski around the island for an hour.

We went ashore and did sight seeing. This is Grand Turk Island, which got flattened by Hurricane Ike on September 7. There were repairs going on all over the island.

Then, of course, there were other people on the cruise.

The program was put on by National Review and two full days plus most evenings were filled with seminars. Guests included Mitt Romney and Fred Thompson plus a number of well known writers such as Bernard Lewis and Bing West. I read West’s book, The Strongest Tribe, which I think is the best book on Iraq thus far. I have read several of Bernard Lewis’s books and he has another currently available that is a primer on Islam. Additionally, there were National Review writers and other well known writers, such as Mark Steyn who is as colorful in person as in print and on the radio, and John O’Sullivan, a Margaret Thatcher intimate. O’Sullivan joined us even if his luggage didn’t, and his enthusiasm for Sarah Palin was reciprocated by the cruisers.

The theme was a review of the election and a discussion of where the GOP goes now. There were some very frank discussions and assessments of the Bush administration and the McCain-Palin campaign. The first day was mostly devoted to the election results and Fred Thompson was interviewed by Kathryn Lopez from NRO. Fred was a McCain supporter and is a likable and engaging speaker. He also has a gorgeous wife and cute kids. The afternoon session the first day was a discussion of the GOP future. I drew some conclusions that were not necessarily those of the panel. We need a better “ground game” and Brent Bozell addressed this but there should have been more talk about it. This pertains to reaching the young voters through avenues like “Facebook.” The discussion of a possible reimposition of the “Fairness Doctrine” by Obama should prompt a serious discussion of satellite radio and its role in the future of talk radio. I think Obama will appoint an FCC that will impose it since it will thrill his base and there is not much else he can offer them given current economic conditions.

There is a debate going on in the party that will continue for some time. This concerns health care and other policies that might appeal to part of the Obama coalition, such as Hispanics.

Scott Johnson, from Powerline, was also on the cruise and here is his take on what went on. I didn’t get a chance to meet him but he did contribute quite a bit on a couple of panels. More of his thoughts are here. Victor Davis Hanson was there and he has a nice assessment this morning of the Obama future.

The Monday afternoon session (After a tour of Grand Turk Island that had been flattened by Hurricane Ike in September) concerned external threats in the Middle East. Anne Bayefsky was the most pessimistic of the commenters, possibly because she is an expert on the UN.

Tuesday and Wednesday had day-long shore excursions (during one of which Cindy and I toured Morro Castle) with late night sessions by some of the speakers. Thursday was another all-day session as the ship was returning north to The Bahamas. The morning session was on “America’s Enemies” which began with an interview of Bernard Lewis by Jay Nordlinger. Professor Lewis does not look or sound 92 years old. The afternoon session was on the GOP future. The Friday afternoon session was an assessment of the Bush Administration and Deroy Murdock’s column above was previewed during the discussion.

We met some interesting people and listened to some interesting talk. Whether the Republican Party returns to power in any degree in 2010 will probably depend on outside influence far more than it depends on these ideas. However, the distant future will be determined by the long range concepts at meetings like this one.

One more outstanding guy we met is a Catholic priest from Michigan named Robert Sirico. His brother is a star on the TV series “The Sopranos.” He runs a free enterprise think tank named The Acton Institute, which is intended to teach the topic to Catholic clergy who have shifted far left politically in the past 50 years. Today, Michelle Malkin posts an excerpt from a speech given before the cruise but he gave some similar talks we attended. She includes his speech as part of a call to reverse the bailout.

The institution of government—what many view as the first resort of charity—is the very thing that unleashed and encouraged those vices of greed and avarice and reckless use of money that got us into the current financial imbroglio. It did so by first placing a policy priority on a worthy goal, increased home ownership, but pursued it with a fanaticism that neglected other goods such as prudence, personal responsibility and rational risk assessment.

Moreover, its official banking centers enjoyed subsidies which distorted that most sensitive of price signals—the price of money—to delude both investors and consumers into believing that capital existed to support vast and extravagant consumerism when in fact no such capital and savings existed.

It’s an obvious point but one the mainstream media appears intent on missing: The financial crisis did not occur within a free market, a market permitted to work within its own indigenous mechanism of risk and reward, overseen by a juridical framework marked by clarity, consistency and right judgment. Quite the contrary. The crisis occurred within a market deluged and deluded by interventionism.

Today we find institution after institution “in the tank” for unrestrained government intervention. One is reminded of Italian philosopher Antonio Gramsci’s call for the left to begin a long march through the institutions of Western Civilization. The left, it seems, got the memo. How will we respond to this disheartening situation? Now is no time to retreat in disarray. Now is no time to stumble. There remains a remnant … a potent remnant who has not bowed the knee to big government. My call to you tonight is a transparent one: strengthen the soldiers of that remnant. In particular—strengthen that band of brothers gathered with you tonight, the Acton Institute.

Liberal tolerance

Saturday, November 8th, 2008

As I was preparing to head east for my cruise, I read some accounts of the demonstrations at the Mormon temple in West Los Angeles. There was anger directed at the Mormon Church because it had contributed quite a lot of money to the Yes on 8 campaign. Apparently, Mormons are not the only ones gays are angry with.

It was like being at a klan rally except the klansmen were wearing Abercrombie polos and Birkenstocks. YOU NIGGER, one man shouted at men. If your people want to call me a FAGGOT, I will call you a nigger. Someone else said same thing to me on the next block near the temple…me and my friend were walking, he is also gay but Korean, and a young WeHo clone said after last night the niggers better not come to West Hollywood if they knew what was BEST for them.

This was directed at a gay black guy walking with “No on 8” buttons with his Korean boy friend.

Al Rantel is a gay conservative talk show host in LA. Periodically, he gets an angry letter from a left winger complaining about something he said on his show and the number of anti-gay comments (like calling him a “faggot”) are amusing. He reads the best of them on the air.

Of course, Hispanics also supported the gay marriage ban but I don’t see as much mention of them. The rest of us are coming in for our share of the “blame.”

There are so many other groups in the exit polling that voted for Prop 8 overwhelmingly (as in, more than 60%):

The elderly (65+)
Republicans
Conservatives
People who decided for whom to vote in October (but not within the week before the election)
People who were contacted by the McCain campaign
Protestants
Catholics
White Protestants
Those who attend church weekly
Married people
People with children under 18
Gun owners
Bush voters
Offshore drilling supporters
People who are afraid of a terrorist attack
People who thought their family finances were better now than 4 years ago
Supporters of the war against Iraq
People who didn’t care about the age of the candidates
Anti-choicers
People who are from the “Inland/Valley” region of California
McCain voters

Let’s see. How many apply to me ?

Anyway, it’s a nice lesson in the tolerance found in those of the left. Sort of like the nasty joke President-elect Obama made about Nancy Reagan at his first press conference.

Oh well, it’s early yet.

Michael Crichton has died

Wednesday, November 5th, 2008

I was a surgery resident when Andromeda Strain came out. Michael Crichton was a close friend of a fellow I knew from the Mass General Hospital when I was a medical student. Crichton had written the novel when a medical student and its enormous success (well deserved) sent him into writing instead of medicine. He is most famous for writing Jurassic Park, which became a hit movie. I might add, the movie scared the beejesus out of me when I saw it. His most recent work has been about global warming and a sensible approach, including a novel satirizing the GW alarmists.

His outstanding essay critiquing the AGW scare is here.

He will be missed. There will be plenty of time for post mortems on the election. This is more important.

Oddly enough, his web site with his speeches and books is suddenly unavailable.

Comment spam

Tuesday, July 29th, 2008

I am getting deluged with comment spam every day, sometimes 500 to 1,000 spam comments per day. The filter catches about 2/3 and puts them in moderation where I delete them. The spammers are smart enough to keep changing addresses so the filter does not keep up. I spend about an hour each day deleting messages and have come to the place where I will have to require registration to comment. If that doesn’t work, I will have to redesign the site. The Word Press support is very poor and they do not answer questions. There is no technical assistance telephone number. My hosting company, Blue Host, does do a good job with customer support so I will turn to them if I have to do more than turn on registration. We’ll see how this works and I’m sorry for the inconvenience. Not that many people comment anyway so one registration should do it.

Why I am an NRA Life Member

Sunday, July 13th, 2008

Take a look at this video and tell me the police can be trusted to protect us.

In the Rodney King riots in Los Angeles in 1992, Korean store owners stationed themselves on the roofs of their businesses with rifles to protect them. The seven-day waiting period for gun purchase kept many from obtaining protection. At least the LAPD did not confiscate weapons.

Who says there is no Palestinian industry ?

Sunday, June 15th, 2008

I have read accusations that the Palestinians have no homegrown economy except bomb building and UN handouts.

This is obviously not true and we have the video to prove it.

Enjoy.

Do something for somebody who needs it.

Thursday, June 5th, 2008

I just learned today about an organization that helps wounded service people at Walter Reed Army Medical Center. They have a wish list on Amazon.com for the electronic library of movies and TV shows. I just ordered some videos to send. Why don’t you do something, too ?

Amnesty tomorrow

Tuesday, May 20th, 2008

Senator Diane Feinstein has an amnesty bill that she sneaked through committee up for a vote tomorrow. What will McCain do ? Michelle Malkin is on the case but it will be a close call.

We’ll see what happens.

UPDATE: We won.