Entitlement

In case you’ve been off planet today and haven’t seen Today’s Mitt Romney video, take a minute and watch it.

 

Mitt Romney is speaking about 47% of Americans who he thinks believe that they are entitled to a handout from the government.

However, Mitt Romney is the one who really believes that he is entitled to a handout, a huge discount on his investment income and tax loopholes. What could Romney have done himself to have actually earned his half-a-billion dollar net worth? Did he create something of value to the world? No, he just figured a smart way to move money from some people’s livelihood to other people’s pockets, and keep big chunk for himself.

When I was in business I got to know some folks who made a lot of money, not on Romney’s scale, but millions. They felt a sense of entitlement, not because of what they could do, but because of their position. They felt this not only about themselves, but about people like themselves. They simply felt that they deserved big salaries, bonuses, first class everything and perks, even while they were laying off workers because profits were not high enough. I don’t think that these are evil people, but the saying that “power corrupts” is true. One has to rationalize the essential unfairness of the system, and that is most easily done by believing in ones’ own entitlement.

Romney is a face on a spreadsheet. I have nothing against spreadsheets and scientific management; however, I have a problem with there is one spreadsheet for the privileged and one for the working guy.

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Charter Communications: monumental stupidity

It is not illegal for Charter Communications to telemarket its existing customers who are on the National Do Not Call Registry, but to do so is monumentally stupid. People put their names on the Registry for a reason – they don’t want telemarketing calls.

I have a policy: If I am not your customer and you telemarket me, I will never be your customer, ever. Calling someone on the Do Not Call registry who is not your customer is a crime, and I don’t do business with criminal enterprises. If I am your customer and you telemarket me, you get one warning. If you call me again, I’m no longer your customer because calling me is an invasion of my privacy and my only legal protection is to make myself no longer your customer. Also, if you are in my state, I will file a complaint with the state Consumer Affairs agency who handles complaints under state law. I will also likely write nasty letters to lots of people in the management of your company complaining about how stupid you are.

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Mitt v Mitt video

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Romney’s Michael Dukakis moment

Dukakis:

image

Romney:

image

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Radio anticipation

I ordered a Tecsun R9702 radio a week or so ago and I’m anxiously awaiting its delivery. I have over 100 radios, most of them shortwave models, but none has a particular feature set that I’m interested in:

  • Dual conversion
  • Analog tuning
  • Digital frequency readout

Why these features? Dual conversion usually means improved selectivity (rejection of adjacent stations) and freedom from images (stations appearing where they don’t belong). Digital readout lets one precisely tune the radio and know the exact frequency of a found station. Analog tuning is just something I like, continuously variable and not in discrete steps.

It seems that higher-end radios have dual conversion and digital frequency readout, but synthesized digital tuning (like the Tecsun PL-660). Less expensive radios like the Grundig G1100 have analog tuning and digital readout, but are not dual conversion. Some older models have dual conversion and analog tuning, but no digital frequency display.

Finally, after quite a bit of searching I came upon the Tecsun R9702 that has all three. I had to consult several sources to verify the radio met my criteria. The R9702 I ordered has (based on product photos) Chinese labeling; however, a manual in English is on the Internet. It’s a pretty simple radio anyway with just 10 buttons: 4 for selecting the band, 4 setting the time and alarm, the display light button and the off-on button. Add volume control and tuning knobs.

Based on the specifications, this radio should do well on AM, but not world class on FM and Shortwave. Its shortwave sensitivity is 30 µV compared to 20 µV on the Tecsun PL-660 and their DSP models. FM sensitivity is particularly weak at 10 µV compared to 3 µV on my good FM radios. I have plenty of FM radios, so that’s not an issue for me.

I’ve had fairly good luck with Tecsun radios except one DR-920 where the internal earphone switch went bad leaving the speaker inoperable.

The radio finally arrived and I’ll share some first impressions.

It comes with plush carry bag, a manual in Chinese, ear buds and a clip-on external antenna. Mine is the black model. The screened labels on the radio are in Chinese, but the molded labels (Volume, Tuning, DC 3v) are in English as is the simple LCD display.

IMG_0457

My first impression was that the radio was a bare-bones model of less than the best quality. I based that primarily on the time set buttons that were flimsy and slightly crooked. The tuning knob is very stiff and the push buttons in general were stiff, hard to press and made a clacking noise. The dial light, illuminating from one side, was weak and uneven.

Cosmetics and ergonomics aside, the radio performed well on all bands. I’ll do more side-by-side tests, but it held up well against my Tecsun PL-380 DSP radio. One downside is that the frequency display is only 4 digits, so you cannot resolve an odd-numbered shortwave frequency, such as 11.975. Another annoyance is that the radio always turns on set to the FM band, no matter where it was set when the radio was turned off, so if you were listening to AM, the next time you turn on the radio you may be greeted to the hiss of an unused FM channel. Drift is a significant problem — I had to retune the radio every few minutes.

On a positive note, the internal speaker sounded crisper than the Tecsun PL380.

Model Tecsun R9702
Frequency coverage (numbers are the published ones. My radio tunes outside these values.) FM 87 – 108 MHz
AM 525 – 1610 KHz
SW1 5.95 – 9.90 MHz
SW2 11.6 – 17.9 MHz
FM Stereo No
Memories n/a
Sensitivity FM 10 μV
AM 1 mV/m
SW 30 μV
Selectivity >= 20 dB
SSB No
Technology Analog Dual Conversion
Battery 2 AA
External DC 3v Center (-)
External antenna jack No
Tuning Analog
Tuning step Continuous
Display Digital
Volume Analog
Signal strength indicator No
Whip antenna length 19”
Local/Distance switch No
Bandwidth switch Yes
Tone control No
Dial light Yes
Clock Time, Alarm
On/off Button
Control lock No
Stereo/mono switch No
Attached battery door No
Size 117 x 77 x 30 mm
Weight without batteries 180 g
Carrying Wrist strap
Accessories included Ear buds, external antenna, pouch
Price (including shipping) $33.39 from DinoDirect
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Lindsey Graham and Immigration

I got an email from my senator, Lindsey Graham, this morning. He said:

I believe it is breathtaking – and possibly illegal – that President Obama would simply say ‘Stop Enforcing the Law.’ He’s going around Congress and the American people in avoiding the hard work of fixing a broken immigration system which is fractured along numerous fronts.

The real moving parts of immigration were left unaddressed. How do we effectively secure our border?  How do we create an employment verification system? How do we reform our visa system to get the workers we need into the high-tech and agricultural communities?  Instead of leading, President Obama chose politics.

Well Senator, you know damn well that no one is going to accomplish anything on immigration as long as the Republicans in Congress play the petulant child, plant their feet and shout “NO,” no matter what it is. Obama did (and 60% of Americans thought it was a good thing) what he could until Congress gets over its tantrum.

And while we’re on the subject of enforcing the law, how about the Senate obeying the Constitution and “advising and consenting” on judicial appointments? I think you folks should refund your salaries to the taxpayers, since you’re not doing your job. You do know that 77% of Americans disapprove of Congress?

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Is Mitt Romney a Christian?

I think all American Presidents have either been Christians or perhaps non-religious freethinkers. John Kennedy broke the “no Catholics” barrier and Richard Nixon was a Quaker.

It’s almost a done deal that Mitt Romney will be the Republican nominee in 2012, and I don’t think we ever had a Mormon in that spot before. There was a major firestorm over Barack Obama (who is a Christian) by detractors trying to paint him as a Muslim. While Democrats in the main are not religious fundamentalists, I still expect to see Romney’s religion on the table, perhaps more from Christian conservatives who hold that marriage is a union of “one man and one woman,” while Romney’s grandfather was a polygamist (Mormons call it “plural marriage”). Obama detractors did everything they could to make him appear strange and “other” and you can imagine what will be directed against the up-until-now little-known Mormons.

Continue reading

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