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#21
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On Sun, 08 Aug 2004 08:55:34 -0600, Newps wrote:
Peter Gottlieb wrote: "Newps" wrote in message ... Terrorists won this battle. American lifestyle now sucks. Maybe yours does, mine gets better every year. Is that because as you get older you get more blind and deaf? Nope, it's because my lifestyle gets better and better. Wellll... Let's see. I do have more money now than I had 45 years ago. *Maybe* more spendable even being retired. But: 45 years ago I didn't have any concern about government regulations altering my life style, or at least very few. I didn't have politicians screwing with my retirement. American products were considered high quality, planned obsolescence not withstanding. Most of the world considered us the good guys. My folks taught me to judge people on what they did, not who they were or what they looked like and to always give the benefit of the doubt even if it cost me a bit. I didn't have any concerns about regulations limiting where I could go. I could walk out to transient parking at Detroit Metro without an escort. I just opened a door and walked out. Now I need an escort to get back to my own plane at class C and D airports. I didn't have to worry about someone trying to take my guns away and I could purchase *almost* anything I could afford. I could even purchase a fully functional Thompson, although the license was too steep for me. "Guns & Ammo" even had an article where they purchased a 20mm cannon, converted it to a bolt action and went "plinking" with HE ammo. I didn't have to be concerned about Broad Band over Power lines (BPL) trashing the frequencies on which I operate my ham station. Admittedly my Receiver weighed 75#, My transmitter 95# and the power amp was 113# while today I have a 100 Watt transceiver that has a spectrum display built in and it only weighs about 15# and there are units small enough to backpack. I didn't have to worry about dependence on foreign oil even if the three carbs on my Pontiac sounded like they were trying to suck the hood through them, or driving a Chevy convertible with dual 4s where the speedometer and gas gage raced to see which got to the peg first. Actually the Pontiac got around 18 MPG if you didn't open the front and back carbs. OTOH my cousin's Chevy convertible (the one above) got about 8 MPH on a good day... a very good day, going down hill with a very strong tail wind. I smoked two packs a day, didn't know they were bad for me, and felt great. I could eat a stack of pancakes coated with real butter and *soaked* in real maple syrup ( I used the pancakes to hold the butter and syrup together) , 4 eggs, 4 slices of toast, and two cups of coffee for breakfast, eat a big lunch, and have a dinner/supper big enough to sink a small boat and never put on a pound. I had good blood pressure and didn't know what cholesterol was. Now I exercise, eat right, live a healthy life style, and I have to watch my cholesterol and blood pressure. When I was 16 I could walk into the hardware store to purchase a case of dynamite, caps, and fuse (and did quite often). I did the dynamiting for the neighboring farmers. Can you imagine a 16 year old kid pulling up on a Hog, filling the saddle bags with dynamite and taking off today? I had a full driver's license at age 14, not a farm permit. I had my own car at 16 even if it was 12 years old. Of course a car with 50,000 to 60,000 miles was pretty well "run out" back then. Dawn Patrols and "The Flying Farmers" fly-ins would cover the airports with small planes. Now a good fly-in breakfast is a 100 to 200 airplanes. Actually 200 is a rarity around here. They were building *more* airports. At just under $3 per hour I made more than almost any of the guys I went to high school with. I had a full head of bright red hair. Now I have a fringe around the edges and have more hair growing out of my ears than on my head. Back then I had 20/10 vision in both eyes. Now I wear bi-focals. Now days a cheap, economy car will cost about twice what my first home cost and it was a nice home. (I'm not counting the divorce - I came out ahead) My second marriage has lasted far longer than the first (20 years next month) Course the first one seemed a lot longer and this one has seemed like only a few years. As the old saying goes; Time goes faster when you're having fun:-)) So, yes, in some ways my lifestyle gets better and better. I'm lazy, retired, and don't have to work, But in many areas I have far more restrictions, and have lost precious freedoms. Many countries and groups are jealous of the freedoms we still have, let alone what we had and they work actively to reduce our freedoms to their levels under many guises. Yes, there are many things I can no longer do and it's not due to my age, but there is one thing they can never take away. As he was leaving this world my dad told me he was proud of me. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com |
#22
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"Jay Honeck" wrote in message news:fKXRc.277186$Oq2.192945@attbi_s52... How about the creation of the Department of Homeland Security, which costs how many millions of our taxdollars? A stupid waste of taxpayers money, almost on the same level as President Johnson's "Great Society" experiment. But, hey, we're getting a Rain Forest built in Iowa City, at the federal gubmint's expense, too. Which one is dumber? Both are dumb, but the first of the three is related to what they are constitutionally charged with doing. |
#23
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"Jay Honeck" wrote in message news:ZjXRc.277044$Oq2.63017@attbi_s52... The government has intertwined itself into so many parts of our lives, thanks to the liberal agenda for the past 40 years -- that we will never regain the freedoms we once enjoyed. Perhaps you would enjoy rule by the Taliban instead. Would that be conservative enough for you? Are you so fooled by the "conservative" groups to believe they don't want to get into our lives at least as much as the "liberal" ones? Can you not see that the titles are there to fool us, that it is the power itself that corrupts? |
#24
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On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 04:35:34 GMT, Larry Dighera
wrote: On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 03:16:34 GMT, "Jay Honeck" wrote in m6XRc.276981$Oq2.266297@attbi_s52:: I now check with Flight Service for TFRs -- but I always called them for a flight briefing before each flight anyway. Well, almost always: http://groups.google.com/groups?hl=e...faabc6e&rnum=1 Shucks, that don't always do it either. I had a flight brienfing, (CAVU) with flight following. It was a beautiful clear day. I hit turbulence so strong south of Toledo the Deb stalled in level flight at Va. It only existed for maybe 5 to 10 miles and then it was smooth again. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com |
#25
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On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 04:22:20 GMT, "Peter Gottlieb"
wrote: "Jay Honeck" wrote in message news:tJWRc.276896$Oq2.265338@attbi_s52... Personally, I had no clue why anyone chose to work or live in New York before 9/11. A lot of people live in big cities and a lot of them wouldn't live anywhere else. If you really cannot understand why they feel that way then you will not understand their attitudes about gun laws and other social issues (independently of who is more "right" or "wrong"). You are right. I can understand why some one would want to live in a city, but I've nver been able to follow their attitudes about social issues and gun laws. To me their reasoning defies stastics and logic. OTOH I've never been able to understand how society can ignore nearly 50,000 deaths a year on the highway. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com |
#26
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Way off topic at this point, but it's late and I can't resist...
"Roger Halstead" wrote in message ... [...] OTOH I've never been able to understand how society can ignore nearly 50,000 deaths a year on the highway. The same way society ignores the enormous financial cost from automobile accidents (fatal and non-fatal). We could spend a much smaller amount of money on better driving training and enforcement, but Americans would rather just go around sending their cars to body shops or buying new ones, spending money on medical insurance, and waiting for their turn at the courtroom lottery. The same thing is true for many other areas of American life. People would rather waste great huge gobs of money than to start paying better attention and start taking responsibility for their own actions. The Wars on Drugs and Terrorism are similarly examples of wastes of money; they remind me of dilatant fluids, in that the more force one applies, the less one gets done. We'd be much better off with less expensive, more subtle approaches. Even when the economy is going well, but especially when it's in the doldrums, I am disgusted by the amount of economic waste this country tolerates and even encourages. Of course, some might argue that the economy actually *benefits* from all this waste, by creating "churn". I'm no economist, so I won't try to argue for or against that point. I do think it's trivially obvious that it's better in the long run to conserve money. Anyway, whatever point I had, I'm sure it's in there somewhere. I agree it's ridiculous how we ignore the deaths on the highway, but there's a fundamental problem with the average person's thinking (if you can call it that) that will always prevent us from fixing that, along with a number of other problems. One of the costs of having a truly equal society is that even the dumb people get to vote. And there are a lot more dumb people than smart people. Pete |
#27
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On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 07:31:08 GMT, Roger Halstead
wrote in :: On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 04:35:34 GMT, Larry Dighera wrote: On Tue, 10 Aug 2004 03:16:34 GMT, "Jay Honeck" wrote in m6XRc.276981$Oq2.266297@attbi_s52:: I now check with Flight Service for TFRs -- but I always called them for a flight briefing before each flight anyway. Well, almost always: http://groups.google.com/groups?hl=e...faabc6e&rnum=1 Shucks, that don't always do it either. I had a flight brienfing, (CAVU) with flight following. It was a beautiful clear day. I hit turbulence so strong south of Toledo the Deb stalled in level flight at Va. It only existed for maybe 5 to 10 miles and then it was smooth again. As Mr. Honeck stated: "Turns out that they [Cedar Rapids Approach Control] are getting PIREPs from pilots all over, reporting moderate to severe turbulence up to 6000 feet, and beyond." It's pretty clear, that had Mr. Honeck availed himself of all the available information as mandated by regulation, he would have been issued a PIREP for turbulence. And his absolute statement in this thread concerning obtaining a FSS flight briefing before departing conflicts what he wrote in that message thread. |
#28
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"Jay Honeck" wrote in message
news:fKXRc.277186$Oq2.192945@attbi_s52... But, hey, we're getting a Rain Forest built in Iowa City, at the federal gubmint's expense, too. I was thinking of this the other day. I was listenning to the local radio here in Newbury (Kick FM 105.6) and an advert came on for a rain forest.... http://www.livingrainforest.org/ I never knew this existed! Paul |
#29
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#30
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"Jens Krueger" wrote in message .. Closure of the, what, 10 airports in the DC ADIZ? The Seattle TFRs? How about the TSA and all that comes with that? No airports have closed. DCA is effectively closed to GA. VKX, CGS, and W32 are only open after stringent scrutiny of the pilots and closed to transients (although businesses at these fields are failing or moving). The only official closure of ain ADIZ airport was 1W2 which has been scheduled for demolition for several years now. There are 49 active airports in the ADIZ (of which 23 are public use). Getting in or out of these requires extensive delays for no reason. |
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