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Movie Quotes – Day 143

 Look son, being a good shot, being quick with a pistol, that don’t do no harm, but it don’t mean much next to being cool-headed. A man who will keep his head and not get rattled under fire, like as not, he’ll kill ya. It ain’t so easy to shoot a man anyhow, especially if the son-of-a-bitch is shootin’ back at you.  — Unforgiven

I read on one of the EMS blogs once that a paramedic does not run, he mosies.  It is amazing how more effective someone is when they take the time to think before acting, even in an emergency.  Also, when you seem to be cool and calm, that feeling will spread to others.  Even if you get rattled, a moment to find that inner silence will steady your hand, slow your thoughts, and improve your chances.

A Modest Proposal

I’m sure that most of you are aware of the ongoing scandal centered around the Veteran’s Administration healthcare system.  Allegations that VA staff have faked records to hide long waits for care, waits so long that some veterans have died while waiting to be seen, are coming from all corners of the system.  Veterans, from World War II to Afghanistan, are suffering, and it is a national shame.

VA Secretary Shinseki seems to be unable to deal with the problem, and the dispatching of a couple of White House flunkies to ‘investigate’ the issue isn’t going to cut it.  Something radical has to happen, and here’s my idea.

Currently, the VA is a cabinet level agency, run mostly by civilian bureaucrats.  Accountability, indeed the sense of honor that an organization entrusted with the care of those who have earned it with their blood requires, has been watered down and seems to have disappeared.  That has to change.

I propose the formation of a Joint Veteran’s Services Command, composed of military officers and NCO’s from all of the uniformed services.  This new command would be a major command under the Department of Defense, like the Joint Special Operations Command.  All current VA facilities and responsibilities should be moved under this new organization, but not all of the personnel.

The civilian management and ‘leadership’ of the current VA would be pretty much flushed out like the waste that it is.  They can be paid off and shown the door, or they can be thoroughly investigated and then shown the door, whichever is quicker.  They would be replaced with military leadership, from NCO’s and junior officers providing supervision in clinics and offices, to a general officer heading up the new organization.  The actual medical providers, case managers, and such could still be civilian employees, but their leadership, and therefore their direction, would come from military servicemembers.  Let today’s soldiers, sailors, airmen, and Marines make sure that our veterans get the care they deserve.  I would love to be a fly on the wall when a VA case manager near Fort Bragg tries to give a World War II or Vietnam veteran the runaround when her supervisor is a paratrooper who fought in Afghanistan.

Would it be perfect?  Absolutely not.  Anyone who’s worn a uniform knows that military bureaucracies can be as infuriating and inefficient as those in the civilian world.   The difference here, from my point of view, would be that military leadership of VA facilities would have a dog in the fight and they would know that they will be held accountable for failure.  Someday, they will leave the service and become veterans, and they will want the facilities and services they will need to be top-notch.  Additionally, a servicemember who is derelict in her duty can be relieved for cause, or even prosecuted, a much different situation than we find with the unionized federal civilians who are neglecting our veterans today.

Doing this might not solve all the problems, but it would be an improvement.

Movie Quotes – Day 142


Dorothy:Now which way do we go?
Scarecrow: Pardon me, this way is a very nice way.
Dorothy: Who said that?
[Toto barks at scarecrow]

Dorothy: Don’t be silly, Toto. Scarecrows don’t talk.
Scarecrow: [points other way]  It’s pleasant down that way, too.
Dorothy: That’s funny. Wasn’t he pointing the other way?
Scarecrow: [points both ways] Of course, some people do go both ways.

The Wizard of Oz

Well, primary season is over here in Kentucky, and my candidate lost.  The Republican incumbent, who has been in office since I was in junior high, will be facing off against a Democrat female scion of a Kentucky political tradition.  A pox upon both of them.

Of course, now that the Republican establishment, backed by an unexpected primary endorsement * by the National Rifle Association, has gotten their guy through the primary, a lot of the people who opposed Mitch McConnell in the primary are getting back in line like good little voter blocks.  I’ve heard the phrase “Support the conservative in the primary, support the Republican in the general” bandied about a few times.

That’s not me.  I’ve come to the decision that it’s preferable to vote principle rather than party.  My principles are smaller government, civil rights, and a strong belief that government service should not be a career.  Mitch McConnell doesn’t fit with some of those principles, and Alison Lundergan Grimes doesn’t fit with others, so I don’t see myself voting for either of them.

So, I’m doing the electoral equivalent of taking my ball and going home.  I’m looking at third parties and independents.  If I can’t find someone I prefer to the two major party candidates, I’m going to either omit that race on my ballot or write in Barry Goldwater.  If you’re in Kentucky, I suggest you do the same.

Voting for party over principle is for Socialists, Communists, and Nazis.  If you share my principles, regardless of your party affiliation, please vote for your principles.  We need those more than we need the parties.  Just ask yourself, which is worse: a politician who is openly hostile to your principles, or one that smiles to your face while he sells those principles out?

 

*Imagine my surprise upon receiving a flyer in the mail from the NRA last week announcing the endorsement.  I was under the impression that the NRA stays out of primary politics.  I guess I was misinformed, and I know I was disappointed.

Blogs Roundup

 

  • Jay has found something that warms my cold, dead, nerd heart.  It’s also what I want for Father’s Day.
  • Jay also had a great day at the range, doing something that all fathers should.
  • BRM has been put out four books in a year, and is getting decent sales.  Congratulations to him!  Just goes to show that hard work pays off.
  • NFO issues all of us a first class ticket on the feels train.  All aboard!
  • Heroditus Huxley is having the same issue I have always had with buying clothes for a young girl:  how to avoid the prostitot look.
  • Nate Hale gives us the best rundown on the debacle that is Veteran’s Affairs and it’s current manager, Eric Shinseki.
  • LTColP over at OpFor gives an AAR for the shotgun class he attended recently, with some good tips and advice from Tom Givens.
  • The FireArm Blog has the straight skinny on Remington moving production of several of its product lines to Alabama.
  • Massad Ayoob verbalizes what I love about small-town America, whether it be in the South, North, East, or West:  community.
  • BRM points us to one of the bright spots of my youth.

Movie Quotes – Day 141

We don’t even care whether or not we care. – The NeverEnding Story

Apathy is the most dangerous thing I’ve ever run into.  When people quit complaining, you know you’re in trouble.  Someone I know does marriage counseling, and she always says that the time to let it go is when one or both of them quit caring.

That’s why I believe there is still hope for our Republic.  We bicker constantly.  We trumpet our competing opinions and viewpoints from the rooftops.  Taking to the streets is still a viable way to get your point across, and some of the top programs on television are still based on politics.

Still, I don’t look forward to the day when all but a few are willing to look away from spectacle in order to try to maintain and improve our country.  Here’s hoping I never see it.

Movie Quotes – Day 140

 Let me tell you something, Toula. The man is the head, but the woman is the neck. And she can turn the head any way she wants.  — My Big Fat Greek Wedding

Next summer, Irish Woman and I are going to pack up the kids and the dogs, along with enough stuff to bury a small elephant, and wend our way to the Florida Panhandle for a week of sun, sand, and mosquitoes.  Thankfully, we are taking two vehicles so that we’re not joined at the hip for the entire week, because even though I love her with all my heart and soul, 10 days in close proximity will drive us to either divorce or criminal court.  Maybe both.

Now, a controversy has arisen over the accoutrements of the house we will be renting.  I, being a simple man, wish for nothing more than a nice house on the beach, with a veranda, a coffee maker, and a big, comfortable bed.  She, on the other hand, wants all those things, except she wants a pool to go with them.  You see, in her logic it would be nice to have a place to go swimming when it gets too hot to go to the beach and for the kids to have somewhere to hang out and have fun while the adults do something, well, adult oriented.  I’m imagining long romantic walks on the beach without a 7 year old and two teenagers, or a candlelight dinner on a dock somewhere, or whatever.  My hope is that she has the same ideas, and this doesn’t mean going to look at antiques.

Now, at first, I resisted this idea.  Driving almost two days and not being able to walk out the back door and hit sand seemed like less than what I wanted.  Why have a pool when you have the entire Gulf of Mexico to swim in.  But, through logical discussion and rational argument, we decided to compromise and get a house, just off the beach, with a pool.

The point of this story is that her happiness and desires are more important to me than my own.  She has softened the blow a bit by acquiescing to my latest ideas when it comes to hobby-related purchases, so it’s not a one way street.  It is a mighty power that I have given her, and it is one that she has never abused.

Gentlemen, the quicker you accept that the best you can do is fight them to a draw, which is a Pyrrhic victory if I ever saw one, the sooner you can find joy in married life.

The Analogy of the Gilded Turd

Let’s say there’s an institution in your town that does quite a bit of good, but gets most of its publicity from the spectacles it puts on for the public.  It just so happens that one day the organization discovers that the place in which they hold these spectacles has been turned, as if by magic, into a humongous pile of fecal matter.  The local news media fall over themselves to demonstrate how dried out and smelly the thing is, and the person in charge of putting on the spectacles, which are really the only reason that anyone outside of your area knows about the organization, threatens to find employment elsewhere unless that turd is replaced with something better.

So, after much hemming and hawing, not to mention shouting and gnashing of teeth, a new palace of spectacles is built.  It’s wonderful.  In fact, it is literally made of gold.  From the sub-basement to the highest peak of the roof, it’s a beautiful sight to behold.

Of course, it cost hundreds of millions of dollars to build, most of which is being paid for with your taxes.  And you’re also on the hook to pay, again with your tax revenue, for a lot of the cost of running it and keeping the palace looking good.  But hey, they’re putting on not only the old type of spectacles, but also circuses, concerts, and lots of other fun things, so maybe the place will pay for itself.  Possibly.  After a few years. Maybe.

So one day you take your family down to see a show at the palace of spectacles, and it is indeed gorgeous.  But during a bathroom break, you notice a few cracks in the golden floor.  Looking down one of the cracks, you notice that the glitter of gold only extends down a few inches.  Asking the nearest attendant about it, you learn that it’s only gold plated, because nobody cares about anything but how wonderful the place looks.  You inquire as to what lays beneath the gold, and after much umming and awwing and shuffling of feet, she admits that under the gilding, it’s a big pile of feces, just like the last place.

Down the road, the other big palace of spectacles in the state has lost a lot of its golden covering, and the feces are really starting to shine through.  Imagine your surprise when you find out that the estimate for taxpayer funding to apply a new coat of gold paint, because who in their right mind is going to pay for gold plating these days, is $80 million.  Being the forward thinking person you are, you look at the local palace of spectacles, and estimate that you’re probably going to be on the hook for at least that much in a couple of decades when its gilding starts to rub off and the stench gets too powerful.

So there you are, a taxpayer, on the hook for hundreds of millions of dollars in bonds for constructing your local gilded turd, and looking at hundreds of millions more over the next couple of decades to keep the shine on it, as well as the one just down the road.  But, hey, they put on such great spectacles!

At some point, people in Kentucky, if not the rest of the country, need to stop polishing and gilding turds so that professional sports organizations don’t have to pay for their own minor leagues.  Public  universities were established so that the children of a state could get a good education without having to go to the Ivy League for it, not so that grown men and women could bounce a rubber ball up and down a court or try to knock each other down while fighting over a vaguely egg-shaped ball.  We can’t afford this anymore here in Kentucky, and I wouldn’t be surprised if the rest of the country isn’t in the same shape.

My solution to the problem?  Quit using taxpayer money to fund any sports at the collegiate level.  Force the sundry athletic programs to be self-funded or get sponsorship from private entities such as alumni organizations or local corporations.  That funding should include the costs of the facilities they utilize, especially the opulent stadiums and practice facilities.  If they can’t do that, close them down, sell the stadiums to the highest bidder, and quit throwing good money after bad.

But, DB, you say, we just built the KFC Yum! Center.  Tearing it down or selling it would be a waste of all those hundreds of millions of dollars you were just complaining about.  I’d agree that doing so would be a tremendous waste, but that money’s a sunk cost, and it’s probably already been wasted, so what’s the point of continuing to pay to operate and keep up the stadium?  And don’t forget, in 20 years, we’re going to be faced with the blackmail of “If you don’t refurbish the Yum! Center, I’m going to quit and take my best players with me!”, which is how we got where we are in the first place.  At least, so far, the legislature has had the sense to not commit us to paying to refurbish Rupp Arena in Lexington, but I have little faith that they will stick to their guns in the long run.

Kentuckians need to stop giving into the blackmail, call the bluffs of the athletes, coaches, and athletic directors, and stop slapping a new coat of glittery whitewash on the turd that is collegiate sports.  I’ll gladly vote for $380 million in bonds to refurbish and improve the educational facilities of not only the universities, but also to reinvigorate our trade schools and improve our public elementary, middle, and high schools across the state.  But I balk at the cost of providing a palace for grown people to play and watch games.

Thoughts on the Day

  • I found it ironic that I had to disarm before going into the sheriff’s office to pick up my new concealed carry license this afternoon.
  • I tried to tell the nice deputy with pictures of his badge tattooed on his biceps that the snap on his OC holster was open, but unless he was thanking me with an ugly look, I’m guessing my aide was not wanted.
  • I can buy her gold, I can buy her diamonds, I can buy her furs.  But nothing lights up Irish Woman’s eyes like a truck bed full of hardwood mulch.
    • Apparently high-grade topsoil would have also pleased her.
  • The lady at the nursery gave me a dirty look when I parked my dirty pickup next to her Prius, but let’s see her haul two scoops of decomposing wood waste material in her little beep beep.
  • Tomorrow is primary day here in Kentucky.  The real season of crazy starts on Wednesday.
  • Speaking of which, if you’re in Jefferson County and are looking at the races for family court judge, I have a recommendation for you.  Bryan Gatewood is running for family court judge, and I heartily endorse him.  He has been our family lawyer for years (heck, he’s family by marriage), and he was essential when I had to go to court to get custody of Girlie Bear.

Movie Quotes – Day 139

Well, that’s the story. So if your air conditioner goes on the fritz or your washing machine blows up or your video recorder conks out; before you call the repairman turn on all the lights, check all the closets and cupboards, look under all the beds, ’cause you never can tell there just might be a gremlin in your house. — Gremlins

Honestly, if one more thing goes wrong around here, I’m going to call in Monster Hunter International and a priest to take care of the issue.  Owning a home means you own all the problems, and you better either have money to pay someone to deal with them, or the skills to do it yourself.  If you’re like me, you fake it until you make it.  A little Internet research, a couple DIY books from the hardware store, and a small wallet are my resources to figure out plumbing, carpentry, gardening, and landscaping.

You know, that retirement condo with no yard and a maintenance contract is sounding better and better all the time.

Musings

  • There seems to be a mathematically describable relationship between the force I use to type in commands on a keyboard and the rapidity with which I wish the computer to do as I command.
  • Two indulgences of my inner nerd:
    • In Star Trek: The Next Generation, I think that it would have been much more interesting for the series if, instead of killing off Tasha Yar in the first season, the show’s writers had instead killed off Will Ryker.  We would have been spared the soap opera between him and Counselor Troi, and we would have had years of a blonde badass.
    • Speaking of Star Trek, I would have enjoyed watching a spinoff of Enterprise that was set in the “In A Mirror Darkly” universe.
    • If no-one in Hollywood has the brains to make a good movie out of David Drake’s “Ranks of Bronze” sometime in my lifespan, then the medium of film is truly dead.
  • Take 8 kindergarteners and their parents, add one two-year-old and his parents, put them all in the party room of a Lego store, season with pizza and cupcakes, and finish off with an hour of free play with Lego’s, and you have what I consider a successful birthday party.
    • Best toys so far?  First place goes to the foam airplane with the three foot wingspan that Freiheit and his family gave  Boo.   In a close second goes the air-powered rocket, which I have dubbed the “My First Jihad Children’s RPG”.
    • The people who run the Lego store might as well have gotten a license to print money.