Observations Along the Road

Roadkill Along the Information Superhighway

Archive by Date: July 13th, 2012

Political Rant: Blaming the Man in Charge? Gotta Figure Out The Right One.

Written By: cahwyguy - Fri Jul 13, 2012 @ 4:30 pm PDT

The news today is all abuzz about the question of whether Romney was in charge of Bain Capital in the period when they laid off a bunch of people. NPR’s Planet Money blog has a nice exploration of the question of whether he was in charge… and more importantly, what does it mean? It ends with an interesting question: “Is the CEO responsible for the actions of different units of his company, whether or not he’s making day-to-day decisions?”

Both parties should think about the implications of this question. It may very well be, fellow Democrats, that Romney being in charge of Bain during that period doesn’t mean he was responsible for the outsourcing decisions. There are other reasons not to vote for him, this isn’t one of them.

And, my Republican friends, think about this question when you blame Obama for everything. Obama has no control over what bills are introduced in Congress, the specific form they take, whether they progress through committee or come to a floor vote. All he can do is issue executive orders, sign or not sign what comes across his desk, and try to influence people. Therefore, to blame Obama for actions that were not done is incorrect: if the bills were never introduced or never made it out of Congress, it isn’t his fault. Similarly, if a flawed bill such as the Affordable Care Act comes across his desk, his only choice is to decide whether to veto it entirely, or whether the good in the bill outweighs the bad… and whether to trust that Congress will adjust and correct it in the future. As for influencing people — the situation in Congress is so polarized that Obama has little influence outside of his party; even when he has worked to adjust things to appease the other party, this hasn’t satisfied them and they’ve moved further to the right.

If you look closely at what Obama is being blamed for, it really isn’t his fault. The problem, my friends on both sides of the aisle, is Congress. They are not doing their jobs and working in the interest of the country–they are working for their party and to score political points (why else would the House waste its time voting to repeal Obamacare when they know it will not pass, instead of working to fix it).

Let’s hold politicians responsible for what they had the capability to fix… and didn’t. If something is out of their hands, let’s blame the folks whose hands are really dirty.

Music: Parade! A Musical Review (Dody Goodman): Maria in Spats

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Friday Link News Chum Stew: Politics, Resumes, Meters, Runways, Bananas, iPod Connectors, DirecTV

Written By: cahwyguy - Fri Jul 13, 2012 @ 11:45 am PDT

Well, it’s Friday at lunch, and that means it is time to clean out the accumulated links that never quite formed into a theme:

  • And The Plan Is… Let’s get some politics out of the way first. One of my big problems with the GOP of late is that their position seems to be solely what they are against, not what they are for. The LA Times captures this well in an article that discusses how the GOP focus regarding “Obamacare” is the repeal, and they have taken no actions — even actions they  promised — towards finding a better solution. This was evidenced this week with the 33rd vote in the house to repeal the act, with knowledge aforethought that it would never pass the senate, let alone be signed. I think the GOP would have a lot more respect if they would work to modify the act into something better, as opposed to just tossing it out whole-cloth with no replacement.
  • Whither the Resume? CNN has an interesting article on the potential death of the resume. Their basic question is this: In this era where our job history is easily available via LinkedIn or even Facebook, why have a resume at all? Work history can be easily found out.
  • Broken Meters. Gov. Brown just recently signed a bill making it legal to park at broken parking meters. It takes effect January 1, 2013. But there’s a catch. Cities can create superseding rules… and it is expected that Los Angeles will be one of those cities.
  • Side Effects of Heat. As you know, it has been hot. You had it in the east; we’re getting it in the west right now. It has been up into the 120s in Las Vegas. Heat has an interesting side effect: it makes air thinner, and thus it is harder for planes to take off. Luckily, the Las Vegas airport is one of the few engineered specifically for hot weather. Specifically, McCarran International Airport has two built-in advantages that help pilots deal with extreme heat: an exceptionally long runway and one that goes downhill just enough — 1.1 degree over its 14,505-foot-length — to help jets reach takeoff speed.
  • Sequencing the Banana. Bananas are an interesting fruit. The best bananas are sterile, propagated by shoot. The majority of the bananas consumed are a single variety — the cavendish — because others do not travel as well or look as good. This has made bananas very susceptable to disease and hard to improve. Thus, it is significant news that they have sequenced the genes of the banana. No, not the cavendish, but something close enough that they might be able to use the information to improve the banana. In related news, did you ever wonder why people slip on banana peels?
  • Pinning it Down. Lastly, an interesting article that explores the Apple iPod Dock Connector: why the shuffle uses a 4 pin connector; why that doesn’t work for most iPods (which have 30 pin connectors), and why there might be a 19-pin connector in the future.
  • Compensating for Nick. CNN is reporting on how DirecTV is compensating for the loss of the Viacom channels. Supposedly, according to DirecTV’s facebook page, “to thank you for your patience until Viacom channels are returned, all eight Encore Channels (including Encore Family) will be made available to all customers thru July 31st”. Further, the article notes that some subscribers have gotten discounts on their subscriptions for multiple months due to the loss.

Music: Raisin (1973 Original Broadway Cast): It’s a Deal

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