Thursday, June 30, 2016

The Press is Officially Dumb

I wish someone had told me this when I sat through a 9th grade journalism class that included writing for the school paper.

Leaving aside this second half of life epiphany, and looking back, I simply loved the class. Being 15 years old and writing for a publication that was read by a thousand or so people was a marvelous experience. I just wish at the time someone had told us that if we stayed in it for a career, we would eventually be, just dumb. Might have led a few of my friends down a different path.

Here's how I finally decided:

I'm finishing off a book by David McCullough about the Wright brothers. It is hugely entertaining history - as the author always produces. When McCullough writes: "They had done it." I can hear him speaking. After Orville and Wilbur flew a winged machine powered by a gasoline engine at Kitty Hawk four times in one afternoon, they genuinely had made history. And no one, least of all the mainstream press, reported on it.

Not even when they both returned to Dayton and Huffman Prairie in Ohio and began perfecting their machine. The press paid them no attention as they buzzed for months over a neighbor's pastureland. Years later when the editor of the local newspaper was asked why they had not noticed the Wrights and their flying machine, he responded: "I guess we were just plain dumb."

Last Sunday I watched Face the Nation with the usual cast of opinionators - and the subject of Brexit came up. Here is a quote from New York Times Magazine chief national correspondent Mark Leibovich:


"I also think that there's several months -- or four or five months now that are going to pass in which fallout is going to be experienced in 401(k)s, you know, at least on the global stage where this becomes less of an abstraction and more of a reality that people are going to be voting on."


He uses the word fallout - as in your 401k is going to lose money because of Brexit.

Today is day six after the Brexit votes were counted and the Dow, S&P, and Nasdaq have all recovered the week's losses. They could and probably will, of course, drop below last thursday's levels. But concluding that they will crash and why that will happen is simply impossible - even for a guy who is a chief at anything or anywhere - including the NY Times.

Dumb.

Previously in that same show, we were introduced by the host to Anthony Salvanto - CBS News director of elections. Seriously, that is exactly the title CBS' official transcript provided.
Sometimes a title is so preposterous, you can't think of a word to descibe why CBS chooses to call him that. I'll do it.

Dumb.

They were dumb in Ben Franklin's day. Dumb in Dayton, 1904. And dumb at CBS today. If I flew my airplane with the average reporter's skill level, we would crash every other flight and land at the wrong airport the other times.

Wednesday, June 29, 2016

Backyard Remodel Phase 1 Complete


Before - June 2015
Rotting skirt boards on the patio cover. The Arizona sun takes a toll on everything


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Previous pool deck surface never looked quite right.


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Forms for a slightly elevated patio area.


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Eager to help.


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Nelson Ramirez - All concrete work and fireplace / bbq build - 602-750-6266


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Island BBQ build to left / Fireplace build to right.


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One row of blocks was removed from the top soon after this photo was taken.
I thought they made the fireplace too tall. Proportions look better in the next photo.


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A&A Materials Landscaping Supply 480-990-0557


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Extruded concrete for borders.


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Flagstone walkway and one cute schmoopy.


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Pretty good photoshop!


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Travertine paver installation


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Great detail work - so the skimmer cover sits flush to the deck.


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More dust than you can imagine.


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Sealer applied to the travertine


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More sealer on the flagstone walkway.


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Check out the patio cover - skirt boards redone and painted.


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Ready for cooking.


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Lucy - It's what's for dinner!


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Gas for fireplace installed - Manny - 602-918-7629


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Electrical for lights - Thomas - 480-299-8204


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Hobby Lobby backyard bling


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Camelback in the distance


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Phase 1 - Done!


Saturday, June 25, 2016

After the Trust is "Lost"

Right now my employer and my union are in negotiations over changes to our labor contract. We are almost at 4 years since the previous agreement became amendable. This means we are working under significantly old work rules and pay rates.

The fact that the negotiations have gone on so long is due to the Railway Labor Act of 1926. It is complicated legislation that essentially prevents strikes and disruptions to important transportation structures in our country. Work contracts, under the RLA do not expire. They become amendable on an agreed upon date. The act has prevented nearly all striking at U.S. airlines over the years - enabling protracted negotiations instead of labor walkouts. Of course the walkouts have happened - after years of unsuccessful bargaining between both sides. Sometimes the business is substantially disrupted - such as the United Pilot's Strike of 1985. Sometimes it is not - such as when American Airlines Pilots attempted a strike in 1997. It was shut down within minutes by President Clinton using authority within the RLA.

"Trust" is a word being used very often these days by our union leadership. Mostly it is in the context of  not being able to trust our company's managment anymore.

As an employee watching both sides of the negotiations, I compare myself to a kid in the backseat of a car on a long family road trip. Mom and Dad are arguing. I probably side a little more with one of the two. But mostly with the bickering, I'm just ready to get out of the car - to the vacation spot, back home to my friends, wherever. Just away from these two. (To be clear - these are methaphorical parents - nowhere close to my own).

In this scenario I see one of my parents taking me aside privately. Apologizing, he or she says they simply don't trust the other anymore.

When that is said, is there ever any repairing the relationship? As a kid, you don't think that far ahead or care much. Kids don't yell on the playground " I don't trust you!"

They yell: "I hate you!" And very often quickly forget and make up.

But as an adult, when words like this are spoken, is there realistically ever going to be a return to the days when the two did trust each other? Maybe. But not very often. Bad feelings like this often go on for years. Forever.

Like the kid in the back seat, I'm ready for the trip to be over. I want my company be successful. I know that unions and employers, like a marriage, work best when they work together. Unlike a doomed marriage - the trust has to be recovered. Divorce is not an option.





Thursday, June 9, 2016

A Visit to Japan, Thailand, Singapore

Japan was very much like I thought it would be. Tokyo was huge, busy, masses of people efficiently moving about and not much diversity. But everyone we dealt with personally was very polite and friendly. The baseball game was a highlight because it was like a college football atmosphere.

Bangkok - we only passed through the airport - but Chiang Mai was also very polite and friendly. I’d have to say the jungle experience was ok. Tourism is a huge business in that area and I think when it gets to such a big scale that you probably can’t tell much difference from Costa Rica or other jungle areas. But everyone knows they are reviewed on the internet (especially by younger people) and the operators work hard for your business.

Singapore was beautiful and very clean. Trent and I rode the city bus to the Raffles area. It was so different compared to here where U.S. bus passengers tend to be lower income. I ride buses a lot in cities when I’m working and the difference is very noticeable. Singapore’s system is clean, they run all the time and and you see more well off people. Trent and I talked to a couple of locals on the way downtown and they were very pleasant and helpful.

We returned to LAX and waited in the longest immigration/customs lines of the entire trip by far. The U.S. now has computer kiosks that are one more line to stand in before you stand in line to get your passport stamped. Everyone grumbles about that and this is a perfect example of why so many citizens are unhappy with their government.