![]() |
|
NL - Friesland _ Prinsenhof _ tacking a skutsje - file 4 of 5 DSC_8043_bewerkt.jpg
"HEMI-Powered" schreef in bericht ... snip Bouler, it has been said that anyone can give an hour talk on any subject, even one they know nothing at all about. But, to give an effective 15 minute talk or to distill a complex and technical subject down to only 5 minutes, both of which I had to do on my job, is VERY difficult indeed. I most appreciate the complements you extend to me on my knowledge of cars and other things. However, there is likely far LESS here than meets the eye, meaning that while I can speak reasonably intelligently about all cars, not just Chrysler, I cannot speak to specifics of even cars designed during my tenure at Chrysler. The reason I can at least speak to most anything vehicular regardless of company or national origin is that the basics of the vehicle product development process from design (styling) to engineering to testing to tooling to manufacturing and assembly is pretty much universal throughout the world. What separates the better car companies from the 2nd and 3rd tier crowd is how well they APPLY basic principles and how much proprietary knowledge they can accumulate and effectively implement to increase features, fuel economy, safety, etc. while at the same time increasing quality, reliability, and durability (those are 3 different things, ask if interested) at the lowest possible cost. I think carfactories can build cars that go on for many more years, but at the same time the're digging their own grave. I know I burned DVDs from some History Channel episodes maybe a year or so ago. If I get ambitious enough, I'll try to find them but I have made a mental note to re-record them again on my DVR. It's a dumb coincidence that a rather long episode or two aired just last week, I think, relating the story of Titanic's construction, it's major structural and safety weaknesses, details of the sinking itself, and results of the most recent dives on the wreak, which I think began in 2002 and maybe ended a year or two later (but I'm rather hazy about that, please help me out if you can). Sorry Jerry I cant. OK, if these shows come on again, I'll try to snag them and perhaps I can mail you a DVD of something you may not have seen in The Netherlands. That would be nice. Maybe I should have put in a grin or two of my own, but each of us is gifted in different ways. Perhaps one of mine to compensate for lack of foreign language skills is what people tell me is a logical mind and an insatiable appetite for new information. In fact, it has been a basic philosphy of mine back at least to my High School days as a teen-ager that learning is a life-long endeavor. Unfortunately, ALL of my classmates in Engineering School were like me and I suddently found myself as a brand new freshman in 1965 going from top 5% in my H.S. class to about the bottom 5-10% and on academic probation for 3 trimesters. One more and I'd have flunked out. Still in all, I barely made it, I recall something like only a 2.32 or so GPA. Could you explain that, we have a comlete other schoolsystem, so I don't have a clue what 2,32 GPA means. Sorry, I did it again, damnit! GPA means Grade Point Average. We use a 4.0 grading system in community colleges and universities where 0.0 is an E or F, 0.5 is barely passing maybe with a D-, 2.0 is a C, 3.0 is a B and 4.0 is an A. My school, Oakland University, used a 4.3 system where 4.3 was essentially an A+. I hope your schools at least use a similar letter grading system. Most schools use a decimal system from 1 till 10, of course 1 is not very good and thats an understatement, but 10 is passing a test without mistakes. Avrage 6 is suficcient to go to a higher class. To recap, American schools are basically organized this way: K-6 (Kindergarten through 6th grade) is called "elementary school, grades 7 and 8 "middle school" and 9-12 "high school." Colleges and universities are divided into "undergraduate" which means one hasn't yet earned the most basic degree, a bachelor of science or bachelor or arts, and "graduate" degrees which include a masters or PhD (Doctor of Philosophy) and also MD (Medical Doctor), DDS (Doctor of Dental Surgery), and LLD (Letter of Law Doctorate, I think, i.e., an attorney. Schoolsystem is very different in The Netherlands since I was young and I can hardly explain the system now. Basisschool (children from 4 till 12), kindegarten is included but the name does not exist anymore. They are talking in groups, grop 1 till group 8. After that school is a very complex system I cannot explain anymore. University is of course the highest grade. So, under my university's grading system, I graduated barely above the minimum necessary, a 2.0, with what amounted to be a low C+. My youngest daughter went always for the minimum because there were much things nicer than school, she only worked hard when she decided to become a maternity nurse (says my dictionary) She looks like her father, till my 16th I did not study very hard. The only thing thats clear is that you had to work hard to graduate, so we can shake hands. I completely agree that learning is a life-long endeavor, for you, for me because we are interested in a lot of things. Not everybody thinks the same way. Yeah, I worked my skinny ass off, Bouler! Here's what one of my days was like: I'd get up early, eat a breakfast of oatmeal or bacon and eggs, finish up any homework and commute to school Go to school and study on campus until early afternoon, return home, eat a fast dinner and go to work in a department store from 5-9 PM to earn gas money and money to go on dates with girls. Then, study until about midnight or when I fell asleep at the kitchen table. On weekends, I'd date, have fun with my friends, go cruising to try to pick up girls or maybe engage in drag racing at night while working Saturday and Sunday 8 hours and studying in whatever time was left besides sleeping. Because I was studyïng in a boardingschool we studied 6 days of the week and had specific studyhours and you did not get a chance to miss them, the punishment was most of the time staying in school the whole weekend. We had not much choice we simply had to. No time to earn some money and not much time to have fun, exept when you were doïng something cultural so me and my friends played in a band, were singing in a lot of choirs, we did everything possible to get out of the building to make fun and of course with girls. Sometimes it was dangerous because you could be send home and never graduate. 4 times I was very near but I came away with it. I did not choose the school for earning a lot of money, I wanted to educate children and pass my knowledge to them. After all it was not payïng bad an we had lots of holidays;-) The goal for me was two-fold: earn a degree that would enable me to try for a high-paying job (which is why I chose engineering which is still the highest paying job with a B.S. degree, the most I hoped to attain) and stay out of the Army and a rice paddy in Viet Nam at least long enough to earn my degree. Our draft system believed that having a college degree, especially a technical one, was an important asset militarily even if one did not become an officer (I was an enlisted man, coming out a sergeant with 3 stripes after 20 months), so we had a system of student deferrments that allowed only 4 years for college. So, I HAD to get it done. I started work the next day after commencement and fought the draft for about a year and lost. But, as it turned out while Army life was hardly fun at the time, I DID get a chance to tour much of southern Europe and the experience of being completely on my own matured me greatly and turned out to be quite useful in my later career. Lots of pretty smart men and women go to engineering school and the admissions process we used here prior to affirmative action initiatives guaranteed that only the best of the best got in. Thats life Jerry, for my school to study for teacher there were 120 people that want that study at that specific school, after a starting examination only 48, the maximum the school could handle got that chance I I was one of them. I did not have to take the standard testing of the day, such as the SAT (Scholasitic Appitude Test) as a senior in High School, but my grades and a recommendation from my counselor, principle, and at least one teacher were required. Then, I had to compete against all other applicants based on the number of freshman class openings. Once accepted, I spent two entire days of mathematics and English aptitude written testing, one day for each. Talk about difficult! Wow! My English scores were OK but my math score was barely passing. My advisor told me that if I actually cut it and graduated I would be the first in his experience with a math aptitude that low. That sobered me up - fast! He helped me a great deal through the many tank traps along the way such as scheduling conflicts and getting me into the lesser difficulty liberal arts classes that were required beyond what were called "core curriculum" for my engineering school degree. I don't know what the numbers were at my college as I didn't have access to the number of applicants nor the number who failed to make the cut on the 2-day testing gig, but I would suspect it was similary to your experience. My engineering class itself was small, maybe 40 or 50 (I've always wished that OU had a yearbook, but they didn't) and I think they all managed to graduate. That I know of, my ranking was 4th from the bottom, or maybe 5th, but no higher. The class was divided along lines of intelligence and grades informally. The smart guys studied together and refusted to help us not so smart guys because they wanted us to get lousy grades so the "curve", or statistical grading system to decide the numeric score you're probably familiary with is helped by the number of people on a test that score below the statistical median or mean and skew the grade distribution to the low end making it easier to earn a 3.0 or 4.0. We helped each other a lot, maybe because teaching each other is a way of learning too. I still heve many contacts from that time and we had several reunions. Next year again a reunion because its than 45 years ago we graduated. Very smart after all;-) Nobody knows 100% of something is my humble opinion. A specialist is someone who knows almost everything about almost nothing. I agree. Just like the gun slinger days of the old American West, where there was ALWAYS someone faster on the draw, there is always someone smarter than you and wealthier than you. But, there is also at least one person dumber and poorer than you, also! grin here, no insult intended Seriously, one of my favorite saying from the Dirty Harry cop movies is "a man's GOT to know his limitations", that is, be humble one can NEVER know it all, no matter how hard or long one tries, because the colllective body of knowledge on even a narrow subject is exploding so fast. I think that was the best Dirty Harry ever said and I agree completely. Yes I know those movies from Clint Eastwood, I think he is in politics now. Now I think I need some sleep, its 4.30 AM;-) Most people like his other quotes, basically "this is a .44 Magnum and will blow you head clean off, now do you feel lucky? well, do you, punk?" Yeah, that's OK, but I liked the other one because it was useful in real-life and not just cop movies. It is interestint that you are familiar with the Dirty Harry series. It was a money maker but not an award-winning movie. I often use movies to illustrate things to you and others and I wonder a lot if my international friends know what the hell I'm talking about! grin Guns in America and guns in The Netherlands is world of difference. Not many people have guns here and its even forbidden exept for policeman and guards. I think there are to many guns in the states. -- Greetings Bouler (The Netherlands) |
Link Titanic disaster
Bouler added these comments in the current discussion du jour ...
I'll try again but I thought my URL was OK. But, as to your writing it vs. reading it, let me respectfully refer you to your exact words, in English, of course, right under your [snip] - "here you can read what I WROTE". Did I misunderstand/misconstrue your intent here? My mistake, I must have had a black out and thought wrote was the past tense of read (sorry sir;-) I had similar problems when trying to learn written French in college. In English, the past-tense of "read" (reed) is also "read" but is pronounced "redd". Yes I know, but sometimes I'm only human and make mistakesgrin Ain't that the truth! Hope you didn't feel insulted or ****ed off at me. [big snip] Without going off in the tall weeds on lots of techie stuff, mathematicians and statisticians describe it two ways that may be useful in understanding where the rivet failure theory fits into the entire Titanic investigation. First is the principle that some types of data or testing are termed NECESSARY but NOT SUFFICIENT, meaning it may be necessary to test for failed rivets to explain the Titanic sinking but it is not sufficient on its own and one must look further for a complete and proveable explanation. Second is the principle of determining "root cause". ALL problems, failures, anything that goes bad may have one or more causes, perhaps dozens, or even thousands of causes, but there is only ONE so-called root cause. Some equate this with "most important cause" but that is inaccurate. Perhaps the best example I can cite is the 1985 space shuttle disaster where it blew up 85 seconds into launch. Some hundreds of causes were found and resulting in nearly 1,000 engineering changes to the shuttle and its booster rockets. But, the ROOT CAUSE turned out to be O-rings on the fuel tanks that failed and allowed leakage during a cold-weather launch. This is the first launch of a space vehicle in below-freezing weather at Cape Kennedy in Florida. Continuing just a bit, the cold weather itself was also a cause of the disaster, of course, yet it couldn't have caused it solely but ONLY because the O- rings failed. In the theory of statistics, specific failure mode analysis (sorry for the jargon but it is necessary to be precise and accurate here, please just accept it, OK?) one strives to identify ALL the modes of failure then use deductinve reasoning based on the facts found and inductive reasoning based on facts NOT found to arrive at a conclusion as to the most likely root causes in descending order of importants and probability of likelihood. Then, using the probability and statistics methods of positive, negative, and null hypothesis testing, one attempt to isolate the ONE cause which MUST be fixed in order to prevent a future failure. I completely understood the above and rememberd he horrible view of that disaster on TV. At last, I'm on the right track with stories of enough technical detail that my international friends can also more easily comprehend. Thanks for the feedback, Bouler, I'll try even harder the next time some technical subject comes up. Als I see you're very accurate and logic in explaining the problem. I think its the same accuracy you use in engineering cars. Ik don't have that background with cars nor with ships so I'm not an expert on nautical things, I just love ships.. Bouler, don't EVER sell yourself short, my good friend! We ALL have gifts, we ALL have strenghts, and we ALL have weaknesses. Friends don't dwell on shortcomings but they do try to accentuate the positive, that's what it is all about, I think. Engineering of most anything from software to cars to airplanes to ships to houses to bridges and tunnels - EVERYTHING is a pretty exact science. Trouble is, engineering is also the art of compromise as it is NEVER possible to forsee all failure modes much less test for them and design around them. Financial considerations often preclude such things as planning for 100 year rains or flood even though when one occurs it is a tragedy. That's what laws and regulations are for, the provide some cost- benefit guidance even though no value can ever be placed on the loss of even a single human life. That said, what IS both SAD and TRAGIC is when a company building anything CAN recognize risks and test for them and CAN design for them but doesn't because the bean counters, i.e., the financial crowd, claim it is too expensive. So, all too many people lost their lives on the Titanic because there weren't enough life boats, no matter what the hell did or didn't cause the actual sinking. Please remember also, Bouler, that one doesn't need a PhD in engineering to love ships or cars or buildings, and it is a damn good thing as I could never have cut even a master's program much less a doctorate. People who are passionate about their hobbies and love for fine pieces of design and engineering excellence can often accumulate more information than the so-called experts basically because of the can't-see-the-forest- for-the-trees syndrome, meaning experts are often too mired down in minutia to see the beauty of their work as passionate buyers or hobbyists do. I get used to your technical jargon (Learning fast because I want to kwow what you're writing) My dictionnary was my friend the last days;-) Important is I need not to know all the words to undrstand you. Combining and a little logic helps a lot. I've come to know you are a very intelligent person, Bouler, and one with even more tenacity than I have, which is also considerable. Use your dictionary, Wikopedia (or, however it is spelled), Google, whatever you like - OR - ask me to clarify my thoughts and define my jargon, whichever works for you. And, as I discussed I think last night, if I am more than a bit verbose, it is for a reason. Besides liking to write, I prefer to offer more info than less because you then have the option of ignoring some and concentrating on what you really want to know. If I practice a laconic style of writing, which means brevity/briefness to the max, if what you're looking for gets left out, well, it's left out forever. Have a great day and we can cover anything left over via E-mail if you like. Specific to my mistake on this one, though, my intentions were MOST honorable because my intent was to HONOR you for what I perceived as an important contribution to the collective pool of knowledge about the Titanic sinking. Sorry that I already knew about the rivet theory but I was about to flood you with complements for superior knowledge of the sinking based on careful research that enabled the ABA to quote you directly. So, again, please accept my apologies for both misunderstanding you and for snowing you under in what must've looked to you like I was trying to refute your expert testimony. You are far more the nautical expert then me, I just have a few - very few! - tricks up my old-time engineer's sleeve when it comes to understanding the science behind the sinking's many theories. But, you can trust and I thank you for the fact that I now have a Favorite in IE6 pointing to the ABA article. I'm glad to stand on my feeth again, when you were talking that I wrote that article I was sitting on a cloud for a while but fell off and that hurts grin Good one, my fault really. In my case, my mother was Polish written and spoken bi-lingual and I picked up a few words here and there because we went to Massachusetts every year when my father was laid off at the Plymouth Plant and heard lots of Polish spoken at family gatherings. And, in my stay in West Germany in the Army circa 1971, I picked up enough to order a good meal anywhere - "eine wiener schnizel mit pomme frits und salade, und eine bier, bitte, snell!". grin Feeding yourself is very important so I can imagine this sentece was a lifesavergrin Yep, besides which they taste good. I also used to like a wurst, either pork or beef but it's a little messy to eat the German way, with the sausage in one hand and the bread in the other taking alternating bites rather than making a sandwhich kind of meal. Also, I found that unless you're fluent enough in German, in the smaller town gasthauses (guest houses, combination bed & breakfast hotel and restaurant) you are going to get a standard vinegar and oil salad dressing and horseradish mustared on the wurst whether you want it or not, so I learned to like it. These are exactly what I was referring to that I believe are still in use in cars today. We call these "pop rivets", perhaps the English translation of "popnagels", I don't know that. nagel=nail in English so it's understandeble. Suspected that even though I can't translate. Bouler, I am neither a car mechanic nor a car designer, I had a relatively minor role early in my career in the development of front and rear car SEATS. But, through my long career as I changed from pure engineering into a variety of jobs related to computers and CAD, I began to get to know more and more people from technicians and mechanics to designers and draftsmen, engineers, supervisors, managers, chief engineers, all the way up the vice presidents within Engineering and Manufacturing. That's not bragging, it was just necessary for me to know these people in order to do MY job of supporting their job by providing CAD training and support and OA (Office Automation) support to their people. Naturally, the more I could glean about the product development process, the better I was able to do this. Ok, but you spend energy to learn stuff t make yourself and other people working as a team, I respect that very much. Is CAD Computer aided design or has it something to do with the computerprogram autocad? It does indeed mean Computer Aided Design and CAE means Computer Aided Engineering, most often used for structural analysis studies, aerodynamic studies, and the like. Sorry I didn't define these but I thought most people knew those. Autocad is just a very popular computer tool for a PC of workstation. In its case, in the beginning CAD meant "Computer Aided Drafting" as early versions of Autocad were 2-D drafting apps only, but are now full 3-D. At Chrysler, we had not one, but two in-house CAD systems but beginning in 1990, we began a very expensive and very painful change over to Dassault Systemes CATIA. CATIA is an acronym for their CAD/CAE program that means Computer Aided Three-D Interactive Application. Dassault Systemes was spun off as an independed company to sell CATIA commercially when it was found to be a potential money maker beyond the Dassault aircraft design that originally drove its development. General Motors and Ford also developed in-house CAD systems but in the late 1980s/early 1990s they, too, began a quest to buy rather than build for primarily two reasons: we are car companies, not software development firms and this costs both money and people, and it was VERY desirable for our suppliers to buy a commercial CAD/CAE system so we could transfer our design and engineering data to them in native format without the really nasty problems associcated with the neutral format known as IGES (Initial Graphics Exchange Specification). The operative word is "initial" and it literally throws away much of the useful data and leaves just the so- called "wire-frame" stuff. I believe it has now progressed to being a full-featured 3-D transfer spec including mathematical "surfaces" and what are known as "solid models" along with all text specifications, dimensions, tolerances, etc. - a lot like a vastly bigger EXIF for a JPEG picture file. I bet I've gone off in the tall weeds again on you by blowing too many words and still too much jargon, so I'll quit while I'm behind before I get behinder. grin Seriously, if you want to know more of any of this, please ask questions here or move to E-mail, I'll be glad to help you. I've continued the discussion here primarily for the benefit of all the lurkers who might be tangentially interested. That said, the car biz is VERY complex, and my knowledge is much more complete - such that it is at all - on the sheet metal body, soft and hard trim, and other aspects of the body of the car than it is for the electrical systems, and my knowledges drops off very fast for engine and transmission design, and for suspensions and brakes. Well that makes you standing on your feeth again IMO, I thought you did know everything of cars. I worked a lot on all the secondhand cars I bought, I came very far with the mecanical stuff, but todays cars you cannot do anything as an amateur. Far to much electronic in cars and thats not my specialty. I think you're saying my limitations and modesty make me more of a real human than some lofty pie-in-the-sky guru or expert, so I will take your very kind words as a complement. Now, I HAVE done my share of auto repair when I wore the clothes of a young man who also had very little money to spare during High School and college and when I was first married and trying to pay for a new house. That was invaluable experience and my father was my teacher. There wasn't anything that one does with their hands that he couldn't do. Carpentry, plumbing, electrician work, car bodies, engines, transmissions, assembly work of all kinds in car plants, he could run any machine in a machine or tool shop and could do tool and die design but never was able to earn a journeyman's card which would have made him what our unions call a "skilled tradesman" because these programs required a long apprenticeship and he couldn't afford the cut in wages. What is much more common today are structural adhesives which allow very fast assembly with no fasteners at all but with all of the strength of a traditional fastener such as a screw or pop rivet. Another fastener in common use today is the so-called single use plastic push fastener. One type of these are called "Christmas tree fasteners" because the little pieces of plastic has small ribs that make them look like a Xmas tree. They are inserted from the back side of a trim panel of some sort and pushed into a pre-stamped hole in the inside sheet metal. They only go in once and are destroyed by the removal process if a repair is need, so new fasteners must be used. I know them. Thought you would if I could describe them in words but I have no pictures. The American use of visible chrome-plated sheet metal screws with a Phillips head went on for decades until the Japanes automakers such as Honda and Toyota taught us quite painfully in the 1980s that interior and exterior trim could be attached more firmly yet with a much better look, fit, and finish with NO visible fasenters, hence the rapid rise of adhesives and the one-time fasteners. Today, a visible screw or rivet is almost impossible to find and manufacturers pride themselves oon the good looks of even things like the engine compartment where everything is hidden vs. the olden days where there were tubes, pipes, hoses, clamps, wiring harnesses, all sorts of ugly stuff snaking it's way around to support the powertrain. Right and working on a car need special tools so fixing a car by myself is almost over and out. After about the mid-1990s when electronic controls first came into widespread use, yes, special tools are required as are very expensive computer diagnostic tools and very expensive computer chip update tools, plus one must pay to subscribe to quarterly updates of what used to be called "service manuals". Even if one could diagnose their newer car's problems, they couldn't possibly afford the wide spectrum of tools and parts, so most people need to take their car to some shop these day. And, if a major computer in your newer cars falls over, e.g., the engine or transmission controller or the theft protection encryption module, there is no longer a "limp home" mode. The car is just dead, dead, DEAD and you have to call a tow truck. You mean "hypothetical" here, I assume? Yes, it is possible, but one would have to get the water to flow over the rudder in a different way than is traditional for a rudder steering system. One way might be the growing use of water jets in patrol boats, pleasure craft, even larger warships that squirt a high-pressure high volume stream of water out to both propel and steer the craft. Obviously here, the force of the water squirting to starboard would move the stern to port and the bow to starboard. Yes I mean hypotatical and dont know if its used in ships. Can't really say. One of my favorite movies is "The Hunt For Red October" because I love the acting, but it is an example of a fictious silent drive system using water jets which were in actual use as early as the Viet Nam war PBR (Patrol Boat River) boats for the Mekong Delta rivers. In the movie they called it a "caterpiller drive" which was claimed to be something called hydromagneto propulsion. So, I am certain that system far in advance of simple rudder and prop are in wide-spread use in everything from small pleasure boats to very large warships, super tankers, and cargo ships. Now, if you really mean that a rudder or water jet steering/propulsion system can actually move physically to starboard and the BOW moves to port, please describe it to me, as I'm not familiar with that I don't think. Your analogy of a reversible drill motor is a good one and it's application to a boat or ship is that which one major theory of the Titanic sinking is based on. Namely, that it MIGHT have been more effective in preventing a collision with the iceberg of minimizing the damage if it did hit, if the office on the bridge hadn't ordered full astern AND a hard a port turn but instructing the helmsman to spin the wheel counter clockwise to move the rudder to port which was intended under British convention to mean move the stern to starboard. The reason this theory may have minimized the damage and possibly prevented or delayed the sinking time is that the headlong dash due to inertia of a huge ship traveling at over 20 knots might well have struck only a glancing blow if the bow had turned INTO it rather than trying desperately to turn away from it by both moving the rudder and reversing propulsion. You're examening the consequences, I like that. To the extent that I can. I quickly run up against my limits of nautical knowledge and my relatively meager knowledge of the entire Titanic thing. Again, I must bow to you and others here who have superior knowledge of the sea and nautical design by far than me. I am speaking ONLY of my body of anecdotal, i.e., practical and observable, evidence and some engineering knowledge. Please elaborate and/or correct anything I have said that you believe to be both right and wrong. My knowledge of ships is not much more than yours, I mostly dont go into technicak stuff, I like to see a nice ship and can enjoy it. I still have this strong suspicion that you know a lot more than you let on, your long personal experience and very high interest are quite conducive to learning, whether it is at the technical level or simply the empirical or practical level. I will readily admit that I simply am NOT anything of a nautical expert. Not power or sail pleasure craft, not commercial power or sailing vessels, and certainly not military ships, although I do know a little about each and I have toured as many destroyers, battleships, submarines, and aircraft carriers as I possibly could when my family and I took vacations where they have floating museums. If this interests you, I can talk about it in a new thread or via E-mail. Let me know, we BOTH may learn a few new tricks! I appreciate that I didn't insult you directly as I feared but I feel I AM guilty of "insulting" you by acting in what appeared to be a superior manner in attempting to put too much science and math out too fast. My apologies for THAT, Bouler. I'm learning fast Jerry. You are a very quick learner, Bouler. I don't know you well enough to understand how you do it, but your thirst for knowledge that drives your tenacity is likely the "culprit" because you're not at all afraid to use Wikopedia, Google, or printed reference materials. You'd probably believe that I have a couple dozen car picture books and maybe a dozen moderately expensive car reference books to fill in the many holes in my knowledge when I need to, and within your budget, I'd think you own some boat and ship books. Of course, if I am still unclear but you are still interested in what I may be able to teach you, please help ME by asking for clarification where needed. And, to help me avoid another of my own nautical "disasters", please guide me when you can as to what you already know and where your strengths and weaknesses may be on the more technical subjects. I hope we call ALL agree on a couple of things he one is that nobody knows the complete story of the Titanic sinking and the other is that nobody knows it all when it comes to ship and boat design or seamanship. Thank you for a most stimulating discussion. You're a very clever man, you're apoligizing before I can even say somethinggrin It's not that I'm being clever or trying to anticipate you, I'm trying to answer a concern you had that I was blowing too much smoke and techical jargon and usage at you, so I made a conscious effort today to tone that down and expand on things you were commenting on. But you have nothing to apologize for Jerry you're smart enough to build in a lot of caution. If we are goïng on this way we're writing a book together;-) Thank you, Bouler, I appreciate that a lot. Hey, you may have a damn good idea - collaborating on a research book about something! -- HP, aka Jerry "If it waddles like a duck and quacks like a duck, it must be a duck" |
NL - Friesland _ Prinsenhof _ tacking a skutsje - file 4 of 5 DSC_8043_bewerkt.jpg
Bouler added these comments in the current discussion du jour ...
I most appreciate the complements you extend to me on my knowledge of cars and other things. However, there is likely far LESS here than meets the eye, meaning that while I can speak reasonably intelligently about all cars, not just Chrysler, I cannot speak to specifics of even cars designed during my tenure at Chrysler. The reason I can at least speak to most anything vehicular regardless of company or national origin is that the basics of the vehicle product development process from design (styling) to engineering to testing to tooling to manufacturing and assembly is pretty much universal throughout the world. What separates the better car companies from the 2nd and 3rd tier crowd is how well they APPLY basic principles and how much proprietary knowledge they can accumulate and effectively implement to increase features, fuel economy, safety, etc. while at the same time increasing quality, reliability, and durability (those are 3 different things, ask if interested) at the lowest possible cost. I think carfactories can build cars that go on for many more years, but at the same time the're digging their own grave. At one time, at least from the 1950s to the OPEC Oil Embargo of 1973, the American car companies followed a philosophy called "planned obsolecscence" where minor styling changes were made every year and major styling changes were made every 2 or 3 years. The idea was to make your 3 year-old buggy look like last week's lettuce to entice you to buy a new one. So, quality was simply awful and problems never got fixed, just replaced by new ones much the same way that software bugs never get fixed anymore. The Japanese "invasion" in the 1980s taught us very painfully two big things: quality IS very important and resale value/overall mimimum cost/mile driven IS very important to owners. These 2 things, the rapid rise of Federal emissions and safety regulations and the outrageous costs of doing all those redesigns made it impossible to continue. These days, cars pretty much look the same for the 4, 5, 6, 7 years of their "platform", resale value is greatly enhanced and the high development costs can be amortized over much more sales volume. This very same idea spread quickly to all the world's car makers, even including your French-made Renault. French cars and maybe Italian city cars were/are about the only brands WORSE than American cars of the halcyon days so if Renault had not adopted a new philsophy based on the world-class Japanese, it is highly unlikely your car would ever have made it to 16+ years of driving without rusting away and the engine falling on the ground. Of course, your countries very strong inspection laws force you to do preventative maintenence on your car, at least for safety and emissions parts. OK, if these shows come on again, I'll try to snag them and perhaps I can mail you a DVD of something you may not have seen in The Netherlands. That would be nice. I have an MS Word list of my movies that I'll send to you, Bouler. Except for the ones marked with $$$ meaning they're commercial tapes and DVDs that most often cannot be copied, the rest I burned on my Panasonic DVR. Besides things we've been talking about here, the Titanic and the number of shows about that, I have many TV shows about Iwo Jima where my father was, the so-called American Muscle Car series on Speed Channel, THC's Modern Marvels series, and the like. All of you lurkers, I'm not exactly in the DVD biz, so don't salivate quite just yet. But, Bouler, if you see a few things that may interest you, it is very inexpensive for me to copy some DVDs. In advance of that, please privately send me your address and international phone number. I'll send you mine if you don't mind figuring out how to make an international number from our local standard. Sorry, I did it again, damnit! GPA means Grade Point Average. We use a 4.0 grading system in community colleges and universities where 0.0 is an E or F, 0.5 is barely passing maybe with a D-, 2.0 is a C, 3.0 is a B and 4.0 is an A. My school, Oakland University, used a 4.3 system where 4.3 was essentially an A+. I hope your schools at least use a similar letter grading system. Most schools use a decimal system from 1 till 10, of course 1 is not very good and thats an understatement, but 10 is passing a test without mistakes. Avrage 6 is suficcient to go to a higher class. Hmmm. Not at all familiar with that, so I'm glad I expanded on our system so you'd at least have a chance to understand ours. Thanks for that. To recap, American schools are basically organized this way: K-6 (Kindergarten through 6th grade) is called "elementary school, grades 7 and 8 "middle school" and 9-12 "high school." Colleges and universities are divided into "undergraduate" which means one hasn't yet earned the most basic degree, a bachelor of science or bachelor or arts, and "graduate" degrees which include a masters or PhD (Doctor of Philosophy) and also MD (Medical Doctor), DDS (Doctor of Dental Surgery), and LLD (Letter of Law Doctorate, I think, i.e., an attorney. Schoolsystem is very different in The Netherlands since I was young and I can hardly explain the system now. Basisschool (children from 4 till 12), kindegarten is included but the name does not exist anymore. They are talking in groups, grop 1 till group 8. After that school is a very complex system I cannot explain anymore. University is of course the highest grade. This sounds similar to our idea, but I recall discussing some pretty big differences between your boarding school and our combo of high school and college so there's not all that much overlap, I don't think. So, under my university's grading system, I graduated barely above the minimum necessary, a 2.0, with what amounted to be a low C+. My youngest daughter went always for the minimum because there were much things nicer than school, she only worked hard when she decided to become a maternity nurse (says my dictionary) She looks like her father, till my 16th I did not study very hard. I would have really wanted to do better but luckily for me back in 1969, the car companies were hiring any graduate engineers with a pulse because of the total redesign of their entire car and truck lines due to the 1968 MVSS (Motor Vehicle Safety Standards) that came out of the NTHSA (Nationalal Traffic and Highway Safety Administration, I think) and the EPA (Environmental Protection Agency) for emissions and toxic substances regulations and the like. We were also burned with regs from OSHA (Occupational Safety and Health Administration) for increasing safety from injury and poisoning in our plants and offices. Yeah, I worked my skinny ass off, Bouler! Here's what one of my days was like: I'd get up early, eat a breakfast of oatmeal or bacon and eggs, finish up any homework and commute to school Go to school and study on campus until early afternoon, return home, eat a fast dinner and go to work in a department store from 5-9 PM to earn gas money and money to go on dates with girls. Then, study until about midnight or when I fell asleep at the kitchen table. On weekends, I'd date, have fun with my friends, go cruising to try to pick up girls or maybe engage in drag racing at night while working Saturday and Sunday 8 hours and studying in whatever time was left besides sleeping. Because I was studyïng in a boardingschool we studied 6 days of the week and had specific studyhours and you did not get a chance to miss them, the punishment was most of the time staying in school the whole weekend. We had not much choice we simply had to. Something that the United States has yet to learn is that the rest of the world, but primarily the Asians, have as much education at the end of what amounts to be our high school nearly as we have with a bachelor degree from a university. These countries are literally eating our lunch in engineering and software/computers as well because they have 50% or more technical education than we require. Worst of all, though, American students are pretty damn lazy and do not comprehend that their livelihood for 4 decades or more depends on a good an education as they can possibly get, and not playing with sex and drugs. No time to earn some money and not much time to have fun, exept when you were doïng something cultural so me and my friends played in a band, were singing in a lot of choirs, we did everything possible to get out of the building to make fun and of course with girls. Sometimes it was dangerous because you could be send home and never graduate. 4 times I was very near but I came away with it. I did not choose the school for earning a lot of money, I wanted to educate children and pass my knowledge to them. After all it was not payïng bad an we had lots of holidays;-) I found that being forced by circumstances - my father was a "blue collar" hourly paid auto worker - to work while in college and I found that to be a very worthwhile endeavor, so we pretty much made our daughter work for spending money also. I don't know what the numbers were at my college as I didn't have access to the number of applicants nor the number who failed to make the cut on the 2-day testing gig, but I would suspect it was similary to your experience. My engineering class itself was small, maybe 40 or 50 (I've always wished that OU had a yearbook, but they didn't) and I think they all managed to graduate. That I know of, my ranking was 4th from the bottom, or maybe 5th, but no higher. The class was divided along lines of intelligence and grades informally. The smart guys studied together and refusted to help us not so smart guys because they wanted us to get lousy grades so the "curve", or statistical grading system to decide the numeric score you're probably familiary with is helped by the number of people on a test that score below the statistical median or mean and skew the grade distribution to the low end making it easier to earn a 3.0 or 4.0. We helped each other a lot, maybe because teaching each other is a way of learning too. I still heve many contacts from that time and we had several reunions. Next year again a reunion because its than 45 years ago we graduated. Most people like his other quotes, basically "this is a .44 Magnum and will blow you head clean off, now do you feel lucky? well, do you, punk?" Yeah, that's OK, but I liked the other one because it was useful in real-life and not just cop movies. It is interestint that you are familiar with the Dirty Harry series. It was a money maker but not an award-winning movie. I often use movies to illustrate things to you and others and I wonder a lot if my international friends know what the hell I'm talking about! grin Guns in America and guns in The Netherlands is world of difference. Not many people have guns here and its even forbidden exept for policeman and guards. I think there are to many guns in the states. Over here, most Americans have an entirely incorrect understanding of our 2nd Amendment. Here's what it says, and I'll explain why most people think what they do: "Amendment II A well regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed." People ONLY use the "right of the people to keep and bear arms" clause and delete the rest. The root of this Amendment goes back to our British Colonial period prior to 1776 and the later Revolutionary War because the British would regularly confiscate all the farmer's muskets anytime there was unrest. The modern version of a "militia" is what we now call the National Guard which is a full military organization of both the Army and Air Force under the command of a state governor. The idea originally was for states to use a paramilitary organization for the common good AND to defend against the possibility of a rogue Federal goverenment trying to change the rules and establish tyranny. Our Supreme Court heard arguments for a Washington D.C. handgun ban last month that is its first 2nd Amendment case in 75 years. In short, if one reads this Amendment and has ANY knowledge of why it is there, they can easily see that it does NOT guarantee you the right to own a rifle, shotgun, handgun, assault weapon, sub-machine gun or anything. But, the threat IS real even today. In New Orleans, Lousianna, the city hit the hardest by Hurrican Katrina in 2005, the Mayor actually sent his police around and confiscated over 1,000 guns presumeably to prevent deaths due to looting. I don't want to start some gigantic flame war about guns, so I'll stop now. -- HP, aka Jerry "If it waddles like a duck and quacks like a duck, it must be a duck" |
NL - Friesland _ Prinsenhof _ tacking a skutsje - file 4 of 5 DSC_8043_bewerkt.jpg
"HEMI-Powered" wrote in message ... Bouler added these comments in the current discussion du jour ... snipage OK, if these shows come on again, I'll try to snag them and perhaps I can mail you a DVD of something you may not have seen in The Netherlands. Maybe I should have put in a grin or two of my own, but each of us is gifted in different ways. Perhaps one of mine to compensate for lack of foreign language skills is what people tell me is a logical mind and an insatiable appetite for new information. In fact, it has been a basic philosphy of mine back at least to my High School days as a teen-ager that learning is a life-long endeavor. Unfortunately, ALL of my classmates in Engineering School were like me and I suddently found myself as a brand new freshman in 1965 going from top 5% in my H.S. class to about the bottom 5-10% and on academic probation for 3 trimesters. One more and I'd have flunked out. Still in all, I barely made it, I recall something like only a 2.32 or so GPA. Could you explain that, we have a comlete other schoolsystem, so I don't have a clue what 2,32 GPA means. Sorry, I did it again, damnit! GPA means Grade Point Average. We use a 4.0 grading system in community colleges and universities where 0.0 is an E or F, 0.5 is barely passing maybe with a D-, 2.0 is a C, 3.0 is a B and 4.0 is an A. My school, Oakland University, used a 4.3 system where 4.3 was essentially an A+. I hope your schools at least use a similar letter grading system. OU, there in Rochester, Mich.? I know where that is. :-) wizofwas |
NL - Friesland _ Prinsenhof _ tacking a skutsje - file 4 of 5 DSC_8043_bewerkt.jpg
wizofwas added these comments in the current discussion du jour ...
B and 4.0 is an A. My school, Oakland University, used a 4.3 system where 4.3 was essentially an A+. I hope your schools at least use a similar letter grading system. OU, there in Rochester, Mich.? I know where that is. :-) wizofwas Exactly, wiz, Class of 1969. Oakland University was originally charted as MSUO - Michigan State University at Oakland but changed to OU a couple of years before I was admitted in 1965. Prior to my class, the Engineering School was the Department of Engineering under the School of Mathematics. As such, I would not have gone there as I would not have been able to earn a B.S. degree in engineering from an accredited university, and thus unable to secure employment. Pretty good school, really. Some 2/3 of the number of credits needed to graduate needed to come from the liberal arts - some say "breadless arts" from the initials of their degrees, B.A. - side. I thought that was pretty much a waste of my time back then but a decade or so later, I realized that their intent was to provide a well-rounded and full EDUCATION even for the hard science majors. That grounding in English, writing, literature, world history, language, music or art, and other "soft" things has stood me in very good stead over the years. In fact, one of my most interesting classes was a freshman American History 101 lecture class I snuck into to get an easy 4 credits when I was a senior - learned a lot that trimester! Do you still live in SE Michigan, wiz? If so, where? I'm sure you know I live in Troy, about 19 miles NNW of the Detroit River. If you've moved away, where did you live when here and where are you now? Thanks. -- HP, aka Jerry "If it waddles like a duck and quacks like a duck, it must be a duck" |
NL - Friesland _ Prinsenhof _ tacking a skutsje - file 4 of 5 DSC_8043_bewerkt.jpg
"HEMI-Powered" wrote in message ... wizofwas added these comments in the current discussion du jour ... B and 4.0 is an A. My school, Oakland University, used a 4.3 system where 4.3 was essentially an A+. I hope your schools at least use a similar letter grading system. OU, there in Rochester, Mich.? I know where that is. :-) wizofwas Exactly, wiz, Class of 1969. Oakland University was originally charted as MSUO - Michigan State University at Oakland but changed to OU a couple of years before I was admitted in 1965. Prior to my class, the Engineering School was the Department of Engineering under the School of Mathematics. As such, I would not have gone there as I would not have been able to earn a B.S. degree in engineering from an accredited university, and thus unable to secure employment. Pretty good school, really. Some 2/3 of the number of credits needed to graduate needed to come from the liberal arts - some say "breadless arts" from the initials of their degrees, B.A. - side. I thought that was pretty much a waste of my time back then but a decade or so later, I realized that their intent was to provide a well-rounded and full EDUCATION even for the hard science majors. That grounding in English, writing, literature, world history, language, music or art, and other "soft" things has stood me in very good stead over the years. In fact, one of my most interesting classes was a freshman American History 101 lecture class I snuck into to get an easy 4 credits when I was a senior - learned a lot that trimester! Do you still live in SE Michigan, wiz? If so, where? I'm sure you know I live in Troy, about 19 miles NNW of the Detroit River. If you've moved away, where did you live when here and where are you now? Thanks. Born and raised in Clarkston, it was a great little town back then. And I've also lived in E. Lansing and Grand Blanc. Now I'm in St. Petersburg, Fla. My one year of sailboat racing, we took 1st in class (Tartan 10) in the Port Huron to Mackinaw race. And yes, I know where Tory is. Exit 69 off of I-75 at Big Beaver Rd. How could I ever forget that exit. I don't know if it's still there, but I used to try to eat at the A&W there at Big Beaver & Rochester Rd. when I was working in that area. I had a job as a computer tech so I got to go to a lot of "job shops" in that area, as well as most of the LP. And I've also worked over a lot of the Midwest. wizofwas |
NL - Friesland _ Prinsenhof _ tacking a skutsje - file 4 of 5 DSC_8043_bewerkt.jpg
"HEMI-Powered" schreef in bericht ... Read all and I agree. In short, if one reads this Amendment and has ANY knowledge of why it is there, they can easily see that it does NOT guarantee you the right to own a rifle, shotgun, handgun, assault weapon, sub-machine gun or anything. But, the threat IS real even today. In New Orleans, Lousianna, the city hit the hardest by Hurrican Katrina in 2005, the Mayor actually sent his police around and confiscated over 1,000 guns presumeably to prevent deaths due to looting. I don't want to start some gigantic flame war about guns, so I'll stop now. You're right, but we have a lot in common. -- Greetings Bouler (The Netherlands) |
Link Titanic disaster
"HEMI-Powered" schreef in bericht ... In The Netherlands every car older than 3 year has to be checked every year by a garage who has their qualifications to do so. So every year in September I hope my 16 years old Renault 19 will make it. If something is wrong it has to be fixed, if not you may not drive that car anymore. I think its a good thing, you don't see rusty vehicles on the road any more. I somewhat often see cars so crappy they are actually a danger to those around them. Bald tires, fascias hanging literally, smoke pouring out the tailpipe, everything. Sad. Thats new for me, I thougt safety came first in the USA. But go to Ireland or Poland and other east-European countrys, I think its even worse than in America. -- Greetings Bouler (The Netherlands) |
Link Titanic disaster
"HEMI-Powered" schreef in bericht ... Read it all and agreed to make a long story shorter. You're a very clever man, you're apoligizing before I can even say somethinggrin It's not that I'm being clever or trying to anticipate you, I'm trying to answer a concern you had that I was blowing too much smoke and techical jargon and usage at you, so I made a conscious effort today to tone that down and expand on things you were commenting on. OK.but you still are clever;-) But you have nothing to apologize for Jerry you're smart enough to build in a lot of caution. If we are goïng on this way we're writing a book together;-) Thank you, Bouler, I appreciate that a lot. Hey, you may have a damn good idea - collaborating on a research book about something! Noooooooooooooo, I don't have the energy and the knowledgegrin -- Greetings Bouler (The Netherlands) |
Link Titanic disaster
Bouler added these comments in the current discussion du jour ...
"HEMI-Powered" schreef in bericht ... In The Netherlands every car older than 3 year has to be checked every year by a garage who has their qualifications to do so. So every year in September I hope my 16 years old Renault 19 will make it. If something is wrong it has to be fixed, if not you may not drive that car anymore. I think its a good thing, you don't see rusty vehicles on the road any more. I somewhat often see cars so crappy they are actually a danger to those around them. Bald tires, fascias hanging literally, smoke pouring out the tailpipe, everything. Sad. Thats new for me, I thougt safety came first in the USA. But go to Ireland or Poland and other east-European countrys, I think its even worse than in America. Safety is paramount only for new cars. Car makers must certify to very rigorous MVSS (Motor Vehicle Safety Standards). I'm not familiar with individual state safety and emissions requirements so beyond California's very strict rules from CARB (California Air Resources Board) on tailpipe emissions, I'm sure there are at least some states that also do safety inspections, but our driver's licensing process is generally quite loose. e.g., in Michigan, you literally CANNOT fail the 10 or 12 question written test you must take only every 8 years. I asked which one(s) I missed the last time I took it and the clerk told me it didn't matter as EVERYONE passes! Then, what's the sense of a test?! But, I do not think that ANY state is any near as tough as you're saying The Netherlands is, nor do I think any are as tough as I remember the inspection for my car in West Germany when I bought it and when I needed a re-inspection before selling it. We just don't do much. And, while the police DO inspect vehicles involved in injury or fatal accidents, it takes something pretty bad before the driver is ticketed. However, car companies are routinely sued by drivers, passengers, or surviving relatives in serious injury and fatality accidents not for safety per se but for alleged product liability, i.e., the plaintiffs allege the accident was caused by faulty design and/or manufacture. Most are dismissed or the car company wins but there are notable exceptions. -- HP, aka Jerry "If it waddles like a duck and quacks like a duck, it must be a duck" |
Link Titanic disaster
Bouler added these comments in the current discussion du jour ...
Read it all and agreed to make a long story shorter. You're a very clever man, you're apoligizing before I can even say somethinggrin It's not that I'm being clever or trying to anticipate you, I'm trying to answer a concern you had that I was blowing too much smoke and techical jargon and usage at you, so I made a conscious effort today to tone that down and expand on things you were commenting on. OK.but you still are clever;-) But you have nothing to apologize for Jerry you're smart enough to build in a lot of caution. If we are goïng on this way we're writing a book together;-) Thank you, Bouler, I appreciate that a lot. Hey, you may have a damn good idea - collaborating on a research book about something! Noooooooooooooo, I don't have the energy and the knowledgegrin Hey, friend, it was your idea above to collaborate on a book! grin back at ya -- HP, aka Jerry "If it waddles like a duck and quacks like a duck, it must be a duck" |
NL - Friesland _ Prinsenhof _ tacking a skutsje - file 4 of 5 DSC_8043_bewerkt.jpg
wizofwas added these comments in the current discussion du jour ...
Do you still live in SE Michigan, wiz? If so, where? I'm sure you know I live in Troy, about 19 miles NNW of the Detroit River. If you've moved away, where did you live when here and where are you now? Thanks. Born and raised in Clarkston, it was a great little town back then. And I've also lived in E. Lansing and Grand Blanc. Now I'm in St. Petersburg, Fla. My one year of sailboat racing, we took 1st in class (Tartan 10) in the Port Huron to Mackinaw race. Really?! Help out a lazy Michigander, wiz. Clarkston is north of Lapeer or NW, I can't remember which. I think the only time I've been there, and it isn't more than maybe 30 miles from me, is for a couple of funerals for the father or mother of one of my employees, and then later when HE suddenly and tragicly dropped dead a few years back after I'd retired. And yes, I know where Tory is. A slip of the digit, methinketh - Troy. Exit 69 off of I-75 at Big Beaver Rd. How could I ever forget that exit. I don't know if it's still there, but I used to try to eat at the A&W there at Big Beaver & Rochester Rd. when I was working in that area. I had a job as a computer tech so I got to go to a lot of "job shops" in that area, as well as most of the LP. And I've also worked over a lot of the Midwest. I normally take the Rochester Road exit either way from I-75 but most often I'm gettin off from the NG side. We live almost on the corner of Square Lake Road and Livernois, only a block from the old Troy Corners church which was moved a couple of years ago to the Troy Historical Museum. For the benefit of others here - you already know, I suspect - Troy was originally a small farming village in the early 19th Century. There were two parts to it, Troy Corners where I'm at, and Big Beaver, about where Big Beaver Road is today, and - I think - between what is now Rochester Road and Livernois. Any of you less lazy and better informed SE Michigan folks that can confirm or dispute my assertion, I'd be beholdin'! I've been to Tampa-St. Pete many times. My wife always liked the Gulf side of Florida for beach vacations than the Atlantic side because the water is warmer, less windy, nicer scenery, about everything better. Her fav place was Treasure Island. We also stayed ONCE - never do that again! - on Sanibel Island some distance south of you. Beaches were narrow, the place was infested with bugs to the point where one couldn't stroll the beach after dusk, and restaurants few and far between. I did like Florida much better than Souther California but since I'd never been there, we did take a vacation to the Greater Los Angeles Area in 1993, stayed in a Holiday in Anaheim, and did all of the touristy stuff including the San Deigo Zoo. But, the white tigers were sleeping in the back of their lair that day. Of course, we also had to find each and every Hard Rock Cafe because me daughter, then not quite 13, was collecting T-shirts. Now she collects their shot glasses and has a couple of big wall shelfie things. I'm glad I went to Kalyfornia, but once was enough for me. For the record ain't no way, Jose, I'd ever fly into LAX, we went into John Wayne and picked up our car on the property, great way to go. Thanks for the info! -- HP, aka Jerry "If it waddles like a duck and quacks like a duck, it must be a duck" |
NL - Friesland _ Prinsenhof _ tacking a skutsje - file 4 of 5 DSC_8043_bewerkt.jpg
Bouler added these comments in the current discussion du jour ...
Read all and I agree. In short, if one reads this Amendment and has ANY knowledge of why it is there, they can easily see that it does NOT guarantee you the right to own a rifle, shotgun, handgun, assault weapon, sub-machine gun or anything. But, the threat IS real even today. In New Orleans, Lousianna, the city hit the hardest by Hurrican Katrina in 2005, the Mayor actually sent his police around and confiscated over 1,000 guns presumeably to prevent deaths due to looting. I don't want to start some gigantic flame war about guns, so I'll stop now. You're right, but we have a lot in common. Which part do we have in common? Does The Netherlands have some equivalent to our 2nd Amendment or do you just mean you think we share views on guns, specifically gun control? I'll just crack the door open just a bit. If I were running things, I'd hardly ban guns except for the kind which only are used to commit crimes or terrorism, such as automatic weapons, assault rifles, etc. But, I'd strengthen the laws similar to Great Britain where you could OWN pretty much anything you wanted but must keep it in a controlled armory and apply in writing to take it to wherever you proposed to use it for target shooting, hunting, or perhaps a collecting show. -- HP, aka Jerry "If it waddles like a duck and quacks like a duck, it must be a duck" |
NL - Friesland _ Prinsenhof _ tacking a skutsje - file 4 of 5 DSC_8043_bewerkt.jpg
"HEMI-Powered" schreef in bericht ... Bouler added these comments in the current discussion du jour ... Read all and I agree. In short, if one reads this Amendment and has ANY knowledge of why it is there, they can easily see that it does NOT guarantee you the right to own a rifle, shotgun, handgun, assault weapon, sub-machine gun or anything. But, the threat IS real even today. In New Orleans, Lousianna, the city hit the hardest by Hurrican Katrina in 2005, the Mayor actually sent his police around and confiscated over 1,000 guns presumeably to prevent deaths due to looting. I don't want to start some gigantic flame war about guns, so I'll stop now. You're right, but we have a lot in common. Which part do we have in common? Does The Netherlands have some equivalent to our 2nd Amendment or do you just mean you think we share views on guns, specifically gun control? Thats the part I meant. I'll just crack the door open just a bit. If I were running things, I'd hardly ban guns except for the kind which only are used to commit crimes or terrorism, such as automatic weapons, assault rifles, etc. But, I'd strengthen the laws similar to Great Britain where you could OWN pretty much anything you wanted but must keep it in a controlled armory and apply in writing to take it to wherever you proposed to use it for target shooting, hunting, or perhaps a collecting show. In The Netherlands we have a law too that allows some people wearing guns. But they all should have a license. -- Greetings Bouler (The Netherlands) |
Link Titanic disaster
"HEMI-Powered" schreef in bericht ... In The Netherlands every car older than 3 year has to be checked every year by a garage who has their qualifications to do so. So every year in September I hope my 16 years old Renault 19 will make it. If something is wrong it has to be fixed, if not you may not drive that car anymore. I think its a good thing, you don't see rusty vehicles on the road any more. I somewhat often see cars so crappy they are actually a danger to those around them. Bald tires, fascias hanging literally, smoke pouring out the tailpipe, everything. Sad. Thats new for me, I thougt safety came first in the USA. But go to Ireland or Poland and other east-European countrys, I think its even worse than in America. Safety is paramount only for new cars. Car makers must certify to very rigorous MVSS (Motor Vehicle Safety Standards). I'm not familiar with individual state safety and emissions requirements so beyond California's very strict rules from CARB (California Air Resources Board) on tailpipe emissions, I'm sure there are at least some states that also do safety inspections, but our driver's licensing process is generally quite loose. e.g., in Michigan, you literally CANNOT fail the 10 or 12 question written test you must take only every 8 years. I asked which one(s) I missed the last time I took it and the clerk told me it didn't matter as EVERYONE passes! Then, what's the sense of a test?! To give some people a job maybegrin But, I do not think that ANY state is any near as tough as you're saying The Netherlands is, nor do I think any are as tough as I remember the inspection for my car in West Germany when I bought it and when I needed a re-inspection before selling it. We just don't do much. And, while the police DO inspect vehicles involved in injury or fatal accidents, it takes something pretty bad before the driver is ticketed. However, car companies are routinely sued by drivers, passengers, or surviving relatives in serious injury and fatality accidents not for safety per se but for alleged product liability, i.e., the plaintiffs allege the accident was caused by faulty design and/or manufacture. Most are dismissed or the car company wins but there are notable exceptions. If I'm informed well, sueïng is a hobby in the USA and the amounts of money they ask for minor things are high. -- Greetings Bouler (The Netherlands) |
NL - Friesland _ Prinsenhof _ tacking a skutsje - file 4 of 5 DSC_8043_bewerkt.jpg
"HEMI-Powered" wrote in message ... wizofwas added these comments in the current discussion du jour ... Do you still live in SE Michigan, wiz? If so, where? I'm sure you know I live in Troy, about 19 miles NNW of the Detroit River. If you've moved away, where did you live when here and where are you now? Thanks. Born and raised in Clarkston, it was a great little town back then. And I've also lived in E. Lansing and Grand Blanc. Now I'm in St. Petersburg, Fla. My one year of sailboat racing, we took 1st in class (Tartan 10) in the Port Huron to Mackinaw race. Really?! Help out a lazy Michigander, wiz. Clarkston is north of Lapeer or NW, I can't remember which. I think the only time I've been there, and it isn't more than maybe 30 miles from me, is for a couple of funerals for the father or mother of one of my employees, and then later when HE suddenly and tragicly dropped dead a few years back after I'd retired. Clarkston is due west of Lake Orion, so that would be SW of Lapeer. Basicly it's at the intersection of Dixie Hwy, M 15 and I 75. I have to say Dixie Hwy, because I think they changed the number from US 10 to US 24, but I'm not susre, it's been a long time since I've been there. And yes, I know where Tory is. A slip of the digit, methinketh - Troy. ROFL, yeppers, that and my old age setting in. :-) Not to mention my dyslexia. I've been to Tampa-St. Pete many times. My wife always liked the Gulf side of Florida for beach vacations than the Atlantic side because the water is warmer, less windy, nicer scenery, about everything better. Her fav place was Treasure Island. We also stayed ONCE - never do that again! - on Sanibel Island some distance south of you. Beaches were narrow, the place was infested with bugs to the point where one couldn't stroll the beach after dusk, and restaurants few and far between. I love it here. With the price of gas the way it is, I can get to anywhere I want by bicycle with no problems. In fact, I haven't driven a car since Christmas. St. Pete is getting real "biker" friendly more and more each year with new bicycle paths being added to the streets every year and even putting up bicycle racks in more areas. I did like Florida much better than Souther California but since I'd never been there, we did take a vacation to the Greater Los Angeles Area in 1993, stayed in a Holiday in Anaheim, and did all of the touristy stuff including the San Deigo Zoo. But, the white tigers were sleeping in the back of their lair that day. Of course, we also had to find each and every Hard Rock Cafe because me daughter, then not quite 13, was collecting T-shirts. Now she collects their shot glasses and has a couple of big wall shelfie things. I'm glad I went to Kalyfornia, but once was enough for me. For the record ain't no way, Jose, I'd ever fly into LAX, we went into John Wayne and picked up our car on the property, great way to go. Been to Cal., nice place to visit, but wouldn't want to live there. wizofwas |
Link Titanic disaster
"HEMI-Powered" schreef in bericht ... OK.but you still are clever;-) But you have nothing to apologize for Jerry you're smart enough to build in a lot of caution. If we are goïng on this way we're writing a book together;-) Thank you, Bouler, I appreciate that a lot. Hey, you may have a damn good idea - collaborating on a research book about something! Noooooooooooooo, I don't have the energy and the knowledgegrin Hey, friend, it was your idea above to collaborate on a book! grin back at ya You're right, I take it back;-) -- Greetings Bouler (The Netherlands) |
Link Titanic disaster
Bouler added these comments in the current discussion du jour ...
[snip] Safety is paramount only for new cars. Car makers must certify to very rigorous MVSS (Motor Vehicle Safety Standards). I'm not familiar with individual state safety and emissions requirements so beyond California's very strict rules from CARB (California Air Resources Board) on tailpipe emissions, I'm sure there are at least some states that also do safety inspections, but our driver's licensing process is generally quite loose. e.g., in Michigan, you literally CANNOT fail the 10 or 12 question written test you must take only every 8 years. I asked which one(s) I missed the last time I took it and the clerk told me it didn't matter as EVERYONE passes! Then, what's the sense of a test?! To give some people a job maybegrin I was flabergasted when I heard that 6 years ago but after reflecting for awhile, it occurred to me that the licensing process is an easy money maker for the state as are plates and it is in the state's best interest to have as many drivers on the road as possible because they also buy gas which is taxed, they drive to work which is good for jobs and business, and they drive to shop which is also good for jobs, businesses, and taxes. So, I don't think that you're right. I have to say, but with a big GRIN, that your political leaning are creeping in here. We DO employ people just to employ them, but not very damn much because there simply isn't budget for planned inefficiency when the unplanned kind is so obvious and plentiful. If I'm informed well, sueïng is a hobby in the USA and the amounts of money they ask for minor things are high. I doubt that, also. "Sue the *******!" may be a good slogan and an easy way to earn money by going after those with deep pockets, but often people feel very strongly about alleged product liability injuring or killing their loved ones and there are all too many tragic examples of corporate greed and callous disregard for the public's safety. I can tell you more off-line if you ask about it. -- HP, aka Jerry "If it waddles like a duck and quacks like a duck, it must be a duck" |
NL - Friesland _ Prinsenhof _ tacking a skutsje - file 4 of 5 DSC_8043_bewerkt.jpg
Bouler added these comments in the current discussion du jour ...
Which part do we have in common? Does The Netherlands have some equivalent to our 2nd Amendment or do you just mean you think we share views on guns, specifically gun control? Thats the part I meant. The latter, I'll assume. I'll just crack the door open just a bit. If I were running things, I'd hardly ban guns except for the kind which only are used to commit crimes or terrorism, such as automatic weapons, assault rifles, etc. But, I'd strengthen the laws similar to Great Britain where you could OWN pretty much anything you wanted but must keep it in a controlled armory and apply in writing to take it to wherever you proposed to use it for target shooting, hunting, or perhaps a collecting show. In The Netherlands we have a law too that allows some people wearing guns. But they all should have a license. We call that a CCW, Carry Concealed Weapon. Rules for that vary quite widely amongst the "several states" but here in Michigan, one must first get a permit to buy the handgun or other concealable firearm or other weapon but that's relatively easy. Then one must submit to a somewhat more rigorous background check for a CCW and be absent any felony convictions but this requirement is often side-stepped or simply ignored so people in Michigan should ASSUME that everyone they see on the streets, in shops, in cars, anywhere are armed to the teeth. Interstingly, one cannot carry a long gun such as rifle or shotgun in the open or concealed, barrel length is limited to 20" or more so sawed-off shotguns are illegal about everywhere, and one cannot even throw a long gun into their rear seat. It must be either disassembledd or stored in a secure case in the trunk of the vehicle or other wise not easily visible from outside the vehicle. What makes this such a peculiar law is that NO permit is required to buy a long-gun except to fill out an application at the store and show a simple photo ID. -- HP, aka Jerry "If it waddles like a duck and quacks like a duck, it must be a duck" |
NL - Friesland _ Prinsenhof _ tacking a skutsje - file 4 of 5 DSC_8043_bewerkt.jpg
wizofwas added these comments in the current discussion du jour ...
[snip] I love it here. With the price of gas the way it is, I can get to anywhere I want by bicycle with no problems. In fact, I haven't driven a car since Christmas. St. Pete is getting real "biker" friendly more and more each year with new bicycle paths being added to the streets every year and even putting up bicycle racks in more areas. I'm not quite fond enough to move to Florida, but I do like it. I don't much like the cost of living nor them dang himmicanes that Kingfisher prefers I not mention. I think he views them as the "H" word. grin I'm glad I went to Kalyfornia, but once was enough for me. For the record ain't no way, Jose, I'd ever fly into LAX, we went into John Wayne and picked up our car on the property, great way to go. Been to Cal., nice place to visit, but wouldn't want to live there. Likewise, bigtime, wizofwas! -- HP, aka Jerry "If it waddles like a duck and quacks like a duck, it must be a duck" |
Link Titanic disaster
"HEMI-Powered" schreef in bericht ... Bouler added these comments in the current discussion du jour ... [snip] Safety is paramount only for new cars. Car makers must certify to very rigorous MVSS (Motor Vehicle Safety Standards). I'm not familiar with individual state safety and emissions requirements so beyond California's very strict rules from CARB (California Air Resources Board) on tailpipe emissions, I'm sure there are at least some states that also do safety inspections, but our driver's licensing process is generally quite loose. e.g., in Michigan, you literally CANNOT fail the 10 or 12 question written test you must take only every 8 years. I asked which one(s) I missed the last time I took it and the clerk told me it didn't matter as EVERYONE passes! Then, what's the sense of a test?! To give some people a job maybegrin I was flabergasted when I heard that 6 years ago but after reflecting for awhile, it occurred to me that the licensing process is an easy money maker for the state as are plates and it is in the state's best interest to have as many drivers on the road as possible because they also buy gas which is taxed, they drive to work which is good for jobs and business, and they drive to shop which is also good for jobs, businesses, and taxes. So, I don't think that you're right. I have to say, but with a big GRIN, that your political leaning are creeping in here. We DO employ people just to employ them, but not very damn much because there simply isn't budget for planned inefficiency when the unplanned kind is so obvious and plentiful. If I'm informed well, sueïng is a hobby in the USA and the amounts of money they ask for minor things are high. I doubt that, also. "Sue the *******!" may be a good slogan and an easy way to earn money by going after those with deep pockets, but often people feel very strongly about alleged product liability injuring or killing their loved ones and there are all too many tragic examples of corporate greed and callous disregard for the public's safety. I can tell you more off-line if you ask about it. Not nessecaryly, I think people in the USA are sueïng faster and more than in The Netherlands. The Urban legend: "Dryïng a cat in the microwave" The cat died and the microwavefactory is sued because it was not in the disclamer;-) -- Greetings Bouler (The Netherlands) |
NL - Friesland _ Prinsenhof _ tacking a skutsje - file 4 of 5 DSC_8043_bewerkt.jpg
"HEMI-Powered" schreef in bericht ... Bouler added these comments in the current discussion du jour ... Which part do we have in common? Does The Netherlands have some equivalent to our 2nd Amendment or do you just mean you think we share views on guns, specifically gun control? Thats the part I meant. The latter, I'll assume. Yep. I'll just crack the door open just a bit. If I were running things, I'd hardly ban guns except for the kind which only are used to commit crimes or terrorism, such as automatic weapons, assault rifles, etc. But, I'd strengthen the laws similar to Great Britain where you could OWN pretty much anything you wanted but must keep it in a controlled armory and apply in writing to take it to wherever you proposed to use it for target shooting, hunting, or perhaps a collecting show. In The Netherlands we have a law too that allows some people wearing guns. But they all should have a license. We call that a CCW, Carry Concealed Weapon. Rules for that vary quite widely amongst the "several states" but here in Michigan, one must first get a permit to buy the handgun or other concealable firearm or other weapon but that's relatively easy. Then one must submit to a somewhat more rigorous background check for a CCW and be absent any felony convictions but this requirement is often side-stepped or simply ignored so people in Michigan should ASSUME that everyone they see on the streets, in shops, in cars, anywhere are armed to the teeth. Scary, I think I'll stay where I am;-) Interstingly, one cannot carry a long gun such as rifle or shotgun in the open or concealed, barrel length is limited to 20" or more so sawed-off shotguns are illegal about everywhere, and one cannot even throw a long gun into their rear seat. It must be either disassembledd or stored in a secure case in the trunk of the vehicle or other wise not easily visible from outside the vehicle. What makes this such a peculiar law is that NO permit is required to buy a long-gun except to fill out an application at the store and show a simple photo ID. I never can get a licence, only when I am a member of a "shootingclub". But I'm not so fond of guns. -- Greetings Bouler (The Netherlands) |
NL - Friesland _ Prinsenhof _ tacking a skutsje - file 4 of 5 DSC_8043_bewerkt.jpg
"HEMI-Powered" wrote in message ... wizofwas added these comments in the current discussion du jour ... [snip] I love it here. With the price of gas the way it is, I can get to anywhere I want by bicycle with no problems. In fact, I haven't driven a car since Christmas. St. Pete is getting real "biker" friendly more and more each year with new bicycle paths being added to the streets every year and even putting up bicycle racks in more areas. I'm not quite fond enough to move to Florida, but I do like it. I don't much like the cost of living nor them dang himmicanes that Kingfisher prefers I not mention. I think he views them as the "H" word. grin Miami area and south, and the panhandle are the worse places to live in Fla. if you worry about the Herricanes (or Himicanes, depending on the gender of the cane :-)). And the safest place is in the Jacksonville area. But at least we get ample warning when they are coming now. I've been here over 15 years now and have only had close calls with them. But you are right, it's not if you're going to get hit by one, just when. wizofwas |
NL - Friesland _ Prinsenhof _ tacking a skutsje - file 4 of 5 DSC_8043_bewerkt.jpg
wizofwas added these comments in the current discussion du jour ...
Born and raised in Clarkston, it was a great little town back then. And I've also lived in E. Lansing and Grand Blanc. Now I'm in St. Petersburg, Fla. My one year of sailboat racing, we took 1st in class (Tartan 10) in the Port Huron to Mackinaw race. Really?! Help out a lazy Michigander, wiz. Clarkston is north of Lapeer or NW, I can't remember which. I think the only time I've been there, and it isn't more than maybe 30 miles from me, is for a couple of funerals for the father or mother of one of my employees, and then later when HE suddenly and tragicly dropped dead a few years back after I'd retired. Clarkston is due west of Lake Orion, so that would be SW of Lapeer. Basicly it's at the intersection of Dixie Hwy, M 15 and I 75. I have to say Dixie Hwy, because I think they changed the number from US 10 to US 24, but I'm not susre, it's been a long time since I've been there. I must've blew right past this earlier today, wiz. Wow! I must have my compass next to a magnet or something, as I thought Clarkston was the other way or maybe I'm mixed up with the funeral home a little south of downtown that I talked about earlier. Hmmm. Gotta broom the cobwebs out of the old brain, methinketh! Now that I cogitate a little more, yes, I get off I-75 at the Lapeer Road exit right by the Palace of Auburn Hills where the Detroit Pistons play basketball but I keep going north to some Michigan 2-lane highway. No, I must still be mixed up, think I'll find a Michigan map and get myself turned around. William Beaumont Hospital has a satellite medical building just south of Lapeer, and just north of the Chrysler marshalling yard where I get my company lease cars. I see my urologist out there. It is a 25 minute rule out there and more than 2 gallons of gas but is FAR easier than fighting the parking deck at Troy Beaumont which is only 6 miles from my house. So, I trade some money and time for the convenience of parking right by the door and only a short walk down the hall. In the end, I actually SAVE time. And, Beaumont has full X-ray, CT, and MRI services so I use them also. Now, would you at all care to tell me what "wizofwas" means? I'd take a wild stab at something like "wizard of was something or the other". That at all close? Also, would you care to go off-line and maybe get to know each other via E-mail. I'd really like that as you and I can compare notes like I've just started doing with Kingfisher. I'm also enjoying the Hell outta talking to Bouler. If yes, do I un-munge your E-mail addy by just taking out the "nospam"? Hope you're agreeable, I think we can have some fun. -- HP, aka Jerry "You've obviously mistaken me for someone who gives a ****!" |
Link Titanic disaster
Bouler added these comments in the current discussion du jour ...
"HEMI-Powered" schreef in bericht ... Bouler added these comments in the current discussion du jour ... [snip] Safety is paramount only for new cars. Car makers must certify to very rigorous MVSS (Motor Vehicle Safety Standards). I'm not familiar with individual state safety and emissions requirements so beyond California's very strict rules from CARB (California Air Resources Board) on tailpipe emissions, I'm sure there are at least some states that also do safety inspections, but our driver's licensing process is generally quite loose. e.g., in Michigan, you literally CANNOT fail the 10 or 12 question written test you must take only every 8 years. I asked which one(s) I missed the last time I took it and the clerk told me it didn't matter as EVERYONE passes! Then, what's the sense of a test?! To give some people a job maybegrin I was flabergasted when I heard that 6 years ago but after reflecting for awhile, it occurred to me that the licensing process is an easy money maker for the state as are plates and it is in the state's best interest to have as many drivers on the road as possible because they also buy gas which is taxed, they drive to work which is good for jobs and business, and they drive to shop which is also good for jobs, businesses, and taxes. So, I don't think that you're right. I have to say, but with a big GRIN, that your political leaning are creeping in here. We DO employ people just to employ them, but not very damn much because there simply isn't budget for planned inefficiency when the unplanned kind is so obvious and plentiful. If I'm informed well, sueïng is a hobby in the USA and the amounts of money they ask for minor things are high. I doubt that, also. "Sue the *******!" may be a good slogan and an easy way to earn money by going after those with deep pockets, but often people feel very strongly about alleged product liability injuring or killing their loved ones and there are all too many tragic examples of corporate greed and callous disregard for the public's safety. I can tell you more off-line if you ask about it. Not nessecaryly, I think people in the USA are sueïng faster and more than in The Netherlands. Do you mean "not necesarily" or "not necessary"? The former means you disagree with my thesis while the latter means you're not interested in talking about this anymore. Sorry, but this time I can't follow your English. The Urban legend: "Dryïng a cat in the microwave" The cat died and the microwavefactory is sued because it was not in the disclamer;-) A better example is this one, in my baileywick [sp?]: Ford has been sued to the tune of billions of dollars, most of which is still in litigation, for Ford Explorer SUV roll-over accidents once it became apparent it was somewhat unstable and even more so when somebody figured out that its Firestone tires were more vulnerable to handling problems than other brands. Plaintiffs sued on the grounds that Ford and Firestone knew of the defective handling and tendency to roll over yet dragged their feet for serveral years before they even tried to fix it. Here's the most outrageous one I'm aware of that I think is still winding its way on the way to the Supreme Court: Some Michigan woman traveling over 85 mph on rain and rainy snow on a limited access highway has to brake hard and change lanes violently to avoid hitting another vehicle. The Explorer rolls over multiple times and lands in the median strip. She is kills but NOT by the trauma of the rollover. She was not belted and was ejected out the driver's door window and killed when the Explorer literally rolled OVER her. Then, after the police investigated, it was found she was driving on a license suspended for too many speeding violations! Wait, it gets FAR worse! Ford damn near beat the first round lawsuit by bringing in expert witnesses and its own MVSS certification engineers and did a computer simulation and ejection at that speed would have been fatal even if the vehicle had NOT rolled on top of her, but if she HAD been fully belted with the combined lap and shoulder belts, the forces could be proven on a proving grounds crash simulator to be LESS than fatal. So, the plaintiff's family's attorney said that Ford should have made the window glass strong enough to keep her in the car! Now it really gets ludicrous because Ford them brought in expert witnesses and proved that even if it were technically feasible to put strong enough glass in the door - which it is NOT - the blunt force trauma of whacking a piece of 1" or more thick glass would have instantly killed the woman just from a cranial injury to the brain. And, the jury STILL returned a verdict of guilty for Ford and awarded something over $150 million in ordinary and punitive damages to the woman's estate! This was over 10 years ago, I know that Ford appealed but lost and I think has managed to tie this up in court ever since. Now, Ford also has several HUNDRED lawsuits still pendind, a couple of dozen of which are so-called class-action suits involving multiple plaintiffs and multiple injuries and deaths. Sorry to dive off the high board on the technical crash engineering stuff but it is the only way to explain how truly egegious this is. So, please clarify what your sentence meaning is and how you'd like to proceed here, if you do at all. Thanks, Bouler. -- HP, aka Jerry "If it waddles like a duck and quacks like a duck, it must be a duck" |
NL - Friesland _ Prinsenhof _ tacking a skutsje - file 4 of 5 DSC_8043_bewerkt.jpg
Bouler added these comments in the current discussion du jour ...
Interstingly, one cannot carry a long gun such as rifle or shotgun in the open or concealed, barrel length is limited to 20" or more so sawed-off shotguns are illegal about everywhere, and one cannot even throw a long gun into their rear seat. It must be either disassembledd or stored in a secure case in the trunk of the vehicle or other wise not easily visible from outside the vehicle. What makes this such a peculiar law is that NO permit is required to buy a long-gun except to fill out an application at the store and show a simple photo ID. I never can get a licence, only when I am a member of a "shootingclub". But I'm not so fond of guns. In Michigan prior to maybe 8 years ago, a private citizen had to show a legitimate need for firearm protection because of their line of work. For example, a free lance PI (Private Investigator), someone who works for a company that may be attacked and needs a privately owned weapon, or similar things. They just didn't let any yahoo carry a Dirty Harry around. But, Republican Gov. John Engler who was a big believer in the presumed 2nd Amendment's right to "keep and bear arms" took advantage of a friendly legislature to push through a general leniency of the permit to buy a handgun and a FAR more lenient law, the one I already talked about, for getting a CCW. I make no comment on what he did, but suffice to say that we are now in the same position as traditional gun states such as the Far West and Old South. So, do I interpret your brief comment to basically mean that The Netherlands has a much stricter law to obtain a CCW license, maybe like Michigan used to have? -- HP, aka Jerry "If it waddles like a duck and quacks like a duck, it must be a duck" |
Link Titanic disaster
"HEMI-Powered" schreef in bericht ... snip If I'm informed well, sueïng is a hobby in the USA and the amounts of money they ask for minor things are high. I doubt that, also. "Sue the *******!" may be a good slogan and an easy way to earn money by going after those with deep pockets, but often people feel very strongly about alleged product liability injuring or killing their loved ones and there are all too many tragic examples of corporate greed and callous disregard for the public's safety. I can tell you more off-line if you ask about it. Not nessecaryly, I think people in the USA are sueïng faster and more than in The Netherlands. Do you mean "not necesarily" or "not necessary"? The former means you disagree with my thesis while the latter means you're not interested in talking about this anymore. Sorry, but this time I can't follow your English. We have a sayïmng he "A small hole does a large ship sink". That is possible with language too. I simply meant I'm not interested in several story's about sueïng and and how things ended. Sorry for writing a word wrong so it had a total different meaning. The Urban legend: "Dryïng a cat in the microwave" The cat died and the microwavefactory is sued because it was not in the disclamer;-) This was a joke Jerry, Urban Ledgends never happened. A better example is this one, in my baileywick [sp?]: Ford has been sued to the tune of billions of dollars, most of which is still in litigation, for Ford Explorer SUV roll-over accidents once it became apparent it was somewhat unstable and even more so when somebody figured out that its Firestone tires were more vulnerable to handling problems than other brands. Plaintiffs sued on the grounds that Ford and Firestone knew of the defective handling and tendency to roll over yet dragged their feet for serveral years before they even tried to fix it. Here's the most outrageous one I'm aware of that I think is still winding its way on the way to the Supreme Court: Some Michigan woman traveling over 85 mph on rain and rainy snow on a limited access highway has to brake hard and change lanes violently to avoid hitting another vehicle. The Explorer rolls over multiple times and lands in the median strip. She is kills but NOT by the trauma of the rollover. She was not belted and was ejected out the driver's door window and killed when the Explorer literally rolled OVER her. Then, after the police investigated, it was found she was driving on a license suspended for too many speeding violations! Wait, it gets FAR worse! Ford damn near beat the first round lawsuit by bringing in expert witnesses and its own MVSS certification engineers and did a computer simulation and ejection at that speed would have been fatal even if the vehicle had NOT rolled on top of her, but if she HAD been fully belted with the combined lap and shoulder belts, the forces could be proven on a proving grounds crash simulator to be LESS than fatal. So, the plaintiff's family's attorney said that Ford should have made the window glass strong enough to keep her in the car! Now it really gets ludicrous because Ford them brought in expert witnesses and proved that even if it were technically feasible to put strong enough glass in the door - which it is NOT - the blunt force trauma of whacking a piece of 1" or more thick glass would have instantly killed the woman just from a cranial injury to the brain. And, the jury STILL returned a verdict of guilty for Ford and awarded something over $150 million in ordinary and punitive damages to the woman's estate! This was over 10 years ago, I know that Ford appealed but lost and I think has managed to tie this up in court ever since. Now, Ford also has several HUNDRED lawsuits still pendind, a couple of dozen of which are so-called class-action suits involving multiple plaintiffs and multiple injuries and deaths. Sorry to dive off the high board on the technical crash engineering stuff but it is the only way to explain how truly egegious this is. So, please clarify what your sentence meaning is and how you'd like to proceed here, if you do at all. Thanks, Bouler. Wow what one word can do;-( Lets stop talking about these things Jerry, they are to complicated for me and I'm not interested enough. -- Greetings Bouler (The Netherlands) |
NL - Friesland _ Prinsenhof _ tacking a skutsje - file 4 of 5 DSC_8043_bewerkt.jpg
"HEMI-Powered" schreef in bericht ... snip I never can get a licence, only when I am a member of a "shootingclub". But I'm not so fond of guns. In Michigan prior to maybe 8 years ago, a private citizen had to show a legitimate need for firearm protection because of their line of work. For example, a free lance PI (Private Investigator), someone who works for a company that may be attacked and needs a privately owned weapon, or similar things. They just didn't let any yahoo carry a Dirty Harry around. But, Republican Gov. John Engler who was a big believer in the presumed 2nd Amendment's right to "keep and bear arms" took advantage of a friendly legislature to push through a general leniency of the permit to buy a handgun and a FAR more lenient law, the one I already talked about, for getting a CCW. I make no comment on what he did, but suffice to say that we are now in the same position as traditional gun states such as the Far West and Old South. So, do I interpret your brief comment to basically mean that The Netherlands has a much stricter law to obtain a CCW license, maybe like Michigan used to have? Yes thats what I meant. -- Greetings Bouler (The Netherlands) |
Link Titanic disaster
Bouler added these comments in the current discussion du jour ...
Not nessecaryly, I think people in the USA are sueïng faster and more than in The Netherlands. Do you mean "not necesarily" or "not necessary"? The former means you disagree with my thesis while the latter means you're not interested in talking about this anymore. Sorry, but this time I can't follow your English. We have a sayïmng he "A small hole does a large ship sink". Like the Titanic, right? That is possible with language too. I simply meant I'm not interested in several story's about sueïng and and how things ended. Sorry for writing a word wrong so it had a total different meaning. I think I once said "English is a language that is hard to understand but easy to misunderstand". The original author is believed to be George Bernard Shaw. The Urban legend: "Dryïng a cat in the microwave" The cat died and the microwavefactory is sued because it was not in the disclamer;-) This was a joke Jerry, Urban Ledgends never happened. How can anyone tell? By definition, urban legends are exactly the same as rumors - completely believable yet impossible to either prove or disprove. My wife just bought a bottle of some liquid from the DMSO, Inc. company which her best friend swears is an outstanding spray or wipe on topical pain killer, yet there are NO ingredients list whatsoever and NO suggested uses cited. Moreover, the "instructions" explicity say "do not apply to skin, eyes, or clothing, do not inhale or swallow or use in any way not specifically mentioned on this label. This product is strictly a solvent and should be used as such with no express or implied warranty as to any fitness of purpose whatsoever." Now, I am aware of a powerful drug call DMSO, which means DiMethylsSulfOxide, and comes in 50ml bottes by physician prescription only, and has the only function to attempt to relieve pain caused by bladder IC (Interstitial Cystitis). DMSO is inserted into the bladder by a temporary urinary catheter and is held in for as long as possible until the burning gets too much for the patient to bear. Guess how I know this? So, the DMSO, Inc. company CLEARLY knows this and has probably put distilled water in the bottle without even a flavor or aroma in the hopes that sufferers of anything at all might shell out six bucks for it, and yet the company attempts to indemnify itself from any legal liabililty for use or misuse. A better example is this one, in my baileywick [sp?]: Ford has been sued to the tune of billions of dollars, most of which is still in litigation, for Ford Explorer SUV roll-over accidents once it became apparent it was somewhat unstable and even more so when somebody figured out that its Firestone tires were more vulnerable to handling problems than other brands. Plaintiffs sued on the grounds that Ford and Firestone knew of the defective handling and tendency to roll over yet dragged their feet for serveral years before they even tried to fix it. Here's the most outrageous one I'm aware of that I think is still winding its way on the way to the Supreme Court: Some Michigan woman traveling over 85 mph on rain and rainy snow on a limited access highway has to brake hard and change lanes violently to avoid hitting another vehicle. The Explorer rolls over multiple times and lands in the median strip. She is kills but NOT by the trauma of the rollover. She was not belted and was ejected out the driver's door window and killed when the Explorer literally rolled OVER her. Then, after the police investigated, it was found she was driving on a license suspended for too many speeding violations! Wait, it gets FAR worse! Ford damn near beat the first round lawsuit by bringing in expert witnesses and its own MVSS certification engineers and did a computer simulation and ejection at that speed would have been fatal even if the vehicle had NOT rolled on top of her, but if she HAD been fully belted with the combined lap and shoulder belts, the forces could be proven on a proving grounds crash simulator to be LESS than fatal. So, the plaintiff's family's attorney said that Ford should have made the window glass strong enough to keep her in the car! Now it really gets ludicrous because Ford them brought in expert witnesses and proved that even if it were technically feasible to put strong enough glass in the door - which it is NOT - the blunt force trauma of whacking a piece of 1" or more thick glass would have instantly killed the woman just from a cranial injury to the brain. And, the jury STILL returned a verdict of guilty for Ford and awarded something over $150 million in ordinary and punitive damages to the woman's estate! This was over 10 years ago, I know that Ford appealed but lost and I think has managed to tie this up in court ever since. Now, Ford also has several HUNDRED lawsuits still pendind, a couple of dozen of which are so-called class-action suits involving multiple plaintiffs and multiple injuries and deaths. Sorry to dive off the high board on the technical crash engineering stuff but it is the only way to explain how truly egegious this is. So, please clarify what your sentence meaning is and how you'd like to proceed here, if you do at all. Thanks, Bouler. Wow what one word can do;-( Lets stop talking about these things Jerry, they are to complicated for me and I'm not interested enough. GRIN Be careful of what you wish for, Bouler, you may get it (that is, you may imply or appear to imply that you are asking a question or making a comment and someone like me will come along and write a major paper on the subject). -- HP, aka Jerry "If it waddles like a duck and quacks like a duck, it must be a duck" |
NL - Friesland _ Prinsenhof _ tacking a skutsje - file 4 of 5 DSC_8043_bewerkt.jpg
wizofwas added these comments in the current discussion du jour ...
"HEMI-Powered" wrote in message ... wizofwas added these comments in the current discussion du jour ... [snip] I love it here. With the price of gas the way it is, I can get to anywhere I want by bicycle with no problems. In fact, I haven't driven a car since Christmas. St. Pete is getting real "biker" friendly more and more each year with new bicycle paths being added to the streets every year and even putting up bicycle racks in more areas. I'm not quite fond enough to move to Florida, but I do like it. I don't much like the cost of living nor them dang himmicanes that Kingfisher prefers I not mention. I think he views them as the "H" word. grin Miami area and south, and the panhandle are the worse places to live in Fla. if you worry about the Herricanes (or Himicanes, depending on the gender of the cane :-)). And the safest place is in the Jacksonville area. But at least we get ample warning when they are coming now. I've been here over 15 years now and have only had close calls with them. But you are right, it's not if you're going to get hit by one, just when. Louisiana and Missippippi got the same warning for Katrina, at least a couple of days before landfall, but the damage, destruction, and loss of life was vastly different for a variety of reasons, but principly from what I know due to much of New Orleans being below the wind surge flood level behind levees that failed and 100 or so miles east wasn't, plus the Mayor of NO and the Gov. of Louisiana sat on their collective duffs and so did FEMA. Now, Florida has none of these problems, AFAIK, you'd obviously be a better judge of this than me, but if ANY coastal area or even 100 miles or more inland is going to get a direct hit by a 100 year wind, rain, and flood there just plain ain't no time to flee, nor any place to go anyway. So, because farming, ranching, manufacturing, and many, many industries are very profitable in hurricane belts and people all must live someplace, I imagine they just play the probabilities. I remember seeing a 15 or so high pole along the Grand Strand near Myrtle beach, wondered what it was and pulled over to see. Perched on top was a sign that read "100 year flood level". 15 feet above the road? Don't think anyone is gonna drive out from there! I know of no place on earth, certainly not wherever the earthquake hit in China, where weather and geological disasters aren't a threat to life and property, it is just a risk we must bear. -- HP, aka Jerry "If it waddles like a duck and quacks like a duck, it must be a duck" |
NL - Friesland _ Prinsenhof _ tacking a skutsje - file 4 of 5 DSC_8043_bewerkt.jpg
Bouler added these comments in the current discussion du jour ...
snip I never can get a licence, only when I am a member of a "shootingclub". But I'm not so fond of guns. In Michigan prior to maybe 8 years ago, a private citizen had to show a legitimate need for firearm protection because of their line of work. For example, a free lance PI (Private Investigator), someone who works for a company that may be attacked and needs a privately owned weapon, or similar things. They just didn't let any yahoo carry a Dirty Harry around. But, Republican Gov. John Engler who was a big believer in the presumed 2nd Amendment's right to "keep and bear arms" took advantage of a friendly legislature to push through a general leniency of the permit to buy a handgun and a FAR more lenient law, the one I already talked about, for getting a CCW. I make no comment on what he did, but suffice to say that we are now in the same position as traditional gun states such as the Far West and Old South. So, do I interpret your brief comment to basically mean that The Netherlands has a much stricter law to obtain a CCW license, maybe like Michigan used to have? Yes thats what I meant. OK, thanks. -- HP, aka Jerry "If it waddles like a duck and quacks like a duck, it must be a duck" |
Link Titanic disaster
"HEMI-Powered" schreef in bericht ... Do you mean "not necesarily" or "not necessary"? The former means you disagree with my thesis while the latter means you're not interested in talking about this anymore. Sorry, but this time I can't follow your English. We have a sayïmng he "A small hole does a large ship sink". Like the Titanic, right? Well I think that was not a small hole;-) That is possible with language too. I simply meant I'm not interested in several story's about sueïng and and how things ended. Sorry for writing a word wrong so it had a total different meaning. I think I once said "English is a language that is hard to understand but easy to misunderstand". The original author is believed to be George Bernard Shaw. The Urban legend: "Dryïng a cat in the microwave" The cat died and the microwavefactory is sued because it was not in the disclamer;-) This was a joke Jerry, Urban Ledgends never happened. How can anyone tell? By definition, urban legends are exactly the same as rumors - completely believable yet impossible to either prove or disprove. My wife just bought a bottle of some liquid from the DMSO, Inc. company which her best friend swears is an outstanding spray or wipe on topical pain killer, yet there are NO ingredients list whatsoever and NO suggested uses cited. Moreover, the "instructions" explicity say "do not apply to skin, eyes, or clothing, do not inhale or swallow or use in any way not specifically mentioned on this label. This product is strictly a solvent and should be used as such with no express or implied warranty as to any fitness of purpose whatsoever." Now, I am aware of a powerful drug call DMSO, which means DiMethylsSulfOxide, and comes in 50ml bottes by physician prescription only, and has the only function to attempt to relieve pain caused by bladder IC (Interstitial Cystitis). DMSO is inserted into the bladder by a temporary urinary catheter and is held in for as long as possible until the burning gets too much for the patient to bear. Guess how I know this? Maybe by expierience? So, the DMSO, Inc. company CLEARLY knows this and has probably put distilled water in the bottle without even a flavor or aroma in the hopes that sufferers of anything at all might shell out six bucks for it, and yet the company attempts to indemnify itself from any legal liabililty for use or misuse. A better example is this one, in my baileywick [sp?]: Ford has been sued to the tune of billions of dollars, most of which is still in litigation, for Ford Explorer SUV roll-over accidents once it became apparent it was somewhat unstable and even more so when somebody figured out that its Firestone tires were more vulnerable to handling problems than other brands. Plaintiffs sued on the grounds that Ford and Firestone knew of the defective handling and tendency to roll over yet dragged their feet for serveral years before they even tried to fix it. Here's the most outrageous one I'm aware of that I think is still winding its way on the way to the Supreme Court: Some Michigan woman traveling over 85 mph on rain and rainy snow on a limited access highway has to brake hard and change lanes violently to avoid hitting another vehicle. The Explorer rolls over multiple times and lands in the median strip. She is kills but NOT by the trauma of the rollover. She was not belted and was ejected out the driver's door window and killed when the Explorer literally rolled OVER her. Then, after the police investigated, it was found she was driving on a license suspended for too many speeding violations! Wait, it gets FAR worse! Ford damn near beat the first round lawsuit by bringing in expert witnesses and its own MVSS certification engineers and did a computer simulation and ejection at that speed would have been fatal even if the vehicle had NOT rolled on top of her, but if she HAD been fully belted with the combined lap and shoulder belts, the forces could be proven on a proving grounds crash simulator to be LESS than fatal. So, the plaintiff's family's attorney said that Ford should have made the window glass strong enough to keep her in the car! Now it really gets ludicrous because Ford them brought in expert witnesses and proved that even if it were technically feasible to put strong enough glass in the door - which it is NOT - the blunt force trauma of whacking a piece of 1" or more thick glass would have instantly killed the woman just from a cranial injury to the brain. And, the jury STILL returned a verdict of guilty for Ford and awarded something over $150 million in ordinary and punitive damages to the woman's estate! This was over 10 years ago, I know that Ford appealed but lost and I think has managed to tie this up in court ever since. Now, Ford also has several HUNDRED lawsuits still pendind, a couple of dozen of which are so-called class-action suits involving multiple plaintiffs and multiple injuries and deaths. Sorry to dive off the high board on the technical crash engineering stuff but it is the only way to explain how truly egegious this is. So, please clarify what your sentence meaning is and how you'd like to proceed here, if you do at all. Thanks, Bouler. Wow what one word can do;-( Lets stop talking about these things Jerry, they are to complicated for me and I'm not interested enough. GRIN Be careful of what you wish for, Bouler, you may get it (that is, you may imply or appear to imply that you are asking a question or making a comment and someone like me will come along and write a major paper on the subject). I know by now, but I did not ask for it. BTW the Ford story proves the insane forms of suïng. The lady was driving very dangerous, so its simply her own fault and not Fords, but still Ford has to pay a crazy lot of money. Nobody in The Netherlands will sue a company for such an accident. A small reply is enough, please don't snow me under againgrin -- Greetings Bouler (The Netherlands) |
Link Titanic disaster
Bouler added these comments in the current discussion du jour ...
We have a sayïmng he "A small hole does a large ship sink". Like the Titanic, right? Well I think that was not a small hole;-) And, I think that you don't know how to think and I also think that you don't know anything at all about the Titanic and can't even figure out which way a ship moves when the rudder is turned in either forward or astern steaming. [snip] Maybe by expierience? Of course, by experience, moron! And, I have a LOT more of it than you will ever fathom! Good word for this NG, huh? Now, how about using some of your feeble brain cells that haven't been polluted yet by idiotic political views and at least learn how to turn on Outhouse Expresso's spell checker. I think I have enough of words, sentences and paragraphs I can barely decipher, they are so badly written. GRIN Be careful of what you wish for, Bouler, you may get it (that is, you may imply or appear to imply that you are asking a question or making a comment and someone like me will come along and write a major paper on the subject). I know by now, but I did not ask for it. BTW the Ford story proves the insane forms of suïng. The lady was driving very dangerous, so its simply her own fault and not Fords, but still Ford has to pay a crazy lot of money. Nobody in The Netherlands will sue a company for such an accident. Yeah, because you are too stupid. I gave you FACTUAL examples of product liability issues, but the REAL reason that Dutch people don't sue is that they get their balls nailed to the deck if they lose, our morons don't. A small reply is enough, please don't snow me under againgrin You have yet to see an intentional snowing under, but you'll shortly begin to see some. Now, after reading my couple of private replies and the first very small retalliatory strikes here, maybe you'll see how really foolish you were in attempting to take me on and apologize, else you will see first-hand just how much brighter I really am than you. //EOT -- HP, aka Jerry "You've obviously mistaken me for someone who gives a ****!" |
NL - Friesland _ Prinsenhof _ tacking a skutsje - file 4 of 5 DSC_8043_bewerkt.jpg
Bouler added these comments in the current discussion du jour ...
"HEMI-Powered" schreef in bericht ... snip I never can get a licence, only when I am a member of a "shootingclub". But I'm not so fond of guns. In Michigan prior to maybe 8 years ago, a private citizen had to show a legitimate need for firearm protection because of their line of work. For example, a free lance PI (Private Investigator), someone who works for a company that may be attacked and needs a privately owned weapon, or similar things. They just didn't let any yahoo carry a Dirty Harry around. But, Republican Gov. John Engler who was a big believer in the presumed 2nd Amendment's right to "keep and bear arms" took advantage of a friendly legislature to push through a general leniency of the permit to buy a handgun and a FAR more lenient law, the one I already talked about, for getting a CCW. I make no comment on what he did, but suffice to say that we are now in the same position as traditional gun states such as the Far West and Old South. So, do I interpret your brief comment to basically mean that The Netherlands has a much stricter law to obtain a CCW license, maybe like Michigan used to have? Yes thats what I meant. If I'd realized when I made my first reply here that you have no clue on these things, I'd not have wasted my time on a thoughtful reply.And,another phrase for CCW is "right to carry", and I can see why you don't - you'd be a danger to yourself and everyone around you if you tried to use your rod. -- HP, aka Jerry "You've obviously mistaken me for someone who gives a ****!" |
Link Titanic disaster
Bouler added these comments in the current discussion du jour ...
Wow what one word can do;-( Lets stop talking about these things Jerry, they are to complicated for me and I'm not interested enough. Single misguided words have started wars, numbnuts! I can understand when a technical discussion is too complicated for your simple pedagogue mind, so you're better off quitting when you're already behind. "'Tis better to be silent and be thought a fool, than to speak and remove all doubt." - Abraham Lincoln -- HP, aka Jerry "You've obviously mistaken me for someone who gives a ****!" |
NL - Friesland _ Prinsenhof _ tacking a skutsje - file 4 of 5 DSC_8043_bewerkt.jpg
"HEMI - Powered" wrote in message ... wizofwas added these comments in the current discussion du jour ... Born and raised in Clarkston, it was a great little town back then. And I've also lived in E. Lansing and Grand Blanc. Now I'm in St. Petersburg, Fla. My one year of sailboat racing, we took 1st in class (Tartan 10) in the Port Huron to Mackinaw race. Really?! Help out a lazy Michigander, wiz. Clarkston is north of Lapeer or NW, I can't remember which. I think the only time I've been there, and it isn't more than maybe 30 miles from me, is for a couple of funerals for the father or mother of one of my employees, and then later when HE suddenly and tragicly dropped dead a few years back after I'd retired. Clarkston is due west of Lake Orion, so that would be SW of Lapeer. Basicly it's at the intersection of Dixie Hwy, M 15 and I 75. I have to say Dixie Hwy, because I think they changed the number from US 10 to US 24, but I'm not susre, it's been a long time since I've been there. I must've blew right past this earlier today, wiz. Wow! I must have my compass next to a magnet or something, as I thought Clarkston was the other way or maybe I'm mixed up with the funeral home a little south of downtown that I talked about earlier. Hmmm. Gotta broom the cobwebs out of the old brain, methinketh! Now that I cogitate a little more, yes, I get off I-75 at the Lapeer Road exit right by the Palace of Auburn Hills where the Detroit Pistons play basketball but I keep going north to some Michigan 2-lane highway. No, I must still be mixed up, think I'll find a Michigan map and get myself turned around. Clarkston, think of Pine Knob, I do hope that you know where Pine Knob is. I can remember going to a game at the Palace and the line on 75 was real long. I saw that and just bypassed it and took the back way in. Used to do the same thing with the "bag" (Silverdome) And I forgot to say that I also lived in Lake Orion just off of Lapeer Rd. (M24) Never got to Lapeer very much, Oxford is as far north as I usually got. But Ihave traveled the length of it going up to the thumb. William Beaumont Hospital has a satellite medical building just south of Lapeer, and just north of the Chrysler marshalling yard where I get my company lease cars. I see my urologist out there. It is a 25 minute rule out there and more than 2 gallons of gas but is FAR easier than fighting the parking deck at Troy Beaumont which is only 6 miles from my house. So, I trade some money and time for the convenience of parking right by the door and only a short walk down the hall. In the end, I actually SAVE time. And, Beaumont has full X-ray, CT, and MRI services so I use them also. I've traveled by "Billy B" in Troy more times than I can count. Now, would you at all care to tell me what "wizofwas" means? I'd take a wild stab at something like "wizard of was something or the other". That at all close? That's it, I really got it from a cartoon on a customers site one time. They had a cartoon of a wizard waving a wand at a computer main- frame and the caption was "I don't know, he's from CV." And beside the wizard was written in "Eddie? Charlie?". I asked the customer and yes, it was a complement. I was one of the best at fixing that old equipment. I turned down a job as regional tech support in Chitown because I didn't want to move there and I knew that I'd be spending most of my time on the road. I also turned down a job as national tech support because I didn't want to take the pay cut. IIRC it would have been about $10k a year and the cost of living is much greater in Boston than it is in Detroit. Also, would you care to go off-line and maybe get to know each other via E-mail. I'd really like that as you and I can compare notes like I've just started doing with Kingfisher. I'm also enjoying the Hell outta talking to Bouler. If yes, do I un-munge your E-mail addy by just taking out the "nospam"? Yes, that's how you do it. and if you want to E-mail, go ahead. wizofwas |
NL - Friesland _ Prinsenhof _ tacking a skutsje - file 4 of 5 DSC_8043_bewerkt.jpg
"HEMI-Powered" wrote in message ... wizofwas added these comments in the current discussion du jour ... "HEMI-Powered" wrote in message ... wizofwas added these comments in the current discussion du jour ... [snip] I love it here. With the price of gas the way it is, I can get to anywhere I want by bicycle with no problems. In fact, I haven't driven a car since Christmas. St. Pete is getting real "biker" friendly more and more each year with new bicycle paths being added to the streets every year and even putting up bicycle racks in more areas. I'm not quite fond enough to move to Florida, but I do like it. I don't much like the cost of living nor them dang himmicanes that Kingfisher prefers I not mention. I think he views them as the "H" word. grin Miami area and south, and the panhandle are the worse places to live in Fla. if you worry about the Herricanes (or Himicanes, depending on the gender of the cane :-)). And the safest place is in the Jacksonville area. But at least we get ample warning when they are coming now. I've been here over 15 years now and have only had close calls with them. But you are right, it's not if you're going to get hit by one, just when. Louisiana and Missippippi got the same warning for Katrina, at least a couple of days before landfall, but the damage, destruction, and loss of life was vastly different for a variety of reasons, but principly from what I know due to much of New Orleans being below the wind surge flood level behind levees that failed and 100 or so miles east wasn't, plus the Mayor of NO and the Gov. of Louisiana sat on their collective duffs and so did FEMA. Now, Florida has none of these problems, AFAIK, you'd obviously be a better judge of this than me, but if ANY coastal area or even 100 miles or more inland is going to get a direct hit by a 100 year wind, rain, and flood there just plain ain't no time to flee, nor any place to go anyway. So, because farming, ranching, manufacturing, and many, many industries are very profitable in hurricane belts and people all must live someplace, I imagine they just play the probabilities. If you think for one minute that given a 24 hour notice that anybody can't drive out of a hurricanes path, then you are dead wrong. I'd say a 12 hour notice, but then you'd have a ton of traffic to deal with and might not be able to get out of the way. And yes, we watch the hurricanes forming off of Africa and keep watching them all summer and fall till they die. We really don't know what they are going to do or go. New Orleans was/is a disaster just wating to happen. The lazy idiots there just wanted the Fed to bail them out and do every- thing for them. They didn't want to take responsiblity for saving themselves. And yes that includes the Mayor and the Governer. Remember tht it IS the governments job to inform you when and where a hurricane is going to hit. It is NOT the governments job to save your sorry ass if you decide to stay. I remember seeing a 15 or so high pole along the Grand Strand near Myrtle beach, wondered what it was and pulled over to see. Perched on top was a sign that read "100 year flood level". 15 feet above the road? Don't think anyone is gonna drive out from there! If you wait till the storm hits, you're right, but who said that you can't leave before the storm hits? I know of no place on earth, certainly not wherever the earthquake hit in China, where weather and geological disasters aren't a threat to life and property, it is just a risk we must bear. Just depends on what you want to put up with. I'd much rather deal with the hurricanes here than the tornadoes up there. I still remember the damage done to Flint in the 50's and Saginaw/Bay City in the 60's by tornadoes. And they strike without warning. wizofwas |
where Clarkston is, meaning of "wiz", and E-mailing
wizofwas added these comments in the current discussion du jour ...
Clarkston, think of Pine Knob, I do hope that you know where Pine Knob is. I can remember going to a game at the Palace and the line on 75 was real long. I saw that and just bypassed it and took the back way in. Used to do the same thing with the "bag" (Silverdome) And I forgot to say that I also lived in Lake Orion just off of Lapeer Rd. (M24) Never got to Lapeer very much, Oxford is as far north as I usually got. But Ihave traveled the length of it going up to the thumb. OK, now I'm with you, wiz. Pine Knob is a fair piece NORTH of me. Yes, Lapeer and Lake Orion both lie (lay?) along Lapeer Road, as does the Palace, but the Silverdome, former home of the Detroit Lions football team is on Opdyke Boulevard at Featherstone Road, where FREC (Chrysler Featherstone Road Office Complex where the SRT team and Team Viper are) and the Chrysler Technology Center and Headquarters Tower Complex both east of the 'Dome. And, the Walter P. Chrylser Museum is at SE corner of CTC's 512+ acre grounds. I've traveled by "Billy B" in Troy more times than I can count. Me, two, and I spent a very unpleasant to days as an inpatient the latter part of January this year after I damn near killed myself with severe malnutrion and Tylenol poisoning, but I'm reasonably healthy again now (although I have a LOT of work ahead of me to regain my strength and endurance). Now, would you at all care to tell me what "wizofwas" means? I'd take a wild stab at something like "wizard of was something or the other". That at all close? That's it, I really got it from a cartoon on a customers site one time So, it is "Wizard of Was", whatever "Was" is? .. They had a cartoon of a wizard waving a wand at a computer main- frame Ah, yes, mainframes. Haven't heard that term in awhile! and the caption was "I don't know, he's from CV." And beside the wizard was written in "Eddie? Charlie?". I asked the customer and yes, it was a complement. I was one of the best at fixing that old equipment. I turned down a job as regional tech support in Chitown because I didn't want to move there and I knew that I'd be spending most of my time on the road. I also turned down a job as national tech support because I didn't want to take the pay cut. IIRC it would have been about $10k a year and the cost of living is much greater in Boston than it is in Detroit. Sounds like you're a pretty good techie, like my nephew. I can hold my own on the SW side but don't know much and don't much like HW. However, after about 1995 or so, I stopped being a PC hobbyist and now just use them to do useful work. So, I can do OK to keep the thing running but can't build one or diagnose and fix serious problems. It isn't that I'm not smart enough, I just ran out of time and interest to stay current, and had bigger fish to fry. Also, would you care to go off-line and maybe get to know each other via E-mail. I'd really like that as you and I can compare notes like I've just started doing with Kingfisher. I'm also enjoying the Hell outta talking to Bouler. If yes, do I un-munge your E-mail addy by just taking out the "nospam"? Yes, that's how you do it. and if you want to E-mail, go ahead. OK, thanks for the go ahead. If you want to go first, also please to to he 1 t h r o w a w a y @ c o m c a s t.n e t. I stopped putting even a munged addy into my headers or sig some time back for the same reason you've at least been wise enough to munge your header. Thanks, Wiz! -- HP, aka Jerry |
NL - Friesland _ Prinsenhof _ tacking a skutsje - file 4 of 5 DSC_8043_bewerkt.jpg
wizofwas added these comments in the current discussion du jour ...
Louisiana and Missippippi got the same warning for Katrina, at least a couple of days before landfall, but the damage, destruction, and loss of life was vastly different for a variety of reasons, but principly from what I know due to much of New Orleans being below the wind surge flood level behind levees that failed and 100 or so miles east wasn't, plus the Mayor of NO and the Gov. of Louisiana sat on their collective duffs and so did FEMA. Now, Florida has none of these problems, AFAIK, you'd obviously be a better judge of this than me, but if ANY coastal area or even 100 miles or more inland is going to get a direct hit by a 100 year wind, rain, and flood there just plain ain't no time to flee, nor any place to go anyway. So, because farming, ranching, manufacturing, and many, many industries are very profitable in hurricane belts and people all must live someplace, I imagine they just play the probabilities. If you think for one minute that given a 24 hour notice that anybody can't drive out of a hurricanes path, then you are dead wrong. I'd say a 12 hour notice, but then you'd have a ton of traffic to deal with and might not be able to get out of the way. And yes, we watch the hurricanes forming off of Africa and keep watching them all summer and fall till they die. We really don't know what they are going to do or go. New Orleans was/is a disaster just wating to happen. The lazy idiots there just wanted the Fed to bail them out and do every- thing for them. They didn't want to take responsiblity for saving themselves. And yes that includes the Mayor and the Governer. Remember tht it IS the governments job to inform you when and where a hurricane is going to hit. It is NOT the governments job to save your sorry ass if you decide to stay. I KNOW an entire state of city's population cannot flee that quickly even if they have the means, which over half of NO residents did not. My point though, was that the governors of the several Gulf states and mayors of the major coastal cities varied widely in their decisions on how to prepare and how to recover from the aftermath. Gov. Blanco of Lousiana and Mayor Ray Nagen of New Orleans also blundered fatally some years prior to Katrina, back to 1999-2000 and again in 2002-2003 when the Army's Corps of Engineers proposed rebuilding the NO levees to support 80% of a 100 year flood and storm surge and had a more expensive alternative that upped the percentage even more. It was in the $2.2B range, which the Army had secured Federal budged for all but about $250-300 million more or less that would be shared 80/20 by the state and city but Blanco and Nagen balked and refused to pony up their share. Pretty damn dumb, if you ask me, and what some people say "penny wise but dollar foolish" in reverse. That said, it might STILL have been possible to prevent the carnage, $20+ billion damages, and both suffering and illness today IF president Bush and first Tom Ridge and later Michael Chertoff of DHS would've popped for entire levee rebuilding by realizing that it would be only about 1/10 as expensive as what FEMA had to attempt to do. I think that is both arrogant and tragic. There is still confusion and finger pointing as to exactly when the Hurricane Warning Service of the Federal government actually told Nagen and Blanco - and the other states - more clearly what the danger was and the probability of a direct hit vs a glancing blow so that more than 24 hours - maybe as many as 72 or more - could have been available. Even more tragic is that over 60 percent of the Louisiana National Guard which could have immediately swung into action to help the recovery, were deployed to Iraq and despite Gov. Blancos many pleas to President Bush, he adamently refused to send her Gaurd home and deploy other state's units. I remember seeing a 15 or so high pole along the Grand Strand near Myrtle beach, wondered what it was and pulled over to see. Perched on top was a sign that read "100 year flood level". 15 feet above the road? Don't think anyone is gonna drive out from there! If you wait till the storm hits, you're right, but who said that you can't leave before the storm hits? Nobody, but lots of folks don't recognize the true danger and/or do not have the wherewithall to move away expediciously or at all. I know of no place on earth, certainly not wherever the earthquake hit in China, where weather and geological disasters aren't a threat to life and property, it is just a risk we must bear. Just depends on what you want to put up with. I'd much rather deal with the hurricanes here than the tornadoes up there. I still remember the damage done to Flint in the 50's and Saginaw/Bay City in the 60's by tornadoes. And they strike without warning. Tornadoes have been in the news in the last couple of years because of the tragedies and devastation in the several Midwestern twisters. But, besides long ago strengthening their building codes and establishing better early warning systems, other states such as my Michigan haven't had a major tornado in a LONG time. That's why I like it where I am. Now if your a Yupper or live someplace like Grand Rapids, then you're going to get hit much harder with lakes-effects rain and snow storms to the point of blizzards so severe that entire cities shut down for long periods are all too common. Again, though, one needs to put some perspective on this. People live where they do because they like it there, and often have deep family roots and also long-time employment, so it can be tough. Agree at all to my counter assertions? I'm not trying to dispute yours, just expand on mine with some more background I'm aware of through multiple sources. -- HP, aka Jerry "You've obviously mistaken me for someone who gives a ****!" |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 06:21 PM. |
|
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 BoatBanter.com