This YouTube video from StormCloudsGathering sent from YouTube.
Author: coastcontact
Exaggeration of the Week
Today’s Los Angeles Times front page headline is “Latest Ebola case raises U.S. anxiety.” That makes a total of two cases. Hardly an epidemic. The news media loves to beat a story to death. CNN is especially good at this kind of “reporting.” They offered 24 hour a day coverage of the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370. That reporting continued until ratings dropped off. Aren’t we all to blame?
As expressed in The Weekly Sift
From googling around and talking with my wife (who specializes in risk management), I’ve concluded that risk theorists do a bad job coming up with catchy names for common fallacies. Let me suggest that the principle in the opening quote be called “the Ebola fallacy”. (If you already know a name for this, please leave a comment.)
Wednesday was the first time a person died of Ebola in the United States. Thomas Duncan (who flew here from Liberia) was also the first person diagnosed with Ebola in the United States. (The handful of previous cases were Americans who contracted the disease in Africa, were diagnosed there, and returned to the U.S. for treatment.) Sunday, we got the first report of someone catching Ebola in this country: one of the people who treated Duncan at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital in Dallas.
This is about what you’d expect from a hard-to-catch disease like Ebola. As CDC Director Tom Frieden explained: “Ebola has been in existence for decades—and has predominantly infected remote areas lacking basic health infrastructure.”
And yet, from the public reaction you’d think Ebola was the biggest health problem in the country. It’s all over the news. Lakeland Industries, which makes hazmat suits, has seen its stock soar 160% this month. Republican political candidates are citing the Ebola threat to support clamping down on the Mexican border. (So far there have been no Ebola cases in Central America. But when Republicans think about disease-carriers, Hispanics leap to mind.) And three Democrats joined 24 Republican members of Congress in calling for banning travelers from western Africa, and possibly quarantining Americans for three weeks after they return from western Africa .
And that’s just the reaction from people who are trying to look respectable. The conspiracy theorists are going completely crazy. “The CDC is working with Border Patrol authorities and the Department of Homeland Security to disappear potential Ebola victims attempting to cross the border into the United States.”
Meanwhile, about 700 Americans die in traffic accidents each week.
Want to be safer and live longer? Use seat belts. Don’t smoke. Don’t drink and drive. Eat better. Get the sleep you need. Exercise regularly. And if you need any additional motivation not to touch the bodily fluids of people who are visibly ill, maybe then you should think about Ebola. But stop obsessing about distant-but-horrible threats that have almost no chance of affecting you.
Happy Thanksgiving in Canada
Even though I grew up in the USA, I do say “eh!” often. Thanks Dad!

Women Shouldn’t Ask for Raises?
The boss of Microsoft, Satya Nadella, has apologised for remarks he made advising women not to ask for a pay rise but to have “faith in the system”.
Could you imagine Bill Gates, founder of Microsoft, saying these things?
Microsoft Chief Executive Satya Nadella issued an apology Thursday evening to all company employees following the backlash he received for comments he made about women asking for raises.
Nadella was a featured speaker at a Phoenix conference for thousands of women professionals in computing when he was asked what advice he would give to women who aren’t comfortable asking for a raise.
“It’s not really about asking for the raise, but knowing and having faith that this system will actually give you the right raises as you go along,” Nadella told the moderator, Maria Klawe, in front of the gathering of women engineers. Nadella went on to say that women who don’t ask for raises have an “additional superpower … because that’s good karma, it’ll come back.”
Klawe, a computer scientist and Microsoft board member, immediately shot back, “This is one of the very few things I disagree with you on,” and was applauded by audience members.
The CEO’s response received blowback almost immediately. “Does this mean Microsoft is developing karma currency to pay your bills?” Twitter user Jame Ervin wrote. “Waiting for karma to solve wage gap.”
“I sort of doubt that Satya Nadella got to be CEO by trusting in karmic ‘super powers,’” Twitter user Scott Starr wrote.
Shortly after his speech, Nadella tweeted that he “was inarticulate” about how women should ask for raises. He added that the tech industry needs to close the gender pay gap “so a raise is not needed because of bias.”
Thursday night, he issued a formal apology via email: “I answered that question completely wrong,” Nadella wrote. “I believe men and women should get equal pay for equal work. And when it comes to career advice on getting a raise when you think it’s deserved, Maria’s advice was the right advice. If you think you deserve a raise, you should just ask.”
Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
Erin Burnett on her CCN Out Front program interviewed Susie Orman about the outspoken Nadella. Obviously Orman condemned the Nadella statement. Others that could be interviewed would be Meg Whitman, Sarah Palin, and Hillary Clinton. Do you suppose any of them would be talking about karma ‘super powers?’
Nadella seemed to recognize his mistake, later walking back his comments through Twitter:
Satya Nadella ✔ @satyanadella Follow
Was inarticulate re how women should ask for raise. Our industry must close gender pay gap so a raise is not needed because of a bias #GHC14
What can you expect from a man who comes from a country where rape is common place and mistreatment of women is the norm?
Cactus Garden and Mystery Home
I have been driving by this unique garden and home for decades. It is on the road to Malibu. I use Topanga Canyon Boulevard as an alternate route from West Los Angeles when the freeways are shut down due to fires or serious car accidents.
Finally I decided to stop a take some photos. The garden is listed on Yelp and Yahoo. As it happens the adjoining house is For Sale. Thus there are real estate photos on line. Asking price for this 4700 square foot home is $1.2 Million. Four bedrooms and four full baths on a .44 acre lot. The house was built in 1931.
There appears to be an abandoned road next to the corner as shown in the first picture. Notice the flirtatious Cupid. Clicking on the pictures gives you a better view.
Location map
My photos all taken with my Panasonic DMC-FZ150:
Heading south as you leave the San Fernando Valley:
Heading north entering the San Fernando Valley from Topanga Canyon:
Real Estate listing photos of the house. Repaved the street and glossed the photos all thanks to Photoshop
Warren Buffett on Clinton 2016: ‘Hillary is going to win’
As reported on Fortune.com, Warren Buffet appearing at Fortune’s Most Powerful Women Summit predicted that Hillary Clinton will not only run for president but that she will win. He said he would bet on it.
I would bet that the GOP will disagree with a Clinton win. But isn’t it entertaining.
Link to the interview: http://for.tn/1rUvaGL
A Conservative-to-English Lexicon, 2nd edition
A well done effort to understand the Tea Party.
Preface to the Second Edition
The popularity and inadequacy of the First Edition led its readers to submit many terms which had unfortunately been overlooked. While still far from complete, the Second Edition (I hope) will make far more Conservative speech comprehensible to non-residents of the conservative echo chamber.
But before listing the terms new to the Second Edition, other comments motivate me to say a few words about the origin and intentions of the Lexicon.
Origin of the Lexicon. While researching “Not a Tea Party, a Confederate Party“, I discovered many examples of language drift among conservatives. The great majority of the new usages are transparent, and can be easily understood by readers without my help. (When, for example, Paul Ryan says “inner city” he means “black”.) But confusion became likely when the drifting terms began to interact.
One example in particular required unpacking, because it was…
View original post 2,285 more words
Bleak reality of Alzheimer’s
Bleak reality of Alzheimer’s may be brighter in the future
Caution: If this is too painful for you, do not read anything beyond this sentence.
This was the title of an article appearing in last week’s Los Angeles Daily News. My mother died from Alzheimer’s disease three years ago. I have seen all five stages. Stage five is devastating. Still, you should know what is likely to happen if you or a loved one develops this horrible disease. I am changing my Medical Power of Attorney by adding instructions pertaining to the disease.
DEAR DOCTOR K »
My mother has Alzheimer’s disease. What should I expect in the coming years?
DEAR READER»
It’s impossible to predict exactly how Alzheimer’s disease will affect someone. Symptoms of the disease, and how quickly they progress, can vary widely from person to person. In some people, for reasons we don’t understand; the disease progresses very slowly.
However rapidly Alzheimer’s disease progresses, it generally un-folds in five stages:
• Stage 1. Memory problems begin. The person may misplace valuable objects. Their performance at work or in social situations begins to suffer. They may have more trouble expressing their thoughts.
Personality changes also begin. A person may become withdrawn, apathetic, moody, depressed, irritable or anxious.
• Stage 2. Memory problems are more obvious. It may be difficult for someone with Alzheimer’s to follow conversations. The person may have difficulty recalling current events or even bits of information from their own lives. Depression of-ten becomes prominent. Reasoning and judgment skills are impaired.
• Stage 3. Memory can fluctuate daily or even hourly. People sometimes forget major events in their lives. Often they are unaware of the date or the time of .year. Their conversations may become disjointed and veer off track.
You may see episodes of paranoia or anger. Stressful situations can trigger shouting, cursing or hitting.
At this stage, people with Alzheimer’s can still manage many basic activities of daily living. But they can no longer live independently.
• Stage 4. In this stage, you’ll see dramatic changes. Language skills drop sharply. Memory impairment becomes profound. A person remembers only bits and pieces of his or her past.
People become less withdrawn, but they often develop behavior and emotional problems, including delusions and hallucinations. Sleep disturbances and wandering are also common.
By this stage, the person will likely require help to bathe, toilet, dress and eat.
• Stage 5. This stage has been called “the long goodbye.” There seems to be very little left of the person’s “self.” Motor skills decline until the person can no longer walk, sit up, chew and swallow food, or control bladder and bowel movements. As the brain shuts down, the person becomes unresponsive, lapses into a coma and finally dies.
I am sorry to paint such a bleak picture, but unfortunately today we have no way of preventing or treating this terrible disease. However, there is reason to hope that the picture will become brighter in the future. In the past 20 years, scientists have begun to unravel what goes wrong with the chemistry of the brain in Alzheimer’s. I am cautiously optimistic that this knowledge will lead to true breakthroughs.
But like the pace of the disease itself, the pace of our growing knowledge is hard to predict. It may take decades, but I think medical research will make major advances. I know that gives little comfort to people who must deal with this terrible illness today.
Dr. Komaroff is a physician and professor at Harvard Medical School.
To send questions, go to AskDoctorK.com, or write:
Ask Doctor K, 10 Shattuck St., Second Floor, Boston, MA 02115.
The United States is the Arms Maker for the World
When you want the very best in military hardware buy American. Ours is the highest quality and most reliable. Our arms are the equivalent of Lexus, BMW, and Mercedes Benz high quality cars.
President Dwight Eisenhower famously warned the U.S. about the “military–industrial complex” in his farewell address. To this day armament manufacturers have provided thousands of well-paying jobs to Americans. With the wind down of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and reduced military budgets there has been a significant reduction in those arms purchases.
The Los Angeles Times reports that “Three days after the U.S. fired 47 cruise missiles into Syria last week, the Pentagon signed a $251-million deal to buy more missiles from Raytheon Co.”
Thanks to the president’s “no boots on the ground” plans we are all happy to know that our children will have limited exposure to the Middle East war zone.
Why are we in this war at all? Congress won’t vote money for America’s infrastructure or other domestic spending proposals. However, given any threat abroad and the need for more jobs at home, why not keep shooting those GPS guided bombs? After all the cost of those guidance systems is a mere $25,000 each.
Make war, make money, and no boots on the ground. Perfect! Something both Democrats and Republicans can both agree on.
The military–industrial complex is alive and well.













