Is it Safe to Live in the United States?

The Los Angeles Times print and internet editions provided news of San Diego State University hosting school shooting survival training.

San Diego State simulate a police team searching for a gunman

San Diego State simulate a police team searching for a gunman

Los Angeles schools will have police visiting all schools in the city district daily to assure parents that their children are safe. The program is the result of the Newtown, Conn. Shooting.

What madness is this? Like a “Twilight Zone” story we fear a handful of people who threaten our children and families with death just because of the second amendment to the constitution. Even the conservative Supreme Court Justice Anthony Scalia has said that reasonable gun regulations are legal. The death rate from homicides in the United States is over 3 people per 100,000 residents. That same number is .5 in Canada and England had 35 homicides in 2011. Neither of those countries has seen dictators take control of their governments. Our obsession with fire arms is horrifying.

Is it safe to reside in this country when you fear going to church, to school, or the shopping mall? Is my only course being armed wherever I go?

Gun Control Legislation in the United States

  Meager and mild legislation is the best we can hope for.

First we all need to understand that our constitution’s second amendment states we all have the right to keep a bear arms.  That is the core reason that gun owners offer to justify their ownership of all the weapons in their possession.

Former Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords, who was almost killed by an assassin, and her husband retired astronaut, Mark Kelly, wrote an op-ed in USA Today that their Americans for Responsible Solutions initiative would help raise money to support greater gun control efforts and take on the powerful gun lobby.

President Obama has appointed Vice President Joe Biden to head a committee that will develop proposed legislation that might reduce gun violence.

Jim and Sarah Brady formed the Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence. Brady, then-President Ronald Reagan’s press secretary, was wounded in the 1981 presidential assassination attempt by a mentally ill gunman.

In January, Calfornia Senator Feinstein will introduce a bill to stop the sale, transfer, importation and manufacturing of military-style assault weapons and high-capacity ammunition feeding devices.

The NRA spent at least $24 million in the 2012 election cycle, including $16.8 million through its political action committee and $7.5 million through its affiliated Institute for Legislative Action. By comparison, the Brady Campaign spent around $5,800.

And when it comes to direct lobbying of lawmakers, the NRA was also dominant. Through July 1, the NRA spent $4.4 million to lobby Congress, compared with the Brady Campaign’s $60,000.

It is estimated that there are 300 million weapons of various kinds in the hand of the American public.

I would support the idea of confiscating all guns that can hold magazines of more than ten bullets.

It won’t happen.  The owners of guns are everywhere.  The mere thought of gun controls results in higher gun sales. Gun organizations are too strong to be contained.

Life After Retirement

Huell Howser passed away last night. He was the homespun host of public television’s popular California’s Gold travelogues.   He obviously enjoyed producing the programs he presented.  I actually found his presentations irritating because of the corny dialog he used.  He wrote it and he enjoyed presenting it.  He retired in November 2012.

Howser is not the first well known and widely loved personality to die shortly after retiring.  Andy Rooney was the ever loved curmudgeon who ended every 60 Minutes program with some silly but interesting observations. He died within a few weeks of his retirement.  Remember Edgar Bergen the ventriloquist?  He was the father of Candice Bergen.  He too died within weeks of his retirement.  I am sure there are other well known people who died shortly after retirement.

Still, I know some veterans of WWII that are alive and well who drive cars, play cards,  argue about everything, watch television, and are living happily ever after.

So my question is: does being in the lime light impact your life after retirement or is it that those who really love their jobs face an early death upon retirement?

I believe it’s the latter.  My own father worked until the age of 70.  He would have worked even longer if his employer had not said “We think it’s time you retired.”  He was not a happily retired man.  He struggled finding things to do.  He lived 16 years after he retired.

I on the other hand never loved any of my work.  It was work not fun.  I do not miss getting up at 5:30am.  I do not miss angry bosses.  Actually my son was 18 when he said, “You have hated every job you ever had.”  Wow! That hurt but it was true.

So since I have no regrets about not working maybe I will live to 100.  I hope so!

Fiscal Cliff Soap Opera Episode 2 – Standby

Just like “As the World Turns,” The Fiscal Cliff is a soap opera and it’s never over.  With that thought in mind a television network ought to provide daily updates with clips of the latest foolish words from the president and the congressional leaders of both parties.  This is evident by the news items that the next fiscal events to be confronted are sequestration and the debt ceiling with a backdrop of over spending.  However, we know that the settling of those issues will not be the end of the story.  Our elected officials seem to take a delight in providing the rolls of the devious, the treacherous, and the good guys.  Like a good soap opera you never know what the next installment will bring.

Gov. Chris Christie with President Obama

 “We are here for you. And we will not forget. We will follow up to make sure that you get all the help you need until you’ve rebuilt,” Obama said at an afternoon news conference.

 Sixty Billion Dollars was the proposed federal aid for Sandy Super storm victims.  Somehow the Speaker of the House overlooked that spending bill on New Year’s day.  N.J.’s governor Chris Christie went on the attack against Speaker John Boehner and the G.O.P.  After hugs and hand holding with the president and now this attack is Gov. Christie about to change political parties?  To me he seems more like a moderate Democrat than a Republican.

The facts:

  • Sequestration is $110 Billion out of a Federal budget spending plan of $3.8 Trillion.  That would be 110/3800 and that equals less that 3%. The 2013 United States federal budget is the budget to fund government operations for the fiscal year 2013, which is October 2012–September 2013.  The sequestration is scheduled to take effect March 1.
  • The debt limit ceiling will be reached at about the same time as the sequestration.  The Federal government borrows approximately 31¢ of every dollar spent.  The fiscally responsible are asking how long can America continue this borrowing pattern.  I am one of them.
  • The political parties fight each other even when they know the other group is correct.  When the speaker of the House tells the leader of the Senate “Go f*** yourself” you know the political system is in failure mode.

New Year’s Resolutions

I do not know if this is just an American pass time but every New Year many of us make a list of resolutions of things we promise ourselves to do but are quickly forgotten.

One of the most popular is losing weight.  Weight Watchers, Nutrisystems and Jenny Craig all enroll thousands of new participants.  The gyms all sign up hundreds and perhaps thousands of new members.  Clearly this is a commercial bonus.

There are however many other kinds of resolutions.  One person I know writes out a set of goals for the new year.  He revises them annually.  In his case that set of goals gives him directions to his life.

Forbes Magazine posts on line Seven Strategies for Highly Effective New Year’s Resolutions. Summarized as follows:

  1. Know Your Why. For a resolution to stick, it has to      be aligned with your core values. In other words, you have to “Know      your why” and feel truly passionate about the goals you set for      yourself.
  2. Be Specific. Resolutions to ‘eat better, get      fitter, be happier, relax more or have better life balance’ are doomed for      failure because they lack specificity.
  3. Don’t Just Think It, Ink it! A Stanford      University study found that when people wrote down their goal, it      increased the probability of them achieving it by over 70%.
  4. Design Your Environment. Design your environment so that it’s      hard NOT to do what you resolved. Create a progress chart, recruit a cheer      squad among your family and friends, find someone to hold you accountable,      hire a trainer, join a group, create a blog.
  5. Narrow Your Efforts. Set yourself up for success and start      with JUST ONE MAJOR UNDERTAKING come starting January 1st.
  6. Focus On The Process. PERSISTENCE ALWAYS PAYS OFF.
  7. Forgive Your Failures. Your setbacks and failures will not      define your success in the year ahead or any year. HOW YOU RESPOND WILL.

What are my resolutions?  I have none today.  I have never believed this process is a worthwhile endeavor.  I have made resolutions but they were not tied to New Year’s day.

Good Luck!

Fiscal Cliff – The Soap Opera Continues

McConnell, Reid point to fiscal stalemate
McConnell, Reid point to fiscal stalemate

Tune in to the political programs on television and radio and all you hear is talk about the Fiscal Cliff.  It’s been a continuing story where missing one or two episodes really means nothing.

My question is what fiscal cliff?

The U.S. government spent $3.563 Trillion in 2012.  The total revenue was $2.435 Trillion.  It does not take a mathematical genius to understand that the revenues will have to increase and the spending will have to decrease. Brooking Institute figures are similar to those provided by the Heritage Foundation.

 The automatic spending cuts amount to $1.2 Billion in one year.  That leaves spending at $3.443 Trillion assuming the budget does not increase one cent in 2013.  Why the whining?  That is hardly a cut.

From The Center for Public Integrity

http://www.publicintegrity.org/2012/12/05/11891/fact-check-facing-facts-fiscal-cliff

Some facts to consider:

  • The scheduled tax increases, if allowed to      take effect, would net an additional $536 billion in fiscal year 2013,      according to the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center, raising more than $5      trillion in 10 years. Nearly 90 percent of Americans would pay more in      taxes, TPC says, with the average increase being nearly $3,500.
  • The automatic spending cuts scheduled to      take effect would cut $1.2 Trillion over 10 years, split roughly in half      between domestic and military spending.       That works out to $1.2 Billion a year.
  • A temporary      payroll tax cut enacted for 2011 was extended      through 2012, but is now set to expire at the end of this year.
  • Tax increases contained in the Affordable      Care Act on upper-income taxpayers will go into effect: a 3.8 percent tax      on unearned income, 0.9 percent increase in Medicare payroll taxes and a      higher income threshold for deducting medical expenses.
  • The Alternative Minimum Tax, which was      designed to make sure wealthy Americans pay a minimum tax, was never      indexed to inflation on a permanent basis.

If all that happened, taxes would increase an average of $3,466 per household, according to the TPC. Middle-income households — those earning nearly $40,000 to about $64,500 a year — would see an average increase of $1,984.  Is this going to stop all spending?  NO!

Once again it’s the whining.  It is the result of this thinking.  You can cut anywhere you want just don’t impact me.

Consider these four likely impacts listed by The Week magazine.

– Higher cost of lattes because a dairy subsidy will lapse.  It appears we have had a dairy subsidy for about 30 years.  Starbuck’s will suffer (maybe). Who knew?

 – The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) will be laying off thousands of screeners at the airports.  That will result in less screening.  It is a wasteful program that has never caught a single terrorist.

– If a deal isn’t reached, and the economy creeps back toward recession, demand for fuel will fall (because presumably, Americans won’t have money to go anywhere), slashing gas prices.  That is a good thing!

– According to Money Morning, during the debt-ceiling crisis last year, there was a 30 percent increase in the price of gold — a cost-climb we are likely to see again should the latest negotiations fail.  Another good thing for all of us that bought gold!

Tough choices are part of life.

Print versus the Tablet

When I visit a doctor or dentist I always look at their selection of magazines.  Hoping that their selection isn’t merely the magazines I subscribe to.

I received my last print edition of Newsweek yesterday.  My subscription expires March 12, 2013.  So the final 2½ months will available to me on their website.  Try taking those issues to the kitchen table or the bathroom (one of my favorite places to read).  For that matter I can’t give the magazines I have read to my friends.  Most of Newsweek’s really outstanding reporters and writers have been laid off so the quality of the magazine has been mediocre at best over the past year or two.  The newspapers have been shrinking in size and quality too.

That leaves me with those shrunken newspapers and just two periodicals.  Bloomberg Businessweek and The Week.  I anticipate their days are numbered too.  Both of them are publicizing their “apps” for the iPad and other e-tablets.

Perhaps the lovers of the horse and buggy were horrified when they saw their easily controlled mode of transportation replaced by those new fangled horseless carriages.

Going back in time to 1439, Johannes Gutenberg, a German blacksmith, invented a printing press with movable type and brought literacy to the world.  The use of movable type marked the end of the handwritten manuscript, which was the existing method of book production.

Perhaps the development of e-readers will bring literacy to even more people than ever before.  I can only hope.

Tablet ReaderAs for me I will be in the bathroom with my e-reader, pocket size version.

The NRA Vision for America

The following letter to the editor appeared in the Los Angeles Times today.  The author accurately and clearly expresses my views.

Re “Gun reform ideas more than just talk,” Dec. 23, and “NRA calls for armed guards in all schools,” Dec. 21

Finally, I understand the thinking of the National Rifle Assn.: It wants to put armed guards in all schools to protect us from the people it   is protecting, when what we really need is protection against them.

An armed society is an intimidating society, in which people fear saying what is on their minds because they fear being shot by the armed person next to them.

An armed society is a gross violation of public spaces and of our right to be free from fear.

An armed society spells the end of civil public discourse and, consequently, the end of democracy.

Before this happens, we need to stand up to the menace of unrestricted gun possession and those who advocate for it.

CATHY COLLOFF

Toluca Lake, California

Invasion of Other Languages into the United States

American English is a conglomeration of word used in other languages. An article in The Week magazine dated December 7, 2012 titled “Why we’re speaking British” caught my attention.  The author pointed out that all of sudden we are using phrases like “spot on”, “ chattering classes”,  and “going missing” that have recently been adopted by commentators and reporters.

We haven’t adopted all of the English expressions.  “Way Out” is used on exit signs.  You rarely see the word “exit.”  Canadians have “washrooms” although they do know the word “restroom” and “toilet.”

Here is a list of some words commonly used in the United States.  French, Spanish and Yiddish words are predominate in my vocabulary.

adios, Spanish – ‘adiós’ meaning “goodbye”

aficionado, French – ‘amateur’ “unprofessional person” or “affection” too.

à la carte, French – In restaurants it refers to ordering individual dishes rather than a fixed-price meal.

à la mode, French – the phrase is used to describe a dessert with an accompanying scoop of ice cream (example: apple pie à la mode).

amigo, Spanish and/or Portugueseamigo, “friend”; from Latin amicus meaning “friend,” derived from amare (to love).

bagel, Yiddish – a ring-shaped bread roll made by boiling then baking the dough

ballet, French

barbecue, Chibchabarbacoa (Chibcha , indigenous people of the eastern cordillera of the Andes of Colombia.)

bon voyage, French – literally “good journey”; have a good trip!

breeze, Spanishbrisa “cold northeast wind” or from Frisian briesen – to blow (wind)[

cafeteria, Spanish – cafetería, “coffee store”

cannibal, Spanishcaníbal, alteration of caríbal, from Caribe

canoe, Spanish canoa, from Haitian canaoua

chaparral, Spanishchaparro loosely meaning small evergreen oak, from Basque txapar, “small, short”

chocolate, Spanishchocolate, from Nahuatl xocolatl meaning “hot water” or from a combination of the Mayan word chocol meaning “hot” and the Nahuatl word atl meaning “water.”

chutzpah, Yiddish – nerve, guts, daring, audacity, effrontery

cigarette, Frenchcigarette “little weed”, diminutive of French cigare “stogie”, from Spanish cigarro meaning “fag (UK), stogie, stogy.”

cockroach, Spanishcucaracha

comrade, Frenchcamarade meaning “friend”, from Spanish camarada, “pal, mate”

condor, Spanish – from Quechua cuntur

corral, Spanish – from corral meaning “pen, yard” from Portuguese

coyote, Spanishcoyote, from Nahuatl coyotl

crusade, blend of Middle Frenchcroisade and Spanish cruzada; both ultimately from Latin cruc-, crux cross

cul-de-sac, French – A blind alley or dead end street

ganef or gonif, Yiddish – thief, scoundrel, rascal

glitch, Yiddish – a minor malfunction

klutz, Yiddish – clumsy person

kosher, Yiddish – correct according to Jewish law

kvetch, Yiddish – to complain habitually, gripe; as a noun, a person who always complains

lox, Yiddish – smoked salmon

macho, Spanish – from macho, male, brave, the property of being overtly masculine. In Spanish is masculinity

maven, Yiddish – expert

megillah, Yiddish – a lengthy document or discourse: Production: What are you making, a megillah?

mensch, Yiddish – an upright man or woman; a gentleman; a decent human being

meshuga, Yiddish – crazy

nosh, Yiddish – snack

nudnik, Yiddish – pest, “pain in the neck”, originally from Polish

oy, Yiddish – (exclamation) Oh!; Oy Gutt – Oh (my) God!

renegade,  Spanish – from renegado, “turncoat, heretic, disowned”

schlep, Yiddish – to drag or haul

schlock, Yiddish – A poorly made product or poorly done work, usually quickly thrown together for the appearance of having been done properly; “this writing is schlock.” Something shoddy or inferior.

schmooze, Yiddish – to converse informally, to small talk or chat. Can also be a form of brown-noseing

schmuck, Yiddish – contemptible or foolish person; a jerk; literally means ‘penis’

schnook, Yiddish – an easily imposed-upon or cheated person, a pitifully meek person. a particularly gullible person.

shack, Mexican Spanishjacal meaning “hut”, from Nahuatl xacalli

spritz, Yiddish – A sprinkling or spray of liquid

temblor, Spanish – for trembling, or earthquake; from temblar, to shake, from Vulgar Latin *tremulāre, from Latin tremulus

yenta, Yiddish – a talkative woman; a gossip; a blabbermouth; a scold. Used as the name of the matchmaker in “Fiddler on the Roof”, who personifies these qualities.