Bunker Mulligan "Let us endeavor so to live that when we come to die even the undertaker will be sorry." ~Mark Twain

August 16, 2004

David’s Medienkritik

Filed under: International — Bunker @ 4:59 pm

I have to agree with Wallace, a new blog is added to my list, also.

David’s Medienkritik adds to the international flavor of the blogs I read.

I also have to delete my friends at Two Nervous Dogs. No more espresso updates as the site has gone blank.

Disney World

Filed under: Society-Culture — Bunker @ 8:08 am

At a time of disaster, there are always people quick to take advantage of others. Just yesterday there were reports of motels and hotels in Florida raising their rates to make as much as possible, however possible.

Not so at Disney World, according to Neal Boortz, who saw it all first-hand.

We were staying at the Ft. Wilderness Lodge villas. Friday afternoon they came around and put flashlights in every room. We never needed them. The electricity never went out. Disney has its own power system, and all lines are underground. The Disney theme parks all closed at 1:00 pm on Friday, so guests were swarming back into the hotels. Staffers put up craft tables to occupy the kids, free movies were being run on the in-room televisions. The restaurants closed for about two hours to let the hurricane pass through, then reopened late in the evening.

Kinda reminds me of the “Old” Disney.

Discussion is good

Filed under: General Rants — Bunker @ 6:49 am

Life would be pretty dull if we all stood on common ground. And neither would we learn much from one another. One of my regular readers just departed because he felt we didn’t share enough common ground. That disturbs me a bit simply because we had a few good conversations, and I can only imagine that my admitting I have already decided to vote for Bush was the final straw.

I’m not putting any of these electrons to phosphor out there in an attempt to tell anyone how to vote. If you don’t like Bush, don’t vote for him. I can’t understand people hating him, nor do I really see why they would think he was a bad President or that “he lied” unless they only hear one side of everything. For that reason, I don’t simply read sites I agree with. Apparently, not everyone can do that.

There are some out there who feel that anyone with religious beliefs is unfit for public office. Yet those same religious beliefs, if sincere, keep someone from crossing the line into immoral or unethical conduct. I like that.

I also enjoy learning from others’ perspectives. I don’t enjoy debate. Debate is a competition without any desire to learn. It is simply a presentation of opinion in hopes of doing a better job of presenting your ideas than your opponent. Discussion is interaction. Bogey and I do this. We both get frustrated with the other on occasion, but there is no animosity, no winner and loser. I try to share my (too) many years of experience, and he tries to share his youthful perspective.

What I write here is an attempt to view things from a slightly different angle. Sometimes I do, sometimes I don’t. That comes from my background. As a young helicopter mechanic, I had the good luck to be entrusted to an experienced man with a good sense of teaching. Being an aircraft mechanic means following strict procedures as laid out in a tech manual. No deviation allowed. Safety. But there are many things where imagination can solve a problem. Those of you who deal intimately with machinery, whether it be a race car or a tuned mountain bike, understand. The machine actually tells you what is wrong if you are aware enough to hear it. My trainer gave me enough loose leash to make mistakes where possible. Even if he knew what I was doing was wrong, he let me make that mistake. When it was obvious I’d been wrong, he’d simply say, “F**ked up, didn’t ya?” I learned. And I became the best troubleshooter in the unit.

Even so, when I began working with some Special Forces folks, I saw that my “thinking outside the box” didn’t expand the world as much as it could. I learned. We flew in support of SF and SEALS, and did what was necessary to get the job done. After a mission, we would review what we had done right and wrong, and where we have violated some flying regulation. If the reg was wrong, we initiated a change. We didn’t simply keep violating it. But thinking on the fly and reacting agressively to a situation was essential.

Another area where the military mentality is different from that of civilians is blame. This is the thing I had the most trouble dealing with in my transition to civilian life. I would point out a problem, and everyone got defensive. “Is he blaming me?” In the military, if someone is to blame, they are dealt with quickly, and everyone moves on to solve the problem. The first step in solving a problem is to adequately identify it. In my experience, civilians don’t do this very well. They spend more time looking for someone to blame than they do in defining the problem. That is amplified in the political process. Damn. Just fix the problem.

As I grew in my career, I tried to provide the same atmosphere for my subordinates. Some found it difficult to operate that way. I insisted that all decisions be made at the lowest level–don’t bring me a problem unless you just can’t solve it. I did the same at USAFA. On the first day I would have a student walk across the desks with his eyes closed. Invariably, they felt their way tentatively along. My rationale, as I explained to them, was that if you know a boundary exists, you tend to stay away from it. Nobody wants to fall. I didn’t want them to know where the boundaries were in my classroom, but I would tell them when they crossed one. I wanted them to grow, and not confine themselves by something artificial. Of course, someone would then prop his feet up on the desk, and I simply said, “That’s not allowed.” They understood, and we had some really great discussions throughout the year.

Really, that’s what I hope to accomplish here. Open minds and different approaches to a situation without fear of embarrassment. I embarrass myself often enough. I try not to sound like a shill for the Republicans, because I’m not. I sometimes get forced into that corner by my own ineptitude, but that’s not where I am. I also regret people’s desire to present the latest gossip as fact. I don’t like lists of facts or pseudo-facts, but prefer a novel analysis of things. That’s where SDB and Wretchard excel. They take you into a problem from a perspective you may never have considered.

You will probably disagree with me somewhere along the line. I hope so. But don’t expect to debate with me. I don’t debate. I’ll be happy to discuss a different perspective. But if you want debate, I give up. You win.

August 15, 2004

Why They Hate Us

Filed under: International — Bunker @ 5:10 pm

Today, Wandering Mind, one of our very good Homespun Bloggers, gives us Part One of Three on Anti-Americanism in Europe.

By giving his employees a ‘piece of the action’, he said, he knew he could count on his employees loyalty and hard work. The Frenchman and his wife were aghast. They could not understand the employees allowing themselves to be so exploited and that even worse, those employees might somehow upset the balance if the company succeeded and others didn’t.

My friend then went on to say that Europeans regarded the working class as a ‘necessary class’ (read: not upwardly mobile) and that business succeeded on the stability of that class.

I remember Europe well in this regard. There is, to this day, a strong class system, although there are now fewer classes. When we speak of “class” in this country, it comes nowhere close to what the real meaning of that word really describes.

The same everywhere

Filed under: Politics — Bunker @ 1:53 pm

Rob stopped by a Pakistani party where a local candidate decided to troll for votes:

“In my district we have the greatest number of cab drivers of Pakistani descent. Are there any cab drivers here today?!!!??”

August 14, 2004

MT issues

Filed under: Engineering — Bunker @ 7:02 pm

Okay all you smart people out there. I get this message from MT when I try to check all the comments on my site:

Can’t use an undefined value as a SCALAR reference at lib/MT/App/CMS.pm line 2030

It is an issue because I’m no longer getting email notification when a comment is posted (since upgrading to 3.0) and it means I don’t know who might have commented on a previous post.

MT is of no help. Their manual pretty much sucks. I’ve reloaded new versions of the CMS.pm script to no avail, so it’s apparently picking up a variable from somewhere else.

I also have to wonder if the SPAM comments I got from the Lithuanian Tourist Bureau had anything to do with it.

Veterans

Filed under: Military — Bunker @ 5:32 pm

Maybe I can explain to some of you why military veterans don’t feel comfortable with John Kerry. I’m talking about my generation, and those immediately preceding and following mine. And I’m speaking of professional military folks, not the one-termers who came in and left for a variety of reasons.

I enlisted in 1972 after dropping out of college. I left school with a 1.25 GPA. Yes, I had a pretty good time. The recruiter had me convinced to enlist for six years, but Dad had a little talk before I signed the papers. Understand, this is the “Old Chief.” Dad retired from the Air Force as a Chief Master Sergeant–one of the top 1% of the enlisted force. And he lived the role. Think of the movie role Sam Elliott played in We Were Soldiers, and you have some concept. He told me he had seen many young men come and go. Some liked the military, and some didn’t. He pointed out that if I didn’t like it four years down the road, I’d see all my friends leaving and I would still have two years to go.

I enlisted for four years.

I quit wearing my uniform when I traveled after one trip through the San Francisco airport. Someone made a rude comment and spit on me. I could have ripped his head off, but it was his city. I would have ended up in jail. I kept my composure.

He was a Kerry follower.

Whatever John Kerry did in Vietnam is really irrelevant to military professionals. We all have our own opinion of whether he was a hero or not. From everything I’ve learned of him since he “torpedoed” Dean (to use rfidtag’s verb), I see nothing of value. I had never even heard of him previous to this election cycle. He was simply another Senator living off the Government teat, and really doing nothing to earn his perks. He didn’t need the paycheck. But, except for my taxes paying for all of it, it was of no import to me–I don’t live in Massachusetts. If they want a do-nothing as their junior Senator, who am I to complain?

But if he wants me to support him for President as a veteran, he’s out of bounds. He waived that support when he failed to get elected to Congress as a war hero and became the voice for those who needed some credibility in the anti-war movement. Face it, he was an opportunist. He demeaned the service of his “Band of Brothers” to build himself up. He encouraged such things as happened to me, one of his “brothers”. And every other veteran.

I’ve seen a few John Kerrys during my career in the military. So had my dad. They are careerists, not professionals. They will do whatever it takes to make themselves look good to superiors. When I first got my commission, I worked for one. Fortunately, the colonel above us saw him for what he was. This captain spent a lot of time escorting visitors, which he felt gave him “visibility”, and would do just about anything to get recognition. The colonel kept him busy so that we lieutenants could get the job done. I even wrote about my experiences at the time. (Oh no…did I really use “nadir” in a sentence?).

Kerry would have gotten along quite well with that captain, except when they ran into a conflict over who would get to escort the general’s wife.

Add those two things together–self-serving opportunism and treasonous behavior toward fellow vets–and perhaps you’ll understand why any medals he has mean absolutely nothing to me in his run for the Presidency.

I don’t trust him.

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