Why I Can’t Vote for Trump – Take 20

Because he doesn’t take responsibility for his failures.

When something isn’t going right, he blames others. He blames Bill Clinton when his lewd language and misogyny is exposed. He blames a vast conspiracy when he falls in the polls. He resorts to bankruptcy when his businesses are not going well.

I bought a property in 2004, that lost 60% of its value in the crash of 2007. I have hung on for nine years now, making payments every month and losing money every month. The property still has not reached 100% of what I paid for it twelve years ago. But I pay, because I promised a bank with my signature twelve years ago that I would pay.

Trump’s advice is to walk away when things get tough. We, the public, pay for his failures.

By the way, that’s exactly what Hitler did. When he saw he was losing the war, he actually had the audacity to state that obviously the German people weren’t committed enough to win and they deserved it. Then he implemented a scorched earth strategy that devastated the country and placed misery on the German people for years after the war. After he put a bullet through his head in 1945, it took the country most of a decade to get back on its feet. Everyone lived in misery, many died of hunger and cold, even after the war.

This is what happens when leaders fail and do not take responsibility.

Trump shows me with every action and statement that he is not a leader, he is a usurper.

How very British

How very British, yes. I am sure we could do an American equivalent. Now there’s a challenge.

Of course, that’s where our term Middle Class came from. I wonder what we call the two other classes in America with political correctness? The One Percent? And The Poor?

Making Humans Interplanetary – SpaceX

Here is an excellent recount by Mekhi who attended Elon Musk’s presentation about the colonization of Mars at the International Astronautical Congress in Guadalajara, Mexico.

Barrel Tiled Shed

This is fascinating. Watch this guy build a hut in the woods with his bare hands. This is the guy you would want to have around if society were to ever collapse. Check out his blog. It’s full of projects like this. No tools. You need an axe, sharpen a stone!

Viral Post of Soldiers Who Died in Iraq

I just stumbled upon this Facebook post:

Lindsay Lohan, 24, is all over the news because she’s a celebrity drug addict. While Justin Allen, 23, Brett Linley, 29, Matthew Weikert, 29, Justus Bartett, 27, Dave Santos, 21, Chase Stanley, 21, Jesse Reed, 26, Matthew Johnson, 21, Zachary Fisher, 24, Brandon King, 23, Christopher Goeke, 23, and Sheldon Tate, 27 are all Marines that gave their lives this week, no media mention. Honor THEM by reposting.

I was suspicious of its accuracy, so I did a quick search and found this amazing blog post giving details about every one of the soldiers mentioned, along with hundreds of comments from readers. I learned a lot.

It is a tragedy to see the names and ages of our young people who we sent to die. But in due fairness, these soldiers died over 6 years ago, in 2010, and even today I can, with a quick search, find plenty of media coverage. So “This Week” is completely misleading. They didn’t die this week. “No Mention” is wrong. Lots of mention in 2010. We all care, very much.

But here is the kicker: Obama pulled out of Iraq TO STOP this nonsense dying. Now too many of us blame Obama for the birth of ISIS. Which is the flipside. ISIS might not exist today if Obama hadn’t pulled out of Iraq when he did. But we would certainly have had another 5,000 American soldiers like those above dead meanwhile in Iraq.

Of course, here is my 13-year-old mantra: If Bush hadn’t invaded Iraq in 2003 in the first place, all those soldiers would still be alive and ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi would still be playing soccer in his village and tutoring Islamic phrases to the neighborhood children.

But then, of course, Saddam would still be the ruler in Iraq.

The Smartest Man in the World: Donald Trump

Ladies and Gentlemen, the President of the United States:

Now speaking to the NRA folks, who are great: when you, when you, and I tell you, so they endorsed me. They endorsed me very early. My sons are members. I’m a member. If you, we can add, I think the National Rifle Association, we can add the Second Amendment to the justices, they almost go, in a certain way, hand and hand. Now the justices are going to do things that are so important. And we have such great justices. You saw my list of eleven that have been vetted and respected and have gotten great, and they, a little bit, equate.

— Donald Trump

Atheism is Not a Religion

Not playing football is not a sport.

Not collecting stamps is not a hobby.

Abstinence is not a sexual position.

Anarchy is not a form of government.

Not owning a gun does not mean you trample of the Second Amendment.

We’re all born naked and atheist, and then we slowly get indoctrinated to become something else. The word for atheism only exists because religion has become so prevalent and powerful over the ages, that non-religion is the minority.

Book Review: Faith of my Fathers – John McCain with Mark Salter

In an age where one of the two candidates for President of the United States is openly advocating that the United States starts torturing people, I would like to reblog this book review I wrote over eight years ago. John McCain knows something about torture. He was one of the few top level politicians we have in our country who actually has experienced torture, who actually was tortured. WE SHOULD LISTEN TO HIM. He knows what he is talking about. And we should not listen to Trump, the Clown, who was born with a silver spoon in his mouth and stayed home with daddy while his countrymen in Vietnam burned — and were tortured. Shame on Trump for calling for torture. It is so wrong, I don’t even know where to start.

So – I highly recommend you read Faith of my Fathers by John McCain.

Hiking Mt. Baldy

Last week, on June 12, I did another hike of Mt. Baldy. I started from the parking lot in the valley’s campground, just below the ski area parking lot, and headed up. This time I didn’t go up the ski road, but rather took the very steep ascent. You can click on any of the pictures to enlarge them.

1 - Clouds in LA

I took this picture shortly after the start. I am at about 6500 feet elevation, looking down into the Los Angeles valley. It’s cloudy down there, and it will remain cloudy all day. Not here.

 

2 - On the Way Up

Here I am at about 8600 feet, looking across the valley to the ridge where I will climb down later. The peak is to the left of this picture, not visible. If you look carefully, you can see a slight path going horizontally across just below the very top in the center of the picture. I’ll point that path out again in a later picture from a different angle.

 

3 - On the Peak

After 4.5 hours of steep uphill hiking, here I am at the peak at 10070 feet altitude. In the background, right by my hiking poles, you can see Mt. San Jacinto. To the very left is Mt. San Gorgonio, the highest peak in Southern California. Mt. Baldy’s peak is a huge expansive and broad, flat area, some of which you can see here behind me. There must have been 100 people at the top when I was  there. It was a very popular Sunday hike. The wind was blowing cold and strong. My fingers were freezing.

 

4 - Heading Back Down

This is looking down just before leaving the peak onto the ridge I pointed out earlier. The path we saw from there is the same we see here as a thin thread in the middle of the photo. The descent from here is also quite steep.

 

5 - Looking back up

Here I am down on that ridge, looking back up from where I just came. The very back is the peak, and if you look carefully in the center of the picture, you can see hikers, like ants, going up and down along the path.

 

6 - Clouds Still in LA

Turning south from the same spot, another look into the Los Angeles valley. It’s still in clouds down there. Here the wind is whipping. The trees here are pretty tough.

 

7 - Heading toward the Devils Backbone

The most remarkable feature of this hike is the “Devil’s Backbone,” a ridge with steep drops to the north and south, and the path is right on top of it. Here we see the beginning of the backbone with a few hikers on the way up.

 

8 - Looking Over the Backbone

Here is another view of the backbone. In the distance in the back is the Mojave Desert to the north. Note that it’s not cloudy there like in Los Angeles to the south behind me. In the upper center of the picture you can see the thin lines of I-15, the major freeway leading from San Bernardino up through Barstow to Las Vegas. Las Vegas is about 4 hours north of here.

 

9 - On the Backbone

Here we are right on a section of the backbone. This is not a place to get dizzy or trip. There are sections here where the mountain drops 1000 feet in both directions, straight down.

 

10 - Ski Area Boundary

At the end of the backbone is the Mt. Blady ski area. I am at about 8500 feet altitude here just about at the top of one of the chair lifts. The sign tells skiers not to go down that way. Funny, it’s basically a cliff.

 

11 - Lodge

Of course, where there is a ski lift, there is a lodge, not something I usually find at the top of a mountain. It’s a welcome spot for a break. Forget the granola. Here is beer.

 

12 - This way to ride down

I could have hiked down the last 3 miles on a boring dirt road to the parking lot. I thought about it. On my previous hike on Mt. Baldy I hiked up that way. But my knees screamed for a break. That chairlift and the sign “This Way to Ride Down” were too inviting. I cheated. A $12 ticket did the trick.

 

13 - Ahhh

Ahhhhh.