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Showing posts from June, 2005

Teaching an Old Dog New Tricks

I am tired of learning new things, and it is getting scarier by the day. I remember a time when I wanted to listen to music, I would either turn the knob on the radio or put a record on the phonograph. You could even listen to several records by stacking them on the spindle and they would drop down when the previous record was over. Now THAT was technology. I remember when my son was younger, his friends visited our house. They were just amazed as to how that worked. They stood and watched it over and over and over again. And laughed at me over and over and over again. On television last night, they told me that if I want to listen to music in the future, I am going to have to download the music to my MP3 player off my broadband connection and subscription music service, plug the player into my computer, plug something called a router into my computer, plug a comparable router into my stereo receiver, turn on the stereo receiver and tell the computer what songs to play from the MP3 pla

Another Way to Girard

I can give many reasons why we need to police ourselves better. At the top of the list is the jerk who ran the red light at the Route 224-Tippecanoe Road intersection, making a left turn, as I proceeded into the intersection in the opposite direction. I duly noted the name of the company on the side of the truck, owned by a friend of mine, and will make appropriate telephone calls tomorrow. It was some kid driving the truck while jabbering on his cell phone. It was close. In tonight's paper, however, it was reported that Mayor Melfi of Girard and his city council, in a 4-3 vote, are moving forward with its plans to put cameras on the streets to monitor speed. The fine for going over 25 mph in Girard: $170.00. Really makes you want to go to Girard, huh? I wonder how long the citizens of Girard will tolerate the demands of having to drive perfect 24/7 before they get tired of what is nothing more than a tax on themselves. Let's face it. How many people actually drive 25 mph throu

We Know Who You Are and We Know What You Did

The local news reported last night that an electronic law enforcement equipment company made presentations about its latest "gotcha" camera for monitoring your behavior. This gizmo is a traffic control radar device that can monitor 3 lanes of traffic simultaneously, take pictures, and then issue appropriate citations and fines to speeders and do the collection to boot. All of this is done at "no expense" to the governing authority. One can assume that the company is paid by either keeping all of the fine or a percentage thereof. The selling point is that this "frees" law enforcement officials to do serious police work. In our area, local news is reporting that Youngstown, Warren, and of course, Girard, are considering this system. The Ohio State Legislature has a different view of things, and has recently passed legislation that would make it illegal to operate a "red light running camera" without the presence of a law enforcement officer on the

Follow the Money

I am one of the few people who think Richard Nixon was a good president. He ended Lyndon Johnson's war, ended the draft, improved relations with Russia, and opened the door to China. Many of today's environmental programs are directly descended from the Nixon Administration. He presided over a country filled with upheaval and social change and provided visible stability through scary times. After thirty years, however, it has become clear that his presidency marked the beginning of the end of any degree of civility in the American political process. I suspect that history will show that Watergate is certainly not a high watermark in our political process. But it will also show that Nixon probably didn't do anything more or anything less good or bad than any of his predecessors. Nixon's biggest mistake was to underestimate the righteous indignation of a left leaning press that exercised a virtual monopoly over the sources of information of the American people. Cloaked in