Monthly Archives: April 2018

To Our Wonderful Congresswoman Jaime Herrera-Beutler

We support you, Congresswoman Jaime Herrera-Beutler!

Though we recognize President Trump is an inexperienced politician and a former disgusting playboy, we thank you and him so much for your and his:

  • Tax reductions increasing paychecks in southwest Washington, 
  • Support for our gun rights, protections for schools, and keeping guns out of the hands of people who will misuse them, 
  • Your attack on the opioid epidemic, 
  • Your defeats against ISIS, 
  • Your support for LEGAL immigration, and most especially, 
  • His leadership of world sanctions against North Korea which will hopefully bring them to eliminate their nuclear weapon development, which is a clear and terrible REAL threat to us in southwest Washington.
  • We agree with you that tariffs are bad when everyone is playing fair. But when China and other nations send steel and other products here at ridiculously low subsidized prices, killing our critically needed steel industry and steel workers, tariffs must be applied until they convince nations to trade fairly.

Your opponents tout their holding of open forums. You have been limited in holding forums because your forums have been brutally attacked by their crude, trained, and suspectedly paid attackers who have ruined your forums and made holding them almost impossible. I tweeted your opponent Carolyn Long:

You strongly advocate open public meetings but what about opponents packing, overwhelming meetings, intentionally destroying openness, with trained, suspectedly paid brutal attackers, as your supporters have done to ? We’re all for open discourse, but ..?

Notably, she has not responded. She knows she and her supporters are guilty of very unfair and destructive campaign tactics.

Your opponents Carolyn Long and the outsider from Oregon opposes almost every one of your points above, your accomplishments, that are so important to us in southwest Washington.

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National Forest Loss of Public Access Due To Unrepaired Road Weather Damage

White Paper by David R. Bunting, Packwood, Washington. Concerned Citizen and ex-Gifford Pinchot National Forest Engineering Staff, Registered Professional Civil Engineer and Land Surveyor, Washington and Oregon.

April, 2018 still being updated

Use of large areas of National Forest land is being lost because forest roads are made undriveable by weather damage, and the U.S. Forest Service is not repairing them.

First, I have seen reports by Forest Service Washington Office (must have been retired) officers that the employees responsible for handling the requests for funds to the Dept. of Agriculture, are opposed to public use of the National Forests, that they desire turning National Forests essentially into National Parks, where of course freedom of the public to use the forest is harshly limited. I have heard and seen statements of high level Forest Service officers talking of “reducing our footprint.” Reducing our footprint literally means reducing our use of the forests, and is not a goal ever approved by anyone. I don’t want my footprint reduced, do you? I want to be free to put my footprint as I’ve always put it, don’t you? Yes, there is skulduggery, trickery intending to reduce our free use of the forests, in the reduction of road maintenance funding.

Second, the roads are fully professionally engineered much the same as highways to be permanent, safe, easily-maintained roads, very expensively constructed- costing typically a quarter million dollars per mile in today’s dollars- just the crushed aggregate gravel surfacing was $100,000 per mile- and located using responsible land management principles to serve whole drainages, mountainsides or other large areas, for whatever use we, the landowners, wished to make of those areas. Those uses included our personal hunting, fishing, mushroom gathering, camping, watching wildlife and all the rest, plus management for our benefit of water, soil, wildlife, range, timber and other resources, which management we delegated to our hired managers, the U. S. Forest Service. Most of the full standard permanent roads being lost now were never temporary roads, “logging spurs” or roads purposed for only the immediate timber sale. We spent considerable extra money making these roads permanent, safe and easily maintained, so they could serve our needs in that area of forest forever.

Third, responsible management of these road infrastructure improvements requires, by any standard of management, that they be maintained so as to remain useable. As in most public infrastructure, maintenance costs only a small fraction of construction cost, and especially for public facilities currently being used, and known to be needed through the future, and is deemed justified. But roads several miles long, having cost a million dollars or more to build, are allowed to be come undrivable because of a washed out culvert that would cost only $10,000 to repair; repair of this million dollar permanent road providing access to a national forest area would cost only one one-hundredth of the road’s construction cost. We gave the Forest Service millions of dollars to build safe, easily-maintained permanent roads so we could access the national forest forever. Proper management for our benefit cannot be allowing the roads to become damaged so that we, who own them and whose money paid for their construction for our use and benefit, cannot use them. If they become unusable, we landowners are unable to visit the large served areas of the forests, and our managers become unable to manage them; our access is impossible. We lose use of our forests.

Fourth, yes, the Forest Service has not been given sufficient funds to maintain them, but they have never asked for sufficient funds, nor explained to the grantors of funds the huge losses of expensive infrastructure, the resulting denial of forest access to Americans to millions of acres of forest.

The budget is proposed “by the President,” but obviously he knows nothing about forest road maintenance. It is really proposed by his budget staff who also know nothing about forest road maintenance, based on advice given by the Secretary of Agriculture who knows nothing about forest road maintenance, based on advice he is given by the Chief of the Forest Service who also knows nothing about forest road maintenance. The Chief is in turn advised by his DC budget staff who also know nothing about forest road maintenance. They are advised by the individual regional offices’ budget staffs who also know nothing about forest road maintenance, and they are in turn advised by the individual National Forest Supervisors who know little about forest road maintenance. The Forest Supervisors finally are advised by the District Rangers and their staffs who finally should know about forest road maintenance.

Indeed the Congressional politicians may cut the recommendations “of the President.” It is true we really can’t complain about that if it happens for justifiable reasons: we elected the politicians, and almost all of us want government spending reduced. But civil servants all the way up the line must- and usually do- and usually with positive results- cry very loudly when their funds are so inadequate as to cause serious damage.

I have written to our Congresswoman Jaime Herrera-Beutler many times asking her to increase Forest Service road maintenance funding.

Admittedly, there are complicating issues, i.e.: a) There are no employees left in the Forest Service who understand the quality engineering and high cost that went into the roads; we’re all retired or dead. The records of the road planning and construction have long ago been sent to distant archives. The roads now look almost natural, as though they required little modification of the natural environment- we intended them to look this way- we planted native grasses to help them look natural. Without a blink current forest managers will abandon a road, the only road providing access to a large forest area, many miles long with a concrete bridge or two, that cost over two million dollars in today’s money. When our congresswoman asks them about the roads, they really don’t understand the issue enough to know how to answer.  b) Wet areas like western Washington and Oregon get very much more water damage, require very much more repair, than roads in dry country, so maintenance costs averaged per mile applied over all roads result in much less adequate funds in our wet area. c) Many high level Forest Service officers bring experience from areas where roads were much less expensively built and require very much less maintenance. d) A different but just as painful aspect of denying public access: The Forest Service land management capability is so understaffed that they cannot adequately manage the extensive lands under their control, so closing access reduces both public activity and their farthest work distances, toward a smaller and lower-activity management area that their limited capability can perhaps more adequately handle. I understand this as another aspect of the Forest Service being underfunded that they should also cry loudly about, but recognize it as the continuation of the very wrong undeserved but well-entrenched anti-Forest Service attitude generated intentionally by preservationists back in the Spotted Owl years.

The primary fault of the Forest Service is to have not asked for adequate funds, or complained to the fund grantors the damage and loss of access caused by inadequate road maintenance.

I put the primary blame way down on the local district rangers and their staffs. They just don’t ask for enough money and don’t complain about how inadequate maintenance is damaging their roads and reducing access to their forests.

There are probably a hundred instances on just the Gifford Pinchot National Forest, where a road, say five miles long, logically located to provide needed access to a forest area, fully engineered to be permanent, safe and easily maintained, and constructed at cost of over a million dollars in today’s dollars (of money deducted from dollars that otherwise were headed directly into the federal treasury), is made unusable by a culvert washout whose repair would cost less than ten thousand dollars. The repair cost is literally exactly a penny to save a dollar. The district doesn’t have the ten thousand dollars to repair the road so the million dollar road is closed, and needed access by both the public and the Forest Service managers to that forest area is lost. This is nonsense.

If we build a million dollar building and some ten thousand dollar damage occurs, say to its water system, no one would suggest abandoning the building- we provide the ten thousand dollars to make the repair, saving the million-dollar building. Yet being unwilling to spend a penny to save a dollar is exactly what the Forest Service DC office is doing by its very inadequate road maintenance funding.

We all agree that we want to reduce deficits and taxes, but saving a penny that costs us a dollar is nonsense.

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Science/Digital Briefs Apr. 25, 2018

A third of 18- to 24-year old Americans not sure the world is round.

Only 66 percent of 18- to 24-year-olds in the U.S. are confident that the world is round, according to a new national survey.

The very reliable scientific site space.com says it doesn’t mean all the rest think the world is flat. But 4 percent of the 18- to 24-year-old age group said they actually believe the world is flat. There seem to be a relatively large number in this age group who are willing to entertain doubts: 9 percent said they had always believed the world was round but were recently having doubts, 5 percent said they had always believed the world was flat but were becoming skeptical of that conclusion and 16 percent just weren’t sure.

Info:   shpr.fyi/2qVChpb

College with no degree, but a job and no debt

A California college-alternative school called MissionU offers a one-year, data-science program with study of 40 to 50 hours per week, and visits to high-tech businesses in the Bay area.

Students pay the school a percentage of income for three years after graduation.

This type of college is the next step up from short boot camps where students are taught software-engineering skills. In 2017 there were at least 95 similar one-year schools as reported in Course Report, which produced over 22,000 graduates, with tuition cost around $11,000.

In a related issue, analysts are observing that many high school students are graduating without ever having used a regular keyboard, also that the use of currency is becoming so limited that high school and even college students must now be taught how to make change using coins.

Info:   shpr.fyi/2qULtdj

New Common Application used by over 750 colleges

A new single standard application form is now accepted by over 750 colleges.

Prospective college students can fill out this form and use the one form to apply to many colleges, instead of having to do the specific long forms provided by all the separate colleges.

Info:   commonapp.org

Want to know what about you FaceBook and Google are selling?

Take a deep breath and expect to spend much of a day looking through each of these:

Facebook’s info includes every message you’ve ever sent or been sent, every file you’ve ever sent or been sent, all the contacts in your phone, and all the audio messages you’ve ever sent or been sent, plus much, much more!

Facebook info on you:

Info:   shpr.fyi/2qTRUx0

Google’s link includes your bookmarks, emails, contacts, your Google Drive files, plus your YouTube videos, the photos you’ve taken on your phone, the businesses you’ve bought from, the products you’ve bought through Google. They also have data from your calendar, your Google hangout sessions, every location you’ve visited, the music you listen to, the Google books you’ve purchased, the Google groups you’re in, the websites you’ve created, the phones you’ve owned, the pages you’ve shared, how many steps you walk in a day, and much, much more.

Google info on you:

Info:   google.com/takeout

New brain cells ARE generated in old age!

The hippocampus, a small part of the brain, has a unique shape, similar to that of a horseshoe. It not only assists with the storage of long term memories, but is also responsible for the memory of the location of objects or people. We would not even be able to remember where our house is without the work of the hippocampus. Alzheimer’s disease, (a disease that effects elderly people and often results in loss of memory) has been proven to have affected and damaged this area of the brain. Info regarding our brain:

Info:   shpr.fyi/2qXTM7d

A new study has learned that ongoing brain cell regeneration in the hippocampus is likely, and that it sustains cognitive function throughout life. The ability to separate similar memory patterns and recover from stress may depend on this regeneration of brain cells. New brain cells are generated in the dentate gyrus, a part of the adult human hippocampus, even after middle age.

Healthy elderly people have the potential to remain cognitively and emotionally more intact than commonly believed, due to the persistence of this brain cell regeneration into and beyond the eighth decade of life.

As has long been known, exercise enhances cerebral blood volume, which results in better cognitive performance in humans.

Editor note: Good news for me, your editor Dave Bunting, as I’m 79, having almost completed my eighth decade. I, as well as everyone around me, knows I am more and more absent-minded, but, happily, my recent test for Alzheimers was negative.

Info:  shpr.fyi/2qWw77c

Human Memory Improved By Stimulation Device

This recent study first learned the nerve electronic signals that patients’ brains were generating when they were remembering successfuilly. Then they artificially generated these same signals during memory tests, which did indeed improve their ability to remember.

The test was on patients in a hospital who already had electrodes implanted into their brains for treatment of epilepsy.

The technology may lead to future devices we could wear externally to help us remember.

Info:   shpr.fyi/2KcXmmL

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Science/Digital Briefs Apr. 11, 2018

Chatbots are becoming more skillful

Talking to your voice assistant, like Amazon Echo, Google Home, Apple HomePod, Insignia Voice, isn’t much like a human conversation, more like a walkie-talkie or texting experience. However, these chatbots are amazing, recognizing different people and pets visually and by the sound of their voices.
But Microsoft is trying to make talking to its Xiaoice bot more like a conversation with a human, more like a back-and-forth listening and talking experience.
One difference is that the user doesn’t have to continually repeat the “wake” word. Another is that the bot tries to identify and respond to emotion expressed in the user’s voice. Some voice bots also are watching the user, and interpreting facial expressions or motions. Along with anticipating the person’s next words, another skill being developed is responding without waiting for the person’s speech to finish, as we humans do. They are becoming able to chitchat, remember personal details, and having a sense of humor.
Voice assistants are anticipated to be in 55% of U.S. households by 2022.
Info:   shpr.fyi/2Ho0xqU

Everett Boeing Wins Jobs From Europe

American Airlines has ordered 47 U.S.-built Boeing 787 Dreamliners in a deal valued at $12 billion at list prices, while cancelling a major order for Europe-built Airbus A350s. The order for US manufacturer Boeing comes in the wake of protectionist trade measures by President Donald Trump, who champions buying from US manufacturers. Most of the 787 final assembly takes place at the Boeing Factory in Everett, Washington. Everett Boeing jobs are paying $31 to $44 per hour, and offer plenty of voluntary overtime.

Boeing Everett phone: 866-473-2016.

Info:   shpr.fyi/2H0cjKn

Manufacturing jobs strongest increase in three years

The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that in March, manufacturing jobs grew by the strongest numbers in three years. Manufacturing jobs grew by 22,000 jobs in March, and have grown by one million two hundred thousand jobs since U.S. manufacturing hit a bottom in 2010.

This March gain was amidst the excellent performance of the U.S. economy as a whole, which added 241,000 jobs in March, exceeding the expected number of 200,000.

Many economists believe that the entire economy is based on and depends critically on manufacturing as the “pump” that produces the money flowing up through and supporting all the rest of the primarily service economy. They worry that, in 2016, manufacturing jobs comprised only 7.9% of all U.S. jobs, down from 9.5% in 2006, and 38% in 1940, and that manufacturing jobs are predicted to fall to only 6.9% in 2026.

The possibility is that a “small” glitch causing loss of only, for example, 10% of manufacturing jobs, which is only less than one percent of all U.S. jobs, could bring the loss of the same 10% of all the manufacturing-supported jobs up through the economy.

Info:   shpr.fyi/2EyCbrp

Department of Homeland Security is building a database of journalists

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security is building a database of Media Monitoring Service, of all journalists, bloggers and other who influence public opinion.

Records will include the journalist’s “sentiment” as well as geographical spread.

The issue comes amid heightened interest in accuracy in media, “fake news,” and the potential for foreigners to influence popular opinion prior to elections.

Nineteen lawmakers including Reps. Josh Gottheimer (D-N.J.), Lee Zeldin (R-N.Y.), Ron DeSantis (R-Fla.), and Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas), sent a letter to Attorney General Jeff Sessions last month, asking whether a well-known arab-based media news service should register as a foreign agent because it “often directly undermines” U.S. interests with favorable coverage of Hamas, Hezbollah and al-Qaeda’s branch in Syria, organizations long labelled as terrorists by the U.S. Government.

Likely I, Dave Bunting, your editor, will be one of the very least among those in the database.

Info:   shpr.fyi/2EwxFcY

Be careful typing .com. Typing .cm instead may lead to big trouble

Mistyping the .com in the URL area of your browser can lead you into big trouble.

Make sure you never type .cm when you mean .com.

Domain names ending in .cm, otherwise imitating the .com address you’re seeking, have been legally registered by criminals. The site your reach will appear identical to the site you were seeking, but will be gathering all your personal and financial data to be used against you.

Also, the Cyrillic alphabet, used across eastern Europe, has 11 lower-case characters that are identical – or very similar – to Latin letters and numbers. Criminals can register a domain name identical to a real domain, like google.com, except with one of its Latin letters replaced by the identical-appearing Cyrillic letter, and if you click on that link, you will go to the criminal’s lair, a place you’ll wish you hadn’t gone.

Info:   shpr.fyi/2IFZmm2

Info:   shpr.fyi/2H6gLHz

Info:   shpr.fyi/2EwAY3S

Chinese Unfair Competition Has Almost Destroyed U.S. Solar Panel Manufacturing

China builds its solar panel factories to production level, then “bankrupts” them, then gives them free to “private” owners, who can, as a result, manufacture the panels for sale prices as low as one percent of their true price as produced by American manufacturers.

China’s solar-power production capacity expanded more than tenfold from 2007 to 2012. Now six of the top 10 world solar-panel makers are Chinese, including the top two, compared with none a decade ago.

Their competition forced many American and European solar-panel manufacturers into bankruptcy. Two dozen quit or cut back operations during President Barack Obama’s first term, damaging the heady optimism then about clean energy producing jobs.

The United States and the European Union determined that Chinese solar-panel makers were dumping panels for less than the true cost of producing them, the cost had they had to include factory construction and amortization costs in their pricing.

Info:   shpr.fyi/2uVj0ID

 

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Science/Digital Briefs Apr. 4, 2018

Good time for us drivers to decide to quit using electronic devices while driving

The Washington State Patrol has extra emphasis patrols looking for drivers using electronic devices from April 2 through 14.

Info:   shpr.fyi/2GzU8HJ

Pacific Ocean has vastly large floating plastic dump

The huge floating dump is trapped in the large system of circulating ocean currents between California and Hawaii.

It is an immense accumulation of bags, bottles, containers, fishing nets and microparticles known as the “Great Pacific Garbage Patch” (GPGP) and has now been measured to spread over 618,000 square miles. That is equal to the states of Washington, Oregon, California, Idaho, Montana and Nevada combined. It has grown 16 times larger since it was last measured.

A research team from the Ocean Cleanup Foundation, a Dutch start-up aiming to scoop up half the debris in the GPGP within five years, were surprised in particular in the build-up of larger plastic items, which accounted for more than 90 percent of the GPGP’s mass. This might offer a glimmer of hope, as larger plastics are far easier to find and fish out than microplastics.

Info:     shpr.fyi/2q2jbgC

Ink dot size computer has over 100,000 transistors

IBM has introduced its new CPU or central processing unit, the heart of all computers, which is only 1mm x 1mm, about 1/32” x 1/32”. The CPU contains 100,000 transistor plus other components.

That is a small fraction of the transistors in the CPUs powering today’s laptops, but is similar to the number of transistors in the CPU that in 1981 powered the first IBM PC Personal Computer.

One use for the tiny device will be high-tech drug containers to prevent the current widespread fraudulent manufacture of fake look-alike drugs.

Info:   shpr.fyi/2EfwQVV

Many good jobs in Iowa

As is true throughout the midwest, Iowa manufacturers are begging for trained workers for their factories.

The many schools offering even free training for these jobs can’t get enough workers to fill their classrooms.

National surveys show that the number of unemployed persons per job opening has fallen from about eight in 2010 to only one now, and this problem is worst in the Midwest.

An example is Mason City, Iowa. With about 28,000 residents, Mason City is the largest town in about a 100-mile radius. It supports industries like manufacturing, construction and agriculture.

Firms in rural areas are more likely to report their applicant pool is limited, the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta said. Controlling for other factors, such as the size of a business or education level required for a job, 68% of rural firms reported too few applicants for open jobs, versus 57% of employers in urban areas.

The Mason City IowaWorks employment office’s phone: 641-422-1524.

Info:   shpr.fyi/2H743pv

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