Sunday, October 30, 2016

Trump (***) vs Clinton (*)

I’ve decided to work through my inclination not to post on social media and talk about my personal history.  So to put this post in perspective, I retired as an Air Force officer the first time, then as an Air Force civil servant the second time.  For all of that period I held security clearances.  I repeatedly signed non-disclosure forms that said if I disclosed classified information to unauthorized individuals I would be subject to penalties such as 10 years imprisonment or $100,000 fines.  Over the years, I stayed away from social media because of a concern of inadvertently revealing information that could affect my security clearance and my job. 

So my view is that Hillary Clinton should have been prosecuted and penalties imposed.  If not in jail (miraculously), she should be on probation and ineligible for office.

Many of us lived through the Clinton presidency where we continually heard that one’s private sexual life was not germane to one’s performance as president.  Most Republicans probably thought that was wrong, and it’s definitely leading to a feeling of hypocrisy when planning to vote for Trump.  However, with Bill Clinton there was substantial reason to believe most if not all of his accusers were legitimate. Hillary vociferously attacked those accusers.  With Trump I have seen accusations of lesser offenses than Bill Clinton’s rapes, all coming within the last 30 days of the campaign, from years ago, and with almost no proof.  The claims against him sound too much like the insults of racism, bigotry, and the twisting of Trump’s words that stream continuously from Hillary Clinton and the main stream media.  Denigrating Trump, rather than pushing her policies, seems to be Clinton’s primary approach to campaigning.

What I will base my vote on are the comparative advantages and disadvantages of the policies of the two candidates.  Most of all, I believe in the Constitution of the United States and in the concepts of individual liberty and unalienable rights.  I want the Supreme Court and the other life-long appointees of the federal judiciary to interpret the laws and apply the Constitution as they are written.  I do not want an unelected, life-long set of jurists legislating from the bench and destroying the rule of law.  Hillary wants to nominate liberal justices who will legislate their agenda from the bench.  Trump wants justices that will apply the Constitution.

I want the right to own and carry a weapon as needed for self-defense.  Hillary either wants to repeal the Second Amendment or allow states such as California or New York or the District of Columbia to place any restriction on ownership, up to not even allowing you to own a gun.  Trump defends the Second Amendment.

I believe in the right to life of the unborn fetus, so does Trump.  Clinton believes in allowing late term abortions and partial birth abortions.

I believe in the right to live your life according to your religion.  Clinton’s judges and the great majority of liberals no longer believe in Religious Freedom outside your home or place of worship.

I believe in the right to Free Speech, for everyone, including corporations, companies, unions, and any organization that represents a group of citizens.  Clinton wants to reverse Supreme Court decisions supporting that belief.  And just to comment on liberal culture, I don’t believe that freedom should be abridged on college campuses that take money from state or federal governments.

Obviously, I believe in a strong military.  Trump plans to reverse the decline in defense capabilities of the Obama years.  Clinton believes the Obama approach is correct.

Regulations are probably my second biggest concern after the Constitution.  Obama (as well as Clinton) and the EPA’s campaign to kill coal, natural gas (fracking), and pipelines to distribute the fuel is disastrous.  We have a power network that relies on fossil fuels for something like 67% of our power.  Do you want brown-outs and high energy costs in your future?  Sure, I like solar and wind, and believe they should be expanded as economics and technology allow.  But I also have graduate degrees in electrical engineering and physics.  Alternative sources of energy (i.e. solar and wind) can supplement, but they can never be a primary energy source, and they are costly.  We recently obtained an estimate for a solar installation for our home.  To provide about 77% of our annual usage, it would have cost us $65,000 (before federal tax credits).  And that’s after years of hearing that the cost of solar is coming down!  I worry some about cyber attacks on our power grid.  With a solar installation I could guarantee our water pump would work during sunny days.  But our refrigerators, freezer, and air conditioning (in south central Texas) wouldn’t have any solar power at night.

Beyond the EPA, Obama has expanded bureaucracy/agency regulations that are stifling our economy and its growth.  Clinton wants to continue that approach.  Trump wants to reverse it.

Free trade is an issue that I’ve changed my mind about over the years.  In an open society where politics and national interests do not manipulate economic behavior, free trade would be great once a steady-state condition is reached.  Until then, there would be disruptions and hardships on individuals, groups and communities (i.e., your job would be at risk).  With the current nation-state partitioning of the planet’s population, our current agreements are destructive to our economy.  High employee salaries and costs plus high U.S. taxes mean jobs and manufacturing move to other countries.  If you increase productivity (to make an item cheaper to offset high employee costs) by automating the manufacturing process, you end up with fewer jobs.  Trump claims he will modify treaties to achieve deals that are not disadvantageous to the U.S.  I think he deserves the chance to show what impact a changed approach may have.  Clinton wants to continue with our current ruinous approach.

Health care is another issue that seems to be a core item of contention.  Obamacare has shown that a liberal attempt to impose government regulations on our health system causes higher costs and less choice.  I use the military retirement TriCare system, and cannot imagine a $5,000 annual deductible.  But I have also seen what it’s like to live with the doctor they assign you with no choice.  I’ve gone in to a military clinic coughing up green phlegm and been given cough medicine as their solution, I presume because they were told to minimize the use of antibiotics and to keep costs down.  I had to go to the emergency room days later to get an x-ray and the antibiotics needed to clear up the bronchitis.  I do not want to transition to government provided medical care for everyone, whether a public option that is cheaper and drives out private competition or a single payer (government only) system.  Choice will disappear and costs will rise.  If you don’t pay the costs because of government subsidies, other taxpayers will.  Trump presents us with the chance of a revitalized health care system.  Clinton’s will be a European or British system.

On immigration and national security.  I want to see our immigration laws enforced.  I don’t want borders where drug smugglers, terrorists and anyone with two feet can enter our country illegally.  Secure the borders, don’t just promise it or provide misleading statistics showing it’s not a problem.  Then work on the issue of legalizing those who came here without permission--that have not demonstrated other criminal behavior.  And do not grant entry to prospective immigrants without a background check, especially if they come from countries supporting or involved in terrorism.  Trump believes in that approach.  Clinton does not.

On international affairs and national security, Clinton and Obama have a history.  Clinton does not propose significant changes, for the most part.  The situation with Russia, China, Iran and North Korea has deteriorated, in my opinion, due in large part to Obama and Clinton foreign policy.  They do not seem to have the ability to counter increasing and emerging threats.  They seem to ignore it.  Clinton’s state department ignored requests for added security in Libya.  When an attack came that killed four people, including our ambassador, they did not even launch a timely military rescue.  I do not know how anyone can think Clinton’s foreign policy experience and decision making is something we want in a President.

Further, Clinton has recently proposed a no-fly-zone in Syria.  Early in the Syrian conflict, that might have worked.  Today, Russia has set up mobile variants of the S-300 air defense system (I am not an expert on this) that can take out anything flying within 100 to 150 miles of the system.  Can we take out those units?  I don’t know--maybe.  But it would seem to require a direct conflict with Russian forces.  Otherwise, how would we control the air?  Either Clinton was just trying to sound tough and smart for votes, intentionally misleading the voters, or she is inept and poorly advised about military operations.

Trump won’t talk much about his approach, which is considered good operational security, before an operation.  On the other hand, it doesn’t let you make firm conclusions about his decision making.  He does have good advisors!

On general temperament, I still lean to Trump.  Can you envision an extremely successful businessman with the characteristics Clinton claims for Trump?  He couldn’t make a deal or arrange a contract.  I expect Trump's deal making skills would make an excellent President.  Can you see a foreign head of state trusting anything that Clinton says?  Well maybe, if they make a big enough donation to the Clinton Foundation.

Finally, I almost overlooked policing in America.  With Black Lives Matter and recent media attention on police shootings of minorities, this has become a significant issue.  My wish is to allow police and the local justice systems to do their investigations, and if needed, go to trial.  Complete the initial process without federal intervention such as FBI and justice investigations, and premature conclusions and statements from the President.  If the local/state investigation and follow-up appears in error, prejudicial to one party, or not timely, then get the feds and public interest groups involved.  The police need our support to maintain the rule of law.  Trump understands that.  I’m not sure Clinton does.

To wrap up, I think it is almost unconscionable to vote for the candidate that does not support one’s beliefs on the Constitution, regulations, the economy, health care, foreign policy and crime/policing.  I can live with uncouth outbursts.  I can only feel anger about a public servant who has violated the trust of the American people by disclosing classified information to unauthorized individuals on unsecured networks and devices, then made light of it.  I don’t see that the arguments are even close.  Trump will be my choice.




























































Thursday, May 12, 2016

Day 29 Final

I decided to leave the trail. No injury or major problems. Basically it was just that it wasn't working out well with me on the trail and my spouse at home working. She wasn't happy about my hiking, and I couldn't help with any of the problems cropping up at home. 

And lack of AT&T signal in Hot Springs was a major problem. I couldn't get Google Voice to call using WiFi and Viber wouldn't accept their own code this year. FaceTime was working on weekends when she had her iPhone with her. But when she went into work she has to leave it outside. 

The in laws had a major connectivity outage, on a system I had set up, but I didn't have the details with me. My wife was very unhappy. 

I did find out that AT&T can be configured on the iPhone for WiFi calling. Apparently it is disabled by default because 911 calls won't give your real address. I had to agree to numerous 911 forms.  Calling worked normal from the library WiFi after that. Met one other guy in town who tried to buy a Verizon phone locally but they were out!  I told him about the library free WiFi and the WiFi calling setting and he was pretty grateful. 

Anyway, the combination of missing Susan and my conscience issue of not being home to help her made up my mind to stop here. Unless she's fully supportive in the future, I'll stick to trips around 2 weeks long. 

Also, I met lots of couples, pairs of friends, and some single folks hiking. The only other married guy I heard about hiking alone made a similar decision a day or two earlier--around the one month point. That doesn't mean there aren't lots of married folks hiking without their spouses...

If you've been following along, thanks!  And I hope I didn't disappoint you. Have a good day!

Tuesday, May 10, 2016

Day 28 Zero in Hot Springs

Not too much to say for today. Hot Springs is small. I got up early and finally got the eggs, bacon, pancakes, grits and milk breakfast I've been craving!

Then I repackaged the mail drop into my food and toiletry bags. Susan sent me a smaller size pair of pants, so I'm going to mail the others back. 

I'll spend some time on my kit...

The insoles on my Altra Lone Peak 2.5 trail runners have been sad. Every time they get wet they fold. Flimsy!  I've got a permanent crease in the left one. I am going to see if Bluff Mountain Outfitters has a better insole. I am not hopeful as the shoe is designed light and of course there is little spare room--except at the toes. 

The wintry cold weather and deep mud have resulted in my reconsidering my kit. If I stopped at a shelter I would have to leave my muddy shoes on to cook, eat and do toiletries. Most have camp shoes. Same issue in hostels. But my pack is not really designed for external equipment attachment. 

In the sleet storm I was chilly. It wasn't dangerous as I was relatively dry. I had on my merino wool base layer, my wind shirt, and my rain jacket. But the tremendous cold wind pulled the heat right out of me. The possum-down gloves and rain mitts were equally ineffective. I could have put on my down puffy, but that would have risked getting it wet. Plus the risk of moisture in the pack when I opened it. If it had gotten worse or been a degree or two warmer so the sleet was rain, I would have needed to stop and set up the tent to use the puffy or quilt for warmth. 

If I had been carrying my capilene hoody instead of the puffy, and maybe some wool mittens, I would have been fine and warm. But I saved a few ounces because I didn't anticipate any snow storms. When I do the summer to winter equipment change up north, I'll remember the lesson. 

Finally my quilt. It's a Katabatic 30 degree down quilt with a 'fixed' foot box. I love it except for the foot box. I have a touch of restless leg syndrome, and the fairly small foot box is like tying your feet together at the ankles. It's great in cold weather, but when it gets warmer it defeats part of the purpose of having a quilt instead of a mummy bag. I like the design of the Zpacks quilts and will take a look. 

Not sure what I'll do today, probably eat and watch TV!

Have a good day!

Monday, May 9, 2016

Day 27 Bluff Mountain to Hot Springs

Monday, May 09, 2016; AT Mile 273.7
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Walked from 258.9 to 269.4 or 10.6 miles.
Started 06:45 AM, stopped 12:12 AM.
Ave mph was 1.93, excluding lunch.
Battery used:  4 percent
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The ankle was feeling better today. Compared to my usual travel, I moved!  Most of the trail was downhill, but most wasn't too steep. I only got passed by a couple of college age girls. Not sure if they were thrus, awfully clean looking. But they were carrying their packs around town. 

Weather is nice today, but I'm not sure it will continue. Lots of clouds. 

Saw Square Peg at the diner on town entry. Tried for lodging at Elmers, but guy said last room was taken an hour earlier. He didn't seem too polite about my not having a reservation. 

Didn't want a standard hostel for a zero. Not too unhappy, proprietors are vegan. Got a room at Alpine Court. Almost nice. But I have to come here to the Wash Tub to do my laundry. 

Went to Smoky Mountain Diner for lunch after showering. Good food at average prices. It's open 0630 for breakfast and has homemade cobbler!

Stopped in Bluff Mountain Outfitters for change for the wash. Will need to pickup my mail drop there soon. 

No AT&T in town. And no WiFi at the Alpine. I'll use the library WiFi next door to call Susan.  Not sure why I had cell on the mountain last night but nothing in town??

 

 

 

 

 

 





















Sunday, May 8, 2016

A Review of Standing Bear Farm Hostel

I wanted to talk a bit about my impressions of the hostel. You also need a frame of reference. I stayed overnight on Friday, May 6, 2016. This is near the end of the AT thru-hiker bubble. They may get year-round clients since they are about the only lodging/shuttle service at the north end of the Smokies. But I'll assume thru hikers provide most of their annual income.

I've also heard that last year the proprietor passed away and his relatives have taken up operations. 

Morgan (aka Comrade) did most of the upkeep. Maria seemed to be the new proprietor   Morgan was friendly and always helpful. Maria did not seem as upbeat, and seemed more worried about finances. I got there early and Morgan had me in the Creekside cabin by noon. Shortly after Maria stopped by and asked me if I was staying there?  She asked if I knew it was $30?  I asked if there was something wrong as she seemed a bit upset. She said a couple wanted a cabin for privacy and they charged two people a total of $50. 

That behavior was not professional and bothered me. Later when I paid early because I wanted to hike out early the next morning before the staff was available, she asked me twice if I had made all the purchases I was going to from the self-service resupply store. Again I was a bit irritated. 

I'll assume their income and expenses were tight and give Maria a pass. 

Now to the hostel itself. It's a great operational approach, but it has some bugs. You get an intro from Morgan but it misses some key details. Like towels, sheets, and who washes dishes you use. 

They have two port-a-potties which is fine and one traditional privy I didn't find. They don't restock the toilet paper and the contractor apparently doesn't do a good job either. They have a shower area but I couldn't find any towels...

They have a small common kitchen with gas stove, microwave, and pizza ovens. A large table with a bench around it was promising, but extension charger for phones left only one entry. People left musical instruments on bench, trash and dog food on the table. People were leaving dirty dishes in the sink and someone had stopped up the drain. Dirty towels were all around the sink and there was no obvious scrub pad or clean dish cloth to clean the dishes with.   I used the microwave and left. 

The laundry area had two sinks for hand washing and a dryer. With the number of hikers staying this was probably more 'wash' efficient than a couple of coin washers and dryers would be with everybody waiting interminably. But my muddy socks did not get as clean as I would have liked. 

There was a picnic table and chairs outside the food/laundry area for use in good weather. 

They had a small building dedicated as a self-serve resupply store. You just noted on an envelope all of your purchases and paid up when leaving. It was a great (and I mean great) little store for food while you were staying at the hostel. But it didn't have freeze dried entrees for the trail. Mail drops were free if you stayed overnight. 

The bunk room was what you might expect in a submarine if they made subs out of wood. It was packed with bunks like sardines. Every one had a hikers kit spread out on it. Maria had told me to get pillow cases there, but I couldn't get close to the shelves with the linen because of the mass of hiker packs and hikers around it. 

They seem to be extending the main house to two stories. Don't know if it's only for the staff or if they will include rooms for hikers. 

My little one room cabin was past the main house on a little creek. The creek side was all glass with double doors. A grated balcony extended over the creek with a rug and two iron chairs. The one room had a double bed, a fan and a half-height bookcase/night-stand. No heat and despite having two electrical outlets (that didn't work) they had an extension cord coming through the window. Good enough, but I could have done the wiring in an hour. 

They had a larger cabin with two beds near the shower and they had a glass tree-house near the back of the property. I was not aware of other lodging. 

In summary, their operation was a little more extensive than most hostels. The self-serve store and free laundry were the highlights. If they had paid attention to the details or the cleanliness in the eating/cooking area, the hostel would be outstanding. They could make improvements anytime that would help. 

The hostel provides an essential service for thru hikers leaving the Smokies. But it's not everything I had hoped. 

Day 26 Stealth Site to Bluff Mountain

Sunday, May 08, 2016; AT Mile 263.1
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Walked from 247.2 to 258.9 or 12.7 miles.
Started 06:52 AM, stopped 03:10 PM.
Ave mph was 1.53, excluding lunch.
Battery used:  5 percent
------------------------------
I didn't do as far today as I would have liked. But given my ankle issues I'm pretty happy. Nice day with sun later. Humongous winds up on Max Patch bald. Lots of ups to get there. Some great views. Then some nice long gradual downs. Finished the day with two challenging ups. The site at the top of the mountain was open so I took it. Sometimes the downs offer few camp sites. 

I was really worried about my ankle yesterday. But I stopped early and it appears to have helped. Only minor issues today. But I still didn't want to push it. Unless the down tomorrow to Hot Springs is really nasty I ought to get to town by 2:00 to 3:00 pm. Then I will take a zero. 

The wind on Max Patch probably wasn't the 60 mph the hiker yesterday quoted. But it was strong enough to blow me off the trail mid-step. I had to put my rain jacket on and tighten my hat. 

Much of the down today seemed to follow a stream through a long valley.  

Bugs hit the last two hours. I'm hoping they will be fewer here on the height. Though when I was adjusting a tent stake a bee stung me on the palm of my hand. Couldn't believe it. 

Bunch of day hikers like usual. But not as bad as yesterday. Said hi to a couple older than me that was also heading north. Should have got their names. Passed three young women in black at the last gap. Unusual attire. Then as I was coming up the up, I heard singing and yelling behind me. Most thrus will pass me on an up. I even stopped to get water. Then while I was setting up my tent, 50 feet off the trail, the three young women arrived by the stones at the peak. Not sure if I took their site or what. They paused a really long time without taking off their packs. 

First time I've had more than one bar since the evening I left the Smokies. But think I will leave all media work for my zero. 

Have a good day! 

 

 

Heading up to Max Patch...

 

 

 

 

 

Top of Bluff Mountain...

 






















Saturday, May 7, 2016

Day 25 Standing Bear Farm to Stealth Site

Saturday, May 07, 2016; AT Mile 250.4
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Walked from 237.8 to 247.2 or 10.0 miles.
Started 06:19 AM, stopped 02:40 PM.
Ave mph was 1.20, excluding lunch.
Battery used:  3 percent
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Today was peculiar.  Nice and clear as I left the hostel. Square Peg was there and seemed to be the only one up. Nice to pack up in a room with a glass front. The porch was placed over a strong stream. But the little cabin wasn't heated. So used the sleeping bag. I'm going to do a separate blog/review on Standing Bear Farm. See that write-up for more details. 

Until noon the winds were strong and cold. The sun has finally come out so its warming a bit. A section hiker stopped as I was setting up my tent. He said winds on Max Patch (up and I do mean up the trail 2.5 miles) were 60 mph today. He may have been exaggerating, but figure he was close. It caused him to go south to the next shelter. 

Lots of greenery and flowers today. Big up out of the hostel that ended in a bald with an air traffic control (ATC) facility on top. The fence was close so I don't think it was active radar or hikers would be fried. Probably just a communications facility and/or passive collection. 

Since then it's been ups and downs. My sore heel became a sore ankle today. I don't know what's going on with it. But it's the reason I stopped early. Seems better if I keep the foot and ankle straight. 

The water was pretty spotty. At the last forest service road there was supposed to be a culvert 50 yards north. But three roads converged with two going north. Used the AT Hiker app and went up the indicated road. There was a little culvert with a trickle coming out. Enough water to camp!

Then I found this camp site and couldn't resist!

Have a good day!