Sunday, July 12, 2009

Smoking or gays?

“WASHINGTON (CNN) -- You've seen the iconic picture of a soldier with a cigarette dangling from his mouth, but that could soon be a thing of the past.

A new study commissioned by the Pentagon and the Department of Veterans Affairs recommends a complete ban on tobacco, which would end tobacco sales on military bases and prohibit smoking by anyone in uniform, not even combat troops in the thick of battle.

According to the study, tobacco use impairs military readiness in the short term. Over the long term, it can cause serious health problems, including lung cancer and cardiovascular disease. The study also says smokeless tobacco use can lead to oral and pancreatic cancer.

The Defense Department's top health officials are studying the report's suggestions and will make recommendations to the Pentagon's policy team and Defense Secretary Robert Gates.

The study recommends phasing out tobacco products such as cigarettes and cigars over a five- to 10-year period…”

    The CNN story goes on to say that many in the military object to a ban on smoking.  

    The military is so upset with the idea of gays in the military, and we know that about 10% of the military is gay, I think we should offer a deal …It could be you can smoke if you agree to gays in the military.  Smile
   

Continue reading "Smoking or gays?" »

Thursday, July 09, 2009

Masterbated using a dictionary?

“SPRINGFIELD, Mass. – Do you use a sock puppet to secretly keep track of your frenemies?

Plan to spend your staycation watching vlogs and webisodes? Or perhaps you plan to signal a flash mob for a quick bite of shawarma.

If you're not entirely certain what all that means, turn to the latest edition of the Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, which has added about 100 new words that largely reflect changing trends in American society…”

  I love words and Webster’s Dictionary.  When I was little we had a very large dictionary.  It was like the ones you would see on a large stand in a library.  I would look up words in it.  I would often just start looking up words one after another.
  I think I was about 7 or 8 years old.  I am not sure how I started or how long it lasted but I would drag the very large and heavy dictionary  to the middle of the room, after my mother and father went to work, and lay on it and hump the book.  Yes, I masterbated using a dictionary. 
  Now some of you are thinking he could not have been 8 years of age because his father and mother would not have left him alone when they went to work… Yes they did ..this was the old days folks..In fact when I was 9 or 10 years old my mother’s mother lived with us for a year or two and she fixed meals for me and read to me but I was in charge of her medication.  She had an addiction to a drug so I had her medication and I would stay close to the house so I could hear if she rang the bell next to her bed and if it was time for her medication then I would give it to her. She died when I was about ten years old.  No not from an over dose of her medication.

  If you think I was a very bad boy for using a dictionary to masterbate keep in mind that we had a very large bible and I never used it.

Wednesday, July 08, 2009

Federal Police Officers!!!! – Run… for your life..

art.federal.guard.gao

  • Story Highlights
  • Plainclothes investigators test security at 10 federal buildings in 4 U.S. cities
  • GAO agents able to assemble components in restrooms, freely enter offices
  • GAO's report questions effectiveness of the Federal Protective Service
  • Sen. Susan Collins: Security lapses show "poor training, lax management" at FPS
  •     You can read the CNN story but I just got to put in my two-cents on the subject.  At one time federal buildings were guarded by private contract guards from services like Pinkerton, Burns and others.
         The contract company would bid on the contract and the lowest bidder would get the contract.  In a couple of years the contract would come up again and often one of the other guard services would bid less and get the contract. 
         What took place most of the time is the guard working for the one company would just quit and go to work for the other company that got the contract.  So it would be new company and same guards.
         The contract guards got higher pay because the government as part of the contract said that a certain percent of the money had to go to the officers.
          The guard company would say that they gave their guards training but in fact they gave none.  I know I worked for years for them as a second job on my days off from my full time job.  I worked for Burns, Pinkerton, Well-Fargo and many others.  I also owned stock in a couple of them and I would see their report to stockholders and they would show photos and stacks of books and videos that they said they gave to employees as training.  It never happened.  One company showed me a 15 minute slide show one time and that was it.
          

    Continue reading "Federal Police Officers!!!! – Run… for your life.." »

    Sunday, July 05, 2009

    Blogging before 2003

      I been doing a blog for a long time.  In fact I been doing one since 1982!  I know many people say that blogging began in 1995.  They are wrong.  I know they are wrong on that information.
      I could just be the father and inventor of blogging.  Whip that smile off your face buddy!  Smile
      There was a web site that listed the inventor of blogging.  I left a comment on the site and one of the readers of the comment went to ShowMeBlog and checked it out and then he posted a comment that I was not telling the truth because he saw that I started blogging using TypePad in 2003.
      I also had a blog review site do a review of my blog and in the review the guy said that I said I had been online since 1982.  He said the same thing…that I was using TypePad and began blogging in 2003.
      I do not understand how they can not see that I was around and blogging before there was a TypePad, before there was a LiveJournal.  Hell, I was blogging  before there was a world wide web.
      I had to write my own software at first.  I did not use it very long because other people started to write software.

      By the way just before I started using TypePad, 2003, to host my blog I used LiveJournal.  If you want to read my blog before 2003 you will have to go to HowardNet on LiveJournal.  
       I also had a blog on Xanga and it began 12/28/2002.

      I started doing the LiveJournal blog on 06/04/2000.  I made 1,278 post to the site and 242 comments were left on the site.
      The important thing to keep in mind is that I was blogging before there was a TypePad, LiveJournal or even the world wide web.

    Wednesday, July 01, 2009

    Swollen Feet

      Last month I was at 200 pounds and I even hit 199 one day.  Now I am at 210 pounds.  Last month my feet were not swollen.  This month both of them are swollen and one looks like it is going to explode.  
      It is the food I eat.  If you think I am eating fast food you are wrong.  I am just eating what I pick up at the store. 
      I am just eating the wrong things…Cashew nuts, Ritz Crackers and other foods with to much salt.

      It looks like the only way I can eat right is to not eat.  I can lose weight and not have swollen feet and feel better if I just eat almost nothing.

      I have a FL Power Ball ticket for tonight.  The jackpot is $20 million.  I could buy a lot of food with $20 million.  I guess I could hire someone to just fix health meals for me.
      I have a Fl Lotto ticket for tonight and the jackpot is $7 million.

      If I won a lottery, and this may surprise you, here is one thing I would buy:

    darttruck
      It is a scale model (1:50) of a KW Dart truck.  I worked in the body shop of KW Dart Truck (Kansas City, MO) for years and I worked in the body shop.  The person selling this item, on eBay, wants $654.41 for it. 

      I would never buy something like that unless I won a lottery.  I hope I am buying it soon.  Smile 

    Monday, June 29, 2009

    The SysOp Next Door

    Joe Taibi made a comment about your note "BBS: The Documentary Photos":

    “I do remember you're doing something very similar and it was for that very reason i contacted you first when looking for people to join us in the Fidonet thing! I was a user of your BBS for some time before jumping in and doing it as well. By some time meaning a few months since we all know how fanatical we all were back then once we got the bug. And damnit I know you were blogging in the early 80's cause that's what Howard's NOTEBOOK was! A blog! Your Blog! But no one had coined that stupid bastardization of phrases yet! lol”

      If it is not in Wikipedia it is not true.  Smile
    I use Wikipedia all the time to look up information.  I guess I need to get someone to enter the information into Wikipedia.
      I wish I had saved old messages and data that would be great.  I wish my memory was better.  I wish the guy that made “BBS: The Documentary” would post my two and a half hour interview.  He started posting some of the interviews with people on the Internet archive site but I guess he got tired of doing it.  It has to be a major amount of work because he interviewed over 200 people.
      If you watch his documentary you will see that many of the people he interviewed still had their old computers, BBS software and all sorts of things saved.  I have nothing.
      My mind is a  blank right now but the guy in Belton that was running the FidoNet hub there at the last…He owned a computer shop..I heard he died.  He was a nice guy but I did not hear about his death until later.  I think he was part of the Fido net wars that seemed to go on later.  You started up the Fidonet thing in KC but later toward the end, I think, there was some real fighting going on.  I was not part of it.  I just wanted the feeds and did not get into the fighting. 
      Jason Scott, creator of the documentary, asked me about FidoNet.  He had some stories about it.  It seems the fighting was taking place not just in KC but all over the United States. 
      There was a lot going on that I did not know about…I was sort of in my own little world and that was Howard’s Notebook
      Do you remember “The Sysop Next Door” series of stories that was posted on Howard’s Notebook and that many other BBS picked up and re-printed?  You do know who the author was?  After all these years it can be told.

    Friday, June 26, 2009

    Ground Observer Corp

      I was a member of the Ground Observer Corp for years.  After they did away with the GOC our post all became weather observers. 
      Now I lived in Kansas City (Missouri) and KC is right in the middle of the United States so I am not sure it made much sense having us watch for Soviet bombers.  Smile

      But I found the following on the Gizmodo site:

    “…Here's a transcript of a panel about SAGE that occurred at the Computer History Museum in 1998. I found this passage, about why they couldn't use human spotters to warn of invasions, fascinating:

    "And they saw lots of things! [Laughter] They saw airplanes — many of them were civilian; they saw birds; they saw all kinds of things, and most of them they thought were Soviet bombers. I mean, this was a scary period. They would then telephone the nearest air base, which would then have to figure out if this information was worth anything. And pretty much none of it was worth anything. So, it very rapidly became obvious that despite the huge size of this program — there were 8,000 observation posts, and at the peak of the program 305,000 volunteers staffing these things 24 hours a day — the information was pretty much useless. So, commanders just ignored it. For one thing, by the time it had been verified, the bombers would already be there. So, what was the point?

    The reason I'm telling you this story is that the purpose of this program was not really air defense. It was public relations. It was saying to the public, "We are doing something about this problem — we see it." At the same time, the Air Force started looking everywhere for ideas from scientists and engineers, and [referring to the slide presentation] now we're restarting, and I'm not sure what's going on.

    What's the modern equivalent system that we'd use to defend ourselves against North Korean nukes? I don't know. I just hope its more than just a PR stunt…”

     275px-Air_force_ground_observer_corps_pin

       I do not know who was making that statement but I guess it was very funny.  I wonder if there was anyone there to tell the speaker that he was full of shit and did not know what he was talking about.  I wish I had been at the meeting to show everyone that the  clown did not know his ass from a hole in the ground.

      We did NOT report Soviet bombers.  We reported ALL airplanes.  We did not call the nearest air base.  We dialed the operator and said “Aircraft FLASH – Aircraft FLASH” and the operator connected us with Air Defense Command. 

    Continue reading "Ground Observer Corp" »

    Thursday, June 25, 2009

    1950: North Korea invades South Korea

    “Armed forces from Communist North Korea invaded the American-supported republic of South Korea today when they crossed the 38th parallel, the boundary that divides the zones. It was unclear at first whether the United States would take direct military action to defend the nation. However, South Korean Ambassador John Myun Chang said during a conference at the State Department, "I don't think the United States will abandon us."

    "The extent and purpose of the attacks remained unclear for hours after the first fragmentary reports of the invasion were received," reported The Cedar Rapids Gazette on June 25, 1950. "But shortly after noon, the Communists' radio at Pyongyang, the Northern capital, said that war had been declared effective at 11 a.m."

    NOTE: Two days after the invasion, President Truman authorized the use of American forces to aid South Korea. The June 25 attacks marked the beginning of the Korean War, a conflict that lasted until 1953.”

    The above is from NewsPaperArchive.Com 

      Here we are all these years later…still having to mess with North Korea.  I was 9 years old when North Korea invaded South Korea.  I remember it.  But not in a great amount of detail.
      I was into news even at that age.  I remember in great detail the Army-McCarthy Hearings and that was in 1954.  I suspect one reason that I remember the hearings so well is that I was not going to school and it was the only thing on TV. 

    Friday, June 19, 2009

    The First Blogger by with Scott Rosenberg

    Scott Rosenberg, author of the new "SAY EVERYTHING", goes on a quest to track down the primal blogger. In SAY EVERYTHING, Rosenberg chronicles bloggings unplanned rise and improbable triumph, tracing its impact on politics, business, the media, and our personal lives.

      Should I tell him who invented blogging? 
    No, I do not think he cares.  If you have an idea who invented blogging his blog is:    say everything

      I made the following video in August of 2007 and posted it on YouTube at that time.  It tells how I invented the blog and my feeling about who is the father of blogging.

    Tuesday, June 16, 2009

    The Internet in 1969

      Here is a video of what they were saying the Internet would be like in 1969.  Keep in mind that the world wide web was not invented until 1995.

      I got my first computer in 1978 and I went on line 24/7 in June of 1982. 

    trs80bbs1982

      God, that was a long time ago.  I found some “lost” photos of me.  They are 35mm slides and I am nude standing in front of computer.  I will have to convert them from 35mm to digital photos and create a little side show or something.  Give you something to look forward too.  SMILE

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