Acme Anvil Co. - This Ain't Exactly Rocket Science

20th February 2008

Liberalism Is a Mental Disorder

From acclaimed psychiatrist Dr. Lyle Rossiter's book, The Liberal Mind: The Psychological Causes of Political Madness:

Based on strikingly irrational beliefs and emotions, modern liberals relentlessly undermine the most important principles on which our freedoms were founded.

. . .

The roots of liberalism – and its associated madness – can be clearly identified by understanding how children develop from infancy to adulthood and how distorted development produces the irrational beliefs of the liberal mind," he says. "When the modern liberal mind whines about imaginary victims, rages against imaginary villains and seeks above all else to run the lives of persons competent to run their own lives, the neurosis of the liberal mind becomes painfully obvious.

Read the review

Buy the book

posted in Politics | 3 Comments

12th February 2008

Getting Started in Ham Radio

I posted this in response to a question on a Yahoo! group, and thought it might be of general interest. The question was "I am interested in learning about ham radio. What courses do you suggest? What radio should I buy to get started?"

To learn the material, I recommend Gordon West’s books; they are available on Amazon.com.

To practice for the tests, try www.aa9pw.com/radio — there is a pool of questions for each exam, and with some work you can memorize the answers. You’ll enjoy the hobby more if you learn the background, though. I used Gordon’s books and AA9PW’s site and passed the Technician and General tests at one sitting, after about a week of study.

There are lots of good websites where you can learn about ham radio; I like eHam; from there you’ll find lots of links to other sites. My favorite site to browse new radios is Universal Radio; look for Amateur Base Transceivers, Amateur Mobiles and Amateur Handhelds. They have lots of info on each radio, and you can tell when they update each section.

Try to get involved locally; if you’re in a big city, there are probably several clubs. Attend a few meetings, and look for a group that actively seeks new members; they’ll be a lot more fun to hang out with, and you’ll get to know some of the people in person that you talk to on the radio. Most clubs hold testing days periodically to facilitate getting your license.

As far as the first radio, some of that will depend upon your license class. Once you pass the Technician test, you’re entitled to use all ham bands from 50MHz and up, which usually means using repeaters. Repeaters are radios which simultaneously receive on one frequency and re-transmit on another, usually using a high antenna in order to receive and be received from further away than a radio on the ground. Your radio will transmit and receive on the opposite frequencies.

If you’re in a city, or live/drive within 10-15 miles of the repeater, a handheld radio will usually work fine. If you live further from the repeater, you’ll need a radio that runs off the car battery and has an antenna mounted on the outside of your vehicle (although an external antenna for the handheld radio could double its range). Since a repeater could have a range of over 100 miles, you could find yourself talking with someone 120 to 200 miles away, depending upon your setup and how far you and the other person are from the tower. For either a handheld or mobile radio, you can get started for under $200 with new equipment, including a good antenna.

(Many of these radios will operate on the same frequencies as FRS radios, and although it’s not legal except in an emergency, it’s pretty handy. My handheld will receive AM, FM, TV, CB, weather, and airplanes and airports, and will transmit and receive on the same frequencies as my local sheriff, fire departments and ambulance company. It costs $300, and is slightly modified. Many volunteer fire departments pick frequencies just outside the ham bands, so their members can use ham radios. One local police department does that – the chief is a ham, and at one time, most of the officers were, too.)

If you pass the General test, you can use lower-frequency radios, which can reach much further -– around the world with a proper setup. I had a horizontal wire antenna strung inside the attic of a rent house a few years ago here in NE Texas, and my furthest conversations were to New York (~1000 miles) and the Oregon-Washington border (~1500 miles). These radios start at around $700 new, and go way past $10,000. Your antenna(s) can cost next to nothing, like mine, or as much as you want to spend.

Most ham radios operate on 12V, so even the long-range radios can be mounted in a vehicle. Lots of truckers and RVers use them, since the range is so much greater than CB radios and the chatter on ham is a lot more civil than what you typically hear on CB. With a well-mounted antenna and cooperative terrain, you should be able to reach up to several hundred miles. From the top of a mountain or on the coast, you might reach Europe or Asia.
online pharmacycialislevitrasomaviagra
I’d recommend studying and passing the Technician and General tests, even if you’re not sure what you want to do otherwise. The test is usually $10. I’d also recommend getting involved with local hams -– a fellow ham in my church gave me my first radios when I told him I’d passed the tests. Including the free radio and the parts for my attic antenna, I was on the air for under $30!

There’s a lot more beyond this, including Morse code, satellite repeaters, bouncing signals off the moon, even chatting with astronauts on the space station. It’s an enjoyable hobby, and I’m sure you’ll find many interesting things to do. The main thing is… get started!

posted in Amateur Radio | 0 Comments

9th February 2008

Ron Paul Scales Back to Concentrate on House Run

Fox News reports that “Ron Paul says he’s still in the presidential race but is moving to scale back his staff and shift focus to his own re-election campaign for his Texas congressional seat. ‘If I were to lose the primary for my congressional seat, all our opponents would react with glee, and pretend it was a rejection of our ideas. I cannot and will not let that happen.’”

While Huckabee has an uphill battle, needing 977 of the remaining 1150 uncommitted delegates (disregarding Romney’s 286 delegates), Paul would need ALL the remaining delegates PLUS some of Romney’s to get the nomination.

Ron Paul supporters – please visit here.

posted in Politics | 0 Comments

7th February 2008

Romney Leaves Race

Former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney left the presidential race today, saying he didn't want to hurt the party or the country. Pundits immediately wondered if Huckabee would make a similar "magnanimous" gesture, but of course there is a major difference between the two campaigns — Romney outspent Huckabee 12:1 but only had a few more delegates to show for his investment suggesting that either Romney's message was inferior, or that he just didn't connect with voters. Or both.

Mitt Romney supporters – please visit here.

posted in Politics | 0 Comments

4th February 2008

Mike Huckabee - the Only True Conservative in the Race

Gregg Jackson explains why he's voting for Mike Huckabee.

Jackson examines the record on:

  • Abortion
  • Marriage
  • Immigration
  • Foreign Policy/National Security
  • 2nd Amendment
  • Taxes and Spending
  • Special Rights for Homosexuals

… and concludes "that when $100 million dollars of GOP campaign propaganda is set aside, Mike Huckabee is the only real across-the-board (social and fiscal) conservative among the three front runners."

Mike Huckabee — the only true conservative in the race.

posted in Politics | 1 Comment

4th February 2008

Huckabee Pardoned Over 1000 Criminals… So What?

I was reading Sandy Rios' excellent article supporting Mike Huckabee - A Candidate We Could Get Excited About—if Only the Pundits Would Let Us - and she makes a good point about the argument that Huckabee pardoned over a thousand criminals while governor of Arkansas, including one man who went on to commit murder.

At least he was willing to make the tough decisions, evaluating every one of the 8000 requests for pardon that came across his desk. Maybe he got some wrong, but that's why our judicial system is based upon the idea of "reasonable doubt" — as a society, we agree that it's better to have a few more guilty people walk free, than to put an innocent man behind bars.

In addition, it bears repeating that Romney was more concerned about his shallow record of "no pardons issued." Romney's hometown paper, the Boston Globe, explains it:

Anthony Circosta, a decorated Iraq War veteran from Agawam, needed a gun permit in Massachusetts to get a promotion at his security guard job and to pursue a possible career as a police officer. But first he needed to have his record cleared of a childhood felony - shooting a classmate in the shoulder with a BB gun when he was 13.

The Massachusetts clemency board investigated Circosta's case and twice recommended pardoning him. But then-Governor Mitt Romney refused, preserving a record of rejecting every clemency request that crossed his desk.

That is a perfect example of putting ambition before principle — the primary reason people don't like Mitt Romney.

I recommend Mike Huckabee — a true conservative.

posted in Politics | 0 Comments

4th February 2008

The Incredible SR-71 - a Pilot Remebers

Wow.

posted in Military | 0 Comments

3rd February 2008

Reasons Not to Vote for Mitt Romney

Including:

  • Thinking his sons working to get him elected equates to servicemen and women fighting in Iraq and Afganistan
  • Sticking his dog inside a cage on top of his car for a 12-hour ride across country, hosing the dog's diarrhea off the car and off the dog at a rest stop, and then resuming the trip (wet dog + 55mph wind?)
  • Does anyone think he'd get nearly as much attention if he weren't so darned pretty and willing to spend so much of his own money? (at least $35 million through December)

WuzzaDem has the breakdown.

I recommend Mike Huckabee — a true conservative.

posted in Politics | 1 Comment

1st February 2008

Why Does the Ku Klux Klan Burn Crosses?

Originally, they didn't — not until they saw it in a movie.

Seriously. Get The Straight Dope.

posted in Culture | 1 Comment