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Wednesday, October 02, 2013

It's a lot better than nothing


It's a lot better than nothing

      My View on Self Defense for Women, by Sheri W.


From the Survival Blog

I wish that all women had some self-defense training.  But, most don't, even among preppers.  Worse yet, most women I know are too embarrassed to learn anything about fighting.  They don't know where to learn or maybe don't want to appear foolish.  And the misinformation out there about how a woman should defend herself is often worse than useless - it's actually harmful.  Most men teach what works for men and often, those techniques don't work very well for women.  This article is intended for those women who have little or no experience with self-defense.  I won't kid you, reading something to learn to defend yourself is not the way to learn.  I hope no woman ever has to defend herself.  But, if your man is down, or you're on your own, even if you aren't terrifically effective with these techniques, some of this information could make the difference even if all you do is read it.  I'm a woman and this is what I believe works for women.

So I want to recommend this exercise: sit with your butt on your heels, on the floor about two feet from your opponent, who is sitting the same way.  You should be facing each other.  Put a small cloth, like a bar towel or washcloth on the floor between you.  Here's the game; you are trying to grab the cloth and quickly roll away from your opponent before he (or she) can reach out and touch you anywhere he can reach.  Neither of you can touch the other unless one of you is holding the cloth.  Your opponent is trying to do the same thing, in which case you're trying to reach out and touch him before he can roll away with the cloth.  This exercise can really help you in several ways.  It teaches you what your reaction time is and what other people's reaction time is.  It teaches you to feint - fake a grab that you won't complete in order to keep your opponent off balance.  And, it teaches you to read your opponent's body language, and how your opponent "telegraphs" what they're about to do. 

The reason I recommend that exercise is that most women I've known don't have a lot of confidence in their ability to defend themselves.  And, for good reason - because most women are at a big disadvantage in a fight with a man.  But, most women have equal or better reaction time compared to most men.  Even if a male opponent has studied martial arts, women often can win at this exercise.  So, it's a confidence builder for women in an area they can excel.  And, when your life might be on the line, you need to know what your assets are, what you can do with a reasonable hope of success.  And what your opponent can do.  You can do the exercise with men, other women or kids.

The sad truth is that a woman's chances in a fight with a man aren't good.  For this reason, a woman has about seven seconds to take a guy out in a fight before the odds for your success start to decrease.  For that first seven seconds, your opponent probably doesn't see you as a lethal threat and you really do have a big advantage.  He probably thinks you won't be a big obstacle.  You have to be lethal in your seven second window of opportunity.  That fact narrows down your range of targets considerably.  There just aren't that many targets on a male opponent that will kill or disable him in a short time frame.  After that seven seconds, you can still win, it's just harder. 

Don't try to look tough.  In fact, try to look scared and totally useless.  By trying to look tough, you're just advertising to the guy that you intend to fight back.

Rule One: The best weapon is never your body.  Nearly anything you can grab or hold is less likely to break and therefore a better weapon than your fist is.  Anything hard or sharp that you can get a good grip on is a weapon.  If you have a choice between a four inch knife and a ten inch knife, go for the shorter knife - it's harder for your opponent to get away from you.  Never throw a weapon.  Keep your weapon and keep it in your control at all costs.  There are nearly always weapons around.  If you can get to a knife, slash at your opponent's hands, short circular slashes that can reach both of the guy's hands.  By circular slashes, I mean out and back towards your body, so that you're set up for another slash.  Don't try to get past his arms for a body stab.  Instead shred his hands.  Always stay aware of both of his hands.  Men are smart and competent, so if you are only paying attention to one hand, you can bet his other hand is about to take your knife away.

Take a few minutes to look around any room you're in and think about what could be used as a weapon and how it could be used to bludgeon your opponent's "soft" targets (like his nose) or to cut someone.  Anything you can reach that is not too light or too heavy can be used in one of those ways.   Be aware your opponent will try to get any weapon away from you.  As I mention later in talking about multiple strikes, if you don't meet his move to disarm you with additional strikes, he probably will disarm you.

Rule Two: Forget any kind of typical karate punch.  You'll break your wrist.  The bones in your hand and wrist are more fragile than almost anything you could hit.  And aside from a strike to someone's nose or throat, that type of blow won't incapacitate your opponent.

The difference between a male's upper body strength and a woman's is huge.  You can pound sand for a couple of years to work up to karate-style punching, if you want to.  But you have better weapons available: your knee, foot, elbow, side of fist, back of fist, head, teeth.  Those are your weapons if you can't get a better one.   Having said that, it's sensible to do 20 pushups a day (working up to it).  That little bit of muscle might save your life and will keep your tits from sagging as an additional bonus.

Karate is a power style and it suits men perfectly.  I don't think it works for women.  Oh, it can work!  But it still plays to men's strengths.  Wrestling is the.same deal.  If an assailant tried to wrestle with me, I'd try to bite his nose off.  Karate and wrestling are biased in favor of power and size.  If you want to take a martial art, try jiu jitsu (which uses leverage instead of power) or kickboxing - even boxing will teach you to duck and be light on your feet although it won't teach you how to successfully hit someone.  I'm sure there are women martial artists who will disagree with me on this issue.  But, in a fight between a reasonably fit guy with no martial arts training and a woman with a black belt in karate, my money would go on the guy.  I wasted years on karate before coming to that conclusion.  And it wasn't a conclusion I was happy to reach.

I used to think that martial arts was mostly a matter of learning to take a beating, ignore the pain and keep going.  There's a weird humor in that, and it's also true.  In a real fight, adrenaline will usually keep you from feeling the damage, for awhile.  Some people are really pain sensitive.  Other people are really afraid of pain and that's a much, much bigger problem.  But pain is always preferable to death or permanent damage.  Pain is temporary.  Don't let the prospect of pain wipe you out.  In a sense, martial arts teaches you that pain isn't the end of the world.  Like hunger, if you ignore pain, it fades away.  I've known people who were afraid of hunger as if it was a big, scary thing.  Hundreds of thousands of years have honed humans to function perfectly in spite of pain or hunger.  We're built to do that and succeed.  Even if someone shoots you, you can still function.

Get out of the mindset that you'll lose the fight.  Your biggest limitations are mental.  You can do a lot more than you think you can.  You won't lose if you're vicious and sneaky enough.  It takes 12 pounds of pressure to break an elbow - including the elbow of a six foot four inch tall, two hundred and fifty pound guy.  About four pounds of pressure will break his nose.  In either case you just have to know your targets.  Speed and accuracy are more important than power. 

In a true do-or-die fight, go for gouging out eyes, nose strikes or bites, windpipe hits (below the adam's apple), breaking knees or elbows.  Bite fingers off - don't just bite them, bite them off.  If you want to win, you have to be brutal.

I've been told by guys who should know what they're talking about, that kicking or kneeing a guy in the balls creates such a adrenaline surge that a guy doesn't always become incapacitated for several minutes afterwards - and for those few minutes you have an enraged, adrenaline-overloaded opponent to deal with.  I mention this for what it's worth.  That doesn't mean I wouldn't go for a guy's genitals as a target of opportunity.  I just wouldn't put all my faith in it.  Giving the impression that you're terrorized will give you an addition edge.  Terror is incapacitating.  If you allow terror to rule you, the other guy's job is already done for him.  You handed him your life on a platter.  But you can give the impression you are terrorized and it will lull your opponent into not expecting much retaliation.  Don't rush him, let him come to you, then move in at the last second when he's in arm's reach.  Read his body language for how he's going to attack or grab you.  What I'm trying to communicate is that, for a woman, there are a small number of targets and  a small number of ways of attacking those targets.  This should simplify your decisions.  Hence the next "rule."

Rule Three: You need to work continual strikes.  Do not kick someone and then back off to see if the guy is going to stop or run away.  It'll never work.  Use continuous strikes at your attacker - nose, knee, eyes, throat, temple, elbow, genitals and whatever else you can strike at.  The only exception to this rule is if you can either run away or get to a better weapon.  In that case, run or break away and/or go for the weapon.

Most people, in a fight, will try to stay back from their opponent.  That doesn't usually work for a woman, kid or smaller guy.  When you back away, you're playing to your opponent's strengths - his longer reach.  It's not instinctive, but a smaller fighter needs to get inside the reach of the bigger guy.  That way the bigger guys blows can't deliver with full power and you can actually reach your targets.  The danger is being close enough to get into a grapple with someone who weighs a lot more than you.  But any distance where you can reach your target is fine.  You don't want your opponent to be at the end of your reach, but within your reach. The big point here is that backing away isn't in your best interests.  Your fear tells you to back off.  Ignore that fear.  You have to be close enough to hit the guy.

You cannot use brutal techniques (with the possible exception of breaking an opponent's knee or elbow) on some drunk guy who grabs your ass or a school-yard bully.  If you do, you'll go to jail for a very long time.  Brutal techniques are for situations that are deadly to you. [JWR Adds: Any strikes at the neck or head are considered lethal force attacks, for good reason. Do not use them unless you are in a truly life threatening situation where you are legally justified to use lethal force.]

If someone grabs you (including chokes), always break the hold towards the guys thumb.  The thumb is the weak part of any hold.  If someone grabs you by the wrist or arm: swing or twist and pull your arm in a direction that puts force against the guy's thumb, bending it towards his wrist.  Be fast.  If you can get the guy's arm straight while you're trying to break the hold, bring up your other hand and use the heel of that hand to smash into the back of the guys elbow or his nose.  If he pulls his head back, go for his knee or groin.  And continuously go for any other target of opportunity.  Back of neck, temple, ear, etc.  Any move you make will cause your opponent to change his position to protect what he thinks you mean to attack, and his motion, in turn, will bring a different target into reach.  If you try to pull out of his grasp, he'll brace his knees beautifully for you, so you can break them.

If someone is choking you from the front reach up and try to grab the guys thumbs  and pry them away. Thumbs move in more or less three directions with some kind of mobility, but not in the fourth direction, directly back towards his wrist.  That's the direction you use to pry his thumbs away from whatever they have a grip on.  If you can get your fingers around his thumb you can break the choke by twisting the thumbs back fairly easily.  You can also try to bring both your forearms up between his forearms and explosively push your arms out against his arms - but this probably won't work for an untrained woman against a powerful man.  Better to gouge his eyes or strike his throat with the side or back of your fist or your elbow.  If you can reach his eyes, go for them - that'll almost always break his choke hold.  Or grab his private parts in your fist and twist hard.  The guy will let go of your throat.

Sometimes trying to pry out of someone's grip isn't using your best resources.  Better to break his knee, which is usually conveniently close (more on this later).  The great thing about knee attacks is that even if you don't strike accurately enough to break it the guy will probably be limping and you can outrun him and you can almost always reach his knees with some kind of kick.  If someone has you from behind, usually your hands and feet (and possibly your elbows) are free.  Head butting (smashing back) into the guys nose is a great technique, but often the guy is so much taller that you can't reach his nose with the back of your head.  Same deal for using your forehead to bash someone's nose.  You can often reach back with your hands and grab, squeeze, wrench or tear the guy's groin.  You can drop all your weight completely, which will sometimes get you free (to roll fast and get up).  Although women have much less upper body strength than men, a woman's leg strength is almost as great as a man's leg strength.  If you have shoes on, you can rake the guys shin with your heel, smash his foot (aim for the top of the arch) or better yet, kick back with one or both feet, repeatedly, to try to hit the front of his knees with the heels of your feet.  Most guys, holding you from behind, if you're trying to hit his knees with your heels, will bend forward (to try to distance his knees from your feet) - this brings his head conveniently close so now you can smash the back of your head into his nose.  And, while you're doing this, be thinking about a weapon you can grab if you get free.  Also, scream your rage loudly.  Get in touch with your inner berserker.  Sometimes rage and relentlessness are more important that power.  If you can't reach his nose with the back of your head, hit anything on his face - except his teeth.  Other than teeth, every single part of his face is more susceptible to damage than the back of your head, or your elbow or the back or side of your fist, for that matter.  If you do all this, fast enough and continuously enough, you probably will get loose, at least briefly.

Before we get off the topic of an assailant grabbing you.  I just want to mention the tactic of faking blows (feints) to set up your opponent for a different blow.  We all telegraph our attacks, more or less, and you can use this to set someone up.  As I mentioned earlier, if someone has hold of you by the arm or wrist and you tense as if you're about to break or wrench away, he'll instantly brace for it.  That brace sets him up perfectly to break his knee - he's got the knee all nice and braced for you.  Braced, it takes more time for him to get his knee out of the way or turn his knee to direct your blow at a less vulnerable part of him.  Every kind of attack sets up your opponent for another attack.  Every time your opponent moves or braces, he's setting himself up for a different strike.  You need to think about that a little.  Every time you move, he'll brace, move or try to compensate.  Every attack sets your opponent up for the next attack.  The point in feinting is that it helps avoid telegraphing your real attack. 

For any of the kicks, imagine the target is about six inches past where it actually is.  Really believe that - that you're trying to strike something behind the true target.  Don't worry too much about power because trying to put all your power into it will slow you down and make pulling your foot back after the strike harder, plus you'll telegraph the coming strike to your opponent a lot more.  Aim for a point behind your target and pull back instantly after striking, all in one motion.  That's how you want your kicks to work.

There are three basic kinds of kicks.  Front kicks, side-kicks and back kicks.  Front kicks involve hitting with the ball of your foot at something in front of you (unless you have hard shoes on, in which case use any part of your foot).  Keep your toes bent up if you're barefoot - you'll strike with the ball of your feet.  Think about running in place, how your foot comes down and hits the ground and recoils back to your torso.  Like running, your toes aren't pointed towards the ground as your foot comes down, they're angled up, out of the way, so that you'll hit the ground with the bottom of your foot. Now try to translate that kind of motion except instead of hitting the ground you're hitting a target.  Hit and pull back like a spring.  If you have heavy shoes on, you can kick the way a guy kicks a football without hurting your toes.  Any attacker, if you try to kick anything above his knee or leave your leg or foot out where he can grab it, will grab your foot and lift it (keeping hold of it), putting you down on the ground and completely in his control.  You need to pull it back in to prevent that from happening and also to support yourself for your next strike.

Side-kicks involve hitting with the outside edge of your foot at something sideways to you.  Side-kicks are both powerful and fast.  I wouldn't hesitate to side-kick to the front by turning slightly while I'm kicking. It's a stronger blow that front kicks and faster pulling back.  Watch a martial arts movie to see some side-kicks, but ignore the fancy high strikes.  Nothing above the knee.  Imagine you're running up to a boulder, then raising your foot to push off the boulder and reverse your running direction - and since you're moving fast you're pulling that leg back and down fast to hit the ground and continue running.  That's not a perfect analogy, but for someone who has never tried this, it's better than nothing. 
Back kicks usually mean using your heel or back edge of your heel as a weapon to hit something behind you.  Again, don't worry about power,  worry about speed, accuracy, not telegraphing the motion and getting your foot back under you fast.
Elbow strikes mean using your elbow as a weapon.  Practically any place you can hit is a good target.  But, preferentially, throats, or noses, solar plexus, ribs, kidneys, anywhere on the face or throat is less ideal but good targets. 

As I mentioned before, if you need to use your hands, use the bottom or the back of your closed fist or the heel of your hand rather than your knuckles.  The reason is that these blows don't compress your wrist as much.  By the bottom of your fist, I mean the area on the same side as your little finger - hammer-wise, the way you would pound on a table.  Back of  your fist is similar to 'backhanding' your opponent, except with your fingers closed in a fist.

A lot of women have long fingernails.  Another reason for using the bottom or back of your fist is that these blows can be used without a really tight fist so they will work even if you have long nails.  If you have any nails, a normal karate or boxing-style fist strike (like you see in the movies) will compress your nails into your palms.  But, back of fist or bottom of fist strikes can be done  with a loosely made fist, just fine.  Regardless, any kind of fist is your very last choice as a weapon.  And if you do have to use fists, put your heart into it.  Targets are nose, throat, temples but hit anything you can reach if you have no other option.  Don't pound on a guy's chest or upper arms, they're useless as targets.  Worse than useless.

Striking with the heel of your hand is very effective for nose strikes.  The area around someone's nose and upper lip has more nerve endings than (almost) any other place on their body.  A hit to someone's nose is one of the most painful blows you can give someone.  It makes your targets eyes water copiously, so your assailant can't see too well.  It bleeds a bunch.  The biggest danger in this strike is that your miss the nose and hit your opponent's teeth.  His teeth will really mess up your hand.  A lot of people think you can drive someone's nasal bones up into their brain, killing them, with this kind of blow.  I've been told it's an urban legend. The heel of your hand is also effective against the back of someone's elbow.  Use a hard sharp blow at the exact back of the elbow, pushing the elbow in the direction it doesn't bend while holding the guys wrist or forearm with your other hand.  If you don't have your other hand on his wrist, but he's holding you, that works too.  It has to be fast because your opponent only has to slightly turn his elbow so that the elbow can bend with the blow, if he sees it coming.  But even if he turns his elbow, it'll hurt. 

Another way to break an elbow, if the guy isn't too much taller than you, is to step under his arm (turning so your back is to him) and bring his arm down on your shoulder so that his elbow is just ahead of your shoulder, pull it down hard to break his elbow.  If the guy's too tall, you can't get the leverage you need to break his elbow this way - your shoulder needs to be almost as high as his. 

As an example of continuous strikes: Let's say the guy throws a punch at you.  You quickly bring up your forearm to block his punch, then slide your arm and grab his wrist and start to swing under his raised arm.  As you swing into the turn, you build momentum to swing your other elbow around into his solar plexus (just below the breast bone) which brings his head down, bending him over a little and that puts you and him in position to swing you fist up for a back fist strike to his nose.  Which swings his upper torso back and away so he's set up for you to bring his upper arm down on your shoulder to break his elbow (his elbow is facing down).  See what I mean about each strike, even if it doesn't land, setting him up for your next strike?

A few words about blocking: the most common way to block an incoming blow is to use your forearm against his forearm.  It's a pretty decent move but only slightly diffuses the direction and force of his blow, so you also need to be moving to the side so his target (you) isn't where it was.  

To gouge someone's eyes: punch your thumbs into the very inside corners of your attackers eyes (the side where his tear ducts are). Once your thumb is in behind the eyeball, bend your thumbs in and push towards the outside corners of his eyes and then back out.  You're reaching in behind his eyeballs and then pushing them out in one smooth move.
If you're down on the ground, on your back, and your opponent is standing anywhere near your feet, you can hook one foot behind his ankle and with the bottom of your other foot, push hard on the front of his shin, just below his knee.  That will put your opponent on their butt if you do it fast enough and it doesn't even take much strength.  Roll fast and get a foot under you to get up and away fast.  The reason you always roll to your feet is that it's faster than any other way to get to your feet.  It uses your momentum to help you get up.  You have to practice.

The classic way to fall when you go down onto your back, is with your arms out from your body about thirty degrees, slap your forearm and hand on the ground hard, just as your back hits but before your head hits.  That slap will defuse the force of the fall to prevent your head from hitting.  Don't get your elbow under you, keep your arm out nearly straight at that 30 degree angle out from your torso.

Often a man will grab a woman by her hair to try to control her.  If a man has a handful of your hair, use your hand to try to press his fist against your head while using your other hand or feet to attack him.  If you can keep his fist against your head, it keeps his hold on your hair from hurting you.  If you can't do that, attack with everything you have and ignore the pain. 

You can practice kicks on a tree trunk or stacked bales of hay, if you don't have a heavy punching bag.  Everything else, you can practice with a brother, boyfriend or friend, except use soft slaps or taps instead of blows - practice ducking, blocking blows and feinting (faking moves).  Practice with your kids or women friends.  This alone won't make you a good fighter but it's a lot better than nothing and might save your life or your family.

Ham and Limas


Ham and Limas

       That's  a nickname from an old time military C-Ration meal. Now we have MRE's, which I have enjoyed, too.

            Most people derided ham and limas, but I actually liked it.  And one can live off of it OK.

            So today the post office brought some ingredients for me to make some soup kitchen kind of ham and lima bean concoction.  I figure to substitute  TVP (textured vegetable protein) for the ham, and probably throw in some Crisco lard or vegetable oil to help the health and cause ideas, with a good dose of spring water, too. Heat it up some, and serve it in cups with sporks, and this is not a bad way to go, or at least to start.

A story worth telling over, and over again


A story worth telling over, and over again

At a Touchdown Club meeting many years ago, Coach Paul "Bear" Bryant told the following story:

I had just been named the new head coach at Alabama and was off in my old car down in South Alabama

recruiting a prospect who was supposed to have been a pretty good player, and I was having trouble finding the place.

Getting hungry, I spied an old cinderblock building with a small sign out front that simply said "Restaurant." 

I pull up, go in, and every head in the place turns to stare at me.  Seems I'm the only white fella in the place.

But the food smelled good, so I skip a table and go up to a cement bar and sit.

A big ole man in a tee shirt and cap comes over and says, "What do you need?"

I told him I needed lunch and what did they have today?

He says, "You probably won't like it here. Today we're having chitlins, collard greens and black-eyed peas with cornbread.

I'll bet you don't even know what chitlins are, do you?" 

I looked him square in the eye and said, "I'm from Arkansas, and I've probably eaten a mile of them. Sounds like I'm in the right place."

They all smiled as he left to serve me up a big plate. When he comes back he says, "You ain't from around here then?"

I explain I'm the new football coach up in Tuscaloosa at the University and I'm here to find whatever that boy's name was,

and he says, "Yeah I've heard of him, he's supposed to be pretty good." And he gives me directions to the school so I can meet him and his coach.

As I'm paying up to leave, I remember my manners and leave a tip, not too big to be flashy, but a good one, and he told me lunch was on him, but I told him for a lunch that good, I felt I should pay.  The big man asked me if I had a photograph or something he could hang up to show I'd been there.

I was so new that I didn't have any yet. It really wasn't that big a thing back then to be asked for, but I took a napkin and wrote his name and address on it and told him I'd get him one.

I met the kid I was looking for later that afternoon and I don't remember his name, but do remember I didn't think much of him when I met him.

I had wasted a day, or so I thought. When I got back to Tuscaloosa late that night, I took that napkin from my shirt pocket and put it under my keys so I wouldn't forget it. Back then I was excited that anybody would want a picture of me. The next day we found a  picture and I wrote on it,

 

"Thanks for the best lunch I've ever had."

Now let's go a whole buncha years down the road. Now we have black players at Alabama and I'm back down in that part of the country scouting an offensive lineman we sure needed. Y'all remember, (and I forget the name, but it's not important to the story), well anyway, he's got two friends going to Auburn and he tells me he's got his heart set on Auburn too, so I leave empty handed and go on to see some others while I'm down there.

Two days later, I'm in my office in Tuscaloosa and the phone rings and it's this kid who just turned me down, and he says,

"Coach, do you still want me at Alabama ?"

And I said, "Yes I sure do." And he says OK, he'll come.

And I say, "Well son, what changed your mind?" 



And he said, "When my grandpa found out that I had a chance to play for you and said no, he pitched a fit and told me I wasn't going nowhere but Alabama,

and wasn't playing for nobody but you. He thinks a lot of you and has ever since y'all met."

Well, I didn't know his granddad from Adam's housecat so I asked him who his granddaddy was and he said,

"You probably don't remember him, but you ate in his restaurant your first year at Alabama and you sent him a picture that he's had hung in that place ever since. That picture's his pride and joy and he still tells everybody about the day that Bear Bryant came in and had chitlins with him..."

"My grandpa said that when you left there, he never expected you to remember him or to send him that picture, but you kept your word to him and to Grandpa, that's everything. He said you could teach me more than football and I had to play for a man like you, so I guess I'm going to."

I was floored. But I learned that the lessons my mama taught me were always right.

 

It don't cost nuthin' to be nice.

 

It don't cost nuthin’ to do the right thing most of the time, and it costs a lot to lose your good name by breaking your word to someone.

When I went back to sign that boy, I looked up his Grandpa and he's still running that place, but it looks a lot better now.

And he didn't have chitlins that day, but he had  some ribs that would make Dreamland proud.

I made sure I posed for a lot of pictures; and don't think I didn't leave some new ones for him, too, along with a signed football.

I made it clear to all my assistants to keep this story and these lessons in mind when they're out on the road.

If you remember anything else from me, remember this. It really doesn't cost  anything to be nice, and the rewards can be unimaginable. 

 

 

"I expect to pass through the world but once. Any good therefore that I can do, or any kindness I can show to any creature, let me do it now. Let me not defer it, for I shall not pass this way again”

 

 

Editor's Note : Coach Bryant was in the presence of those few gentlemen for only minutes, and he defined himself for life.

Regardless of our profession, we do define ourselves by how we treat others, and how we behave in the presence of others, and most of the time, we have only minutes or seconds to leave a lasting impression. We can be rude, crude, arrogant, cantankerous, or we can be nice. 

Nice is always a better choice. 

 

 

The Beginning of the End for Washington


The Beginning of the End for Washington

This impasse could be the breaking point for a political system that has gone from dysfunctional to nonfunctioning.
Bill Clinton: Driving the GOP to Extremes

Step back. Try for a moment to extrapolate what a government shutdown and discredited U.S. currency could do to the economy and the public's faith in government. Think beyond next year's congressional elections or even the 2016 presidential race. Factor in existing demographic and social trends. I did, and this is what I concluded:

1. The Republican Party is marginalizing itself to the brink of extinction.

2. President Obama can't capitulate to GOP demands to unwind the fairly legislated and litigated Affordable Care Act. To do so would be political malpractice and a poor precedent for future presidents.

3. Despite the prior two points, Obama and his party won't escape voters' wrath. Democrats are less at fault but not blameless.

4. This may be the beginning of the end of Washington as we know it. A rising generation of pragmatic, non-ideological voters is appalled by the dysfunctional leadership of their parents and grandparents. History may consider October 2013 their breaking point. There will come a time when Millennials aren't just mad as hell; they won't take it anymore.

The Republican Party may be splitting apart. The divide is between conservatives who want to limit government and extremists who oppose governing.

The latter sect is represented by Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas who is misleading his supporters. He knows that the GOP can't overturn Obamacare because Republicans only control one half of one branch of government. And yet, Cruz and other tea party Republicans pledge to do the impossible, presumably to build email lists, bank accounts, and fame.

On the other side of the GOP divide are conservatives who were already worried about the future of their party. Rep. Tom Cole of Oklahoma, a campaign savvy conservative, wants the GOP focused on refurbishing its image rather than conducting kamikaze missions. "Let's go win some elections," Cole tells GOP voters. Sen. Tom Coburn, a conservative by any sane measure, said on MSNBC last week, "I'm now no longer conservative according to the standards that have been set by the expectations of this process."

Just one in four Americans say they believe Republicans in Congress are working with Obama, according to a New York Times/CBS News poll. Three-quarters of independents say the GOP is not attempting to find common ground. More than seven of every 10 voters disapprove of the way Republican lawmakers are doing their job. In general, polls show, the GOP is considered to favor the rich. On immigration and many other issues, the predominately white GOP is out of step with a rising-minority nation.

Shutting down the government and threatening the nation's credit can only hurt the Republican Party's branding crisis. The party could close ranks for the 2014 and 2016 elections, but it's hard to see how it continues to exist without fundamental changes. That's not just my opinion. It was the conclusion of the so-called autopsy ordered by GOP Chairman Reince Preibus after the 2012 election. "There's no one solution," he said. "There's a long list of them."

The strange thing is that Obamacare could be a good issue for the GOP. It is an unpopular law freighted with complexity. Successful implementation requires precision from an Obama team that has proved itself weak on the nitty-gritty of governing. One could argue that the GOP is fighting Obamacare at its peak strength – prior to implementation. Why not wait for it to go into effect, seize on the flaws and, as Cole says, win some elections?

Obama can't and won't gut his bill. Even if you set aside his politics, capitulation would set a horrible precedent: The nation's credit and the government itself cannot be taken hostage by the extreme wing of a minority party.

At the risk of being accused of "false equivalency" I need to state the obvious: Obama and his party won't emerge from a shutdown or debt crisis unscathed. To suggest otherwise is a false purity. For starters, the president of the United States is the living symbol of our government and thus receives undue credit when things are going well and outsized blame when they're not.

Second, voters want Obama to work with Republicans – or at least try. The president is seen by just half of Americans as trying to work with GOP lawmakers, according to the New York Times/CBS News poll. That is down from six of 10 Americans who said the same thing in January 2012 and three-quarters who said he would work with Republicans in 2010 and 2011.

Remember the central promise of Obama's presidency: He will change the culture of Washington. What happened? Obama has not only been taken hostage by the worst of Washington, gridlock and pettiness, but he seems to be suffering from Stockholm syndrome. His criticism of the GOP last week was as petulant as any GOP talking point. While announcing historic negotiations with Iran, a regime that sponsors terrorism, Obama said he wouldn't bargain with the GOP.

Reaching out to rivals doesn't mean capitulating on Obamacare. It does mean swallowing his pride, listening and helping the GOP find a way out of the box they've built for themselves. If this was merely a leadership pageant, Obama would win by default because House Speaker John Boehner is performing so poorly. But it's not. It's about the country that Obama leads, and everybody gets hurt when he cloisters himself off from the dirty process.

Obama's job approval numbers are already slipping. For the first time in months, more voters disapprove of his performance than approve. Two-thirds of Americans think the country is on the wrong track. The "wrong track" metric is one that often tracks the president's popularity. A government cataclysm this month will heighten voters' anxiety and Obama's jeopardy.

The salt in voters' wounds is that this fight does not directly address their biggest issue, jobs. It also not about the nation's long-term, entitlement-fed debt, an existential issue both parties stopped trying to solve.

Where does all this lead beyond the next election cycle or two? Nobody knows, but the best place to look for answers is within the Millennial Generation, the nation's rising leaders and voters. Last month, in a lengthy essay on Millennials [ The Outsiders: How Can Millennials Change Washington If They Hate It?], I concluded that their revolutionary view of government and politics points toward two possible outcomes. One is that they might opt out of Washington, which leads us to some dark places. The second and more likely outcome is they will blow up Washington ("disruption" is the tech-inspired term they use), and build something better outside the current two-party dysfunction.

Millennials don't fit neatly into either the Democratic or Republican parties. They are highly empowered, impatient, and disgusted with politics today.

"This tension – two parties thinking they are in the trenches dueling it out, and a burgeoning generation who reject trench warfare altogether – is, for me, the key," said Michelle Diggles a senior policy adviser at the Democratic think-tank Third Way and an expert in demographics and generational politics. "Washington doesn't get that change isn't just a slogan. It's about to become a reality,"

"Neither party," she said, "gets what's coming down the pike."

What happens in Washington this month might make a Millennial Revolution all the more likely.

Poster's comments:

          I have personally be predicting the rise a third USA political party for over five years.

          It will be based on ideas, and not someone's money and whimsy, like has often been our American legacy.

          It will be mostly based on the present Democrats, Republicans, and Independents, too.

          Only time will tell. I predict the year will be 2020, and at all levels, like school boards, local, state, and federal. Call it a clean sweep. And it is actually already happening as of 2013.

          And it will focus on electing new leaders, vice throwing out the bums. Said another way, it is the best kind of leadership by the voters I can imagine.

          And a lot of work will have gone into it. So good on those who have done the work, and are doing it now! Said another way, there may even be better alternatives, ways to go, if you will.

          Many Americans think their status quo will go on forever. I don't believe such silly thoughts, and I suspect many other Americans think the same way, too.

          Imagine the frictions that may go on, too. So be it. It will have to happen, and many may die or suffer needlessly. That's what the present situation in the fall of 2013 will bring, or so it seems to me, anyway. Maybe that is the nature of change as we proceed towards a better world, or so the idealism mixed with practicality goes in my imagination; and also hope for my children, and grandchildren's future.

 

Tuesday, October 01, 2013

Life span calendar


Life span calendar

 From an email I received

Watch your age in the upper right corner!

Kind of fun to watch your age go up and down as you answer the questions.

Now this is interesting, give it a try....

How long will you live? This is a calculator that estimates your life expectancy.

It was developed by Northwestern Mutual Life. It's interesting that there are only 13 questions.

Yet, they can predict how long you're likely to live.

       http://media.nmfn.com/tnetwork/lifespan

Ludwig von Mises


Ludwig von Mises

       A wiki link on the subject can be found at:  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ludwig_von_Mises

Paratus Familia Blog


Paratus Familia Blog

     Here's a link you may enjoy: http://www.paratusfamiliablog.com/

What is the shelf life of lard?


What is the shelf life of lard?

       Here's some links on the question:

            http://food52.com/hotline/12917-what-is-the-shelf-life-of-rendered-lard-in-my-refrigerator

            http://www.discusscooking.com/forums/f17/shelf-life-of-lard-21064.html

            http://www.survivalistboards.com/showthread.php?t=225853

            http://www.thekitchn.com/lard-whats-the-big-deal-154255

            http://www.mothering.com/community/t/1072276/shelf-life-of-lard

            http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lard

            http://forums.gunboards.com/showthread.php?199270-How-long-will-lard-or-Crisco-store

 

There are many other links on this subject, too.

 

My bottom line. I'm getting Crisco from the store nearby, and storing it in a cool, dry place that is also out of the sun. Then, I hope to get a year out of it. And I will pay attention to the printed labels on it. When I open it, I'll also use the smell test to sense if it has gone rancid. Last night I went 5 hours** without any public electricity, so my motivation level is up since I had no idea how long the outage would last, and how much refrigerated and frozen food I might lose*. I know lard is not considered to be the most healthy food, but it is better than nothing. Plus if times get hard that kind of food will probably be good for those that do a lot of outside farm and hunter type work, and for anyone who enjoys baked goods. And I can also use it for other purposes, like making soap. Now that is something I can also barter with if times get hard.

PS  I just returned from the local grocery store where I purchased two (2) three(3) pound (1.36 Kg each) tubs of Crisco. The "best if used by" dates on both tubs were summer of 2015 dates, which is better than what I expected.

*  Most of the food in the main refrigerator and freezer is there to extend its shelf life, but I can still lose the various foods in it quickly if the public electricity goes out for an extended period of time. Now  I do have a separate  4.8 cu. ft. freezer that runs off of solar power when it can, but usually at nighttime it also depends on public electricity. And my solar setup is my poor man's backup (still being improved a little) to my main backup, micro hydro turbo electricity, which is considerably more powerful the way it is setup, and just happens to be down right now for some bearing  work. Worse case, all the food type things get stored in large plastic tubs to protect the food from the mice, etc.  In that case the shelf life will be more normal, vice extended like it is when refrigerated or frozen.

** It is kind of crazy what your imagination can do when the public electricity goes down at 2300 (11 PM), and you don't know when it might start up again.

      

Ohio Fireball


Ohio Fireball

Ohio Fireball: On Sept. 27th, a meteor exploded in the skies above the US midwest. Witnesses report shadows cast upon the ground, unusual sounds, and a swirling contrail marking the aftermath of the blast. A NASA all-sky camera in Hiram, Ohio, recorded the fireball at 11:33 pm EDT:

"This was a very bright event," reports Bill Cooke of NASA's Meteoroid Environment Office. "Flares saturated our meteor cameras, and made determination of the end point (the terminus of the fireball's flight through the atmosphere) virtually impossible. Judging from the brightness, we are dealing with a meter class object."

Data from multiple cameras shows that the meteoroid hit Earth's atmosphere traveling 51 km/s (114,000 mph) and passed almost directly over Columbus, Ohio. Cooke has prepared a preliminary map of the ground track. According to the American Meteor Society, the fireball was visible from at least 14 US states.

Even many people where I live about 300 miles (480 Km)  south of the event observed the effects of the fireball. I, myself, did not, but I was probably unconscious, or as my then young daughter said years ago, she was not unconscious, she was asleep.

Diatomaceous Earth (DE): Safe Product for a Spider-Free Home


Diatomaceous Earth (DE): Safe Product for a Spider-Free Home


If you freak at the sight of a spider in your house, you’re not alone. Up to half of women and 10 percent of men fear spiders. Psychologists think that fear of spiders may be a “disease-avoidance” behavior that goes back thousands of years, but whatever. You can make your home a spider-free zone by dusting crevices, corners, and the spaces under beds and furniture with diatomaceous earth (DE), a natural mineral dust that dries out spiders within days after they come into contact with the sharp prehistoric particles.

Because DE kills spiders by physically drying them out, it remains effective indefinitely as long as it stays dry. Reapply after vacuuming — the idea is to have a light layer of the dust in places where spiders or other insects are likely to walk or crawl. Using too much at once may backfire, causing them to avoid the place altogether. In addition to spiders, you can use DE to control roaches, carpenter ants, and even centipedes that come inside your house.

DE is most effective on pests that live in dry habitats so that they are under constant moisture stress — the typical life situation of most house spiders and insects that wander in from outdoors. Particles of DE scratch and abrade the spiders’ bodies, causing them to dry to death. DE that ends up in your vacuum cleaner bag may be good, too, in that it will help to kill any live insects present in the bag.

DE is widely available from companies that sell organic pest control products (you can use our Organic Pest Control and Garden Products Finder to locate a source). In addition, you will need a small handheld puffer to apply the dust to spidery hangouts without breathing it in. These cost from $8  to $15.



Spider


Spider

       A long wiki link on the subject can be found at:  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spider

Ground (electricity)


Ground (electricity)

       A wiki link on the subject can be found at:  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ground_(electricity)

Me and Mrs. Swallows


Me and Mrs. Swallows

       I remember one old line from my father, who actually heard the story first hand.  Mrs. Swallows probably died around a century ago of old age, so this is just a story repeated. Mr. and Mrs. Swallows were caretakers who lived in a caretaker house on the property known as the Hemlocks by the owning Family, and also known as Summerville Heights, locally.

            Where I now live is still a rural place in east Tennessee, USA. The cottage I live in was built circa 1905, and has 10 foot ceilings as an old fashioned way to help keep cooler in the summer. The cottage next door was built circa 1906, and has 12 foot ceilings for the same reason. I think most homes today are built with 8 foot ceilings to help our present way of heating and cooling using central air machines that both heat and cool using public power. Even the 1905 cottage where I live had a wood cooking stove in the kitchen, and it exhausted through a small  brick chimney built into  the kitchen, which means it did need some connecting pipe, too.

            Well, my city boy great-grandfather, as the story goes, suggested to Mr. Swallows that he stack a nice rick of wood by the back door to aid Mrs. Swallows in her cooking chores. Well, Mr. Swallows responded something like "Oh, Mr. Williams, you don't understand. I wouldn't trust no woman with that much wood"

            Well now I am (and I'll nail some kids if I can)  Mrs. Swallows, and still have to scurry around the yard to collect downed  firewood, pine cones, etc, for the present cooking stove.  And it is now like 2013!  What goes around, comes around, as I have heard before. And now it is my turn.  Bummer.

            By the way, these days the collected wood and pines cones, etc., go into a 55 gallon galvanized metal trash can with a lid. And no one wants to help me clean the soot out of the cooking stove, every so often, especially during the cold season. Wood (even seasoned small wood)  and pine cones tend to make more soot than coal and charcoal do, for example. And why do I even mention such a thing?  Mostly soot will clog up the hot gas flow up the chimney, usually in the stove itself. And I really don't like smoke coming into the room, vice up the chimney.  It has happened a lot, to me.

            Of course, one can just keep the cooking stove running all the time, but even then and every so often, one usually needs to clean the soot out, anyway, and in spite of using creosote cleaner in the interim, too . That usually means letting the stove go cold, first. This task is around 3 or 4 times a year with the present cooking wood stove. So, generally, I try to postpone the soot cleaning work until times are warmer. Even during the cold season, we usually do have warm spells, too.

            Cleaning is just doing a simple disassembly, and ideally using a brush, some cleaning stuff, and some water.  That's it.  Expect to get sooty dirty, too. Oh yes, disassembly usually means messing with the exhaust pipe, but most humans can figure that out, too.

Consider Plan B during the cold season


Consider Plan B during the cold season

       Plan A is just to turn up the thermostat to heat your abode to your satisfaction. That idea includes setting  the hot water thermostat, too. 

            Years ago I read that about 30% of our energy costs go to heating our water to make us happy when bathing, and even food cleaning some, too.

            Plan B is just to put on more clothes to keep warm, and then add more or remove more as makes sense to get through the day, or really whatever time period and circumstance, like just doing physical work, or going to an office.  Like what is wrong with sleeping bags, for example?  Even I know how to phoo phoo them up with aromas, like lavender, an idea used as recently as WWI. Of course, adjusting one's standards helps in many cases, too.

            I'll always remember a student at Georgia Tech in the 1980's complaining about her Boston father telling his kids to put on more clothes to keep warm as he sought to pay the cold season energy bills, and keep the pipes from freezing, too. She did not like it.

            I'll always also remember talking to a gal from Cabela's years ago. She and her Family lived in Nebraska on a farm type place. Anyway, her daughter had to go out to the barn at least once a day to chop the frozen water in the horse water trough (electrically heated to boot). Usually the kid had to deal with like up to 12 inches (30 Cm) of ice. Of course, this was the cold season speaking.

            Even in my time in my own past, I have lived in many places where warmth in water and abode were luxuries to be appreciated during the cold season, especially.  This even applied to my time in Istanbul, for example.  And this example was decades ago. There's nothing like a luke-cold bidet spray on one's bottom to provide an attitude adjustment, at least it did for me. And his was in a hotel, like the number three hotel in the city, to boot.

 

How to Make Flat Bread



     Here's one link on the subject:  http://www.wikihow.com/Make-Flat-Bread