Author: Derek

Monday Reflections

I’ll probably do a links post either later this week or next week. Everything is kinda being dominated by everyone dissecting the election results. And the results are a freaking Rorschach test for people’s priors. But here are my reflections after most of a week of listening/reading various punditry.

Am I happy Trump won? No, but to be fair, I wouldn’t have been happy with a Harris victory either. Both of them were in extremely different quadrants than me. I’m not a populist, nor a protectionist, nor a statist. I voted for Chase Oliver, but that was mostly for ballot access. If we had more open ballots, I would have been sorely tempted to just leave it blank.

What am I happy about? First, I’m happy that Trump clearly won both the Electoral College and the popular vote. Not that I find the popular vote a helpful metric. It’s kind of like wealth disparity – it’s a useless measure that’s used to gin up a desired political outcome. At least by winning both, it lessens the “stolen election” rhetoric. Also, it magically makes the election legitimate in so many of my MAGA friends and acquaintances.

Second, I am happy to see the demographics shifting. Jonah Goldberg said it best – “In a multi-racial society, it’s good when both parties are multi-racial.” Hopefully, this will be a nail in the coffin for the idea the demography is destiny. That every other race – except whites – vote in lockstep with one party or another. That mindset leads down a dark road.

I am sure there will be actions the Trump administration takes that I will support. There will be others I will oppose. I worry about the new administration’s positions on Ukraine, Israel/Iran, and guns (I don’t trust Trump on guns).

Finally, let’s reflect on how truly bizarre this election has been. I’m hoping that it’s one of those highlighted in future history books, more because it’s an outlier than a harbinger of more turbulence.

Ward Manor Happenings

Halloween Happenings – Ward Manor was invaded by the great niece so she could trick or treat in our neighborhood. This year, she decided to be a police officer. We set up our table at the end of the driveway and handed out little trinkets. We avoided handing out candy because, well, that means having candy in the house. I will say the best costume goes to the next door neighbors. Not because they dressed up their 13-month-old as an Ewok, but because they turned his stroller into an Imperial Speederbike.

Orlando Happenings – The Wife and I spent the last few days in Orlando so that I could go to the Babymetal concert.

Sunday, The Wife and I traveled over to Disney Springs. We got there shortly before everything opened up and made a beeline to the Lego store. Because, if you’ve never been, they limit the number of folks into the store. The line gets long the later in the day. From there, we meandered through the different stores. They closed their big Star Wars shop and enlarged the smaller one. Not sure if that’s permanent or what. From there, we went up to get some groceries. Much to our surprise, there was a hot pot place advertising boba tea next to the Publix. So, we enjoyed boba while we picked up groceries. From there, we trekked over to the Airbnb. Which was in a place that was kind of like a hotel/apartment thing? I dunno. We had some fun with the door lock, but got all of the stuff dragged in. Then came setting up the workstations. I found some portable monitor/laptop stands. These improve the workstations a lot more. The Wife got the small dining table, while I got the much smaller desk in the bedroom.

Monday was a work day. I will say using laptop stands improved working remotely. Which was good because the day job threw me a quick turnaround – as in same-day – analysis. The internet at the AirBnB wasn’t the best, but it wasn’t the worst we’ve had to deal with on our travels. The chairs were in the same vein – not great, not the worst. We ordered dinner in from Carrabba’s – which neither of us had eaten from in quite a long time. Tuesday work day was similar, with the exception of my work headphones acting up.

Concert Happenings – There was some discussion on whether I should bring my sling bag or not. I ended up deciding against it because it would be one more thing going through security. Plus, I’ve never been to the Hard Rock at Universal – and I always get a bit anxious with new places. When I arrived the line was – shall we say long? I will give them credit, once the doors opened, the line moved pretty smoothly.

The good news was that I had a seat in the center of the stage. The bad news was that the seat was probably in the top row.

The opening act was Scene Queen. Grindcore with a female lead. Kind of like Letters From The Fire meets Bloodhound Gang. Not my cup of tea. At least the singer’s voice didn’t hurt my head like the lead singer from Edge of Paradise.

Babymetal puts on a good show. The girls are very energetic and played a lot of their hits. I will say that through my AirPods Pro I was using as earpro, you could definitely tell how produced they are. Still, even with that, I really enjoyed it.

Plus when the concert was over and the house sound came back on, I got to hear a couple of thousand metalheads sing the refrain from “Take Me Home, Country Roads.” I may have joined in the festivities.

Here’s a couple of pics:

Scenes of Ward Life

The Wife and I went to Disney Springs last weekend. There will be more about the trip in tomorrow’s post. This scene needed its own post.

We went to a store that is kind of a high-end Bath and Bodyworks. While perusing through the wares, we came across little packages of “solid shampoo”.

Me: These are interesting, particularly if we use them for packing for air travel.

The Wife: Those are supposed to be good for your hair, but I’ve never used them.

Me: I’ve used regular bar soap to wash my hair, but nothing like that.

The Wife: There are times you make my head hurt.

Monday Links

Reason links first.

Worried about the vengeance of a president? Maybe you should look to shrink their powers.

Increasing tariffs could trigger economic decline.

Doctor fights Certificate of Need in North Carolina.

A family from Germany who came to the US so they could homeschool are allowed to stay another year.

Boeing charged 8,000% mark up on a soap dispenser. DOD procurement is one of those areas that needs to be burned to ground and rebuilt on more efficient principles.

What is Open Fields Doctrine? Read this – and find out why it needs to die.

A government program with a laudable goal turns wrong? Who could have seen that coming?

From Ground News, Florida court blocks the state from threatening television stations over abortion ads.

From one of the local stations, homeowners are selling their gutted houses instead of rebuilding after the hurricanes.

John Richardson reports on the recent hearing between the NRA and the New York AG.

The Trace (not a friend of gun rights) reports on the record number of FFL revocations. Including revocations for minor infractions.

Ward Manor Happenings

How is it the end of October already?

Day Job Happenings – I am now firmly ensconced in the old/new job. We have a new supervisor who was hired during my interregnum from the team. It’s fun when he explains something the team does that I helped start up before I left.

The other fun was I put in an IT ticket because a piece of software was having an issue. In return I was told my laptop was out of warranty and I needed to come in to swap it out. Grumble. My team uses some non-standard software. Plus, getting everything back would be a pain. On top of that, the day job is about fifty miles north of Ward Manor. Anywhoo, I went up, found a place to work for an hour until I could go down to IT, and at the appointed time went down – to be told there were no laptops to be had. Oh, and do you need yours to work? So, I guess I need to make the 100 mile round trip again at some point.

Drink Happenings – The Wife and I picked up bottles of the new Oreo flavored Coke Zero. Okay, not horrible, not great. Also, not something I would go out of my way to get again. I think that kind of sums up the experience.

Cat Tree Happenings – The cat tree we kept out on the back porch was finally deteriorated enough to toss out. After much deliberation, The Wife found one on Amazon that was wood and rope – perfect for outdoors. When it arrived, the wood was, shall we say, very naked. Dang. Run up to Lowe’s for stain and assorted items. I was told by The Wife to stick to staining the small pieces. Assembly didn’t go too bad. A couple of frustrations. Then some rearranging the back porch.

Voting Happenings – The Wife and I did our early voting. There was a small hiccup but went relatively smoothly.

Grill Happenings – It looks like I’m going to get a new grill. The Wife’s nephew is looking to offload some floor models from his day job. Plus, the old grill was getting a bit “dilapidated.”

Financial Reps

The Wife loves her TikTok. The algorithm fed her up a guy named Caleb Hammer, who is kind of like a foul-mouthed, very confrontational Dave Ramsey. Not my cup of tea, but i can see why he would be popular.

Anywhoo, it led to a discussion between The Wife and me about how glad we are that we agreed early on money, spending, and budgeting. It also got me thinking on some of the financial reps – the financial muscles I had to build.

The beginning exercise was to pay cash for stuff. I really believe this was such a foundational financial rep. Because when I got used to paying cash for everything, I learned to pay for only what I could afford and budgeted to spend. This was the strength I needed to go to using a debit card. I could spend in more areas, but I still was doing the financial reps of staying within budget and keeping with what was in my account. This meant I had that discipline when The Wife and I went to a credit card. We already had those financial reps to treat the credit card like cash.

Monday Links

Starting off with Reason links.

Javier Milei continues his radical reforms in Argentina by shuttering the tax collection agency and creating a new one. There comes a time when you need to burn it down and start fresh. Argentina is going to be an interesting case study if Milei can see his reforms through before his opponents bring him down.

An examination of geothermal power generation. It’s an interesting concept, but we’re running into the same problem with wind and solar. How do we get the power from where it’s being generated to where it’s needed? Cracking that problem will open a lot of doors.

Examining the charges against the father of the Georgia shooter. I’m leery of this trend because there’s not a strict formula of how a person becomes a murderer. By the same token, there are some parents who have such reckless disregard for their children…

Illinois scholarship excludes white applicants. Here’s the issue. They want to recruit teachers to go into minority-dominant schools. Okay, I can understand that because you want the students to identify with their teachers and provide them good examples of success. And if it was a private scholarship, I would be all for it. When the state does it? I’m very leery.

Iowa Supreme Court have a case on whether the state can charge acquitted defendants for their public defendants. Wait? What? Iowa is charging people to use public defendants? How is this just?

New Zealand is revoking gun licenses for political beliefs. This is why we hate registration. Why we hate licenses. Because there are too many politicians and bureaucrats who will deny them because we disagree politically. Look, I think radical environmentalists, radical leftists, radical rightists, and anti-Zionists all have abominable political views that are detrimental to society. I think someone who supports Hezbollah and Hamas are supporting despicable terrorist groups. Guess what? If they haven’t committed a crime, you shouldn’t be able to deny them their rights.

And now on to other stories.

The Verge takes a look at Apple AirPods being used for hearing aids and hearing protection. I’m very interested in this. I don’t think my AirPods Pro will be able to substitute for my range ear-pro, but for concerts?

Local station talks about how people are finding out that insurance may not cover a lot of the damages of first floor in a multi-story dwelling. This is a caution to make find out what your insurance will and will not cover.

NYT article on grocery stores looking into electronic price tags. Of course, they immediately go to the most drastic worse use of the technology.

BleepingComputer examines how bad the Change healthcare hack was.

ProPublica reports that gun makers were sending warranty cards to NSSF for lobbying purposes. Okay,