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Open Thread - Politics Plus

 
 
roger
 
  1  
Reply Wed 20 Jan, 2016 05:17 pm
@cicerone imposter,
Technology sure enough. Great fuel economy at cruise speed and real swell emissions at idle, which is where the emissions are checked. I think it's more than a couple of millions, which may be nothing compared to its brand image for quality.
blatham
 
  1  
Reply Wed 20 Jan, 2016 05:33 pm
@roger,
I owned a Jetta as well. Loved it. That's when I was skiing a lot and it pulled me up the snow-covered mountain roads like a goat. Mostly in third gear. Great car. Had an Accord too. Also damned fine.
ossobuco
 
  1  
Reply Wed 20 Jan, 2016 05:41 pm
@blatham,
I had a Civic. It twirled out going down hill in the rain, nothing apparently wrong with the tires. I liked it otherwise though. Damn, Bernie, you've had as many cars as I have.. just California's first rain for a long time slicky busy street.
blatham
 
  2  
Reply Wed 20 Jan, 2016 05:54 pm
@ossobuco,
Odd behavior for a Civic. What year approximately? Even if you have good tread, if it is a summer tire and not designed for wet roads and hydroplaning, it can be dicey.

Just put new tires on my Z3. I used Tire Rack's testing and consumer feedback to make the choice and damn they are fine tires. Also, correctly identified my roof leak source and my fix was successful.
cicerone imposter
 
  1  
Reply Wed 20 Jan, 2016 05:56 pm
@blatham,
Good on ya.
ossobuco
 
  1  
Reply Wed 20 Jan, 2016 06:02 pm
@blatham,
Always a summer tire in west Los Angeles. What year, gotta think, before or after the TCelica. I'll be back with that. People don't do snow tires there, for the most part, and it can fail to rain for months and months, thus accumulated oil on a hilly well used street by the Santa Monica Airport.
blatham
 
  2  
Reply Wed 20 Jan, 2016 06:02 pm
@cicerone imposter,
Saved me something like a grand. Took a while to figure things out and isolate the problem but got there. In the process, realized how bright BMW had been on the design of the water evacuation system is for the intersection of windshield frame and roof. There was nothing on this in the car's manual or my very expensive after-market manual.
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  1  
Reply Wed 20 Jan, 2016 06:04 pm
@ossobuco,
Quote:
Always a summer tire in west Los Angeles.

Yes, that's what I figured. And you're right about oil build up.
ossobuco
 
  1  
Reply Wed 20 Jan, 2016 06:10 pm
@blatham,
The car, as cars go in the US, was likely relatively light, not sure if that is related re the twirling.
ossobuco
 
  1  
Reply Wed 20 Jan, 2016 06:18 pm
Also, that was not far from where Harrison Ford had his recent problem, and not far from where my niece and her dad live, and where my ex has put on some theater shows. Must be some magic going on...
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  1  
Reply Wed 20 Jan, 2016 06:27 pm
@ossobuco,
Quote:
The car, as cars go in the US, was likely relatively light

Lots of cars in that weight range so not likely causal. Just the summer tire and some unusual conditions that allowed your car to lose traction, I think.

Or could be magic.
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  1  
Reply Thu 21 Jan, 2016 03:07 am
another very interesting archaeological find...
Quote:
Prehistoric Massacre Hints at War Among Hunter-Gatherers
http://nyti.ms/1JZk8wi
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  1  
Reply Thu 21 Jan, 2016 03:19 am
For those who haven't bumped into this, allow me to introduce carpool karaoke
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qqrvm2XDvpQ

As you'll see, there's a bunch of them. Not only is James Cordon really funny, he sings good!
0 Replies
 
oralloy
 
  -1  
Reply Thu 21 Jan, 2016 06:24 am
@McGentrix,
McGentrix wrote:
Trump is not favored by the "Republican Establishment" which really means he won't bend to their will. They should have considered that before they allowed him to run on their ticket. They were afraid of his running as independent and guaranteeing a Dem win. They hedged their bets and now have to pay for it.

Did they actually have the option of excluding him from running in the primaries?

In any case, Rubio is an establishment candidate, although not a moderate, and he is coming in third in Iowa:
http://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/election-2016/primary-forecast/iowa-republican/

Third in Iowa was enough to propel George H. W. Bush and Bill Clinton to the White House in 1988 and 1992.
0 Replies
 
ossobuco
 
  1  
Reply Thu 21 Jan, 2016 12:12 pm
Ahhh, good then:

https://news.artnet.com/people/david-koch-off-board-of-museum-of-national-history-411374?google_editors_picks=true


Climate Change-Denier David Koch Is Off Museum of Natural History Board
Sarah Cascone, Thursday, January 21, 2016

After 23 years, philanthropist, energy magnate, and known climate change–denier David H. Koch has stepped down from the board of the American Museum of Natural History (AMNH) in New York, reports the New York Times. His perceived influence over the museum had been widely criticized by scientists and environmentalists, who questioned the institution's ability to maintain its integrity while accepting money from the owner of oil manufacturing conglomerate Koch Industries.

In March of 2015, the Natural History Museum, a mobile institution founded by arts collective Not an Alternative, published an open letter calling on the AMNH and the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of Natural History in Washington, DC, to cut ties with the billionaire. (Koch remains an Advisory Board member at the latter museum.) The initial signatories included 39 scientists who were soon joined by 120 other scientists and government officials. Their sentiments were echoed by a petition of over 550,000 people.

According to museum spokesperson Anne Canty, Koch stepped down from the board at its December 9 meeting, as his annual term was ending. Koch first joined the board in 1992, and has reportedly donated $23 million to the museum, which has named its dinosaur wing after him.

"We are thrilled that David Koch, a climate denier and top funder of climate science disinformation campaigns (to the tune of $79 million) is no longer in a leadership position at a venerable science museum like the American Museum of Natural History," the Natural History Museum wrote on its blog. "With this conflict of interest removed, we hope that the AMNH will consider our invitation to demonstrate its leadership by divesting financial holdings from fossil fuels."

Cristyne Nicholas, Koch's New York spokesperson, also denied that petitions to end his involvement at the institution had influenced Koch. "He was not swayed by that at all and it absolutely did not factor into his decision," she told the Times. Instead, Koch is cutting down the number of boards that he is on—currently about 20 nationwide—to focus on cancer research.

Koch also lends his name to the David H. Koch Hall of Human Origins at the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art's $65 million David H. Koch Plaza in New York. Protesters crashed the latter's unveiling in 2014, leading to the arrest of the NYC Light Brigade.
ossobuco
 
  1  
Reply Thu 21 Jan, 2016 02:10 pm
Political changes in Spain, sounds good to me -

http://www.reuters.com/article/us-spain-parliament-renewal-idUSKCN0UZ1OM

Jan 21, 2016 9:07am EST
Dreadlocks and poets herald new face of Spanish parliament
MADRID | BY ANGUS BERWICK

http://s2.reutersmedia.net/resources/r/?m=02&d=20160121&t=2&i=1111293434&w=&fh=&fw=&ll=644&pl=429&sq=&r=LYNXNPEC0K0QH


When Alberto Rodriguez of Podemos turned up for the new Spanish parliament's first session in the grand chamber in Madrid, his dreadlocks, jeans and scruffy jumper drew a look of disapproval from the staid prime minister, Mariano Rajoy.

Such scenes are likely to become commonplace with the end of two-party domination of Spanish politics and a new wave of delegates taking their seats alongside the well-groomed ranks of the old guard.

It is more than just a style issue, however.

The national election on Dec. 20 left Rajoy's ruling People's Party (PP) without a majority and opened parliament's doors to two new parties, the anti-austerity Podemos and the centrist Ciudadanos.

Rodriguez, 34, and his cohorts want to reform a political class tainted by its handling of Spain's economic crisis and corruption scandals that have reached as high as Rajoy himself.

"Rajoy has not understood that we are in a new political era in which parliament is not the private reserve of the few," Rodriguez, a former oil refinery worker, told reporters when he made his parliamentary debut last week.

Although the 218 first-time delegates in the 350-seat lower house mark only a slight increase from five years ago when Rajoy won a comfortable majority, they come from diverse backgrounds - from actresses and poets to restaurant-owners and winemakers.

Party leaders are now wrangling over forming a government, with the opposition Socialist's leader, Pedro Sanchez, proposing a leftist coalition and Rajoy a "grand coalition" of center-right and center-left parties.

IN TOUCH WITH REALITY
Podemos says the fuss kicked up by the traditional parties over Rodriguez and his dreadlocks was to distract people from the problems at hand. Despite a rebound in the economy, Spain still has Europe's second-highest youth unemployment rate.

"It is a symptom of how the political class want to prevent change," said Sofia Castanon, a well-known poet and Podemos delegate for Asturias, a mountainous region on Spain's northern coast.

Parliament had lost the trust of Spaniards, Castanon told Reuters, and Podemos would restore it by eliminating the privileges politicians had enjoyed, such as official cars, generous tax allowances and special pension schemes.

Podemos leader Pablo Iglesias has restricted his lawmakers' salaries to three times the minimum wage of 757 euros ($824) a month, a change Castanon, 32, said showed how the party was in touch with Spain's economic reality.

Political analysts said that how far the new parliament could go in changing the course of Spanish politics remains to be seen, especially if the next government is a fragile coalition of many parties that could struggle to agree on a strong reform agenda.

Teleo Intelligence analyst Antonio Barroso said there was a risk that Podemos, whose delegates' average age is 11 years below that of the PP, would stick to dramatic and symbolic messages without tackling more complex budgetary issues.

Iglesias, for instance, cradled his party deputy's baby during last week's first parliamentary session and vowed, with a clenched fist raised high, to change the constitution to create a more federal Spain.

"There is a lot of potential for the parliament to become a political circus," Barroso said. "But I think by bringing in fresh blood you will actually increase the quality of the debate."

TAKING ON PRIVILEGE
Although Podemos stole the headlines with its break from the norm, delegates from Ciudadanos, whose leader Albert Rivera has called for a more transparent and meritocratic government, say they have similar plans to reform parliament despite their more conventional style.

Many from Ciudadanos spent their working lives prior to politics in sectors such as law, finance and higher education, and they are now eager to correct what they see as the government's inadequacies.

Patricia Reyes, a lawyer who defended customers of Spanish banks such as Bankia, said one of her priorities is to revoke the government's power to pardon officials charged with corruption.

Hundreds of politicians across Spain are under investigation for embezzling public funds, including the PP's ex-treasurer. A former justice minister said two years ago more than 17,500 official positions had special protection before the law.

"I went into politics because I was outraged by the privileges politicians had," Reyes, 42, told Reuters in her new parliament office. "There are politicians that have spent their whole lives here, they live completely apart from reality."

Another Ciudadanos delegate, Marta Martin, investigated gender and labor disputes for 18 years as a university professor in Alicante. Within a week of arriving in parliament she has filed a proposal to extend Spain's maternity and paternity leave.

"I couldn't just keep complaining from my couch at home," Martin, 43, said.

CLOSE TO HOME
New reformist faces are not just found in the two upstart parties.

Miguel Angel Viso followed his parents and grandparents in working in the wine industry in the rainy northwestern region of Galicia before becoming PP delegate for the city of Ourense.

"The PP saw the need to freshen up its ranks," Viso, 45, said. "The big advantage I have is my connection with local people and my skills as a manager."

Although he now spends three days a week in the capital, he said the rest of his time he will be back at his vineyard outside Ourense to listen to his fellow winemakers and farmers.

"I don't want to be too far from home, I want to be close to the people that voted for me."
blatham
 
  1  
Reply Thu 21 Jan, 2016 07:19 pm
@ossobuco,
Re Koch off the Natural History board. Good.
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  1  
Reply Thu 21 Jan, 2016 07:21 pm
@ossobuco,
Quote:
Patricia Reyes, a lawyer who defended customers of Spanish banks such as Bankia, said one of her priorities is to revoke the government's power to pardon officials charged with corruption.

Bravo.
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  3  
Reply Sat 23 Jan, 2016 06:01 am
If you own a newer car, you'll be personally aware of the flood of recall notices that your auto manufacturer sends you (perhaps particularly American cars, like GM, for whom I work part-time).

Talking to a fellow about the evolving technology that will soon put a lot of driverless cars on the road, it occurred to me that when this becomes more common, there'd be little need to inform the owner of a recall. Just inform the car and have it turn itself in for the patch.

Which presents an interesting possibility of hundreds or thousands of driverless cars backing out of driveways and all heading to the dealership in the wee hours. That would be a tad spooky. You'd see them, bumper to bumper, rolling quietly past, long lines of them, one after another. "Where are they going? What are they up to?"
0 Replies
 
Lash
 
  2  
Reply Sat 23 Jan, 2016 08:07 am
Hillary, pissing off voters in Iowa and blatantly using Hollywood to try to curry favor. I think she's tired of giving speeches that don't get her paid millions immediately.

http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2016/jan/22/hillary-clinton-angers-iowa-fans-who-waited-hours-for-five-minute-speech
0 Replies
 
 

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