D-Day, 65 Years later

When we were in France last winter, we went to Normandy (Calvados!).

the_braves.JPG

On Omaha Beach, we saw this sculpture – “The Braves” by French sculptor Anilore Banon that was set up on Omaha Beach.

Braver men than me waded through that water 65 years ago.

Headline Of The Day: “Skateboarder ‘sorry’ for naked rooftop incident”

…or why I love living in Southern California:

Professional skateboarder Jereme Rogers said Wednesday he was sorry for disturbing his Redondo Beach neighbors this week when he “ate some `mushrooms’ and bugged out,” preaching naked on his rooftop.

Rogers, a high school dropout who attributes his skateboarding skills to God, was eventually grabbed by police officers and brought down from his precarious perch.

“It obviously was not an everyday experience,” the 24-year-old athlete said. “It was a very out-of-body experience. I’ve never had an experience like that.”

Rogers pulled off his boxer shorts about 6:40 a.m. Monday and climbed onto the roof of the two-story house he shares with roommates on Havemeyer Lane and Goodman Avenue.

“It was obviously something I shouldn’t have done,” Rogers said as he rolled a marijuana joint in his bedroom. “It was just something that happened.”

Some of us exist just to be a bad example to others, I’d guess…

What Terrorism Looks Like Today

I’ve been watching the news this week with interest and not a little sadness, noting the events in Kansas and Arkansas.

I’ll make a side comment on the difference in coverage between the Tiller and Long murders; one got screaming headlines, and one was buried deep in the news section. There’s a piece to write about how the coverage is driven in part by how central the issues manifested by something are to the media class, and by how interesting the narrative is to them – and Christian militia murderers definitely makes that cut. neo-Islamists murdering soldiers – not so much.

But I’m bored of bashing the media, and they’re dying anyway, so let’s talk about more important things.

And the important thing to me is that in my mind, to a large extent, this is what terrorism is going to look like for the next decade or so.

I don’t envision much in the way of vast conspiracies (maybe, but less likely I believe as the resources they require are choked off – I did a piece I never posted on what it would take to really screw up the US via acts of terror, and it cost about $15 – 20 million. Money at that level is noticed – I hope) There’s no central figure – no Osama or Dr. Evil sitting in a volcano lair directing minions.

What we have instead is an Idea – about Islam, about the rights of the unborn, about the rights of animals, about tending the environment, about whatever – and a cadre of people dedicated to pushing that Idea forward, and who use that idea to pull people who are loosely attached to their lives into the belief that their lives will only matter if they give all for the idea.

Now that notion isn’t new; it’s not even novel in modern America (ask Jim Jones, Cinque, and Andreas Baader or Charlie Manson). There have always been charismatic, murderous thugs who pried people out of their life orbits and sent them crashing into the ground – usually with a few corpses trailing behind them.

And the problem, of course, is that the people who are holding the flame of the Idea in their hands, and blowing on it to keep it burning bright are – rightly – protected. Even as it becomes clear that the incitement of damaged people is something they truly hope to do, our system requires that we protect their right to think and speak freely.

So what do we do about it?

One thing, I believe, is to hold them up to the light – to make sure that every nasty thing they say and do is widely exposed, and so shame them in the public sphere. This is, I believe, the right thing to do – but the reality is that it will also serve to publicize their cause, and to attract the susceptible. So while it’s right, there are questions about how effective it will be.

Do we criminalize speech and thought because it might incite deed? My answer is no.

But like all answers, it comes with a cost – and we’re seeing that cost today.

I think the core answer is the harder one – and it is make it harder to pry people out of their orbits, to do a kind of COIN within our own country in which we re-establish the concept of legitimacy and revalidate in people’s minds the channels through which they are validated and through which they believe they can engage their beliefs; we need, if possible to, declare a war on anomie.

Jimbo’s Folly (or “Yo!! – Jimbo!”)

OK. There are times as a man when you need to simply put your friends in their place – you know, when the thumbwrestling in the bar suddenly turns deadly serious or when the drinking contest suddenly turn mean and you have to guzzle one more bottle of Medoc.

And sometimes you need to simply fly by someone’s house and drop the GBU-43/B.

So here we go.

Last week, I put up a post about my new bike, a Ducati 1100 Hypermotard.

Jimbo responded at Blackfive, where he foolishly views the Hypermotard as “…the delivery vehicle for the Croissant House.

Oh, really?

Xaus_hypermotard.JPG

…yeah, you try that on a Harley, Jimbo, and when you get out of the hospital, you can tell both of your friends all about it…

Jimbo may be sober – it’s unlikely – but even so, he’s displaying a fundamental misapprehension common to enlisted men. That is simply this. Which is a scarier weapon?

Flintlock.jpg

or

coltm4-m203-nsn-a.jpg

Which one would you rather fly against?

B17.JPG

or

f117.JPG

Yes, the primitive weapon looks scarier and more imposing, and there is a certain – delicacy – found in modern weapon design. And it’s understandable how the … less-developed … mind might find the primitive weapons far scarier and more imposing.

But they’d be wrong.

In Jimbo’s comments, Grim asks “Does he also wear one of those fancy red leather jumpsuits when he’s riding that thing?

MD_Laguna.jpg

Why yes, I do…mine’s yellow and blue, though…

On the other hand, here I have spy photos of Jim in the parking lot at Camp Mackall, learning to ride a motorcycle…

pushing_jimbo.JPG

…note the stylish Village People getups they are all wearing…

Look, it’s a simple thing. Here’s Jim:

jimbo_caveman.JPG

Here’s me:

inigo_montoya.jpg

One is living in a cave, picking nits and hitting things with his club, and one is now the Dread Pirate Roberts, headed for a life of luxury in Patagonia. I think that makes things clear enough, hmmm?

Meet Maud Gonne

Maude_side.JPG

So for the last year, my 07 Triumph Tiger has been burning oil (there was a bad batch of early 07’s). I finally got a great local dealer (SoCal Motorsports in Brea) to deal with Triumph on the issue, and last week they OK’ed an engine rebuild under waranty.

The bad news is that we do an annual riding trip to Porterville and the Sierra over Memorial Day, and it’s all about people we enjoy and roads my wife and I very much look forward to riding.

The good news was that I had a bulletproof excuse to get a new bike…and I’d had my eye on a Ducati Hypermotard since they first hit the stores.

A week of surfing Craigslist, and I found a mint ’08 base model with a Leo Vince exhaust (keeping the catalyst) and 940 miles, and got a great deal on it.

Because the bike was a year and a half old and had barely been ridden, I had SoCal redo a 600 mile service, and add a rear rack. I picked the bike up Wednesday, installed a Givi plate Thurs, and Friday morning we headed out of town. The rack broke Day One – but I’ll get it reinforced and remounted; the ability to carry a little stuff will be very useful. But damn, what fun.

To give you a sense of the routes we followed, check the links to Google Maps…

Day 1 – the ride up – 318 mi

Day 2 – 201 mi

Day 3 – (we liked that route) – 245 mi

Day 4 – the ride home – 275 mi

I’m 56, in reasonable shape, and survived the trip with three problems: sore hands (hard small grips – need something a little fuller), a sore butt (sadly Renazco doesn’t make a Hypermotard seat…checking my options here), and a slightly sore neck. Plus the facial pain from the continual grinning and hooting with laughter in my helmet.

I tend to name my motorcycles – which is a slightly embarassing affectation, to be sure, but keeps me amused. My Tiger is named ‘Monteore‘ and I named the Hyper ‘Maud Gonne’ after Yeats’ muse – a famous and firey redhead.

I’d worried that the bike was ‘too close’ to my Tiger – esp since the Tiger has a full Hyperpro/Race Tech suspension and has given a decent accounting of itself on the Streets of Willow racetrack.

Wrong. It’s like my old MZ Baghira with serious grunt, and a suspension that feels like it is connected to the ground with titanium plates and little sucker cups. The base rear shock gets overwhelmed occasionally – leaned way over on bumpy roads while hard on the gas, for example – but I got the bike for a good enough deal that I can add all the suspension upgrades I want. I don’t feel the need for more power – today – but will def change the gearing to bump the revs a little; I spent a lot of time in tight twisties either bouncing off the rev limiter or lugging a bit.

And I have to – publicly – eat a generous helping of crow about Ducati bikes and their owners. I’ve always written off the brand attachment as snobbery, plan and simple. I’ve given friends massive grief over it (Hi, Chris!!). But you know what? Damn, these are just great bikes to ride (or technically, this is a great bike to ride).

A seat, some fiddling with control positions, a sprocket, and I can spend the rest of my money on track time, vacations riding, and having someone try and massage the grin off my face when I’m done.

So if you see a somewhat dirty Hypermotard with a milk crate on the back, scuffed tires, and an old guy in a Hi-Viz Aerostich…wave, please.

Obama Is Right About The Settlements

Barbara: So, when do I get out of here?
Sandy: As soon as Mr. Stone pays the ransom.
Barbara: What’s the problem? What is the ransom?
Sandy: Well, we asked for $500,000.
Barbara: That should be no problem.
Sandy: He wouldn’t pay.
Barbara: He wouldn’t pay?
Sandy: Then we asked him for $50,000.
Barbara: Yeah?
Sandy: He still wouldn’t pay. So now we’re lowering our price to $10,000.
Barbara: Do I understand this correctly? I’m being marked down?

Ruthless People

In the film, a couple who have been stolen from by a ruthless businessman kidnap his wife for ransom, only to discover that he really doesn’t care about her.

Israel’s ‘land for peace’ model has been similar; they took over the West Bank and Gaza in the hopes that the Palestinian people would be willing to trade for them – much as traditional nation-states trade for territory. And then they discovered that they were playing checkers and the Palestinians were playing whist, and that their moves were essentially valueless.

And every year, as they built more town into the Occupied Territories, they thought they were sending a message…”No ransom? We’ll send you a finger at a time!” But the Palestinian leadership didn’t want it’s land back, to devolve into a normal nation they’d have to lead; they want to keep leading a worldwide movement and if all the Palestinian people have to die to make that happen – well.

This doesn’t make the Israelis right – at all – for continuing to make it clear that they will keep a little more of the West Bank every year.

The reality is that continued encroachment – one house at a time – is the stupidest thing the Israelis can do. The settlements are hard to defend, they undermine Israel’s moral position as desiring a two-state solution, and the empower the worst hardliners in Israeli politics.

Obama is absolutely right when he said he “wants to see a stop to settlements — not some settlements, not outposts, not natural-growth exceptions,” as Secretary Clinton explained this week.

And Netanyahu is saying he won’t.

Mr. Netanyahu is trying to find a middle ground. On Monday, he told lawmakers from his Likud Party that Israel would have to destroy 26 illegal outposts in the West Bank in order to win U.S. support for tough action against Iran. After his return from meeting with Mr. Obama in Washington last week, Mr. Netanyahu ordered a few structures built by teenage settlers on private Palestinian land in the West Bank razed. But none of them were among the 26, and settlers quickly started rebuilding some of them.

Meanwhile lawmakers from Mr. Netanyahu’s party responded coldly to his proposal. “The message from the party was clear: We were not chosen by voters to evacuate Jews from their property,” a Likud lawmaker said after a party meeting Monday.

Likud and the Israeli leadership would be wise to reconsider – not only because it is most likely the price of continued US support, but because it is in fact the best strategic position for Israel to take today. Building settlements is financially and politically very expensive, and those costs are ones that Israel really can’t carry any more.

This isn’t a new position for me. But for the first time, a sitting President is taking that position publicly. Israel – and Israel’s other friends – should listen.

Replace Hiltzik.

While I was working on the bookkeeping last night, a bunch of more nimble bloggers jumped on Michael Hiltzik’s latest fact- and conceptually-challenged column and pointed out that the premise of his column was false; California’s population didn’t increase 30% in the last decade, it actually increased about 14%.

Not to mention Hiltzik’s decision to exclude all of the bond-financed spending and accounting sleight-of-hand that has gone into the budget over the last 4 or 5 years. Therefore California government spending clearly, obviously, and factually didn’t increase at the rate of population increase plus an inflation index, it increased faster.

Gosh, who could have known? An eight year old with access to Google, perhaps – but not the lead business columnist for the leading newspaper in the State.

In my last post on Hiltzik, I pointed out that he similarly misread a tax-rate table and misrepresented California’s relative tax burden. He argued for a split property-tax roll, and then explained that homeowners should be able to defer the resulting tax increases until sale. Um, a split roll is one which reassesses commercial (income) property on a different basis (different assessment timing, different rates, etc.) than owner-occupied residential real property.

Does Hiltzik have a clue?

Look, I’m not an antitax warrior. I believe that government has an important role to play in our society. But government has an especial obligation to deliver value for our tax dollars, and California’s government isn’t. And we voters are not going to be inclined to up the credit limit until it is.

Patterico asks readers to write to Jamie Gold, the Reader’s Rep for the Times and ask for a new column correcting the error. I’d suggest we write to her and suggest a new columnist instead.

Hiltzik’s Baaaack. And He’s Baaaad. That’s Not Good.

There was an important column in the Los Angeles Times last week – not good, but important.

It’s by my old friend, the dishonest and foolish Michael Hiltzik. And it’s important not because of what he says, which is empty-headed, dogmatic, predictable, and dishonest, but because it provides a perfect window into what’s wrong with the thought leadership of the state I live in and love. And why it is that I’ll wave goodbye to the collapsing vessel of the LA Times with only a trace of sadness.

So let’s go to the column first, and make some points.

His opening is absolutely true – in part. Down around the 4th paragraph he says that:

Schwarzenegger had the kind of voter support in 2003 that would have allowed him to tell the voters the harsh but necessary truths about California governance and force real reforms down their throats.

Of course, he actually opens by blaming the bulk of the mess on Arnold, explaining that:

Instead, he uttered the same lies about state government and proposed the same nostrums as many of his predecessors: Californians are overtaxed and underserved, the budget can be balanced by cutting waste, fraud and abuse, etc. Like everyone else who has made these claims, he never delivered on his promise.

And repeating the core talking point of the mainstream California Democrats:

The most onerous lie is that Californians are burdened by the highest state taxes in the nation. The truth, according to 2006 figures derived from the U.S. Census, is that as a percentage of all personal income, California’s tax and fee schedule ranks 18th in the country.

That’s funny, because the table he links to says that we’re 14th – the ‘own-source revenue’ column he links to excludes subventions, which is covered in the ‘Tax Collections’ column to its right.

And even these numbers are often challenged – here’s crazy conservative (not really) Dan Walters, from the Bee:

Historically, at least until the tax revolt that began with Proposition 13 in 1978, California was a relatively high-tax, high-service state.

Data from the Washington-based Tax Foundation rank California as having the nation’s third-highest state-local tax burden in 1978, at 11.7 percent of personal income. The national average at the time was 10.3 percent.

Proposition 13, which slashed property taxes, and the state tax cuts quickly enacted by the Legislature to demonstrate that it had gotten the anti-tax message, dropped California to 22nd in 1979, at 9.8 percent of income.

Since then, taxation has increased to 10.5 percent, raising us to sixth-highest in the nation in 2008. And the income, sales and vehicle tax boosts enacted by the Legislature in February would presumably have pushed the percentage even higher – except that the severe recession has also cut deeply into state and local government revenues.

Now, I took 30 seconds, Googled the Tax Foundation, and went to their site to see if there was an explanation of why it is their numbers are different than the Census numbers. Here’s what I found:

People often ask how Tax Foundation rankings of state-local tax burdens compare to Census data, which include two popular state-by-state rankings. One of these popular Census tables covers only state-level taxes (click here to view tables). Local taxes are excluded, such as property taxes and local sales taxes. This exclusion allows Census to report up-to-date state-level collections, which would be impossible if Census waited for the time-consuming tally of tax collections by thousands of local governments. However, some states accomplish at the local level what other states accomplish at the state level, so a degree of comparability is lost as a result. For example, New York’s state sales tax rate is 4 percent, and its counties have local sales tax rates that range from 3 percent to 5.75 percent. Connecticut, on the other had, has a 6 percent state-level sales tax with no local add-ons. In a ranking that includes only state-level taxes, New York appears less taxed than it actually is, and Connecticut appears more taxed. Census also ranks combined state-local tax collections after it has amassed the local data (click here to view tables). This is closer to the Tax Foundation rankings, which take the additional steps of projecting collections into the current year, counting out-of-state tax payments in the state of residence instead of the state of collection, and dividing total tax payments by total income to calculate the “tax burden.”

For further explanation of the data in these charts, see this study.

Now, a good business reporter and columnist – the reporter we ought to have instead of Hiltzik – would dig into the discrepancies, review the various claims, and lay out what the real relative tax burden of California might be. But that’s not the reporter we have, I guess…on the face of it, though, I’d give this round to Walters.

Let’s go on.

Hiltzik is angry that we’re so nice to the rich:

Then there’s the canard that we unfairly soak our rich. This is supposedly a no-no, because the rich might flee, taking with them their sterling job-creating potential.

The dirty little secret, according to Citizens for Tax Justice, a left-leaning nonprofit group, is that California’s wealthiest residents shoulder the lightest burden of any income group in the state. The top 1% of California income-earners (average 2007 income: $2.3 million) paid 7.4% of their income in various state taxes last year, counting the federal deduction for state taxes. The highest rate was paid by the poorest residents. Those earning $20,000 or less, with average income of $12,600, forked over 10.2% of their earnings in sales, excise, property and other levies.

Now I’m not – at all – opposed to progressivity in taxes. the problem in California – as any number of experts have pointed out – is that it’s bad fiscal policy.

In the first post I ever did criticizing Hiltzik, I did so on exactly this issue:

The problem with doing this is that California is already highly dependent on high-income filers, and their income is variable.

In 2003, (the last year that the FTB has an Annual Report for -note, pdf) the top 5% of filers paid 58.8 of the personal income tax.

Since the personal income tax represented $33.7B of the $73.6B in revenues in the 03 budget, high income filers represented 58.8% of 45.8% of the budget, or 26.9% of the annual budget.

Since this represents 680,000 returns of the 13.6 million filed, it’s fair to say that half a million households provide about a quarter of the revenue to the state.

I think this is an amazingly bad idea. I don’t think that this is a bad idea because it’s unfair to the half-million rich households. I think it’s a bad idea because it builds insane levels of volatility into the state revenue stream.

Looking back on 2003 again, we note a few interesting things (go to page 14):

Exhibit Table B-1 Comparison by Taxable Years shows that, from taxable year 2000 to taxable year 2002, the total Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) declined from $829.5 billion in 2000, to $754.1 billion in 2001, to $731.2 billion in 2002, or an overall reduction of 11.9%. Consequently, the amount of personal income tax dollars deposited to the General Fund declined by 29.2%, from $40.4 billion in taxable year 2000, to $31.3 billion in 2001, to $28.6 billion in taxable year 2002.

The numbers of returns reporting incomes of $200,000 and above also declined between taxable year 2000 and 2002, as illustrated by the following table:

2000 = 414,746
2001 = 371,369
2002 = 349,845

There’s your fiscal crisis right there.

There’s an interesting research project, for someone with more time than I have, to decompose the state revenues for the past decade and really get to the bottom of this.

But by following Hiltzik’s plan, the state is in the position of a farmer with one cow. As long as the cow is healthy, all is well. But as soon as the cow gets sick…

Now taxing the hell out of the Malibu Mafia to pay for improving healthcare for the poor emotionally hits the all the right notes for me (I’m the Armed Liberal, remember). But I’m grown-up enough to notice that what feels good emotionally doesn’t necessarily make for good policy.

Note that the Legislative Analyst pretty much agrees with me

This was in 2006, before Hiltzik demolished his reputation by getting into a sockpuppet argument with Patterico.

It’s sad to note that his policy judgment isn’t any better today. his column continues to offer three solutions for our crisis:

One: Eliminate, or at least loosen substantially, the two-thirds legislative requirement to pass a budget or raise taxes.

This rule has allowed a small Republican minority to hold up all budget progress unless its reactionary program is incorporated in the deal. If the supermajority were pared back even to 60%, the minority lawmakers would be unable to block a budget unless they could enlist at least a few moderates in their cause. The improvement in the tone of legislating would be immediate.

In other words, make those pesky Republicans stop stopping the interests that elect the Democratic majority from simply raising taxes to a level that makes them happy on demand. I’d grade this one an F.

Two: Remove legislative term limits. This ridiculous provision has reduced the Capitol to a nursery full of would-be legislators needing afternoon naps. Worse, it has sapped legislative leadership of its vigor.

Since mid-1995, there have been nine speakers of the Assembly. Over the previous 20 years, there were two, including Willie Brown, the original target of the term-limit movement. You want to tell me that government in Sacramento has improved since then? As long as term limits exist, we’ll never have a 21st-century state government.

And without term limits, we can go back to a 19th-century one. Term limits exist in part to limit the professionalization of policits and policy; the idea being that the legislators are the voice of the people – as opposed to the Administration and lobbyists. Today they aren’t. Term limits were meant to make them more so, but I don’t think they really have; I knew Willie Brown (and admired him) but I’m not completely sure that what worked for a relatively powerless part-time legislature back in the 50’s and 60’s is really the best answer today. This one, I’d grade a C.

Three is the Big One: Revise Proposition 13. Prop 13 is often described as a tax-cutting measure, but that scarcely does justice to the damage it has caused.

Note that it has only done damage…

Hiltzik and I actually almost agree about something next:

By rendering the property tax useless as a revenue device, Prop 13 hit local governments especially hard. Key budgeting authority devolved from cities and counties up to Sacramento, where they have to compete with the state government for money. You want your streets paved or more teachers for your third grade? Stand in line behind the health department, or the corrections department, or Caltrans.

So city streets deteriorate and local schools get worse. Police and firefighters are laid off. All the places where the voters come into face-to-face contact with their governments crumble.

The result? Voters get more cynical, more convinced that government is expensive and useless. It’s a vicious circle — the more government is unable to do the things voters want it to do, the less faith the voters have in government and the less they’re willing to spend on it. Which leaves it with less money to do the things voters want. And on and on.

Let me flag this one and come back to it…

And then he descends into incoherence.

Reversing the worst effects of Proposition 13 doesn’t take rocket science. Commercial property should be subject to regular reassessment — the “split roll” that, inexplicably, can’t gain traction in Sacramento. Cash-strapped homeowners can be provisionally protected from the burden of higher residential assessments — say by allowing some assessments to be deferred until the home is sold.

I actually approve of a split roll – I discussed it some time ago. There’s an intermediate step, which is to tax the corporate sale of real estate (i.e. the change of control of the corporations that often own major properties) as a change in ownership. It’s supposed to work that way as I understand it, but it’s seldom enforced. Again – a good reporter would be pointing this out, doing research, running some numbers and point out the real fiscal impacts.

And what in the wide, wide world of sports does allowing homeowners to defer increased taxes until sale (i.e. borrow against their homes to pay them) have to do with a split roll? Unless he expects to both reassess commercial and residential properties…

Hiltzik isn’t that reporter.

Plainly, local government needs to recover its authority to collect revenue directly. That would help our political leadership make the case that, considering the quality of the services and institutions state and local government provide, Californians aren’t overtaxed but undertaxed — and the wealthy are the most undertaxed of all.

Right…

Look, I agree that the core issue on taxes is simple; call it the FedEx issue. When the post office charged $2.50 to send an express letter – but you got awful service – FedEx came along and charged $11. And you didn’t mind. Because you got great service from them.

Our public servants too often think we’re here to serve them, not the other way around; and as long as that’s the case, government will fail the Fedex test.

(this is the point I flagged where he and I sort of agree)

But let’s step back to the larger issue.

Hiltzik has never – once – looked in the mirror and validated his arguments and reconsidered his conceptual framework. He’s lazy when it comes to facts – even misquoting (in his argument’s favor) the very sources he quotes.

And this is the major voice of the economy and public policy in the LA Times – in the leading newspaper in the state. How can we possibly make informed, sensible decisions with people like this as our public ‘thought leadership’? It matters that you pay attention to what’s going on around you. Larry Gonzalez, who wrote the great book ‘Deep Survival’ recently was quoted as saying:

“My first rule of survival is perceive and believe…That means you accept the clear evidence of your senses and not engage in denial like ‘maybe it’ll get better’…”

Hiltzik and people like Hiltzik are destroying liberalism – my kind of liberalism that cares about improving conditions for working people and the poor more than scoring skyboxes because they refuse to accept or care about facts and reality. As long as they have power – the power of his position at the Times or the power of an elected official or senior policymaker, you can deny the evidence – for a while.

And California’s government has been taken over by these people, and that’s why were in the condition we’re in.

A long time ago, when Hiltzik got himself in trouble, I carefully said that I hoped he wasn’t fired for his transgressions. I hereby take that back; I’d like to see him fired – because he’s a lazy, lousy journalist and we need better if we’re going to save the state.
Updated to clarify point on Prop 13.

The Prodigal Returns

Sorry for the long absence; we scaled a wall at work (and now I get some more time…) and I’m just back from our annual motorcycle trip to the Sierra with a collection of friends (on my new motorcycle…).

I’ve got a backlog of stuff I want to write about, so please come by often and send your friends…

Just another WordPress site